R.I.P. M.J.

Thursday, June 25, 2009 22:19
Posted in category Culture

RIP Michael Jackson

Funeral Home Cuts Off Tall Corpse’s Legs

Wednesday, June 3, 2009 18:28
Posted in category Legal

Too Tall CorpseColumbia, South Carolina.- Authorities have revoked the licenses of a South Carolina funeral home and its director after he admitted one of his employees cut off the legs of a 6-foot-7 man without the family’s permission so the corpse would fit in a casket.

The state Board of Funeral Service voted unamimously to close Cave Funeral Home in Allendale.  The board also fined funeral director Michael Cave $500 and ordered him to pay $1,500 for the investigation.

In an agreement with the board, Cave said employees never told James Hines’ family that this body might not fit in a standard casket.  An unlicensed worker, Charles G. Cave, cut the legs with an electric saw without consulting relatives.

As published by:  The Wall Street Journal, Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009.

First touchscreen golf gps

Thursday, May 7, 2009 12:21
Posted in category Sports, Tecnology

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Did You Know?

Friday, May 1, 2009 10:55
Posted in category Culture, Economics

Why are conventional golf clubs different lengths?

Thursday, April 16, 2009 14:52
Posted in category Sports

Hickory Shaft ClubsAs was related by a golf club designer who worked for MacGregor Golf in Dayton, Ohio during the 1920’s and 1930’s:
All sets of golf clubs were custom built to the same club lengths prior to the introduction of steel shafts (invented in 1910 and legalized in 1926). Prior to that time hickory shafts were the norm and golf clubs were custom fitted/built to one single club length within a set based upon the static measurements of the individual golfer (wrist-to-floor measurement). The production and tuning of hickory shafts as well as the rest of the club making process was very time consuming and demanded the skills of highly experienced club makers. Obviously, this was an expensive process and could only be afforded by the wealthy which is why golf originally got the reputation as being strictly a sport for the rich.

The advent of the steel shaft changed all of this since this type of shaft could be produced by the thousands very cheaply in factories using unskilled workers. Large sporting goods manufacturers, lured by the huge untapped market for inexpensive sets of golf clubs, jumped in to bring golf to the masses. Their only stumbling block was that they could not provide single-length custom fitting in their mass production model. The solution came when it was suggested that these mass produced sets incorporate a 1/2 inch incremental step progression between successive irons and woods so that at least a few of the clubs within a set would come close to fitting any customer. In other words the incremental lengths in a set of conventional golf clubs today are the result of a miss-guided manufacturing decision made in the 1930s and not based upon any golfing performance criteria whatsoever.

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