Woolworths bakery staffer asks customers to buy old bread first to prevent waste
Woolworths bakery staffer asks customers to buy old bread first. Video / TikTok
news.com.au
A Woolies bakery worker has issued a public plea for customers to stop buying bread with the furthest away expiry dates, claiming it causes unnecessary food waste.
Back in February TikTok user @tony.zakharia2 shared how the clips on loaves of bread will usually correspond to what day it was baked and was a guide to which one was the freshest.
His video went viral, with plenty of customers responding that they always went by the bag clip colour or picked the bread at the back so they could get the freshest loaf.
May God bless the departed soul.
At the turn of the millennium came across a magazine featuring the small car market of India. As a child vividly remember the front cover. It had a top view of four cars (Alto, Indica, Santro, Mariz) and the faces of the MDs/CEOs, including Mr. Khattar, superimposed on the top of the cars.
The article was pretty pessimistic about Maruti and Tata s future prospects, while writing that Hyundai and Daewoo were set to swallow the Indian market.
Five years later the article was proved terribly wrong, when Maruti launched the Swift under his leadership. There has been no turning back for the company ever since.
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27 Apr, 2021 05:33 AM
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Being far away from other markets is an excuse than a reason for lagging behind others in incomes and productivity. Photo / 123RF
Being far away from other markets is an excuse than a reason for lagging behind others in incomes and productivity. Photo / 123RF
NZ Herald
OPINION: New Zealanders like to think that we punch above our weight . And in many fields – think sport, food, wine – we do. But when it comes to our incomes and productivity, we have lagged behind other countries for some time.
Covid 19 coronavirus: India s families forced to keep their dead at home; hospitals turn away critically ill patients
25 Apr, 2021 08:54 PM
5 minutes to read
A relative of a Covid victim breaks down during cremation in Jammu, India on April 25. Photo / AP
A relative of a Covid victim breaks down during cremation in Jammu, India on April 25. Photo / AP
Daily Telegraph UK
By: Samaan Lateef
Grief-stricken relatives are being forced to store their dead at home and hospitals are struggling to function amid India s horrifying coronavirus surge.
In the simmering New Delhi heat, Muhammad Yusuf has struggled to find a place to bury his mother, Noor Jahan, 65, who died on Friday at her home in the capital.