National womens month

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National Women’s History Month in March annually encourages us to honor the women who came before us and fought for equality among all races and genders. While America is full of influential women today, hundreds of women came before them, paving the way. Women’s History Month serves as a way to not only remember them but keep carrying their torch onward. There’s still work to do. During the month, International Women’s Day also celebrates the achievements of women from the past and present. All Races, Influential Women, International Women’s Day, Women’s History, Womens History Month, Woman’s Day, Past And Present, Still Working, Women In History

National Women’s History Month in March annually encourages us to honor the women who came before us and fought for equality among all races and genders. While America is full of influential women today, hundreds of women came before them, paving the way. Women’s History Month serves as a way to not only remember them but keep carrying their torch onward. There’s still work to do. During the month, International Women’s Day also celebrates the achievements of women from the past and present.

Celebrating women in History - Meet ZENOBIA, she carried the greatest female military mind in history. Inspiring to people of all ages, Zenobia uses the skills of both a warrior and a queen to fight against injustice. The Zenobia Book Series spans her entire life from her birth to when her love of justice brought her into conflict with the strongest empire on earth - Rome. Join with us as we celebrate National Women's History Month and International Women's Day (March 8) In honor of "writing…

Newsweek’s Print –30–: As the Magazine Shutters, a Look Back At its 1960s Heyday and Landmark Achievements | Vanity Fair Reading Lists, Good Girls Revolt, Feminist Books, Good Girls, Womens History Month, Books Young Adult, Good Girl, What’s Going On, Women In History

In the new book The Good Girls Revolt, former Newsweek senior editor Lynn Povich traces the history of the magazine and women—women who started as mail girls and, if they were lucky, went on to become researchers, handing their notes over to the guys to turn into stories. A firm no-women-writers rule prevented them from going further. But after a landmark lawsuit in 1970 that Lynn helped organize, women were eventually coopted into the writer-and-editor pool—and in 2010, Newsweek got its…