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Women
Athletes Take the Spotlight
The
renovation of the Lapham Field House to accommodate women and men
equally represents a milestone in Yale's acceptance of women as
full-fledged athletes.
November
1993
by Marc Wortman
Competitive
rowing has always meant a hefty measure of pain for its practitioners,
but for Yale's first women crews, there was even more discomfort
off the water than on it. Fully seven years after the admission
of female undergraduates in 1969, the women's crew still had no
facilities of its own at the Derby boathouse, and the situation
was getting hazardous. In the late fall of 1975, the women would
end their daily workouts on the Housatonic River and stow their
shells and oars just as the men did. But then, while the men showered
and changed in their own locker room, the women sat huddled on the
bus, their sweat mingling with the melting ice on their warmups,
until the men were ready for the 30-minute ride back to Payne
Whitney. That year several team members fell ill; a few developed
pneumonia and ended up in the hospital. Despite repeated requests
from team members for even temporary changing facilities, Yale said
only that it would eventually renovate the existing structure to
accommodate them. No administrator could say when.
Change, concluded team
captain Christine Ernst '76, who had rowed to a silver medal in
the previous summer's world championships and went on to row in
the summer Olympics, would never happen without forcing the issue.
"We had plenty of time to sit on the bus and stew and plot,"
she recalled recently. On March 4 of that year, Ernst and 17 teammates
marched into the office of Joni Barnett, now director of community
relations but then the director of women's athletics. The students
stripped off their shirts. Written across their bare chests and
backs were the words "TITLE IX," representing the 1972
civil rights code that mandated equal opportunity for women in federally
supported institutions. Ernst read a statement demanding boathouse
facilities of their own. The New York Times and other national
media quickly picked up the well-planted story. A few days later
a heated trailer with showers and lockers arrived in Derby. By the
next racing season, the University had finally made good on its
original promise by giving the women a locker room of their own.
In the
intervening years, attitudes about the place of women as athletes
at Yale have changed dramatically,
and there is no better symbol of that than what has happened to
the Lapham Field House adjacent to the Bowl. When it opened in 1923,
the building provided locker rooms for football, track-and-field,
soccer, and baseball. By the time women were added to the mix 50
years later, the already overcrowded building was badly deteriorated,
and the women suffered the most. But when Lapham was rededicated
this past September 18 following a thorough renovation, no one was
complaining about substandard facilities for either gender.
Renamed the Lapham Field
House
at the Joel E.
Smilow ('54) Field Center in honor of the major donor (who five
years ago endowed the position of head football coach), the $7-million
project reflects the latest in the care and equipping of college
athletes. The existing structure was expanded by some 14,000 square
feet to accommodate locker rooms, training facilities, storage,
and an elegant reception area. Through it all, careful attention
was paid by the architects (the firm of Edward Larrabee Barnes/John
M.Y. Lee) to serving the needs of female and male athletes equally.
"We made the effort to insure parity of facilities and space
assignment," says Athletic Director Ed Woodsum ('53, '58LLB).
"This will eliminate inequities among teams."
The very idea that someone
like Woodsum believes that women deserve equal facilities represents
the evolving attitude surrounding female athletics at Yale. A former
football star and University trustee, Woodsum attended Yale in an
era when coeducation was still a generation away and women had no
business on its athletic fields except as spectators. Some women's
coaches claim that when Woodsum arrived at his Ray Tompkins House
office six years ago (he will be returning to his native Maine at
the end of his term next spring), he was less than fully enthusiastic
about the cause of women athletes. Now, he insists, "I don't
care if it's a man or a woman: Athletes here are self-starters,
high achievers, and their feelings about the University are framed
by their athletic experience. That's the attitude Yale should be
fostering." Citing as an example the nationally competitive
women's cross country team, Woodsum says with evident fervor, "I
admire those young athletes as much as the running back with 4.4
speed or the guard with the soft jump shot. There is the same intensity,
commitment, and dedication. An athlete's an athlete."
Those
qualities have helped propel Yale women into the upper echelons
of the Ivy League
and, in some cases, won them national recognition. Last year, women's
softball, swimming, gymnastics, and soccer all won Ivy titles and
performed well in post-season competition against nationally ranked
teams. The women's four won the national crew championship. In 18
years, the gymnastics team has won the Ivy title nine times, never
finishing below second, and has been ranked as high as fourth in
the nation. Cross country, which placed among the nation's top ten
squads three years running (1987-89), fencing (third in the nation
last year), and squash (the 1992 national champions) have been historically
strong, and the recently beefed-up basketball program has shown
marked improvement. Two athletes were named finalists for the ncaa
Woman of the Year Award in successive years: Kristine Campbell '91,
captain of the fencing team, and lacrosse captain Catherine Sharkey
'92. Over the years, a handful of Yale women have competed in the
Olympics, and many more have been honored as All-Americans; several
have gone on to careers as coaches of their own teams.
Those accomplishments
are all the more impressive for the brief span of time in which
they occurred. Yale's first women athletes took the field in 1970
as members of a field hockey club (the athletic department also
offered women synchronized swimming and a handful of other more
"feminine" physical education courses). A tennis squad
was organized in 1971. The teams were granted varsity status in
1973 and were followed by swimming, squash, crew, fencing, gymnastics,
and basketball by the end of 1974. Because Yale maintained a policy
of not launching sports programs for women unless students first
indicated an interest, some potential athletes spent their entire
college careers lobbying for a team and never got to play at all.
The promulgation
of Title IX of the federal Civil Rights Code in the spring of 1972
first aroused administrators' concern about the need to bring women's
programs into line with the men's. At the time of the crew team
protest, Yale had two years left before the federal government required
full compliance with the ordinance, but enforcement remained rare.
Anne Keating '77 remembers playing on varsity teams that were less
like the men's programs than club sports. At a school with more
than 120 years of tradition behind its male intercollegiate athletic
programs, the needs of the men always came first. As the athletics
department now readily admits, meals, travel arrangements, coaching
staffs, practice fields and times, and even uniforms were inadequate
at best for women. Teams practiced in parking lots or on the varsity
fields after the men finished; they were forced to borrow uniforms,
and to stay with friends for away games. "Anything we wanted,"
says Keating, "we had to fight for."
For the first years,
the only places available to the women at Lapham were the press
room and the basement, which they shared with their opponents and
which was frequently flooded during bad weather. "It was the
most unbelievable pit," recalls Athletics Capital Projects
manager Jack Merrill '67, who directed the renovation of the building.
"We finally had to shut it down."
Barbara Tonry, a former
Olympic gymnast and women's gymnastics coach since 1975, says, "We've
come a long way from borrowing uniforms from the high school team,
where I also coached. For years, it was tough just looking presentable."
These days, gymnastics meets draw close to 300 spectators, and the
teams compete successfully against schools that offer athletic scholarships.
(Still, most Yale fans know the gymnasts better for their work parking
cars at the Bowl during football season to raise travel money.)
There
is no longer any lack of opportunity to compete.
The Hartford Courant last year in a series of articles on
the impact in Connecticut of Title IX found that more than 65 percent
of Yale's nearly 1,000 intercollegiate athletes are men while men
compose around 55 percent of the total student body. This places
Yale squarely in the upper ranks of schools around the nation, but
a significant gap remains. "You need relative parity of
numbers in the student population at large and in sports programs,"
explains Woodsum. He notes that team budgets also figure into the
recent interpretations of the statute. "You can't get away
with women's programs as mere shells of men's," he says. Even
at Yale, the so-called "showcase" sports-men's basketball,
football, and ice hockey-have budgets far exceeding those for women
(football alone has seven full-time coaches, a 95-member varsity,
and a 50-member junior varsity, while the women's teams have a maximum
of 25 players and three coaches).
At a time when the University
faces a budget deficit, bringing the athletic program into relative
parity seems all but impossible without cutting existing programs
or finding some new source of revenue. Woodsum has already exercised
the first option, by cutting wrestling and water polo. Those cuts
provoked loud criticism and a lawsuit by alumni of the wrestling
squads.
That suit was dismissed,
but similar actions at other schools have had better success. Members
of the gymnastics and volleyball teams at Brown last spring sued
to protest the cutting of their programs and forced the school to
reinstate them, and Cornell women are now taking legal action to
block planned cuts of fencing and gymnastics. Princeton, which eliminated
its wrestling team last year, may face a reverse-discrimination
suit. Wrestlers there contend that their relatively less-prominent
sport was cut because the school was unwilling to increase women's
programs to comply with Title IX and instead dropped a men's program
to bring the numbers more into line.
To avoid additional
cuts at Yale, administrators are being forced to find new ways to
pay for existing programs, but the search has some built-in problems.
This is especially true for women's ice hockey, which has a part-time
coach, limited ice time at Ingalls Rink, and mediocre locker rooms,
while the men's team has three full-time coaches, a national schedule,
and facilities that have recently undergone a major renovation.
"Women's ice hockey needs time to develop," points out
Varsity Sports director Barbara Chesler. "There are only nine
Division 1 teams in the country." Others argue that as long
as women's programs are treated as second-class teams at the most
prominent places, such as Yale, no progress is likely to be made
at all at other schools.
Another
aspect of support for women's athletics at Yale and elsewhere is
historical. Men's
teams have century-long traditions and well-developed means to elicit
alumni support in both funding and recruiting. Endowments and sports
associations help cover expenses such as travel, special team banquets,
and (when things are at their best) championship rings. "We're
only about 20 years into sports coeducation," says Chesler,
"and that's not very many alums. There are maybe ten times
as many men." Adds Tonry: "Young alumnae give back, but
$10 or $15 doesn't go very far."
Lacking strong outside
financial support, Yale attempts to cover costs for women out of
its general funds, but coming up with the money can be difficult.
"We're making a conscious effort to even things out,"
says Woodsum. "We want the experience to be comparable. My
goal is to be competitive, and if it requires trips to the West
Coast for recruits, we need to figure out how to do that."
Coaches are the first
to recognize the efforts being made-and to voice concern that more
needs to be done. Women's soccer coach Felice Duffy is now in her
ninth year at Yale. Her team won Yale's first women's Ivy soccer
title last year and finished 17th nationally out of more than 80
Division 1 schools, most of which offer soccer scholarships. She
knows the ramifications of Title IX intimately. As an undergraduate
at the University of Connecticut, Duffy forced the school to create
a women's soccer program by filing and winning a Title IX suit.
She went on to become an All-American and a leading proponent of
the sport for women. (In the wake of recent Title IX decisions,
50 other Division 1 schools plan to launch women's soccer programs
in the next two to three years.) "Since I've been here,"
Duffy says, "there has been tremendous growth in women's programs.
Yale is one of the more progressive places relative to other programs
in the country. If there were no money constraints, then Yale would
be truly equal between men and women." Cecelia DeMarco, who
is in her fourth year as women's basketball coach, concurs. "I'm
proud of where we are," she says. "But just because we're
ahead of other schools doesn't mean we're where we should be."
While
women's programs have yet to achieve complete parity with the men
in funding and facilities, earning respect for their play is no
longer the problem it once was. "Yale heralds success,"
says Duffy. "The whole environment here is based on achievement.
The kids are proud of being female athletes at Yale because they
know what it takes."
One of the proudest
is this year's crew captain, Eliza Miller '94, a member of the national
championship four, who has seen major progress even in her three
years at Yale. "Crew is a really, really sexist sport,"
she says. "When I was a freshman, the senior men were horrible.
The men's team's attitude has become so much healthier. Now I feel
we're really fortunate to be here." Especially in comparison
to a semester she spent studying and rowing at Oxford. "Everything
there was for the men," she says. "Yale is an exception.
They want to give us what we want here." As an example, she
points out that the women and lightweight men's crew have recently
linked their alumni associations and share in the benefits from
fundraising.
While female athletes
rarely suffer the "dumb jock" labels that occasionally
plague the men, there are other stereotypes they must face, such
as a fear of losing their femininity by becoming too physically
imposing. "Some have a resistance to lifting weights,"
says Duffy, who considers year-round strength conditioning vital
to her team's success. "They say, 'I don't want to bulk up.'
But the more athletes we get in, the less resistance there is."
The stereotypes about "Amazons" and lesbians are also
fading. Says DeMarco: "These young women will not tolerate
being discriminated against because of things they are or do."
In February, alumnae
will be invited back to campus to review the state of women's athletics
as part of the National Women's and Girls' Sports Week celebration.
To mark the event, Yale's athletics department will also hold a
25th anniversary celebration of the beginnings of coeducation in
sports. "I hope a lot of people come back," says Chesler.
"They were pioneers. They really struggled in the 1970s, and
they deserve to be recognized."
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