"Every time a woman runs, women win. When you throw a pebble into a lake, the ripples move far beyond the point of immediate impact. And those ripples are what you hear constantly...You talk to all of these people who are in positions of power. Women in the Senate. One after the other has come up to me and said, 'The impact of your campaign did make a difference.'
Let me also assure you that when I ran in 1984, if my name were Gerard instead of Geraldine, I would never have gotten the nomination. I mean, I was there because I was a woman. I drew crowds because I was a woman national candidate."
-- Geraldine Ferraro, in a 2008 PBS interview. Ferraro was not only the first female candidate on major party presidential ticket; she was also the first Italian-American. The congresswoman and lawyer (one of two in a law class of 179) died Saturday.
Image Credit: The Detroit News
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