truesee's Blog

Rats! Much-hated rodent has growing fan club

Rats! Much-hated rodent has growing fan club in New York City

Amy Sacks
SPECIAL TO THE NEWS

Saturday, May 28th 2011, 4:00 AM

Pet fashion designer Ada Nieves will showcase her rat couture Sunday at the NYC Fancy Rat Convention in midtown.
 
Ada Nieves
 
Pet fashion designer Ada Nieves will showcase her rat couture Sunday at the NYC Fancy Rat Convention in midtown.
 
Ruby, a rat owned by writer Mil Scott, models a plaid kilt.
 
Mil Scott
Ruby, a rat owned by writer Mil Scott, models a plaid kilt.
 
Rats!

While most New Yorkers have a hate-hate relationship with the ubiquitous street rodents, a surprising number say the domestic creatures make perfect companions.

After all, rats are very intelligent, can be trained like dogs and are clean like cats. The social creatures are also expressive, able to bond and very playful.

So says Raquel Citron, longtime rat enthusiast and organizer of the N.Y.C. Rat Meetup Group, which boasts a robust membership of 425 local rat fanciers.

Rats are "very misunderstood," Citron said, noting that to know one is to love one. "The rat is as much a part of us as your dog is a part of you and your family. We love them, and we feel love back."

In fact, whenever Citron walks into her Manhattan apartment, her pink-eyed white rats, Gina and Becky, jump up and down and run to greet her.

Citron rescued her first rat 18 years ago from a university laboratory, where she grew cells for human cancer research. She has since had dozens of rat companions, and works to educate the public and facilitate rat rescues around the country.

The average pet rat is 6 inches long, has a 6-inch tail and weighs less than a pound. Females breed year-round and can have 20 or more babies at a time. In the wild, rats naturally become aggressive and learn to bite as they compete with other rats for food.

Rats only live an average of two to three years, with death often brought on by respiratory infections or tumors. But Manhattan artist Dani Wilbert believes that rats can live longer with proper nutrition.

"I had a rat that lived six years," said Wilbert, whose paintings and sculptures are inspired by her love for the species.

Her four pet rats - and newborn litter of six - eat a diet of veggies and "superfoods" that she believes reduce the risk of disease.

She is also a big proponent of rescuing rats from pet stores, breeders and shelters.

Last year, 16 pet rats landed at NYC Animal Care & Control Shelters. Rescue groups take most of them out of the shelters and find them homes.

Writer Mil Scott and her husband rescued their first rat, Molly, in 2005, when they stopped at a mailbox after a snowstorm and saw a shivering white creature gently digging in the dirt.

"Within minutes, we were charmed by her, and within hours utterly in love," Scott said.

Today, the couple share their Washington, N.J., home with 11 rats, including Dumbo-eared, pink-eyed whites and straight-eared Berkshires.

Molly has since passed on, but her loveliness inspired Scott to create The Rodent Reader Quarterly (rodentreader.com), a magazine that aims to communicate the positive nature of rats through literature and art. The magazine's Facebook page boasts 2,500 fans.

Other rat-friendly resources include the www.ratfanclub.org and the American Fancy Rat and Mouse Association at www.afrma.org.

Tomorrow, the rat-curious can head to the NYC Fancy Rat Convention for a rat fashion show, a rat showcase, education and a screening of Disney's "Ratatouille." The show is from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 320 Studios, 320 W. 37th St., 14th floor, in Manhattan. Admission is $2 and free for kids under3.

Entry #4,716

Educators busted for ethnic jokes in the classroom

No one's laughin' at these teachers: Educators busted for ethnic jokes in the classroom

Clare Trapasso and Rachel Monahan
DAILY NEWS WRITERS

Saturday, May 28th 2011, 4:00 AM

Department of Education investigative reports have documented the educators' comments.
 
Department of Education investigative reports have documented the educators' comments.
These jokes landed with a thud - and a slap on the wrist for the school staffers who told them.

 

One assistant principal told "yo mama" jokes, a teacher called rowdy students the "Taliban" and another educator tried to pass a racial slur off as humor, Department of Education investigative reports show.

Queens Junior High School 8 teacher David Butler admitted to investigators he tried to shush a class by saying "Be quiet, you Taliban" and "Stop talking, you border jumpers," the report shows.

He meant it "playfully," he told investigators, and didn't direct it at anyone in particular group because the class included students of "various nationalities," the report said.

Butler, who couldn't be reached for comment, had a letter put in his official file.

Nearly a dozen 2009 investigative reports from the city Department of Education Office of Equal Opportunity were released yesterday in response to media requests.

The reports chronicled bias and sexual remarks made by teachers and staff to students, parents and other staffers.

Assistant Principal Lyle Walford of Brooklyn's High School for Public Service got in hot water for telling "yo mama" jokes in a black literature class.

"I said at one time that it was a significant part of black culture," he said, noting the course also covered weightier subjects like the civil rights movement.

He even gave a reporter an example of a joke yesterday, saying, "Your mother's so dumb she tried to alphabetize M&M's."

Walford said a disgruntled teacher turned him in, but he understood that his comments had caused offense.

"I can't debate someone's perception. I have no defense for her perception," he said, noting he'd agreed to sensitivity training to settle charges.

Substitute teacher Zsuzsanna Csecke at Newtown High School in Queens called a student the n-word, investigators said.

She denies ever using the offensive term, except to direct students not to say it. Yesterday, she called the incident a misunderstanding since she was not born in the U.S.

"[The students] knew that I was a foreigner. They were trying to get me to say it," she said. "I'm not a racist. I have many black students who like me. This word doesn't mean the same to me as to Americans."

Agency officials put a letter in her file and sent her for training.

Armando Cataldi, who formerly taught at Brooklyn Tech, was fined $10,000 for proposing "group sex" to fellow teachers as well as regaling them with tales of his own sexual exploits. He works at Life Academy High School for Film and Music in Brooklyn.

Cataldi did not return a call seeking comment.

Entry #4,713

'Grandma Bandit' was really a man

‘Grandma Bandit,' now known to be a ‘Grampa' killed after police chase

 

Bill Rankin and Rhonda Cook

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

9:04 p.m. Friday, May 27, 2011

 

The puffy-faced, middle-aged woman at the CVS checkout counter opened a black purse and showed the clerk a rusty gun. She said she was sorry, that she was dying of cancer and had no choice.

 
Atlanta Police Department Surveillance video showed this suspect, described as a 50- to 60-year-old woman, who is wanted in the robbery of multiple drug stores.
 
“Don’t be scared,” the woman said, according to police. “Just give me all the money in the cash drawer.”

Roxanne Taylor's  string of drugstore robberies -- daring heists that earned her the nickname "Grandma Bandit" -- ended Friday morning after she was fatally shot following a police chase. It was unclear if she died by her own hand or was killed by police, who fired multiple times after hearing a gunshot, authorities said. The DeKalb County Medical Examiner's Office could not be reached Friday, and authorities were unable to confirm whether Taylor indeed  had a terminal disease.

Authoritieswere however able to make another determination about the bandit later Friday. In a tersely worded statement, DeKalb police spokeswoman Mekka Parish wrote

Greetings,

Positive identification has been made on the person involved in todays incident on North Druid Hills. After further investigation detectives have determined the person believed to be a female suspect in fact is a male.

His name is Roxanne Taylor, a 57 year old man.

No additional information is available.

Taylor did not look like the typical armed  robber -- the jittery young male with a stocking cap or hoodie pulled down low.

Instead, the 57-year-old  holder of a helicopter pilot's license lived in a trendy loft near the state Capitol. Wearing dark sunglasses and a black University of Georgia ball cap, he had walked up to the checkout counters of at least seven metro pharmacies in recent weeks, exposed the handgun and demanded cash, police said.

There were differing opinions all along on whether the bandit was a woman or a man dressed as a woman.

An employee of a Rite Aid pharmacy on Ponce de Leon that was robbed May 14 described Taylor as a skinny man with large cheek bones who was dressed as a woman and who walked around the store for about a half hour before coming inside, an Atlanta police report said.

It was during a May 20 robbery of a CVS on Cheshire Bridge Road that Taylor told the cashier he had cancer, another police report said.

Ron Hunter, a criminology professor at Georgia Gwinnett College, said it is extremely rare for middle-aged women to be committing violent crimes. "And people who do armed robberies during the daylight hours are a little more bolder, more brazen -- not a 58-year-old female.”

Asked Friday night if there was any further explanation on how they determined Taylor was a man, Parish said, "We know the legal name was Roxanne. All indications we had early on was that he appeared to be female; it wasn't until further investigation that we determined he was a man."

Hunter, a former Tallahassee police sergeant, said he is eager to learn whether Taylor actually had cancer. "Someone who commits this kind of crime is also someone who will most likely lie," he said.

But if Taylor did have a terminal disease, that could explain the reckless conduct, Hunter said.

"If she was broke, she knows she doesn't have much time left and she just doesn't care," he said. "There is also 'suicide by cop.' It's someone who's desperate and wants to end their life and thinks they can't do it themselves so they'll put themselves in a situation where they force someone else to do it."

According to police, Taylor struck at least four pharmacies in Atlanta and three in DeKalb, taking $89 to $350. "Just give me the money and be quiet," he told a clerk during a robbery Tuesday at the Rite Aid pharmacy on Howell Mill Road, an incident report said.

This week,  surveillance photos showing Taylor inside a number of pharmacies were made public.

On Friday morning, as Taylor sat in a gold Jeep Liberty at a Wendy's drive-through on Piedmont Road, he was spotted by someone who had seen the photos and notified Atlanta police. Officers tried to stop Taylor after he left the restaurant, but Taylor fled, leading police on a chase up Interstate 85 northbound, authorities said.

Taylor took the North Druid Hills Road exit, hit another car, then was confronted by APD officers, who had been notified he could be armed and dangerous, APD spokesman Carlos Campos said.

The officers who had been pursuing Taylor heard a gunshot and returned fire, hitting Taylor a number of times, DeKalb spokeswoman Parish said. Neither of the officers, whose names have not been disclosed, were injured. Taylor could be seen slumped over in the Jeep car, its driver's side window blown out, as police inspected the crime scene.

Court records show Taylor was having financial problems last fall. In September, the company that owned Mattress Lofts, where he lived, began the process of evicting him. It also filed a motion in Fulton County Magistrate Court, saying he owed $2,133.

According to business records, Taylor once worked for Atlanta Aviation Graphics in an office-and-warehouse complex near Grant Park. But the property owner said Friday the company left the space at least two years ago.

Federal Aviation Administration records show that Taylor received a pilot's license in 1977 and was certified to fly helicopters in 2001. In 2006, Taylor updated his FAA medical certificate, which is required every five years.

Staff writers Mike Morris and Kristi E. Swartz contributed to this article.

LINK TO PHOTOS: 

http://projects.ajc.com/gallery/view/metro/dekalb/i-85-shooting/

Entry #4,711

Parents decide to raise baby without a gender

Porter: The decision to raise baby Storm without a gender stokes parental insecurity

Fri May 27 2011
 
Baby Storm with father David Stocker in Toronto. Storm, who is 4 months old, is being raised as genderless. Photo taken on May 7, 2011.

Baby Storm with father David Stocker in Toronto. Storm, who is 4 months old, is being raised as genderless. Photo taken on May 7, 2011.

Steve Russell/Toronto Star
 
 

Storm’s parents have hit a nerve.

They’ve been called “selfish,” “irresponsible,” “reprehensible,” “profoundly ignorant” and child abusers, all because they don’t want you or anyone else to know whether their 4-month-old baby has a vagina or a penis.

The story, written by the Star’s Jayme Poisson, has received more hits and vitriol than any other story ever published on thestar.com.

Why?

Well, sex always sells, and gender is the moment’s hot-button issue. Maybe Storm’s parents, Kathy Witterick and David Stocker, will prove themselves revolutionary, and 40 years from now high school students will perceive the current maelstrom as we now do the interracial romance Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner — quaint and archaic.

But I think there’s more at play than cultural obstinacy. Something more personal. My bet? Witterick and Stocker’s decision triggers our insecurities as parents.

Somewhere deep beneath the wrath lurks a muffled voice that wonders: “Am I too controlling of my kids?”

Let’s go back to those adjectives. Who was the last parent to be derided as a selfish, reprehensible child abuser? Ah yes, Tiger Mother Amy Chua, whose book championed the polar opposite approach to parenting. While Witterick and Stocker promote total freedom and exploration for their children, Chua extols control and duty. Storm’s parents let their two older boys pick their own clothes at 18 months. Chua forced her 4-year-old to practise piano for three hours a day and threatened to burn all her stuffed animals if she didn’t play “perfectly.”

Beneath your horror, deep down, a voice whispers: “Should I have pushed my kids harder to excel?”

The Mommy Wars continue to rage, fuelled by our insecurities and the mounting scientific studies that reveal, mostly, how damaging we are to our children. (My recent favourite: stressed-out parents cause their children to have more flus and colds.) Parents used to mimic what their parents did. Now, we have hundreds of experts telling us hundreds of contradictory things. We choose our poison, and then defend it militantly.

And we feel threatened by anyone who’s taken a different tack.

Storm’s parents aren’t winging it. They have an expert of their own — Alfie Kohn, an American writer and education critic. I tried to get his book, Unconditional Parenting, from the public library, but a waiting list was sparked by last weekend’s story about Storm. So, I bought the second last copy from Indigo Books.

Unconditional parents, Kohn posits, raise authentic, confident humans instead of drones by drawing on fountains of patience and unconditional love. Your kid screams his head off? You don’t send him to his room for a time-out, which Kohn calls solitary confinement.

Instead, you approach the situation as a “teachable moment” and try to uncover the root of your child’s anger. Instead of instilling a “mindless obedience” to your rules, you involve your kids in writing them.

There’s no carrot either — by giving your son a sticker for peeing in the potty, you are polluting his inner volition and teaching him to do things only for approval, Kohn says.

As a parent, he says, you should address the whole child all the time, and not just his or her behaviour.

I managed 100 pages, out of duty for this column.

I salute Witterick and Stocker. The path they’ve chosen as parents sounds just as exhausting as Chua’s, who studied treatises on violin technique when not sitting in on all three hours of her daughter’s violin lessons every Saturday.

They, too, are über-parents.

They, too, think the stakes are high. If Chua’s daughters didn’t get scholarships to Harvard “and perform virtuoso duets for the Supreme Court justices,” she would have failed as a parent.

For Storm’s parents, if the baby’s gender was decided for him or her, it presumably could smother the child’s authentic self, and cause depression down the road. Kohn says children who experience “love withdrawal” through time-outs “tend to have lower self-esteem. They display signs of poorer emotional health overall and may even be more apt to engage in delinquent acts.”

In the end, it comes down to control — controlling what our kids become, or what they don’t become.

I think Storm will turn out just fine, like most kids do. He’ll look at his penis at some point and look at his dad’s, and announce he is a boy. Or she’ll look at her vagina and her mother’s, and declare she is a girl.

Then she’ll put on some brown corduroys and rain boots, and rush outside to play.

Entry #4,709

Two ice cream truck drivers battle over turf

Uniontown ice cream truck drivers have frosty battle

 

Posted: Friday, May 27, 2011 2:00 am | Updated: 11:10 pm, Thu May 26, 2011.

Josh Krysak

Herald-Standard

 

Turf wars have become commonplace in many aspects of American culture.

Rival gangs will battle for control of an area or their “turf.”

Football players wage a battle for actual turf each and every game.

Even branches of the U.S. government often wage turf wars over control of governmental actions.

But who would have guessed that such an entrenched battle could be waged over frozen treats and the merry music-making trucks that deliver them to children during the summer?

That was the question that left Uniontown police officers scratching their heads Wednesday evening after an apparent turf war between two ice cream truck drivers working in Uniontown escalated to the point where police were summoned.

Patrolman Thomas Kolencik said that police were notified shortly after 6?p.m. that two ice cream truck drivers operating in Uniontown were not doing their best to show good humor to one another.

Kolencik said that he spoke to the wife of one of the drivers who reported that another ice cream truck driver tried to run her husband’s truck off the road on Hortense Street.

Kolencik said that he was able to talk to the suspect ice cream proprietor who told police that it was actually the other driver who had forced him off the road and that it wasn’t the first frosty encounter between the two.

The driver told police that he had pulled up next to the other man’s truck and simply said hello but was greeted with an expletive.

Meanwhile the other driver’s wife said that the ongoing war between the popsickle pedlars was caused by the man police interviewed and cited numerous incidents involving the man’s alleged actions, Kolencik said.

In the end, Kolencik said that he warned both drivers that they need to try and get along so that they could each continue to sell their sundaes in the city.

“I talked with both drivers and instructed them that if the incidents continue, the city will have to explore revoking their permits,” Kolencik said.

Neither man’s identity was released as charges were not filed.

Entry #4,706

Deputy tied children to desk spanked them with sex toys and...

Investigators: Polk deputy tied naked children to desk, beat them with paddle

Robin Leigh Pagoria, 45, faces child abuse, child pornography charges.

 

Robin Pagoria

Robin Leigh Pagoria, 45, faces child abuse, child pornography charges. Pagoria has been a Polk County detention deputy for almost six years. (Polk County Sheriff's Office / May 26, 2011)

 

Jeff Weiner
Orlando Sentinel

7:54 p.m. EDT, May 26, 2011

A Polk County sheriff's deputy filmed herself strapping naked children to a desk and spanking them with sex toys, then sent the videos to a boyfriend she met on a fetish website, investigators said.

On Thursday, 45-year-old Robin Leigh Pagoria was charged with aggravated child abuse, production of child pornography, promotion of child pornography and possession of child pornography.

According to an arrest report, the two children, described only as girls between the ages of 10 and 18, described in graphic detail multiple spanking sessions.

Investigators say Pagoria cut the legs off one end of the desk she used for the spanking. To keep the girls from moving, she handcuffed their arms and tied their ankles to the desk, deputies said.

The girls told investigators that Pagoria beat them with a leather sex paddle. The victims believed they were being punished — one said she was hit 50 times for being "disrespectful"

Detectives say Pagoria recorded the beatings on her cell phone, uploading them to the Internet so her online boyfriend could watch.

On Thursday, Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd called Pagoria's alleged behavior "outrageous."

"There aren't words to describe my anger with her," he said. Judd, noted for his well-publicized focus on sexual predators, said no one should be more aware of that focus that his own employees.

"She's seen us walk hundreds of them into the Polk County Jail," Judd said.

Judd said the arrest came "out of nowhere." Aside from a domestic violence incident and some minor disciplinary issues, he said Pagoria was considered a good worker.

Judd said Pagoria worked in housing at the jail, and was a 22-year veteran of the Marines. He said his office reviewed the psychological and polygraph tests from when she was hired, and they were clear.

"We do extensive background investigations on anyone we hire," Judd said.

When interviewed by investigators, reports state that Pagoria explained that she used to spank the girls, but "the spankings had not improved their behavior."

She switched to the table and handcuffs after "she decided she needed to do something that would embarrass them so they would learn not to break the rules again," the report states.

Investigators say Pagoria claimed she videotaped the sessions so she could review and "'fine tune' her technique" — leading her to modify the table, and to put a delay between blows for "maximum burn."

After the whippings, Pagoria explained that the girls were forced to stand naked in the corner "so that they could reflect on what they had done wrong," according to the report.

Deputies say Pagoria later admitted to having a lifelong spanking fetish, and to meeting her boyfriend on SpankFinders.com. Officials said the boyfriend, who lives in another state, is also under investigation.

Investigators said they found evidence of two videos on Pagoria's phone. In both, deputies said the victims' genitals and buttocks were the clear "focal point."

According to the Sheriff's Office, the videos were about 10 minutes long, and showed the children suffered "substantial" wounds. They could be heard screaming in the videos, investigators said.

The victims names were redacted from arresting documents, it's not clear how or why Pagoria had access to them. However, officials said it was not through her employment with the Sheriff's Office.

Officials said Pagoria, a deputy for nearly six years, resigned Tuesday, in lieu of being fired.
Entry #4,704