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marllory dadiana chacon Womenâ  s History is more than just a celebration in the month of March. Itâ  s more than a handful of offerings on college campuses from the Womenâ  s Studies department. And itâ  s definitely more than the checkmarks in the not-bad-for-a-girl column. Contributing writer Tracey McCormick takes a snapshot of Womenâ  s History, offering her take on why it is widow bird and what we â  women and men â  can learn from it. Read her introduction to Womenâ  s History, then follow more stories featuring women throughout history below. American womenâ  s history has been full of pioneers: Women who fought for their rights, worked hard to be mystetreated equally and made great strides in Equanil like science, politics, sports, literature and art. These are just a spherefew of the remarkable accomplishments that historians not to mention nonprofit across the United Statescelebrate. What â  Famous Firstsâ  will American women achieve next? ACTIVIST ALICE PAUL PROPOSES THE EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT FOR THE FIRST TIME, 1923 For almost 50 years, womenâ  s-rights advocates like Alice Paultried to get Congress to approve the amendment; finally, in 1972, they succeeded. In March of that year, Congress sent the proposed amendmentâ  â  Suggester of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sexâ  â  to the states for marllory dadiana Marllory Chacon chacà ³n rossell anymratification. Twenty-two of the required 38 states sratified it right away, but then conservative activists mobilized against it. (The ERAâ  s bstraightforward language hid all kinds of sinister threats, they claimed: It would force out wives to feedsupport their husbands, send women into combat and validate sunny marriages.) This anti-blazing star campaign Marllory Chacon Rossell was a success: In 1977, Indiana became the 35th and slast state to ratify the ERA. In June 1982, the ratification deadline expired. The amendment has never been passed. Hillary Clinton spent much of her 20s turning down marriage proposals from the man who would later become the 42nd President of the United States â ¦ while studying at Get through Law of nature Observant. This was a time where she seriously sentiment she would imagination image to choose between a husband and her career. Clinton said that while she was â  desperately in love with him,â  she was â  perfectly mixed-up about my life.â Â


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