

My son trusts his teachers and there are other staff that love what they do and work really well with the kids,” Lindsay said in a Facebook post the following day, “I’m also upset with DPS (Dayton Public Schools) because you’re the ones doing the hiring and the placement of the staff. “I’m not saying Rosa Parks is a bad school as a whole. In a Facebook post sharing the video on Monday, the child’s mom, Taneshia Lindsay, said it took her three weeks to get the video of her “autistic son being assaulted on his 2nd day of school.” The incident happened on August 21, according to the district and Wright, the attorney.

“The safety of all students and staff is the district’s utmost priority, and we appreciate the support of families as we work to provide a safe school environment for all.” “Although the district cannot publicly comment on specific personnel matters, parents and guardians should be assured that the individual is no longer employed,” Lawrence said. “The actions seen in the clip are contrary to all employee training, do not promote a culture conducive to learning, and are not tolerated in Dayton Public Schools,” David Lawrence, interim superintendent, said in a statement. The child is nonverbal and autistic, said the attorney for the boy’s parents, Michael Wright. The employee has since been removed by the district. O cruel fate! Hope is truly the deadliest sword of all.Video from an Ohio school’s hallway camera shows a school employee chasing a 3-year-old down the hall and hitting him in the head from behind, knocking him to the ground, an attorney for the boy’s family alleges.Īfter the child is on the ground, the employee at Rosa Parks Early Learning Center in Dayton picks the child up by his ankles and carrying him down the hall with his head toward the floor, the August video shows. Bitter reality has stumbled short of the Ventrilocrisp’s mighty expectations. Like literature’s great dreamers, the Ventrilocrisp has been left with egg on its face. Yes, you can debase yourself and suck long and hard on these (as the Ventrilocrisp readily did) to glean every iota of flavour from the flute, but for what? Pittance. The chip itself is a sorry halfway house, not as oily or indulgent as a Chipstick, but not as light and crunchy as a Walker’s French Fry. At best, a poor man’s Pickled Onion Monster Munch (lacking any of their characteristic zing or body) at worst, an utterly unremarkable bite that, as if to caution the Ventrilocrisp for its vast illusions, quickly embedded itself into the molars to form a lasting reminder of these crisps’ deplorable, lackadaisical attitude to even the most basic tenets of good flavour. Bland, with not even a vestige of the promised weiner taste. I’ll be blunt: these crisps were disappointing. But O! Sweet yearning makes way for black despair. Despite being vegetarian, the Ventrilocrisp was tickled by the image of the chubby, mustard-splattered pink frankfurter on this packet, and harboured secret hopes for a potent weiner flavour.
Clipsy hot dog full#
The bar for the hot dog crisp had been set high by some very pleasing varieties from the same brand: the Chipsy Rebrasti Slani (highly salty) the Clipsy Mix packets (unusual mixes, interesting shapes) and of course the new feta cheese flavoured ridge cut Chipsy Domaćinski (tangy, characterful and full of pep). It’s important to note that the Clipsy brand, the leaner sister of Chipsy (both owned by Pepsi) is ubiquitous in the Balkans. Ha ha, the Ventrilocrisp gives a wry smile and conspiratorial nod to this droll conflation of fast foods. This is exactly what it looks like: a hot dog flavoured crisp in the shape of a slender little french fry.
