JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================9K" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?X"RYnV}+toֺOpru,R9Dͽ{Ir$PǞ힘Z^&EUIf0CZOC>w{s[1X#jQ瀪HHoN+neˆ mbTtBy p:4e[ܦǓ%{ޕ*ݖK↦F.[W˙ YOAxᾦyap6@T];Po- 4QW&6ӬX[*Q[h NUϱ(02j."k #/F2}l󍺧 mmǶIV/{lC,߬FmC"n:r?Zﯥ8eC]OO2se [mk6N@z&aSpyThe popular mindset was that college was a great place for women to get her M.R.S. (read "wife"), and soon after, she'd be having babies, not spiking balls, making goals and vaulting over 14-foot-high bars. Such thinking likely caused many an old codger to grin in secret delight that a "little" educational amendment would placate the feminists yet result in relatively little impact on the status quo.<br>So, on June 23, 1972, with little controversy, President Richard Nixon signed into law the Educational Amendment Title IX, which contained a section prohibiting discrimination against girls and women in federally funded education, including sports. Like a snowball on a downhill run, what seemed insignificant at the beginning created an avalanche that has completely changed the status of women in sports today.<br>If those old codgers are still alive, I bet they're not grinning now.<br><br>The Sydney Games<br><br>Let's return to the present. The recent Sydney Olympics were a shining example of the dr