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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Track & field sports, athletics > General
Before 1968, women's athletics in higher education meant playdays
and sports days. That spring, when the National Division of Girls
and Women in Sports announced that national collegiate sports
championships for women would begin in 1969, Marlene Mawson, a new
hire on the physical education faculty at the University of Kansas,
was charged with establishing a women's athletics program. 'I was
on my own,' Mawson recalls, 'because there was no precedent for
creating a women's athletics program with a meager budget.' That
meant planning sports competition schedules, staffing coaches,
organizing policies and procedures for coaches and athletes,
coordinating practice schedules, budgeting, and directing the new
KU intercollegiate sports program for women without intervention or
guidance. In their first decade, KU women's teams competed in
national championships in volleyball, basketball, softball, and
gymnastics. In this book, Mawson, who was inducted into the KU
Athletics Hall of Fame in 2009, describes her remarkable career,
from her early years in Missouri to her retirement. With
behind-the-scenes views and insights that reflect a lifetime's
experience, her memoir weaves together the history of the
development of women's athletics at the University of Kansas and
the story of the birth of women's intercollegiate athletics across
the United States - from the Olympic Development Committee to Title
IX to the NCAA. It is an engaging account of groundbreaking
personal achievement by a woman in the world of college sports, and
a stirring record of an extraordinary but little-documented decade
in the evolution of women's athletics.
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Boston Marathon
(Hardcover)
Paul C. Clerici; Foreword by Rodgers Four-Time Boston Marathon Winner
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