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Appalachian Features

  • The Value of Undergraduate Research
    The Value of Undergraduate Research
    Chemistry major Allison Newell and biology major Morgan Thompson present their undergraduate research findings at a professional conference in San Diego, Calif.
  • Snowfall prediction research
    Snowfall Prediction Research
    Researchers from Appalachian State University, UNC Asheville and NC State University are collaborating on a project to improve snowfall predications in the higher elevations.
  • On the Rock Face
    On the Rock Face
    The region's cliff faces harbor rare plant species dating back to the last ice age. Appalachian researchers are working to understand and protect this special ecosystem.
  • Seven Girls, Seven Dreams
    Seven Girls, Seven Dreams
    Seven girls have greater hope for achieving their professional dreams because they chose to participate in Upward Bound's college preparation activities.
  • Dancing with the Dragon: Contemporary Art from Beijing
    Dancing with the Dragon: Contemporary Art from Beijing
    The Turchin Center for the Visual Arts presents "Dancing with the Dragon," a multi-disciplinary exchange program featuring contemporary art and artists from China.
  • Gloria Steinem: A Leader in Social Change
    Appalachian's Forum Lecture Series brings nationally prominent speakers to campus. Their views enliven campus dialogue on a variety of issues. Writer and feminist activist Gloria Steinem opened the 2008 series.
  • Supporting the Best Writers
    Supporting the Best Writers
    The Truman Capote Literary Trust Scholarship in Creative Writing is awarded to Appalachian's best student writers of fiction and poetry. This year's winner is John Stone, a senior from Sanford.
  • The Power of Mentoring - Carolyn Clark '04
    Two communication majors reach the top of their field in New York City thanks to the mentoring relationships they developed at Appalachian.
  • Diverse Educational Journeys
    Four graduate students describe very diverse educational journeys at Appalachian and beyond in their own words.
  • Mountaineers Make History
    Mountaineers Make History
    The Mountaineers seal their reputation as a national model for college football success after winning an unprecedented third-straight NCAA Div I FCS Championship.
  • Appalachian and the Community Together
    Hearts and Hands at Work
    Appalachian students can express their benevolent spirit through community service, service-learning, and community-based research opportunities.
  • Enhancing Diversity: The Faculty Fellows Program
    Enhancing Diversity: The Faculty Fellows Program
    Central to the depth and quality of intellectual life at Appalachian is a diverse faculty.
  • Shades of Green
    Shades of Green
    Professor Curtis Ryan dispels myths and misinformation of Islam and the Arab world.
  • Cultural Exchange
    Cultural Exchange
    15 Pakistanis strengthen their teaching skills and leave behind a better understanding of their culture.
  • A Debt-Free Education
    A Debt-Free Education
    A new scholarship fund called Appalachian Commitment to a College Education for Student Success (ACCESS) brought its first group of recipients to campus this fall.
  • A Friendship Blooms
    A Friendship Blooms
    Art faculty member April Flanders and her student Heather Owens are just one example of how Appalachian's stimulating learning community thrives both inside and outside the classroom.
  • A Beautiful Setting
    A Beautiful Setting
    Spring, summer, fall and winter bring some 30 million visitors to the Blue Ridge Parkway and the Appalachian Trail, both just minutes from campus.
  • Global Climate Change
    Global Climate Change
    Geologist Dr. Ellen Cowan was among a select, international group of scientists who drilled the Antarctic sea floor for indications of how global warming affected our planet in the past.
  • Many Faces, Many Stories
    Many Faces, Many Stories
    Ask someone to tell their story and you'll find that no two students are alike on the Appalachian campus.
  • The Polluting of a Park
    The Polluting of a Park
    Biologist Howard Neufeld has spent 20 years documenting the impact of ozone on native plants in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
  • Champion Cyclists
    Champion Cyclists
    The Appalachian Cycling Team - one of 20 club sports on campus - is a four-time winner of the Atlantic Coast Cycling Conference for road racing.
  • Exercise and the Immune System
    Exercise and the Immune System
    Keeping athletes healthy is a passion for David Nieman, a world-renowned expert in nutrition and exercise science.
  • A Student-run Record Label
    A Student-run Record Label
    In the Hayes School of Music, students expand their knowledge of the recording industry by signing, recording and marketing local bands through their own record label called Split Rail Records.

Gloria Steinem: A Leader in Social Change

Gloria Steinem is interviewed by Appalachian State University Chancellor Kenneth E. Peacock for Appalachian Perspective cable television program. A transcript of this clip is below. View full interview.

Glorida Steinem

Gloria Steinem talks with Appalachian students.

Dr. Janice Pope

Gloria Steinem autographs one of her books for a young admirer.

Writer and feminist activist Gloria Steinem visited campus in February as part of Appalachian State University’s Forum Lecture Series, which brings prominent speakers to campus. She gave a public lecture on the progress of feminism. She also met with students, listening to their dreams and concerns and encouraging them to follow their passions.

Steinem has been a leader in the U.S. women’s liberation movement for 40 years. She is the author of the bestselling books “Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions” and “Revolution from Within.” Among her credits, she co-founded Ms. magazine, the first national feminist magazine, and the Ms. Foundation for Women. She also helped found The National Women’s Political Caucus, Voters for Choice, The Women’s Action Alliance and the Coalition of Labor Union Women.

Appalachian sponsors the Forum Lecture Series to promote the exchange of ideas. Sometimes challenging, sometimes controversial, the speakers enliven campus dialogue. They bring awareness to issues of concern in society and help students think critically about those issues.

The next speaker is Nell Painter, an award-winning writer and scholar of the history of the American South. Her public lecture is March 3 at 8 p.m. in Farthing Auditorium.

Related Links

Video Transcript

Gloria Steinem:

If you look at the famous study of intellectual self-esteem over a fifteen-year continuum of young women and young men who had been at the top of their high school class, you see that women's intellectual self-esteem tends to go down with every year of higher education, whereas men's stays the same or goes slightly up. Because what women are often learning is that everybody who accomplished something in the world didn't look like them. 

Now that is greatly remedied by taking Women's Studies, of course, but not everybody takes Women's Studies.  It's part of the reason we need to make courses in both race and sex stereotyping entry-level courses that everybody takes, so that men are also released to do what they want to do that maybe doesn't fit the masculine stereotype, and that we understand the racial politics as well.  And in a way the Women's Studies, African-American Studies, Native American Studies, Appalachian Studies are all remedial studies.  They should be part of everybody's history.