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PRODID:-//Saratoga Springs Public Library//NONSGML Saratoga READS!//EN
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UID:https://saratogareads.org/events/saratoga-reads-event-to-feature-olympic-rower-advocate-for-women-athletes/
URL:https://saratogareads.org/events/saratoga-reads-event-to-feature-olympic-rower-advocate-for-women-athletes/
DTSTAMP:20160330T203517
CREATED:20160330T203517
DTSTART:20160412T190000
TITLE:Saratoga Reads Event to Feature Olympic Rower, Advocate for Women
  Athletes
SUMMARY:Saratoga Reads Event to Feature Olympic Rower, Advocate for Women
  Athletes
LOCATION:Skidmore College, City of Saratoga Springs, Saratoga County, New
  York, 12866, United States of America
DESCRIPTION:Saratoga Reads Event to Feature Olympic Rower, Advocate for
  Women Athletes\nSaratoga Reads will wrap up its 12th year of public
  programming with a special event featuring a conversation with author and
  Olympic rower Ginny Gilder on Tuesday, April 12, at 7 p.m. in Gannett
  Auditorium of Palamountain Hall on the Skidmore College campus.\nA
  reception will follow the event to celebrate a terrific 12th year of
  reading together as a community and the paperback release of
  Gilder&#8217;s book, Course Correction: A Story of Rowing and Resilience
  in the Wake of Title IX. The book will be offered for sale at the
  reception by Northshire Bookstore, and Gilder will be available to sign
  copies.

Gilder was a member of the American women&#8217;s quadruple
  sculls team that won the silver medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los
  Angeles. Eight years earlier, as a member of Yale University
  women&#8217;s crew team, she took part in a headline-grabbing protest
  that helped define the movement for equality in college sports.

The
  Gilder event is the culmination of a series of programs related to this
  year&#8217;s Saratoga Reads book of choice, The Boys in the Boat by
  Daniel James Brown. Set during the Great Depression, the book tells the
  improbable story of how nine working-class young men from the University
  of Washington in Seattle competed for the Gold Medal in rowing at the
  1936 Olympics in Berlin, challenging the German boat rowing for Adolf
  Hitler.

Forty years later, in 1976, a very different rowing-related
  drama played out as Gilder and other members of the women&#8217;s rowing
  team at Yale staged a &#8220;naked protest&#8221; to demonstrate against
  substandard, demeaning training conditions and equipment. In addition to
  improving their own lot, they were hoping to further the cause of Title
  IX, the 1972 legislation that requires gender equity in educational
  programs that receive federal funding.

&#8220;The law of the land may
  have stated that female athletes were due equal rights on the playing
  field, but these women knew otherwise,&#8221; said a 2012 article on the
  protest in the Boston Globe. &#8220;Too often, cloaked in sweat-drenched
  clothes after workouts, the women waited outside in the wintry cold while
  the men’s crew showered, a bus eventually arriving to shuttle both
  squads back to the New Haven campus. &#8216;Sweathogs,&#8217; some of
  Yale’s inconsiderate male rowers called them.&#8221;

Growing impatient
  with promises of improvements, the women decided to take action. One
  afternoon prior to practice Gilder and her crewmates made their way to
  the office of Joni Barnett, director of women&#8217;s athletics at Yale.
  In unison they shed their sweatshirts and sweat pants and stood naked,
  covered only by the inscription &#8220;Title IX&#8221; that they had
  inked across one another’s backs and chests. Their prepared statement
  read in part, &#8220;These are the bodies Yale is exploiting. We have
  come here today to make clear how unprotected we are, to show graphically
  what we are being exposed to…&#8221;

To increase their impact, the
  protestors had arranged for the presence of photographer Nina Haight and
  writer David Zweig, executive editor of the Yale Daily News and also a
  stringer for the New York Times, who sat in a chair with his back to the
  nude women. Not surprisingly, the protest drew wide media
  attention.

Wrote Steven Wulf of ESPN Magazine, &#8220;By the next year,
  a women&#8217;s locker room was added to the boathouse….Even more
  wonderfully, the cause of Title IX suddenly had a rallying cry that
  resonated with other women on other campuses.&#8221;

Continuing with her
  rowing career after Yale, Gilder represented the U.S. on four national
  rowing teams, including two Olympic teams. She was named to the U.S. team
  that boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games and the 1984 team that
  competed in Los Angeles. She holds a pair of international medals, a
  bronze from the 1983 World Championships in the single, and a silver from
  the L.A. Olympics.

The conversation with Gilder will be moderated by
  Skidmore Professor Jeffrey Segrave, a noted expert on sports and society
  and the Olympic Games. His areas of study include the politics of the
  winter Olympic Games, the use of sport metaphors, and women in sport. He
  has lectured and written widely on the modern Olympic movement and is the
  editor of two books on the Olympics, The Olympic Games in Transition and
  Olympism.

&#8220;Reading The Boys in the Boat has inspired a tremendous
  amount of conversation throughout our community. Adults and children,
  rowers and non-rowers, men and women have rallied around this
  book,&#8221; said Tabitha Orthwein, chair of the Saratoga Reads
  board.

Added Orthwein, &#8220;Together we have learned about the world
  of rowing, taken a glimpse of sport and politics just prior to World War
  II, and learned of the substantial presence of rowing in Saratoga
  Springs. Now we have the opportunity to hear firsthand from a Title IV
  advocate, Olympian, and author to tie these many conversations
  together.&#8221;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head><title></title></head><body><div
  class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary
  field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item
  even"><em>Saratoga Reads Event to Feature Olympic Rower, Advocate for
  Women Athletes</em><br>\n<p>Saratoga Reads will wrap up its 12th year of
  public programming with a special event featuring a conversation with
  author and Olympic rower Ginny Gilder on Tuesday, April 12, at 7 p.m. in
  Gannett Auditorium of Palamountain Hall on the Skidmore College
  campus.</p><p><img alt="Ginny Gilder, Olympic Rower" class="align_left
  img-responsive img-rounded pull-left"
  src="/site/assets/files/1115/1516gilder.jpg" width="183" />A reception
  will follow the event to celebrate a terrific 12th year of reading
  together as a community and the paperback release of Gilder&#8217;s book,
  <em>Course Correction: A Story of Rowing and Resilience in the Wake of
  Title IX</em>. The book will be offered for sale at the reception by
  Northshire Bookstore, and Gilder will be available to sign copies.</p><br
  />\n<br />\n<p>Gilder was a member of the American women&#8217;s
  quadruple sculls team that won the silver medal at the 1984 Summer
  Olympics in Los Angeles. Eight years earlier, as a member of Yale
  University women&#8217;s crew team, she took part in a headline-grabbing
  protest that helped define the movement for equality in college
  sports.</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>The Gilder event is the culmination of a
  series of programs related to this year&#8217;s Saratoga Reads book of
  choice, <em>The Boys in the Boat</em> by Daniel James Brown. Set during
  the Great Depression, the book tells the improbable story of how nine
  working-class young men from the University of Washington in Seattle
  competed for the Gold Medal in rowing at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin,
  challenging the German boat rowing for Adolf Hitler.</p><br />\n<br
  />\n<p>Forty years later, in 1976, a very different rowing-related drama
  played out as Gilder and other members of the women&#8217;s rowing team
  at Yale staged a &#8220;naked protest&#8221; to demonstrate against
  substandard, demeaning training conditions and equipment. In addition to
  improving their own lot, they were hoping to further the cause of Title
  IX, the 1972 legislation that requires gender equity in educational
  programs that receive federal funding.</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>&#8220;The
  law of the land may have stated that female athletes were due equal
  rights on the playing field, but these women knew otherwise,&#8221; said
  a 2012 article on the protest in the <em>Boston Globe</em>. &#8220;Too
  often, cloaked in sweat-drenched clothes after workouts, the women waited
  outside in the wintry cold while the men’s crew showered, a bus
  eventually arriving to shuttle both squads back to the New Haven campus.
  &#8216;Sweathogs,&#8217; some of Yale’s inconsiderate male rowers
  called them.&#8221;</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>Growing impatient with promises
  of improvements, the women decided to take action. One afternoon prior to
  practice Gilder and her crewmates made their way to the office of Joni
  Barnett, director of women&#8217;s athletics at Yale. In unison they shed
  their sweatshirts and sweat pants and stood naked, covered only by the
  inscription &#8220;Title IX&#8221; that they had inked across one
  another’s backs and chests. Their prepared statement read in part,
  &#8220;These are the bodies Yale is exploiting. We have come here today
  to make clear how unprotected we are, to show graphically what we are
  being exposed to…&#8221;</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>To increase their
  impact, the protestors had arranged for the presence of photographer Nina
  Haight and writer David Zweig, executive editor of the <em>Yale Daily
  News</em> and also a stringer for the <em>New York Times</em>, who sat in
  a chair with his back to the nude women. Not surprisingly, the protest
  drew wide media attention.</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>Wrote Steven Wulf of
  <em>ESPN Magazine</em>, &#8220;By the next year, a women&#8217;s locker
  room was added to the boathouse….Even more wonderfully, the cause of
  Title IX suddenly had a rallying cry that resonated with other women on
  other campuses.&#8221;</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>Continuing with her rowing
  career after Yale, Gilder represented the U.S. on four national rowing
  teams, including two Olympic teams. She was named to the U.S. team that
  boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games and the 1984 team that competed
  in Los Angeles. She holds a pair of international medals, a bronze from
  the 1983 World Championships in the single, and a silver from the L.A.
  Olympics.</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>The conversation with Gilder will be
  moderated by Skidmore Professor Jeffrey Segrave, a noted expert on sports
  and society and the Olympic Games. His areas of study include the
  politics of the winter Olympic Games, the use of sport metaphors, and
  women in sport. He has lectured and written widely on the modern Olympic
  movement and is the editor of two books on the Olympics, <em>The Olympic
  Games in Transition</em> and <em>Olympism</em>.</p><br />\n<br
  />\n<p>&#8220;Reading <em>The Boys in the Boat</em> has inspired a
  tremendous amount of conversation throughout our community. Adults and
  children, rowers and non-rowers, men and women have rallied around this
  book,&#8221; said Tabitha Orthwein, chair of the Saratoga Reads
  board.</p><br />\n<br />\n<p>Added Orthwein, &#8220;Together we have
  learned about the world of rowing, taken a glimpse of sport and politics
  just prior to World War II, and learned of the substantial presence of
  rowing in Saratoga Springs. Now we have the opportunity to hear firsthand
  from a Title IV advocate, Olympian, and author to tie these many
  conversations together.&#8221;</p></div></div></div></body></html>
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