Two Loves Julee Roth enjoys moving over the water, whether it's warm or frozen. SUSAN WEINGARDEN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS I t's like playing chess on a moving board," says Julee Roth of her love for competitive sailing. "The course is al- ways changing and I love the challenge. I love feeling the wind in my face and the bugs in my teeth. And I love the water, frozen or otherwise." To prove that point, Ms. Roth, 27, di- vides her time. Her summers are spent in Michigan as the program director of the junior, sailing, adult and ladies sailing pro- grams at the Great Lakes Yacht Club. From November to April, she is in charge of the snowboard program for the Aspen Ski Company in Snowmass, Colo. "I feel very fortunate that I am paid to enjoy my hobbies," she says. Her interest in sailing and skiing came naturally via her parents, Michael and Janie Roth of Bloomfield Hills. "I've been sailing since my parents joined the Great Lakes Yacht Club when I was 3," Julee says. "I was in the junior program as a child, but I really learned to sail from my dad. "In the winter, we spent vacations in Snowmass and I've always loved skiing. Snowboarding is like skiing, but both feet are on one board that is wider than a ski." Roth employs the same principles when teaching the two sports. "The key words are comfort and confidence," she says. "Ba- sically, you expose the student to the equipment, teach them the mechanics, and build their confidence by repetition." In the junior sailing program at GLYC, which teaches about 20 children age 9 to 17, students first go out in a Sonar sail- boat. "It is a larger, more stable boat so they will feel more comfortable on the wa- ter," she says. "They have to experience the motion and feel the spray, and as their confidence builds they learn to steer the boat and pull the lines." Students then graduate to smaller boats, like a Flying Junior or Laser II. Cap- size and man-overboard drills emphasize safety training before skills are mastered. "Kids learn about wind directions and tacking a course, and we set up buoys as a mini race course. After about two weeks they can take a boat out alone." To teach skiing or snowboarding, Roth first has students put the equipment on so they can feel the sensation of sliding. "The first step is learning control, which comes from knowing how to stop and how to turn the skis," she says. "You get stu- dents down the mountain by teaching them to take one turn at a time. They learn to talk themselves into doing it and they learn not to be afraid." Following her gradu- Julee Roth's ation from Andover summer venue. High School, Roth stud- ied economics for two years at the Amer- ican College of Switzerland. She returned to Michigan and took classes at Wayne State. While selling real estate, she vol- unteered at the Great Lakes Yacht Club to help reorganize the junior sailing pro- gram, and the following year became the first member ever hired to direct it. "Julee is like the CEO of the junior sail- ing program," says Patti Kommel, secre- tary of the Great Lakes Yacht Club. "She took a program that was on its knees and turned it around so that we now have the respect of other clubs. She is well-respected in the racing community." Roth reorganized the program with a manual she wrote after attending semi- nars and investigating other clubs. Under her direction, the budget increased from $7,000 to approximately $50,000, and is divided between instructor wages, equip- ment and maintenance, and miscellaneous items such as weekly programs and re- gattas. Her administrative duties limit her in- struction time, and teaching is what she likes best."She has a wonderful rapport with the kids and tailor-makes the pro- gram to suit their needs," says Mrs. Kom- mel, whose daughter is in the program. "She gives them a wonderful sense of pride." Seeing the accomplishments of the kids, says Roth, is the best part of both her jobs. "Their smiles are my reward. In both sail- ing and skiing we set kids up to succeed. I teach them to respect their environment and provide them with a sense of achieve- ment at the same time." When her sailing students asked ques- tions that books did not address, Roth wrote and published an advanced sailing manual for children called Get Ready Get Set Go! In addition to covering funda- mentals such as proper sailing terms, weather and safety, Roth took her book one step further. "It is a very practical manual and I discuss things like what causes storms, what to do if you are caught in a storm, how to fix things, how to use the radio, and the importance of seaman- ship and attitude." Now in its second printing, the book is used by sailing programs, marine compa- nies and trade shows, and is available at local bookstores. Roth plans to continue her writing and is working on three new projects. When time allows, she races on Hippie Chick, the 19-foot Lightning sailboat that she keeps at the Pontiac Yacht Club on Cass Lake, or visits her parents in Charlevoix, where the family sails a new 65-foot yacht, the Micjay. She joined them in July for the Chicago-to-Mackinac race. "Julee was our tactician," says her father, Michael Roth. "She plotted our di- rection and told us where the wind would Mixing sailing and snowboarding. be. She's extremely knowledgeable and I totally respect her opinions. We finished 17th overall out of 252 boats." Though she admits to occasionally ex- periencing fear while racing in a storm, she usually finds it exhilarating. When the boat is reeling, and the thunder is threatening, Roth is in her glory. "Safety is the No. 1 issue, and you have TWO LOVES page 118