Views on life as seen through the eyes of David
Kupler at...
KUPKAKE'S KORNE
Christmas? Don't Bother, Thanks...
There's no need for lights this Christmas,
To brighten shopping streets,
Our hire signs provide illumination,
As we our business seek...
Early kipper and recession
Instead of booming rush,
An oncoming depression,
And drastic corporate cuts...?
Oh, there'll be the office parties,
Not as many as the past,
But they're over before they've started,
Never meant to last...
And the New Years' hopes and wishes,
As we rank around the blocks,
Thick as shoaling fishes,
Will be dashed upon the rocks...
Like the old days now forgotten,
We'll tighten up our belts,
And reminisce about the good times,
'Cos we know how good it felt...
Kopyright Kupkake 2001
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APPEAL TO TRACE TAXI DRIVER WHO MAY HAVE PICKED UP A
MURDER SUSPECT
Police are reiterating appeals for information following the murder
of a Swedish tourist in Kensington Road, SW7 in March 1999.
Maria Wodianitzky had just arrived for a week's holiday
in London, when she was attacked on a number 10 Routemaster double-decker
bus in Kensington Road, at about 5.20pm on Saturday 27 March 1999.
Mrs Wodianitzky, a 49-year-old computer clerk from Stockholm,
was with her former husband Peter and their 13-year-old son when her
handbag, which she was wearing with the strap over her head and across her
body, was grabbed by the suspect. As he got off the moving bus, she was
dragged into the road, hitting her head on the ground. She died at Kings
College Hospital on Tuesday 30 March.
The suspect is described as a light skinned black man,
possibly of mixed race, aged between 20 and 35 years, about 6ft tall with
short hair and wearing dark, smart clothing. After the incident, he ran
off along Kensington Road into Exhibition Road, where police believe he
was picked up by a 'black' cab driver.
Police are still anxious to speak to the taxi driver who
may have picked up the suspect. Anyone who has information about this
murder is asked to contact the Incident Room at Barnes on 020 8247 7911 or
Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555111. |