Horizons Page 1 BSUCalendar March 12-13, 2000
4th Annual BSU Winter Rendezvous, Laughlin, NV March 24-26, 2000
30th Anniversary Celebration of Women’s Intercollegiate Athletics, Bemidji State University campus
Vol. 15, No. 3, SPRING 2000
A Publication for Alumni & Friends of Bemidji State University
BSUHorizons
April 7, 2000
BSU Education Wall of Fame Induction Ceremony April 14-15, 2000
BSU Alumni Board Meeting, Bemidji, MN April 28, 2000
Mass Communication Spring Awards Banquet, Bemidji Elks Lodge May 11-12, 2000
50 Year Reunion of Class of 1950, Bemidji State University campus May 12, 2000
BSU Commencement 2000 May 20, 2000
Danny Kraus Memorial Golf Tournament June 16, 2000
Pabst/Skaar Memorial Golf Tournament, Bemidji Town and Country Club
WOMEN’S thletics
A BSU Celebrating 30 Years
ofWomeninAthletics
Bemidji State University
BSUHorizons
Bemidji State University Alumni Association 1500 Birchmont Drive NE, #DPH Bemidji, MN 56601-2699 218-755-3989 1-877-BSU-ALUM alumni@vax1.bemidji.msus.edu http://info.bemidji.msus.edu/alumni
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Bemidji, MN 56601-2699 PERMIT NO. 9
Penalt y for Private Use
Coaches tell athletes to give 100 percent during a game and to have an empty reservoir when the final gun sounds. But Bemidji State women’s athletes in the early years had to amend that concept a bit as it was common for them to perform one more important task before they could call it a day. “In those days, women’s programs shared uniforms. Often the field hockey players would have to get off the field as soon as possible to get their uniforms to the laundry room to be washed for use by the volleyball team,” said Betsy McDowell, who was the long-time coach of BSU’s very successful field hockey program. The problem of finding a clean uniform was just one barrier faced by a fledgling women’s program. Three decades later, BSU has overcome pitfalls in funding, recruiting and management to field teams ready to accept the challenges of the 21st Century. That growth will be recognized March 24-26 during a 30th Anniversary Celebration that features a variety of activities, including a banquet March 25 where the top 60 women athletes in BSU history will be honored. Tickets for the weekend are $50 and include several meals, social events, and programs. Tickets for the banquet are $25. Reservations are required by March 17 and can be made by calling 218-755-2940.
Women’s athletics has undergone many changes, from an activity that was viewed as unladylike in the 1900s to simply tolerated by mid-century. In the early 1960s, women at BSU were given a taste of athletic competition through activities the students managed and funded. Support and guidance was given by the women’s physical education faculty. By the late 1960s women had earned the opportunity to make the move to intercollegiate sports. The Minn-Kota Conference provided that opportunity. “The Minn-Kota was officially adopted in 1969-70, but it didn’t just appear,” said veteran BSU women’s coach and former women’s athletic director Dr. Pat Rosenbrock. “A number of physical education instructors from the region had been meeting for several years. They envisioned a conference for women.” Bemidji State was very successful during the early MinnKota Conference. “The athletes were here and they had the talent,” said Dr. Ruth Howe, one of BSU’s coaches and professors during those days. “The raw material was in place and we had to do the necessary teaching to put it all together. The opportunity to compete was a joy to all of our women.” The birth of national associations created venues for expanded competition. “The allmale NAIA and NCAA were not interested in offering competition
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“ think, woman for woman, we had the best athletes anywhere. As a result, we were very successful within the conference, the state and region.” v Dr. Pat Rosenbrock
for women,” Rosenbrock remembered. “So in 1971 the national Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women and its state organizations were born.” Spearheading a dramatic recognition of the rights of girls and women to participate in schoolsponsored athletic programs was a government mandate known as Title IX. In essence, Title IX decreed that men’s and women’s programs should be run on an equal basis. “There were many movements for social change at that time, including the modern women’s movement,” Rosenbrock said. “So it was a combination of factors - the formation of AIAW, the environment and visibility created by the women’s movement, and Title IX - that combined to push this issue to the forefront.” Bemidji State’s programs flourished during the 1970s as more than 100 women were involved in seven sports. “I think, woman for woman, we had the best athletes anywhere,” Rosenbrock said. “As a result, we were very successful within the conference, the state and region.” While the 1970s represented a
decade of growth, the 1980s represented a period of uncertainty, challenge and change. Nationally, the NAIA and NCAA opened doors to women, prompting schools like BSU to shift affiliations. It was also a time for programmatic change, with several sports dropped and others added. And surviving the obstacles of the 1980s made facing the challenges of the 1990s much easier. That’s when the women’s and the men’s conferences merged into the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference. Bemidji State abandoned the NAIA in favor of the more visible NCAA II. Later in the decade the women’s hockey program was formed and immediately was elevated to NCAA Division I status. “In the 1990s BSU saw an emergence of new sports for women plus a substantial increase in funding from the university and through the development of Beaver Pride,” said Doreen Zierer, head women’s basketball coach and athletic director for all sports except hockey. “Overall, there has been an eight to 10-fold growth in Continued on page 5