Word: haselton
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...Human Behavior showed that strippers who are ovulating average $70 in tips per hour; those who are menstruating make $35; those who are not ovulating or menstruating make $50. Other studies suggest that men can react in more romantic ways to olfactory signals. In work conducted by Martie Haselton, an associate professor of psychology at UCLA, women report that when they're ovulating, their partners are more loving and attentive and, significantly, more jealous of other men. "The men are picking up on something in their partner's behavior that tells them to do more mate-guarding," Haselton says...
Things didn't quite work out for Josh Anderson in the Mormon church. Nor did a nondenominational Christian upbringing light the way for Randy Haselton. But neither teen gave up entirely on structure and clean living in Utah. The boys hooked up with Straight Edge, an anti-drug gang of middle-class kids, and discovered new passions. Josh became a vegan and firebombed a McDonald's; Randy enjoys beating the tar out of people...
...Randy Haselton, who has multiple arrests for fighting, says Edgers won't back down if anyone "talks sh__." But as for cruising around looking to beat people up, he says, "that's a lot of crap...
Last June Ronald Haselton, 41, president of the Consumers Savings Bank of Worcester, Mass., introduced a more convenient form of checking: a bank draft called NOW (for Negotiable Order of Withdrawal). NOW drafts look and are used exactly like the checks offered by most checking accounts. Each draft costs 15?. At Consumers Savings, depositors no longer even have to bother with bankbooks. Instead, NOW users get monthly computerized statements of deposits, withdrawals, charges and interest. The minimum balance required is $10. Last May Haselton won a test case in the state supreme judicial court establishing the legality of NOW accounts...
Commercial bankers are irritated, because they find it impossible to compete against what in effect are interest-yielding checking accounts. Under the Federal Banking Act of 1933, commercial bankers are forbidden to retaliate by paying interest on their checking accounts. Haselton insists that the NOW system is reasonable, arguing: "It's the consumer's money, and he should be able to get it whenever he pleases for whatever he wants...