Athlady May Issue

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ATHLADY May 2013 Chelsea Robie Bomber Gymnastics’ newest face page 10 —Ouch! Doesn’t that hurt... May’s Do-Gooder Kaitlin Hardy flips with fruit flies for a good cause page 3 40 years after Title IX passing, has anything changed? page 7

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The digital sports magazine written by women for women. This month's issue features articles on the Ithaca gymnastics team and the 40th Anniversary of Title IX.

Transcript of Athlady May Issue

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ATHLADY

May 2013

Chelsea RobieBomber

Gymnastics’ newest face page 10

—Ouch! Doesn’t that hurt...

May’s Do-Gooder

Kaitlin Hardy flips with fruit flies for a good

cause page 3

40 years after Title IX passing, has anything changed?

page 7

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ATHLADYMay3 FACES of EpilepsyCornell Gymnast Kaitlin Har-dy was diagnosed with ep-ilepsy at age 19. Now she’s helping others with the dis-ease.

7 Title IX 40 years laterOn it’s 40 year anniversary, has the legislation changed anything?

12 Chelsea RobieA one on one with the news-est star of Bomber Gymnas-tics

14 In syncThe Ithaca College synchro-nized skating team is ready for their own rink

16 Bump and DiveVolleyball girls take on a challenge

Everything elseyou need

5 It’s ok if...A list of this month’s latest fe-male athlete woes

10 Run girlA workout playlist you need to download ASAP

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Kaitlin Hardy has taken a message of understanding to 14 elementary schools in Tompkins County about liv-ing and succeeding with epilepsy. She knows the topic well. When she was 19, she had to take a medical leave from Cor-nell University because of epilepsy. During her recovery she developed a program, FACES: Facts, Advocacy, and Control of Epileptic Seizures to assist people with seizure disorders manage epilepsy and build self-esteem.

Athlady’s May Do-Gooder

Cornell gymnast raises awareness for epilepsyBy Megan Goldschmidt

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So far through FACES, Hardy and her co-founder, Daniel Nicholls, helped to start a research lab component entirely run by undergraduate students. The students conduct experiments with various seizure medications on fruit flies and record the effects. She has published a children’s book with Nicholls called “Baseballs and Little Falls,” about epilepsy and seizures. The two also have regular speaking engagements to inform audiences about living with seizures. Ann Dipetta, a Trumansburg mother whose son has epilepsy, attended one of Hardy’s speaking engagements about seizure disor-der, and was in tears. “I felt a variety of things. I felt admiration for her as a person because she is strong and intelli-gent and very brave. I also felt appreciation for the work that she is doing and the support she pro-vides to other people who are facing similar challenges.” Dipetta said that Hardy and FACES helps her child to connect with other people that are facing the same issue, and that in turn helps her as a parent because it’s hard to know how to help her child sometimes. “Having peers who are going through the same thing is so valuable. Not even just peers but friends; people in your life who are going through the same its really valuable and you don’t feel so alone. As a parent, I see how important research is, and probably the most important thing for me is that my child is well served and is getting the proper doses of medication that are safe,” Dipetta said. “So in that regard, I so appreciate the work that she’s doing. Its really so broad and so well rounded; she provides sort of this personal support and inspiration but also really valuable scientific work.”

Hardy first started having seizures in high school, but after suffering a concussion at gymnastics practice during her freshman year of college, went home on doctor’s orders and could not drive or practice for six months. “It’s really embarrassing. You draw a lot of attention to yourself. If you’re a person who has a seizure people think it’s a huge deal and don’t know how to act around you. I didn’t want to be seen with the girl with all of these problems,” Hardy said. While home on leave and under her grandparents care, Hardy remembered something one of her sports medicine doctors said about a hockey player at Cornell who also had epilepsy. She sent him an email, initially not even thinking about starting an organization. She just wanted to talk to another student athlete who would know exactly what she was going through. That hockey player was Nicholls. Hardy said Nicholls is the reason her attitude about epilepsy changed. “Yeah tremendously, it’s like night and day. We would do speaking events and talk about our situations. I would have everyone in tears and he would have everyone laughing hysterically. He is a person who solidified in my mind that it isn’t something to be embarrassed about; it’s better to make light of it,” Hardy said. In the next couple of years, Hardy’s biggest goal is to take FACES national. “I keep telling people that I want FACES to be as big a campaign as Autism Speaks,” Hardy said. “Epilepsy is more common than autism, and I would love to help people to the same extent that Autism Speaks has. I think this is just the starting point now and I hope we can continue to expand and move outward.”

“It’s really embarrassing. You draw a lot of attention to yourself. If you’re a person who has a seizure people think it’s a huge deal and don’t know how to act

around you. I didn’t want to be seen with the girl with all of these problems.”

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It’sOkayIf...

- You aregoing to missseeingDerek Jeter,and his body,on the field.

- You’re trying to fit in as many gym sessionsas possible before summer.

- You didn’t really care if Louisville had an injured player, you still didn’t want them to win.

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-You want to hitMike Rice in the head with a basketball.

- You can’t wait two more years for the FIFA Women’s World Cup.It’s not ok if....You think Brittney Griner won’t make the NBA.

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40 years after Title IX was passed, disparities

still exist Forty years ago, Title IX was enacted to prevent gender discrim-ination in education programs and activities receiving federal financial assistance.

Today it is most associated with sports, where notable progress has been made. Yet in other areas, disparities remain. The legislation, part of the Education Amendments of 1972, actually covers issues including sexual harass-ment, unequal oppor-tunities in athletics and discrimination based on pregnancy, the National Center for Education Statistics states. But the focus shifted from academics to sports, where there was a flagrant lack of fairness, and Title IX was used to level the playing field, said Mary Jo Kane, director of the University of Minne-sota’s Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women and an expert on gender discrimina-tion in sports. “For example, I’m a professor and I come forward and say I am being discrim-inated against because I have written two

more articles than my male counterpart and he’s making more money,” Kane said. “His counterclaim could be that mine are in less prestigious journals. It’s a hard thing to deter-mine. “But when you have 12 sports with conferences, coaches and uniforms for men and nothing for women in an institution paid for by tax dollars, it’s pretty obvious.” Emily Dane, assistant professor of sport studies at St. John Fisher College, be-

lieves the reason Title IX is associated with sports so much has to do with American culture. When she was growing up, she was affected by the legis-lation through open access to any sport and did not even know it. “Super Bowl Sun-day is a religious hol-iday for some people; for others the Masters is on and it’s ‘I will take four days off of work because I want to watch what happens

at Augusta,’” Dane said. “So when there is this idea about sport being threatened in any way, the historical context of what it means to be a male athlete, people take notice.

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“We don’t hear about those types of other cases that are part of the legislation, be-cause we have so much of a focus on sports.” In terms of academics, women earn the majority of degrees at the collegiate level, but their numbers lag in science, technology, engineering and math. Females make up only 25 percent of the science, technology, engi-neering, and mathematics workforce. Kevin McDonald, vice president and associate provost for diversity and inclusion at Rochester Institute of Technology, finds disparities even with all of the progress Title IX has brought. “Only 18 percent of undergraduate engineering degrees are received by women,” McDonald said. “Think about career education and vocational offerings, automo-tive or electrician fields-those are still heavily dominated by men. Our university is very committed to trying to share those fields with women.” On the sports end, the Women’s Sports Foundation reports, some 294,000 girls com-peted in high school sports the year before Title IX became law; in 2011, the number was nearly 3.2 million. At the college level, 170,000 more women are playing sports than four decades ago.

Uneven progress Yet, WSF figures show, women make up 56 percent of college students but 43 percent of student-athletes. Dane attributes the skewed ratio to leaders, college adminis-trators and athletic directors who may claim lack of funds, inadequate facilities or low interest in a particular program. “They will say there isn’t enough mon-ey, yet if people look at college tuition rates,

it’s obvious there is funding to make things happen,” she said.Progress also is hindered by people who say women athletes are not real athletes, Dane said. “We live in a gendered society and some people still hold a lot of stock in what women and men shall do,” she said. Dane, who did a lecture project in 2009 on Title IX, found roughly 18 percent of col-leges are in compliance with the three-prong test set forth by the law. Schools must meet at least one criterion to comply. The first prong is proportionality: The enrollment of the undergraduate students, male-to-female, has to be proportionate to the athlete population.The second prong is the history in continuing practices that show consistent efforts over a period of time. The third is demand: If all of the stu-dent body’s interest is being met, then no addition is required. “Up until recently the way in which athletic departments were funded was by stu-dent fees,” Kane said. “Well, female students paid the same amount as male students, but the return on that investment was that athlet-ic budgets for females on average nationwide was about 2 to 3 percent of what men got. It was a very clear case of gender discrimina-tion.” The problem with the language of the law, Dane said, is it is vague and difficult to define. For proportionality, some courts have granted a 5 percent leeway in the ratio. She is unsure of the definition in terms of history in continuing practices: Does five years of a continued women’s tennis program constitute history?

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There is no way to measure satisfaction of the third criterion, because student interest could be defined by any number of things, from the current student body to incoming freshmen to high school students being recruited for that institution.

Bridging the gap Another setback Dane points to is the lack of awareness among the younger generation. Most children quit sports by 14, and more girls than boys leave by that age, she said. Dane would like to know why they leave, and she asks for more education on the benefits of staying on the playing field. She cites a now-infamous quote by tennis player Jennifer Capriati, who was asked how Title IX would affect future generations, and her response was, “I don’t know what Title IX is, sorry.” “I think this lack of aware-ness is also one of the biggest threats to the law,” Dane said. “If women and girls don’t know what the reason for their opportunity is, they may not realize what they need to fight for if the law is being challenged.” RIT, because it wants to be a model for Title IX, uses consul-tants to take stock of its programs and efforts in terms of athletics and education. They provide thoughts and recommendations as RIT moves forward, McDonald said. For George VanderZwaag, director of athletics and recreation at the University of Rochester, Title IX has been hugely con-sequential to every decision he

makes about program growth and development. While he said many programs struggle to meet the re-quirements, his is not one of them. “It’s part of the fabric of trying to make difficult decisions; it’s a constant part of what we do, to make sure we meet the legal requirements. I don’t struggle with it,” VanderZwaag said. One great myth around Title IX is it takes away from men’s athletics, Kane said. She believes the fault lies with athletic direc-tors. “If an athlet-ic director doesn’t have as many women participating as men, they typically have three options to get in compliance,” she said. One option is to add a women’s sport like tennis. “And it’s going to cost up to $800,000 a year of recurring money you don’t have for a sport where you’re never going to make a dime,” Kane said. “Your other option is to drop a men’s sport like gymnastics and save. The third option is to walk down the hall and say to the football coach, ‘You don’t get to stay in hotels every night before a home game or fly on private jets to recruit,’” she add-ed. “What athletic directors do when faced with the arms race is drop a men’s sport and say, ‘Don’t blame me. Title IX made me do it.’ It’s been a convenient scapegoat.” Though many people

associate Title IX with sports, Dane said only some 10 percent of complaints filed with the Office of Civil Rights, the organization that deals with Title IX violations, have to do with athletics. The other 90 percent have to do with other forms of discrimination in education. McDonald takes stock of Title IX complaints around RIT. Sexual harassment complaints, not just on his campus, but by and large, are the most common viola-

tions, he said. The progress of Title IX in the next 40 years depends on making sure it stays at the fore-front in the minds of leaders. “It is easy to look at the progress it has made and rest on those past laurels,” McDonald said. “We have to continue to push ourselves and look for equality, and I think if we can do that, then we will be able to bridge those gaps.” -Megan Goldschmidt

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RUN GIRLTen songs guarenteed to pump up

your workout1. Dope- Tyga With it’s low bass and ego boosting lyrics, this rap song will take your tired run to the next level2. Make It Bun Dem- Skrillex This techno reggae mash up will distract you from even noticing the sweat dripping down your face.3. Battle Scars- Lupe Fiasco The inspirational ballad will have you believing you can make it despite all your wounds (or blisters!).4. 5AM in Toronto- Drake Off his new album, a more serious ballad will help you laser in on your exercise.5. Troublemaker- Olly Murs The upbeat song featuring Flo Rida helps put the fun back in a run.6. Jump- Rihanna A harder side to the edgy songtress, this bumping jam will help burn off calories in no time.7. Your Body- Christina Aguilera All she wants to do is love your body, and with this tune in your headphones you’ll want to love your rockin bod too.8. All Night Longer- Sammy Adams The party song will make you want to work out all night long...er.9. High School- Nicki Minaj Great song for a cool down that will still keep you in your work-out mindset.10. Fine China- Chris Brown To end your exercise, put on this calming but energizing track.

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Freshman Chelsea Robie stands under the low bar poised to complete her bar routine. She appears to be completely fo-cused and blocks everything else out, trying to prepare for the difficult 45 seconds ahead of her. Around her the gymnastics team screams her name and cheers her on to what they hope will be victory. “In [United States of America Gymnastics] you’re almost out for yourself; there is no team feeling,” Robie said. “I know now that college gymnastics is about having fun and trying to do well for the team.” USAG is the program that runs all, elite-level gymnastics competition in the United States. Robie went to an extremely small high school that didn’t have a gymnastics team. She went to a local competitive gymnastics academy in Florida and trained about 20 hours a week for an entire year. After a while, the tedious and stressful environment put a damper on her mood and love for the sport. But now in a team environment, she can’t wait to go to practice and improve her tricks. She said she enjoys working on new skills to put into her routines to gain the team a high score, especially a jaeger, which is a front flip release move on the uneven bars. Proving that gymnastics really is her passion, Robie said the only negative about college practices is that they’re too short and she always wants more time to work. “Being a freshman, Chelsea is learning what it’s like to be part of our team,” sophomore Lauren Moroch said. “She is a very caring person and puts in great effort to be a good team member. She is also eager to be prepared. In practice, she trains hard. She plays an important role in our bar lineup.” Robie precedes sophomore Jessica Bolduc, the anchor in the lineup. It’s a hard spot to attain as a freshman and requires a great amount of difficulty in her routine. Starting at age 5, Robie fell in love with gymnastics because of the challenge. She said she knew gymnastics was more than just a childhood recreation activity when she watched Kerri Strug in the 1996 Olympics stick her infamous vault on one leg and went on to win the gold medal.

On The Cover MAY

A Fresh RoutineFreshman gymnast renews love of sport as part of a teamBy Julianne Feller

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Robie said it’s not your average sport and she delights in the fact that people get excited when she says she can do a back flip. At times the sport has been hard be-cause she isn’t able to master a skill, but she continues to try. “She works hard every day in practice and never gives up,” freshman Katie Samp-son, Robie’s roommate, said. “Even when she has a bad turn she gets back up and tries again. Chelsea is an awesome gymnast and friend.” Robie is a more dedi-cated gymnast than most and will stay on an event until she successfully completes her goal for that day. Though they have only lived together for a short time, Sampson said Robie is en-couraging, but also a fun person who she can goof around with outside of the gym.

Though gymnastics is a big part of her life, Robie said she still has time to be a

college fresh-man. She picked Ithaca because of the campus size and overall feel, but the number of people, wind and snow is a big change from her graduating class of sev-en people in Florida. Robie re-cently de-clared her major in inte-grated mar-keting com-munications and said she looks forward to her career as a student athlete. “I want to broaden my horizons,” she said. “I went to such a

small high school that I want to get to know more people, try new classes and just get experiences that I can build on.”

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Awaiting their score as they wait in the “kiss and cry” — the area beside the rink — the skaters of the Cornell University synchro-nized skating team reflect on all the challenges they faced to get to nationals in Minneapolis. When the score of 49.94 flashes on the screen, the skaters are mixed with disappoint-ment and delight. The score is lower than expected, placing them 11th out of 12 teams, but they can call themselves the No. 1 team in New York because they beat their rival, SUNY-Oswego. For the 13 members of the team, go-ing to the nationals March 6 was the defining moment of their season. The athletes practice six hours a week from November to March, traveling back and forth to a rink in Lansing, N.Y., because the hockey teams always oc-cupy Lynah Rink. Besides the fact that the team is unrecognized in Ithaca, many people don’t know the most interesting part of the Cornell club: It is made up of Cornell, Ithaca College and SUNY-Cortland students. Ithaca senior co-captain Kristen Gerringer said only students looking at schools for figure skating would ever know the program existed. “That’s the biggest problem,” Gerringer said. “I didn’t even know about it my fresh-man year, and then from skating in the area I met one of the girls on the team. I tried out the next year and have been doing it ever since. But other than that, no one would

know.” Gerringer said she has tried to get the team recognized on Ithaca’s Web site, but was not able to. Club Sports Program Coordinator Sarah Hawkins said the college only allows recognized student organizations and sports clubs to advertise, so that would be a violation of the rule. Gerringer said the team is made up of almost an equal number of athletes from both Ithaca and Cornell and, therefore, should be funded by both schools.Cornell junior Lauren Gluck said it’s hard for the team to get publicity because they are a club sport. “Not a lot of people know about the team at Cornell,” Gluck said. “We’re able to advertise it through the figure skating team, but the close-knit community of skaters are basically the only students who know of it.” Since the team is a club and not a varsi-ty sport at Cornell, the students are forced to do a lot of fundraising and campaigning for sponsors. The team only gets enough mon-ey to cover its ice time, which came to about $10,500 this year. The athletes had to pay trav-el expenses to nationals this year, but if both schools were to fund the team, Gluck said it could hire a coach and cover a lot more of the expenses.

Getting in syncCornell University and Ithaca College skaters synchonize performance on iceBy Megan Goldschmidt

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“It’s frustrating because most club sports don’t even use the al-lotted amount of money they’re given,” Gluck said. “But we trav-el, and we represent Cornell at a national level, and yet we’re not recognized for it.”The skaters hired a coach before nationals to help them judge the routine from an outside perspective, and all the athletes agreed it helped tremendously. None of the other teams at na-tionals face the challenge of not having a coach, so the team’s goal is merely to not place last in the competi-tion. The skaters make up for not having a coach by practicing a move and then standing around in a circle allowing everyone to give input.“Myself and the other captain work together on what we’ll do in practice, but synchronized skating is so different because if you step out to watch it, it mess-es everything up because you’re missing a person,” Gerringer said.The athletes may all be from different schools, but Ithaca freshman MollyRose Mendell

said they have a good team dynamic. She said she loved the opportunity this year to meet people from other schools under different circumstances than just social outings, and especially values that athletes from the different local colleges can come together and perform as a team.“I really like all the girls on the team,” Mendell said. “I wouldn’t have branched out of my group of friends here, but I’m glad I did. Not only do you meet girls

from other schools, but you also meet upperclassmen who you can go to for advice.”The synchronized skating team at Cornell accepts members from other schools; their figure skating team does not because it’s against the United States Fig-ure Skating Association’s policy. Gerringer competed on behalf of Ithaca College as an individ-ual on the college figure skating

circuit, but for the past few years she has tried to garner attention so Ithaca might get a program of its own.Mendell said she hopes to carry on Gerringer’s torch and create a program at Ithaca for just fig-ure skating since there is more interest now. Gluck said she sup-ports Ithaca getting a program because it will also draw more collegiate skaters to the upstate New York area. However, they do not wish to have a separate

syn-chro-nized skating pro-gram.“My goal is to start a figure skating team before I grad-uate,” Gerrin-ger said. “This is the first year we

have enough freshmen who I know can carry the program on. I am confident that as the in-terest grows, we’ll be able to do something because now some athletes are making the decision to come to Ithaca because of skating.”

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The three returning outside hitters, all of whom missed time last year because of injuries, are healthy this season and competing for a starting spot. With juniors Jessica Hoeffner and Chelsea Hayes and sophomore Stephanie Lavallato missing sub-stantial time last season, the offense had to accommodate for the gap in the outside position last year.This season, the outside hitters have already shown what they’re capable of on the court, accounting for 49 of the team’s 87 kills in victories against Widener University and Baptist Bible College on Saturday in the cham-pionship round of the 2010 Bomber Invitational. After dropping its first four matches of the season at the Pacific Coast Classic in Claremont, Calif. on Sept. 3 and 4, Lavallato said the team and outside hitters found their rhythm this weekend on their home court. “It was definitely a big change from the previous weekend in California,” Lavallato said. “Wefinally found the right combination of people and plays to make everybody, especially the outsidehitters, succeed on the court.” Outside hitters, who have the ability to change the flow of the game with one hit, are often looked to in pressure situations. Rarely, if ever, is an outside hitter taken out, and they often shoulder most of the more physical parts of the game, Hayes said. “We often get the ball a lot more than other players just because of the nature of the position,” she said. “We’re constantly jumping, constantly diving and constantly moving, and that was the main cause of our many injuries.” With Hoeffner out the entire 2009 season with a torn ACL, Hayes out with an intercostals chest injury and Lavallato just recently healing from tarsal coalition, all three said the biggest challenge now is integrating back into the routine of a game. “Being outside, there is a lot of pressure on you because you’re supposed to be the big hitter who gets the team out of a situation if something goes wrong,” Hoeffner said. “Especially since I wasn’t playing last year, I have to get used to playing volleyball and being in that atmosphere again.” Head Coach Janet Donovan said, while having all three outside hitters healthy benefits the team as a whole, each hitter will have to do their own individual part to stay on the court. “We’re really working on getting them in the weight room,” Donovan said. “At this point, if they don’t get both workouts in the weight room. or miss one, they’re going to be on the bench. There is enough compe-tition in that position for even one of them to open the door for the others by missing a scheduled workout.” The Bombers will look to carry the momentum from last weekend’s four-game winning streak into the rest of the season, starting tomorrow at the Hawks Invite at SUNY–New Paltz. With the outside hitters healthy, each athlete has to prove she deserves the playing time, Hayes said. “I would say that the competition for all of the outside hitters is going to continue to be tough for a while,” she said. “We all have our own strengths and we have to continue to prove ourselves every day in prac-tice and matches to earn our spot on the court.”

HittingTheirMarkBy Megan Goldschmidt

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