instead of running around after their heavy meal, the kids here are taught to read aloloud from old newspspapers. [reading in foreign language] amos: while most indian schools cook their own lunches each day, some are getting outstside help o on a massive s. many schools now have their midday meals mass-produced in high-tech kitchens like this one. man: we can see the blending ofof the masala. amos: okay. it's the result of collaboration between state governments and a religious group familiar to many in the west. man: now we are entering the production area. amos: the hare krishna movement prepares 820,000 lunches in kitchens like this every scscol day. they call it a gravity force kitchen. man: we have three-story silos on the top of this floor, one for lentils and two for rice. amosos: rice and lentils come from silos on the roof and are waeded on the totop floor of the kitchen. this is also where the vegetables are prepared, spices are ground, and chilies and curry leaves are fried. then they're all poured down chutes into waiting cauldrons on the floor below. the food is cooked with steam g