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Through Feminine Eyes

When Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale picked Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate in 1984, the debate of women in nontraditional roles changed. For the first time, the nation was forced to ask itself if a woman could handle a role historically reserved for men: that of commander in chief and president. That question was skirted when Mondale lost the election to Ronald Reagan. But many women both before and after Ferraro have proven they had what it took to excel in traditionally male roles. And although it has received much less notoriety than national politics, the aggregate industry ...

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