The News Review:
- New Collection of Golf Stories Illustrates Passion Behind Sport
- Injury could sideline tourney’s defending champion
- Now that’s a handicap: Golf course seeks missing holes
New Collection of Golf Stories Illustrates Passion Behind Sport
FXBusiness
An estimated 25 million Americans participate and love the game of golf for its sheer ability to test the bounds of their mental acuity and physical dexterity. With a collection of 25 short stories “Golf for a Rainy Day” (published by AuthorHouse) Frank G. Kilmer portrays the joy despair and humor that are so intricately involved in what is said to be greatest game of all time. “Golf for a Rainy Day” tees off with a lighthearted tale about the twists turns and surprises that can lay around the next hole. ther stories in Kilmer’s treasure chest tackle issues familiar to any golfer including the threat of losing getting pulled into a mental game and forgetting the role of play in this sometimes intense sport.
Injury could sideline tourney’s defending champion
Detroit Free Press
Women’s pen Creamer said she wanted to be especially careful. “I’m a little frustrated so I feel like I want to get out there on the golf course and get out there and play hard” she said. “I know in the back of my mind I know I can’t force it. It’s not something I want to cause an injury forever. “But I still want to go out and I feel like I can shoot a 60. But I just don’t think I physically am able to right now.
Related from Inkfeenz: Defending champion Glasgow girls to be tested by Malta Florence
Now that’s a handicap: Golf course seeks missing holes
Salt Lake Tribune
The club near Los Angeles International Airport had 18 holes when it was built in 1965. But it lost three of them in 1993 when a major road was expanded. Golfers have been reduced to playing 15 holes reusing some to complete a game. Efforts to restore the holes failed over the years but on Monday the Los Angeles Board of Airport Commissioners approved a 10-year lease with Westchester Golf Partners to restore the holes using vacant airport-owned land.