You can't smoke on public golf courses anymore in San Francisco. Not even if you're basketball legend Michael Jordan.

Acting as the honorary assistant captain for the U.S team at the President's Cup golf tournament, Jordan pulled out a stogie and lit up in 1990s fashion. The best part is that it seems everyone was too afraid to upset the star. City officials requested that the PGA tour remind Jordan about the law which was referred to as a "gentle nudge" according to Recreation and Park General Manager Phil Ginsburg.

The fine for smoking on a public golf course is $100 but Matt Dorsey, the spokesman for the City Attorney Dennis Herrera said, "Just don't expect me to ask him for it." If golf balls were testicles, then no one would be able to play on this golf course.

Making Bombs (not bongs) and Growing Weed
Growing marijuana and making explosives go hand in hand like peanut butter and napalm. Add child care on top of that and you have the winner of the most eclectic "I-work-three-jobs" person of all time.

Rebecca Kuzelka, a 55-year-old from Lake Elsinore, Calif., operated a child day-care business from her home. Last Wednesday however she made a little more than a grilled cheese. An explosion sent her 23-year-old son, Benjamin to the hospital. The old gunshot-wound explanation didn't fool doctors who promptly called the police. Benjamin's mom and his 21-year-old brother, Grey, were promptly arrested and soon Benjamin would also be arrested after his release from the hospital.

The Riverside County Sheriff's Department found bomb-making materials as well as a sophisticated marijuana growing room. Rebecca and Grey were charged with manufacturing explosives, cultivating marijuana and felony child endangerment.

English study suggests children have alcohol allowance
A new study suggests that parents can keep their teenagers from getting into alcohol-related trouble by giving them a sort of alcohol allowance. A study conducted at Liverpool John Moores University questioned about 10,000 15 to 16-year-old. A third of them told researchers that they experienced violence when drunk and 12.5% experienced regrettable sex.

Some kids are allegedly buying cheap alcohol which is bad for their health. The most popular of these cheap boozes include large bottles of cider. The study says that the allowance will keep the children from binge drinking and goes on to say that alcohol is one of the major international threats to public health.