KEY POINTS:
Does my bum look big in this? Moya Michalakis spotted these fashion faux pas in The Warehouse, Pakuranga.
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The BBC became embroiled in another row over deception yesterday after it emerged that the button used to set off the Lotto balls is not real.
Viewers watching the draw on BBC1 on Wednesday saw the singer Craig David hesitate as he went to press the red button to release the balls. Despite his hesitation, the balls dropped into the spinning barrel, raising questions about whether the button was real.
Camelot, which operates the national lottery, said yesterday that the button was just a cue for "a draw master" who set off the balls from behind the scenes. It admitted it had received a "small number" of complaints from viewers.
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A reader went to Farmers last Friday and had a rather annoying Christmas surprise.
"I was planning on getting some perfume for my mother. I looked at the price and thought it was a bit expensive for my giant Kiwi family's Christmas budget, so decided to think about it for the night. The next morning I decided I would get it ... and boy was I ever surprised when I picked it up and saw that the price had gone up by over 50 per cent overnight. Talk about inflation ... the oil kings could take some lessons here."
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Tony Goodwin of Avondale writes: "The true cost of dairy prices was brought home to me on a recent visit to McDonald's in New Lynn. The usual thin sliver of cheese on the burgers had been halved into a triangular portion for each burger. I guess the next step is to use a thin coating of cheese spread instead."
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Dick Ayres had great service from WINZ when he called to advise it, as required, that he and his wife, both superannuitants, were travelling overseas for a short holiday.
"The charming fellow at the other end then asked me to call into their office on our return with our boarding passes to prove that we had returned. He had no answer when I suggested coming in without our boarding passes would surely be good enough proof that we had returned."
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The Texas Board of Education announced in November that it had made its selections of approved math textbooks for the next school year, even though the group of chosen books contained a total of 109,263 errors. Books of the industry giant Houghton Mifflin accounted for about 86,000. All publishers have guaranteed to correct the errors by the time the books are shipped. (Source: News of the Weird)