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			Olympics legend Jackie Joyner-Kersee joins discussion of women in 
			sports March 25thLincoln Presidential Library looks at 
			impact of Title IX
 
 
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            [March 24, 2021]  
            
              The federal law “Title IX” revolutionized 
			women’s sports in America, allowing millions of female athletes to 
			get off the sidelines. The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and 
			Museum will examine the law’s impact March 25 with a panel of 
			experts, including Olympic gold medalist Jackie Joyner-Kersee. | 
        
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			 The online panel also includes a 
			participant in Illinois’s very first girls state basketball 
			tournament, who has since collected oral histories from Title IX 
			pioneers. She will be joined by the authors of the definitive book 
			on Title IX and an Emmy-winning sports reporter as moderator. 
 “Title IX - The Landmark Legislation That Transformed American 
			Sports” takes place 7 p.m. Central time on Thursday, March 25. To 
			register for the free event, please visit bit.ly/ALPLMtix.
 
 “It’s hard to imagine now, but opportunities for women and girls to 
			play organized sports were incredibly limited until Title IX 
			passed,” said Melissa Coultas, the ALPLM’s acting executive 
			director. “Our Oral History Program has collected fascinating 
			stories from dozens of women about the impact it had, and we are 
			excited to discuss it further with this distinguished panel, 
			particularly the great Jackie Joyner-Kersee.”
 
			
			 
 Passed in 1972, Title IX prohibits sex-based discrimination in any 
			education program that receives federal money. This meant, among 
			other things, that most high schools and colleges had to offer 
			women’s sports programs comparable to those for men. In Illinois, 
			for instance, more high schools began offering girls basketball, and 
			in 1977 the first statewide girls basketball tournament took place.
 
 Some believe it made the most important change in the lives of 
			American women since 1920, when women were guaranteed the right to 
			vote. Title IX allowed millions of young girls the chance to 
			participate in all manner of sports, enriching their lives in the 
			process.
 
 One such girl was Jackie Joyner-Kersee of East St. Louis, Ill. Going 
			to high school in the 1970s, she was able to participate in track 
			and field, basketball and volleyball.
 
			
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That allowed her to attend college on a track scholarship and to qualify for the 
Olympics. She earned three gold, one silver and two bronze medals over four 
Olympic games and has been voted the greatest female athlete of all time.
 
 She will be joined on the panel by:
 
 Ellyn Bartges, a player in Illinois’s first girls state basketball 
tournament. She later conducted scores of oral history interviews about Title IX 
as part of her master’s and Ph.D. programs.
 
 Linda Jean Carpenter and R. Vivian Acosta, emeritus professors at 
Brooklyn College and co-authors of the book “Title IX.”
 
 Moderator Peggy Kusinski, a sports reporter at Chicago’s NBC5 and 
recipient of two national Emmy Awards for her work as a producer at ESPN.
 
 Educators who attend this virtual program and complete the mandatory program 
evaluation will receive 1.5 CPDU credits.
 
 The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum uses a combination of 
rigorous scholarship and high-tech showmanship to immerse visitors in Lincoln’s 
life and times. The library holds an unparalleled collection of Lincoln books, 
documents, photographs, artifacts and art, as well as some 12 million items 
pertaining to all aspects of Illinois history.
 
 For more information, visit www.PresidentLincoln.Illinois.gov
 
			[Christopher Wills] 
			
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