The Back Nine

Altvater: Did IBM force Augusta National to admit women as members?

Written by Fred Altvater | | BackNine@toledofreepress.com

Most of us will never know the feeling of being asked to be a member of Augusta National Golf Club. It’s a difficult process just obtaining a ticket to attend the Masters each year.

Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore are accomplished women, and the world learned of their admission to Augusta National as the club’s first female members on Monday.

Augusta National broke from its 80-year tradition of inviting men only to become members of the club that annually hosts the Masters.

Membership to Augusta National is a private matter. Members at the club rarely address the media or discuss club business or procedures.

Women’s activist Martha Burk campaigned for admission of women to the elite club beginning in 2003. Hootie Johnson, who was the club’s chairman at the time, explained that the club would not bow to pressure and admit women as members. They would follow normal policy and procedure.

Augusta National has a longstanding policy of granting membership to the president or chief operating officer of companies that become sponsors of the Masters.

In October 2011, IBM installed Virginia Rometty as president and chief executive officer. Questions were asked if Augusta National would honor its policy of granting membership to Ms. Rometty?

With no female members, Augusta National found itself digging a deeper hole for itself over the question of whether to allow women members.

Do you think there were discussions about the admission of Rometty as a member versus losing IBM’s sponsorship?

IBM likely had more influence on the admission of women as members at Augusta National than Martha Burk or public outcry could ever hope to have.

Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne explained that membership to the club is a deliberate procedure. A candidate is mentioned among the members and that person goes through a five- or six-year process to determine suitability prior to being officially asked to become a member.

Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore may have been discussed as possible members for several years among the membership at Augusta National but it seems that their official invitations may have been hastened by the predicament the club found itself in with no women members and a new woman president of one of its sponsoring companies.

As most things in this world, the decision to admit Rice and Moore as members to Augusta National was driven more by a monetary consideration than a moral obligation to correct a sexual inequality issue among the membership.

For whatever reason Augusta National decided to admit women members, it is a momentous occasion and should be applauded.

The last bastion of male dominance in the golf world now becomes the Royal & Ancient.

Has Augusta National forced the door open for the R&A to add women to its illustrious membership?

“These accomplished women share our passion for the game of golf, and both are well known and respected by our membership. It will be a proud moment when we present Condoleezza and Darla their green jackets when the club opens this fall.”

— Augusta National chairman Billy Payne after Augusta National invited former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and South Carolina financier Darla Moore to become the first female members since the club was founded in 1932.

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The Back Nine

Altvater: Augusta National admits first female members: Condoleezza Rice, Darla Moore

Written by Fred Altvater | | BackNine@toledofreepress.com

Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters, has been a men-only private club since its inception in 1932. Just because it has decided to add two female members, don’t expect the famous Green Jacket to suddenly turn pink.

Founding members Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts envisioned a club steeped in southern hospitality and charm. A club based on the morals and culture of the male-dominated society of the 1930s.

Times have changed. Women have taken over leadership roles in business and government and demand seats in tightly held men-only clubs and organizations across the country.

Women’s activist Martha Burk of the National Council of Women’s Organizations demonstrated against and campaigned several years about the lack of female members in Augusta National.

But until recently, the membership at Augusta National held firm to their right to allow only members of their own choosing and would not bow to public sentiment or outside pressure.

The time has finally come for Augusta National to extend membership to two very deserving ladies.

Augusta National Chairman Billy Payne announced Monday that former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and South Carolina financier Darla Moore were invited to join the club.

Before entering government service, Rice was a professor of political science and a provost at Stanford University. She has served on the National Security Council and was national security adviser for President George W. Bush before becoming the secretary of state. She is an avid golf fan, and, since leaving public service, has returned to the faculty at Stanford.

Moore is a graduate of South Carolina University and has endowed the Moore School of Business at SCU. She received her master’s of business administration from George Washington University and made a name for herself by taking bankrupt companies and making them profitable while at Chemical Bank in the 1980s.

She was named president of Rainwater Inc. in 1993 and has been credited with vastly increasing that company’s assets. Fortune Magazine named Moore one of the 50 Most Powerful Women in Business in 1998.

Augusta National admitted two women to its membership. What will we see next, flying pigs or ice water in hell?

For golf tips and video, visit www.toledoohiogolflessons.com. Follow on Twitter: @tolohgolfr.

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