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  1. 7 de may. de 2005 · Clif Taylor - Clif Taylor, GLM pioneer. Clif Taylor, inventor of the Shortee ski and the Graduated Length Method of ski instruction, died in 2005 in Evergreen, Colorado, at age 83. Taylor was a veteran of the 10th Mountain Division, and was wounded during the battle for Riva Ridge.

  2. Su carrera estuvo repleta de éxitos, interpretando muchos papeles nominados al Óscar y convirtiéndose en un ídolo por su presencia y atractivo. Sus escenas de amor con Elizabeth Taylor en Un lugar en el sol (1951) establecieron un nuevo estándar para el romance en el cine.

  3. Hall of Fame Class of 1979. Information submitted in a nomination letter to the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame by Mort Lund. Clif Taylor, a ski instructor at the Mad River Ski School in Vermont, was intrigued by the efficiency of goon skis, as they were called, in helping beginners get going on skis. The goon skis came in various lengths and ...

  4. He called these new skis "Clif Taylor Shortees" and they ranged in length from 100cm, 120cm and 150 cm. In 1980 he co-designed the world's first 16" Boot Ski . In 1994 he designed a Snow Slipper which snapped onto the soles of ski boots and was used for beginners to learn parallel turns, eliminating the snow plow technique.

  5. 9 de ene. de 2018 · During World War II, Clif served in the 10th Mountain Division at Camp Hale. Over the next 51 years, he worked as a certified ski instructor at Aspen, Aspen Highlands, Mad River Glen, Loveland, and Winter Park. He developed the “shortee” ski and introduced the GLM or Graduated Length Method.

  6. During World War II, Clif served in the 10th Mountain Division at Camp Hale. Over the next 51 years, he worked as a certified ski instructor at Aspen, Aspen ...

  7. This season, in the USA alone, more than 100 schools will be teaching some version of GLM. There’s Clif Taylors method of some 10 years standing: Lock the feet together, then swivel the feet or the legs or the knees or the hips or the whole body, depending on the kind of turn you want.