AWOL Issue 74

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C B ut A v a W o uf t li n f h 2 O y a is 5 d L o l c / u 0 n u o o r T u 3 t /1 il m av p 0 e e o a r n l n o (d f u r o t in r a k a nd s 1 n 0 % pr o t d es in is e c c n lu o t d u n at e t d )

Visit www.awolonline.net

Public House and restaurant

SOME ITEMS FROM OUR NEW MENU COMING SOON: Pan-fried Fillet of West Coast Flounder with a Fresh mango salsa Pan-Seared Duck Breast with an Orange reduction Glaze or homemade Hoisin sauce & egg noodles Slow-roasted chicken breast on a bed of Thai herbs and infused With Rosemary gravy Homemade panacotta & wild berries or French Crepes & fresh strawberry Jus

Come along with this advert between 6-7.30 pm during the week of Monday 22nd March –Friday 26th for a free sample of any of the above dishes cooked by our new 5* trained Chef Tan. Live Music every Friday and Saturday evenings from 7.15 pm Luxurious suites overlooking the beach, large outside sun terrace and free WIFI

Located on the corner of Chomsin/ Naresdamri rd by the fishing pier Ample parking nearby For bookings or more information call 032 530087 or 086 603 5335

Weird News New Jersey, USa

Police hunt ‘The Midnight Knitter’

A guerilla knitter is gradually covering a New Jersey town in brightly coloured wool - and authorities have no clue who the rogue crafter is. An unknown person or persons - dubbed ‘The Midnight Knitter’ by West Cape May residents - is covering tree branches and lamp poles with little sweaters under cover of darkness. Mayor Pam Kaithern says police are looking into the knitted graffiti, which is technically against the law, as it is being done on public property without 6

permission. However, the mayor and many residents admit they’re delighted by the woolly rainbow of colours that has popped up. ‘We don’t know who it is. Technically, they shouldn’t be doing it. The police are asking about it, but it’s fun and it’s a mystery,’ Kaithern told local newspaper The Press of Atlantic City. And she added that she’s not even that keen for police to get to the bottom of the affair. ‘Lets’ keep it a mystery,’ she said. The knitter even has a website, a Facebook page and a MySpace, under the name of ‘Salty Knits’, where they describe themselves as ‘Knitters that got sick of knitting kitten mittens.’ The Facebook page is filled with overwhelmingly positive comments about the undercover needlework. One said: ‘Don’t give in to requests for you all to identify yourselves . . . just keep doing what you’re doing. Mystery is nice.’ The rogue knitter is happy with the attention the woolwork has been getting - but is now concerned that the added attention may make it harder to carry out their work, saying on Facebook a few hours ago: ‘Today has been so crazy. Now we have to figure out how to put new tags up without being spotted!’ Guerilla knitting has been an increasingly widespread phenomenon over the past few years, with yarn enthusiasts taking to the streets of cities around the world to encase parts of them in wool.


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