Word: augustas
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MASTERS GOLF TOURNAMENT (CBS, 5-6 p.m.). Action at 14th through the 18th holes, broadcast live from Georgia's famed Augusta National Golf Club, and continuing on Sunday from...
...took at Pensacola last week. Dey complains that the rash of low scores in P.G.A. tournaments "cheapens the concept of par." Both he and Jones insist that fans prefer to watch a golfer battle the hazards of a tough, demanding course-such as Georgia's 6,980-yd. Augusta National, site of this week's Masters tournament. "Galleries aren't attracted by low scores," says Architect Jones. "What they want to see are great golf shots." He speaks with authority. Something like 40,000 fans will attend the Masters, millions more will watch...
...Association of African and Afro-American Students last week elected Hubert E. Sapp '67 of Eliot House and Augusta, Georgia, president for 1966-67. Other officers elected were Gall Snowden '67, vice-president, Chandra Saldi '67, secretary, and Robert C. Scott '67, treasurer. Also elected to the executive committee were Charles J. Hamilton '69, Jeffrey P. Howard '69, Charles F. Lovell '68, and Elvin Montgomery...
...Jack!" Now there was a week. The august members of Georgia's Augusta National Golf Club were embarrassed when Nicklaus ripped their course to shreds last year-firing a record 17-under-par 271 for 72 holes, winning the Masters by nine strokes. Last week there were spongy fairways to deaden long drives and two new greens that were as fast as billiard tables. Hostile fans screamed, "Too bad, Fat Jack!" whenever Nicklaus flubbed a shot. History was against Jack: nobody had ever won the Masters twice in a row. And so, it seemed, was fate...
President Johnson, who knows an impossible job when he sees one, stayed on the Podernales an extra day. It was the first time a President had skipped an opener since lame-duck Dwight Eisenhower put in an extra day's golf at Augusta...