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Activist and writer Gloria Steinem, who will speak at 7 p.m.
Feb. 8 in the Boise State Student Union Jordan Ballroom,
will follow her lecture with an audience question-and-answer
session and book signing.
The lecture is free and tickets
are not required, but early arrival is encouraged. The doors
open at 6 p.m. for general seating, and overflow crowds will
be able to view Steinem via video in the Hatch Ballroom.
Steinem travels worldwide as a
lecturer and is a frequent media spokeswoman on issues of
equality. She co-founded Ms. magazine in 1972 and was
one of its editors for 15 years. She also helped to found
New York magazine, where she worked as a political
columnist.
Steinem continues to serve
as a consulting editor and columnist for Ms. and was
instrumental in the magazine�s recent move to join forces
with the nonprofit Feminist Majority Foundation. Her books
include the bestsellers Revolution from Within: A Book of
Self-Esteem, Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions,
Moving Beyond Words, and
Marilyn: Norma Jean, on the life of Marilyn Monroe.
Steinem helped found the Women�s
Action Alliance, a national center for information and
advocacy in such areas as nonsexist, multiracial children�s
education and communication among women�s groups, and the
National Women�s Political Caucus, a nonpartisan
organization devoted to advancing pro-equality women of all
races. She is president of Voters for Choice, an independent
bipartisan political action committee that supports
candidates working for reproductive freedom. Steinem is also
a founding president of the Ms. Foundation for Women, a
national, multiracial women�s fund that supports grassroots
projects to empower women and girls.
After growing up primarily in
the Midwest where her unconventional childhood included no
full year of schooling until she was 12, Steinem graduated
Phi Beta Kappa from Smith College in 1956. Following
graduation, she lived in India for almost two years as a
Chester Bowles Asian Fellow. There she wrote for Indian
publications and was influenced by Ghandian activism.
As both a writer and an
activist, she remains particularly interested in the shared
origins of sex and race caste systems; gender roles and
child abuse as the roots of violence; non-violent conflict
resolution; the cultures of indigenous people; and in
organizing across national boundaries for peace and justice.
For more information, call the
Women�s Center at 426-4259 or visit
http://womenscenter.boisestate.edu.
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Contact:
Melissa
Wintrow, Women�s Center, (208) 426-4259, mwintrow@boisestate.edu
Media Contact:
Sherry
Squires, communications and marketing, (208) 426-1563, ssquires@boisestate.edu,
or Anna Fritz, communications and marketing, (208) 426-1577, afritz@boisestate.edu
Online at:
http://news.boisestate.edu
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