Most Popular
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership
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Grand Old Patty: Ian goes on a beefy binge at Burger Bar and Sub Zero New American Burger Restaurant
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Dora Magrath was blessed with a beautiful voice. She's gone, but you can still hear it.
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership (17)
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Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week (13)
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras (11)
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Fist City: Rockwell Knuckles aims to punch through St. Louis hip-hop's glass ceiling (3)
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Can Taqueria los Tarascos' tacos make you feel homesick for a place you've never lived? Si! (2)
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
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Seeing Red: Partners battle over a Wash. Ave. eatery's ownership
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E-Mix: André Anjos and the Remix Artist Collective leverage initiative, ingenuity and the Internet into an online music force
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Same Ol' Song: Club owners owe royalties for music played on their premises
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View the New St. Louis Cardinals "Play Like a Cardinal" Ads Here
12:10PM 03/27/08 -
Top Pinball Players Head to Vegas; Local Action Heats up April 5
11:43AM 03/27/08 -
Nine Inch Nails to Play St. Louis, Scottrade Center, August 20
08:46PM 03/27/08 -
Cute Overload: Sleepy Cats plus Bjork's "It's Oh So Quiet" + Bonus P. Diddy Phone Conversation
08:11PM 03/27/08 -
What Is P.I.G.?
03:15PM 03/27/08 -
Now Open: New Location of Mosaic
02:01PM 03/27/08
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National Features
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Miami New Times
Perez Hilton: Exposed!
Can a "crazy, flamboyant dork" from Miami find happiness as a Hollywood mudslinger?
By Francisco Alvarado -
Nashville Scene
Chip Off the Old Rock
Songwriter Justin Townes Earle has struggled with addiction--just like his proud papa.
By Michael McCall -
Phoenix New Times
"Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy"
Have they become the magic words when a state wants to terminate parental rights?
By Megan Irwin -
SF Weekly
Out of the Woodwork
Union carpenters describe a little slice of Jim Crow smack dab in the middle of America's most PC city.
By Lauren Smiley
Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week
Published: March 26, 2008
Katydid — or didn't — get turned on. That's what University of Missouri researchers Johannes Schul and Oliver Beckers set out to discern when they examined how female katydids respond to mating calls. The scientists found that the big green bugs — which are related to crickets — prefer faster mating calls in summer and slower calls in winter. A dabbler in mating calls our ownself, Unreal tracked down Schul.
Unreal: Tell us, how do you measure the arousal of a katydid?
Professor Johannes Schul: It's simple, really. We put a female katydid on a treadmill. Then we play the recorded mating call from a male. If she's interested in the call, she'll walk quickly on the treadmill toward the sound. If not, she might just walk in circles or just groom herself.
How often are katydids doing it?
We don't really know. Many insects mate just once in their lifetime. Some mate every two or three nights. Our study looked primarily at how temperature shaped their calls.
Is it sort of like seducing a woman with the music of Barry White versus Rick James? In the winter they like a slower, sensual beat. In August they just want it funky and fast?
That might be worth a try, but we weren't really concerned with human mating habits. We are interested in how communication systems change and new traits evolve.
How did the katydid get its name? Is it because — entomologically speaking — the female of the species is so darn promiscuous? Katy did him, and him and she did him, too?
No, no, no. In most English-speaking countries, they're called bush crickets. Only in the United States are they called katydids. The urban myth is that their calls sound like "katy did, katy didn't, katy did, katy didn't."
Stop it! We're getting excited! So, what's next?
I think we're going to look at whether the female forces the male to change his call or vice-versa. The goal is to better understand their behavioral and neurological traits.
Dress to Depress
"100 years ago," a press release for the second annual Saint Louis Fashion Week proclaims, "St. Louis was a worldwide fashion capitol." But as Fashion Week 2008 kicks off, even the hippest hometown designer must admit that these days St. Louis style isn't exactly on par with Milan and Paris. In fact, the average St. Louisan would be hard pressed to distinguish between a bottle of BORBA Skin Balance Water (one of Fashion Week's sponsors) and a Budweiser Select.
Still, the Lou has seen a style renaissance of late, with ambitious young designers trying to put St. Louis back on the global fashion map. Regardless of whether they succeed, Unreal agrees with the slogan of STL-Style, purveyors of the "Highway Farty" T-shirt: You can't spell style without "STL."
In that spirit we present an abridged history of St. Louis fashion, from its peak to its present state.
1904: The World's Fair. According to mohistory.org, fashion at the fair "was a mark of status, and at the time of the Fair people believed in dressing appropriately for every occasion, which could mean changing clothes several times in a day."
It was downhill from here.
January 1956: Elvis Presley releases "Heartbreak Hotel," effectively spawning the rockabilly genre. The tremors from this earthquake are still felt locally today, in the form of well-worn leather jackets, bowling shirts and over-oiled pompadours.
August 2003: Nelly introduces Apple Bottoms, jeans that specialize in "Liberating the natural curves of a woman's body." Oprah, whose natural curves fluctuate weekly, soon endorses the product. T-Pain eventually croons about "Apple Bottom Jeans and them boots with the fur."
September 2007: St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay appears in Esquire clad in a $4,900 Domenico Vacca suit. Men's Wearhouse withdraws its long-running endorsement and cuts campaign contributions to the man who once was the clothier's best customer.
January 2008: St. Louis T-shirt makers Rina Wear, known for their Cardinals fandom and sponsorship of Al Hrabosky's bar near Busch Stadium, introduce their 2008 line. Slogans range from the cute and clever "Yadi's a hottie" to the, um, not so cute "I'd rather my sister be a prostitute than a Cubs fan."
March 16, 2008: Kimora Lee Simmons, St. Louis native and fashion mogul, kicks off Fashion Week 2008. She is presented with a key to the city by Mayor Slay, who proclaims it to be "Kimora Day" in St. Louis. Unreal's campaign to inaugurate "Jorts & Mandals Day" is placed on hiatus.
That's Le Pew to You
Dom Durbin had a pet skunk. Her name was Penelope, and she was a wedding gift from Dom's brother, who bought her from a breeder in Indiana. But when Dom and his bride, Beth, who live in Farina, Illinois, took Penelope to a vet to be spayed, they discovered that in Illinois, it's illegal to keep a skunk as a pet. (In Missouri, too.) The Durbins sent Penelope to a nice home in Ohio, but Dom has been lobbying Illinois lawmakers to change the state's wildlife code ever since.
Unreal: Enough about you, Dom. Tell us about Penelope.
Dom Durbin: She liked to play tug of war. She took all my son's boxer shorts out of the laundry one time and used them for bedding in her room.
Wait. Skunks build nests? And they have their own rooms?
Sort of, yeah. They use a blanket, that type of thing, and fluff it up. We gave her half a walk-in closet.
What did she eat?
Pretty much the same thing you or I would eat, if we actually followed our doctor's recommendations: fruits and vegetables, light meat, easy on the dairy products.
You cooked for the skunk?
To give 'em the best diet, yeah, you do have to cook for 'em. It got us eating broccoli a lot more.
Quite the princess, that Penelope. Was she smart?
Very. If you wanted to be a skunk owner, you would probably have to put a latch on your refrigerator door, because a skunk will figure out how to open it.
Sounds high-maintenance. Why would you want one?
They send the cute meter through the roof.








You forgot to plug my website http://www.skunklaw.com
Comment by Dom Durbin — March 27, 2008 @ 09:46AM
Cute article. Skunks are very cute and smart. Wish them the best with their pet.
Comment by Eileen — March 27, 2008 @ 10:11AM
Having a pet of choice should be the American Way! When someone is not a responsible owner of their animal........consequences should fall hard, but for those of us who love our "different" choices of pets that ARE RESPONSIBLE, we lose our freedom due to ignorance. I hope your fight continues to have the pet of your choice!! Go Dom!!!
Comment by Margaret — March 27, 2008 @ 10:21AM
Cute, loving, empathetic, loving, funny, loving, hard-headed, loving, affectionate, loving, determined, loving, SUPER INTELLIGENT....and did I mention loving? If
a comparison MUST BE made, domestic pet skunks are more like children than any animal. They go through every single phase that our skinkids do from birth to about 20 years.....but a skunk does it in a year! I've had countless different type pets in
my lifetime--fur, fins, feathers and scales--and NOTHING compares with the wonder and joy of sharing your home, your life and your heart with a domestic skunk!!!
GO DOM, GO!!! Let's get Penelope HOME where she belongs!!!
Comment by Shelor Brumbeloe — March 27, 2008 @ 10:23AM
Skunks are way cool...you should be able to have them as a pet. They aren't a threat to anyone and are just as healthy as any other pet animal.
Comment by Nina — March 27, 2008 @ 10:24AM
How ridiculous that skunks should be banned in any state. They make wonderful pets. My friend liked hers so much that she adopted 2 others! They even have skunk shows like they do dog shows in or near Tampa, FL that she shows her skunks in.
Comment by Cynthia — March 27, 2008 @ 10:58AM
This is America - Land of the Free - right? What harm would it do for someone to have a pet skunk - to enjoy having an animal of their choice. These are not dangerous animals to be feared - You Go Dom - keep up the good fight.
Comment by Jeanne — March 27, 2008 @ 11:22AM
Domestic skunks are more than just pets, they are part of the family. They are cute, loving and sometimes onery, just like any small child. We have 6 of them running around our house and love every one of them. They each have their own personality. Our skunks range in age from about 11 months to almost 6 years of age.
Comment by Danna — March 27, 2008 @ 12:37PM
Skuns are very cute, to bad they are illegal in some states.
Zuzana
www.REXANO.org
Comment by Zuzana — March 27, 2008 @ 12:57PM
What the hell else will be banned? When did the USA become the place for bans and prohibitions anyway? What happened to the land of the free?
Comment by Beth — March 27, 2008 @ 03:12PM
Skunks are the cutest animals! I watched a really cool video about them & I would love to have one too! Here's hoping that freedom to own a skunk is soon a once agin restored freedom to we, Americans. When I was a little girl, you could have ANY animal! What's with all these draconian laws against enjoying life with animals?
Comment by Diane Amble — March 27, 2008 @ 04:38PM
Even though I know about many of the laws passed to ban animals I still find it hard to fathom. I had a skunk years ago and they are quite enjoyabe little animals. I may own one again some day as long as these animal rights backed BAN laws get stopped! I can't imagine why some try to stop others from having the animal of their choice. Skunks are great and no more threat than any animal.
Comment by AmyR — March 27, 2008 @ 05:24PM
Skunks can be some cool pets. A friend had one when I was growing up in the NW Burbs of Chicago (she lived in WI). I wanted one so bad, but they were illegal in IL. No one could say why. When my parents inquired why, the response was "Because." That was it. IL and MO need to look around, and see that pet skunks are not the hazard that someone dreamed up as being fact. The skunks in the pet trade, like dogs and cats, are not wild caught. They are bred by responsible breeders, and either wind up in loving homes, or end up as someone's coat. I prefer to see them in loving homes.
The major problem these days is that you have groups like API, PETA, and HSUS, spreading rumors about different animals. They have dumped alligators when legislators look into banning them as pets. PETA kills dogs and cats, and puts their remains in dumpsters behind grocery stores, and swear that it is what is best for those animals. Then API writes legislation, demanding the destruction of all pets, and they dupe some unknowing legislator into presenting the bill as a "must have." All three groups would much rather see ALL animals destroyed, instead allowing them to live in happy, loving homes.
Let's keep up the good fight, and give the legislators real facts. Don't let them fall for the propaganda that groups like PETA make up out of thin air and swear it's fact.
Comment by Sharon — March 27, 2008 @ 08:41PM