Dear Prowlers:
I am too exhausted to write my regular column. I caught the
social conscience bug and flew to Augusta, Georgia, to help Martha
Burk fight the good fight for women’s rights. (I guess in this
circumstance, it’s for one woman’s right.)
I called Burk at the last minute after I heard a rumor that they
had a block of hotel rooms reserved in Augusta, something almost as
difficult to do as get passes to the tournament itself. Not
surprisingly, she questioned my bona fides.
“Sure,” she said, “you support fringe issues equal pay for women
and childcare in the workplace, but you never took a stand on my
crusade to get a Sacagawea coin without her carrying a baby. And
where were you when I was getting retailers to stop selling AND1
T-shirts with the slogan, ‘Your game is as ugly as your
girlfriend’?”
I won her over with my plan to go under deep cover at the
tournament. Not satisfied with the crummy remote location to which
we protesters were relegated, I would infiltrate the grounds and
bring the place down from the inside during the final round.
I rode with the other protesters on the bus. There weren’t many
people there, and those in attendance clearly wished they were
someplace else. I was going to ask about the low turnout but the
other protesters avoided me, probably because of my disguise.
(Because I had no ticket, I did what Gandhi would do in this
situation: dress up as an overweight hooker with a goatee and
demand admission by threatening a storm of media coverage if I was
denied.)
Martha gave me a dirty look, but she had bigger fish to fry. The
protest site looked like a swamp, and our only company was the Klan
and a group protesting against the protests. They had a TV and a
cooler and Martha was sorely pressed to enforce the
no-fraternization policy.
Tottering on my high heeds in the mud, I snuck in past the
guard, but I could sense about a half-dozen security personnel
ready to pounce on me as soon as I made a move toward the
course.
As a diversionary tactic, I ducked into the souvenir tent. While
they waited outside, I took as long as possible, buying everything
in sight: shot glasses, towels, playing cards, a hand-tooled
leather wallet, a golf shirt, sleeves of golf balls. Each item
prominently featured the Augusta National logo. Stripping off the
skirt and fishnets — I took the precaution of wearing shorts
beneath this outfit, stuffing more sensible shoes into the size
48EE bra — I put on my new golf shirt and topped off the ensemble
with a yellow Augusta bucket hat, unisex to signal my devotion to
the cause.
Wandering by the putting green, I heard a roar on the course.
Did Augusta National announce it offered Queen Noor of Jordan
membership? No, it was just an eighty-foot birdie putt on the
second hole by Phil Mickelson. I thought Phil, of all people,
should understand the importance of women’s rights, with two
daughters. But I saw the Ford logo on his shirt on the Jumbotron
and knew he was as bad as the rest. (Remember Ford’s demeaning
slogan? “Have you driven a Ford, lady.”)
I broke into a run, looking for a place to protest for the
afternoon, hopefully where I could get some sun.
I was chasing down Mickelson when I saw Jeff Maggert, leading
the tournament, on the third hole, hitting out of a fairway bunker.
Maggert is a Ping spokesman and I thought briefly about running
across the fairway and pointing out Ping’s anti-women ways. I know
that Ping sponsors the Solheim Cup and an LPGA event, and has
numerous female staff pros and gives millions to women’s golf. But
they pay men to promote their product at an event held at
a club that has no women members. How could Maggert be so blind to
this?
His bunker shot hit the lip, bounced back, and hit him in the
chest, leading to a two-stroke penalty and a triple bogey. I almost
felt bad for him, until I realized he could always console himself
by applying for membership to Augusta National.
A little later, I heard a sound like a cannon from the eighth
hole. It startled me so much I almost dropped my delicious,
inexpensive egg salad sandwich. (Augusta National is the
anti-Disney when it comes to pricing its food and merchandise.
Disney, though, doesn’t discriminate against women.) I figured that
maybe Hootie Johnson called an impromptu press conference to offer
memberships to Nancy Lopez and Sandra Day O’Connor, but it was only
a chip-in birdie by Len Mattiace.
After that, I admit that I drifted in my protest, much like
Martin Luther King, Jr., might during a long march, saving his
strength. I determined the best place to protest was in the
bleachers between the fifteenth and sixteenth greens. The view of
both holes was awesome from there. You could acutely sense the
injustice of the club not having women members. I didn’t see any
opportunities to advance the cause of women, but I saw some great
golf.
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