Just Ask A Woman

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More than 10.000 documents for Just Ask A Woman
  • WASHINGTON, Aug. 26 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Continuing an unprecedented effort to reach out to American women, the Kerry- Edwards campaign today launched its national Women for Kerry- Edwards initiative. Today's announcement features a report entitled, "Just Ask A Woman: A National Report on Women in America. The report examines how women have fared during the Bush administration over the past three and a half years and the Kerry- Edwards plan for women in America. Highlights of the report include women outlining their personal story and their support for the Kerry- Edwards ticket.

  • The misery caused by drinking and driving never ends. Just ask the family of a woman who died six years ago because of a drunken driver. Just ask her passengers who were maimed. Just ask the drunken driver, or his family. Darla Lee Rodey, a 43-year-old Glen Burnie nurse, died on the night of Nov. 26, 1999, when the GMC Suburban driven by Mhamed Bouadjemi of Pasadena left the eastbound lane on Mountain Road, crossed a center turn lane and hit Mrs. Rodey's Nissan head-on.

  • SNEEDVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - All it takes is one vote to win. Just ask a Tennessee woman who was elected constable by voting for herself. Angela Tuttle, 32, said her father encouraged her to run as a write-in candidate because no one else was vying for one of the positions in Hancock County, which is in northeastern Tennessee.

  • OAKLAND, Calif. -- It's never too late to earn your college degree. Just ask 94-year-old Hazel Soares. The San Leandro woman was one of about 500 students to pick up diplomas Saturday during a commencement ceremony at Mills College, an Oakland liberal arts college for women that also offers coed graduate programs.

  • OAKLAND, Calif. - It's never too late to earn your college degree. Just ask 94-year-old Hazel Soares. The San Leandro woman was one of about 500 students to pick up diplomas Saturday during a commencement ceremony at Mills College, an Oakland liberal arts college for women that also offers coed graduate programs.

  • On Thursday , Mary Lou Quinlan, CEO and founder of New York- based strategic marketing firm Just Ask a Woman, discussed "Cracking the Code of What Women Want" as part of the Regent University Executive Leadership Series in Virginia Beach. The following are remarks prepared in advance of her talk. Take a dollar bill out of your wallet. Now rip off one of the edges. The big part left in your hand represents the purchasing power of female consumers. The tiny part represents the purchasing power of men. It's a fact: Women make or influence over 85 percent of the consumer purchases in the United States today.

  • People of a certain age may have been told to behave themselves or face having their misdeeds archived in a "permanent record. With the advent of social-networking sites, that's fairly close to reality. Just ask a 29-year-old Canadian woman who was stripped of her disability payments after her insurance company saw photographs on her Facebook profile of her attending -- and apparently enjoying herself -- at a Chippendale event at a bar. The profile also included her comments on climbing a mountain. The woman had been on leave from her job for nearly two years after a diagnosis for major depression.

  • For 22 years, Erie County Surrogate Court Judge Barbara Howe has worn her robe well. First in Buffalo City Court, then on to State Supreme Court, Howe has built an impressive base of legal skills and contacts. But beyond the bench and in the community is where she also shines. Howe is one busy woman. Just ask her husband. >People Talk: You sure get around. How many appointments do you have in one day?

  • SNEEDVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- All it takes is one vote to win. Just ask a Tennessee woman who was elected constable by voting for herself. Angela Tuttle, 32, said her father encouraged her to run as a write-in candidate because no one else was vying for one of the positions in Hancock County, which is in northeastern Tennessee.

  • Had a punk rock girlfriend once. She was so punk, she wore not one, but two green Mohawks. The woman looked so dangerous that guys would slide over and ask me just how a brother gets with a woman like that.



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