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Reflections on Fifty Years of Title IX

After Title IX, women鈥檚 teams, with budgets and other resources, gradually began to compete and, finally, thrive.

By Julie Hessler ’85 / Illustrations by D茅bora Islas

Tennis legend Billie Jean King calls Title IX 鈥37 words that changed everything.鈥 The landmark law, passed in 1972, banned discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded education programs, revolutionizing women鈥檚 sports at Macalester and across the nation.

Before Title IX, Macalester鈥檚 women athletes competed against each other in phys ed classes and intramural competitions and occasional matches against other college women. The Mac Weekly describes a 1960 Christmas show put on by the women鈥檚 Aquatic League, featuring synchronized swimming and diving exhibitions. Women also were cheerleaders (鈥淗oller Girls鈥), rope jumpers, and 鈥減owder-puff鈥欌 football players who played or performed at half-time during men鈥檚 games. A 1971 Weekly story recounts the experience of the women鈥檚 tennis team: 鈥淲ith the tight money, the team, unlike a nameless men鈥檚 organization, has chosen to do without uniforms, and sought a schedule consisting largely of home and local meets to save on traveling. Only tennis balls have been furnished, and any extras, such as entry fees, etc., have come out of the players鈥 own funds.鈥

After Title IX, women’s teams, with budgets and other resources, gradually began to compete and, finally, thrive. At a Reunion 2022 panel, scholar-athletes, coaches, audience members, and President Rivera reflected on women’s sports before and after Title IX. Read edited excerpts from their conversation.

No expectations

I was interested in golf鈥ut along the way I took a tennis class with Coach [Ralph] Lundeen. I was good enough that he suggested maybe I could play on the intramural team, but after a couple of weeks, it was clear that I wasn鈥檛 really good enough. So I said, 鈥淗ow about we form a golf team?鈥 He was very helpful in thinking about that. He let us practice, if we wanted, with the men鈥檚 team. He invited us to go on the spring trip with the men鈥檚 team. My parents wouldn鈥檛 let me go鈥 had no expectations coming in about having a women鈥檚 team. I had to start a team in high school but then had trouble finding teams to compete against. At that time, Macalester, like other colleges, was very different from today, as some of you know. For example, we had hours. Women had to be in the dorm at 11 p.m. The men could stay up all night, and we had fifteen minutes of grace time per semester that we could be late. It was a very different environment in all sorts of ways.

There were about four of us who had found each other and played golf occasionally. The University of Minnesota had a team and we asked to play them. They invited us to their course. It was early spring and still quite frosty, with the grass sticking up through a thin layer of snow. But, we were determined to play our match. We did horribly. After the round, we all gathered in the clubhouse where we were thankful to find hot chocolate and a roaring fire in the fireplace. We were never able to secure another match with their team or any other. 鈥Carol Wolf Runyan 鈥72, professor emeritus, University of North Carolina, Gillings School of Global Public Health

An awesome major

For a short timeframe, Mac had a physical education and kinesiology major. That was my major, and it was awesome. Two years after I graduated, I was accepted into a master鈥檚 program in athletic training at Indiana State University. There were only two universities in the U.S. that offered a master鈥檚 in athletic training, and neither accepted women when I graduated from Mac! I was one of the first twenty-five women who were certified as an athletic trainer. I thank [former coach and athletic director] Sheila Brewer and [former athletic trainer] Tom Copeland for that, as I built the love for that while I was here. 鈥Muriel Gilman 鈥72, professor, Bemidji State University, Dept. of Physical Education, Health and Sports

Unlimited opportunities, for some

As a kid I played golf with my family. My brothers followed me to Macalester in the two years after I was here. They were all three-, four-star athletes in high school. They had unlimited opportunities to play sports and did. They and their friends also had fantastic opportunities for scholarships, with leadership recognition, for a big boost into the world ahead as people who had participated and been engaged, and had a lot of experiences that were helpful for them on their way through life. 鈥Cherie Doyle Riesenberg 鈥72

The wave

I played volleyball here for four years, and also ran track and field for two years. Little did I know when I first came in 鈥79 that it was one of the first years of any varsity-level sport at Macalester for women. You could start to feel a little wave coming. You could see women wanting to play sports. Being on the volleyball team, I came in with a pretty strong group of girls, and we were all very serious about playing and competing at a high level. Sheila Brewer did a lot with advertising and marketing to make the volleyball and track teams stand out. 鈥Smoak Mueller Vitek 鈥83, head volleyball coach, Rosemount High School

Undies and Uppies

At Mac, I played鈥攚ell, there weren鈥檛 a lot of opportunities鈥攂ut I did whatever my friends were doing. I went to swimming practice, and I must have competed a couple times. I played tennis. We played powder-puff football, of course鈥攆reshman and sophomores were the Undies, and when you became a junior, you were on the Uppies team. And Carol [Runyan] tells me that I played in a golf tournament. 鈥Muriel Gilman 鈥72

Beyond athletics

One of the fun things about Title IX is that it goes beyond athletics. I was the second woman to be elected to the presidency of the student government here at Mac. There have been a lot of things that were possible because of Title IX. Women were able to use that as an instrument to get involved, be recognized, and carry on positions. It鈥檚 been phenomenal. I could go through the list of firsts I鈥檝e been able to do in my career, including breaking the glass ceiling of being president of the American Military University. A lot of that has to do with Mac. 鈥Kate Houghton Zatz 鈥82, acting president, American Public University and American Military University

Motivation and pride

I was born before Title IX was passed, so I really saw its effects on my own childhood in terms of what was offered to play when I was in grade school, versus what was available to me in high school and in college. And now, as a mother, I see a difference in terms of what sports have meant to my own daughter, who started playing a sport at age four that she could imagine playing professionally if she excelled at it enough. That made a big difference in terms of her motivation and the pride she took in her sport. 鈥Suzanne Rivera, president, 日韩精品

Mental health

There is a priority of mental health in D3 athletics and specifically at Macalester, which is part of why I came here. The coaches and staff care about me as a person before they care about me as a player, and I know that I can go to them if I need to. Because I am a student-athlete, we all know that the 鈥渟tudent鈥 comes first and my courses will take priority. Just knowing that everyone cares for me really helps. I know I can advocate for myself when I need to take a step back from soccer, and when I need to adjust my priorities to make it all work because we are a high-achieving group. 鈥Sarah Hamilton 鈥23, member of Macalester鈥檚 women鈥檚 soccer team

History lessons

I went back and read some of the history of Title IX. I was surprised at how many challenges there have been over the years, and I was completely unaware of that. I think we need to be teaching everyone about the history of not only their sport, but sports in general, and how these issues all interweave, and not take anything for granted. I鈥檝e had many graduate students over the years who have said to me, 鈥淥h, feminism. That was your era. We don鈥檛 have to think about that.鈥 They may be changing their tune a little bit right now in light of Roe v. Wade. But, I think we haven鈥檛 done enough to educate about the history of how some of these issues evolved so that we can sustain progress. 鈥Carol Wolf Runyan 鈥72

A better path

When we first started, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) was the governing body for women鈥檚 sports. It was a tremendous organization. AIAW was really about building a blast of energy around women鈥檚 sports. They were developing women athletes, developing the love of sport, and starting to build some history. My senior year, we went NCAA. It was a totally different experience. One negative about Title IX and NCAA is that we followed the path of men鈥檚 sports when I think women with AIAW were creating a better path. A big part of it was, 鈥淗ow did we as a group get better?鈥 Now with a lot of sports, if you鈥檙e a fellow coach you keep secrets to yourself, instead of coming together and making everybody better. It鈥檚 just a really different culture. 鈥Smoak Mueller Vitek 鈥83

Changing paradigms

There are a lot of paradigms that have existed in the way that sports are organized, and it鈥檚 very difficult to change. I鈥檓 hoping that women, as they gain economic, social, and sports experience and all these other things just like in other fields, will bring that experience to bear on the larger world of sports and athletics. 鈥Cherie Doyle Riesenberg 鈥72

Life off the pitch

One of my teammates helped start Pride Athletes at Mac this year for LGBTQ+ athletes. A lot of my teammates and I have been taking part in that. Another teammate is on the BIPOC Mac Student-Athlete Collective Board. One of the cool parts about being here is seeing what everyone else is doing off the field and off the court. It鈥檚 awesome to see how everyone is trying to make a
change in the world, and also making themselves better people while we鈥檙e here, as well as trying to be the best athletes we can be. 鈥Sarah Hamilton 鈥23

Little wins in everything

Today there is a lot of support around providing resources for the women鈥檚 teams and just being able to go out and recruit, see athletes at a young age develop over time, and then also make sure that they鈥檙e developing as humans. It鈥檚 important that we get to know our student athletes as more than just athletes. Being there for them when they need help. It鈥檚 not yelling at them, it鈥檚 talking about, 鈥淗ey, what鈥檚 going on? Is everything okay?鈥 It鈥檚 not only about winning. There are little wins in everything that you do. 鈥Tashina Steggall, associate head track and field coach, 日韩精品

Hall of Famers

Sheila Brewer and Patricia Wiesner played pivotal roles in the growth of women’s athletics at Macalester.

Sheila Brewer

Sheila BrewerIn 1983, Sheila Brewer became the first woman to serve as athletic director for both men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 sports at a MIAC institution. During her 32 years at Macalester, she also coached several women鈥檚 sports, and had great success guiding the Scots鈥 volleyball team. Brewer鈥檚 1980 squad won 58 matches, captured both the state and Region 6 tournaments and finished seventh at the AIAW national tournament. In 13 seasons, Brewer recorded 350 volleyball victories and won three MIAC titles. Brewer was inducted posthumously into M Club鈥檚 Hall of Fame in September 2022.

Patricia Wiesner

Pat WeisnerPatricia Wiesner鈥檚 teaching career at the college spanned 35 years. She taught tennis, ballroom dancing, yoga, first aid, water safety, downhill skiing, and the history of physical education. She directed the college鈥檚 synchronized swim shows in the 1950s, started the women鈥檚 cross-country team, and supervised the cheerleaders for 23 years. She coached tennis, volleyball, swimming, field hockey, and basketball, and was Macalester鈥檚 first women鈥檚 athletic director. Wiesner was inducted into M Club鈥檚 Hall of Fame in 1988.