Betsy Warrior

[2] She recalls beatings that left her "face bleeding and bruised", and cites the intervention of her family in helping her to finally leave her husband.

[6][2] That same year, Warrior, Dunar, and Densmore also published a collection of essays entitled "No More Fun and Games: A Journal of Female Liberation".

[7] While with Cell 16, Warrior created a poster that read: "Disarm rapists/Smash sexism", depicting a woman fighting off a would-be rapist.

Warrior equated domestic violence to "how women were devalued in society", and how a woman might stay in an abusive relationship because they lack the means or ability to escape.

[10] The publication was cited for spreading awareness on the issue of domestic abuse and Warrior received numerous offers of help from other women who read the book.