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  2. Girls For A Change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girls_For_A_Change

    In Silicon Valley, Phoenix, and Richmond, Girls For A Change offers free after-school programming for middle- and high-school girls. For a year, Action Teams consisting of 5-30 girls and two adult female coaches identify challenges in their communities and design and implement creative solutions to address them as a team following GFC's 7 Steps of Social Change.

  3. Women Creating Change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_Creating_Change

    Women Creating Change (formerly Women's City Club) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1915 by suffragettes in New York City. WCC is still active in the New York community. WCC is still active in the New York community.

  4. Zolzaya Batkhuyag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zolzaya_Batkhuyag

    Women for Change is a membership-based NGO located in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. It founded in 2010 by four Mongolian women including Zolzaya Batkhuyag, Anudari Ayush, Nomingerel Khuyag and Tegshzaya Jalan-Aajav, who shared a passion for the promotion of gender equality, human rights and democracy – values which continue to underpin our work today.

  5. List of women's organizations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_women's_organizations

    Women Creating Change, founded 1915; Women's Caucus for Art, founded 1972; Woman's Christian Temperance Union, officially founded 1874; Women Employed, founded 1973, based in Chicago; Woman's Foreign Missionary Society, founded 1869, attached to the Methodist Episcopal Church; Women's Institute for Science, Equity and Race (WISER), founded 2016

  6. YWCA USA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YWCA_USA

    YWCA USA was founded as the Young Women's Christian Association in New York City in 1858. In 1905, the Harlem YWCA hired the first Black woman general secretary of a local YWCA branch, Eva del Vakia Bowles. Bowles joined the national association as the head of "colored programs" in 1913 and remained in that capacity until 1932. [2]

  7. Chris Gobrecht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Gobrecht

    Christianne Geiger Gobrecht (born February 9, 1955) is an American basketball coach who was most recently the head coach of the United States Air Force Academy women's basketball team. [1] A coach since 1977, she has been a head coach at the high school, junior college, and NCAA levels, and is known for only hiring female assistant coaches in ...

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