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What's up with all those tip jars?

Tipping has spread to businesses where the customer does a lot of the work.

By Christian Science Monitor

Am I alone in taking pointed notice of all the tip jars that have blossomed on business countertops? From delis to pizzerias, Chinese takeout joints to barbershops, the word has spread like wildfire: If you put out a tip jar, people will fill it.

Well, maybe they will, but I have yet to be shamed (if this is the right word) into casting my coin into the tip jar fountain. Perhaps it is the scientist in me, but I try to reason the situation out like this: I call in my order to the Chinese restaurant. I drive there to pick it up. I pay the menu price. Why on earth would I pay more than they are asking for their product? Doing so strikes me as positively un-American.

Tipping used to be confined to service-oriented occupations: waitresses, taxi drivers, doormen. Now it has spread to businesses where I seem to be doing most of the work.

Attempts at justification

Just recently I was in a general store where I roamed the aisles, collected my goods, brought them to the counter and even packed them myself. I paid the cashier $23.97 and then noticed a rather ostentatious pickle jar by the register. It was brimming with coins and paper money. On its face was written, in large red letters so as not to escape notice, "TIPS!" The addition of that exclamation point seemed to push the thing beyond a suggestion toward the realm of subtle demand.

 

Sometimes the tip jar bears an explanation or justification of the recipient's need for the extra cash, such as the annotation, "For college." And then there was this cryptic one I saw in a service station: "For unanticipated expenses." Hmm. Don't we all have these?

All this reminds me of a little incident with an Internet retailer. On the order form after I had added up the total for goods and shipping, was an additional charge of $1, for "immediate replacement of lost or damaged goods." 

There was no way for me to decline or eliminate this fee, so I called them. The pleasant woman at the other end of the line explained that the fee was a bargain because it would ensure my satisfaction with my purchase.

"Ma'am," I calmly began, "if I am not satisfied with this purchase, I expect you to remedy the situation in any event."

She removed the $1 fee.

Nobody will notice

The moral of this tale is that these companies seem to assume that nobody -- except for me! -- will notice or care if an additional buck or two is appended to an order. Considering the large customer bases involved, this can add up to a lot of money. I think this is precisely what has spilled over into the ad hoc tipping jar phenomenon we're now experiencing. If the college student who works at the local taco stand puts out his or her jar and makes an extra $10, $20 or $30 a day, well, why not? It's not as if people have to cough up a tip.

 

At this point I'm willing to admit that maybe I'm being a curmudgeon about this -- or even worse, a cheapskate. But although I don't contribute to these ubiquitous, beckoning Mason jars, I think there is an insidious effect on the young. 

On a visit to a bakery with my son, I had just paid for my bagels when Anton nudged me and pointed to the tip jar. "Dad," he said, "aren't you going to tip them?"

I looked at the milk-faced student behind the cash register, who beamed at me. "Thank you," I told him, "and have a nice day."

This didn't end the conversation. In the car on the way home, Anton asked me how I would feel if I had a tip jar and nobody put any money in.

A little classroom experiment

No one had ever asked me this before. As a teacher it had never occurred to me to put one of these jars on my desk. And so I decided to conduct an experiment. The next day, when I entered the classroom, I casually pulled a small jelly jar from my bag and placed it on my desk. On the front was a neat label, "Tips." I didn't do anything else to draw my students' attention to it and ignored the low mumble that the act incited.

 

At the end of the lecture, as the students filed out, I'll be darned if a few of them didn't throw their loose change into the jar. I gave it all back, of course, but their quiet gestures did lend me a small thrill, a sense that my teaching efforts were worth more than my salary alone.

Well, I still don't put money in tip jars, but I have put one of these jars in my son's room. Sometimes, when he does something positive or helpful without being told, I throw a couple of quarters in. He appreciates this and looks for opportunities to lend a hand wherever he can. I think that as long as we can keep this under control, I will not have created unreasonable expectations. But mum's the word.

This article was reported and written by Robert Close for The Christian Science Monitor.

Published July 5, 2007

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Life term for killing teen who walked on lawn

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What kind of crazy world do we live in when a grown man shoots a kid for walking on his lawn? And the jury couldn't decide if it was planned. It sounds planned to me. He obviously got the gun with the intent to scare the kid, which was overkill so the next illogical step would have been to shoot him. I could so see this guy having it in the back of his mind to show the kid a lesson. As if his lawn was worth someone's life.
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Tiger, U.S. team upset over article, pic

FOXSports.com
Posted: 2 hours ago



The last thing the European Ryder Cup team wanted to see has come to pass — Tiger Woods is fired up.

The reason for Woods' angry mood? According to a report in the Daily Mail, Woods is understandably upset after a Dublin magazine printed topless photos of a woman whom it wrongly claimed to be the golfer's wife, Elin Nordegren.

Woods and his Ryder Cup teammates are said to be "appalled" by the article in the latest issue of the Dubliner, which features the picture of the topless woman under the headline "Ryder Cup filth for Ireland."

While the photo was the most egregious shot at an American team member's wife, it was far from the only one.

The Dubliner article states: "Most American golfers are married to women who cannot keep their clothes on in public. Is it too much to ask that they leave them at home for the Ryder Cup?

"Consider the evidence — Tiger Woods's wife Elin Nordegren — pictured left — can be found in a variety of sweaty poses on porn sites across the web ..."

The article goes on to call Chad Campbell's wife Amy a "largechested singer" and suggests Jim Furyk's wife Tabitah "married geeky Jim as his winnings hit £10 million."

The Daily Mail report says the magazine has been banned from the U.S. team's hotel.


Why would they write such crazy stuff?
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Couple accused of kidnapping daughter

By KATHARINE WEBSTER, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 54 minutes ago

SALEM, N.H. - A Maine couple upset that their 19-year-old daughter was pregnant tied her up, loaded her in their car and began driving to New York to force her to get an abortion, police said.

The daughter, Katelyn Kampf, escaped Friday at a shopping center and called police, who arrested her parents, Nicholas Kampf, 54, and Lola, 53, of North Yarmouth, Maine. They were jailed on a kidnapping charge and were being held on $100,000 bail each.

The parents were scheduled to be arraigned in Salem District Court. A call to attorney Mark Sisti was not immediately returned.

"Her parents chased her out into the yard, grabbed and tied her hands and feet together," Salem Police Officer Sean Marino wrote in a court affidavit. "Katelyn states that her father then carried her to their car and they headed toward New Hampshire."

Investigators said rope, duct tape, scissors and a .22-caliber rifle were found in the Kampfs' Lexus and Nicholas Kampf had a loaded .22-caliber magazine clip in his pants pocket.

The Kampfs were upset that their daughter was pregnant by a man who is now in jail, police said, and before leaving Maine on Friday they had an argument at the parents' home.

"Katelyn stated to me that upon her parents finding out that she was pregnant, they told her she had no choice but to get an abortion," Marino wrote in his court affidavit.

Katelyn Kampf escaped from her parents in Salem after persuading them to untie her so she could use a Kmart bathroom. After her father went into the men's room, she used a cell phone to call for help, then ran to a nearby Staples store, where police found "a hysterical female hiding in the back of the store," according to the affidavit.

She got into Marino's cruiser while Sgt. Kristin Fili pulled over her parents.

"They told us initially they did take her here against her will, but they denied tying her up initially," Fili said. "Obviously what happened was a crime. She was taken against her will."

Authorities in Maine said the parents apparently thought that, in light of their daughter's stage of pregnancy and the different abortion laws in each state, the abortion should be performed in New York. Fili said she did not know how many weeks pregnant she was.

Maine law prohibits abortions once a fetus is able to live outside the uterus unless the mother's life or health is at stake. The law does not specify when that is, but it generally is 20 to 27 weeks, said Dr. Dora Ann Mills, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. New York law prohibits abortions after the 24th week of pregnancy unless the woman's life is at stake.

What were her parents thinking? Did they think they could really force her to have an abortion? Or rather that a clinic would perform it?
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Who's your daddy? How about Matt Leinart?

FOXSports.com
Arizona Cardinals rookie quarterback Matt Leinart and Brynn Cameron, a basketball player at USC, are expecting a baby boy in November, Cameron's father told the Ventura County Star.
"It might not be the best timing in the world, but we are obviously very happy to have a new baby in the family," Stan Cameron told the Ventura County Star. "Brynn just found out about a month ago and told the team on Monday."


Okay, that makes no sense. My baby is due in the middle of Oct. How could she have only found out she was pregnant a month ago? My baby has been kicking for months. That means she's had no prenatal care and obviously no awareness of her own body. I hope her dad's quote is completely wrong.
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