Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kratter’s original club reason to remember

Course, clubhouse, early days celebrated on 50th anniversar­y

- By Brian Hurlburt Special to The Review-journal

Last Friday evening, Las Vegas Country Club members gathered 50yearstot­hedayofwhe­nthelate Marvin Kratter opened the Las Vegas Internatio­nal Country and Tennis club.

Kratter, a Brooklyn native and owner of the Boston Celtics from 1965-68, was the club’s original developer and a high-rolling baccaratpl­ayerwhosaw a rewarding future in Las Vegas. He spared no expense and hired noted course architect

Bob Ault to design the layout and high-end building architect Julius Gabrielle to design the clubhouse.

“It is one of the of the greatest courses I’ve seen in my lifetime and I just couldn’t find any flaw,” seven-time major champion and World Golf Hall of Fame inductee Gene Sarazen said in a 1968 Las Vegas Sun article.

Even before the course officially opened, Rat Pack member Dean Martin would play it daily, invited by Arthur Nightingal­e, the club’s first profession­al. Martin frequently was joined by Desert Inn Country Club profession­al Bo Wininger, casino executives Tony Frabbiele, Myron Friedman and Minnie Cardillo, and singer and noted amateur golfer Don Cherry.

“When we first opened the club, I received permission from Mr. Kratter to invite the stars out to play and he said ‘OK’ as long as it wasn’t for what he called ‘self gain’,” the late Nightingal­e said in 2011 during an interview for the book, “Las Vegas Country Club: Chronicle of an Icon.” “The name I gave my favorite group was the ‘gruesome sixsome’. They were a lot of fun, but I should have used the word ‘awesome’, not gruesome.

“How often do you get a group like that? They had the course to themselves

for about six weeks. I probably let them overdo it a bit, but Marvin wasn’t there so I thought, ‘why not?’ I think they did more for the course than you could ever justify in a monetary amount.”

Kratter started to have financial difficulti­es almost immediatel­y upon opening, and in 1968 sold controllin­g interest to Levin-townsend, a computer company that also purchased the Bonanza Hotel from Kirk Kerkorian. The club’s name was changed to Bonanza Country Club in 1969.

Shortly after those purchases, Levin-townsend imploded internally following a coup led by James Townsend to oust his partner, Howard Levin.

In 1970, the club was sold to a group of 40 members, headed by legendary Las Vegans Irwin Molasky, Merv Adelson, Allard Roen and Moe Dalitz. The glory days of the New Las Vegas Country Club — the club’s name in official documents LPGA Tour

What: Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia Where: TPC Kuala Lumpur (East Course) (6,260 yards, Par 71).

When (tape delay): Thursday, 3-6:30 p.m. (Golf Channel); Friday-saturday, 5-7:30 p.m. (Golf Channel); Sunday, 6-9 p.m.(golf Channel).

Purse: $1.8 million (Winner’s share: $270,000).

Defending champion: Shanshan Feng. Last week: Eun-hee Ji won the Swinging Skirts LPGA Taiwan Championsh­ip.

LPGA money leader: Sung Hyun Park. Next week: TOTO Japan Classic.

PGA Tour Champions

What: Powershare­s QQQ Championsh­ip Where: Thousand Oaks, California; Sherwood CC (7,059, par 72).

When: Friday-sunday, 5:30-8 p.m. (Golf Channel).

Purse: $2 million (Winner’s share: $300,000).

Defending champion: Tom Pernice Jr. Last week: Bernhard Langer won the Dominion Energy Charity Classic.

Charles Schwab Cup leader: Bernhard Langer.

Next tournament: Charles Schwab Cup Championsh­ip on Nov. 10-12. — were underway, and it became the place to be and be seen.

The equity club has been owned and operated by members ever since, an era most likely coming to an end. In 2015, members voted to sell, but a purchase by Discovery Land fell through earlier this year. However, a deal with a new buyer is reportedly being negotiated, and the club’s next chapter could begin to unfold soon.

Putt for dough

Tour player Brad Faxon hosts the all-pro putting championsh­ip Monday and Tuesday at the Major Series of Putting Stadium adjacent to Planet Hollywood. Also, there is still time to qualify for events. Visit MSOP.COM for details.

Deal of the week

UNLV students, alumni, faculty and staff plus police, fire, EMT and military personnel will receive free entry to the Shriners Hospitals for

Children Open.

Stars on, off course

Dr. Harry Schroeder won the MakeA-wish Lakeshore Open held at the home of Philip Tom. The unique course is situated in Tom’s front, back and side yards, and is officially trademarke­d as golf ’s fifth major.

The golf notebook appears each Thursday. Freelance writer Brian Hurlburt is a two-time author who has covered golf in Las Vegas for more than two decades. He can be reached at bhurlburt5@gmail.com or @Lvgolfinsi­der.

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