MAKE THE SWITCH TEEING OFF page 39 to One on One Athletic Club NEW TENNIS DIRECTOR ARMAND MOLINO WELCOMES YOU WITH A 2-FOR-1 SPECIAL ON ANNUAL TENNIS MEMBERSHIPS $216 FOR TWO ADULTS Roberta Madorsky tees off. • Permanent court time • Leagues beginning September 7 • Travel teams and USIA teams • Group tennis clinics for all levels • Private instruction • Complete locker facilities • Kids' Center/Nursery for child care • Snack bar and lounge ONE ATHLETIC CLUB a new era Call Debby today for information 626-9880 Promotion ends 8/31/93. Membership is for one year. Offer not available to previous members of One on One since 1/1/93. Thompson, teaching profes- sional at Knollwood Country Club in West Bloomfield, more women are taking up golf and staying with it. "Golf is a game that any- one can play at any age," says Thompson. "Women past the age of 30 or 35 used to be intimidated by the game; they would start tak- ing lessons, find it very diffi- cult and then quit. That's just not happening as often. "They still find it difficult, but they're continuing their lessons, practicing on the range, and enjoying the game with other women players like themselves." Playing at an 8-handicap and heading toward a 7, Knollwood member Roberta Madorsky of Bloomfield Hills believes that more women are playing golf because it's becoming more acceptable for women to see themselves as athletic and still be feminine. "Golf is athletic," says Madorsky. "Women are learning that it's OK to hit the ball hard, to drive the ball 200 yards, to practice and take lessons. It's part of the change in a woman's total attitude in how she sees herself. - "A bonus from this change is that more men and women are playing on the course as couples and in mixed groups. (Husband) Irwin and I golf together at least once a week for 18 holes and often squeeze in an extra nine during the evening." According to Dennis Spaulding, head profession- al at Tam-O-Shanter in West Bloomfield, not only are more women taking up the game, they are also tak- ing a greater responsibility for their own game. "Today, women select their own golf clubs rather than relying on someone's hand-me-down set," says Spaulding. "And more women are taking lessons from a professional rather than learning how to play from their husbands or fathers, who may or may not know what they're doing. "They are also more confi- dent, and not looking over their shoulder to see who may be looking at them play or practice." According to Missy Pollack of Ann Arbor, a Tam member, as more women play the links, attitudes are changing. Although the impetus for equal access to the golf course was legisla- tion, gender issues regard- ing membership remain a problem. "Clubs often get around the gender issue by having a couple designate one spouse as the member, usually the man, and the other as the non-member," says Pollack. "For some clubs, this may mean only members can vote, serve on the board, or get a Sunday morning tee time." While many clubs are still in the process of restructur- ing their rules regarding membership, voting rights and access to the golf course, Wabeek in Bloomfield Township recently resolved such mat- ters. Last year, Andrea Culberson of Bloomfield Hills appeared before the Wabeek board to request equal starting times for women. "One previous rule was that unless a woman worked full time, she was not permitted to tee off on Saturday before 11 a.m.," says Culberson. "However, non-working men had no such restrictions. "At the time, there were loud cries that the board had opened Pandora's Box and all sorts of trouble would ensue, including slow play and lack of etiquette," recalls Culberson. "What's happened is that women are getting more respect as com- petent players and as work- ing members of the club's committee structure." Most clubs have long accepted the quasi-member- ship role of a woman who is