The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 15, 1996, Image 12

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FI!?H camp
Cecillia Abbcfc'fc
Co-Chair
ShanaeJennings
Co-Chair
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MSC HOSPITALITY
Casey Reeves
Chair
Susanna Ince
MUSTER GREETER
Heather Hewitt
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SCONA DELEGATE
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SIG EVENT STAFF
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ORDER OF OMEGA
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ALLSPACE SELF-STORAGE, INC.
fley
AS 5 '
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offer expires 6-15-96
Brian Sebastian Class of
Richard Mason Class of
Managers
‘97 j
‘97 1
Holocaust Remembrance Days
Monday Night April 15 at 7:30 p.m.
in the MSC Rm 225
Three Scholars Face the Holocaust
All Day Tuesday, April 16, 1996
During the Day:
Reading of Victims’ Names
12 noon (weather permitting) the play “I Never Saw Another Butterfly’
at Rudder Fountain
At Night:
Inter-religious Holocaust Service at A&M Presbyterian Church
301 Church St., at 7:30 p.m.
r SUMMER / FALL 1996 APPLICATION DUE MON v APRIL 15 BY 5 P.M. ^
Circle semester(s) for which you are applying
013 Reed McDonald Building • Telephone: (409) 845-3313 • Fax: (409) 845-2647
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Page 12 • The Battalion
Monday • April 15, i
Norman chokes, Faldo takes
Masters title for third time
'The White Shark' shot a stunning 78 Sunday, in what is being
termed the greatest collapse in Masters history.
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) —
Greg Norman shot a startling
78 Sunday in the greatest col
lapse in Masters history, giv
ing Nick Faldo his third green
jacket and sixth major champi
onship.
It was the sixth time Nor
man had taken a lead into the
final round of one of the Grand
Slam events only to lose. But
none was as shocking nor as
complete as the unraveling
that began on the ninth hole
and ended in the water in front
of the 12th green.
“It’s the most nerve-wrack
ing course in the world,” Faldo
said. “It’s as simple as that.”
In that four-hole stretch
Norman went from three
strokes ahead to two behind,
enabling Faldo to play the kind
of golf he does best — methodi
cal, precise, controlled.
Faldo’s closing 67 — the low
est score of the day — put him
at 12-under-par 276, five
strokes ahead of Norman, who
started the day with a six-stroke
lead. Phil Mickelson finished
third at 282.
But the only two players on
the course who really mattered
were Faldo and Norman.
It was reminiscent of the
third-round confrontation be
tween Faldo and Norman at
the 1990 British Open at St.
Andrews.
Playing together, they start
ed the day tied and Faldo beat
him 67 to 76 and went on to
win the championship.
Norman would have needed
only an even-par round in the
final round to win.
“Obviously, I didn’t play as
well as I could,” Norman said.
“Things didn’t go my way. Nick
played solid and steady and it
was all my mistakes.”
While Norman, who has fin
ished second in a major cham
pionship eight times, had to
carry that history with him
over the hills and across the
treacherous greens of Augusta,
Faldo had the comfort of his
past successes.
In 1989, Faldo trailed Scott
Hoch by three strokes going to
the back nine at Augusta and
won in a playoff. The next
year he trailed Raymond Floyd
by two strokes going to the
last nine and again won in a
playoff.
Now, only Jack Nicklaus
with six and Arnold Palmer
with four have won more
Masters than Faldo and only
10 players in the long history
of golf have won more major
titles.
It was Faldo’s first victory
in a major since the 1992
British Open.
Norman’s collapse overshad
owed a great round of golf by
Faldo. No one shot lower than
his 67. And no one, except per
haps Norman, played under as
much pressure.
Faldo got into the spirit of
the showdown between the two
dominant golfers of the last
decade on the first hole when
he chose to putt out from 2 feet
rather than marking, putting
added pressure on Norman’s 4-
foot par putt. He missed.
F'aldo got within three
strokes with a 22-foot birdie on
No. 8, then Norman fell apart.
He spun his approach shot
back off the ninth green and
missed a 10-foot par putt after
a poor chip. He missed another
10-footer for par on No. 10 af
ter missing the green left and
three putted No. 11, missing
the par putt from 30 inches.
Then on No. 12, for the sec
ond day in a row, Norman left
his tee shot short in Raes
Creek. While he was able to re
cover for a great bogey on Sat
urday, this time he made a 5.
Faldo was content to make
pars during this stretch and
pulled two ahead.
“I had to put my head down
and grind as hard as I could,”
Faldo said.
Both players birdied the two
par 5s, Nos. 13 and 15. Then
Norman ended any chance he
Sc
had when he hit into the wate
on the par-3 16th hole.
Faldo finished his fabulous
day by making a birdie on No,
18 from out of the fairwaj /ol. 102, No
bunker.
The previous biggest
lead in the Masters occurrei
when Fd Sneed took a fw
stroke lead into the final rounl
of the 1979 Masters, won!
Fuzzy Zoeller in a playoff will
Sneed and Tom Watson.
After a record-tying biliii
the first round and then two
gutsy middle rounds of i
71, it looked as if Normal flO
would take a big step towarl
shedding a reputation startel
a decade ago when he
four of the major champi
onships going to the final
round and won only one.
Since that notorious Satin
day Slam in 1986, Normanhas
lived with a reputation
being a closer, of being at Ills
best in a runaway, of not hat
ing a
HOUSTON'
lioner of Hi{
“ftshworth hi
itate’s minoi
allowing la
that sharply 1
“We have ti
don’t like it,
on Chronicle
Ashworth \
LAi CA X LXXACA W CA V ^ \JX HUO IUU j . •
swing that would holdup, ![ ' ( d !' n
under pressure. Mrs f ? ay ^
Norman led the ’86 Masters “ affirmatu
jffolleges and u
Last mom
hurt of Appi
ersity of Te
sions policy,
by a stroke entering the
round but finished a stroked
hind Jack Nicklaus, who close!
with a 65.
Norman still had a cliaiM c
going to the last hole butk fav ° rir
geyed when he hit his 4-i» e f lon f.f 1
approach into the gallery we! ^,T^ r ,y v 1 (
right of the green. If the ru
The next year he lost the
Masters in a playoff when Lar
ry Mize holed a 140-footckip
the second playoff
The Te.
:ind some \
Texas will b
role our p
minorities w'
Sea
Last year, Norman needed!
birdie on No. 17 to move into!
tie for the lead but pulled!
simple 90-yard sand wedgeti
feet left of the hole and three
putted.
Norman’s worst previousc
lapse was in the 1986 PGAChr
pionship when he led by fourgoitj
to Sunday, shot a 76 and fmisk L Urmbomb
two behind Bob Tway. kzynski’s c
Golf’s greatest moneye ^dress
ner still is forced to live - maps ot
ists of n
HELENA, I
a reputation as
achiever.
an UP'
Red Wings complete
greatest season: 62-13-7
Detroit blew by Dallas 5-1 at Reunion Arena Sunday
DALLAS (AP) — The Detroit
Red Wings wrapped up the most
successful season in NHL histo
ry by defeating Dallas 5-1 Sun
day behind big games from
Sergei Fedorov, Paul Coffey and
Vyacheslav Kozlov.
Fedorov had a goal and two
assists, Kozlov scored twice and
Coffey had an assist and a goal
as Detroit closed the regular sea
son by extending its NHL record
for victories to 62.
The Red Wings, who went 62-
13-7, open the playoffs at home
Wednesday. Their opponent was
to be determined later Sunday
from a pool of several teams eli
gible for the No. 8 seed.
Detroit’s victory Sunday was
its fourth straight and sixth
straight game without a loss.
The Red Wings haven’t lost to
Dallas since April 14, 1993, a 10-
game streak.
The Stars, meanwhile, ended
the season with two straight
losses. They finished the season
26-42-14 and out of the playoffs
for the first time in their three
years in Dallas. The disappoint
ing season included the team be
ing sold, the coach resigning and
the use of a record number of
players.
Fedorov had an unassisted
goal, his 39th, at 14:59 of the
first period to put Detroit ahead
1-0.
The Stars tied it midway
through the second period on a
power-play goal by Jamie Lan-
genbrunner, who was called up
from the
%
schedules
Josive device
inned today,
la a filing
Wrt, the FB
eports of thi
!e cabin, as \
locuments an
But the ler
:ally identify ;
he original
nanifesto, coj
The New Yorl
on Post. A si
minors
S a t u r -
day. His
second
career
NHL
goal was
set up by Derian Hatcher and
Todd Harvey.
Detroit regained the lead six
minutes later when Coffey took
the puck behind the Red Wings’
net, skated down the ice without
being touched, then fired a slap
shot over from the right circle
that went over the glove hand of
Dallas goaltender Darcy
Wakaluk. It was his 14th.
Detroit then scored
goals in the third period.
The first came at 8:08 dm
Kozlov fed Fedorov on the I' 5
side, drawing Wakaluk tout 2
him. Instead of shooting,f'
dorov went back to Kozlovon'f
right for his 35th goal. Vik
eslav Fetisov and Fedorov-
sisted.
At 15:13, Coffey was alt
at the blue line when he
Keith Primeau sneak in froi
the right side of the goal. A
feet pass set up an easy score
Primeau, his 27th.
Kozlov capped the scorinf
17:07 with a slap shotfr (!
about 30 feet. His 35th 0
assisted by Doug Brown and-
dorov, who finished the sea! ;
with 107 points.
Detroit played without rip
wing Dino Ciccarelli andBok"
rey, both of whom were suspk
ed by the league for differed
cidents in Friday night’s vie! 3
over Chicago. Errey also*'
miss the playoff opener;T :f
carelli’s punishment is still®
der review.
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AS
By Lisa Job
The Battai
Jerry
Harlingi
years o
their co
when th
ents of
Sunday
sity awe
Anne
dent G<
Year Cc
commu
award (
to the c
“The;
awards
idea tl
award,’
The i
to Colk
without