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June 1, 2012

St. Francis Athletic Director Named to Prestigious List of Women in Sports

The Women’s Sports Foundation (WSF), in collaboration with espnW and Women in Cable Telecommunications (WICT), today released its 40 FOR 40 list of forty women, including St. Francis College Director of Athletics, Irma Garcia, who made a significant impact on society after playing sports in high school or college during the forty years of the Title IX era. The honorees will be recognized as part of a 40 FOR 40 event on June 21 at the JW Marriott in Washington, DC. The supporting sponsor of the event is Scripps Networks Interactive.

irma garcia

“I am touched to be associated with a group of distinguished women who have pioneered and paved the way for equality not only in athletics but in the work force,” Garcia said. “These women and many before us are an inspiration and continue to be great female role models! Since the inception of Title IX, it is clear how the opportunity of playing a sport has impacted women not only in the world of athletics but in other leadership roles. Without Title IX there is no female secretary of state, there would be no women anchoring the news. I will remain passionate in my commitment to make continued strides in ensuring gender equality in the world of athletics.”

Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 requires schools and colleges receiving federal money in any education program or activity to provide the same opportunities for girls as they provide for boys. According to WSF, Title IX has resulted in growth of girls participating in high school sports from 1 in 27 in 1972 to about 2 in 5 today. Title IX has not only made its impact felt in terms of athletic participation, but in educational opportunities for girls and women. According to several studies, the combination of the two has produced significant long-term educational, health and economic benefits for women.

40 FOR 40
Honoree; Professional category (can be multiple categories); Sport; Contribution
Appearing in alphabetical order

  1. Val Ackerman; Sports; Collegiate Basketball; First president of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA).
  2. Cynthia Breazeal; STEM and Academia; High School Track, Swimming, Soccer and Tennis; Founder and Director of the Personal Robots Group at MIT Media Laboratory.
  3. Christine Brennan; Journalism/Media; High School Tennis and Field Hockey; Award-winning print and broadcast journalist who is the most widely read female sports columnist in the nation.
  4. Beth Brooke; Business; Collegiate Basketball; Global Vice Chair of Public Policy at Ernst & Young and named one of Forbes 100 Most Powerful Women (2007). Corporate gender diversity advocate.
  5. Ann Cody; Nonprofit; Paralympic and Collegiate Wheelchair Track & Field; Director of Policy and Global Outreach for BlazeSports America. Member of the International Paralympic Committee’s governing board.
  6. Ellen DeGeneres; Arts and Entertainment; High School Tennis; Comedienne and talk show host. Just named as recipient of Mark Twain Prize.
  7. Jean Driscoll; Sports; Collegiate Wheelchair Basketball and Paralympic Wheelchair Racing; Served as the national spokesperson for the ASPIRE project from 2001-2003, a national outreach program for the American Association of Adapted Sports Programs, whose goal is to provide sports opportunities for children with physical disabilities.
  8. Nancy Dubuc; Media; Collegiate Crew; President of Lifetime Network and History Channel. Top ten in The Hollywood Reporter Most Powerful Women in Media.
  9. General Ann E. Dunwoody; Military; Collegiate Tennis and Gymnastics; First female commander of the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division and first female four-star general.
  10. Lynn Laverty Elsenhans; Business and STEM; Collegiate Basketball; CEO, Sunoco, and named one of Forbes 50 Most Powerful Women (2011). Played on first intercollegiate basketball team at Rice while getting degree in mathematical science.
  11. Tina Fey; Arts and Entertainment; High School Tennis; Award-winning writer, producer, actress, comedienne and bestselling author. One of four women and youngest person ever to win Mark Twain Prize.
  12. Julie Foudy; Sports; Collegiate and Olympic Soccer; Advocate for women’s and children’s rights, including Title IX. Received the FIFA Fair Play Award for her trip abroad to examine the working conditions of Reebok’s factories.
  13. Irma Garcia; Sports and Academia; Collegiate Basketball; First and only Hispanic female to head a NCAA Division I athletic program.
  14. Alice Gast; Academia and STEM; High School Track & Field; President, Lehigh University, following a career as an award-winning and internationally recognized researcher and teacher at Stanford University and vice president for research and associate provost at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  15. Jodi Gillette; Government and Civil Service; Collegiate Basketball; White House Senior Policy Advisor for Native American Affairs.
  16. Kirsten Gillibrand; Government and Civil Service; Collegiate Squash; United States Senator and two-term Congresswoman from New York. Advocate for empowering women.
  17. Mia Hamm; Sports; Collegiate and Olympic Soccer; Played on four NCAA Championship teams, two World Cup Championship teams and two Olympic gold medal teams. Helped found first professional women’s soccer league. Born the year Title IX was enacted, a true Title IX baby.
  18. Flo Hyman; Sports; Collegiate Volleyball; “National Girls and Women in Sports Day” was posthumously established in recognition of her contributions to growing sports for girls and women.
  19. Kristina Johnson; STEM, Academia, Business, and Government/Civil Service; Collegiate Lacrosse and Field Hockey; Holds 43 patents. CEO, Enduring Energy. Formerly, professor at University of Colorado, dean of the Pratt School of Engineering at Duke University, and provost at Johns Hopkins University. Served as Under Secretary for Energy at U.S. Department of Energy.
  20. Jackie Joyner-Kersee; Sports; Collegiate and Olympic Track & Field; Ranked among all-time greatest female athletes in the world. Known for her efforts in giving underprivileged children more opportunities to safely participate in sports.
  21. Michelle Kwan; Sports; Olympic and World Champion Figure Skater; Sports ambassador for Special Olympics, member of the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition, and public diplomacy ambassador for U.S. State Department.
  22. Queen Latifah; Arts and Entertainment; High School Basketball; Actress, singer, author, and production company owner.
  23. Kathy Levinson; Business; Collegiate Basketball, Field Hockey and Tennis; Managing Director for Golden Seeds, a national network of angel investors dedicated to investing in early-stage companies founded and/or led by women.
  24. Ellen Kullman; Business and STEM; Collegiate Basketball; Chair and CEO, Dupont, and ranked as Forbes fourth most powerful woman. Credited with leading the company’s renewed focus on biotechnology.
  25. Mary Bono Mack; Government and Civil Service; High School Gymnastics; Seven-term Congresswoman from California and avid advocate for sports and physical activity.
  26. Sandra Magnus; STEM; Collegiate Soccer; Astronaut on crew of final Space Shuttle mission. Played all four years on first women’s soccer team at college.
  27. Linda Mastandrea; Law; Paralympic Track & Field; Attorney and leading advocate for persons with disabilities; member, legal committee for International Paralympic Committee.
  28. Brigadier General Loretta Reynolds; Military; Collegiate Basketball; First female commander at Parris Island and one of only two active female generals in the Marines.
  29. Dot Richardson; Medicine; Collegiate Softball; Executive Director and Medical Director of the National Training Center. Former Vice Chair of President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports.
  30. Condoleezza Rice; Government/Civil Service and Academia; Figure Skating; Former U.S. Secretary of State and Stanford University political science professor.
  31. Susan Rice; Government and Civil Service; Three-sport High School Athlete; Current U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.
  32. Sally Ride; STEM; High School and Collegiate Tennis; First female astronaut.
  33. Robin Roberts; Journalism/Media; Collegiate Basketball; Renowned broadcast journalist and anchor of ABC’s Good Morning America and ESPN’s “In the Game with Robin Roberts.”
  34. Irene Rosenfeld; Business; Collegiate Basketball; CEO of Kraft Foods.
  35. Mary Shapiro; Government/Civil Service and Law; Collegiate Lacrosse and Field Hockey; U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair.
  36. Rear Admiral Sandra Stosz; Academia and Military; Collegiate Sailing; First female leader of a US military academy.
  37. Pat Summitt; Sports; Collegiate Basketball; Played basketball during the enaction of Title IX. Her success as all-time winningest coach in NCAA basketball history with Tennessee basketball team expanded recognition and opportunities for women in basketball.
  38. Jill Vialet; Nonprofit; Collegiate Rugby; Social entrepreneur recognized as part of Forbes Impact 30 list for Playworks, an organization devoted to improve the health and well-being of children by increasing opportunities for physical activity and safe, meaningful play.
  39. Meg Whitman; Business; Collegiate Lacrosse and Squash; CEO of Hewlett Packard and former CEO of eBay.
  40. Venus Williams; Sports; Tennis; Three-time Olympic medalist and seven-time Grand Slam tennis champion who helped lead a successful effort to gain equal prize money for women at Wimbledon.

Plus Four More Honorary designees include:

  • Sue Enquist; Sports; Collegiate Softball; Former UCLA Women’s Head Coach and espnW Advisory Board. Greatly expanded recognition and opportunities for the sport of softball.
  • Nancy Hogshead-Makar; Law; Collegiate and Olympic Swimmer; Senior Director of Advocacy for the Women’s Sports Foundation. Leading Title IX expert and advocate.
  • Cindy McConkey; Media; All State High School Basketball and Track & Field; Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications at Scripps Networks Interactive. First female reporter to cover Southeastern Conference football.
  • Kathy Payne; Media; High School Tennis champion and team captain; 2012 Chair of the WICT Board and Vice President, Content Acquisition with Cox Communications. Currently negotiates complex carriage deals with all professional sports leagues, regional sports networks and college conferences for cable television and mobile platform distribution.

Read the full release

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