Name: Candy Analysis: Descriptive Statistics; Confidence Intervals Reference: Using StatView, 2nd edition. SAS Institute Inc. Description: Since 1994, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has required uniform, easy-to-read nutrition labeling for nearly all foods. The purpose of the new label is to reduce confusion and help consumers choose more healthful diets. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Health and Human Service (HHS) have teamed up to produce the Food Guide Pyramid, which recommends eating a variety of foods, an appropriate number of calories, and a modest amount of fat-specifically, 30% or fewer of your total number of calories per day should be calories from fat, and only a third of those should be calories from saturated fat. For adults consuming 2000 calories per day, which works out to no more than 65 grams of fat, no more than 20 grams of which are saturated fat. We want to know how many candy bars can fit into this daily diet. We found nutritional facts about every candy bar we could find. We also included some non-bar candies like M&Ms, Reese's Pieces, Skittles, and Super hot Tamales. Graphic Analysis: box plots; scatter plots; histograms SAS Product: Enterprise Guide; Base SAS; SAS/GRAPH Size: 75 rows, 17 columns