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Women's History Month Crossword

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Across
First woman to serve in US cabinet
Transgender pioneer and central figure in a gay liberation movement energized by the 1969 police raid on the Stonewall Inn. She was one of the first to resist the police. Her goal was “to see gay people liberated and free and to have equal rights that other people have in America,” with her “gay brothers and sisters out of jail and on the streets again.”
Snuck into the Boston marathon to compete before women were allowed (1966). (first name_nickname_surname)
First hijab-wearing international runway model, as well as a UNICEF ambassador.
Company president of Columbia from 1970-1988
First computer programmer. She wrote, if a young male student had shown her skill, “they would have certainly made him an original mathematical investigator, perhaps of first-rate eminence.”
Cofounded the Women’s Rights Project and worked on hundreds of cases against gender discrimination. Supreme Court Justice from 1993 to 2020.
Founded the National Organization for Women and helped to organize the Women’s Strike for Equality
Earned women the right to vote, worked to abolish slavery
Founded New York magazine, Ms. magazine, and champions female independence and social justice.
Down
(wife of MLK). Worked on civil rights for African-Americans, women’s rights, LGBTQ issues and world peace.
Surname of the two sisters who spent their teenage years luring Nazis in the Netherlands to their death by seducing them.
Syrian refugee, Olympic swimmer, and translator and advocate for refugees. Spent 106 days in prison for charges related to her activism in Greece.
First person and only woman to have won two Nobel prizes. Fought to preserve the Polish language under threat from Russian imperialism.
First African-American child to attend the formerly whites-only William Frantz Elementary School in Louisiana (1960), despite protests and violence on her walk to school.
Youngest Nobel Peace Prize laureate for her work to help girls get an education
Refused to give up her seat on a bus for a white passenger in Montgomery, Alabama, 1955. Was arrested for civil disobedience and helped spark and support the civil rights movement.
"China’s Joan of Arc." Wrote feminist poetry and studied martial arts heroines like Mulan. Unbound her feet, cross-dressed, and left her family to pursue an education abroad, all in late 19th century China