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Title IX under scrutiny and adversity

Abstract:
Title IX was enacted in 1972 to open up educational opportunities for high school and college females. The most significant part of Title IX was the impact it had on athletics, but the rule has resulted in the cancelling of sports at universities trying to comply with the rule....

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jack dumas

posted 11/24/09 @ 4:26 PM EST

Elaine Jacobs, associate athletic director at Youngstown State University, said the blame shouldn't be placed on women or the rule but rather the athletic directors and presidents of universities who continue to allow out of control spending on men's basketball and football.

"No one wants to cut back," Jacobs said.

This is a lies, anyone that has been to a university and felt the pressure from the gender studies and other shuch groups know for a fact that they want to cut male sport enrolmment, they veiw men's sport as a bunch of nehandertals that must be changed and stopped. They lie and the media give them press without ever checking if what they say really match their actions or thier publications.

Demonspawn

posted 11/30/09 @ 6:55 PM EST

"There are three ways for universities to comply with Title IX."

The article forgot the forth way:
Make all sports gender-neutral and allow the "equal" women to compete with the men for spots on the team.

After that, no more problems with title IX, as all sports are no longer gender-segregated.
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