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Women Get First Full Memberships At Tokyo 2020 Golf Course

The Kasumigaseki Country Club has allowed women to have full memberships for the first time in decades. Here, a golfer is seen on the club's course, which will host men's and women's golf at the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics.
Jonathan Ernst
/
Reuters
The Kasumigaseki Country Club has allowed women to have full memberships for the first time in decades. Here, a golfer is seen on the club's course, which will host men's and women's golf at the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics.

Under pressure to change its policies or lose the right to host golf at the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics, an exclusive golf club has now accepted three women as full members, breaking with decades of gender discrimination.

Founded in 1929, the private Kasumigaseki Country Club was picked to host the men's and women's Olympic tournaments. But the International Olympic Committee reiterated last year that if the club wanted to host the Olympics, it would have to change.

Women have been allowed to play the club's two 18-hole courses – but never on Sunday, and not as full members. The club voted to change its membership rules last year.

The golf club is in Saitama prefecture, northwest of downtown Tokyo. Its membership policies were put in the spotlight in January of 2017, when Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike said, "I feel very uncomfortable about women not being able to become a regular member in this era."

Shaded by large pine trees, the lush course is dotted with dogwoods and hydrangeas. It's where President Trump played with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe when he visited Japan in November. And it's been gearing up for the Olympics, including a course redesign by Tom and Logan Fazio in 2016.

The club's general manager, Hiroshi Imaizumi, says it previously had two female full members – but that was around four decades ago, reports The Japan Times. Ending the ban, he said, "is the trend of the time."

"It always understood it would have to be gender equal," IOC Vice President John Coates said of Kasumigaseki in early 2017. But Coates also said time was running out for the club's members to adapt.

Despite the public pressure, the Tokyo-area club has largely avoided the outcry that hit Scotland's historic Muirfield golf club – which was tossed from the British Open's rotation of venues in 2016, after its members voted to preserve its 270-year-old ban on women becoming members. The club lifted the ban in 2017, after a second vote.

Like many prestigious courses, Kasumigaseki has a strict dress code. For much of the year, a blazer or jacket must be worn at the time of arrival, for instance. There are also standards for covering the legs.

"Miniskirts, hot pants, tights, and leggings are not allowed for women," the club's rules state. "Golf skirts and culottes should be no shorter than 5 centimeters above the knee."

Both men and women can wear shorts – provided they end above the knee and are not too short. Only women can wear sleeveless shirts. Anyone who pops their shirt collar up out on the course must know that "the collar should be turned down in the clubhouse," the rules state.

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Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.