March 9, 2015
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THE MERCURY | UTDMERCURY.COM
THE WOMEN'S ISSUE MARCH MADNESS Women's basketball squeezes by UT Tyler, advances to third round of NCAA tourney PG 12
HUMZA KHAN | MERCURY STAFF
...and the men's issue? Editor's Note In recognition of Women’s History Month, The Mercury set out to celebrate the best way its staff knows how: by telling stories. Throughout the issue, readers will find narratives highlighting the trials and triumphs of womanhood, especially the women on our campus. As with many annual observances, there’s a certain, anticipated objection: Why isn’t there an equally recognized Men’s History Month? It's a matter of representation and perspective. Similar to Black History Month, I think March's spotlight on women is meant to expunge the systemic erasure that women experience in their personal lives, the media and society at large. As a man, I cannot speak on the experiences of women, but as a gay person of color, I can appreciate the importance of representation and understand how underrepresentation can hurt groups of people. Even in 2015, we are still unaccustomed to seeing or hearing our experiences being told truthfully by people
Veterans on campus share experiences of women in combat ANWESHA BHATTACHARJEE Web Editor
Retired Air Force Col. Kim Olson will visit campus March 26 to speak about women in combat as part of a series of events celebrating Women’s History Month. Olson, who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan and retired after 25 years of service in 2014, authored “Iraq and Back: Inside the War to Win the Peace.” She is also the CEO of Grace After Fire, a nonprofit that provides assistance to female veterans. She said her talk will focus on women as warriors in all professions and about how the workforce and economy have changed. Since 1994, when Congress raised the ban on women on board combat vessels and aircrafts, more women have gone to the frontlines, she said. They have proven they can be just as effective as men, Olson said. There are critical skills — which women excel in — required to fight wars that have little to do with being physically strong, she said. “(The military) won the combat portions of Iraq and Afghanistan — I would argue — in the first 30 days,” Olson said. “... We took
over Baghdad in 30 days, and we had to stop for all the gas tanks to catch up with us. We moved so fast across that desert, but what took us so long was in securing the peace. And, those skill sets — securing peace, winning hearts and minds, collaborating with the locals, building a democracy — have got nothing to do with how much weight you can carry.” Between September 2001 and February 2013, 299,548 female service members have been deployed for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to “Women in Combat: Issues for Congress,” a Congressional Research Service report. That's 40 times more than the 7,484 women who served in Vietnam of which 83.5 percent were nurses. A Pentagon estimate in 2011 put women at 14.5 percent of the military workforce including 69 generals and admirals. While these numbers are a significant increase from what they used to be when Olson joined the Air Force in 1979, she said women still form a minority in the armed forces.
→ SEE VETERANS, PAGE 16
BREAKING GROUND
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
A history of the Women's Center, UTD's pioneers
From Oscars to primetime, what's changed for women on TV ?
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PG 10
- Miguel Perez, Editor-in-Chief
WONDER WOMEN
SEX & SALARY
Student leaders share advice for up-andcomers
A breakdown of wages among men and women at Texas universities
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ON THE FRONTLINES
who are like us. In books, on television and in the news, there is a clear focus on the man's experience, and men oftentimes control the narratives of women's lives. That's the way things have been for a very long time. In a bit of unintentional irony, even this very issue was made under the direction of two male editors, but rather than writing the stories ourselves, we reached out to the students, veterans, athletes, artists, administrators and scientists that call UTD home, and let their words guide us. Throughout history, women have always matched men in their ambition, their achievements and their victories. The stories here aren't necessarily special, but they have worth. Equal representation isn't about fighting for more screen time. It's about recognizing the worth of an indivual's experience. It shouldn't take an annual observance to acknowledge that.
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