The article seemed to be focussing on earlier days than Williams was involved with; and though Laura Hickman certainly deserves a mention both she and Margaret Weis came in near the end of the era the article's looking at - which somewhat explains why Weis is mentioned last.It was interesting in that it focused on persons who aren't discussed much, but since it was supposed to be about the role of women in the origins of D&D I felt it focused a bit too much on some less influential early women in a way that wasn't entirely fair either to the men or the women in the article. There was no mention of Laura Hickman's partnership with her husband Tracy, and Margaret Weis barely got a mention way down at the end of the article which hardly seemed fair given her towering influence on the hobby. The result was to make it seem like the role of women in the development of D&D was entirely minor, and wholly limited by women being marginalized, which isn't quite I think a true picture.
No mention either of Lorraine Williams, though that might have set a different tone.
Part of why this flew was because, in its very ruleset, D&D assumed a mostly-male audience. In the mid-70s, that ruleset faced accusations of chauvinism when it became clear that women characters’ strength was capped four points lower than men’s. It compensated with the “Beauty” attribute, a substitute for “Charisma.” D&D also featured a “Harlot Table,” a bounty of twelve “brazen strumpets or haughty courtesans” players could summon with the roll of a die."
Well, technically this last bit isn't wrong, as there was "Comeliness": a seventh stat introduced in 1e's Unearthed Arcana (and probably in a Dragon article before that; almost all of UA was first trial-ballooned in Dragon) which split out the physical attractiveness side of Charisma from the persuasiveness side.Every statement here is wrong. I'm sure the author could have discussed the women who contributed to early D&D without lying about old editions.
In AD&D female human strength is capped at 17 (vs. 18 for non-Fighter human males). There is no "Beauty" attribute; reading the link provided as the source, that idea appears to be from an old Dragon article.