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In 1966 she was hired by Jewel Food Stores as their first Consumer Affairs person, becoming in 1971 the Vice President of Consumer Affairs and one of the very early Vice Presidents of a major US company. She was instrumental in Jewel’s effort to become a leader in programs that today shoppers take for granted. With Janie’s leadership, Jewel was the first to develop open dating on milk, dairy and other perishable products. Previously, freshness dates were in a code that no one could understand. She served on national committees, USDA and FDA, that developed nutritional labeling where a shopper could read the nutrient content of any canned or packaged product. She also led grocers to use unit pricing where the price per ounce was listed on all packaged products. Janie retired from a long career with Jewel in 1984.
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She was instrumental in Jewel’s effort to become a leader in programs that today shoppers take for granted. With Janie’s leadership, Jewel was the first to develop open dating on milk, dairy and other perishable products. Previously, freshness dates were in a code that no one could understand. She served on national committees, USDA and FDA, that developed nutritional labeling where a shopper could read the nutrient content of any canned or packaged product. She also led grocers to use unit pricing where the price per ounce was listed on all packaged products. Janie retired from a long career with Jewel in 1984.
Katie wrote:I check unit prices carefully when I shop, and I get annoyed when they are intentionally unhelpful (e.g., price per ounce for one item, price per average-pig's-foot-weight for a comparable item) or just plain wrong (e.g., two spice containers of comparable weight and price with shelf tag unit prices orders of magnitude apart).
When customers lined up at Emilia Pontarelli’s cash register at Tony’s Italian Deli on Northwest Highway in Edison Park, they felt like they’d been adopted by an Italian nonna.
She’d ask when they were going to get married.
If they bought her homemade lasagna, sugo (sauce) or giardiniera, she’d say approvingly: “Mama’s cooking for you tonight.”
If any of her grandchildren’s friends stopped in, she’d issue a firm directive: “You tell them to come visit me.”
When it came to staying in touch, there was no digital divide for the 93-year-old, according to her grandson Mike Rendina.
“You text him right now,” she’d tell his friends. “I want to see you text him.”
Now and then, she’d throw in a few of these: “I’m yelling at you because I love you!”
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Nina Balducci, Who Shaped Famed Grocery Store, Dies at 91
Dave148 wrote:Sirio Maccioni, Whose Le Cirque Drew Manhattan’s Elite, Dies at 88
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/20/dini ... ticleShare
riddlemay wrote: This was a wonderful tribute, but isn't it standard form in an obituary to include information about the cause of death? I've looked the obit over a couple times and not found it. (It could be there and I'm not seeing it, though.)
The GP wrote:I've seen plenty of obits with no cause of death listed.
Cathy2 wrote:HI,
Often in obits, they don't usually highlight the cause of death. However, some people make a practice of suggesting donations to a charity related to their cause of death.
I've been reading obits since I was eight years old, which is something that surprises even me.
Regards,
Cathy2
lougord99 wrote:I suspect that practice started when people did not want other people to know they had contracted AIDS and families tried to hide cause of death.
If you think about it, cause of death is really none of our business.
Cathy2 wrote:Lot's of things are nobody's business, but that does not stop them from asking.
G Wiv wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Lot's of things are nobody's business, but that does not stop them from asking.
And, importantly, just because somebody asks you a question, even if you know the answer, you do not have to answer.
riddlemay wrote:I'm probably just on hyper-alert to when a death was caused by C-19. Never mind.
Despite mass furloughs and cutbacks attributed to the coronavirus shutdown, the Chicago Tribune has nearly quadrupled the number of reporters and editors handling obituaries for COVID-19 fatalities in the Chicago area, according to CNN. Now with 19 reporters assigned to the grim task, managing editor Chrissy Taylor told CNN: “We are preparing to add more people to the team. Our goal is to do as many as we can.” Said lead reporter Christy Gutowski: “I don’t view it as a typical obit with a set template. I am writing a life story to ensure history properly remembers someone’s loved one. . . . I feel that I, in a small way, am making a positive contribution at such a difficult, important time in the world.”
NFriday wrote:The mayor of Chicago has decided that she will not allow outdoor seating at Chicago restaurants even though the Governor has said it is okay.
nr706 wrote:No obit yet, but just got word that Hecky Powell, famous mutt, philanthropist, and owner of Evanston's iconic Hecky's Barbeque, passed away this morning from Covid 19.
NFriday wrote:I read the obit at the Sun Times. The Trib did not let me view it. It sounds like Hecky's is going to remain closed for a while. I just drove past the restaurant and their was a sign up sending people to his foundations website. Apparently he had a transplanted liver which did not help matters. He came down with covid first, and then came down with pneumonia.