Tue Dec 27, 8:39 AM ET (Reuters)
NASHVILLE (Reuters) - Nashville police and residents were searching Monday for clues to the Christmas Day theft of a cinnamon bun that found unlikely fame for its resemblance to the late Mother Teresa's face.
The bun has been a draw for curious tourists since it was preserved and put on display in a glass case at the shop where it was discovered by a customer in 1996.
"What I can't figure out is why anyone would steal it," said the shop's owner, Bob Bernstein. "They can't sell it on eBay, it's not fit to eat, there was no ransom note and the police put its value at only $25 on their report."
Bernstein said the thief broke into the coffee house at 6 a.m. Sunday, and had smashed the glass case containing the bun, ignoring cash lying nearby.
Before her death in 1997, Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa wrote to Bernstein asking that her name not be used commercially. The pastry became known simply as the "Nun Bun."
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Nun Bun on the Run
- chonsigirl
- Posts: 33633
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Nun Bun on the Run
Wasn't there a similar thing with a tomato a few years ago? It wasn't Mother Teresa and it wasn't stolen but it revealed a face of a religious figure when it was cut open.
Or am I just losing it?
Or am I just losing it?
Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answers...Rainer Maria Rilke
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Nun Bun on the Run
Chonsigirl, if there were such a thing as gold stars here, I'd give you a handful just for your subject line alone! :wah: