ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY - Golf clubs are propped upright and a basketball hoop hangs nearby. A recliner sits in front of a television set showing sports highlights. <br>
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The room comes with one more amenity for the sports fan: a casket. <br>
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Funeral directors say ``sets'' tailored to the interests of anglers, film buffs, school teachers and others have gained popularity as a method of giving a personal touch to viewings. <br>
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Silvy Edmonds Cotton, president of Perpetua, told The Press of Atlantic City, New Jersey, ``We really bought into the idea that funerals should be a meaningful experience reflective of a person's life. This helps them feel the person is really there.'' <br>
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Perpetua, a Tucson, Arizona, firm that acquires funeral homes, showed examples of its sets at the annual convention of the National Funeral Directors And Morticians Association, which runs through tomorrow. <br>
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The Atlanta-based association represents about 2,300 members nationwide, mostly black funeral directors. <br>
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Perpetua started creating sets two years ago. Earlier versions consisted of a living room furnished with personal items from the deceased, but the sets have grown more elaborate. <br>
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One, titled ``Big Momma's Kitchen,'' had cabinets and a stove, table and chairs positioned on a linoleum floor. <br>
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Another offered a fishing scene with a pole cast into a pond stocked with goldfish and sign that said ``Gone Fishing.''
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