Senators Edward Kennedy, Orrin Hatch and New York Governor Mario Cuomo
On February 23, 1988 in Washington, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. (L), New York Governor Mario Cuomo (C), and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah (R) talk prior to testifying before Kennedy’s Committee on Labor and Human Resources about the “Smart Start” bill that would encourage states to develop pre-kindergarten educational programs. (UPI Photo/Jeff Franko/Files)
Britt Ekland announces her 'tell all' autobiography "True Britt"
Britt Ekland moved from the sophisticated world of Peter Seller to the rock world of Rod Stewart and now she is going to tell the world about it in her autobiography. Britt tells news people who gathered at her home on March 1, 1979, that the book “True Britt” will tell all with “no holds barred.” (UPI Photo/Glenn Waggner/Files)
Automaker John Delorean and his wife model Christine Ferrare, as DeLorean is released from jail on a $10 M bail
Automaker John Delorean and his wife model Christine Ferrare in their Jaguar car as they leave terminal Island Federal Prison here on October 29, 1982 in Los Angeles. Delorean was released on $10 million bail after spending 11 days in jail on charges he financed a $24 million cocaine deal. (UPI Photo/Glenn Wagnner/Files)
FRENCH: Dak To: de violent combats out fait rage pour l'occupation des collines. Les premiers secours se donnet sur place, ici du plasma pour un blesse grave tandis que les combats continuent sur les flancs de la colline 875 le 21/11/1967. Le lendemain 22/11 les parachusistes U.S. sauterent sur la forteresse communiste au haut de la colline lancant des grenades et utilisant les lance-flammes tandis que l'aviation pillonait le fortin de bombes au napalm. .ENGLISH: Dak To: A wounded soldier is given plasma after being hit during violent engagements in the woods and hillsides November 21, 1967. The following day parachutists landed on the communist fortress and the attack on the fortress continued with throwing of grenades and the use of flame throwers, while pilots dropped napalm bombs. (UPI Photo)(UPI Radiophoto)
Richard Attenborough holds up two Oscars for the movie, "Gandhi."
Richard Attenborough, director of the movie, "Gandhi", holds up two Oscars he won in the 55th Annual Academy Awards presentations 4/11/1983. Attenborough won for Director and Movie of the Year.
Actor Clint Eastwood is seen here putting on the 2nd hole at the Cypress Point Golf Club during the opening round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Golf Championship February 1, 1990. (UPI/File)
Anti-Apartheid demonstrators and police engage in a tug-of-war over a protest banner in front of the University of California Extension Center in San Francisco on June 20, 1986, where the UC Regents are meeting to discuss and vote on UC's investment in South African companies doing business with South Africa. Police arrested 26 demonstrators. (UPI Photo/Martin Klimek/Files)
Actor Dustin Hoffman and actress Meryl Streep receive Oscars
Actor Dustin Hoffman and actress Meryl Streep smile happily after winning their respective Oscars at the 52nd Annual Academy Award presentations at the Music Center on April 14, 1980 in Hollywood. Hofmann won his Oscar for being Best Actor in his role in the film “Kramer vs. Kramer”, while Streep won hers for her role as Best Actress in a Supporting Role in the same movie. (UPI Photo/Bob Flora/Files)
Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. shows executive hiring freeze order due to passage of Proposition 13
California Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. holds up an executive order he signed earlier on June 7, 1978 during a press conference at the Los Angeles Airport. The order will immediately freeze all job hiring and replacements in the State of California as a result of passage of Proposition 13. (UPI Photo/Bill Hormell/Files)
Secretary of State George Schultz chats with comedian Lucille Ball
Secretary of State George Schultz chats with comedian Lucille Ball following a dinner for the John F. Kennedy Center honorees on December 6, 1986 at the State Department in Washington. Ms. Ball will be honored on the 7th at a gala, to be attended by President Reagan, at the Kennedy Center. (UPI Photo/Leighton Mark/Files)
WAX2002102803 - WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Former vice president and Senator Walter Mondale, shown here in an artist rendering from the 1970's, may be the replacement for Sen. Paul Wellstone on this Nov. 5th senate ballot in Minnesota. Sen. Wellstone was killed in a plane crash on Oct. 25, 2002 with his wife, daughter and several aides. mk/UPI
Paris inspired fashion in New York in the late 1950s
Deep box pleats are skillfully cut into the smooth back of a Paris-inspired daytime dress of sheer wool, from the Fall collection of Suzy Perette. The front of the dress has a high round neckline with a buttoned closing to the knee. Photo from 7/19/1958 (UPI Photo)
Democrat Kathleen Kennedy Townsend (L), oldest child of Robert and Ethel Kennedy, and Republican incumbent Helen Delich Bentley (R), both shown in recent photo files, are the contenders for Maryland’s 2nd congressional district seat. Photo released on October 6, 1986. (UPI Photo/Gary Fine/Files)
Jackson Browne gets ready to start in the Sanctuary concert
Rock Superstar Jackson Browne during a sound check before the start of the Sanctuary concert in Tucson, AZ, on September 19, 1985. Browne, along with superstars Don Henley, Stevie Nicks, and Stevie Ray Vaughn, will try to raise money for the Sanctuary movement. The sanctuary trials begin in Mid-October, where 12 people including members of the church will be on trial. (UPI Photo/David Sanders/Files)
KKK Wizard David Duke announces running for U.S. President
David Duke, Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) from Louisiana, talks to news media reporters late August 11, 1979 in Barnegat, NJ, prior to a New Jersey Klan rally. The rally, which was met by an angry crowd of rock throwing protesters, was held to announce the Duke's candidacy in the upcoming 1980 U.S. Presidential election. (UPI Photo/jf/Files)
The Clintons dance at one of the 13 Inaugural Balls
Newly sworn in President Bill Clinton dances with his wife, First Lady, Hillary Rodham Clinton at one of the 13 Inaugural Balls held in Washington D.C. on January 20, 1993. (UPI Photo/Martin Jeong/Files)
President Gerald Ford (R), shown in a November 23, 1974 file photo, died at the age of 93 in his home in Rancho Mirage, California on December 26, 2006. President Ford is pictured with Soviet General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev departing a train at the Okeansky Sanitarium in Vladivostok, USSR. (UPI Photo/ David Hume Kennerly/Gerald R. Ford Library).
Neil Armstrong in testimony before the House Committee on Science and Technology
Former astronaut Neil Armstrong in testimony before the House Committee on Science and Technology on December 8, 1981, in Washington, urged that NASA Aeronautics Research be spared from the budget-cutting axe. (UPI Photo/Don Rypka/Files)
Folk singer Joan Baez sings at Newport Folk Festival
Singer Joan Baez waves to the crowd as she finishes her set before an estimated 7,000 people gathered on the shores of Narraganset Bay for the Newport Folk Festival in Newport, RI, on August 8, 1987. The first day of the 1987 festival drew much larger crowd than last year when fewer fans turned out to see lesser known performers. Arlo Guthrie, Judy Collins and Bonnie Raitt perform on August 9. (UPI Photo/Jim Bourg/Files)
NANCY REAGAN AND KIRK DOUGLAS PRESENTING AWARD TO FORREST GREGG
Nancy Reagan is seen here presenting the American Cancer Society's Courage Award to Cincinnati Bengals coach Forrest Gregg (R) while actor Kirk Douglas, National Crusade Chairman, looks on in a ceremony at the White House in this May 21, 1982 file photo. (UPI/File)
Democratic State Assemblywoman Yvonne W. Braithwaite, who at 39 looks 10 years younger, is a virtual cinch to become the nation’s second black Congresswoman next January. Mrs. Braithwaite, an attorney, is shown at a news conference in Sacramento on June 12, 1972. She has served in the California Assembly since 1967, representing a district which borders on the black Los Angeles area of Watts. (UPI Photo/kjk/Files)
Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy Magazine, is seen here as he appeared in court June 25, 1963 to face charges that nude photographs of Jayne Mansfield in the June issue of the magazine were "obscene". (UPI/File)