luc0-luc-bwp-001 Young George Lucas with race car driver Allen Grant at the 1963 Pacific Grand Prix at Laguna Seca Raceway. © LucasFilm, Ltd. win0-bet-clp-002 luc0-luc-bwp-002 George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola at Lucas's Skywalker Ranch. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-003 George Lucas, 1991. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-cls-004 George Lucas, 1987. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-cls-005 George Lucas, 1992. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-cls-006 George Lucas with some of the fanciful creations from his Star Wars films: C3PO and the Ewoks. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-cls-007 George Lucas with R2D2, C3PO and the Ewoks. © LucasFilm, Ltd. PAU0-AIP-BWP-001 Linus Pauling with his infant son Peter in 1931. By S.A. Goudsmit, Courtesty AIP Niels Bohr Library pau0-aip-bwp-002 Dr. Linus Pauling in the 1950s. Courtesy Niels Bohr Library, Uhlenbeck Collection pau0-ohs-bwp-003 The Paulings, 1931. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-004 Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-005 Linus Pauling at the graduation of his daughter Linda from Reed College in 1954. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-006 1954 Nobel Prize Winners. From L to R: Thomas Weller, Max Born, Frederick Robbins, John Enders, and Linus Pauling. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society SEA0-AIP-bwp-001 pau0-ohs-bwp-007 Linus Pauling in 1954 with model demonstrating molecular structure. A few days after this picture was taken, Pauling was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-008 Linus Pauling with co-worker at California Institute of Technology. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-009 Linus Pauling debating the future of nuclear weapons with Edward Teller in the 1950s. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-010 Linus Pauling (second from right) with colleagues at California Institute of Technology. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-011 Linus Pauling in 1949, at the time of his first studies of sickle cell anemia. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-012 Linus Pauling at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society pau0-ohs-bwp-013 Dr. Linus Pauling Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society luc0-luc-cls-008 George Lucas receives the Irving G. Thalberg Life Achievement Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. © LucasFilm, Ltd. gat0-mic-bwp-001 gat0-mic-clp-002 mar0-bet-bwp-004 mar0-bet-clp-003 mar0-bet-clp-001 mar0-bet-clp-005 Wynton Marsalis displays one of his Grammy Awards. © UPI/Bettman mar0-bet-bwp-002 yea0-bet-bwp-002 yea0-bet-bwp-003 yea-bet-bwp-005 yea-bet-bwp-004 yea0-bet-bwp-001 pau0-bet-bwp-017 pau0-bet-bwp-018 J. Robert Oppenheimer, lead scientist of the Manhattan Project, which developed the atomic bomb. © UPI/Bettman but0-bet-bwp-002 UPI/Bettman but0-bet-bwp-003 © UPI/Bettman alb0-bet-bwp-003 Tenley Albright performs compulsory figures at the 1956 Winter Olympics. © UPI/Bettman alb0-bet-bwp.002 Tenley Albright displays her Olympic Gold Medal for figure skating. © UPI/Bettman alb0-bet-bwp-004 Tenley Albright on the podium at the 1956 Winter Olympics. She has just been awarded the gold medal for figure skating. © UPI/Bettman alb0-bet-bwp-001 Tenley Albright, on the eve of the 1956 Winter Olympics. © UPI/Bettman pau0-bet-bwp-016 Linus Pauling receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962 for his advocacy of arms control. © UPI/Bettman pau0-bet-bwp-014 Dr. and Mrs. Linus Pauling. © UPI/Bettman pau0-bet-bwp-015 Dr. Linus Pauling and the actress Julie Harris demonstrating against nuclear weapons testing (1962). © UPI/Bettman n/a win0-bet-clp-001 Onstage with Oprah Winfrey. © UPI/Bettman win0-bet-clp-003 luc0-bet-bwp-010 Steven Spielberg and George Lucas place their handprints in cement in front of the Chinese Theater in Hollywood. Betweeen the two of them, these two men have produced or directed the six most popular films of all time. © UPI/Bettman pow0-bet-clp-001 General Powell briefs the press on the progress of the Gulf War. UPI/Bettmann pow0-bet-clp-003 Generals Colin Powell and H. Norman Schwarzkopf. UPI/Bettmann luc0-luc-cls-009 Steven Spielberg presents George Lucas with the Motion Picture Academy's Thalberg Award for lifetime achievement. © LucasFilm, Ltd. yea0-daf-bwp-006 Chuck Yeager (center) and crew posing with the Glamorous Glen (named for Mrs. Yeager). Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-yea-bwp-007 Chuck Yeager's World War II fighter, a P-51 Mustang he named for a girl he had met on leave, the future Mrs. Yeager. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office mic0-mic-bwp-001 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull car0-bet-cls-001 "I'm in my tenth year as a professor." Former President Carter in the classroom. © UPI/Bettman car0-bet-cls-002 car0-bet-cls-003 President Jimmy Carter at a picnic with his daughter Amy. © UPI/Bettman car0-bet-cls-004 car0-bet-cls-005 Inauguration Day, 1977. Chief Justice Warren Burger administers the oath of office to President Jimmy Carter, while First Lady Rosalynn Carter looks on. © UPI/Bettman car0-bet-cls-006 car0-bet-cls-007 but0-bet-bwp-004 but0-bet-bwp-005 "They are professional athletes, so they need sports medicine in addition to veterinary medicine." Susan Butcher with one of her champion sled dogs. UPI/Bettman alb0-bet-bwp-005 © UPI/Bettman win0-bet-clp-004 "The greatest thing about what I do is that I'm in a position to change people's lives." © UPI/Bettman win0-bet-bwp-005 pow0-pow-clp-011 General Colin Powell greets children visiting the White House. Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-clp-012 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-clp-013 Colin Powell addresses students. Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-clp-014 General Colin Powell of the U.S. Army with Russian General Moiseyev. Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-015 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-clp-017 Courtesy of General Colin Powell but0-rey-bwp-006 Susan Butcher after winning the 1988 Iditarod. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels luc0-luc-oth-025 © USC/LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-011 A portrait of the artist as a very young man. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-012 George Lucas in his high school picture. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-013 George Lucas, film student. 1966. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-014 George Lucas directing his student film THX 1138:4EB in 1967. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-015 Preparing a difficult shot for American Graffiti,> 1973. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-016 George Lucas with Chewbacca, a character from the Star Wars films. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-017 George Lucas on the set of The Empire Strikes Back with character Yoda and collaborator Frank Oz. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-018 George Lucas on the set with Star Warriors Carrie Fischer, Harrison Ford, and Mark Hamill. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-019 George Lucas on camera dolly with Dennis Muren, shooting Return of the Jedi. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-020 George Lucas on the set of Raiders of the Lost Ark. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-021 George Lucas with Harrison Ford and Steven Spielberg. © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-022 © LucasFilm, Ltd. luc0-luc-bwp-023 George Lucas gets some advice from mentor Francis Ford Coppola. © LucasFilm, Ltd. car0-jcl-bsp-043 car0-jcl-bsp-009 yea0-daf-bwp-008 Chuck Yeager and the X-1 research plane that broke the sound barrier. It can be seen today at the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum in Washington, DC. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-009 Chuck Yeager and Jack Ridley with the X-1, the plane that broke the sound barrier. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-010 The supersonic X-1 in flight. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-011 A B-29 with the X-1 attached underneath. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-012 B-29 with X-1, preparing for take-off. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-013 Colonel (later General) Albert G. Boyd, chief of the flight test division in 1947. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-014 Chuck Yeager with the X-1A rocket research plane. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-015 Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-016 The F-15E: "...the premier airplane, air to ground, with auto terrain following and infrared laser capability." Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-017 The F-22, stressed for nine Gs. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-018 The F-16 fighter. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-019 The T-38. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-020 The X-5: America's first variable swept-wing airplane. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-021 F-15 fighter plane. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-022 An F-15 fighter. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-023 F-16 fighter. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-024 Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-025 An F-4 fighter plane. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-026 Chuck Yeager, still flying high in the 1990s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-027 Chuck Yeager, circa 1963. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-028 Chuck Yeager and his wingman, Bud Anderson, in test pilot days. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-029 Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-030 Chuck Yeager with his children. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-031 The Yeager family at home, 1950s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-032 Chuck and Glennis Yeager. Chuck holds the medal he received for breaking the sound barrier. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-033 An F-86 Sabre, 1953. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-034 Chuck Yeager with his parents, Albert and Susie, after receiving the Harmon International Trophy. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-035 Chuck Yeager in flight school during World War II. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-036 Chuck Yeager, fighter pilot. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office mar0-mar-bwp-006 "We looked up to our father. He still is much greater than us." Wynton and his brother Branford look on as their father, Ellis Marsalis, plays. Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-bwp-007 "I grew to love New York." Wynton Marsalis in his adopted city. Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-bwp-008 Branford and Wynton Marsalis, getting an early start on their chosen instruments. Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-bwp-009 Young Wynton and Branford with their father, Ellis Marsalis, and saxophonist Sonny Stitt. Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-cls-010 "Everything is difficult that's worth achieving." Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-cls-011 "IÕm trying to play something that will make people feel good and make them want to like jazz music." Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-cls-012 Wynton Marsalis gives a lecture demonstration, with orchestra. Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-cls-013 Courtesy Wynton Marsalis mar0-mar-cls-014 "(Jazz has) ...the type of attitude that respects a certain type of form and structure, but (also) has the American conception of humor." Courtesy Wynton Marsalis luc0-vis-vhs-024 alb0-rey-bwp-006 Dr. Tenley Albright. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright win0-rey-bwp-006 A portrait of Oprah Winfrey by Francesco Scavullo. Courtesy of Harpo Studios win0-rey-clp-007 Oprah Winfrey as seen by Francesco Scavullo, portrait photographer of the stars. Courtesy of Harpo Studios sch0-rey-clp-001 General H. Norman Schwarzkopf. Photo courtesy of General Schwarzkopf. tom0-rey-clp-001 Dr. Clyde Tombaugh, discoverer of planet Pluto. Photo courtesy of Dr. Clyde Tombaugh. gol0-rey-bwp-001 she0-rey-bwp-001 Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr., first American in space. nov0-rey-clp-001 joh0-rey-bwp-001 Philip Johnson, dean of American architects. "I enjoy being an enfant terrible, although I'm pretty old to be an enfant." Photo courtesy of Philip Johnson wal0-rey-bwp-001 Herschel Walker, All-American. Photograph courtesy of Herschel Walker. cop0-rey-bwp-001 for0-rey-bwp-001 bal0-rey-bwp-001 Dr. Robert D. Ballard, on board the Atlantis II. nad0-rey-bwp-013 Consumer advocate Ralph Nader. Courtesy of Ralph Nader. joh2-rey-bwp-001 Judge Frank M. Johnson in his chambers in the 1970s. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr. kra0-rey-bwp-001 Henry R. Kravis, managing partner of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. Photo courtesy of Henry R. Kravis. tha0-rey-bwp-001 Twyla Tharp. Photo courtesy of Twyla Tharp. ros0-rey-clp-001 erv0-rey-cuv-001 mar0-ste-bwp-015 mar0-ste-bwp-016 Wynton Marsalis with one of his mentors, author Stanley Crouch. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-017 Wynton Marsalis: composer, bandleader and trumpet viruoso. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-018 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-019 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-020 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-021 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-022 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-023 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-024 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-025 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-026 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-027 "More than anything, I wanted to be able to play." © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-028 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-029 Wynton Marsalis rehearses the band while his children look on. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-030 Wynton Marsalis at home with his children. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-031 Planning a new ballet with choreographer Garth Fagan and his company. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-032 Passing it on to the next genereation. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-033 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-034 Wynton Marsalis conducts the Jazz at Lincoln Center series of concerts. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-035 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-036 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-037 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-038 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-039 Wynton Marsalis with his brother Branford. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-040 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-041 Wynton Marsalis with one of his heroes, be-bop pioneer Dizzy Gillespie. © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-042 © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-043 "I really want to become a better composer. I want to learn how to really write jazz music." © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-044 "It just kind of happened that I did a classical record, and even got known for playing classical." © Frank Stewart mar0-ste-bwp-045 © Frank Stewart nad0-tim-bwp-001 Nader's Raiders on the steps of the Capitol. © John Zimmerman, Life Magazine nad0-tim-bwp-002 Ralph Nader in is office, 1974. © Stanley Tretick, Life Magazine nad0-tim-bwp-003 © Jill Krementz nad0-tim-bwp-004 Testifying before a congressional committee. © Walter Bennett, Time Magazine nad0-bet-clp-006 At this 1988 news conference, Nader and N.Y. State Attorney General Robert Abrams criticize the FDA for suspending the requirement for juice companies to list the actual amount of juice in their products. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-clp-007 Ralph Nader at a Capitol Hill news conference. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-008 In 1966, Ralph Nader testified before the Senate Commerce Committee. Private detectives hired by General Motors had tailed him into the Senate Office Building. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-009 Ralph Nader exposes the defective door laches on luxury cars at hearing of the House Commerce Committee in 1966. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-010 In 1986 Nader joined demonstrators facing the State House in Annapolis, Maryland. The savings and loan system of the state had failed. © UPI/Bettman nad0-tim-bwp-011 Ralph Nader in his Washington office. © Walter Bennett, Time Magazine nad0-bet-cls-012 "The Congressional hearing usually gets good media, and leads to legislation..." © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-014 Ralph Nader at a 1976 press conference. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-005 At a news conference in 1977, Nader and a young friend demonstrate the airbag, which has since become a standard feature in American cars. © UPI/Bettman pau0-bet-bwp-019 Dr. Linus Pauling celebrates with his family after receiving the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. © UPI/Bettman mic0-rey-clp-051 but0-but-bwp-019 Susan Butcher, with her winning team. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels wat0-bet-bwp-001 James Watson with Francis Crick in 1953, the year of their discovery of the DNA molecule. UPI/Bettman eis0-re-clp--001 Michael Eisner and his mother, Margaret. © Reuters/Jeff Christensen/Archive Photos eis0-reu-clp-002 At Disneyland with Roy Disney and Mickey Mouse. © Reuters/Fred Prouser/Archive Photos eis0-reu-clp-003 Michael Eisner, Chairman of the Walt Disney Company. © Reuters/Lee Celano/Archive Photos eis0-bet-bwp-004 Two giants of the communications industry: Michael Eisner and Rupert Murdoch. © UPI/Bettman eis0-reu-clp-005 Michael Eisner unveils the Alladin Activity Center, a CD-ROM based on the hit movie. © Reuters/Fred Prouser/Archive Photos eis0-reu-clp-006 Michael Eisner with New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. © Reuters/Mark Caldwell/Archive Photos eis0-sho-cls-007 Michael Eisner on vacation. © Ron Davis, Shooting Star yea0-daf-clp-037 The F-23. General Yeager has flown this plane since its inception. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-038 Yeager and crew at Johnson Air Force Base. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-039 A Stealth fighter cruises above the cloud layer. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-040 Time-lapse photo of a Bell X-5 variable swept-wing aircraft. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-041 Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-042 Lt. Col. Yeager ready for take-off in the 1950s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-043 ChuckYeager at the controls. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-044 Yeager at the controls, in pressure suit for high-altitude flying. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-clp-046 Chuck Yeager, preparing to fly an F-16 in the 1990s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-047 Aerial view of Muroc (later Edwards) Air Force base as it was in 1946. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office yea0-daf-bwp-048 Chuck Yeager and Kit Murray with the X1-A rocket research plane in the 1950s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office par0-bet-bwp-001 Rosa Parks approaches the Montgomery courthouse to enter her plea. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-002 Rosa Parks at a 1956 press conference. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-003 Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-004 After the Supreme Court decision, Rosa Parks rides at the front of the bus. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-005 Rosa Parks, campaigning in 1988. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-006 © UPI/Bettman par0-reu-bwp-007 Rosa Parks gets a warm greeting from President Bill Clinton. At left, actress and activist Cicely Tyson. © Reuters/Win McNamee/Archive Photos par0-bet-bwp-008 The struggle goes on. Rosa Parks in her seventies. © UPI/Bettman par0-bet-bwp-009 Rosa Parks in Montgomery after the Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation on public transit. © UPI/Bettman par0-tim-bwp-010 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. conducts a meeting of the Montgomery Improvement Association in 1955. Rosa Parks is seated in the front row. © Don Cravens, Life magazine par0-tim-bwp-011 On Rosa Parks Blvd. in Detroit, Michigan. People Weekly, © 1976 Andrew Sacks par0-tim-bwp-012 Rosa Parks at home in Detroit, 1976. People Weekly, © 1976 Andrew Sacks par0-tim-bwp-013 Rosa Parks talking to young people in Detroit, Michigan. People Weekly, © 1976 Andrew Sacks alb0-alb-bwp-010 Tenley Albright performs a split jump. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-oth-007 Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-oth-008 Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-009 Tenley Albright at the 1955 World Championship Figure Skating competetion Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-vhs-011 Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-012 Tenley Albright displays her gold medal. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-014 Tenley Albright at age 11, the year she was stricken with polio. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-015 Tenley Albright at age 13. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-016 Tenley Albright in action at age 12. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-oth-013 Original poster from the 1956 Winter Olympics at Cortina, Italy, where Tenley Albright won her gold medal. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-017 Tenley Albright, 17 year-old World Champion Figure Skater. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-018 Eleven year-old Tenley Albright does a split jump. She has just recovered from polio. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-019 Tenley Albright demonstrates the bunny-hop jump at age 14. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-021 Tenley Albright on the ice in her teens. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-020 Tenley Alright, age 20, doing the bunny hop jump. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-022 Tenley Albright, age 16. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-clp-023 Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-024 Tenley Albright practicing for World Championship competition. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-025 Tenley Albright at the National Figure Skating Championships at Sun Valley, Idaho. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-026 Tenley Albright with her trophy from the 1955 National Figure Skating Championship. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-027 Tenley Albright at the World Figure Skating Championships at Davos, Switzerland. She was the first American woman to win this competition. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-028 Dr. Tenley Albright on the ice with her three daughters. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-029 Dr. Tenley Albright reviews a patient's chart. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-bwp-030 Tenley Albright at Harvard Medical School. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright alb0-alb-clp-031 Dr. Tenley Albright, General Surgeon, writes orders. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright win0-sho-cls-008 Oprah Winfrey, actress, entrepreneur and talk-show host extraordinaire. © Marc Morrison,/Shooting Star win0-sho-cls-021 © Ron Davis/Shooting Star win0-sho-cls-009 Oprah Winfrey flourishes her Emmy award. © Lisa O'Connor. Ace/Shooting Star win0-sho-cls-010 Oprah keeps fit with power walking. © Mitch Jacobson, Shooting Star win0-tim-bwp-011 Oprah Winfrey on the set of There Are No Children Here. People Weekly, © 1993 Steve Kagan win0-tim-bwp-012 Oprah with children. "A part of my life now is to encourage every other child who has been abused to tell." People Weekly, © 1983 Steve Kagan win0-tim-bwp-013 "(My show) is the most incredible platform for influence that you could imagine." People Weekly, © Kevin Horan win0-tim-cls-014 Oprah Winfrey with Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou, Angela Davis and Rita Dove. People Weekly, © 1994 Will McIntyre win0-tim-cls-015 Oprah Winfrey with Angela Davis. People Weekly, © 1994 Will McIntyre car0-jcl-clp-010 Signing the Panama Canal Treaty with President Torrijos of Panama (right) and Kurt Waldheim, Secretary General of the UN. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-011 President Carter and his mother, Lillian. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-012 President Carter and his mother, Lillian. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-013 President Carter prepares to deliver a live television address from the Oval Office. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-014 President Carter with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat at Camp David, Maryland. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-015 President Sadat of Egypt, President Carter and Prime Minister Begin of Israel sign the Camp David Accords: A Framework for Peace. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-018 President Carter relaxes with President Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Begin of Israel at the presidential retreat, Camp David. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-019 President Carter receives an old friend: Admiral Hyman Rickover, father of the nuclear submarine. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-020 The Plains High School basketball team. Jimmy Carter is in the back row, second from left. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-021 Young Jimmy Carter, with his dog, Bozo, 1937. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-022 Lillian Carter on the family farm with her daughter, Ruth, and her son, Jimmy. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-023 James Earl Carter, Sr., with his children. The future president is on the right, with his sister Ruth and brother Billy. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-024 Jimmy Carter campaigning for Governor of Georgia. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-025 Midshipman Carter of the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-026 Old enemies make peace. Prime Minister Begin of Israel shakes hands with President Sadat of Egypt while U.S. President Carter looks on. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-027 President Carter visits the Kittredge School while promoting energy awareness. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-028 President Carter shakes hands with Soviet Leader Leonid Brezhnev after signing the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II). Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library but0-but-bwp-001 Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-007 Susan Butcher, mushing dogs on the trail. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-008 This map charts the course of the grueling Iditarod dogsled race. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-009 Susan Butcher on the trail with her championship team. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-010 "There is nothing that brings me more joy than to see a 16-dog team trotting down the trail." Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-011 Susan Butcher crossing the finish line of the 1988 Iditarod. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-012 Susan Butcher, with one of her teammates. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-013 Susan Butcher, champion of the Iditarod. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-014 Summertime in Alaska. Susan Butcher and her team, mushing in warm weather. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-015 Susan Butcher and friends around the campfire in the wilds of Alaska. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-016 Mushing in the long northern twilight. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-017 The finish line of the 1990 Iditarod. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels but0-but-cls-018 Susan Butcher and her husband David at Trailbreaker Kennels. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels yea0-daf-bwp-045 Chuck Yeager, test pilot, 1950s. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office car0-rey-cls-029 Former President Carter addresses the Academy of Achievement. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-016 Anwar Sadat, Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter prepare to sign the Camp David Accords, making peace between Israel and Egypt. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-bwp-031 Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at Camp David. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library car0-jcl-clp-032 Presidnt Carter shakes hands with President Torrijos of Panama after signing the Panama Canal Treaty. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library but0-but-bwp-020 Susan Butcher, champion dog-sled racer. Courtesy Trailbreaker Kennels eis0-reu-clp-008 Michael Eisner with George Lucas and C3PO. © Reuters/Archive Photos eis0-rey-bwp-009 Michael Eisner, Chairman of the Board of the Walt Disney Company. eis0-reu-clp-010 With Capital Cities Chairman Thomas Murphy, announcing the merger of the Walt Disney Company and Capital Cities/ABC. © Reuters/Peter Morgan/Archive Photos par0-rey-bwp-014 Rosa Parks, Pioneer of Civil Rights. © People Weekly yea0-rey-bwp-049 Chuck Yeager, Brigadier General, USAF. Courtesy Air Force Flight Test Center History Office alb0-alb-bwp-032 Teenage skating champion Tenley Albright receives a new variety of orchid which has been named for her. Courtesy Dr. Tenley Albright woo0-woo-bwp-001 John Wooden's parents. Courtesy of John Wooden woo0-woo-oth-002 John Wooden's Pyramid of Success. Courtesy of John Wooden woo0-woo-clp-003 Coach JohnWooden. Courtesy John Wooden woo0-woo-bwp-004 woo0-woo-clp-005 In action during a game. woo0-woo-bwp-006 Johnny Wooden, star of Purdue University basketball squad in 1930. Courtesy JohnWooden woo0-woo-clp-007 woo0-woo-clp-008 John Wooden and his beloved Nellie. Courtesy John Wooden woo0-woo-bwp-009 woo0-woo-clp-010 At UCLA, John Wooden visits an exhibit of his life and career. pau0-bet-bwp-020 In 1958, Dr. Linus Pauling shows a Senate Committee a petition calling for an end to the testing of nuclear weapons. © UPI/Bettman yea0-bet-bwp-050 Neil Armstrong, first human to set foot on the moon. © UPI/Bettman nad0-bet-bwp-015 The Pride of the Yankees, Lew Gehrig. © UPI/Bettman alb0-tim-cls-033 "You're seeing how close you can come, whether you can, in your mind's eye, draw a pattern on a totally clean, unmarked piece of ice." Hy Peskin, Sports Illustrated © Time Inc. alb0-tim-cls-034 World Figure Skating Champion Tenley Albright performs a stag leap. Hy Peskin, Sports Illustrated © Time Inc. erv0-tim-cls-002 erv0-tim-cls-003 erv0-tim-cls-004 erv0-tim-cls-005 erv0-tim-cls-006 erv0-tim-cls-007 wal0-tim-cls-002 Peter Read Miller/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-003 Herschel Walker Jim Schnepf/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-004 Al Tielemans/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-005 Brad Mangin/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-006 Al Tielemans/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. car0-hab-bwp-041 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter volunteering with Habitat for Humanity. Courtesy Habitat for Humanity car0-hab-bwp-034 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter volunteering with Habitat for Humanity. Courtesy Habitat for Humanity car0-hab-bwp-035 Former President Carter and his wife Rosalynn building homes for the homeless. Courtesy Habitat for Humanity car0-hab-bwp-036 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter volunteering with Habitat for Humanity. car0-hab-cls-037 Jimmy Carter, volunteering with Habitat for Humanity. car0-hab-cls-038 Jimmy Carter at work with Habitat for Humanity. car0-hab-cls-039 Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter study plans for a house they are building as volunteers with Habitat for Humanity. Courtesy Habitat for Humanity car0-hab-cls-040 Former President Carter and his wife Rosalynn volunteer one week every year building houses for the poor with Habitat for Humanity. nad0-bet-bwp-016 In 1973, Ralph Nader tells a congressional committee that the oil crisis is an industry fabrication, abetted by apathetic regulatory agencies. © UPI/Bettman win0-war-cls-016 Oprah Winfrey as Sofia in The Color Purple. Courtesy Warner Bros. win0-sho-cls-017 Oprah Winfrey with Quincy Jones and Oscar. © Spike Nannarello, Shooting Star wal0-rey-bwp-007 Minnesota Vikings mic0-mic-bwp-002 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-003 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-004 The Michener family. Top row, left to right: Mabel, Laura, Hannah. Bottom row: Dorothy, Noel and James A. Michener. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-005 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-006 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-007 James Michener as a child. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-008 Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-009 James Michener, basketball player at Doylestown High School. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-010 Young James Michener, at home in Doylestown. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-011 Graduation picture, Doylestown High School. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-012 James Michener, Swarthmore College graduation picture. Courtesy Virginia Trumbull mic0-mic-bwp-013 James Michener, U.S. Navy. Courtesy James A. Michener mic0-mic-bwp-014 Writing Tales of the South Pacific in a Quonset hut on Espiritu Santo Island at 4:00 A.M. Courtesy James A. Michener mic0-mic-bwp-015 Courtesy Mari Sabusawa Michener mic0-mic-bwp-016 James Michener and his wife of 39 years, Mari Sabusawa. ©Honolulu Star Bulletin mic0-mic-bwp-017 James Michener in Israel researching his novel, The Source. ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-018 ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-019 With lawmen in Marfa, Texas, James Michener researches his novel, Texas. ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-020 Michener rides a dogsled while doing research for his novel Alaska. Courtesy Fred Big Jim mic0-mic-bwp-021 In Wyoming, Michener researches his novel, Centennial. ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-022 Michener meets with Cuban poet Pablo Fernández while working on his book, Six Days in Havana. ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-023 ©Prince mic0-mic-bwp-024 Courtesy James A. Michener mic0-mic-bwp-025 In Rome, the novelist meets an old friend, Pope John Paul II. ©Artura Mari, LÕOsservatore Roma mic0-mic-bwp-026 Michener with Texas Governor Ann Richards, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip. ©Charles Guerrero mic0-mic-bwp-027 Michener followed the Iran-Contra hearings with great interest. ©John Kings mic0-mic-bwp-028 ©George Holmes mic0-mic-bwp-029 James Michener, with students at the University of Texas. ©Steven Pumphrey mic0-mic-bwp-030 ©Peggy Pryor mic0-mic-bwp-031 Hard at work. ©Colleen Dilworth mic0-mic-bwp-033 Courtesy James A. Michener mic0-bet-bwp-034 UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-035 UPI/Bettmann mic0-bet-bwp-036 James Michener displays a medal awarded him by the Pennsylvania Society. Michener served on the commission which revised the state's constitution. UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-037 UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-038 Michener is interviewed after surviving a plane crash in the Pacific. UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-039 Candidate Michener, running for Congress. UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-040 UPI/Bettman mic0-bet-bwp-041 UPI/Bettmann mic0-bet-bwp-042 Michener, off on his travels again, after a surviving a plane crash in the Pacific Ocean. UPI/Bettmann mic0-bet-bwp-043 UPI/Bettmann mic0-bet-bwp-044 UPI/Bettmann mic0-tim-bwp-045 © TIME Inc. mic0-tim-bwp-046 © TIME Inc. mic0-tim-bwp-047 © TIME Inc. mic0-rho-bwp-048 A scene from the original Broadway production of South Pacific. ©Rodgers and Hammerstein mic0-arc-bws-049 James A. Michener, Pulitzer Prize-Winning novelist. Archive Photos mic0-arc-cls-050 James A. Michener, American institution and internationl publishing phenomenon. Archive Photos pow0-rey-bwp-002 Colin Powell, a civilian once again. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-004 Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-005 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-006 General Powell at the dedication of the Buffalo Soldier memorial at Fort Leavenworth. Buffalo Soldiers was the name given by American Indians to the African Americans who served with the 10th Cavlary during the winning of the West. Ebony Magazine/Vandell Cobb pow0-pow-bwp-007 Department of Defense Photo pow0-pow-bwp-008 Retired General Colin Powell preparing to speak to a crowd of 14,000 people at a business conference in Bakersfield, California. John Harte/The Bakersfield Californian pow0-pow-bwp-009 The General's father, Luther Powell, as seen in the British passport he carried when he immigrated to the United States from Jamaica. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-010 Young Colin Powell, with his father, Luther, on 167th St. in Harlem, on their way home from church. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-016 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-018 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-019 Former President Carter, President Clinton, Senator Nunn and retired General Powell at press conference announcing the successful outcome of Carter, Powell and Nunn's peace mission to Haiti. AP/Wide World pow0-pow-bwp-020 General Powell's mother, Maud Ariel McKoy Powell, called Arie. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-021 U.S. Government Photo pow0-pow-bwp-022 Ingalls Shipbuilding Photo/Ron Elias pow0-pow-bwp-023 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-024 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-025 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-026 Official file photo of Colonel Powell, 101st Airborne. U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-027 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-028 ROTC summer camp, Ft. Bragg, North Carolina. Colin Powell, Duty Officer of Company D. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-029 White House Fellow, 1972. U.S. Government Photo pow0-pow-bwp-030 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-031 Department of Defense Photo/R.D. Ward pow0-pow-bwp-032 Colin Powell receives the Legion of Merit from Major General Herbert McChrystal on Powell's last day on the Army staff before becoming a White House Fellow. Alma Powell holds Annemarie, while Mike and Linda Powell look on. U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-033 Meeting Pesident Nixon in 1972. White House Photo pow0-pow-bwp-034 U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-035 U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-036 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-037 Visiting with soldiers of his brigade in field training at Ft. Campbell, Kentucky. U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-038 Greeting Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld at Ft. Campbell, Kentucky in 1976. U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-039 At Ft. Chaffee, Araknsas in 1976. Training the 39th Infantry Brigade of the Arkansas National Guard. Brigadier General harold Gwateny at left, the commanedr of Forces Command, General Bernard Rogers on the right. U.S. Army Photo pow0-pow-bwp-040 White House Photo pow0-pow-bwp-041 White House Photo pow0-pow-bwp-042 National Security Advisor Colin Powell with President Reagan at Reagan's ranch. Powell has flown in from Geneva to brief Reagan on the INF treaty concluded with the Soviets. White House Photo/Bill Fitzpatrick pow0-pow-bwp-043 Department of Defense Photo/R.D. Ward pow0-pow-bwp-044 Arturo Mari pow0-pow-bwp-045 Joint Staff Photo/Joe Fallon pow0-pow-bwp-046 Colin Powell, age five, on a summer Sunday outing to his aunt and uncle's house in Queens. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-047 Colin Powell and his sister, Marilyn, in front of their apartment house in the Bronx. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-048 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-049 Autumn, 1954. Colin Powell in his ROTC uniform. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-050 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-051 Courtesy of General Colin Powell pow0-pow-bwp-052 Colin Powell with four friends from his Bronx neighborhood in the early 1950s. "Two blacks, two Lithuanians and a Puerto Rican: typical of the ethnic mix" of the neighborhood, says General Powell. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-053 General Powell with his growing family in 1975. Annemarie, age five, his wife Alma, ten year-old Linda, and Mike, age twelve. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-054 Wedding day, 1962. Powell's parents are on the left, Alma Johnson's parents on the right. Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-pow-bwp-055 Colin Powell stands in the back row of this group of second lieutenants who have just completed their final field exercise at the Ranger school mountain training camp in Georgia. U.S. Army Photo pow0-rey-cls-056 Courtesy of Colin L. Powell pow0-rey-cls-057 Colin and Alma Powell at the Academy of Achievement banquet. Academy of Achievement pow0-pow-bwp-058 Joint Staff Photo/Joe Fallon sal0-sal-bwp-001 Courtesy of the Salk Institute sal0-sal-bwp-002 Courtyard of the Salk Institute, La Jolla, California. Courtesy of the Salk Institute sal0-mod-bwp-003 March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-004 Dr. Salk vaccinates a child against polio. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-005 Dr. Salk's discovery of the polio vaccine made headlines the world over. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-006 President Franklin Roosevelt, himself a victim of polio, meets with March of Dimes executive Basil O'Connor. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-007 March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-008 Many polio victims were forced to spend the rest of their lives in iron lung devices like these. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-009 One shopkeeper expresses a nation's gratitude for Dr. Salk's discovery. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-010 A young girl, parayzed by polio, gazes out from her iron lung. In the foreground are the elaborate leg braces worn by those whom the disease crippled less severely. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-011 Elvis Presley receives the polio vaccine. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-012 Dr. Salk in the laboratory. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-013 The first March of Dimes poster child. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-014 Jonas Salk with Dr. Bazely. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-015 Field trials of the polio vaccine. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-016 Dr. Mulvaney admininister the first vaccination. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation sal0-mod-bwp-017 March of Dimes Birth Defect Foundation sal0-bet-bwp-018 Dr. Salk checks virus samples. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-019 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-020 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-021 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-022 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-023 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-024 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-025 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-cls-026 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-cls-027 Jonas Salk in 1955. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-028 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-029 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-030 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-031 Dr. Jonas Salk receives the Medal of Freedom from President Carter and Vice President Mondale. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-032 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-033 Reviewing plans for the Salk Institute. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-034 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-035 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-036 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-037 Jonas Salk and his research team at the Virus Research Laboratory of the University of Pittsburgh. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-038 Jonas Salk arrives in Washington with his family. UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-039 UPI/Bettmann sal0-bet-bwp-040 UPI/Bettmann sal0-tim-bwp-041 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-042 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-043 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-044 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-045 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-046 Jonas Salk, 1962. © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-047 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-048 In 1962, Salk displays a chart showing the rapid decline in the incidence of polio since the introduction of the vaccine. Bill Eppridge/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-049 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-050 © TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-051 Jonas Salk at the press conference announcing the polio vaccine in 1955. Al Fenn/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. sal0-tim-bwp-052 © TIME Inc. ste0-ste-vhs-001 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-clp-002 Martha Kostyra, of Nutley, New Jersey, age 10. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-clp-003 Christmas at home. Martha at 14. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-clp-004 Martha Stewart and her daughter Alexis, at home in the 1960s. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-clp-005 Martha Stewart and her mother, Martha Kostyra. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-006 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-007 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-008 Martha Stewart in the greenhouse at her farm in Connecticut. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-009 On the set of Martha Stewart Living. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-010 Christmas with Martha Stewart. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-011 Posing for a magazine cover. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-012 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-013 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-014 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-cls-015 One of Martha Stewart's popular books on home decoration. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-oth-016 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-oth-017 The book on Gardening has been one of Martha Stewart's most popular. Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-ste-oth-018 Courtesy of Martha Stewart ste0-arc-cls-019 Archive Photos ste0-arc-cls-020 Archive Photos ste0-rey-bwp-021 Archive Photos tom0-tom-bwp-002 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-003 Clyde Tombaugh as a child, with his family. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-004 Clyde Tombaugh with his high school track team. Young Clyde was the school's star pole vaulter. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-005 Clyde Tombaugh at the Lowell Observatory, at the time of his momentous discovery. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-006 Young Clyde Tombauh, with a favorite telescope. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-007 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-008 The two white lines mark the spot on this photographic plate where Clyde Tombaugh first saw the planet Pluto. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-009 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-010 The dome of Lowell Observatory, with its 13" telescope. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-011 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-012 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-013 Clyde Tombaugh and his wife Patricia. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-014 The Chancellor of the University of Kansas congratulates Clyde Tombaugh on graduation day. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-015 White Sands Missile Range, 1948. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-016 A captured German V-2 rocket at White Sands. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-017 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-018 Tombaugh and associates at the White Sands Missile Range. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-019 Clyde Tombaugh examines film of rocket flights taken with his tracking telescope. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-020 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-021 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-022 Clyde Tombaugh at the blink comparator, the device he used to discover Pluto. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-023 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-024 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-025 Clyde Tombaugh at the 24" telescope in Las Cruces, New Mexico. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-026 The Andromeda nebula. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-027 Clyde Tombaugh and his friend, Pluto. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-bet-bwp-028 UPI/Bettmann tom0-bet-bwp-029 UPI/Bettmann tom0-bet-bwp-030A Defense attorney Clarence Darrow at the notorious Scopes "monkey trial" in 1925. UPI/Bettmann tom0-bet-bwp-030B The Bettmann Archive tom0-bet-bwp-030C The Bettmann Archive tom0-bet-bwp-030D UPI/Bettmann tom0-tim-bwp-031 © TIME Inc. tom0-tim-bwp-032 Clyde Tombaugh at home, with one of his handmade telescopes. © TIME Inc. tom0-tim-bwp-033 © TIME Inc. tom0-tim-bwp-034 © TIME Inc. tom0-tim-bwp-035 © TIME Inc. tom0-tim-bwp-036 © TIME Inc. tom0-rey-oth-037 tom0-tom-bwp-038 Clyde Tombaugh in 1928, with his homemade 9" telescope. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwo-039 Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-040 Courtesy of David Levy tom0-tom-bwp-041 CLyde Tombaugh's son Robert peers through a 5" telescope in 1935. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh tom0-tom-bwp-042 Poster for New Mexico State University's Tombaugh scholarship fund. The poster shows Tombaugh with Pluto and its moon, Charon. Courtesy of Clyde Tombaugh wat0-csh-bwp-002 James Watson in the classroom. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-003 James Watson as a child. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-004 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-005 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-006 Watson as a teenager, 1946. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-007 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-008 James Watson, age 11, with his father and sister in 1939. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-009 James Watson in the Italian Alps in 1952. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-010 Watson signs autographs for students in 1988. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-011 Watson and Crick's original demonstration model of the double helix. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-012 Dr. James Watson. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-013 Watson and Crick reunited, with the double helix model of the DNA molecule. A. Barrington Brown/Science Source/Photoresearchers wat0-csh-bwp-014 Microbial genetics meeting, 1951. Watson stands in the back row, third from the right. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-015 Sir Francis Crick, co-discoverer of the DNA molecule. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-016 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-017 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-018 Young Watson in Oxford. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-019 James Watson, age 10, in 1938. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-020 Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-021 James Watson with his sister in Copenhagen, Denmark, 1951. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-csh-bwp-022 James Watson leading a symposium on DNA. Courtesy of Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. wat0-bet-bwp-023 The Nobel Prize winners for 1962.
From left to right: Prof. Maurice Wilkins (for Medicine, along with Watson & Crick), Dr. Max Perutz (UK, for Chemistry), Francis Crick, John Steinbeck (USA, for literature), James Watson, Dr. John Kendrew, (UK, Chemistry). UPI/Bettman wat0-hpb-bwp-024 James Watson, with his family, spending a day at the lake. Photo courtesy of Hugh Patrick Brown wat0-hpb-bwp-025 Photo courtesy of Hugh Patrick Brown wat0-tim-bwp-026 James Watson, at Cold Springs Harbor Laboratory. Leonard McCombe/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. wat0-tim-bwp-027 James Watson with Dr. Bernhard Hirt, 1970. Leonard McCombe/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. wal0-wal-vhs-008 wal0-wal-bwp-009 New York Giants wal0-wal-clp-010 wal0-wal-clp-011 wal0-wal-clp-012 wal0-wal-clp-013 wal0-wal-clp-014 Herschel Walker, "I was a different little kid." Courtesy of Herschel Walker wal0-wal-clp-015 wal0-wal-clp-016 wal0-wal-clp-017 wal0-wal-clp-018 "Your body is different from my body. This may work good for you and not work good for me." Courtesy of Herschel Walker wal0-wal-clp-019 "I started doing push-ups and sit-ups during commercials as I was watching TV. I started doing about 2,000 push-ups, 3,000 sit-ups, 1500 pull-ups, 1000 dips, or different things like that." Courtesy of Herschel Walker wal0-wal-clp-020 wal0-wal-clp-021 "Run the race against yourself and not the guy in the other lane." Herschel Walker at the University of Georgia. Courtesy of Herschel Walker wal0-wal-clp-022 wal0-wal-bwp-023 Herschel Walker and his sister Veronica. Courtesy of Herschel Walker wal0-wal-bwp-024 wal0-bet-bwp-025 UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-bwp-026 Herschel Walker with his wife, Cindy. UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-bwp-027 UPI/Bettmann Newsphotos wal0-bet-bwp-028 wal0-bet-bwp-029 Herschel Walker, All-American, signing footballs in 1982. UPI/Bettman wal0-bet-bwp-030 wal0-bet-cls-031 Herschel Walker with the Heisman Trophy. UPI/Bettman wal0-bet-bwp-032 UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-bwp-033 Herschel Walker, carrying the ball for the New Jersey Generals. UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-bwp-034 Herschel Walker, on the offense, with the New Jersey Generals. UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-bwp-035 Herschel Walker, playing for the University of Georgia. UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-cls-036 Herschel Walker of the New Jersey Generals. UPI/Bettmann wal0-bet-cls-037 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann wal0-reu-clp-038 REUTERS/Lou Dematteis/Archive Photos wal0-arc-cls-039 wal0-wal-vhs-040 hil0-bet-bwp-001 Edmund Hillary took this photograph of Tenzing Norgay as they became the first human beings to set foot on the summit of Mt. Everest, the highest point on earth. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-002 Edmund Hillary reads his mail in camp after descending from the summit of Everest. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-003 The ascent of Mt. Everest. On this expedition, only Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were able to reach the summit. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-004 Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay at the Everest base camp, after the climb. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-005 Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay savor their triumph over the wordÕs tallest mountain. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-006 "When I was home, we had a very pleasant and relaxed family life." Sir Edmund Hillary and Lady Hillary at home with their son Peter. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-007 Sir Edmund Hillary, departing from London's Heathrow Airport. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-008 "My God! WeÕve climbed the thing! WeÕve done it!" Edmund Hillary, safely off the mountain. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-009 Mountaineer friends form an arch of ice axes over the heads of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Hillary as they leave the chapel on their wedding day. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-010 "I never climbed up anything one step at a time." Edmund Hillary leads the way. UPI/Bettmann hil0-bet-bwp-011 Sir Edmund Hillary and Sir John Hunt, leader of the Everest expedition on July 16, 1953, the day they were knighted by Queen Elizabeth II. UPI/Bettmann hil0-reu-bwp-012 Sir Edmund Hillary receives the Golden Camera Award for his documentation of the Himalyas. Reuters/Bettmann car0-jcl-cls-033 President Carter joins hands with President Sadat of Egypt and Prime Minister Begin of Israel after signing the Camp David Accords. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library pau0-bet-bwp-021 Dr. Linus Pauling, age 84, at the Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine in Palo Alto, California. © UPI/Bettman hil0-tim-bwp-013 "The years from 1953 to 1975 were extremely happy years for me." Sir Edmund Hillary, 1955. © Time Inc. hil0-tim-bwp-014 © Time Inc. hil0-tim-bwp-015 "I donÕt normally preach to young people. Not unless they ask me a question." PIX, Inc./LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. hil0-tim-bwp-016 John Hunt, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, decorated by the Queen. Jim Burke/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. hil0-tim-bwp-017 Edmund Hillary, second from right, relaxes in camp after descending from Mt. Everest. Jim Burke/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. hil0-tim-bwp-018 Sir Edmund Hillary. Jim Burke/LIFE Magazine©TIME Inc. hil0-arc-bwp-019 Sir Edmund Hillary in New Zealand, preparing for the great Antarctic expedition. Archive Photos hil0-arc-cls-020 Sir Edmund Hillary. Archive Photos hil0-arc-bws-021 "I get frightened to death on many occasions, but fear can be a stimulating factor." Edmund Hillary on Mt. Everest. Archive Photos hil0-arc-bws-022 Sir Edmund Hillary and crew preparing for their trip to the South Pole. Archive Photos hil0-arc-bws-023 Sir Edmund Hillary with the plane he was to use on the Trans-Antarctic expedition. Archive Photos bus0-bus-bwp-001 Congressman-elect George Bush and his wife, Barbara, celebrate their victory on election night, 1966. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-002 Mr. Bush goes to Washington. First-term Congressman, 1966. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-003 bus0-bus-bwp-004 Watching the election returns, 1988. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-005 bus0-bus-bwp-006 Chairman of the Republican National Committee, 1974. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-007 President Bush, JCS Chairman Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney and National Security Advisor Brent Scowcroft. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-008 bus0-bus-bwp-009 President Bush addresses the United Nations, on the eve of the Gulf War. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-010 bus0-bus-bwp-011 bus0-bus-bwp-012 Navy pilot George Bush, 1942. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-013 "Our family has been close, close, close." The Bush family at home in Texas, early 1950s. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-bwp-014 bus0-bus-clp-015 bus0-bus-clp-016 The Commander-in-Chief visits American troops in the Persian Gulf. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bus-clp-017 bus0-bus-clp-018 A winning team in the 1980s: Ronald and Nancy Reagan, George and Barbara Bush. George Bush Presidential Materials Project bus0-bet-clp-019 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-020 In the Oval Office, President Bush prepares his State of the Union address. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-021 bus0-bet-clp-022 President Bush with Mikhail Gorbachev, the last President of the Soviet Union. UPI/ Bettmann Newsphotos bus0-bet-clp-023 UPI/ Bettmann Newsphotos bus0-bet-clp-024 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-025 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-026 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-027 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-028 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-029 Vice President Bush with President Reagan and Soviet President Gorbachev in New York City. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-030 Accepting the Republican presidential nomination, 1988. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-031 UPI/Bettmann Newsphotos bus0-bet-clp-032 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-033 President Bush at the Grand Tetons, addressing the press in the first days of the Kuwait crisis. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-034 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-035 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-036 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-037 UPI/Bettmann Newsphotos car0-car-clp-008 James E. (Jimmy) Carter, Jr., 39th President of the United States. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library bus0-bet-clp-038 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-clp-039 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-bwp-040 UN Ambassador George Bush in 1971. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-bwp-041 UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-bwp-042 Primary election night, 1964. George Bush has just become the Republican candidate for Senator from Texas. UPI/Bettmann bus0-bet-bwp-043 UPI/Bettmann tel0-rey-bwp-001 Edward Teller, physicist and "Statesman of Science." Courtesy of Dr. Edward Teller tel0-lln-bwp-002 Dr. Edward Teller in the 1960s. Courtesy of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tel0-lln-bwp-003 tel0-lln-bwp-004 Edward Teller in the classroom. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tel0-ucb-bwp-005 tel0-lln-bwp-006 tel0-lln-bwp-007 Edward Teller, teaching a class at General Dynamics in San Diego, 1956. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tel0-lln-bwp-008 tel0-lal-bwp-009 tel0-lal-bwp-010 Los Alamos, New Mexico as it appeared during World War II. Los Alamos Laboratory tel0-lln-bwp-011 tel0-lln-bwp-012 tel0-lln-bwp-013 tel0-lal-bwp-014 tel0-lln-bwp-015 tel0-lln-bwp-016 tel0-lln-bwp-017 The Hungarian passport Edward Teller carried when he entered the United States in 1935. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tel0-lal-bwp-018 Los Alamos, New Mexico, where the first atomic bomb was built. Los Alamos Laboratory tel0-ucb-bwp-019 tel0-lln-bwp-020 tel0-lln-bwp-021 tel0-lln-bwp-022 tel0-lln-bwp-023 tel0-lal-bwp-024 tel0-lln-clp-025 Dr. Edward Teller. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tel0-lbl-bwp-026 tel0-aip-bwp-027 AIP/Niels Boht Library/Physics Today Collection tel0-aip-bwp-028 Wheeler Collection/Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-029 Milton Plesset, Niels Bohr, Fritz Kalckar, Edward Teller and Otto Robert Frisch at the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Denmark, 1934. Wheeler Collection/Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-030 Edward Teller receives the National Medal of Science from President Reagan in 1983. White House Photo/Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-031 AIP/Niels Bohr Library/Photograph by Francis Simon tel0-aip-bwp-032 tel0-aip-bwp-033 tel0-aip-bwp-034 The first man-made atomic blast: Trinity site, Alamagordo, New Mexico, July 16, 1945. Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-035 Atomic test explosion in the Nevada desert, 1953. Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-036 The plaque at Trinity site, ground zero: "World's 1st nuclear device exploded 7.16.45" Courtesy of AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-037 tel0-aip-bwp-038 tel0-bet-bwp-039 AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-aip-bwp-040 AIP Niels Bohr Library tel0-bet-bwp-041 J. Robert Oppenheimer testifying before the Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy. UPI/Bettmann tel0-bet-bwp-042 UPI/Bettmann tel0-bet-bwp-043 September, 1949: Leo Szilard gets the bad news. UPI/Bettmann tel0-lal-bwp-044 A Santa Fe newspaper announces the culmination of the work done at nearby Los Alamos. Los Alamos Laboratory ste0-ste-oth-022 Archive Photos ear0-gid-cls-001 Chuck Nicklin/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-002 Syliva Earle dons the Jim suit. Chuck Nidlin/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-003 Chuck Nidlin/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-004 Sylvia Earle in the Jim suit. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-005 Walt Clayton/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-006 Walt Clayton/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-007 Sylvia Earle, in Jimsuit, hitches a ride on a submarine. Pete Romano/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-008 Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-009 Underwater with Sylvia Earle. Chuck Nidlin/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-010 Preparing to dive in the Jim suit. Chuck Nidlin/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-011 Sylvia Earle, gettting to know some dolphins. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-012 Sylvia Earle with unidentified friend. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-013 Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-014 Recording the humback whales. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-015 Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-016 Following the humpback whales. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-017 Sylvia Earle, studying the coral in Truk Lagoon. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-018 Dr. Earle studies a jellyfish in Truk Lagoon. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-019 Sylvia Earle in Truk Lagoon. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-020 Dr. Syliva Earle and associate in Truk Lagoon. Al Giddings/Al Giddings Images, Inc. ear0-gid-cls-021 wat0-rey-cls-028 Dr. and Mrs. James Watson with architect Philip Johnson at the Academy of Achievement. pow0-bet-clp-059 Victory parade, New York City, 1991. Gen. Powell greets the crowd. UPI/Bettman ric0-rey-bwp-001 Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright August Wilson. may0-may-bwp-001 Willie Mays, with his father and friends, in the Giants locker room. Courtesy of Willie Mays may0-may-bwp-002 Willie Mays's high school graduation picture. His father insisted he finish high school, even though he had already begun to play baseball professionally. Courtesy of Willie Mays pau0-csh-bwp-022 James Watson and Francis Crick, who first determined the structure of the DNA molecule. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory pau0-rey-bwp-023 Dr. Edward Teller, physicist and advocate of a strong nuclear deterrent. tel0-tel-bwt-045 Edward Teller as a young man. Courtesy Edward Teller tel0-tel-bwt-046 Courtesy Edward Teller tel0-tel-bwt-047 Courtesy Edward Teller tel0-tel-bwt-048 The young physicist, Edward Teller. Courtesy Edward Teller ear0-ear-cls-022 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-023 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-024 Dr. Sylvia Earle, with a feathered friend. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-025 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-026 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-028 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-029 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-030 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-031 Dr. Sylvia Earle with Graham Hawkes. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-032 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-033 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-034 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-035 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-036 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-037 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-038 Dr. Syliva Earle studies marine life at close range. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-039 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-040 Dr. Sylvia Earle: "The most important thing, to me, (as a child) was the kind of creatures that you could see along the beach that you can't find anywhere else." Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-041 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-042 Dr. Sylvia Earle, studying marine life up close. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-043 Dr. Earle explores a shipwreck. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-044 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-046 Sylvia Earle with her mother, Alice, and her daughter, Gale Mead. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-047 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-048 Dr. Sylvia Earle examines environmental damage done by the oil fires in Kuwait. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-049 Syliva Earle in the Jim suit. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-050 Sylvia Earle examines plant specimens. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-051 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-052 Sylvia Earle with her two daughters. Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-053 Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle ear0-ear-cls-054 Horseshoe crabs. "I thought they were just charming. They look so strange, but they're absolutely harmless." Courtesy Dr. Sylvia Earle sch0-sch-bwp-002 General H. Norman Schwarzkopf, Sr., at home with his wife and children, including Norman Jr., future hero of the Gulf War. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-003 Norman Schwarzkopf on the football team at Valley Forge Military Academy. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-004 Norman Schwarzkopf, yearbook photo. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-005 Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-006 Norman Schwarzkopf with General William Westmoreland in Vietnam, 1965. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-007 Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-008 Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-009 Recovering from injuries in Vietnam, 1966. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-010 General Schwarzkopf on a 25-mile hike in Alaska. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-011 H. Norman Schwarzkopf was promoted to Brigadier General in 1978. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-clp-012 The general visits the troops in the Persian Gulf. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-clp-013 Victory Parade after the Gulf War, 1991. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-clp-014 Generals Schwarzkopf and Powell, with Secretary of Defense Cheney in the War Room. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-bwp-015 General Schwarzkopf in desert camouflage. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-sch-clp-016 General H. Norman Schwarzkopf. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf sch0-bet-bwp-017 Schwarzkopf with South Vietnamese troops, the Duc Co operation, 1965. UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-bwp-018 General Schwarzkopf addresses Congress after the successful conclusion of Operation Desert Storm. Speaker of the House Tom Foley stands behind Schwarzkopf. UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-019 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-020 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-021 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-022 At the White House, General Schwarzkopf with Vice President Quayle, President Bush. Secretary of Defense Cheney and JCS Chairman Powell UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-023 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-024 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-025 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-026 UPI/Bettmann sch0-bet-clp-027 UPI/Bettmann cas0-arc-bwp-001 cas0-arc-bwp-002 cas0-arc-bwp-003 cas0-bet-cls-004 UPI/Bettmann cas0-bet-bwp-005 Johnny Cash and June Carter, onstage in 1975. UPI/Bettmann cas0-bet-bwp-006 Johnny Cash, legend of country music. UPI/Bettmann cas0-bet-bwp-007 The Man in Black, 1969. UPI/Bettmann cas0-bet-bwp-008 Johnny Cash meets President Nixon at the White House, 1972. UPI/Bettmann cas0-tim-bwp-009 UPI/Bettmann cas0-tim-bwp-010 Johnny Cash celebrates his induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, with his son, John, daughters Carlene and Rosanne, and his wife June Carter. People Magazine cas0-tim-bwp-011 Johnny Cash and June Carter recording in Nashville, 1986. People Magazine cas0-kle-cls-012 Heinz Kleutmeier cas0-tim-cls-013 cas0-tim-cls-014 cas0-kle-cls-015 cas0-tim-cls-016 cas0-tim-cls-017 cas0-tim-cls-018 cas0-tim-cls-019 Johnny Cash, photographed for Life Magazine in 1969. Micahel Rogier, Life Magazine © Time Inc. geh0-rey-bwp-001 Architect Frank Gehry in the early 1990s. Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-bwp-002 A teenage Frank Gehry (right) horsing around with a friend in his old neighborhood in Toronto. Courtesy of Frank O. Gehry geh0-geh-bwp-003 Frank Gehry in front of his boyhood home in Toronto in the mid-1940s. Courtesy of Frank O. Gehry geh0-geh-bwp-023 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-cls-007 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-cls-004 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-cls-005 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-cls-006 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-cls-008 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-geh-bwp-009 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-bwp-010 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-bwp-011 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-bwp-012 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-bwp-013 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-bwp-014 Frank Gehry & Associates, Joshua White geh0-geh-cls-015 Frank Gehry & Associates geh0-bet-bwp-016 UPI/Bettmann geh0-bet-bwp-017 UPI/Bettmann geh0-cm5-bwp-018 geh0-cm5-bwp-019 geh0-zim-bwp-020 geh0-out-cls-021 geh0-lit-cls-022 tha0-tim-bwp-002 Twyla Tharp, 1976. Time/Life tha0-tim-bwp-003 Twyla Tharp, in the studio. tha0-tim-bwp-004 Twyla Tharp, onstage. tha0-tim-bwp-005 Twyla Tharp at work. tha0-tim-cls-006 tha0-tim-cls-007 Onstage with Twyla Tharp. tha0-tim-cls-008 tha0-tim-cls-009 Twyla Tharp and partner in The Men's Piece. tha0-tim-cls-010 Twyla Tharp, resting comfortably tha0-tim-cls-011 tha0-tim-cls-012 tha0-tim-bwp-013 Twyla Tharp, photographed by Twyla Tharp. tha0-tim-bwp-014 Twyla Tharp in When We Were Very Young. tha0-tim-bwp-015 Twyla Tharp in When We Very Young. tha0-tim-bwp-016 Twyla Tharp and Mikhail Baryshnikov in Once More, Frank. tha0-tim-bwp-017 Twyla Tharp, onstage. tha0-tim-bwp-018 tha0-tim-bwp-019 Twyla Tharp, dancer and choreographer. tha0-bet-bwp-020 Twyla Tharp, performing with Paul Simon in her work Hodgepodge. UPI/Bettmann tha0-bet-bwp-021 UPI/Bettmann tha0-bet-bwp-022 UPI/Bettmann tha0-bet-bwp-023 UPI/Bettmann tha0-arc-bwp-024 Martha Graham, high priestess of modern dance. Archive Photos may0-bet-bwp-003 Willie Mays. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-006 Willie Mays, 1963. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-004 UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-005 UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-007 Willie Mays, Monte Irvin and Hank Thompson. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-008 Willie Mays plays stickball with children on the street in Harlem. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-009 Willie Mays meets his fans, 1957. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-010 Willie Mays, New York Giant. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-011 Willie Mays gets his 2000th hit, 1963. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-012 Willie Mays, Most Valuable Player in the National League. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-013 Willie Mays, practicing his swing. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-014 Willie Mays gets a hit in the 1962 World Series. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-bwp-015 Willie Mays, Rookie of the Year, drafted into the Army immediately after his first season in the majors. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-cls-016 Willie Mays, 1951. UPI/Bettmann may0-bet-cls-017 UPI/Bettmann may0-arc-bwp-018 may0-arc-bwp-019 may0-arc-bwp-020 may0-arc-bwp-021 erv0-6er-bwp-008 erv0-6er-bwp-009 erv0-6er-bwp-010 erv0-6er-bwp-011 erv0-6er-bwp-012 Dr. J. in action. Courtesy of Philadelphia 76ers erv0-bet-bwp-013 erv0-bet-bwp-014 erv0-bet-bwp-015 erv0-bet-bwp-016 erv0-bet-bwp-017 erv0-bet-bwp-018 erv0-bet-clp-019 erv0-bet-bwp-020 erv0-bet-bwp-021 erv0-bet-bwp-022 erv0-bet-bwp-023 erv0-bet-bwp-024 erv0-bet-bwp-025 erv0-bet-bwp-026 erv0-bet-bwp-027 erv0-bet-bwp-028 erv0-bet-cls-029 joh0-arc-bwp-002 Philip Johnson, with a scale model of his famous Glass House. Archive Photos joh0-arc-cls-003 The parthenon, Athens, Greece. Archive Photos joh0-arc-cls-004 joh0-arc-cls-005 Chartres Cathedral. Archive Photos joh0-pri-bwp-027 joh0-tim-bwp-006 joh0-pri-bwp-007 joh0-pie-bwp-008 joh0-dar-bwp-009 joh0-dar-bwp-010 joh0-mrt-bwp-011 joh0-bet-bwp-012 Philip Johnson, Curator of Crchitecture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. UPI/Bettmann joh0-bet-bwp-013 UPI/Bettmann joh0-bet-bwp-015 Philip Johnson with a model of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York. UPI/Bettmann joh0-bet-bwp-016 UPI/Bettmann joh0-bet-bwp-017 Philip Johnson with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, 1983. UPI/Bettmann joh0-bet-bwp-018 Frank Lloyd Wright, wth a sketch of the Mile-High Illinois Office Building, 1957. UPI/Bettman joh0-bet-bwp-019 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, 20th century architect. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh0-est-cls-020 The AT&T headquarters in New York City, designed by Johnson and Burgee. (copyright) Peter Mauss/Esto joh0-est-cls-021 Pre-Columbian Gallery of the Dumbarton Oaks Museum in Washington, D.C., designed by Philip Johnson. Ezra Stoller (copyright) Esto Photographics joh0-est-cls-022 Philip Johnson's Glass House in New Canaan, Connecticut. Ezra Stoller (copyright) Esto Photographics joh0-est-cls-023 The Seagram's Building, a collaboration of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson. Ezra Stoller (copyright) Esto Photographics joh0-est-bwp-024 Ezra Stoller (copyright) Esto Photographics joh0-est-bwp-025 (copyright) Roberto Schezen/Esto joh0-est-bwp-026 she0-she-bwp-002 Alan Shepard, age three, with his mother Renza and sister Pauline. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-bet-cls-025 Charles Lindbergh with the Spirit of St. Louis, the plane he flew in the first transatlantic solo flight, 1927. Bettman she0-she-bwp-003 Midshipman Alan Shepard, Annapolis, 1943. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-bwp-004 Alan Shepard, with his wife Louise, on their wedding day in 1945. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-bwp-005 Flight school, 1946. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-bwp-006 Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-bwp-007 Alan Shepard, test pilot, in the Calif x-plane. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-tim-bwp-008 she0-she-bwp-009 A Redstone rocket lifts off, with Freedom 7 and Alan Shepard. National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-bwp-010 Splashdown! A helicopter carries Alan Shepard and Freedom 7 to a waiting aircraft carrier. National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-bwp-011 Alan Shepard emerges from Freedom 7 after splashdown. National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-bwp-012 Alan Shepard, immediately after his historic flight. National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-clp-013 National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-clp-014 Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-clp-015 Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-clp-016 Alan Shepard with the Lunar training vehicle, in preparation for the Apollo XIV mission. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-tim-bwp-017 A helicopter hoists Alan Shepard out of the water after he has splashed down in Freedom 7 after completing America's first manned space flight. Time/Life she0-she-clp-018 Alan Shepard, Mrs. Shepard, Mrs. Kennedy, President Kennedy and Vice President Johnson, at the White House. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-clp-019 Apollo XIV blasts off, carried by a Saturn V rocket. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-bwp-020 Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-clp-021 Alan Shepard drives a golf ball a long, long way. Courtesy Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. she0-she-clp-022 National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-she-clp-023 Rear Admiral Alan B. Shepard, Jr. Courtesy Rear Admiral alan B. Shepard, Jr she0-she-clp-024 Courtesy National Aeronautics and Space Administration she0-bet-bwp-026 Alan Shepard, Sr. and Renza Shepard, on the day their son began his journey to the moon. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-027 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-028 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-029 Commander Alan Shepard walks to the launch pad on the morning of America's first manned space mission. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-030 The Bettmann Archive she0-bet-bwp-031 Commander Alan Shepard, on board Freedom 7 during the historic flight. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-032 Commander Alan Shepard and his wife Louise ride down Pennsylvania Avenue with Vice President Johnson, as all Washington turns out to honor America's first space hero. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-033 August, 26, 1971. Alan Shepard is promoted to admiral in a ceremony at the Pentagon. Navy Secretary John H. Chafee does the honors as Shepard, recently returned from the Moon, becomes the first astronaut to achieve star rank. At the time, he was the only one of the original seven astronauts still on flight status with the space program. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-034 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-035 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-036 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-037 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-038 CIPI/The Bettmann Archive she0-bet-bwp-039 UPI/Bettmann she0-arc-bwp-040 she0-bet-bwp-041 Alan Shepard, suited up and ready to depart for the Moon on Apollo XIV. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-042 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-043 Alan Shepard plants an American flag on the moon. February 5, 1971. UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-044 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-045 UPI/Bettmann she0-bet-bwp-046 UPI/Bettmann she0-tim-bwp-047 she0-tim-bwp-048 Alan Shepard with his wife and children, 1959. Ralph Morse, LIFE Magazine, © Time Inc. she0-tim-bwp-049 she0-tim-bwp-050 she0-tim-bwp-051 she0-tim-bwp-052 she0-tim-bwp-053 she0-tim-bwp-054 she0-tim-bwp-055 she0-tim-cls-056 she0-tim-cls-057 pau0-rey-bwp-024 James Watson and Francis Crick. UPI/Bettmann sch0-rey-cls-028 Retired General H. Norman Schwarzkopf. sch0-rey-cls-029 Retired Generals H. Norman Schwarzkopf and Colin Powell at the Academy of Achievement. joh2-per-clp-002 Judge Frank M. Johnson in his courtroom, the Federal Courthouse in Montgomery, Alabama, 1978. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr. joh2-bet-bwp-003 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-004 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-005 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-006 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-007 Frank M. Johnson in 1964. He had already served nine years on the federal bench. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-008 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-009 Judge Frank Johnson with surgeon Michael DeBakey, September 12, 1977, after Dr. DeBakey successfully treated Judge Johnson for an aneurysm of the abdominal aorta. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann coo0-bet-bwp-021 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-010 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-bet-bwp-011 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh2-tim-cls-012 nit0-bet-bwp-001 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-002 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-003 Paul Nitze meets with President Reagan in the Oval Office on May 12, 1983, to receive final instructions before returning to Geneva for the third round of the INF talks. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-004 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-005 The INF talks begin. Paul Nitze shakes hand with Soviet negotiator Yuli Kvitsinsky in Geneva, December 1, 1981. The following summer, the two men would go for a famous "walk in the woods." UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-006 Paul Nitze meets with reporters on November 25, 1981, just before leaving for Geneva and talks with the Soviets on reducing nuclear weapons in Europe. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-007 Paul Nitze at a press conference with then-Senator John F. Kennedy, August 30, 1960. Nitze was Kennedy's defense adviser during the Senator's presidential campaign. UPI-Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-008 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-bwp-009 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-cls-010 Dr. Harold Brown, Paul H. Nitze and Major Genral Royal Allison arrive in Helsinki, Finland for arms control negotiations with the Soviets, November 15, 1969. These negotiations would eventually lead to the ABM Treaty and the interim agreement on strategic arms (START I). UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-cls-011 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann nit0-bet-cls-012 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh0-cry-clp-028 joh0-cry-clp-029 cas0-rey-bwp-020 Johnny and June Carter Cash, partners in music and in life. jon0-quj-cls-001 Quincy Jones. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-002 Quincy Jones, holding a few of his many Grammy Awards. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-003 Quincy Jones,the young trumpeter and arranger. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-004 Quincy Jones, Sr. Quincy Jones, III, and Quincy jones, Jr. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-005 Duke Ellington with Quincy Jones. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-006 Art Farmer, Quincy Jones, Lionel Hampton, and Walter Williams. Onstage with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra, ca. 1950. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-007 The Quincy Jones big band, 1960 Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-008 Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-clp-009 Quincy Jones working on the album E.T. with Michael Jackson and Steven Spielberg. The album won a 1983 Grammy for Best Recording for Children. Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-cls-010 Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-011 Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-quj-bwp-012 Courtesy Quincy Jones jon0-bet-cls-013 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann jon0-bet-cls-014 UPI/Bettmann jon0-bet-clp-015 Quincy Jones with a few new Grammies, 1991. UPI/Bettmann jon0-bet-bwp-016 Quincy Jones receives his star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. Peggy Lipton, his wife at the time, kneels next to him. UPI/Bettmann jon0-bet-bwp-017 UPI/Bettmann jon0-sip-cls-018 jon0-gam-cls-019 jon0-glo-cls-020 jon0-tim-bwp-021 jon0-tim-bwp-022 jon0-tim-bwp-023 jon0-tim-bwp-024 jon0-tim-bwp-025 jon0-tim-bwp-026 jon0-tim-bwp-027 jon0-tim-bwp-028 jon0-tim-bwp-029 jon0-tim-bwp-030 jon0-eme-bwp-031 jon0-arc-bwp-032 jon0-arc-bwp-033 jon0-arc-bwp-034 jon0-arc-bwp-035 eli0-eli-bwt-001 Gertrude Elion. Her high school graduation picture. She was only 15. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwt-002 Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwt-003 Visiting Harvard Medical School with Dr. Roy Calne, Gertrude Elion Dr. George Hitchings, Dr. Donald Searle, Dr. Hager, and Dr. Joseph Murray. The dogs are Tweedledum, Tweedledee, Titus and Lollypops. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-004 Gertrude Elion's grandfather, with her grandmother and Aunt Anna. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-005 Gertrude Elion at age 3 1/2, with her mother. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-006 Gertrude Elion, age 5. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-007 Gertrude Elion, 18 year-old Hunter College chemistry student. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-008 Elion in her lab at Burroughs Wellcome in Tuckahoe, New York, 1950. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-009 Elion in the laboratory, 1980. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-010 Gertrude Elion, 1982. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-011 Gertrude Elion in the laboratory at Tuckahoe, 1948. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-012 Gertrude Elion and George Hitchings, ca. 1952-53. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-013 Elion in the laboratory with Stan Bushby and Dr. Hitchings, 1972. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-014 Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-015 Gertrude Elion in 1968, at the time of 1968 at the time she received the Garvan Medal of the American Chemical Society. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-bwp-016 Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-017 Young Gertrude goes riding, 1922. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-018 Elion appears with two fellow Hunter College graduates in a 1937 newspaper item. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-019 Gertude Elion, college graduate at age 19. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-020 Elion in the laboratory with Dr. George Hitchings in 1948. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-021 Gertrude Elion at work in 1960. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-022 Gertrude Elion in 1982, the year before her official retirement from Burroughs Wellcome. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-023 Gertrude Elion receives the National Medal of Science from President George Bush. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-024 Gertrude Elion and Dr. George Hitchings. (copyright) Will and Deni McIntyre eli0-eli-cls-025 Gertrude Elion, Nobel Prize Winner. (copyright) Will and Deni McIntyre eli0-eli-cls-026 Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-027 Elion receives the Nobel Prize from Carl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-028 The Nobel Prize ceremony. Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion eli0-eli-cls-029 Courtesy Gertrude B. Elion far0-far-bwp-001 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-002 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-003 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-004 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-005 Suzanne Farrell, age 10. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-006 Suzanne Farrell as Clara in a production of The Nutcracker in Cincinnati in 1953. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-007 Suzanne Farrell, age 12, with partner John Lankston at Cincinnati Conservatory. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-008 Suzanne Farrell, with John Lankston at Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-009 The Farrell girls -- Donna, Beverly and Suzanne -- modeling for the Cincinnati Post in 1950. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-010 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-011 Suzanne Farrell, age 12, photographed for a play at Cincinnati Conservatory. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-012 Suzanne Farrell as a first-year student at the School of American Ballet in New York City, age 15. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-013 Suzanne Farrell in Latin class at the Professional Children's School, ca. 1960. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-014 Suzanne Farrell performs a grand jeté in class at the School of American Ballet, 1960. (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-far-bwp-015 Suzanne Farrell with Jorge Donn in Nijinsky, Clown of God for Maurice Bejart's Ballets of the the XXth Century. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-016 Suzanne Farrell with Peter Martin in Balanchine and Stravinsky's Agon. (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-far-bwp-017 Suzanne Farrell, taking a bow after performing in Balanchine's Jewels. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-018 Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-far-bwp-019 Suzanne Farrell performing in the ballet Mozartiana. (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-020 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-021 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-far-bwp-022 Suzanne Farrell with Peter Martins in Agon, by George Balanchine, music by Igor Stravinsky. (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-024 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-025 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life magazine far0-far-bwp-023 The Farrell family, ca. 1950. Donna standing, mother Donna holding Suzanne, father Robert holding Beverly. Courtesy Suzanne Farrell far0-tim-bwp-026 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-027 Suzanne Farrell in Balanchine's Tzigane. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-028 Suzanne Farrell with the New York City Ballet in Walpurgis Nacht. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-029 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-030 Suzanne Farrell with George Balanchine in Don Quixote. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-031 Suzanne Farrell in Don Quixote. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-032 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-033 Suzanne Farrell with George Balanchine, rehearsing Clarinade. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-034 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-035 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-036 Rehearsing Don Quixote. Suzanne Farrell and George Balanchine in 1968. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-037 Suzanne Farrell rehearsing Slaughter on Tenth Avenue with George Balanchine and Arthur Mitchell. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-038 Suzanne Farrell, Jacques D'Amboise and George Balanchine. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-039 Suzanne Farrell in Vienna Waltzes. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-040 Suzanne Farrell with a portrait painted by her husband, Paul Mejia. © Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-041 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-tim-bwp-042 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine far0-bet-bwp-043 UPI/Bettmann far0-bet-bwp-044 Suzanne Farrell backstage with her dog, Duchess. UPI/Bettmann far0-bet-bwp-045 UPI/Corbis Bettmann far0-bet-bwp-046 UPI/Bettmann far0-tim-bwp-047 (copyright) Martha Swope, Life Magazine jon1-jon-bwp-001 (copyright) 1983 Yousuf Karsh jon1-jon-bwp-002 Chuck Jones with John Burton (l) and Friz Freleng (r) at desk Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clp-003 Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-cls-004 Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clt-005 Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clt-006 Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clt-007 Daffy Duck. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clt-008 Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-arc-cls-009 jon1-arc-cls-010 jon1-arc-cls-011 jon1-arc-bwp-012 jon1-bet-bwp-013 Springer/Corbis-Bettmann jon1-bet-bwp-014 Corbis-Bettmann mac0-aer-bwp-001 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-002 The man-powered Gossamer Albatross crosses the English Channel. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-003 The man-powered Gossamer Condor takes flight. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-004 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-005 Gossamer Albatross rides low over the English Channel. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-006 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-007 The Gossamer Condor in flight. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-bwp-008 The man-powered Gossamer Albatross in flight. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-mac-bwp-009 "I somehow got especially interested in a large variety of models. "Paul MacCready, February, 1937. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-010 Young Paul MacCready and his father at work on Paul's second gasoline-powered model plane., ca. 1939. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-011 13 year-old Paul MacCready with a gas-powered model airplane. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-012 Paul MacCready, age 14, watches one of his gas-powered models in flight. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-013 14 year-old Paul MacCready with trophies won in model airplane competitions. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-014 Paul MaCready entered this flying model in a national competition in Chicago. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-015 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-016 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-017 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-018 25 year-old Paul MacCready emerges from a Jadran sailplane during international soaring competition held in Yugoslavia. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-019 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-020 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-bwp-021 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-aer-clp-022 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-023 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-024 Paul MacCready's flying replica of the prehistoric pterodactyl. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-025 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-026 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-027 Paul MacCready with the solar-powered Sunraycer, outside the offices of Aerovironment. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-028 The solar-powered Sunraycer. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-clp-029 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-mac-clp-030 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-clp-031 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-clp-032 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-033 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-034 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-035 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-036 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-037 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-038 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-mac-cls-039 Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-aer-cls-040 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-041 Paul MacCready's son, Tyler, flying the first version of the Gossamer Condor. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-042 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-043 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-044 Paul MacCready's wife Judy takes the Condor for a spin. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-045 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-046 Testing the Gossamer Albatross in England, 1979. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-047 June 12, 1979: Gossamer Albatross crosses the Channel. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-048 Preparing the Gosaamer Albatross. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-049 May 18, 1980: 13 year-old Marshall MacCready and the Gossamer Penguin make the world's first solar-powered flight. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-050 Paul and Marshall MacCready with the Gossamer Penguin. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-051 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-052 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-053 Solar Challenger before test flight in Tuscon, 1980. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-054 The Solar Challenger flying from Paris to England: 163 miles at 11,000 feet, 1981. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-055 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-056 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-057 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-058 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-059 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-060 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-061 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-062 The pterodactyl flies again. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-063 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-064 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-065 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-066 Paul MacCready and the solar-powered Sunraycer. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-067 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-068 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-069 Demonstration model of the all-electric GM Impact, built by AeroVironment, 1989. Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-070 Courtesy AeroVironment, Inc. mac0-aer-cls-071 Paul and Judy MacCready among monarch butterflies. Courtesy Paul MacCready mac0-aer-vhs-072 mac0-aer-vhs-073 sal0-sal-bwp-053 Dr. Jonas Salk, discoverer of the polio vaccine. Courtesy of the Salk Institute. woo0-ucl-bwp-011 woo0-ucl-bwp-012 John Wooden with his great-granddaughter, Cori. Courtesy of John Wooden woo0-ucl-bwp-014 woo0-ucl-bwp-015 woo0-ucl-bwp-016 John and Nellie Wooden. Courtesy of John Wooden woo0-ucl-bwp-017 woo0-ucl-bwp-018 A retired Coach John Wooden flanked by two of his greatest players: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Lew Alcindor) and Bill Walton. Photo courtesy of UCLA woo0-ucl-bwp-019 "Of course you have to keep your emotions under control." Coach Wooden shares his thoughts on the game in progress.. Photo courtesy of UCLA. woo0-ucl-clp-020 John Wooden watches over his players from the UCLA bench. ASUCLA woo0-ucl-bwp-021 John and Nellie Wooden. ASUCLA woo0-ucl-bwp-022 1964 NCAA Champions, John Wooden and the Bruins of UCLA. ASUCLA woo0-ucl-cls-023 John Wooden with one of the stars of the 1973 and '74 teams: Bill Walton. ASUCLA woo0-ucl-cls-024 Bruin Bill Walton blocks the shot. ASUCLA woo0-ucl-cls-025 woo0-ucl-cls-026 Bruin Sidney Wickes soars over long-time rivals USC. Photo courtesy of UCLA woo0-ucl-clt-027 At long last, a court of his own: Coach Wooden at Pauley Pavilion. woo0-ucl-clt-028 Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbbar) and the UCLA Bruins get one past Purdue (John Wooden's alma mater). Photo courtesy of UCLA woo0-ucl-cls-029 woo0-ucl-cls-030 woo0-ucl-cls-031 woo0-ucl-cls-032 woo0-arc-bws-033 President Abraham Lincoln. Archive Photos joh2-arc-bws-013 woo0-bet-bwp-034 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann woo0-bet-bwp-035 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann woo0-bet-bwp-036 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann woo0-bet-bwp-037 UPI/Bettmann woo0-bet-bwp-038 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-arc-bsp-001 atv012-rey-clp-002 Retired General H. Norman Schwarzkopf, addresses high school students for Achievement Television. American Academy of Achievement atv012-rey-clp-003 atv012-rey-clp-004 atv012-rey-cls-005 wat0-rey-oth-029 James Watson's best-seller, The Double Helix. but0-rey-clp-021 Iditarod champion Susan Butcher meets an Academy of Achievement student delegate at the Banquet of the Golden Plate. Academy of Achievement kra0-rey-cls-013 George Roberts (left) and Henry R. Kravis (right) at the American Academy of Achievement with Mr. and Mrs. Gillette. kra0-rey-cls-002 Henry Kravis and George Roberts at the Academy of Achievement. kra0-fre-cls-003 Henry R. Kravis. Courtesy of Andy Freeberg kra0-kra-clp-004 Henry R. Kravis visits with students in his Project Highroad. Courtesy Kohlberg Kravis and Roberts kra0-kra-clp-005 Henry R. Kravis in his office at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Company. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis Roberts and Company kra0-kra-bwp-006 Henry R. Kravis, early 1980s. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts kra0-kra-bwp-007 Henry R. Kravis dines with New York Mayor Ed Koch at Gracie Mansion. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts kra0-kra-clp-008 Henry R. Kravis with President George Bush at the White House, December 1987. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts kra0-kra-clp-010 Kravis and Roberts at Claremont McKenna College alumni event. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts kra0-kra-clp-011 George Roberts and Henry Kravis, Christmas, 1995. Courtesy Kohlberg, Kravis and Roberts kra0-bet-bwp-009 Winston Churchill (1874-1965) UPI/Bettmann kra0-sav-cls-012 tel0-rey-cls-057 joh0-rey-clp-030 The nave of Chartres Cathedral, seen from the choir. Editions Houvet joh0-rey-clp-031 A 1921 painting by Piet Mondrian: "Composition with red, yellow blue and black." Gemeentemuseum, The Hague. sal0-tim-bwp-054 Dr. Jonas Salk. Al Fenn, LIFE Magazine ©TIME Inc. ric0-lit-bwp-002 ric0-cor-jpg-003 Paul Robeson (1898-1976): American actor, singer and social activist. Corbis/Bettmann ric0-bwt-bwp-004 Paul Robeson as Othello. UPI/Bettmann ric0-bet-bwp-005 Canada Lee in the 1938 Federal Theater production Haiti. UPI/Bettmann ric0-wwp-bwp-006 ric0-bet-bwp-007 Lloyd Richards with his 1987 Tony Award for Best Diretion of a Dram, Fences. UPI/Bettman may0-rey-bwp-022 Willie Mays dives for home plate. may0-rey-bwp-023 Willie Mays making the legendary over-the-shoulder catch in the 1954 World Series. may0-rey-bwp-024 Twisting like a corkscrew to throw to second base. ric0-ric-clp-008 Lloyd Richards. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards ric0-ric-clp-009 ric0-ric-clp-010 Lloyd Richards recieves the National Medal of the Arts in a White House ceremony with President Clinton and Mrs. Clinton. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-clp-011 Lloyd Richards with his wife, Barbara, and President Clinton at the White House. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-012 ric0-ric-clp-013 ric0-ric-clp-014 A 1991 Yale University banquet with August Wilson, Roc Dutton, Scott Richards, and Lloyd Richards. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-015 Playwright August Wilson, with director Lloyd Richards, on the set of Wilson's The Piano Lesson. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-016 The cast and crew of The Piano Lesson at the Yale Repertory Theater. Director Lloyd Richards and playwright August Wilson are on the sofa, first and third from the right. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-clp-017 ric0-ric-clp-018 ric0-ric-clp-019 Lloyd Richards and actress Alfre Woodard prepare to shoot a scene for the television production of The Piano Lesson. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-clp-020 ric0-ric-bwp-021 ric0-ric-clp-022 ric0-ric-bwp-023 ric0-ric-bwp-024 ric0-ric-bwp-025 ric0-ric-bwp-026 ric0-ric-bwp-027 Lloyd Richards with critic Martin Esslin at the National Playwrights Conference. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-028 ric0-ric-bwp-029 ric0-ric-bwp-030 ric0-ric-bwp-031 ric0-ric-bwp-032 Lloyd Richards directing actor Andy Griffith in Roots II. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-033 Lloyd Richards, directing Roots II. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-034 ric0-ric-bwp-035 A scene from the London production of A Raisin in the Sun. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-036 ric0-ric-bwp-037 ric0-ric-bwp-038 ric0-ric-bwp-039 ric0-ric-bwp-040 Lloyd Richards with George White and African author Wole Soyinka. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-041 ric0-ric-bwp-042 ric0-ric-bwp-043 ric0-ric-bwp-044 ric0-ric-bwp-045 Lloyd Richards and George Roy Hill in the Equity Library Theater production of Stevedore. Hill later became a sucessful film director. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-047 Lloyd Richards with Paul Mann and Patricia Benoit. New York, 1950s. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-048 ric0-ric-bwp-049 ric0-ric-bwp-050 ric0-ric-bwp-051 ric0-ric-bwp-052 Lloyd Richards directing a production of Oedipus with "These 20 People" in Detroit. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-053 Lloyd Richards getting into makeup with Millie Weitz for a performance at the Village Church in Greenwich Village. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-054 Lloyd Richards in The Decision at the Greenwich Mews Theatre, 1950s. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-055 Disc jockey Lloyd Richards in Detroit, 1940s. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-056 Lloyd Richards reading to his blind mother, Rose Richards. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-057 The Richards family with their congregation at St. Cyprian's Episcopal Church in Detroit. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-058 Lloyd Richards in Army Air Force flight training during World WAR II. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. ric0-ric-bwp-059 Lloyd Richards, pilot in training, World War II. Courtesy of Lloyd Richards. may0-rey-bwp-025 Ebbets Field, home of the Brooklyn Dodgers. may0-rey-bwp-026 A hand-written death threat sent to Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play major league baseball. may0-rey-bwp-027 Jackie Robinson slides into home. may0-tim-cls-028 Willie Mays, playing for San Francisco in 1958. John G. Zimmerman/Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. may0-tim-cls-029 Willie Mays, San Francisco Giant. Walter Iooss Jr./Sports Illustrated ©Time Inc. may0-tim-cls-030 Richard Meck/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. may0-tim-cls-031 Willie Mays, back in New York, batting for the Mets. Neil Leifer/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. woo0-tim-cls-039 Rich Clarkson/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. woo0-tim-cls-040 gol0-arc-bwp-002 gol0-arc-bwp-003 gol0-arc-bwp-004 gol0-arc-bwp-005 gol0-tim-bwp-006 Whoopi Goldberg speaking out. Time/People gol0-tim-bwp-007 gol0-out-bwp-008 gol0-bet-bwp-009 gol0-cel-bwp-010 gol0-dmi-bwp-011 gol0-dmi-bwp-012 Whoopi Goldberg and friends at the premiere of Sister Act. DMI gol0-tim-cls-013 Whoopi Goldberg on Broadway, doing her one-woman show. Martha Swope ©Time Inc gol0-tim-cls-014 Whoopi Goldberg in her one-woman show on Broadway. Martha Swope ©Time Inc gol0-tim-cls-015 One of the many characters Whoopi played in her one-woman Broadway show. Martha Swope ©Time Inc gol0-tim-cls-020 One of the many characters Whoopi played in her one-woman Broadway show. Martha Swope ©Time Inc gol0-tim-cls-021 Martha Swope ©Time Inc gol0-tim-cls-022 gol0-tim-cls-023 One of the many faces of Whoopi Goldberg. Martha Swope © Time Inc. gol0-cel-cls-016 Whoopi Goldberg puts her handprints in cement outside Mann's Chinese Thetaer in Hollywood. Celebrity Photos gol0-cel-cls-017 Whoopi Goldberg with her daughter, Alexandrea Martin. Celebrity Photos gol0-cel-cls-018 Whoopi Goldberg accepting the People's Choice Award. Celebrity Photos gol0-arc-bwp-019 John F. Kennedy addresses a crowd in New York City during the 1960 presidential campaign. Achive Photos woo0-tim-cls-041 John Wooden on the bench. Rich Clarkson/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-041 John D. Hanlon/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-042 John D. Hanlon/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-043 John Biever/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-044 Herschel Walker on the U.S. bobsled team at the 1992 Winter Olympics. John Biever/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. wal0-tim-cls-045 Tom Lynn/Sports Illustrated©Time Inc. woo0-tim-cls-042 woo0-nba-cls-043 woo0-nba-cls-044 woo0-nba-cls-045 woo0-nba-cls-046 woo0-nba-cls-047 woo0-nba-cls-048 woo0-nba-cls-049 woo0-nba-cla-050 woo0-nba-cls-051 woo0-nba-cls-052 woo0-nba-cls-053 woo0-nba-cls-054 woo0-nba-cls-055 woo0-nba-cls-056 Coach Wooden's favorite pro basketball player: John Stockton of Utah, the all-time leader in assists. NBA Photos kra0-rey-cls-014 Henry R.Kravis with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at the American Academy of Achievement. kra0-rey-oth-015 Barbarians at the Gate, the best-selling account of the RJR Nabisco takeover. atv012-bet-bwp-006 American troops storm the beaches of Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-007 General Dwight Eisenhower talks to US paratroopers as they prepare for the invasion of France, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-008 The choir of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-009 West Point cadets throwing their hats in the air on graduation day. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann kra0-rey-bwp-016 Henry Kravis and George Roberts putting their names in the dotted line. They have just bought RJR/Nabisco for $25 billion. bus0-arc-bws-044 President Abraham Lincoln. Archive Photos wat0-bet-bwp-030 Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States from 1933 to 1945. Bettman Archive atv012-bet-bwp-010 Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-011 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-012 Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-013 Major General George S. Patton. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-014 General Omar Bradley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1951. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-015 An American soldier, fallen in the invasion of France, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann joh0-arc-cls-032 The nave of Chartres Cathedral, seen from the choir. Editions Houvet joh0-arc-cls-033 A side altar of Chartres Cathedral. Editions Houvet hil0-tim-cls-024 Mt. Everest, tallest mountain in the world. George Silk, Life Magazine © Time Inc. atv012-bet-bwp-016 American troops landing in Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-017 Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-018 Free French General Charles DeGaulle, with Genral Esinhower in London, 1942 Corbis-Bettmann atv012-bet-bwp-019 The Supreme Command of the Allied Expeditionary Force.
Sitting (L to R): Generals Eisenhower, Marshall, Montgomery.
Standing (L to R): Gen. Omar Bradley, Adm. Ramsey, Gen. Leigh-Mallory, Gen. Walter Bedell Smith.
UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-020 General Eisenhower and Winston Churchill visiting U.S. paratroopers in England. March, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-021 General Eisenhower outside the headquarters of the U.S. First Division in Normandy, France, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-022 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-023 General Eisenhower giving orders to paratroopers, just before the first assault. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-arc-bwp-024 ARCHIVE PHOTOS/American Stock
atv012-bet-bwp-025 Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-026 Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-027 Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-028 Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885), Commander of Union forces during the American Civil War, and 18th President of the United States (1869-1877). Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-bet-bwp-029 Mother Teresa. Reuters/Corbis-Bettmann
atv012-arc-bwp-030 Archive Photos/Sonia Alland Collection
atv012-arc-bwp-031 Margaret Thatcher, British Prime Minister from 1978 to 1990. Reuters/Archive Photos
atv012-arc-bwp-032 Dr. Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965). Theologian, philosopher, musician and missionary doctor. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952. Archive Photos
atv012-arc-bws-037 Washington Hall at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York. Archive Photos
may0-tim-cls-032 Sports Illustrated cover featuring Willie Mays of the San Franciso Giants. Time/Sports Illustrated
tel0-aip-bwp-049 Ernest, Lord Rutherford (1871-1937), physicist. Founder of modern atomic theory. AIP Niels Bohr Library
tel0-aip-bwp-050 Albert Einstein (1879-1955), physicist. Proponent of the Theory of Relativity. AIP Niels Bohr Library/W.F. Meggen Collection
tel0-aip-bwp-051 Niels Henrik David Bohr (1885-1962), winner of the 1922 Nobel Prize for Physics. Niels Bohr Institute/Courtesy AIP Niels Bohr Library
tel0-aip-bwp-052 John von Neumann (1903-1957), one of the founding fathers of computer science. AIP Emilio Segre Visual Archives
tel0-aip-bwp-053 Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976), physicist. Father of the Uncertainty Principle, 1932 Nobel Prize Winner. AIP Meggers Gallery of Nobel Laureates
tel0-lal-clp-054 The hydrogen bomb explodes in the Pacific, 1952. Los Alamos Laboratory
wat0-csh-bwp-031 James Watson and Francis Crick with a model of the DNA molecule, the double helix. Copyright: A. Barrington Brown/Science Source/Photoresearchers
tel0-bet-bwp-056 President Franklin Roosevelt at the 1939 World's Fair. A speech of Roosevelt's in 1940 persuaded Edward Teller to join the Manhattan Project. UPI/Bettman
cas0-tim-cls-021
joh-rey-bwp-034 Philip Johnson as a young boy.
woo0-ucl-bwp-057 UCLA Coach John Wooden. ASUCLA
may0-arc-bws-033 "Leo Durocher was like my father away from home." Willie Mays and Giants manager Leo Durocher share a joke in the dugout . Archive Photos
sch1-frz-clp-001 Fritz Scholder Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-clp-002 Fritz Scholder Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-003 Fritz Scholder (right) with Native American writer N. Scott Momaday. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-004 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-005 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-006 A portrait of the artist as a young man. Fritz Scholder in 1955. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-007 Fritz Scholder with Will Rogers, Jr. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-008 "Indian With Beer Can," 1969 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-009 "Red Number 7," 1994. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-010 "Horse Number 1," 1983. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-011 "Self-portrait with Green Aura at the Grand Canyon," 1987 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-012 "Red number 1," 1994. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-013 "Red number 2," 1994. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-014 "Indian With Flag," 1979. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-015 "Plains Dancer" Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-016 "Sitting," 1995 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-017 "Lilith Number 3," 1991. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-018 "Portrait of a Cowboy," 1978 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-019 "Shaman with Animal," 1984. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-020 "Indian in Canoe" Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-021 "Red Number 6," 1994. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
atv012-rey-clp-035 General H. Norman Schwarzkopf on Achievement Television. American Academy of Achievement
sch1-frz-bwp-022 Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
may0-arc-bws-034 Dodger manager Leo Durocher before flying to Havana before spring training. Archive Photos
may0-arc-bws-035 Archive Photos
may0-arc-bws-036 Leo Durcoher reports to the Brooklyn draft board. Archive Photos
jon1-bet-bwp-015 Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens), author and humorist. Corbis-Bettman
eli0-bet-bwp-030 Marie Curie in her laboratory. Corbis-Bettman
sch1-frz-bwp-023 Fritz Scholder, age three. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
sch1-frz-bwp-024 Fritz Scholder, age five, with his father, mother and sister Sindra, 1942 in Wahpeton, North Dakota. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
woo0-woo-clp-058 John Wooden maintains his composure while UCLA celebrates another victory. Photo courtesy of John Wooden.
sch1-frz-oth-025 Jacket of Fritz Scholder's Book of Symbols For Children. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
kra0-tim-oth-017 The cover of Fortune magazine, July 4, 1988. (Fortune Magazine)
joh2-tim-cls-014 Time magazine featured Judge Johnson on the cover of this 1967 issue.
woo0-ucl-bwp-059 Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) blocks a shot by Drake University players. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwp-060 Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) celebrates a victory with Coach JohnWooden. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-clp-061 Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwp-062 Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), walking on air. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwp-063 Walt Hazzard dribbles past USC. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-cls-064 UCLA Bruin Mike Warren. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-cls-065 UCLA Bruin Mike Warren. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-cls-066 Bill Walton makes the jump shot. ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwt-067 ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwt-068 ASUCLA
woo0-ucl-bwt-069 UCLA's 1965 starting five: Keith Erickson is second from left, Gail Goodrich is the last player on the right. ASUCLA
pow0-rey-oth-069 A US News and World Report cover celebrates General Powell. U.S. News and World Report
gol0-war-cls-024 Whoopi Goldberg in The Color Purple. Warner Bros.
sal0-sal-bwp-055 Dr. Jonas Salk and his family. Salk's parents, Dora and Daniel, seated. Standing, from left to right: his brother Herman, wife Donna, Dr. Jonas Salk and his brother Lee. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-056 John F. Enders (left) and Jonas Salk on the SS Independence. The two traveled to Rome for the International Poliomyelitis Conference in 1954. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-057 Jonas and Donna with Peter (standing), Darrell (kneeling with back to camera), and Jonathan (kneeling, facing camera) at Inglis House in Ann Arbor, April, 1955, at the time of the announcement of the results of the vaccine field trials. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-058 An RKO Pathe newsreel crew stand by as Salk prepares to administer the vaccine to a child in Pittsburgh. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-059 Salk having a blood sample drawn in Pittsburgh, ca. 1954. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-060 Salk takes a blood sample from a woman in Pittsburgh, ca. 1954. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-061 Young Jonas Salk's graduation day. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-clp-062 Jonas Salk with children and grandchildren in La Jolla, 1989. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-bwp-063 Jonas Salk, age 15, with his brothers Lee and Herman, ca. 1930. Courtesy of the family of Jonas Salk.
sal0-sal-clp-064 Jonas Salk on the site of the Salk Institute, La Jolla, California, ca. 1961. Courtesy of Bessie Wood.
pau0-ohs-bwp-025 Linus Pauling, age four. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society
pau0-ohs-bwp-026 At age five, Linus was photographed in fur chaps for one of a series of postcards intended to draw tourists to Oswego, Oregon. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society
pau0-ohs-bwp-027 Linus Pauling with his mother and sisters. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society
pau0-ohs-bwp-028 Linus Pauling with his wife Ava Helen, and their four children, August 1937. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society
pau0-ohs-bwp-029 Linus Pauling demonstrating in front of the White House, August 1962. Pauling was sheduled to attend dinner with President Kennedy that evening. Courtesy of Oregon Historical Society
may0-fpg-cls-037 Willie Mays, New York Giant. Hy Peskin/FPG International Corporation
may0-fpg-cls-038 Willie Mays, Giants training camp. Hy Peskin/FPG International Corporation
may0-fpg-cls-039 Willie Mays, "the best throwing arm in baseball," according to Joe Di Maggio. Hy Peskin/FPG International Corporation
may0-sfg-bwp-040 Willie Mays, third greatest home-run hitter in baseball. San Francisco Giants Archives
may0-sfg-bwp-041 Newsreel cameramen get a close-up look at the "Say Hey" kid. San Francisco Giants Archives
mac0-bet-bwp-075 Charles Lindbergh and the Spirit of St. Louis, 1927. Bettman
mac0-mac-bwp-076 Paul MacCready, age 14, watches one of his gas-powered models in flight. Paul MacCready
she0-rey-bwp-058 Maxime Faget, designer of the Mercury space capsule. American Academy of Achievement
she0-nas-clp-059 NASA
she0-nas-clp-060 NASA
she0-bet-bwp-061 Bettman
nov0-nov-clp-002 Dr. Novello distributes candy to children in a Nepalese village during her 1988 visit. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-003 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-004 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-005 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-006 Antonia Novello as a little girl in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-007 Graduation portrait, University of Puerto Rico Medical School, 1970. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-008 Antonia, age 13, a representative of the Girl Scouts in the Fajardo summer parade. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-009 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-010 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-011 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-012 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-013 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-014 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-015 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-016 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-017 Dr. Novello receives flowers from children on her arrival in Puerto Rico, March 15, 1990. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-018 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-019 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-020 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-021 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-022 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-023 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-024 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-bwp-025 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-026 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-027 Dr. Antonia Novello. Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-028 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-029 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-030 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-031 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-nov-clp-032 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
ric0-nem-bwp-060 Poster for the orginal production of A Raisin in the Sun. Courtesy of Robert Nemiroff
ric0-nem-bwp-061 Sydney Poitier and Claudia McNeill as walter and Mama Younger in original production of A Raisin in the Sun. Courtesy of Robert Nemiroff
she0-rey-clp-062 Alan Shepard, commander of the Apollo XIV mission. Courtesy of Rear Admiral Alan Shepard
nov0-rey-bwp-033 Courtesy of Dr. Antonia Novello
nov0-arc-cls-034 Dr. Antonia Novello is sworn in as Surgeon General of the United States. Her husband Joe Novello holds the Bible while President George Bush looks on and Justice Sandra Day O'Connor administers the oath of office. Archive Photos
nov0-arc-cls-035 Dr. Novello makes use of her pulpit. Archive Photos
nov0-arc-clp-036 Surgeon General Antonia Novello. Archive Photos
nov0-arc-clp-037 As Surgeon General, Dr. Novello was critical of tobacco advertising directed at children. Archive Photos
nov0-arc-clp-038
nov0-rey-clp-040 Antonia Novello and her husband Joe meet Olympic skater Katarina Witt at the American Academy of Achievement.
she0-nas-clp-063 Maxime A. Faget, Assistant Director for Engineering Development, Manned Spacecraft Center, December, 1964. NASA
she0-nas-bwp-064 Dr. Maxime A. Faget, Director of Engineering and Development, Johnson Space Center. April, 1981. NASA
she0-nas-clp-065 Alan Shepard strides across the deck of the U.S. Navy Carrier Champlain after a post-flight inspection of his Freedom 7 space capsule. NASA
she0-nas-clp-066 May 5, 1961: A Redstone rocket launches Freedom 7 and Alan Shepard on America's first manned space flight. NASA
she0-nas-clp-067 Alan Shepard plants an American flag on the moon. February 5, 1971. NASA
she0-nas-clp-068 The original seven Mercury astronauts. Alan Shepard stands at top left. NASA
wie0-rey-bwp-001 Elie Wiesel Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
wie0-rey-clp-002 Craig McCaw, Elie Wiesel, Larry King, Jonnetta Cole and Willie Brown.
she0-nas-clp-069 NASA
she0-nas-clp-070 NASA
she0-nas-clp-071 NASA
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she0-nas-bwp-073 NASA
she0-nas-clp-074 NASA
she0-nas-bwp-075 NASA
she0-nas-clp-076 NASA
she0-nas-clp-077 NASA
she0-nas-clp-078 NASA
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mom0-rey-cls-001 N. Scott Momaday, speaking at the Academy of Achievement. Academy of Achievement
gol0-rey-clp-025 Whoopi Goldberg in The Color Purple. Warner Bros.
tan0-rey-cls-001 Amy Tan receiving Golden Plate from Phyllis Grann, Chairman of The Putnam Berkley Group. American Academy of Achievement
sch1-rey-cls-026 Jacket of Fritz Scholder's Book of Symbols For Children. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
wie0-rey-oth-003 Elie Wiesel's first book, Night.
wie0-rey-oth-004 Elie Wiesel's Night Trilogy in a single volume, including Night, Dawn and The Accident.
wie0-rey-oth-005 Elie Wiesel. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
mom0-rey-bwp-002 Poet and novelist N. Scott Momaday Academy of Achievement
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wie0-wie-bwp-006 Elie Wiesel. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
wie0-wie-bwp-007 Shlomo Wiesel, father of Elie. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
wie0-wie-bwp-008 Elie Wiesel's maternal grandfather, Dodye Feig. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
wie0-wie-bwp-009 Elie Wiesel, as a child with his mother and sisters. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
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wie0-wie-bwp-010 Elie Wiesel, age 15, shortly before deportation. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
car1-car-bwp-001 Benjamin S. Carson, MD, director of pediatric neurosurgery at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. © 1995 Vince Rodriguez
car1-car-bwp-002 Ben Carson's graduation from Southwestern High School, Detroit, Michigan, 1969. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Children's Center
car1-car-bwp-003 Ben Carson's graduation from Yale University, 1973. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Children's Center
car1-car-bwp-004 Benjamin S. Carson, MD, Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
car1-car-bwp-005 Dr. Carson with Kira Cazenave, age 3.
car1-car-bwp-006 Dr. Carsom reviews a patient's x-rays with colleagues. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Children's Center
car1-car-bwp-007 Dr. Ben Carson in the operating room. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-008 Dr. Carson consults with a parent about his child's medical condition. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-009 Dr, Carson talks with patient Dontae Sample, age 8. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
car1-car-bwp-010 Dr. Carson prepares for surgery. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-011 Ben Carson (center left) was ROTC Commander at Southwestern High School in Detroit, Michigan. Courtesy Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
car1-car-bwp-012 Dr. Carson appears annually on the Children's Miracle Network Telethon to raise money for the Johns Hopkins Children's Center. He is pictured here with co-host Mary Beth Marsden. ©1996 by Robert J. Smith, Jr.
car1-car-bwp-013 Dr. Carson tells students about the obstacles he overcame to achieve his dreams, and encourages them to "THINK BIG." Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-014 Dr. Carson tells students about the obstacles he overcame to achieve his dreams, and encourages them to "THINK BIG." Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-015 Dr. Carson with his sons, his wife Candy, and his mother, Sonya (seated). © 1995 Vince Rodriguez
car1-car-bwp-016 Dr. Carson spends much of his time talking to community residents in Baltimore. Photo by Andrew Campbell
car1-car-bwp-017 Ben Carson celebrates his graduation from Yale University in 1973, with his mother, Sonya, and his wife, Candy. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-018 Dr. Benjamin Carson, Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-019 Dr. Benjamin Carson addresses students. Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-020 Dr. Carson encourages young people to "THINK BIG." Courtesy of Dr. Ben Carson
car1-car-bwp-021 Quality time with the children. Copyright 1995 Vince Rodriguez
car1-car-bwp-022 Dr. Carson teaching his son one of life's essentials. © 1991 Richard T. Nowitz
car1-car-bwp-023 Dr. Benjamin Carson with his three sons. © 1990 Richard T. Nowitz
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tan0-rey-clp-006 Amy Tan, novelist. © 1995 Robert Foothorap
wie0-bet-cls-011 Elie Wiesel, 1986 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-012 Elie Wiesel, Chairman of the US Holocaust Memorial Council, addresses the audience in "An Evening of Commemoration" im Philadelphia. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-013 French chief of state Pierre Mendès-France. On June 20, 1954, the day this picture was taken, he simultaneously assumed the duties of Prime Minister and Foreign Minister. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-014 UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-015 François Mauriac, 1952 winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-016 UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-017 UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-018 UPI/Corbis-Bettman
mom0-bet-bwp-007 N. Scott Momaday, 1969 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
atv012-sch-clp-112 The general visits the troops in the Persian Gulf. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf
atv012-sch-clp-113 General Schwarzkopf marching in Gulf War victory parade, Washington, DC. Courtesy General H. Norman Schwarzkopf
she0-tim-cls-079 1959 LIFE Magazine cover featuring the seven original Mercury astronauts. Ralph Morse, LIFE Magazine, © Time, Inc.
wie0-tim-clp-019 ElieWiesel speaks at the dedication of the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. © Diana Walker/TIME Inc.
wie0-tim-clp-020 President Clinton and Elie Wiesel observe a moment of silence at the dedication of the Holocaust Memorial in Washington, DC. © Diana Walker/TIME Inc.
col0-col-clp-002 Dr. Johnnetta Cole and her three sons: Ethan, Aaron and David. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-clp-003 Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-004 Johnnetta Betsch Cole with her sister Mauryne as children in Jacksonville. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-clp-005 Dr. Cole with her husband, Arthur J. Robinson, Jr., and President-elect Bill Clinton. Official White House Photograph
col0-col-clp-006 Marian Wright Edelman, at far left, was Chair of the Board of Trustees at Spelman College. Dr. Cole stands at far right. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-007 Pioneer African-American educator Mary McLeod Bethune. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-008 Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-009 Abraham Lincoln Lewis, Jacksonville's first Black millionaire, the great-grandfather of Johnnetta Betsch Cole. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-010 A reproduction of the Emancipation Proclamation distributed by the Afro-American Industrial Benefit Association, Florida's first insurance company, founded by Johnnetta Cole's great-grandfather, A.L. Lewis. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-011 Mary Frances Lewis Betsch and her daughter, Johnnetta, on graduation day at Oberlin College, 1957. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-012 Young Johnnetta (rear right), with her sister, mother, brother and father, John Thomas Betsch, in Jacksonville, Florida. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-013 Dr. Johnnetta Cole hands a diploma to a new graduate of Spelman College. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-clp-014 Dr. Cole addresses a class at Spelman College, Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-clp-015 Dr. Cole awards an honorary Spelman degree to her old friend Donna Shalala, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, former President of Hunter College. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-016 "Sister Prez" with a few of her "daughters," the President and students of Spelman College. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-017 Johnnetta Cole with her friend and fellow anthropologist, Mary Catherine Bateson, the daughter of Margaret Mead. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-018 A graduation photo of Johnnetta Betsch, Oberlin, Class of 1957. Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
col0-col-bwp-019 Giles Hall at Spelman College, Atlanta, Georgia. Photo courtesy of Spelman College
col0-col-bwp-020 Courtesy of Dr. Johnetta Cole
wee0-rey-cls-001 Barry Iverson, Time magazine
wee0-rey-cls-002 Barry Iverson, Time magazine
wie0-bet-bwp-021 President Carter observes a Day of Remembrance with Elie Wiesel at the U.S. Capitol. Memorial candles are lit to commemorate the 11 million who died in nazi concentration camps during World War II. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
wie0-bet-bwp-022 The barracks at Buchenwald. Elie Wiesel is among the prisoners on the far right of the center bunk. This photograph was taken on April 16, 1945, just after the liberation of Buchenwald. Corbis-Bettman
car1-car-clt-024 Dr. Benjamin Carson with a patient. © Max Aguilera-Hellweg
mom0-rey-clp-008 N. Scott Momaday, 1969 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. UPI/Corbis-Bettman
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luc0-rey-clp-027 George Lucas at the American Academy of Achievement.
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kra0-rey-clp-022 Henry Kravis with his daughter, Kimberly, at the 1991 Academy of Achievement in New York City. American Academy of Achievement
nov0-rey-clp-041 Antonia Novello and her husband Joe meet Olympic skater Katarina Witt at the American Academy of Achievement.
tan0-rey-clp-007 Amy Tan at the Academy of Achievement, June, 1996 at SunValley, Idaho. American Academy of Achievement
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col0-bet-bwp-021 Rosa Parks, heroine of the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott, godmother of the Civil Rights movement. © UPI/Bettman
col0-bet-bwp-022 Rosa Parks, with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. © UPI/Bettman
woo0-ucl-bwt-070 Richard Washington in the 1975 NCAA championship game against Louisville. ASUCLA
mom0-mom-bwp-013 Mayme Natachee Scott, mother of N. Scott Momaday. Although only one-eighth Indian herself, as a young adult she traveled west to rediscover her Indian roots. Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-014 Momaday as a small boy. "The horse is Tony. I am being pursued." Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-015 "I believe that I was thinking on great things."
N. Scott Momaday as a small child. Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-016 In the yard at Mountain View, Oklahoma. Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-017 N. Scott Momaday's parents, Alfred and Natachee, about the time of their marriage in 1933. Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-018 N. Scott Momaday's grandfather, Mammedaty. Courtesy of N. Scott Momaday
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mom0-frz-bwp-019 N. Scott Momaday with painter Fritz Scholder. Courtesy of Fritz Scholder
mom0-mom-bwp-020 N. Scott Momaday. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-021 N. Scott Momaday's great uncle Pohd-Lohk. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-022 N. Scott Momaday's grandmother, Aho. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-023 Guipagho the Elder, called Lone Wolf. N. Scott Momaday's great-great grandfather. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-024 I.J. Galyen, N. Scott Momaday's great-great grandfather on his mother's side. He married the Cherokee woman, Natachee. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-025 Theodore Scott, maternal grandfather of N. Scott Momaday. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-026 N. Scott Momaday, also known as Tsoai-talee. N. Scott Momaday
mom0-mom-bwp-027 Five generations. Clockwise, from left: N. Scott Momaday's great-grandmother (Keahdinekeah), grandfather (Mamedaty), great-great grandmother (Kau-au-ointy) and aunt (Clara) with her son (Marland). N. Scott Momaday
nov0-tim-bwp-042 PEOPLE Weekly © 1990 Taro Yamasaki
nov0-tim-bwp-043 PEOPLE Weekly © 1990 Taro Yamasaki
nov0-tim-bwp-044 PEOPLE Weekly © 1990 Taro Yamasaki
tan0-tim-bwp-008 "I discovered how Chinese I was by the kind of family habits and routines that were so familiar."
Amy Tan, shopping in San Francisco. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-009 Amy Tan and her husband, Louis DeMattei. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-010 Amy Tan and her mother Daisy read a letter from relatives in China. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-011 "You are not alone. I thought I was. I had so many readers who said, 'I feel as though you've written my life. That was how I felt.'"
Amy Tan in San Francisco. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-012 Amy Tan in her study at home, with her husband, Louis DeMattei. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-013 Amy Tan in San Francisco. "This whole question of who you are is a very, very interesting question and having two cultures to add to the mix of it makes it even more interesting." PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh tan0-tim-bwp-014 Amy Tan and her mother Daisy, at home in San Francisco. PEOPLE Weekly © 1989 Jim McHugh kol0-tim-bwp-001 Dr. Willem Kolff walking his dog, Diane. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-002 Dr. Kolff and his wife Janke, at home with their dog, Diane. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-003 Dr. Kolff consults with staff at the Institute for Biomedical Engineering at the University of Utah. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-004 Dr. Kolff blows into one ventricle of a plastic heart, to demonstrate the pumping action. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-005 Dr. Kolff observes a calf in the laboratory. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-006 Dr. Willem Kolff and his son, heart surgeon Jack Kolff (lower left), confer with colleagues. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford kol0-tim-bwp-007 Dr. Kolff inspects an artificial kidney machine with a patient undergoing dialysis. PEOPLE Weekly © 1975 John Telford joh1-joh-clp-001 Donald Johanson, with "Lucy." © Institute of Human Origins. Nanci Kahn joh1-joh-clp-002 Dr. Johanson in Africa. joh1-joh-clp-003 "There is a tremendous amount of romanticism which surrounds going off on expeditions to remote parts of the world."
Johanson in Africa. joh1-joh-bwp-004 Dr. Johanson examines a freshly discovered fossil in the field. joh1-joh-bwp-005 "I wouldn't shout down other people, but I would certainly make an argument in a way that was so forceful that some people refused to argue with me." joh1-joh-clp-006 Dr. Donald C. Johanson in work tent at Hadar fossil site, Ethiopia, 1992. © Institute of Human Origins 1992 joh1-joh-bwp-007 Johanson examines the day's find of fossils in the Afar Depression. On this December day in 1975, the thermometer hit 135 degrees Fahrenheit. By David Brill© National Geographic Society joh1-joh-bwp-008 "I was a very forceful young scientist."Johanson with "Lucy," in 1974. joh1-joh-bwp-009 The badlands of Hadar, Ethiopia in the great Rift Valley of East Africa. © Institute of Human Origins. Photo by Dr. Donald Johanson. joh1-joh-bwp-010 Hands of a hominid. Copyright National Geographic Society. All Rights Reserved. joh1-joh-bwp-011 "It turned out that I was pretty good as a communicator."
Young Johanson in a classroom setting. Copyright National Geographic Society. All Rights Reserved. cop0-cop-bwp-003 Francis Ford Coppola with his father and mother on the set of Godfather II. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-004 James Caan, Marlon Brando, Francis Ford Coppola, Al Pacino and John Cazale on the set of The Godfather. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-005 Francis Ford Coppola and his wife Eleanor. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-006 Directing Apocalypse Now. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-007 Francis Ford Coppola on the set of Apocalypse Now. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-008 Oscar night, 1975. Coppola won Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay and Best Director for The Godfather, Part II. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-009 At press conference for Apocalypse Now. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-010 Francis Ford Coppola and Al Pacino on the set of Godfather III. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-011 Francis Ford Coppola and his wife and Eleanor . Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-012 Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-013 Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-014 The director's father: musician and composer Carmine Coppola. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-015 "To use technology to create magic is what appealed to me." The man behind the camera. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-016 "I was the first one to break in."The young filmmaker. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-017 "Film students were junkies for equipment."Coppola as a UCLA film student. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-018 Francis Ford Coppola, age 10. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-019 Francis Copolla with his father, mother, brother and sister. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-clp-020 Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Brian Da Palma, George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola. Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-021 Francis Ford Coppola cop0-cop-bwp-022 Francis Ford Coppola. Francis Ford Coppola joh1-joh-cls-012 Hadar, where the LUcy fossils were found. © Institute of Human Origins, Nanci Kahn joh1-joh-cls-013 Excavating in the Great Rift Valley. © Institute of Human Origins, Don Johanson joh1-joh-cls-014 Some of the hundreds of hominid fossils found at the Hadar site. © Institute of Human Origins, Don Johanson joh1-joh-cls-015 Johanson with his colleagues Yoel Rak (standing), and Bill Kimbel (seated). © Institute of Human Origins, Nanci Kahn joh1-joh-cls-016 "Science should be available to anyone and everyone who wants to study it, or understand it." © Institute of Human Origins. Photo by Michael Black joh1-joh-cls-017 "There is very little we say in our field that doesn't provoke controversy." Johanson in his office at the Institute of Human Origins. © Institute of Human Origins, Nanci Kahn joh1-joh-cls-018 Olduvai Gorge, site of some of the most famous fossil finds of the Leakey family. © Donald Johanson joh1-joh-cls-019 A general view of Olduvai Gorge in the dry season. This area has produced some of the most significant fossils of extinct hominids. © Institute of Human Origins joh1-joh-cls-020 Donald Johanson with "Lucy." © Institute of Human Origins, Nanci Kahn joh1-joh-cls-021 The remains of an adult female Australopithecus afarensis, known to all the world as "Lucy." © Institute of Human Origins wee0-rey-cls-003 © 1995 P. Dzikowski wee0-rey-cls-004 © 1995 P. Dzikowski wee0-rey-cls-005 David Wallace © 1995 wee0-rey-cls-006 David Wallace © 1995 wee0-rey-cls-007 © 1995 P. Dzikowski joh1-rey-clp-022 Johanson's institute in Berkeley, California. American Academy of Achievement joh1-joh-oth-026 East Africa, including Ethiopia. Hadar, where Lucy and her contemporaries were found, is in the upper right hand corner, due west from the Gulf of Aden.
The Great Rift Valley, a treasure trove of fossils, runs south from Hadar, through Kenya, down to Olduvai, in Tanzania. Institute of Human Origins joh1-joh-clp-027 Artist's conception of "Lucy," the "mother of us all." Institute of Human Origins bal0-bet-clp-002 Bob Ballard testifies at a House hearing on the discovery of the Titanic. UPI/Bettman bal0-bet-clp-003 Robert Ballard display a model of the Titanic at a Washington DC press conference, July 30, 1986. UPI/Bettman bal0-bet-clp-004 At a press conference, Dr. Bob Ballard explains how he found the wreck of the Bismarck. UPI/Bettman bal0-bet-bwp-005 Illustration of the sinking of the Titanic on April 15, 1912. Only 711 passsengers survived. 1,517 drowned. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bal0-bet-bwp-006 Front page of the New York Times, April 16, 1912. © New York Times, 1912 bal0-bet-bwp-007 Photograph of RMS Titanic on her maiden voyage, April 10, 1912. Corbis-Bettman bal0-bet-bwp-008 Robert Ballard on board the research vessel Knorr. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bal0-bal-clp-009 Jason Jr., the robot photographer, explores the starboard forecastle deck of the Titanic, its light illuminating a rust-topped bollard. bal0-bal-clp-010 Alvin rests on its launch cradle, during Project Famous. Emory Kristof © National Geographic Society bal0-bal-clp-011 A support diver attempts to follow Alvin as it begins its free-fall toward the ocean floor, 8,500 feet below. Emory Kristof © National Geographic Society bal0-bal-clp-012 Bob Ballard climbs into Alvin through the turret during the Titanic expedition. artifacts.gif fashion.gif wisdom.gif gri0-tim-bwp-002 John Grisham, at home in Mississsippi. PEOPLE Weekly © 1992 Stephen Gates gri0-tim-bwp-003 "There are worse things in life than signing lots of copies of your own books." PEOPLE Weekly © 1992 Stephen Gates gri0-tim-bwp-004 PEOPLE Weekly © 1992 Stephen Gates gri0-tim-bwp-005 "These are friends of mine, and I can't imagine publishing a book and not going back to their stores." PEOPLE Weekly © 1992 Stephen Gates gri0-sab-clt-006 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-007 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-008 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-009 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-010 John Grisham, at home in Oxford, Mississippi with his wife Renee. © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-012 John Grisham, coaching Little League. © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-013 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-014 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-015 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-016 © Ann States/Saba gri0-sab-clt-017 "It's country living. We try to keep it simple." Author John Grisham, with a close friend. © Ann States/Saba wee0-rey-cls-008 © 1995 P. Dzikowski may0-rey-bwp-042 Newsreel cameramen get a close-up look at the "Say Hey" kid. San Francisco Giants Archives kol0-bet-bwp-008 Dr. Willem Kolff and Dr. William DeVries present an artificial heart at a press conference. UPI/Corbis-Bettman kol0-bet-bwp-009 Dr. Willem Kolff, pioneer of artifical organs. UPI/Corbis-Bettman kol0-bet-cls-010 Dr. Willem Kolff, inventor. UPI/Corbis-Bettman gri0-sab-clt-011 © Ann States/Saba nun0-rey-bwp-001 nun0-coo-bwp-002 Trevor Nunn, Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, 1981 © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-003 Trevor Nunn, Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, 1981 © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-004 Trevor Nunn, Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, 1981 © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-005 Trevor Nunn, Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, 1981 © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-006 Trevor Nunn with his wife, actress Janet Suzman, and son Joshua at home in Suffolk. © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-007 Trevor and Janet at home in Suffolk. © Ian Cook nun0-coo-bwp-008 Trevor Nunn, Janet Suzman and their son Joshua. © Ian Cook bal0-tim-cls-013 Dr. Robert Ballard, at a Washington DC press conference, discusses finding the wreck of the Titanic. Cynthia Johnson/TIME Magazine bal0-tim-cls-014 Dr. Robert Ballard, with the remote camera JJ, aboard the research vessel Atlantis. Steve Liss/TIME Magazine gri0-sip-cls-018 Rogelio Solis/SIPA Press gri0-sip-cls-019 Rogelio Solis/SIPA Press nun0-tim-bwp-009 L-R, Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, producer David Geffen, actress Betty Buckley, and director Trevor Nunn at recording session for cast album of Broadway production of Cats. Martha Swope © TIME Inc. nun0-tim-bwp-010 Chroeographer Gillian Lynne, director Trevor Nunn, talking with dancer Terence Mann during rehearsal of Cats Martha Swope © TIME Inc. nun0-tim-bwp-011 Trevor Nunn, during rehearsal of Cats Martha Swope © TIME Inc. nun0-tim-bwp-012 Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and director Trevor Nunn, during rehearsal of Cats Martha Swope © TIME Inc. nun0-tim-bwp-013 Trevor Nunn surrounded by the cast of Cats. Martha Swope © TIME Inc. nun0-tim-bwp-014 Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber confers with director Trevor Nunn during Broadway production of Cats. Martha Swope © TIME Inc. eli0-bet-bwp-032 James Watson with Francis Crick, at the time of their discovery of the structure of the DNA molecule. UPI/Bettman eli0-csh-bwp-031 James Watson and Francis Crick with a model of the DNA molecule, the double helix. Courtesy of Cold Spring Harbour Laboratory nun0-ber-clp-015 Exterior of the Aldwych Theatre, first London home of the Royal Shakespeare Company. British Travel Association nun0-ber-clp-016 Young Nicholas joins a troupe of actors in this scene from Trevor Nunn's stage adaptation of Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens. nun0-ber-clp-017 Britain's National Theatre. National Theatre Archive nun0-ber-clp-018 The Olivier auditorium in Britain's National Theatre. National Theatre Archive nun0-ber-clp-019 A scene from Trevor Nunn's production of Les Miserables. Donald Cooper nun0-ber-clp-020 Roger Rees and David Threllfall in a scene from Trevor Nunn's production of Nicholas Nickleby. nun0-wal-clp-021 A scene from Trevor Nunn's production, Cats. nun0-wal-clp-022 John Napier's set for Cats. nun0-wal-clp-023 Elaine Page as Grizabella in Cats. nun0-wal-clp-024 The Growltiger's Last Stand in Cats. Oriental costumes, swords held overhead. nun0-wal-clp-025 Old Deuteronomy on his way to the Heaviside Layer. nun0-wal-clp-026 nun0-wal-clp-027 Skimbleshanks the Railway cat. jon1-jon-bwp-016 Johnson the cat, attacking a grapefruit. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-017 Johnson the cat, in his grapefruit helmet. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-019 Chuck Jones in Ocean Park, California, 1920. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-020 Charles Adams Jones, the artist's father. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-021 Mabel McQuiddy Martin Jones, the artist's mother. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-022 Students at Chouinard Art Institute, 1929. Chuck Jones is third from the left. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-023 Chuck Jones, animation director, 1941. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-bwp-024 Photogrpah of Leon Schlesinger, defaced by disrespectful subordinates. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises jon1-jon-clp-026 Chuck Jones and two old friends. Courtesy Chuck Jones Enterprises kol0-roc-bwp-011 Dr. Willem Kolff, inventor. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-012 Dr. Willem Kolff and his wife Janke, in Kampen, the Netherlands, 1941. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-013 Dr. Kolff on his farm at Ashtabula, Ohio. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-014 Four generations of Kolffs. Young Dr. Kolff holds his infant son, Jack, while his father and grandfather look on. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-015 Willem and Janke Kolff with their five children. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-016 Willem Kolff and his wife-to-be, Janke, wear historic costumes for a festival in Leiden, 1935. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-017 Young Willem Kolff plays with two of his brothers. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-018 Dr. Jacob Kolff with his wife Adriane and their five children. Young Willem is seated at far right. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-019 Dr. Kolff inspects prototype of a home dialysis machine. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-roc-bwp-020 Early dialysis machines built at Kampen with wooden slats. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-dev-bwp-021 Dr. William C. DeVries. Courtesy of Dr. William DeVries kol0-rey-clp-022 University Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. Photo by Wayne Reynolds kol0-roc-bwp-023 Dr. Kolff confers with colleagues at the Cleveland Clinic in the 1960s. Courtesy of Dr. Willem Kolff kol0-mod-bwp-024 A young girl, parayzed by polio, gazes out from her iron lung. In the foreground are the elaborate leg braces worn by those whom the disease crippled less severely. March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation bal0-dav-bwp-015 bal0-dav-bwp-016 bal0-dav-bwp-017 was0-was-clp-001 Dennis R. Washington Forbes Magazine was0-was-bwp-002 Dennis Washington as a small boy. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-003 Teenage Dennis Washington, crazy for cars and Òanything that ran.Ó Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-004 The young contractor. Today, this plane would fit inside one of Dennis WashingtonÕs private jets. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-005 Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-006 The young Dennis Washington dreamed of running heavy machinery. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-008 Dennis Washington as a boy. ÒMost people in rural areas didnÕt live too fancy...Ó Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-010 Young Dennis Washington, ready to embark on his career as a heavy equipment operator. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-011 Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-012 WashingtonÕs style evolved as his business grew. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-013 Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-014 Wedding day for Dennis and Phyllis Washington. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-015 Dennis and Phyllis in the 1970s. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-016 The Dennis and Phyllis Washington at the King Dome in Seattle, 1991. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-017 Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-018 The Washingtons today. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-019 The Washington family celebrate. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-021 The Anaconda Copper Mine, Butte Montana. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-022 Dennis Washington built his fortune with massive construction projects like this water filtration plant near Butte, Montana. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-023 The Washingtons are well-known in their native state. Montanan Magazine was0-was-clp-024 In the 1980s, Dennis Washington earned a national reputation for turning around troubled businesses. BarronÕs was0-was-bwp-025 Dennis Washington as a schoolboy in Washington. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-bwp-026 Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-027 Phyllis Washington as Homecoming Queen at the University of Montana. Courtesy of Dennis and Phyllis Washington was0-was-clp-028 This Forbes magazine cover story made Washington a national figure. Forbes Magazine mcc0-mat-clt-002 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-003 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-004 Craig McCaw, at home in Washington. © 1996 Louis Psihoyos, Matrix mcc0-mat-clt-005 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-006 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-010 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-011 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-012 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-013 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-007 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-008 © 1996 Louis Psihoyos mcc0-mat-clt-009 Craig McCaw takes a global view of telecommunications. © 1996 Louis Psihoyos, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-014 Craig McCaw, at home in the 1980s. © 1993 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-015 "We should be measured on what we do, not how long we spend to do it. If major corporations don't understand this, they will be destroyed." © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-016 Craig McCaw, at home. © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-017 "The more they criticize you, the more they compliment you later if you're right." © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-018 "Your integrity is always challenged in business." © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-019 "When you borrow tremendous amounts of money, there are always times of adversity..." © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix mcc0-mat-cls-020 "You have to be driven by competitiveness, which is usually driven by adversity." © 1989 Dan Lamont, Matrix wei0-kin-cls-002 Sanford Weill with colleagues at a corporate retreat in Connecticut. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-003 Penthouse apt at 90th & Park view across the Hudson Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-004 At home in Greenwich. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-005 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-006 Weill at the offices of the Travelers Group. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-007 House in Greenwich, Connecticut Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-008 Sanford Weill in the roof garden of his New York apartment, overlooking the Hudson. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-009 Sanford Weill, Chairman of the Travelers Group. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-010 Sanford Weill at the Travelers Group offices. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-011 Library in office at Primerica Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-012 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-013 Sanford Weill in the office library at Primerica Corp., in the 1980s. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-014 In the office at Travelers Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-015 The Chairman of Travelers, Sanford Weill. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-016 Sanford and Joan Weill on the patio of their home in Greenwich, Connecticut. Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-017 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-018 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-019 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-020 Rob Kinmonth wei0-kin-clt-021 Rob Kinmonth don0-bet-bwp-002 Sam Donaldson at the White House, 1986. UPI/Corbis-Bettman kur0-bet-bwp-002 Charles Kuralt, on the road with his cameraman, 1971. CBS Photo Archive kur0-bet-bwp-003 Charkles Kuralt and his CBS colleague Diane Sawyer on the set of Good Morning America, 1981. UPI/Corbis-Bettman kin0-bet-bwp-002 Larry King at press conference after being named anchor man for broadcast of the 1990 Goodwill Games. UPI/Corbis-Bettman kin0-bet-clp-003 Larry King broadcasting from San Francisco in 1988. UPI/Corbis-Bettman don0-bet-clp-003 Sam Donaldson looks on as Pat Robertson announces that he will abandon his own campaign to support George Bush for president in 1988. UPI/Corbis-Bettman don0-arc-clp-004 Sam Donaldson secures his flak jacket as he prepares to leave UN headquarters in Sarajevo. Another member of DonaldsonÕs ABC crew had been killed earlier in the day. REUTERS/Corinne Dufka/Archive Photos kin0-arc-clp-004 Larry King poses with his plaque after the unveiling of his star on HollywoodÕs Walk of Fame, 1997. Reuters/Fred Prouser/Archive Photos mus0-bet-bwp-002 Astronaut Story Musgrave greets photographers in Houston after returning from a space flight in 1983. UPI/Corbis-Bettman mus0-arc-bwp-003 Astronaut Story Musgrave at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, 1971. NASA mcc0-rey-clp-021 Craig McCaw at the American Academy of Achievement. Wayne Reynolds mcc0-mcc-bwp-022 Craig McCaw, at the start of his career. Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw wei0-arc-bwp-022 Margaret Thatcher, British Prime Minister from 1978 to 1990. Reuters/Archive Photos wei0-wei-bwp-023 Sanford Weill as a teenage cadet at Peekskill Military Academy. Courtesy of Sanford Weill wei0-wei-bwp-024 From left to right: Natan Bibliowicz, Jessica Bibliowicz (Mr. Weill's daughter), Marc Weill (Mr. Weill's son), Joan Weill, Sanford I. Weill, and Sally Mosher (Mrs. Weill's mother). Courtesy of Sanford Weill wei0-wei-clp-025 Sanford Weill with students of the Academy of Finance in Baltimore, Maryland. Courtesy of Sanford Weill wei0-wei-clp-026 Sanford Weill in the main hall of Carnegie Hall. Courtesy of Sanford Weill wei0-wei-clp-027 Sanford Weill as a young stockbroker in the 1970s. Courtesy of Sanford Weill wei0-wei-oth-028 Travelers' purchase of Salomon, Inc. landed Sanford Weill on the cover of Business Week in September, 1997. Business Week mus0-bet-cls-01? Musgrave and his crewmates on Space Mission 51-F, 7/3/1985. Back (L-R) Tony England, Karl Henize, Story Musgrave, Loren Acton, Jahn-David Bartoe; Front: Commander Gordon Fullerton, Pilot Roy Bridges. UPI/Corbis-Bettman mus0-arc-cls-017 Story Musgrave as a member of STS-61, the Hubble Rescue Mission. Archive Photos mus0-mus0-clp-001 Story Musgrave, astronaut, 1972. Archive Photos mus0-nas-cls-015 Story Musgrave prepares for a space walk. Archive Photos kur0-arc-bws-004 Charles Kuralt and his traveling workplace, 1970s. Archive Photos kur0-arc-bws-005 Charles Kuralt, 1979. CBS/Archive Photos kur0-arc-bws-006 Charles Kuralt in a Kansas wheat field, while touring rural America in 1975. CBS/Archive Photos kur0-arc-bws-007 Charles Kuralt in his mobile office in the 25-foot "On the Road" van in 1979. CBS/Archive Photos kur0-arc-cls-001 Charles Kuralt, 1992. Frank Capri/SAGA/Archive Photos kur0-arc-cls-008 Charles Kuralt, 1992. Frank Capri/SAGA/Archive Photos kin0-arc-cls-005 Larry King at the American Oceans Gala at the Beverly Hills Hilton. Archive Photos/Lee kin0-arc-cls-020 Larry King, Nov. 27, 1996. Popperfoto/Archive Photos kin0-arc-cls-021 Larry King. © SAGA 1989 Sarah Hood/Archive Photos don0-arc-cls-005 Sam Donaldson and veteran AP White House correspondent Helen Thomas in the White House press room. REUTERS/Corinne Dufka/Archive Photos win0-win-bwp-018 Oprah Winfrey as a little girl in Kosciusko, Mississippi. Oprah Winfrey win0-win-bwp-019 Oprah Winfrey as a little girl in Kosciusko, Mississippi. Oprah Winfrey win0-win-bwp-020 Oprah Winfrey as a teenager in Nashville, Tennessee. Oprah Winfrey mcc0-mcc-bwp-025 Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-026 Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-027 Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-028 Craig McCaw, his father, mother and older brother. Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-029 Craig McCaw and his three brothers grew up enjoying the outdoors. Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-030 Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-031 Craig McCaw as a youngster in Seattle. Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-032 Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw mcc0-mcc-bwp-033 Craig McCaw, his mother, father and three brothers, boating on Lake Washington. Courtesy of Craig O. McCaw kur0-cbs-bwp-009 Charles Kuralt, 1958. CBS Photo Archive kur0-kur-bwp-010 Tubin' on the Apple River. Estate of Charles Kuralt kur0-kur-bwp-011 Kuralt navigates on the road. Estate of Charles Kuralt kur0-bet-bwp-018 Ralph Nader, testifying before a committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. © UPI/Bettman kur0-bet-bwp-019 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. with Rosa Parks. © UPI/Bettman kur0-time-bwp-014 Charles Kuralt found his stories in America's heartland. Doug Wilson/TIME Magazine kur0-cbs-bwp-015 Charles Kuralt speaking to an Iowa farmer, 1973. CBS Photo Archive kur0-tim-bwp-016 Kuralt with his longtime cameraman, Isadore Bleckman, and sound man Larry Gianneschi. Doug Wilson/TIME Magazine kur0-cbs-bwp-017 Kuralt in Vietnam, 1968. CBS Photo Archive kur0-cbs-bwp-012 For almost 30 years, Charles Kuralt and his crew toured America in a camper van. CBS Photo Archive kur0-tim-bwp-013 Charles Kuralt and his crew crisscrossed America in search of their stories. Doug Wilson/TIME Magazine don0-swa-oth-006 Sam Donaldson in the offices of ABC News. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-007 Waiting for the President's motorcade. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-008 On duty at the White House, with Secretary of State Alexander Haig, ca. 1981. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-009 Waiting for the President. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-010 Sam Donaldson is the anchor of ABC World News Sunday. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-011 A lighter moment on the set of World News Sunday. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-012 Sam Donaldson with George Will and David Brinkley on the set of This Week. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-013 At work in the ABC newsroom. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-014 Preparing for a broadcast. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-015 Preparing the week's program with David Brinkley. © Dick Swanson don0-swa-oth-016 Sam Donaldson at home with his three younger children, Jennifer, Thomas and Robert. © Dick Swanson krz0-krz-cls-034 don0-don-oth-017 Sam Donaldson and his mother, on the way to school in El Paso, Texas, 1941. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-oth-018 Sam Donaldson and his brother Tom, a pilot in the U.S. Army Air Corps, 1942. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-oth-019 Sam Donaldson and his mother, Chloe Hampson Donaldson on the family farm in Chamberino, New Mexico, on her 90th birthday, in 1984. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-oth-020 Lt. Sam Donaldson, U.S. Army, with Nike Hercules missile at Ft. Bliss, Texas, 1957. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-oth-021 Broadcasting "Sam's Show" on KEPO, El Paso, in 1952. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-oth-022 Sam and Jan, on their honeymoon in Athens, Greece, 1983. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-tim-bwp-023 Early in the morning at the White House Press room. © Karl Schumacher/TIME Magazine don0-tim-bwp-024 Shooting a "stand-up" outside the White House. © Diana Walker/TIME Magazine don0-tim-bwp-025 Hunting for info while in transit. People Weekly, © 1992 Ian Cook krz0-krz-bwp-002 Coaching World University team. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-003 Grant Hill (Number 33), and Christian Laettner make the winning play against Kentucky in the 1992 Eastern Regional Final. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-004 Coach K. sees his team through the Final Four in Minneapolis. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-005 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-006 Durham Herald-Sun, 4/7/1991 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-007 The Blue Devils, along with Coach Krzyzewski and his daughter Jamie, receive the congratualations of Vice President Dan Quayle after winning the 1991 NCAA championship. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-008 With Dean Smith Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-009 Meeting Kevin Costner while commentator for CBS 1997 finals Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-010 The NCAA Championships have made Coach K. a nationally recognized figure. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-011 Mike Krzyzewski meets President George Bush in the Oval Office after leading Duke to victory in the 1991 NCAA championship. © David Valdez, The White House krz0-krz-clp-012 The Coach in a rare relaxed moment on the sidelines. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-013 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-014 Co-chair of Children's Miracle Network Telethon, Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-015 Coach K. and his team celebrate their victory over Kansas for the 1991 National Championship. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-016 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-017 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-018 Mike Krzyzewski accepts the Kodak Coach of the Year award from Kodak Vice President Bob Sharp. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-019 Coach K. and his team celebrate their victory over Kansas for the 1991 National Championship. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-020 Accepting Coach of the Year Award Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-021 Coach Krzyzewski, his wife Carol, and the team meet North Carolina Governor Jim Marten after winning the national Championship in 1991. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-022 Parade magazine cover of October 11, 1992 shows Coach K. with star players Thomas Hill, Grant Hill and Bobby Hurley. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-023 The coach leads a practice session at Duke with Number 4, Tommy Amaker. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-024 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-025 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-026 Mike Krzyzewski plays in a charity tennis tournament alongside John McEnroe. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-027 Coach K., a West Point graduate, on a tour of the Pentagon after winning the 1992 Championship. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-028 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-bwp-029 Coach K. inspires his players in a difficult moment. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-030 Mike Krzyzewski covering the 1997 NCAA Finals as a commentator for CBS Sports. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-031 Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-032 The Coach talks things over with the captain of his 1996 team. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-krz-clp-033 Coach K. performs the customary "cutting down the net" ritual after winning the 1992 NCAA Championship. Courtesy of Duke University krz0-tim-cls-035 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-036 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-037 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-038 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-039 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-040 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-041 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-042 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-043 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-044 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-045 © Time-Life krz0-tim-cls-046 © Time-Life bro0-bet-bwp-002 Willie Brown, whose San Francisco district included the hippie haven of Haight-Ashbury, surprised his California Assemby colleagues in 1968 with his up-to-the-minute fashion choices. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bro0-bet-bwp-003 After taking some kidding in the California Assembly over his Nehru jacket and love beads, Brown appeared the next day in more conventional attire, but carrying a snapdragon to show solidarity with his flower-power constituents. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bro0-bet-bwp-004 Willie Brown's political mentor, U.S. Congressman Phillip Burton. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bro0-bet-bwp-005 Willie Brown gives a press conference as Speaker of the California Assembly in 1990. UPI/Corbis-Bettman bro0-bro-bwp-006 Willie Brown (left) and classmates at Mineola Colored High School, circa 1947. Courtesy of Virginia London McCalla bro0-bro-bwp-007 Willie Brown (center), at his eighth-grade graduation in Mineola, Texas, 1947. Courtesy of Virginia London McCalla bro0-sac-bwp-008 Willie Brown, newly elected Assemblyman from San Francisco, 1965. Photo by The Sacramento Bee, courtesy of the City of Sacramento Archives and Museum Collection Center bro0-cal-bwp-009 Willie Brown in his office at the California State Capitol, 1967. As low man on the Assmebly totem pole, Brown was given an office next to the cafeteria. Courtesy of the California State Library bro0-cal-bwp-010 Willie Brown keeps count with looks on as Jesse Unruh, as Unruh is releected as Speaker of the California Assembly in 1968. Photo by The Sacramento Bee, courtesy of the City of Sacramento Archives and Museum Collection Center bro0-cal-bwp-011 Willie Brown campaigned side by side with members of the Burton family throughout his career. In 1967, he shared a flier with State Senate candidate John Burton. Courtesy of Archive and Special Collections, California State University, Sacramento. bro0-ban-bwp-012 A tense moment during the 1968 Presidential campaign. Willie Brown has just introduced Sen. Robert Kennedy (back turned) to a hostile crowd in Oakland, California. Congressman Phil Burton and Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh stand at right. Kennedy would win the contested Calfornia primary, but was shot to death on election night. Courtesy of Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley bro0-cal-bwp-013 When this picture was taken in 1966, no one knew that all three men would serve as Speakers of the California State Assembly: Jesse Unruh (left) from 1961 to 1968, Robert Moretti (center) from 1971 to 1974, and Willie Brown (right) from 1980 to 1995, the all-time record. Courtesy of Archive and Special Collections, California State University, Sacramento bro0-cal-bwp-014 On the floor of the California Assembly. Speaker Unruh and Wille Brown stand at center, with Brown's young son Michael just visible between them. California State Archives, Jesse M. Unruh collection bro0-sac-bwp-016 Willie Brown enjoyed the high life in the 1970s, including fast cars like this Porsche he drove to work at the Capitol. Photo by Owen Brewer, The Sacramento Bee, courtesy of the City of Sacramento Archives and Museum Collection Center don0-don-bwp-026 Sam Donaldson and Frank Reynolds in the House committee room where the articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon are about to be voted on. July, 1974. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-don-clp-027 Staying dry while staying in touch. Waiting for the dignitaries on a wet runway. Courtesy of Sam Donaldson don0-nor-bwp-028 Cadets throw their hats in the air to celebrate graduation day from New Mexico Military Institute. Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-029 Graduation day at New Mexico Military Institute. Donaldson returns to his old school as commencement speaker. Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-030 Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-031 Sam Donaldson learned farming from his mother. This picture was taken shortly before her death. Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-032 Sam Donaldson revisits his alma mater, the New Mexico Miiltary Institute. Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-033 Sam Donaldson and his mother, Chloe Hampson Donaldson. Steve Northup don0-nor-bwp-034 Steve Northup car0-jcl-bwp-026 Old enemies make peace. Prime Minister Begin of Israel shakes hands with President Sadat of Egypt while U.S. President Carter looks on. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library don0-jcl-clp-035 Anwar Sadat, Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter sign the Camp David accord, a framework for peace. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library kin0-tim-cls-022 Presidential candidate Ross Perot enjoys himself while Larry King's make-up receives a finishing touch, kin0-tim-cls-009 Candidates Bill Clinton and Al Gore have their mikes hooked up before being interviewed by Larry King. kin0-kin-bwp-010 Summer 1944. Larry Zeiger (left) poses for a souvenir photo with his brother Marty and Aunt Sylvia. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-011 Fun and games in a Coney Island photo booth: Larry Zeiger (center) with his friends Howard Weiss and Arnold Perlmutter. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-012 Sitting on the stoop of their clubhouse, (top row) Larry Zeiger and Herb Cohen, bottom row left to right: Arnold Perlmutter , Irvin Kaplan, William Perlberg. The "W" on their jackets stands for the name of their club: The Warriors. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-013 A teenage Larry Zeiger (bottom right) with his friends in front of their Brooklyn clubhouse. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-014 At this party in his old neighborhood, a young Larry Zeiger (later King) with glasses, is just visible behind the accordionist. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-015 No, these young men are not drinking and driving; they're posing on a prop car at Coney Island in 1952. Larry Zeiger (later King) can be seen on the right wearing a straw hat. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-016 A young Larry King serves as Master of Ceremonies for a high school New Year's party at Brooklyn's Colonial Mansion. Larry King kin0-kin-bwp-017 Larry King with his mother in Miami, 1962. Lrry King kin0-tim-bwp-006 A Brooklyn boy remembers his roots. People Weekly © 1992, Kimberly Butler kur0-tim-cls-020 Charles Kuralt. kur0-tim-cls-021 Charles Kuralt on the set of the CBS Sunday Morning Show. kin0-tim-bwp-007 An interviewer contemplates his next question. People Weekly © 1992, Kimberly Butler kin0-tim-bwp-008 Television personality Larry King reviews his wardrobe selection. People Weekly © 1992, Kimberly Butler oat0-oat-clp-001 Washington, DC, 1996. Joyce Carol Oates, reading her story "The Knife." She has just re ceived the PEN/Malamud Award for Achievement in the Short Story. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-clp-002 Joyce Carol Oates withJohn Updike (left) and her husband, Raymond Smith (right) at the Book Fair in Gothenburg, Sweden, ca. 1986. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-clp-003 New York City, 1994. PEN honorees Joyce Carol Oates and Henry Louis Gates at the awards dinner of PEN, the international writers' oprganization which honored them both that year. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-oth-004 Joyce Carol Oates © 1996 Mary Cross oat0-oat-clp-005 Mike Tyson and Joyce Carol Oates in Catskill, NY, Fall, 1986. Oates was at work on her book On Boxing. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-006 Joyce Carol Oates lecturing at Mt. Holyoke College. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-007 Joyce Carol Oates and her mother Carolina, Millersport, NY, 1941. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates coo0-tex-bws-001 Dr. Denton Cooley assists Dr. Alfred Blalock (right) in an operation to correct a congenital heart defect in a young child, ca. 1944. Dr. Blalock pioneered the famous "blue baby" operation. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bws-002 Johns Hopkins Hospital surgical housestaff, 1950. Dr. Cooley (to the right of Dr. Blalock) was the chief resident in surgery. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-003 Two pioneers of transplant surgery: Dr. Christiaan Barnard (right) who performed the world's first successful heart transplant operation and Dr. Cooley (left) whop perfromed the first successful heart transplant operation in the United States, ca. 1968. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bws-004 Dr. Cooley (right) performs surgery on a child with congenital heart problems, ca. 1960. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bws-005 Dr. Cooley (top) watches the progress of the first patient in the world to undergo implantation of an artificial heart, 1969. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-006 Dr. Denton Cooley at his Cool Acres Ranch with his family, 1968. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-007 Dr. Denton Cooley at his Cool Acres Ranch with his family, 1968. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-008 Dr. and Mrs. Cooley with their grandchildren, ca. 1988. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-009 Dr. Cooley (center) poses with heart transplant recipients during the Texas Heart Institute's 25th Anniversary Gala Celebration, 1987. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-010 Dr. Cooley receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Ronald Reagan on March 26, 1984. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bws-011 Visiting surgeons representing seven foreign nations, and twelve states of the United States, crowd the operating room to watch coronary artery bypass surgery in 1970. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-012 Dr. Cooley, preparing to make patient rounds. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-cls-013 Dr. Cooley in the operating room, ca. 1997. The technology has changed significantly since the early days of heart surgery. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bwp-014 Denton Arthur Cooley heads off to school. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bwp-015 San Jacinto High School graduation, 1937. Dr. Cooley was an "A" student was chosen for the "All City" basketball team. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bwp-016 Denotn Cooley on the University of Texas Southwest Conference championship basketball team, 1939. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bwp-017 Cover story of LIFE Magazine, August 19, 1968. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-bwp-018 Dr. Cooley with a patient in the Intensive Care Unit, 1970s. © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-clp-019 Dr. Denton A. Cooley © Texas Heart Institute coo0-tex-clp-020 Dr. Denton A. Cooley © Texas Heart Institute pal0-pal-bwp-001 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-002 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-003 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-004 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-005 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-006 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-007 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-008 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-009 AP Wirephoto pal0-pal-bwp-010 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-011 AP Wirephoto pal0-pal-clp-012 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-013 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-014 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-015 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-clp-016 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-017 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer pal0-pal-bwp-018 Courtesy of Arnold Palmer how0-how-clp-041 Ron Howard with Tom Hanks and the cast of Apollo 13. Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-042 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-043 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-044 Ron Howard, directing The Paper. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-001 Director Ron Howard. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-002 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-003 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-004 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-005 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-006 Ron Howard directing Splash. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-007 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-008 A teenage Ron Howard, with Andy Griffith on the set of The Andy Griffith Show. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-009 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-010 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-011 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-012 Ron Howard, age eight, as Opie on The Andy Griffith Show. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-013 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-014 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-015 Ron Howard studying his script on the set of Happy Days. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-016 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-clp-017 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-018 Ron Howard and Brian Grazer, partners in Imagine Films. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-019 Director Ron Howard on the set of Apollo 13 Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-020 Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-021 Ron Howard, directing Apollo 13. Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-022 Rance and Jean Howard, with Ron and his brother Clint, on the set of The Shootist. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-023 Ron Howard as Opie on The Andy Griffith Show. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-024 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-clp-025 Ron Howard, Henry Winkler and the cast of Happy Days. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-026 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-027 Photo by Lorey Sebastian, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-028 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-029 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-030 Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-031 Ron directs his mother, actress Jean Howard, in Apollo 13. Photo by Ron Batzdorff, Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-032 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-clp-033 Ron Howard directing a scene from The Paper with Michael Keaton and Glenn Close. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-034 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-035 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-036 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-037 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-038 Director Ron Howard (left) holds Mark Vande Brake and executive producer George Lucas holds Dawn Downing amidst nearly 250 little people hired to portray the Nelwyns in Willow, a Lucasfilm Ltd. production presented by MGM. Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-039 Courtesy of Ron Howard how0-how-bwp-040 Courtesy of Ron Howard krz0-krz-clp-047 Christian Laettner makes the winning shot against Kentucky in the 1992 Eastern Regional Final. Courtesy of Duke University coo0-bet-clp-022 Dr. Michael DeBakey, 78, operates on a patient at the Texas Medical Center. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-bet-clp-023 Dr. Michael DeBakey's inventions and techniques revolutionized and standardized the art of cardiovascular surgery. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-bet-bwp-024 Dr. Michael DeBakey displays an artificial heart at a 1966 press conference, shortly after his first attempt to implant an artificial heart. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-bet-bwp-025 Dr. Michael DeBakey in 1987. Chairman of Surgery at Baylor College of Medicine. UPI/Corbis-Bettman oat0-bet-bwp-008 Joyce Carol Oates in the 1960s. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-arc-bwp-026 Dr. Denton A. Cooley, in the year of 20 transplants. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-arc-bwp-027 Dr. Denton Cooley playing bass wiht his all-physician band, The Heartbeats UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-arc-bwp-028 Dr. Michael DeBakey, chancellor emeritus of Baylor College of Medicine. UPI/Corbis-Bettman coo0-tim-clp-029 Dr. Denton Cooley and Dr. Michael DeBakey, surgeons and rivals. mus0-mus-bwp-019 Story Musgrave, aged 16 months. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-020 Sotry Musgrave as a small child on Linwood Farm in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-021 Story Musgrave on his polo pony, Silver Star, in 1946. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-022 Dr. Musgrave at a 1975 medical exchange conference in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, then part of the Soviet Union. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-023 Dr. Musgrave is interviewed by a TV crew. 1996. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-024 On spaceship Columbia, December 1996. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-025 Training in a water tank in Houston, 1985. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-026 Dr. Musgrave performs the first spacewalk from the Space Shuttle Challenger, 1983. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-027 Meeting Vice President Gore in the White House, 1994. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-029 Dr. Musgrave adjusts equipment while Charles Sawin serves as test subject, in a 1976 Spacelab simulation medical experiment. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-030 Waiting to board Space Shuttle Discovery on Halloween, 1989. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-031 Dr. Musgrave, receiving an honorary Dpctpr of Science degree from Chancellor Melvin Eggers of Syracuse University in 1984. 20 years before, Musgrave had arrived at Syracuse as a freshman, straight out of the Marines. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-032 Dr. Musgrave conducts an electrophoresis experiment, 1982. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-033 Training for the first flight of the Space Shuttle Challenger with Don Peterson, 1982. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-034 Training for the first Challenger flight in a NASA simulator, 1982. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-035 Floating in an underwater simulator, preparing for the first Shuttle space walk, 1983. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-037 Testing Space Shuttle rescue equipment, 1977. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-038 Training for the 80th Shuttle mission, 1996. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-clp-039 A welcome home from the family. Courtesy of Story Musgrave mus0-mus-bwp-036 Pvt. Musgrave, United States Marine Corps, 1954. NASA mus0-nas-clp-014 Astronauts Musgrave and Peterson on the first spacewalk from the Shuttle, 1983. NASA mus0-nas-clp-012 Peering through the hatch on Space Shuttle Mission 44. NASA mus0-nas-clp-010 Story Musgrave, repairing the Hubble Space Telescope. NASA mus0-nas-clp-009 Repairing the Hubble Space Telescope. NASA mus0-nas-clp-008 Working on the Hubble. NASA mus0-nas-clp-004 Story Musgrave and the Hubble Telescope pass over the West Coast of Australia. NASA mus0-nas-clp-006 Astronauts Hoffman & Musgrave repairing the Hubble. NASA mus0-nas-clp-005 Story Musgrave, working on the Hubble Space Telescope on Shuttle Mission 61. NASA mus0-nas-clp-007 Inflight crew portrait of Shutle Mission 61, the mission to repair the Hubble telescope. NASA mus0-nas-clp-018 Crew portrait of STS-6, the maiden voyage of the Space Shuttle Challenger. Story Musgrave is at top right. NASA dov0-dov-bwp-002 Rita Dove and her brother, Tom, all decked out for church in Akron, Ohio, ca. 1956. Photo by Ray A. Dove dov0-dov-bwp-003 Rita Dove, head majorette of Buchtel High School in Akron, Ohio, 1969. Photo by Ray A. Dove dov0-dov-bwp-004 Rita Dove playing the cello in high school. Courtesy of Rita Dove dov0-dov-clp-005 Rita Dove as a freshman at Miami University, Ohio, 1970. Photo by Ray A. Dove dov0-dov-clp-006 Rita Dove as a graduate student in Iowa, 1976. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-007 Rita Dove with her future husband, Fred Viebahn, and his mother in Cologne, Germany, 1977. The spires of Cologne's famous cathedral are visible in the distance. Photo by Hans Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-008 Rita Dove at Oberlin, Ohio, 1977. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-009 Wedding Day, 1979. Rita Dove and her husband Fred, with her brother and two sisters. Photo by Ray A. Dove dov0-dov-clp-010 Rita Dove and her husband Fred Viebahn, with their newborn daughter, Aviva, in Tempe, Arizona, January, 1983. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-011 Rita Dove and her daughter, Aviva, in Florence, Italy, 1985. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-012 Rita Dove at home in Charlottesville, Virginia. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-013 Rita Dove at home in Charlottesville, Virginia. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-014 Rita Dove at home, playing her viola da gamba. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-015 Rita Dove at home in Charlottesville, Virginia. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-017 Rita Dove before throwing out the first ball and singing the National Anthem at a minor league baseball game in Medford, Oregon, 1996. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-018 Rita Dove and her husband, Fred Viebahn. © Fred Viebahn, taken with his camera by a bystander dov0-dov-clp-019 Rita Dove, her husband Fred, and their daughter, Aviva Dove-Viebahn, 1997. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-020 Rita Dove with her mother, Elvira, and her father, Ray A. Dove, 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-021 Rita Dove with her high school English teacher, Margaret Oechsner, 1988. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-022 Rita Dove and Big Bird during the filming of a Sesame Street segment on poetry. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-023 Rita Dove, Whoopi Goldberg and a student honoree at the American Academy of Achievement, 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-024 Rita Dove with her husband Fred Viebahn, her daughter Aviva, and Olympic skater Scott Hamilton at the American Academy of Achievement, 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-025 Rita Dove with her daughter Aviva and civil rights legend Rosa Parks at the American Academy of Achievement, Sun Valley, Idaho, 1996. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-026 Rita Dove with President Bill Clinton and historian John Hope Franklin at a White House dinner, October 7, 1993. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-027 Rita Dove with Jimmy Carter and Rosalyn Carter, 1995. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-028 Rita Dove with Oprah Winfrey, 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-029 U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove with Nobel Prize-winning novelist Toni Morrison and poet Maya Angelou in 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-030 Poet Laureate Rita Dove, on the balcony of her office at the Library of Congress, across from the U.S. Capitol, 1994. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-bwp-031 Rita Dove, Commonwealth Porfessor of English, University of Virginia, Charlottesville. © Fred Viebahn dov0-dov-clp-016 Rita Dove introduces a poetry reading at the Library of Congress. © Fred Viebahn oat0-oat-oth-009 Joyce Carol Oates's novel Man Crazy. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-oth-010 Haunted: Tales of the Grotesque by Joyce Carol Oates. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-011 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-012 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-013 Photo courtesy of Nelia Pynn oat0-oat-bwp-015 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-016 Joyce Carol Oates, age 3, with her father Frederic Oates, in 1941. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-017 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-018 Joyce at her first desk, age 5, 1943. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-019 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-020 Joyce in a school photo (age 11), 1949. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-021 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-022 Joyce Carol Oates, winer of the 1959 Mademoiselle College Fiction Contest. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-023 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-024 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-025 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-026 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-027 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-028 Joyce Carol Oates, and her husband, Raymond Smith, in Key West, Florida. Christmas, 1970. Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-029 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-030 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-031 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-032 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-033 Joyce Carol oates at age 35, 1973. Photo by Graeme Gibson oat0-oat-bwp-034 Newsweek cover story, December 11, 1972. Courtesy of Newsweek magazine oat0-oat-bwp-035 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-036 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-037 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-038 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-039 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-040 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-041 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-042 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-043 Photo by Thomas Victor oat0-oat-bwp-044 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-045 Photo courtesy of Fred and Carolina Oates oat0-oat-bwp-046 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-047 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-048 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-049 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-050 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-051 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-052 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-053 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-054 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-055 Courtesy of Joyce Carol Oates oat0-oat-bwp-056 Photo courtesy of Greg Johnson oat0-oat-bwp-014 Joyce, age 10 (standing, far right), with her classmates, inside the same schoolhouse her mother, Carolina, attended, 1948. Photo courtesy of Nelia Pynn zem0-zem-clp-002 Robert Zemeckis rehearsing with neighborhood garage band in Chicago, age 12. Courtesy of Robert Zemeckis zem0-zem-clp-003 Robert Zemeckis at home with his son. Courtesy of Robert Zemeckis zem0-zem-clp-004 Steven Spielberg and Robert Zemeckis, two of the most successful film directors of all time. Courtesy of Robert Zemeckis zem0-arc-cls-005 Robert Zemeckis Archive Photos zem0-arc-cls-006 Robert Zemeckis Archive Photos led0-fer-bwp-001 Nobel Prize winner Leon Lederman, October 19, 1988. Fermilab Photo Dept. led0-fer-clp-002 Nobel Prize winner Leon Lederman, March 31, 1998. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-003 "Gee, winning the Prize is fun!" Leon Lederman at press conference after winning the Nobel Prize, October 19, 1988. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-004 Leon Lederman with an American Saddle Breed, "Corky," who has no respect. 1989 Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-aaa-bwp-005 Leon Lederman with Oprah Winfreyat the American Academy of Achievement. August, 1989. American Academy of Achievement led0-fer-bwp-006 "When you win the Nobel, everything you say is Gospel." Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-007 Leon Lederman at the Fermilab picnic. 1982. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-008 Leon Lederman receives the Wolf Prize in Physics from the President of Israel, Chaim Herzog, 1983. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-009 Leon Lederman and his horse, Cody, in costume for an event at Fermilab. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-010 Leon Lederman with his predecessor as director of Fermilab, Dr. Robert R. Wilson, at the dedication of Fermilab's Feynman Computing Center. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-011 Leon Lederman emulating another great physicist, Albert Einstein. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-bnl-bwp-012 Brookhaven National Laboratory, 1961. Leon Lederman is second from right, one of three future Nobel laureates in this group. Brookhaven National Laboratory led0-bnl-bwp-013 Leon Lederman and colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1961. Brookhaven National Laboratory led0-fer-bwp-014 Dr. Lederman (3rd from right) at a meeting of the International Committee on Future Accelerators in Novosibirsk, Siberia, with fellow physicists from Russia, UK, USA, France and Japan. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-015 Dr. Lederman visits Fermilab's daycare center, where the schoolchildren wish him a happy birthday, July 15, 1987. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-016 Farmer Leon at Fermilab's horse barn, 1992. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-nev-bwp-017 Graduate student Leon Lederman looking in a cloud chamber at Columbia University, 1949. Nevis Laboratories, Columbia University led0-fer-bwp-018 Gargoyle at Oxford University. Dr. Lederman sees a resemblance to his father, not to himself. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-led-bwp-019 Leon Lederman and his brother Paul meet as soldiers in Germany, 1944. Photo courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-bwp-020 Morris and Minna Lederman, parents of Leon. Photo courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-fer-bwp-021 College sophomore Leon Lederman outside his home in the Bronx, NY, 1940. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-022 Leon Lederman, age one. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-023 Leon Lederman receives the Nobel Prize for Physics from King Carl Gustav of Sweden, December 10, 1988. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-024 Leon Lederman speaking on "The Future of Fermilab," 1979. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-led-bwp-025 Leon Lederman at Sharon Springs, New York, 1932. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-bwp-026 Leon Lederman's maternal grandfather Issac Kivenko, in Kiev, Russia (now in Ukraine), with his second wife and son, ca. 1890. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-bwp-027 Leon Lederman celebrates his bar mitzvah in New York, July 15, 1935. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-fer-bwp-028 Leon Lederman at work as director of Fermilab, 1985. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-led-bwp-029 Leon Lederman receives the national Science Medal from U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-fer-bwp-030 Leon Lederman keeps pace with colleague Tom Collins at Fermilab's annual Directors' Jog. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-fer-bwp-032 U.S. Senator Charles Percy of Illinois, with Dr. Leon Lederman and Dr. Alex Langsdorf at Fermilab, 1982. Fermilab Visual Media Services led0-led-clp-033 Dr. Lederman and his friend Chloe discussing foreign policy in the Tetons. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-034 Dr. Lederman visits President Clinton in the Oval Office after winning the Enrico Fermi Prize, 1993. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-035 Dr. Lederman hiking in the Tetons with his dog Chloe. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-036 Dr. Lederman with his oldest daughter, Rena, professor of anthropology at Princeton University, with her two children, Evan and Jayna. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-037 Dr. Lederman enjoys skiing in the winter, hiking in the summer. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-038 Dr. Lederman on his Tennessee walking horse, Willy, 1997. Courtesy of Leon Lederman led0-led-clp-039 Dr. Lederman and his dog Chloe in Duggs, Idaho, 1977. The Tetons are visible in the background. Courtesy of Leon Lederman vog0-vog-bwp-001 Dr. Bert Vogelstein of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein vog0-vog-bwp-002 Dr. Bert Vogelstein of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Photo by Joe Rabino vog0-vog-bwp-003 Dr. Bert Vogelstein at work at Johns Hopkins. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein vog0-vog-bwp-004 Dr. Bert Vogelstein with a colleague at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein vog0-vog-bwp-005 Dr. Bert Vogelstein with colleagues at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein vog0-vog-clp-006 Dr. Bert Vogelstein with colleagues at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein vog0-vog-clp-007 Dr. Bert Vogelstein in his office at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Bert Vogelstein sch2-sch-clp-001 Dr. Robert H. Schuller, pastor of the Crystal Cathedral. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-002 The Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove California. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-003 Interior of the Crystal Cathedral, with 90-foot doors in open position. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-004 Robert H. Schuller in 1947. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-005 Robert H. Schuller, an Iowa farm boy, in 1935. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-006 Robert H. Schuller, at his grade school graduation, 1938. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-007 The entire student body of Newkirk High School, 1941. Robert Schuller stands in the top row of boys, seventh from the left. His future wife, Arvella DeHaan, is second from the left in the third row of girls from the bottom. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-008 Robert Schuller, age 16, the year he graduated from high school. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-009 Robert and Arvella Schuller on their wedding day, June 15, 1950. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-011 Robert Schuller , newly ordained minister of the Dutch Reformed Church in America. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-012 An advertisement for the first drive-in church. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-013 Robert Schulller's first church location in California, the Orange Drive-In. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-014 Pastor Robert Schuller, 1968. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-015 A final microphone check before an Hour of Power broadcast. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-016 On the 20th anniversary of the Garden Grove Community Church, Dr. Schuller announces plans to build the Crystal Cathedral. He is holding Philip Johnson's model of the Cathedral in his hand. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-017 Dr. Schuller reviews final plans for the Crystal Cathedral. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-oth-018 Section and floor plan of the Crystal Cathedral. The four-pointed star shape was inspired by the Star of Bethlehem. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-oth-019 Plans for the massive doors and windows of the Crystal Cathedral. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-020 Dr. Schuller during construction of the Cathedral. Costs had doubled even before construction began. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-021 Raising the south balcony of the Cathedral. The Tower of Hope stands at left. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-022 Arvella Schuller, Dr. Schuller and opera singer Beverly Sills at a benefit concert in the almost-completed Crystal Cathedral. Her performance raised over $4.5 million dollars and allowed the Cathedral to be dedicated completely free of debt. It was one of her last public performances before retirement. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-023 This statue of Job, symbolizing struggle and perseverance stands in front of the Crystal Cathedral. It was sculpted by Dallas Anderson from a single block of Vermont marble. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-024 Dr. Robert Schuller. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-025 Dr. Schuller signing copies of his book The Be-Happy Attitudes. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-026 Dr. Schuller keeping track of current events while traveling. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-027 Dr. and Mrs. Schuller in Moscow. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-028 Dr. Schuller is much in demand as a motivational speaker.Bias right Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-clp-029 Arvella and Robert Schuller, seen here in 1992. They were married in 1950. Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller sch2-sch-bwp-010 Robert and Arvella Schuller with their daughter Sheila in Chicago.Bias right Courtesy of Dr. Robert H. Schuller shi0-shi-bwp-002 1944, Donna Shirley and her father at her grandmother's house, before her father shipped off for the Pacific. Courtesy of Donna Shirley shi0-shi-bwp-003 Donna Shirley, Miss Wynnewood of 1961 Courtesy of Donna Shirley shi0-shi-bwp-004 The Airknockers, University of Oklahoma Flying Club, 1958: Pete Howard, the instructor, is to the left, Gene Nora Stumbough and Donna Shirley are seated at right. Courtesy of Donna Shirley shi0-shi-bwp-005 Al Hibbs, the Senior Voice of Mariner 10, with Donna Shirley, the Junior Voice, at JPL in 1974. Courtesy of Donna Shirley shi0-shi-bwp-006 The Little Blue Rover takes a stroll in the Arroyo Seco next to JPL. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-007 Robby looms over Rocky 3 and members of Dave Miller's Robotic Intelligence Group, 1992. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-008 Rocky 3 entertains kids at the Planetary Society's Rover Expo in Washington, DC, 1992. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-009 Rocky 4.3, decked out in computer and cables, places the Alpha Proton X-Ray Spectrometer on a rock in the sandbox at JPL, 1993. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-010 The Rover Team, July 1992, onthe mall at JPL. Rocky 4 is inthe front center. Lin Sukamoto is at the far left. Bill Dias is fifth from the left. Ron Banes is seventh from left, and Tome Rivellini is in froont of Ron, in the dark shirt. A bearded Brian Wilcox is in the middle of the back row, peering over the shoulder of the short fellow in the suit. Don Bickler is looking over the other shoulder and Donna Shirley is in front of him. Henry Stone is to her left. Then come Bill Layman, Jake Matijevic, and Howard Eisen. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-011 The Rover Team, 1995. Front row, from left: Brian Cooper, the Rover driver, Jake Matijevic, Lin Sukamto. Two technicians are behind marie Curie, the spare rover. Next to them are Andy Mishkin, the backup rover driver, and Scott Stride, the radio technincian. In the back row, left to right: a mobility consultant, Hank Moore, (with cap), Tam Nguyen, and four mobility and power people. Ron Banes is in the very back, peering over Howard Eisen's shoulder (Howard has his arms crossed). Next to Howard is Ken Jewett who designed the featherweight rocker bogies. Henry Stone is in front of Ken Jewett and behind Andy Mishkin. Standing on the far right are Jack Morrison, the programmer of Sojourner's brain, and Allan Sirota, the rover system integration engineer. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-012 Mars Pathfinder lander. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-013 Mars Pathfinder's Sojourner rover. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-014 Part of the Mobility team in "bunny suits" assemble Sojourner in the clean rom at JPL, 1996. Howard Eisen is on the right. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-015 Closing the petals on Pathfinder in 1996 at Cape Canaveral, closely supervised by a crowd of bunny-suited engineers and technicians. Last glimpse of the rover before landing. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-016 Running the rover for a space fan. Dan Goldin, NASA's administrator, makes a point to Vice President Al Gore at JPL in 1996. Ed Stone, the Director of JPL is to the right of Donna Shirley. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-017 Preparing to launch Mars Global Surveyor from Cape Canaveral, Florida, November, 1966. Glenn Cunningham, the MGS Project Manager is at the far left. Norm Haynes, Donna Shirley's boss as Director of Mars Exploration, is at the back right. "Finding me is like looking for Waldo. I'm about eleventh in from the left, peeking between two guys in white shirts." NASA shi0-shi-bwp-018 July 4, 1997. First color picture from Pathfinder. Sojourner squats on the lander's petal with the twin peaks in the background. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-019 July 5, 1997. All six wheels on soil next to Barnacle Bill. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-020 July 8, 1997. Sojourner samples Yogi. NASA shi0-shi-bwp-021 A rover's eye view of the lander on Mars. NASA gol1-nas-jpg-001 Dan Goldin, NASA Administrator. Bill Ingalls/NASA gol1-nas-jpg-002 Tom Hanks speaking at Rayburn House Office Building. Watching is AstronautJim Lovell, Vide President Al Gore and NASA Administrator Dan Goldin. Bill Ingalls/NASA gol1-nas-jpg-004 IGA signing ceremony. State Department, Washington, DC.
Left to right:Mr. Yuri Koptev, Russian Space Agency General Director
Mr. William "Mac" Evans, Canadian Space Agency President
Mr. Dan Goldin, NASA Administrator.
Mr. Antonio Rodota, European Space Agency Director General
Mr. Isao Uchita, National Space Development Agency of Japan President Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-005 Mr. Goldin with model of the Mars Pathfinder. Jet Propulsion Laboratory(JPL) Pasadena, CA. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-006 Mr. Goldin testifying on Capitol Hill. 10/98 Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-007 Mr. Goldin with students at Kramer School in Washington, DC. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-008 Mr. Goldin with students at Kramer School in Washington, DC. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-009 Mr. Goldin with Secretary of State Albright at the Launch of STS-88.December 1998. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-010 The President, First Lady, Dan Goldin and Astronaut Bob Cabana watch thelaunch of STS-95 and John Glenn. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-011 Mr. Goldin visits Russia and talks with engineers about the Russian Dockingsystem pictured in the foreground. (1992) Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-012 Mr. Goldin visits with children at a school near Tampa Florida. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-013 Mr. Goldin with Vice President Gore. Bill Ingalls/NASA
gol1-nas-jpg-014 Mr. Goldin with Governor Wilson of California, viewing 3D images ofMars from the Mars Pathfinder. JPL, Pasadena, CA. Bill Ingalls/NASA
tel0-arc-cls-058 First test of atomic cannon, Nevada. Archive photos
shi0-jpl-clp-022 Part of Pathfinder's 360-degree panorama of the surface of Mars NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-023 Part of Pathfinder's 360-degree panorama of the surface of Mars. The rover has run up against the rock called Yogi. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-024 Part of Pathfinder's 360-degree panorama of the surface of Mars, with deflated airbags strewn around the lander. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-025 Mariner 4 spacecraft takers off for Mars on November 28, 1964. The mission revealed the red planet to be as barren and cratered as the moon. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-026 Panorama of Martian surface, taken from Viking 2 lander. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-027 The north and south poles of Mars. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-028 The Pathfinder's landing vehicle retracts its airbags and opens its petals. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-029 The Pathfinder's launch vehicle. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-030 The launch of Pathfinder on December 4, 1996. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
shi0-jpl-clp-031 Scientists and engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory celebrate the landing of Pathfinder.
(Left to right: telecommunications system manager Leslie Livesay, project scientist Matt Golombek, flight system chief engineer Rob Manning. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory shi0-jpl-clp-032 Rover positions its alpha-proton X-ray spectrometer against the rock called Yogi. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory shi0-jpl-bwp-033 The astronomer Percival Lowell at his observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Lowell Observatory shi0-jpl-oth-034 Artist's rendering of the Mars Global Surveyor. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory shi0-jpl-bwp-035 Artist's rendering of planned mission to examine soil samples near the planet's south polar cap. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory shi0-jpl-oth-036 Artist's rendering of the international space station. NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory shi0-jpl-bwp-001 Donna Shirley NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory kim1-kim-clp-002 Jeong Kim receives the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement from author Tom Clancy. American Academy of Achievement kim1-kim-clp-003 "I joined the Navy in 1982, while I was in school, and then became an officer when I graduated from college." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-004 Dr. Jeong H. Kim, founder of Yurie Systems, Inc. Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-005 "Once you have some food and clothes to wear, everything's extra." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-006 "School is such an efficient way of absorbing information because somebody prepares it for you, and you just sit there and listen." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-007 "School is such an efficient way of absorbing information because somebody prepares it for you, and you just sit there and listen." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-008 Jeong Kim received his Bachelor of Science degree from Johns Hopkins University, and his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland. Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-009 Steve Jobs was really making headway. I thought, "If he could do it, why can't I do it?" Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-010 "I did not want to wait until I was 80 years old, or 60 years old to pay back, and that it was better going into the Navy, and gave part of my time -- my prime time of my life -- serving this country. " Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-011 Jeong Kim spent seven years in the nuclear submarine service. Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-012 "In the Navy, you alternate sea duty, shore duty, sea duty. So when I was doing my shore duty in Washington, D.C., I decided to get a degree in management." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-013 "I did consulting for the military for three years because I had some background there." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-bwp-014 Jeong Kim as a small boy in Korea, before immigrating to the United States. Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-bwp-015 A young Jeong Kim practices Taekwon Do, the Korean art of self-defense. Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-016 Jeong Kim in the U.S. Navy. "I felt that this country already has given me so much, and I needed to pay back." Courtesy of Dr. Jeong H. Kim kim1-kim-clp-017 Mr. and Mrs. Jeong Kim with George Lucas at the American Academy of Achievement. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-001 Fireworks over Mt. Vernon on the first night of the 38th annual Salute to Excellence. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-002 Honor students, adult honorees and guests of the Academy enjoy a spectacular display of fireworks at Mt. Vernon. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-003 Naomi Judd presents the Golden Plate to Trisha Yearwood. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-004 George Lucas presents the Golden Eagle Award to student Karen Mendelson. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-005 The 38th annual Banquet of the Golden Plate, at the National Building Museum in Washington. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-006 The 38th annual Banquet of the Golden Plate, at the National Building Museum in Washington. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-007 George Lucas leads a round table discussion of "Entertainment, Media and Public Policy," with (L to R) Bob Woodward, James Cameron, Geraldine Laybourne, R.L. Stine, Rita Dove, Ben Bradlee. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-008 Microsoft chief technologist Nathan Myhrvold chats with students at the Salute to Excellence. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-009 Washington National Cathedral, site of the Academy concert "Voices of the American Dream." American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-010 Coretta Scott King at Washington National Cathedral, where her husband gave his last Sunday sermon. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-011 Basketball great Grant Hill speaking at the Banquet of the Golden Plate. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-012 Red McCombs, owner of the Minnesota Vikings, with Charline McCombs, Washington Post publisher Katharine Graham, and former FBI chief Wiliam Sessions at the Banquet of the Golden Plate. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-013 Aretha Franklin in "Voices of the American Dream" at Washington National Cathedral. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-014 A brass band greeted the arrival of delegates to the International Achievement Summit in Budapest. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-015 Participants in the International Achievement Summit on the steps of the Hungarian National Parliament. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-016 AOL founder James Kimsey presents the Golden Plate to President Arpad Goncz of Hungary. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-017 Dr. Bronislaw Geremek, Foreign Minister of Poland. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-018 Dr. Arpad Goncz, President of Hungary, addresses the International Achievement Summit. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-019 Balloonists Brian Jones and Bertrand Piccard. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-020 General Wesley Clark presents the Golden Plate to the Prime Minister of Hungary, Dr. Viktor Orban. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-021 The Foreign Minister of Bulgaria, Nadezhda Mihailova, and the President of Lithuania, Waldas Adamkus, arrive at the banquet fo the Golden Plate in Budapest. American Academy of Achievement new0-aaa-cls-022 The Foreign Minister of Bulgaria, Nadezhda Mihailova, receives the Golden Plate from Summit patron Catherine Dunlevy, CEO of EduCap Inc. American Academy of Achievement wei1-wei-bwp-001 Andrew Weil, MD Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-002 Andrew Weil, MD Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-003 Andrew Weil, MD, with two good friends. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-004 Andrew Weil, MD. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-005 Andrew Weil, age 1 and 1/2. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-006 Andrew Weil, age 4, with his mother. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-007 Andrew Weil, with his father, 1946. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-008 Andrew Weil, 1950, a budding botanist. at age 8. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-009 Andrew Weil, Harvard student, "Off for an around the world study trip." Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-010 Andrew Weil, at Central High School, Philadelphia. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-011 Andrew Weil, biology student at Harvard. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-012 Andrew Weil. Graduation day at Harvard, 1964. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-013 Andrew Weil, MD, at the National Institute of Mental Health, 1971. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-014 Andrew Weil, MD, at his home in Arizona, 1995. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-015 Andrew Weil, MD, at his home in Arizona, 1995. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-016 Andrew Weil, October 1993, in the Japanese Alps, with his daughter Diana. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-017 Andrew Weil, hiking in Japan, 1993, with his daughter Diana. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-018 Andrew Weil, at his X9 ranch, Spring, 1995. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-clp-019 Andrew Weil, MD, teaching at La Paloma, 1992. Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil wei1-wei-bwp-020 Andrew Weil, MD Courtesy of Dr. Andrew Weil gol1-arc-clp-015 gol1-arc-clp-016 gol1-arc-clp-017 kim0-kim-clp-002 Courtesy of James V. Kimsey wil0-arc-clp-002 Dr. Ian Wilmut examines sheep eggs. Reuters/Jeff Mitchell/Archive Photos wil0-arc-clp-003 Dr. Ian Wilmut at a press conference in Washington. Archive Photos wil0-arc-clp-004 Dr. Wilmut testifying before the U.S. Senate Public Health and Safety Committee. Archive Photos hoa0-arc-clp-002 Dr. David Ho gives a tour of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center. Reuters/Peter Morgan/Archive Photos hoa0-arc-clp-003 Dr. David Ho at the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center. Greg Girard con0-arc-cpl-002 Ron Sachs/CNP/Archive Photos con0-arc-cpl-003 Reuters/Mark Wilson/Archive Photos con0-arc-cpl-004 Reuters/Luc Novovitch/Archive Photos sim0-cor-bwp-002 Corbis/Bettman-UPI sim0-cor-clp-003 Corbis/Bettman-UPI sim0-cor-clp-004 Corbis/Bettman-UPI sim0-cor-clp-005 Corbis/Bettman-UPI sim0-arc-clp-006 Reuters/Mike Theiler/Archive Photos ful0-hfh-clp-002 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-clp-003 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-clp-004 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-clp-005 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity, Reggie Parker ful0-hfh-clp-006 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity, Robert Baker ful0-hfh-clp-007 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity, Robert Baker ful0-hfh-clp-008 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity, Robert Baker ful0-hfh-clp-009 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity, Robert Baker ful0-hfh-cls-010 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-011 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-012 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-013 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-014 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-015 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-016 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-017 Dale Higgs. Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-018 Dale Higgs. Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-019 Reggie Parker, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-020 Julie A. Lopez, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-021 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-022 Linda Fuller, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-023 Julie A. Lopez, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-024 Jerry Counselman, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-025 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-026 Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-027 Robert Baker, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-028 Robert Baker, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity ful0-hfh-cls-028 Robert Baker, Courtesy of Habitat for Humanity wil0-cor-cls-005 Sen. Tom Harkin, Sen. Bill Frist, Dr. Ian Wilmut and Sen. Edward Kennedy, before Senate hearings on cloning. Agence France Presse/Corbis-Bettman wil0-arc-cls-006 Dr. Ian Wilmut. Ken Cedeno/Saga/Archive Photos hoa0-arc-cls-004 Dr. David Ho, Director of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center. Greg Girard wei1-cor-cls-021 Street festival in Arizona Doug Berry/Corbis wei1-cor-cls-022 Andrew Weil, MD Doug Berry/Corbis sim0-cor-cls-007 Chick Harrity/Corbis sim0-arc-cls-008 Ron Sachs, Copyright 1992 Consolidated News Pictures sim0-arc-cls-009 Consolidated News Pictures wil0-arc-cls-007 Dr. Ian Wilmut. Ken Cedeno/Saga/Archive Photos amb0-peo-cls-002 Stephen Ambrose, paddling in the wake of Lewis and Clark. Acey Harper, People Weekly, copyright 1996 amb0-peo-cls-005 Stephen Ambrose and his wife Moira, near their home in Montana. Acey Harper, People Weekly, copyright 1996 amb0-peo-cls-004 Stephen Ambrose leading another generation on the trail blazed by Lewis and Clark. Acey Harper, People Weekly, copyright 1996 amb0-peo-cls-003 Stephen and Moira Ambrose, lifetime partners in love and letters. Acey Harper, People Weekly, copyright 1996 col1-nih-oth-001 Dr. Francis S. Collins, Director of the National Center for Human Genome Research National Institutes of Health col1-nih-oth-002 Dr. Francis S. Collins examines gels used in analyzing DNA. National Institutes of Health col1-nih-oth-003 Dr. Francis S. Collins, Director of the National Center for Human Genome Research National Institutes of Health col1-nih-oth-004 Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. This book had a profound effect on Francis Collins when he was a medical student. cam0-cor-clp-002 James Cameron at the Writers Guild Awards at the Beverly Hilton, February 22, 1998. Corbis/Pacha cam0-cor-cls-003 James Cameron with his Academy Award for Titanic. Corbis/Pacha cam0-cor-cls-004 Academy Award winner James Cameron. Corbis/Pacha mcc1-aaa-oth-002 Frank McCourt's first book, Angela's Ashes.
"When I look back on my childhood I wonder how I survived at all. It was, of course, a miserable childhood. The happy childhood is hardly worth your while." Simon & Schuster
mcc1-aaa-oth-003 Frank McCourt's second book 'Tis, continues the story of his life with his arrival in America at age 19. Simon & Schuster
cam0-cam-oth-005 James Cameron on one of twelve missions to study the actual wreck of Titanic on the floor of the North Atlantic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-006 James Cameron modifies a sketch of the sunken Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-007 James Cameron on a photographic expedition to the wreckage of Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-008 James Cameron get his hands dirty preparing a piece of "wreckage" the young lovers will cling to in the climactic scenes of Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-009 Costume designer Deborah Scott shows director James Cameron a costume to be worn by the heroine of Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-010 Because only one side of the Titanic's hull was completely fabricated for the film, Cameron had signs printed in reverse for scenes that were shot, then flipped, to create the illusion of another side of the great vessel. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-011 Director turns cameraman for this hand-held shot in the saloon scene of Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-012 James Cameron used a vintage hand-cranked motion picture camera to simulate period newsreel footage in Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-013 James Cameron prepares actors for a scene in Titanic's wireless room. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-014 James Cameron frames a shot with his director of photography. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-015 James Cameron coaches actress Kate Winslet for a scene in Titanic. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-016 James Cameron places extras in the foreground of a scene. In the finished film, the green screen will be replaced with computer-generated background images. Courtesy of James Cameron
cam0-cam-oth-017 James Cameron and Assistant cameraman Kirk Bloom shoot scenes for See also Liang and Lin: Partners in Exploring China's Architectural Past by Wilma Fairbank University of Pennsylvania Press; ISBN: 081223278X.
lin0-lin-oth-032 One of Maya Lin's original conceptual drawings for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
lin0-lin-oth-033 The names of 57,000 Americans who died in the Vietnam War are listed on the wall of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in the order in which they fell.
lin0-lin-oth-034 One of Maya Lin's original conceptual drawings for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
ham1-ham-jpg-021 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
ham1-ham-jpg-022 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
ham1-ham-jpg-023 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
ham1-ham-jpg-024 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
ham1-ham-jpg-025 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
ham1-ham-jpg-026 Olympic Champion Dorothy Hamill, performing in the 1990s. Courtesy of Dorothy Hamill
hil0-geo-oth-025 Triumph on Everest: A Photobiography of Sir Edmund Hillary by Broughton Coburn, published by the national Geographic Society. The cover shows Edmund Hillary at Everest base camp after his historic climb.
hil0-hil-oth-026 Edmund Hillary, age 20 months. Courtesy of Sir Edmund Hillary
hil0-hil-oth-027 Edmund Hillary (far right) at age 19, with his family in New Zealand. He and his brother Rex (far left) were already managing the family's 1600 bee hives. Courtesy of Sir Edmund Hillary
wal1-aaa-cls-008 Lech Walesa at the American Academy of Ahcievement's Banquet of the Golden Plate atr Hampton Court Palace, October, 2000. American Academy of Achievement
wal1-tim-clp-009 Time Magazine feautured Lech Walesa on the cover of the December 29, 1980 issue, in a story entitled "Shaking Up Communism." Copyright Time Inc.
wal1-tim-clp-010 Lech Walesa in 1980, holding one of his daughters in front of a portrait of Pope John Paul II. Chris Niedenthal, Black Star; Time Inc.
wal1-tim-clp-011 Lech Walesa in 1988, addressing striking workers at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk, Poland. Chris Niedenthal, TimePix
wal1-tim-clp-012 Lech Walesa in 1979, sowing the seeds of revolution. Chris Niedenthal, TimePix
iro0-tim-clp-007 Jeremy Irons and Glenn Close in a scene from the Broadway production of The Real Thing. Martha Swope/Time Pix
iro0-tim-clp-008 Jeremy Irons in the Broadway production of The Real Thing. Martha Swope/Time Pix
gor0-tim-jpg-009 Time magazine cover of January 1, 1990 featuring Mikhail Gorbachev as Man of the Decade. Copyright Time Inc.
gor0-tim-jpg-010 Time magazine cover of January 4, 1988 featuring Mikhail Gorbachev as Man of the Year. Copyright Time Inc.
jon0-quj-bwp-036 Quincy Jones and his brother Lloyd. Courtesy Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-037 Quincy Jones and his brother Lloyd, 1935. Courtesy Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-038 Street Scene, South Side of Chicago in the 1930s. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-039 Visiting the old neighborhood. Copyright Mark Higashino
jon0-quj-bwp-040 Adolescent QJ as President of Boy's Club, Bremerton Jr. High, 1947 Courtesy Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-041 Quincy Jones cultivating a cool image in the 1940s. Courtesy Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-042 Charlie Parker. Copyright Bob Parent
jon0-quj-bwp-043 Quincy Jones (far left) with the Bumps Blackwell band, Seattle, c. 1949. Courtesy Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-044 Be-Bop maestro Dizzy Gillespie. World Wide Photos
jon0-quj-bwp-045 Quincy Jones and a friend from his early days, Ray Charles. Ebony Magazine
jon0-quj-bwp-046 Quincy Jones (far right) with Dizzy Gillespie and his band at Birdland, 1949. Copyright Herman Leonard
jon0-quj-bwp-047 Trumpet master Clark Terry. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-048 Lionel Hampton and the band in action. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-049 Miles Davis, Birdland 1949. Frank Driggs Collection; photograph by Popsie Randolph
jon0-quj-bwp-050 Quincy Jones in the 1950s, a sought-after arranger and conductor. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-051 Quincy Jones and fellow musicians in Athens. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-052 Quincy Jones on a world tour in the 1950s. Marshall Stearns; prints courtesy Institute of Jazz Studies
jon0-quj-bwp-053 Composition teacher Nadia Boulanger. An associate of Igor Stravinsky, her students included, among others, Aaron Copland and Quincy Jones. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-054 Quincy Jones and Sarah Vaughan in Paris. Copyright Jean Pierrre-Leloir
jon0-quj-bwp-055 Young record company executive in an ebullient mood. Copyright Chuck Stewart
jon0-quj-bwp-056 Quincy Jones and his lifelong friend Count Basie. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
jon0-quj-bwp-057 Quincy Jones, ca. 1955 Copyright Bengt H. Malmquist
jon0-quj-bwp-058 Quincy Jones, ca. 1955 Copyright Patrick Demarchelier
jon0-quj-bwp-059 Quincy Jones and the band at Bremerton Jr. High. Courtesy Quincy Jones
mcc2-pbs-bwp-001 Historian and author David McCullough Robert Gothard
goo0-sim-bwp-001 Pulitzer Prize winner Doris Kearns Goodwin Richard Goodwin
luc0-luc-clp-028 From left to right, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Brian Da Palma, George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola. Old friends who stuck together and became the foremost filmakers of their era.
luc0-luc-clp-029 George Lucas on the set of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, with R2D2 and Jake Lloyd as young Anakin Skywalker.
luc0-luc-clp-030 George Lucas on the set of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace.
luc0-luc-clp-031 George Lucas with an old friend on the set of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace,
don0-don-bwp-037 Sam Donaldson, age 4, only boy in the Radford School, El Paso, Texas. Courtesy Sam Donaldson
don0-don-bwp-036 Sam Donaldson, age 14, and his mother, Cloe, on the way to school in El Paso, Texas, 1941. Courtesy Sam Donaldson
don0-don-bwp-038 Sam Donaldson, age 18, working as a disc jockey at KEPO, El Paso, Texas. Courtesy Sam Donaldson
goo0-cor-jpg-002 President John F. Kennedy, whose call to service inspired a generation of Americans. Corbis
goo0-cor-jpg-003 President Lyndon B. Johnson, on duty at his Texas ranch. Corbis
goo0-cor-jpg-004 President Lyndon B. Johnson, on duty at his Texas ranch. Corbis
mcc2-cor-jpg-002 The movie star as American icon: James Stewart in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Corbis-Bettman
mcc2-cor-jpg-003 Harry S Truman, 33rd President of the United States. Corbis-Bettman
goo0-cor-jpg-005 Eleanor Roosevelt, widow of the President, author and diplomat. Corbis
goo0-cor-jpg-006 President Lyndon B. Johnson relaxing at the Johnson Ranch. Corbis
goo0-cor-jpg-007 Doris Kearns Goodwin at home. Corbis
goo0-cor-jpg-008 Campaign 1960: Speechwriters for Senator, later President, John F. Kennedy. Richard Goodwin is seated at right. Corbis
mcc2-mcc-jpg-004 Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough. Photo by William B. McCullough
mcc2-mcc-jpg-005 Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough. Photo by William B. McCullough
mcc2-mcc-clp-006 Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough. Photo by William B. McCullough
mcc2-mcc-clp-007 Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough. Photo by William B. McCullough
mcc2-mcc-bwp-008 Pulitzer Prize-winning author David McCullough. Photo by William B. McCullough
bhu0-cor-jpg-002 The late Ali Bhutto, Prime Minister of Pakistan and father of Benazir Bhutto. © Bettmann/CORBIS
bhu0-cor-jpg-003 Benazir Bhutto, former Prime Minister of Pakistan. © Wally McNamee/CORBIS
bhu0-cor-jpg-004 Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto waves to her supporters in Karachi during a rally against the Pakistan government. AFP Photo/Amir Qureshi
by Jonathan D. Spence
1982, Viking Press. ISBN: 0140062793.
Copyright AFP/Corbis
bhu0-cor-jpg-005 Ali Bhutto, Prime Minister of Pakistan and father of Benazir Bhutto, during a 1973 visit to the United Kingdom. © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
bhu0-cor-jpg-006 Benazir Bhutto and her children. © Karan Kapoor/CORBIS
bhu0-cor-jpg-007 Benazir Bhutto meeting with U.S. President George H. W. Bush in Tokyo, following the funeral of Emperor Hirohito, February 24, 1989. Vince Mannino
© Bettmann/CORBIS
bhu0-cor-jpg-008 Benazir Bhutto and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, on their wedding day, at Clifton Palace, Karachi, Pakistan, December 1987. © Francoise de Mulder/CORBIS
amb0-cor-jpg-006 Richard M. Nixon, 37th President of the United States. Corbis
joh2-cor-jpg-027 Dwight David Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States. Corbis
sch3-sch-bwp-002 The Amazon, largest river in the world, runs through the largest forest in the world. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-004 Rock-engraving representing the river god Nyi, at Rio Paraparaná, Colomiba. The rock stands on the equator , origin point of mankind in the creation myth of the Tukanoan peoples. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-005 Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-006 Sacred rock-carvings on the Rio Paraparaná in Vaupés, Colombia. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-007 Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-008 The white or greenish aerial roots of an aroid. These plants grow in the sunlight on the tops of tall trees and send long roots back to earth to absorb moisture and nutrients. El Encanyto, Rio Karaparaná, Amazonas. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-009 A native communal house sits in a small clearing in the vast jungle. Rio Paraparaná, Vaupés. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-010 A communal house of the Makuna people, typically shared by four or five families. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-011 Kofán shaman, Rip Sucumbios, Putumayo. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-012 Elderly Tikuna woman of Rio Amacayacu, reputed to have supernatural powers. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-013 Makuna shaman preparing to perfrom ceremony with the hallucinogenic vine caapi. Rio Popeyaká, Amazonas. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-014 Ingano hunter using his blow gun at Mocoa, Putumayo. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-015 Makú huntersuse their blow guns in Rio Piraparaná. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-016 Indian agricultural plots in Rio Piraparanaá. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-017 Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-018 A maloca house of the Taiwano people, with a field of manioca planted all around. Where the forest is cleared, the soil quickly loses its nutrients, and the manioca is one of the few food crops that will grow reliably. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-019 Tapping a wild rubber tree, Rio Loretoyacu, Amazonas. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-020 Yukuna Indians dressed for the butterfly dance, performed every April in honor of the great blue morpho butterfly. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-021 Yukuna Indians in sun-masks, preparing for a dance in honor of the sun. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-022 Tukano Indians, famed for the quality of their feathered ornaments. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-023 The rapids of Tatú, Rio Vaupés. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-024 Catalina airplane taking off from Karurú, Rio Vaupés, three and a half hours from Bogotá by air, two months by the surface route. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-001 Dr. Richard E. Schultes, ethnobotanist. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-003 Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
sch3-sch-bwp-025 Jirijirimo Falls, Colombia. Copyright © 1988 by Richard Evans Schultes
bar0-bar-jpg-001 Ehud Barak, former Prime Minister of Israel, and the most decorated soldier in Israeli hospital.
bar0-aaa-jpg-002 Former Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak addresses Academy of Achievement guests at San Antonio's Empire Theatre. Copyright American Academy of Achievement
bar0-cor-jpg-003 Ehud Barak and his father, photographed in the 1990s. © Eldad Rafaeli/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-004 Ehud Barak, with his father on the kibbutz. © Moshe Shai/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-005 Ehud Barak and his family at their kibbutz in the 1990s. © Moshe Shai/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-006 Ehud Barak as Chief of Staff with Israeli troops in the field, 1994. © David Rubinger/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-007 Ehud Barak, Prime Minister of Israel, at a joint press conference in Alexandria, Egypt, with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, July 9, 1999. © AFP/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-008 sraeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak lays a wreath at a memorial ceremony for 2,609 Israeli soldiers killed during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War (known in Israel as the Yom Kippur War). © AFP/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-009 Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and his wife Nava, January 8, 2000. © AFP/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-010 Ehud Barak, Chief of Staff of the Israeli Armed Forces, 1994. © David Rubinger/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-011 Prime Minister Ehud Barak addresses dignitaries at the Commemoration of Yitzhak Rabin, at City Hall in Oslo, November 2, 1999. ©Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-012 Outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) shakes hands with incomingPrime Minister Ehud Barak, in Jerusalem, June 1, 1999. © AFP/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-013 Israeli Prime Minister-elect Ehud Barak waves to his supporters, May 23, 1999, as he celebrates his victory in the last elections with members and activists of the "One Israel" Party in Kibbutz Shefayim. © AFP/CORBIS
bar0-cor-jpg-014 Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak during a joint press conference with US President Bill Clinton at the White House in Washington, DC. Photo by Joyce Naltchayan
© AFP/CORBIS
sto0-sto-clp-001 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-002 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-003 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-004 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-005 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-006 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-007 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-008 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-009 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-010 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-011 F8U Crusader jet piloted by James Stockdale, coming in for a landing. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-012 James Stockdale emerging from his Skyhawk on the flight deck of the USS Oriskany in 1965, one week before he was shot down. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-013 James and Sybil Stockdale, comrades "In Love and War." Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-014 James B. Stockdale with his father at home in Illinois, already preparing for a naval career. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-015 James Stockdale bringing planes aboard ship, 1962. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-016 Test Pilot Training Class 14 at Patuxent River, Maryland, 1955. The instructors stand in the front row, James Stockdale is third from the right. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-017 Lt. Cmdr. James Stockdale and his F8U Crusader, 1960. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-018 One of many squadrons James Stockdale flew with in a naval career lasting over 30 years. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-019 James Stockdale visits his father in Illinois for the last time, March 22, 1964, just before he left on the cruise that would include the fateful Tonkin Gulf incident. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-020 James Stockdale, at home on Coronado Island, Calfironia, the day before his deployment, April 1965. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-021 F8U Crusaders under the command of James Stockdale, "breaking" over the USS Midway during an air show. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-022 "The Day the Vietnam War Started." Painting of Stockdale's plane attacking the Vinh POL Storage, August 5, 1964. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-023 Painting of Stockdale's plane retuirning to the USS Ticonderoga after blowing up Vinh POL Storage, August 5, 1964. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-024 Aerial view of the notorious prison camp its inmates called "The Hanoi Hilton." Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-025 James Stockdale (second from left) in POW camp in Hanoi, a week before his release in February, 1973. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-026 Free at last, James Stockdale sees his wife and three sons for the first time in nearly eight years. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-027 Free at last, James Stockdale sees his wife and three sons for the first time in nearly eight years. Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-028 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-029 James Stockdale receives the nation's highest military decoration, the Congressional Medal of Honor, from President Gerald Ford Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-030 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-oth-031 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-032 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-033 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-034 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-035 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-036 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-037 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-bwp-038 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-039 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-clp-040 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
sto0-sto-oth-041 Courtesy of James Bond Stockdale
hil0-cor-jpg-028 The Irish-born explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton (1874-1922), photographed in 1908. He led several Antarctic expeditions and located the South magnetic pole during his voyage of 1907-1909. ©Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
erv0-erv-bwp-000 Julius Erving, "Dr. J." to his legion of fans. Courtesy of Julius Erving
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tho0-tho-jpg-001 Lt. Michael E. Thornton, USN, at the time of his retirement from the United States Navy. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-nor-jpg-002 Lt. Thomas R. Norris, USN, photographed in the 1970s. Courtesy of Thomas Norris
tho0-nor-clp-003 Lt. Thomas R. Norris, USN, with the Congressional Medal of Honor. Courtesy of Thomas Norris
tho0-nor-clp-004 Lt. Thomas R. Norris in Vietnam with Nguyen Van Kiet, the Vietnames Sea Commando who accompanied him on the rescues of Clark and Hambleton. Kiet was awarded the Navy Cross for his role in this operation, the highest award the navy can give to a foreign national. Courtesy of Thomas Norris
rat0-cbs-jpg-002 Live from Dallas, 1963, Dan Rather reports on the assassination of President Kennedy. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-003 On a 1967 CBS News special, Dan Rather shows viewers the window of the Dallas textbook depository from which Lee Harvay Oswald shot President Kennedy in 1963. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-004 Dan Rather reporting from Vietnam, 1966. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-005 Dan Rather reporting on the war in Afghanistan in 1980. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-006 Dan Rather anchoring the CBS Evening News, March 9, 1981. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-007 Dan Rather interviews pro-democracy students in Tienanmen Square, Beijing, China, 1989. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-008 Dan Rather interviews Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak in 2001. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-009 Dan Rather takes a break while interviewing Haitian dictator General Raoul Cedras in 1994.. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-010 Dan Rather with Kwazulu children in South Africa. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-cbs-jpg-011 Dan Rather interviews Cuban dictator Fidel Castro in 1996. Courtesy of CBS News/Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-012 Dan Irvin Rather, age nine. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-013 Dan Rather's father, Irvin "Rags" Rather, in 1931, the year Dan was born. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-014 Dan Rather's mother Byrl, with baby Dan in front of their "shotgun house" in Wharton, Texas. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-015 Dan Rather at age 13, still recovering form rheumatic fever. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-016 Dan Rather in elementary school. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-017 T.F. "Puny" Wilson, Dan Rather's football coach at Sam Houston State Teacher's College sweatshirt. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-018 Dan Rather on the John H. Reagan High School football team, 1949. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-019 Dan Rather at age 17, dressed for a high school dance. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-020 Dan Rather, a 22-year-old Marine Corps recruit. Courtesy of Dan Rather
rat0-rat-bwp-022 Dan Rather, broadcast journalist. Anthony Edgeworth/CBS
kar0-kar-jpg-001
kar0-aaa-clp-002 Hamid Karzai addresses the Academy of Achievement in Dublin, Ireland, June 7, 2002. Academy of Achievement
kar0-tim-jpg-003 President Hamid Karzai at the independence day parade in Kabul, August 19, 2002. After three wars against Britain, Afghanistan gained its independence in 1919. DARREN WHITESIDE/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-004 President Hamid Karzai at a graduation ceremony for cadets from various military colleges in Kabul, July 31, 2002. Karzai urged the cadets to defend their country and be representative of a new multi-ethnic Afghanistan. ZAINAL ABD HALIM/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-005 Chairman Hamid Karzai votes during the traditional Afghan grand assembly called the Loya Jirga, in Kabul on June 13, 2002. Hamid Karzai won Afghanistan's presidential election in a landslide. BEAWIHARTA/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-006 Hamid Karzai greets the former King of Afghanistan, Mohammad Zahir Shah, after receiving a Koran from the king outside his residence on the outskirts of Rome, December 18, 2001. The former King resisted all efforts to return him to power and suported Hamid Karzai for President of Afghanistan. DYLAN MARTINEZ/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-007 The head of the Afghan interim government, Hamid Karzai, sits in a car at the presidential palace in Kabul on December 13, 2001, one night after arriving in Kabul. SAYED SALAHUDDIN/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-008 Ahmad Karzai, brother of Hamid Karzai with tribal leader Abdul Raman Janabi during the uprising in Afghanistan. ADREES LATIF/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-009 For nine years, Russia and Afghanistan fought a bitter war. In 2002, their leaders met in peace for a security forum focused on tensions between nuclear neighbors India and Pakistan. In 2002 Russian President Vladimir Putin and Afghanistan's Hamid Karzai shake hands before the Asian security summit in Almaty, June 4, 2002. SERGEI KARPUKHIN/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-010 Hamid Karzai presents a memorial wreath on at the site of the World Trade Center, New York., January 30, 2002. REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-011 Hamid Karzai with U.S. President George W. Bush at the White House prior to a press conference, January 28, 2001. LARRY DOWNING/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-012 Hamid Karzai and Afghan Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdulla attend a sunset service at Mustafa Center in Annandale, Virginia, just outside Washington, January 27, 2002. HYUNGWON KANG/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
kar0-tim-jpg-013 U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell shakes hands with Hamid Karzai after a joint press conference in Kabul, January 17, 2002. OLEG POPOV/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
ban0-ban-jpg-001 Sir Roger Bannister Courtesy of Sir Roger Bannister
ban0-ban-jpg-002 1500 meter race, Olympic Games in Helisinki, Finland, 1952. Graphic News Photo
ban0-ban-jpg-003 The start of teh race in which Roger bannister broke the four-minute mile, Oxford, May 6, 1954. News Chronicle
ban0-ban-jpg-004 The half-mile in the historic race: Brasher leading Bannister and Chataway. News Chronicle
ban0-ban-jpg-005 Roger Bannister breaks the tape at 3 minutes 59.4 seconds, a new world's record. Central Press Photo
ban0-ban-jpg-006 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. The start of the mile race. Vancouver Daily Province
ban0-ban-jpg-007 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. At the half-mile. Fed-news
ban0-ban-jpg-008 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. Eighty yards to go. Fed-news
ban0-ban-jpg-009 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. Bannister passes Landy. Life
ban0-ban-jpg-010 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. The crucial last strides. Life
ban0-ban-jpg-011 The 1954 Empire Games, Vancouver, Canada. Roger Bannister breaks the tape at 3 minutes, 58.8 seconds. Life
ban0-ban-jpg-012 The Four Minute Mile, by Roger Bannister. Life
ban0-ban-jpg-013 Roger Bannister breaks the tape ahead of John Landy at the Empire Games, Vancouver, 1954. Life
jon2-jon-jpg-001 James Earl Jones Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-clp-002 James Earl Jones Photograph by David Hume Kennerly, courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-003 James Earl Jones as a baby, with his mother, Ruth Connolly Jones, in 1932. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-004 James Earl Jones at home in Mississippi, 1931. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-005 James Earl Jones's great-grandparents, Wyatt and Shirley Jeeter Connolly, and family on the family farm, 1908. James Earl Jones's grandfather, John Henry Connolly is second from right in the back row. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-006 James Earl Jones as a boy in Mississippi, early 1930s. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-007 James Earl Jones on the family farm in Michigan, after the move north. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-008 James Earl Jones, his mother Ruth, and his youngest uncle, Randy, about 1944. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-009 James Earl Jones, his cousin Robert Earl, Uncle Randy, Aunts Helen and Ozella in Michigan about 1941. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-010 James Earl Jones's grandparents, John Henry and Maggie Connolly on the front porch of their homestead in Mississippi, ca. 1933. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-011 James Earl Jones's grandmother Elnora Jones. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-012 James Earl Jones (back row, number 27) on the Dickson High School basketball team in Brethren, Michigan, ca. 1947. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-013 James Earl Jones in his early 20s. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-jon-bwp-014 James Earl Jones in an acting workshop, early 1950s. Courtesy of James Earl Jones
jon2-tim-clp-015 James Earl Jones in a scene from Jean Genet's absurdist drama, The Blacks, 1961. GJON MILI/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-bwp-016 Cicely Tyson and James Earl Jones in a scene from the Off-Broadway production of the play The Blacks, 1961. MARTHA SWOPE/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-bwp-017 James Earl Jones in a scene from the Circle in the Square production of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh, 1973. MARTHA SWOPE/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-bwp-018 James Earl Jones and Kevin Conway in a revival of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men 1974. MARTHA SWOPE/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-bwp-014 Roger Bannister surrounded by reporters after beating Gehrmann and Wilt in Penn Relays, 1951. HY PESKIN/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-bwp-015 Roger Bannister, 1951. CORNELL CAPA/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-bwp-016 Dr. Roger Bannister beating John Landy at the Empire Games, 1954. RALPH MORSE/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-bwp-019 James Earl Jones, with Muhammad Ali, after a performance of The Great White Hope, 1968. BOB GOMEL/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-bwp-017 The1954 British Empire Games, Roger Bannister pulls ahead of John Landy. RALPH MORSE/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-bwp-018 John Landy and Roger Bannister after competing in the 1954 Empire Games. RALPH MORSE/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-clp-020 James Earl Jones, Graeme Campbell and Dianne Wiest in a scene from the Broadway production of Shakespeare's Othello. MARTHA SWOPE/TIMEPIX
jon2-tim-clp-021 Actor James Earl Jones holding his Emmy Awards, 1991 KEVIN WINTER/DMI/TIMEPIX
ban0-tim-clp-019 Queen Elizabeth II and Charles Allen, Chairman of Manchester 2002, look up to the baton held by ir Roger Bannister (R) prior to the start of the Commonwealth baton relay at the gates of Buckingham Palace March 11, 2002. KIERAN DOHERTY/REUTERS/TIMEPIX
tho0-tho-clp-005 Michael Thornton Navy SEAL. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-006 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-007 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-008 Michael Thornton and fellow SEALS in Vietnam. "We went to places where big army units didn't go." Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-009 Michael Thornton and two SEAL comrades in Vietnam. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-010 Michael Thornton with Admiral Elmo Zumwalt. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-011 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-012 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-013 Michael Thornton, shortly after arriving in Vietnam. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-014 "It's hard to explain to somebody that's never been there what it's like to work in an area where you're outnumbered." Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-015 Thomas Norris and Michael Thornton, Oct. 15, 1973, the day Thornton received the Congressional Medal of Honor. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-016 Michael Thornton, May 1967, Spartanburg, South Carolina. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-017 Michael Thornton in basic training at San Diego, 1967. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-018 "They know in combat you're going to be outnumbered every time." Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-019 Lt. Michael Thornton, USN. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-020 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-021 MIcahel Thornton, age five. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-022 Off duty in Da Nang. Michael Thornton second from left in back row. Lt. Thomas Norris at right in front row. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-023 President Nixon presents the Congressional Medal of Honor to Michael Thornton. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-bwp-024 Michael Thornton, age one. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-025 Michael Thornton and Thomas Norris in the e Rose Garden of the White Hous, Oct. 15, 1973.Michael Thornton, his father Ed Thornton, Thomas Norris, and Thornton's brother Mark. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-026 President Nixon presents the Congressional Medal of Honor to Michael Thornton at White House ceremony, Oct. 15, 1973. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-027 Lt. Michael Thornton, USN, 1983. Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-028 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
tho0-tho-clp-029 Courtesy of Michael Thornton
mit0-mit-jpg-001 George J. Mitchell Courtesy of George J. MIichell
mit0-bow-tif-003 Senator George J. Mitchell in U.S. Senate Committe, 1994. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-004 President William J. Clinton and Speaker of the House Thomas S. Foley, with House Minority Leader Robert Michel and House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt congratulating Sen. George J. Mitchell at his 1994 farewell tribute. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-005 President William J Clinton consulting the Senate Majority Leader, Senator George J. Mitchell, 1994. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-006 George J. Mitchell with Senator Edmund S. Muskie, 1967. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-007 George J. Mitchell in his U.S. Senate office, 1987. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-008 Arthur Liman conversing with Senator George J. Mitchell during a session of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran-Contra Affair. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-009 Senator George J. Mitchell, 1988. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-010 George J. Mitchell, 1981. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-011 Senator George J. Mitchell, 1992. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-012 Sen. George J. Mitchell, 1981 The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-013 Sen. George J. Mitchell, 1982. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-014 George J. Mitchell, with Sally and Andrea Mitchell, and Senator Edmund S. Muskie, on the occasion of Mitchell's swearing-in as a U.S. Senator, 1980. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-015 Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell with Senators Edward M. Kennedy and John D. Rockefeller IV at National Health Care Conference, 1991. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-016 A young George J. Mitchell (front row, 2nd from R) on his junior high school basketball team in Waterville, Maine. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-017 George J. Mitchell, Waterville High School yearbook photo. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-018 George J. Mitchell, Waterville High School yearbook photo. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-019 A young George J. Mitchell accepting a Boys Club Award in Waterville, Maine. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-bow-tif-020 George J. Mitchell as a teenager in Waterville, Maine. The George J. Mitchell Papers, George J. Mitchell Department of SpecialCollections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library
mit0-tim-jpg-002 The Mitchell Committee led by former U.S. senator George Mitchell (L), Norwegian Foreign Minister Thorbjoern Jagland (2nd L), European foreign policy security chief Javier Solana (3rd L) and former Turkish President Suleyman Demirel (R) meet with Israel Foreign Minister Shimon Peres (3rd R) and Israeli minister Danny Naveh (2nd R) in Jerusalem March 21, 2001. The committee undertook a fact-finding mission into nearly six months of Israeli-Palestinian violence. TimePix/REUTERS/Natalie Behring
wal2-cbs-bwp-002 Mike Wallace began his television career in New York in the 1950s. Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-cbs-clp-003 Mike Wallace was the only reporter to accompany U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to Iraq on his mission to prevent war between Saddam Hussein and the Allies. His exclusive interview with Annan was broadcast on 60 Minutes on Feb. 22, 1998. Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-cbs-clp-004 Mike Wallace interviewed singer Tina Turner at her home in Nice during the summer of 1996. Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-cbs-clp-005 Mike Wallace interviewed mathematician John Nash at Princeton University in 2001. From left to right, Nash, Wallace, and producer Peter Klein of CBS News. John Nash was awarded the 1994 Nobel Prize in Economics; his life was dramatized in the film A Beautiful Mind. Courtesy of Mike Wallace
hil0-bre-clp-029 Everest, tallest mountain in the world. Photo by David Breashears
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wal2-wal-bwp-006 Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-wal-bwp-007 Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-wal-bwp-008 Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-wal-bwp-009 Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-wal-bwp-010 Courtesy of Mike Wallace
wal2-wal-bwp-011 CBS News, Irving Haberman
wal2-wal-bwp-012 AP Photo
wal2-wal-bwp-013 CBS News
bro1-nga-jpg-001 J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery of Art (1969-1992). Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-ama-jpg-002 Windshield, the first major modern house in the eastern United States, built in 1936 by architect Richard Neutra for the family of J. Carter Brown.
bro1-sto-jpg-003 The South Front of Stowe House, Stowe School, Buckingham, England. Courtesy of Stowe School
bro1-sto-jpg-004 The South Front of Stowe House, Stowe School, Buckingham, England. Courtesy of Stowe School
bro1-nga-jpg-005 East Building of the National Gallery of Art, designed by I.M. Pei. Copyright Dennis Brack/Black Star
bro1-nga-jpg-006 J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery from 1969 to 1992. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-007 J. Carter Brown (right) with Alexander Calder in the sculptor's studio in Saché, France, July 2, 1974. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-008 J. Carter Brown and HRH Diana, Princess of Wales, at the exhibition "Treasure Houses of Britain." Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-009 J. Carter Brown at the East Building of the National Gallery, home to many of the spectacular special exhibitions he pioneered. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-010 J. Carter Brown with Paul Mellon, great benefactor of the National Gallery. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-011 National Gallery benefactor Paul Mellon, J. Carter Brown and architect I.M. Pei, in the atrium of the East Building of the National Gallery, with Alexander Calder's giant mobile overhead. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-012 J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery (1969 -1992) Align left Copyright Dennis Brack/Black Star
bro1-nga-jpg-013 The great rotunda of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-014 Aerial view of the National Gallery of Art on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., the West building at left, the East Building at right. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-015 J. Carter Brown, Director of the National Gallery, in the atrium of the East Building, with the giant mobile by Alexander Calder. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-016 J. Carter Brown and a giant illustration of the landmark exhibition, "Treasure Houses of Britain." Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
bro1-nga-jpg-017 J. Carter Brown, greets His Majesty, King Juan Carlos of Spain, at the spectacular exhibition, "Circa1492: Art in the Age of Exploration." Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art
kin1-kin-jpg-001 Coretta Scott King, Pioneer of Civil Rights Courtesy of Coretta Scott King
kin1-get-jpg-002 Coretta Scott King displaying her book My Life With Martin Luther King Jr. February 9, 1970. Hulton|Archive by Getty Images
kin1-get-jpg-003 Martin Luther King, Jr. with his wife Coretta Scott King and colleagues during the famous march from Selma, Alabama, to the state capital in Montgomery, March 1965. Hulton|Archive by Getty Images
kin1-get-jpg-004 Coretta Scott King speaks at a peace demonstration in Washington, D.C., 1970. Catherine Ursillo/Getty Images
tut0-tut-jpg-001 Archbishop Desmond Tutu, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. Courtesy of Archbishop Desmond Tutu
tut0-get-jpg-002 Desmond Tutu, Anglican Archbishop of Johannesburg, South Africa, 1985. Hulton|Archive by Getty Images
cas0-get-jpg-022 Johnny Cash and the love of his life, June Carter Cash (1929-2003). Getty Images; Credit: Dave Allocca
kin1-cor-jpg-005 Paul Robeson (1898-1976): American actor, singer and social activist. Corbis/Bettman
kin1-cor-jpg-006 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King during a news conference following the announcement that he had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Corbis/Bettman
kin1-cor-jpg-007 Martin Luther King Jr. eats Sunday dinner with his wife, Coretta Scott King, and their young children at home in Atlanta. © Flip Schulke/CORBIS
kin1-cor-jpg-008 Coretta Scott King and her daughters, Yolanda and Bernice, talk with a fellow parishioner outside Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. © Flip Schulke/CORBIS
kin1-cor-jpg-009 Coretta Scott King plays piano and sings with her children Yolanda, Marty, and Bernice at home after church. © Flip Schulke/CORBIS
kin1-cor-jpg-010 Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife Coretta march together along a rural Mississippi road with the March Against Fear. Corbis/Bettman
kin1-cor-jpg-011 Coretta Scott King holds her sleeping daughter Bernice at the funeral of her husband, Martin Luther King Jr. Corbis/Bettman
tut0-aaa-jpg-003 Archbishop Desmond Tutu addresses the Academy of Achievement in Washington, D.C., 2003. Academy of Achievement
tut0-aaa-jpg-004 Archbishop Desmond Tutu addresses the Academy of Achievement in Washington, D.C., 2003. Academy of Achievement
tut0-aaa-jpg-005 Archbishop Desmond Tutu speaks at the Academy of Achievement in Washington, D.C., 2003. Academy of Achievement
tut0-cor-jpg-006 February 21, 1990. After his release from prison, African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela visits Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Johannesburg. © Peter Turnley/CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-007 Archbishop Desmond Tutu delivers a commencement address at Oberlin College, Ohio, May 25, 1987. © Bettmann/CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-008 Archbishop Desmond Tutu speaks after receiving the Jamnalal Baja International Award in Cape Town, South Africa, June 25, 2001. The award, named after a close associate of Mahatma Gandhi, recognizes the promotion of Gandhi's pacifist values outside India. Photo by Mike Hutchings© Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-009 Desmond Tutu meets Rosa Parks, heroine of the American civil rights movement. © David Turnley/CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-010 February, 1986. At the height of the anti-apartheid struggle, Archbishop Tutu addresses a mass meeting in Alexander Township, South Africa. © David Turnley/CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-011 Archbishop Desmond Tutu conducts services in Washington's National Cathedral, December 23, 1984. © Bettmann/CORBIS
tut0-cor-jpg-012 Archbishop Desmond Tutu: "I am made for goodness. I am made for laughter." © David Turnley/CORBIS
per0-per-jpg-001 Shimon Peres, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. Courtesy of Shimon Peres
per0-per-jpg-002 Berl Katznelson (1887 - 1944), founder of Israel's national labor federation, mentor of Shimon Peres.
per0-per-jpg-003 David Ben-Gurion (1886-1973), first Prime Minister of the modern State of Israel.
per0-aaa-jpg-004 David Ben-Gurion speaks at a public forum at a displaced persons' camp in 1946.
per0-cor-jpg-005 Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres (L) sits next to the Speaker of the Palestinian Assembly Abu Ala'a (Ahmed Qorei) (R) in the West Bank city of Ramallah, January 11, 1999. Peres was the first Israeli to address the Palestinian Assembly, where he urged the next Israeli government to negotiate recognition of a Palestinian state. Jamal Aruri © AFP/CORBIS
per0-cor-jpg-006 In his office as Chairman of the Labor Party, Shimon Peres sits beneath a portrait of his mentor, founder of the modern state of Israel, David Ben-Gurion. May 1984. © Bettmann/CORBIS
per0-cor-jpg-007 Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres addresses the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, January 23, 2002 in Strasbourg. © Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS
per0-cor-jpg-008 Shimon Peres, former Prime Minister of Israel and long-time leader of Israel's Labor Party, photographed in Rome, April 24, 1999. © PIZZOLI ALBERTO/CORBIS SYGMA
per0-cor-jpg-009 Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat shake hands after signing the peace accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization at the White House on September 13, 1993. President Bill Clinton stands behind them. Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres looks on at left. © Richard T. Nowitz/CORBIS
per0-cor-jpg-010 Prime Minister Shimon Peres visits Israeli troops in Lebanon. November 1, 1984. © MILNER MOSHE/CORBIS SYGMA
per0-hul-jpg-011 Israeli Defense Minister Shimon Peres on a fact finding tour of Lebanon, January 22, 1976. Shortly thereafter, Lebanon was invaded by Syria. © Getty Images
per0-cor-jpg-012 Chief of Staff Moshe Levy (2nd from L), Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin, and Prime Minister Shimon Peres review a parade of the Israeli air force, 1985. © David Rubinger/CORBIS
per0-cor-jpg-013 Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres makes a statement after emerging from talks with President Reagan at the White House, October 17, 1985. Larry Rubenstein © Bettmann/CORBIS
per0-aaa-jpg-014 Chaim Nachman Bialik, (1873-1934) national poet of Israel.
per0-aaa-jpg-015 Sholem Aleichem, Chaim Nachman Bialik, and others at Jewish writers' conference in Basel.
cas0-tim-jpg-023 TIME magazine's issue of September 22, 2003, marked the passing of Johnny Cash.
bez0-get-jpg-004 Jeff Bezos was TIME Magazine's choice as Person of the Year in 1999. Photo by Gregory Heisler. Time Inc./Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
bez0-ama-jpg-002 Jeff Bezos, Founder and Chairman of Amazon.com. Courtesy of Amazon.com
bez0-ama-jpg-003 Jeff Bezos, King of cyber-commerce. Courtesy of Amazon.com
bez0-ama-jpg-005 Jeff Bezos, small, but thinking big. Courtesy of Amazon.com
bez0-ama-jpg-006 Jeff Bezos, age 5, with his grandfather, Lawrence Preston Gise, on the ranch at Cotulla, Texas, in 1969. Courtesy of Amazon.com
hum0-hum-jpg-001 John Hume, MP, co-recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Peace Courtesy of John Hume
hum0-tri-jpg-002 David Trimble, MP, co-recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Peace. Courtesy of David Trimble
hum0-cor-jpg-003 May 21, 1998: David Trimble, UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and John Hume await the result of an island-wide referendum on the Northern Ireland peace agreement. (c) Alan Lewis/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-004 David Trimble and John Hume display their Nobel Peace Prize medallions, May 1, 1998. (c) Micheline Pelletier/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-005 U.S. President Bill Clinton meets with John Hume in the Oval Office, March 17, 2000. Clinton kick-started the stalled Northern Ireland peace process in separate meetings with its key players. AFP PHOTO/THE WHITE HOUSE/WILLIAM VASTA (c) AFP/CORBIS
hum0-cor-jpg-006 From left to right: Brian Faulkner of the UUP, Gerry Fitt and John Hume of the SDLP during an Irish Unity conference in Sunningdale, England, December 1973. (c) Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
hum0-cor-jpg-007 Northern Ireland's First Minister David Trimble (R) sits opposite Bertie Ahern, Prime Minister of Ireland, during the first meeting of the North/South Ministerial Council in Armagh, December 13, 1999. Photo by Paul McErlane REUTERS (c) Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS
hum0-cor-jpg-008 Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams shakes hands with Jonh Hume, while Albert Reynolds, Prime Minister of Ireland, looks on, September 6, 1994. (c) PMatthew Polak/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-009 John Hume, peacemaker. (c) Micheline Pelletier/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-010 John Hume and his wife Pat meet with the press in Derry after the announcement of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Peace, October 16, 1998. (c) Alan Lewis/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-011 U2 singer Bono helps David Trimble and John Hume celebrate victory in the island-wide referndum on the Northern Ireland peace agreement, May 19, 1998. (c) Alan Lewis/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-012 In Belfast, John Hume and David Trimble urge a "yes" vote in the peace referendum, May 21, 1998. (c) Alan Lewis/CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-013 John Hume and David Trimble greet well-wishers from the balcony of the Grand Hotel in Oslo, Norway on the eve of the Nobel Prize ceremony, December 10, 1998. (c) CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-014 St. Patrick's Day in Washington. Bill Clinton receives Gerry Adams, John Hume and David Trimble at the White House, March 17, 2000. Photographer: Ron Sachs (c) CORBIS SYGMA
hum0-cor-jpg-015 David Trimble briefs the the media before speaking to a meeting at his party's headquarters in Belfast, November19, 1999. Photo by Paul McErlane, REUTERS
(c) Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS
woo1-woo-jpg-001 Investigative journalist Bob Woodward. Courtesy of Bob Woodward
woo1-bra-jpg-002 Ben Bradlee, former Executive Editor of the Washington Post. Courtesy of Ben Bradlee
woo1-cor-jpg-003 Investigative journalists Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, April 1, 1976. (c) Betty Mimms/CORBIS SYGMA
woo1-cor-jpg-004 Ben Bradlee, former Executive Editor of the Washington Post, 1994. (c) Christopher Felver/CORBIS
woo1-cor-jpg-005 Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in the Washington Post offices at the height of the Watergate investigation, April 29, 1973 . (c) Bettmann/CORBIS
woo1-cor-jpg-006 Ben Bradlee departs Washington National Cathedral following the funeral service for Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham, July 23, 2001. (c) Ron Sachs/Corbis
woo1-cor-jpg-007 Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham, and her executive editor, Ben Bradlee, in 1971. (c) Bettmann/CORBIS
woo1-cor-jpg-008 Bob Woodward in Washington, June 1992. (c) Wally McNamee/CORBIS
woo1-cor-jpg-009 Bob Woodward at the Washington Post, watching former president Nixon on TV, April 11, 1977 (c) Wally McNamee/CORBIS
hum0-aaa-jpg-016 John Hume and former U.S. President Bill Clinton at the International Achievement Summit in Dublin, Ireland, 2002. Academy of Achievement
giu0-giu-jpg-001 Rudolph W Giuliani
giu0-aaa-jpg-002 Irving Younger, Rudolph Giuliani's law professor and mentor.
giu0-cor-jpg-003 Rudolph Giuliani campaigns for re-election as Mayor of New York City. October 22, 1997. © CORBIS SYGMA
Photographer: Liz Gilbert
giu0-cor-jpg-004 Rudolph Giuliani campaigns for re-election as Mayor of New York City. November 2, 1997. © CORBIS SYGMA
Photographer: Andrew Lichtenstein
giu0-cor-jpg-005 Mayor Rudolph Giuliani congratulates rescue crews working in the streets of Manhattan, one week after the attack on the World Trade Center. © STEWART MIKE/CORBIS SYGMA
Photographer: MIKE STEWART
giu0-cor-jpg-006 Mayor Rudolph Giuliani meets workers still sifting through the rubble at Ground Zero, a month after the attack. © CORBIS SYGMA
Photographer: MIKE STEWART
giu0-cor-jpg-007 FBI Director William Webster and federal prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani hold a press conference with a chart outlining "La Cosa Nostra" organized crime families. February 1985 © Robert Maass/CORBIS
Photographer: Robert Maass
giu0-cor-jpg-008 New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani speaks to reporters at his daily press briefing at City Hall in New York, May 15, 2000. The Mayor began the press conference by stating that he had not yet reached a decision concerning his cancer treatments and whether or not he would continue in the race against Hillary Clinton for the U.S. Senate seat from New York. © Reuters/CORBIS
Photo by Mike Segar
giu0-cor-jpg-009 New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani pauses in front of clean-up efforts at the site of the World Trade Center during a visit with the director of the Federal Office of Management and Budget October 16, 2001. © Reuters/CORBIS
Photo: Kathy Willens
giu0-cor-jpg-010 Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani during a book signing in London, January 21, 2003. Giuliani was promoting his book, Giuliani - Leadership, at Borders bookstore as part of a European tour. © Reuters/CORBIS
Photo: Toby Melville
giu0-cor-jpg-011 Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in Times Square, 1996. © Mitchell Gerber/CORBIS
Photographer: Mitchell Gerber
giu0-cor-jpg-012 Reporters surround New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and his wife, Donna Hanover. Their marriage did not survive life in the media pressure cooker. © Lynn Goldsmith/CORBIS
Photographer: Lynn Goldsmith
kin2-kin-jpg-001 B.B. King, the King of the Blues. Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-cor-jpg-002 B.B. King, backstage with the two Grammys he won at the 43rd annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, February 21, 2001. King won for Best Traditional Blues Album and for Best Pop Collaboration With Vocals. Photo by Sam Mircovich © Reuters/CORBIS
kin2-cor-jpg-003 B.B King: "You have a soul, you have a heart, you have a feeling and your music is life. " Academy of Achievement
kin2-cor-jpg-004 B.B. King displays his much imitated guitar technique at the House of Blues. Academy of Achievement
kin2-cor-jpg-005 B.B. King performed at the House of Blues in Chicago during the 2004 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
kin2-cor-jpg-006 B.B. King, performing at the International Achievement Summit with Bonnie Raitt, one of the many musicians he has inspired over the years. Academy of Achievement
lew0-lew-jpg-001 Congressman John R. Lewis, Champion of Civil Rights. Courtesy of John R. Lewis
lew0-aaa-jpg-002 Congressman Lewis addresses the Academy of Achievement in Chicago, June 2004. Academy of Achievement
lew0-aaa-jpg-003 Congressman Lewis receives the Golden Plate of the Academy of Achievement from James Earl Jones at the 2004 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
lew0-cor-jpg-004 Congressman John Lewis at home in Atlanta, Georgia, January 1985 . © Flip Schulke/CORBIS
lew0-cor-jpg-005 Freedom Riders John Lewis and James Zwerg after being attacked and beaten by segregationists in Montgomery, Alabama, May 20, 1961. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lew0-cor-jpg-006 May 24, 1961: With his head still bandaged from a previous beating, young John Lewis is arrested in Jackson, Mississippi, along with 26 other Freedom Riders, for the "crime" of riding in the "Whites Only" section of an interstate bus. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lew0-cor-jpg-007 John Lewis, age 23, Chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, speaks at the Lincoln Memorial during the historic March on Washington, August 28, 1963. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lew0-cor-jpg-008 John Lewis (L), chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and Hosea Williams, of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), announce a campaign of demonstrations against segregation in Georgia, July 26, 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lew0-cor-jpg-009 John Lewis (center, seated) staging a temporary "sit down" protest during an attempted march in Jackson, Mississippi. Lewis was among an estimated 175 demonstrators arrested for protesting at the State Capitol, June 15, 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
kin2-cor-jpg-007 B.B. King: "Get high off your music." Academy of Achievement
omi0-omi-jpg-001 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay. Courtesy of Pierre Omidyar
omi0-aaa-jpg-002 Pierre Omidyar receives the Golden Plate of the Academy of Achievement from Academy member Quincy Jones at the 2000 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
omi0-aaa-jpg-005 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay, addresses the Academy of Achievement in London, October 29, 2000. Academy of Achievement
omi0-aaa-jpg-008 Pierre Omidyar in conversation with students at the International Achievement Summit. "If you start a business because you think you're going to make a lot of money at it, then you probably won't be successful, because that's the wrong reason to start a business." Academy of Achievement
omi0-aaa-jpg-009 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay, addresses the Academy of Achievement. "I think we can work together as a global community and solve the world's problems." Academy of Achievement
omi0-aaa-jpg-004 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay, at the International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
omi0-aaa-jpg-007 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay. "The only way your customers are going to adopt those values is if they see that you're living those values as well." Academy of Achievement
omi0-get-jpg-011 Pierre Omidyar, Founder of eBay. Time & Life Pictures
omi0-get-jpg-012 Pierre Omidyar, Founder and Chairman of eBay, with his CEO, Margaret Whitman. Getty Images News
kin2-bbk-jpg-008 B.B. King recalls the advice of his cousin Bukka White, "If you're going to be a blues singer, a blues musician, always dress like you're going to the bank to try to borrow money." Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-bbk-jpg-009 B.B. King: "I've had tragedies." Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-bbk-jpg-010 B.B King: "I have learned that blues singing is just like singing any other kind of song. You still try to tell the story." Photo by John Super. Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-bbk-jpg-011 Bluesman B.B. King and his trusty guitar, Lucille. Photo by Kevin Westerberg. Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-bbk-jpg-012 Courtesy of B.B. King
kin2-bbk-jpg-013 B.B. King: "I have had a lot of things happen to me for which I'm grateful." Photo by Bob Guthridge. Courtesy of B.B. King.
cas1-cas-jpg-001 Stephen M. Case Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-002 Steve Case, age six. Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-003 Stephen M. Case, Chairman and CEO of America Online, Inc. Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-004 (L to R) Stephen M. Case, Charman of AOL, with Ted Waitt, Chairman of Gateway and retired General Colin Powell in 1999, promoting the Power Up program, which provides access to computers and the Internet in low income neighborhoods and housing projects. Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-005 In 1999, Steve Case meets one of the students who has gained acces to the Internet through the Power Up program. Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-006 Steve Case, Chairman of AOL Time Warner. Courtesy of Stephen M. Case
cas1-cas-jpg-007 Ronald Reagan, 40th President of the United States, addresses the Academy of Achievement in Chicago, 1990. Academy of Achievement
mai0-mai-jpg-001 Norman Mailer, recipient of Pulitzer Prizes for both Fiction and Non-fiction. Courtesy of Norman Mailer
mai0-get-jpg-002 Author Norman Mailer, 1995. Photo by Frank Capri/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
mai0-get-jpg-003 Norman Mailer, 1975. Photo by Arthur Schatz/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
mai0-get-jpg-004 Norman Mailer campaigning for Mayor of New York City in 1969. Photo by Bob Peterson/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
mai0-get-jpg-005 Candidate Mailer meets the voters, running for Mayor of New York in 1969. Photo by Bob Peterson/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
mai0-get-jpg-006 Author Norman Mailer and a favorite subject, former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, May 6, 1998, Photo by Dave Allocca/DMI/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
upd0-upd-jpg-001 John Updike, recipient of two Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction Courtesy of John Updike
upd0-get-jpg-002 John Updike in 1955, not long after graduating from Harvard. Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images
upd0-get-jpg-003 John Updike, at home with his wife and children in Ipswich, Massachusetts, 1966. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
upd0-get-jpg-004 John Updike juggles apples, and careers, at home in Ipswich, 1966. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
upd0-get-jpg-005 John Updike, 1976. Getty Images
upd0-get-jpg-006 TIME magazine featured Updike on its cover on April 26, 1968. His novel Couples had inspired the magazine's report on "The Adulterous Society." Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
upd0-get-jpg-007 TIME featured John Updike on its cover for a second time in 1982. Time Life Pictures/Getty
upd0-cor-jpg-008 John Updike in Boston, October 15, 2002. The chronicler of anonymous American lives had himself become internationally renowned. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
upd0-cor-jpg-009 John Updike, in 2002, an institution in American letters. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
mai0-cor-jpg-007 Norman Mailer in 1987. © William Coupon/CORBIS
mai0-cor-jpg-008 Adele Morales Mailer and her husband Norman Mailer emerge from the courtroom, December 21st, 1960. She refused to sign a complaint against Mailer after was arrested on charges of stabbing her after a party. © Bettmann/CORBIS
mai0-cor-jpg-009 October 30, 2003: Norman Mailer reads from his book Modest Gifts, a collection of poems and drawings. © Orjan F. Ellingvag/Corbis
mai0-cor-jpg-010 Author Norman Mailer chats with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis at a publisher's party in New York City, February 22, 1978. © Bettmann/CORBIS
upd0-cor-jpg-010 John Updike, recipient of two Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction Corbis
pau0-aaa-cls-030 Linus Pauling in the 1970s. Academy of Achievement
pau0-ohs-bwp-031 Edward Teller, physicist and proponent of the hydrogen bomb. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
sch3-sch-jpg-026 Richard Schultes in Bogota, Colombia, January 1952. Courtesy of Harvard University
sch3-sch-jpg-027 Richard Schultes, with a member of the Yakuna tribe, preparing for a cereminal dance, Rio Miritiparana, Colombia, May 1952. Courtesy of Harvard University
sch3-sch-jpg-028 Richard Evans gathers specimens with Henri Humbert at Rio Kubiyu, Vaupes, Colombia, November 1952. Courtesy of Harvard University
sch3-sch-jpg-029 Richard Schultes gathers specimens with Maku helpers in lower Vaupes, Colombia, June 1953. Courtesy of Harvard University
par0-cor-jpg-018 Rosa Parks was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal, on June 15, 1999. © William Philpott/Reuters/Corbis
par0-gft-jpg-017 (L-R) First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, baseball player Sammy Sosa, and Tipper Gore (wife of Vice President Albert Gore, Jr.) applauding civil rights activist Rosa Parks, during President Bill Clinton's State of the Union address. Photo by Diana Walker/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
par0-bet-jpg-020 Rosa Parks at work as a seamstress, shortly after the beginning of the Montgomery bus boycott, February 1956. Photo by Don Cravens/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
par0-cor-jpg-015 Rosa Parks leaving the Montgomery courthouse with her attorney, Charles Langford. Feb. 22, 1956. Bettman/Corbis
cas0-aaa-jpg-024 Johnny Cash performs on his popular ABC television program, 1970.
ham1-aaa-jpg-027 Dorothy Hamill, 1976. Tony Triolo for Sports Illustrated © Time Inc.
joh0-aaa-jpg-034 Philip Johnson as a schoolboy. Courtesy Philip Johnson
joh0-aaa-jpg-035 Philip Johnson, dean of American architects, 1984. Courtesy Philip Johnson
jon0-aaa-jpg-060 Quincy Jones, master of American music. Courtesy of Quincy Jones
wat0-aaa-jpg-032 James Watson, co-discoverer of the DNA molecule, photographed in the 1950s. Courtesy of James Watson.
wie0-aaa-jpg-024 Elie Wiesel, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. Courtesy of Elie Wiesel
par0-get-jpg-019 Rosa Parks (C) riding on newly integrated bus following Supreme Court ruling ending segregation of Montgomery buses. Photo by Don Cravens/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
par0-bet-bwp-016 Rosa Parks in Montgomery after the Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation on public transit. © UPI/Bettman
nit0-whh-jpg-013 Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul H. Nitze, third from left, at a National Security Council meeting with President Lyndon B. Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. February 7, 1968. White House Photo Office
nit0-get-jpg-014 At the State Department's Office of International Economic Affairs, Paul H. Nitze, James Stillwell, George McGhee, Ernest A. Gross and C. H. Bonesteel drawing up the European Recovery Plan, known as the Marshall Plan. April 1, 1948. Photo by Thomas D. Mcavoy/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-015 Paul Nitze on his farm in southern Maryland, still an enthusiastic horseman at age 80. After Nitze resigned from the Eisenhower administration in 1953, his wife entered Nitze in a horse race at the Charles County Fair. To his own great surprise and satisfaction, he won the race. Photo by Diana Walker/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-016 President Ronald Reagan greets Paul Nitze as he arrives at the White House for a summit dinner with Mikhail Gorbachev, December 1, 1987. NItze was always wary of the Sovet leader. Photo by Diana Walker/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-017 Paul Nitze, age 80, on his farm in southern Maryland. His country retreat was a 1,290-acre working farm where he raised corn, pigs and cattle. Photo by Diana Walker/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-018 Ambassador Paul H. Nitze. Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-019 Arms adviser Paul H. Nitze appearing before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee for hearings on the INF treaty. Photo by Terry Ashe/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
nit0-get-jpg-020 State Dept. officials confer with arms adviser Paul H. Nitze during his appearance before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on the INF treaty. Photo by Terry Ashe/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
ang0-ang-jpg-001 Author Maya Angelou Courtesy of Maya Angelou
ang0-cor-jpg-002 Maya Angelou walks along the beach in San Francisco, 1970. © Bettman/CORBIS
ang0-cor-jpg-003 Maya Angelou in San Francisco, at the time of the publication of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, 1970. © Bettman/CORBIS
ang0-cor-jpg-004 Author Maya Angelou hosts the 2000 annual conference of the Children's Defense Fund in New York City. © Najlah Feanny/CORBIS SABA
ang0-cor-jpg-005 Maya Angelou enjoys a speaker's joke at the 2000 annual conference of the Children's Defense Fund in New York City. © Najlah Feanny/CORBIS SABA
ang0-cor-jpg-006 Maya Angelou reads her poem, "On the Pulse of the Morning," at the inauguration of President William J. Clinton, 1993. © Reuters/CORBIS
ang0-get-jpg-007 Maya Angelou is interviewed at the Algonquin Hotel in New York City, 1972. Getty Images
ang0-get-jpg-008 Maya Angelou at home, 1978. Getty Images
ang0-get-jpg-009 Maya Angelou on the set of the film Poetic Justice (1993) with director John Singleton. Angelou played a role on camera as well as writing the poetry heard in the film. Getty Images
ang0-get-jpg-010 Maya Angelou, 1993. Getty Images
ang0-get-jpg-011 Maya Angelou, 1994. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
gon0-gon-jpg-001 Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. Courtesy of Alberto R. Gonzales
gon0-cor-jpg-002 President George W. Bush shakes hands with White House legal counsel Alberto Gonzales after naming him his choice for new attorney general, November 10, 2004. © JASON REED/Reuters/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-003 Alberto Gonzales, in his West Wing office as Chief Counsel to the President, 2002. © Brooks Kraft/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-004 Alberto Gonzales is sworn in at the start of his Senate confirmation hearings, January 6, 2005. © Larry Downing/Reuters/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-005 Alberto Gonzales waits for the start of his U.S. Senate confirmation hearings, January 6, 2005. © Larry Downing/Reuters/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-006 Alberto Gonzales, kisses his son Gabriel as his wife Rebecca looks on before the start of his U.S. Senate confirmation hearings, January 6, 2005. © Larry Downing/Reuters/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-007 Attorney General nominee Alberto Gonzales testifies at his Senate confirmation hearing, January 6, 2005. © Jason Reed/Reuters/Corbis
gon0-cor-jpg-008 President-elect George W. Bush listens as Texas Supreme Court Justice Alberto Gonzales speaks to the press after Bush appointed him White House General Counsel during an announcement ceremony at the Governor's Mansion in Austin, December 17, 2000. © Reuters/CORBIS
ken0-ken-jpg-001 The Honorable Anthony M. Kennedy, Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court. Couretsy of Anthony M. Kennedy
ken0-cor-jpg-002 U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy testifies before the House Committee on Appropriations in Washington, D.C, March 17, 2004. © MANNIE GARCIA/Reuters/Corbis
ken0-cor-jpg-003 Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy appears before the House Appropriations Committee, March 17, 2004 to discuss the Supreme Court's 2005 budget. © Chris Kleponis/ZUMA/Corbis
ken0-cor-jpg-004 Anthony Kennedy is sworn in as a Justice of the United States Supreme Court on February 18, 1988. Chief Justice William Rehnquist administers the oath and Kennedy's wife Mary holds the family Bible as President Reagan looks on. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ken0-cor-jpg-005 The United States Supreme Court in a group portrait taken in 2000. Back row L-R are: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, David Souter, Clarence Thomas and Stephen Breyer. Front row L-R: Antonin Scalia, John Paul Stevens, William Rehnquist, Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony M. Kennedy. © Reuters/CORBIS
ken0-get-jpg-006 President Ronald Reagan introduces Judge Anthony M. Kennedy and his family in a press event at the White House, November 1, 1987. The President had just announced his choice of Judge Kennedy to serve on the Supreme Court. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
ken0-get-jpg-007 Anthony Kennedy in the office of Senator Patrick Leahy. Judge Kennedy met with the Senators of the Judiciary Committe during his Supreme Court confirmation process. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
ken0-get-jpg-008 President Ronald W. Reagan announces Judge Anthony M. Kennedy's nomination to the Supreme Court. White House Chief of Staff Howard Baker and Attorney General Edwin Meese III look on. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
ken0-get-jpg-009 Justice Anthony M. Kennedy in his judicial robe. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
ken0-get-jpg-010 Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy and his wife, Mary, during his swearing-in ceremony at the White House, February 18, 1988. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
gon0-aaa-jpg-009 Attorney General Alberto Gonzales speaks at the International Achievement Summit in New York City, 2005. Academy of Achievement
ken0-aaa-jpg-011 Justice Kennedy speaks at the International Achievement Summit, New York City, 2005. Academy of Achievement
ken0-aaa-jpg-012 Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy at the 2005 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
ang0-cor-jpg-012 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King during a news conference following the announcement that he had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Corbis/Bettman
ber0-ber-jpg-001 Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra, folk philosopher and baseball legend. Courtesy of Lawrence Peter Berra
ber0-cor-jpg-002 Berra was a dominant hitter throughout the 1950s. Here he is in action in May 1956. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-003 New York Yankees' Derek Jeter laughs with Yankee legend Yogi Berra while warming up before a season-opener game at the Tokyo Dome in Japan, March 27, 2004. © ISSEI KATO/Reuters/Corbis
ber0-cor-jpg-004 Yogi Berra in his prime, March 14, 1953. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-005 The four Yankees picked for the American League team in the 1950 All-Star game: Phil Rizzuto, Joe DiMaggio, Yogi Berra, and Gerry Coleman. July 8, 1950. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-006 Berra had seldom played catcher before joining the Yankees. He soon became the dominant catcher of the era. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-007 Yogi Berra poses for the press on the eve of his 13th World Series, October 1, 1962. He would play in 14 over the course of his career, and win ten. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-008 Red Sox slugger Ted Williams and Yogi Berra often goaded each other with wisecracks at the plate. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-009
ber0-cor-jpg-010 Berra managed the Yankees to a pennant victory in the 1964 season. Here, he waits for the start of the YankeesÕ first game against the Cardinals in the World Series. October 10, 1964. © Bettmann/CORBIS
ber0-cor-jpg-011 Yogi Berra tips his cap to the crowd as he is introduced during the 59th annual Old Timer's Day at Yankee Stadium, July 9, 2005. © Ray Stubblebine/Reuters/Corbis
ban0-spo-oth-020 Sports Illustrated commemorated Bannister's achievement in their issue of December 27, 1999, more than four decades after his famous run.
ban0-spo-oth-021 Sports Illustrated featured Bannister as Sportsman of the Year in their issue of January 3, 1955.
son0-son-jpg-001 Composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim Courtesy of Stephen Sondheim
son0-cor-jpg-002 Composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim in 1974. He had won Tony Awards for Best Music and Lyrics in a Broadway musical for each of the three previous years. © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
son0-cor-jpg-003 Composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
son0-cor-jpg-004 Oscar Hammerstein II (1895-1960), lyricist of Oklahoma, South Pacific, The King and I, and The Sound of Music, a neighbor and mentor of Stephen Sondheim. © CORBIS
son0-cor-jpg-005 Producer and director Harold Prince. He oversaw some of the most celebrated shows in Broadway history, including many of Stephen Sondheim's. © John Springer Collection/CORBIS
wol0-wol-jpg-001 Author Tom Wolfe Courtesy of Tom Wolfe
wol0-cor-jpg-002 Tom Wolfe at Cape Canaveral in 1972. His years of research into the beginnings of the manned space program would yield a non-fiction best-seller, The Right Stuff. © Bettman/CORBIS
wol0-cor-jpg-003 Tom Wolfe (R) with Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead (C), and the Dead's manager, Rock Scully (L) in San Francisco, 1966. Wolfe's Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test was one of the first books to examine the emerging counterculture of the 1960s. © Ted Shresinsky/CORBIS
wol0-cor-jpg-004 Tom Wolfe at home in New York City, 1988. © Roger Ressmeyer/CORBIS
wol0-cor-jpg-005 Tom Wolfe, 1988. The Virginia-born author still loves dressing the part of the Southern gentleman. © Lynn Goldsmith/CORBIS
wol0-get-jpg-006 Tom Wolfe on a New York City street corner, July 30, 1978. Wolfe's trademark white suit enabled him to stand out in New York's crowded literary scene. Getty Images
wol0-get-jpg-007 TIME magazine featured Tom Wolfe on the cover of its November 2, 1998 issue. Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-006 Stephen Sondheim in 1972. At the time, he was composing A Little Night Music, one of his best-loved scores. Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-007 Stephen Sondheim and Bernadette Peters, one of the stars of Sunday in the Park With George, congratulate playwright James Lapine. Their show had just won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. It would later earn Sondheim and Lapine the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-008 Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine enjoyed their first success as a team with Sunday in the Park With George. Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-009 Stephen Sondheim at home in New York City, reviewing one of his scores, 1987. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-010 Stephen Sondheim backstage at New York's Plymouth Theater, where his musical Passion was being performed. March 10, 1994. Getty Images
son0-get-jpg-011 Stephen Sondheim appearing on the television program Inside the Actors Studio, November 7, 1994. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
son0-aic-jpg-012 Sondheim's musical, Sunday in the Park With George, was inspired by Georges Seurat's painting, "A Sunday on La Grande Jatte." Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago
son0-loc-jpg-013 Leonard Bernstein rehearses the cast of West Side Story, accompanied by Stephen Sondheim at the piano. Courtesy of the Library of Congress
son0-loc-jpg-014 Composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990). Berstein and Stephen Sondheim collaborated on the score for West Side Story in 1957. Courtesy of the Library of Congress
par0-apr-jpg-021 President George W. Bush pays his respects to the late Rosa Parks, October 30, 2005. She was the first woman to lie in state in the rotunda of the United States Capitol. Associated Press
mar1-mar-jpg-001 Dr. Barry Marshall, recipient of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-cor-jpg-002 Drs. J. Robin Warren and Barry Marshall celebrate after learning that they have received the 2005 Nobel Prize in Medicine. © William Edwards/Reuters/Corbis
mar1-mar-jpg-003 Dr. Barry Marshall and his old friend, Dr. Robin Warren, at a favorite haunt, the Old Swan Brewery in Perth, Australia. The pair shared a Nobel Prize in 2005 for their discovery of helicobacter pylori and its role in gastric diseases. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-004 Old friends: Dr. Robin Warren and Dr. Barry Marshall in their hometown of Perth, Australia. They shared the Nobel Prize for their discovery of helicobacter pylori, and its role in diseases of the stomach. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-005 Dr. Barry Marshall, a young resident physician, and Dr. Robin Warren, a staff pathologist, at Royal Perth Hospital in 1984. At the time,the two were just begining to publish their findings on the possible role of bacteria in stomach ulcers. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-006 Helicobacter pylori, the organism that causes the most common chronic infection in the world. Medical science had ignored its existence for a century. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-007 Dr. Barry Marshall and his wife, Adrienne, at home in Perth. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-008 Dr. Barry Marshall at the University of Virginia in 1987. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-get-jpg-009 Dr. Robin Warren and Dr. Barry Marshall on their way to a press conference at the University of Western Australia, October 4, 2005. TONY ASHBY/AFP/Getty Images
mar1-get-jpg-010 Dr. Barry Marshall arrives at work. The personal license plate on his car reads: PYLORI 1, in honor of the bacteria he has long studied. TONY ASHBY/AFP/Getty Images
mar1-get-jpg-011 Dr. Barry Marshall at his alma mater, the University of Western Australia, where he is now Senior Principal Research Fellow. The pattern of his necktie portrays the helicobacter he has spent his career studying. AFP/Getty Images
irv0-irv-jpg-001 Award-winning author John Irving. Courtesy of John Irving
irv0-cor-jpg-002 John Irving in his hometown, Exeter, New Hampshire, 1980. © Sophie Bassouls/CORBIS SYGMA
irv0-cor-jpg-003 Author John Irving in 1984. © Marko Shark/CORBIS
irv0-get-jpg-004 TIME magazine featured John Irving on its cover: August, 31, 1981. Photo by Shyla Irving/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
irv0-get-jpg-005 John Irving, at home in Vermont, 1989. Photo by Kimberly Butler/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
irv0-get-jpg-006 John Irving and his son, Everett, at home in Vernon, Vermont, 2001. Photo by Ellingag/All Over Press Norway/Getty Images
irv0-get-jpg-007 John Irving won an Oscar in 2000, for writng the screen adaptation of his novel, The Cider House Rules. Scott Nelson/AFP/Getty Images
ber0-ber-bwp-012 Yogi Berra congratulates Don Larsen after Larsen pitched a perfect game in the 1956 World Series, the only perfect game in World Series history. Courtesy of Yogi Berra
ber0-ber-bwp-013 Yogi Berra tags the Dodgers' Jackie Robinson as Robinson slides into home plate during the 1955 World Series. The umpire said, "Safe." Yogi disagreed. Courtesy of Yogi Berra
wei1-wei-jpg-023 Andrew Weil's best-selling book, Spontaneous Healing.
wei1-tim-jpg-024 TIME magazine featured Dr. Andrew Weil on the cover of its October 17, 2005 issue. TIME
mar1-mar-jpg-012 Dr. J. Robin Warren's first slide of helicobacter pylori, taken on June 20, 1979. Dr. Barry Marshall's experiments confirmed that these mysterious bacteria were responsible for peptic ulcers and other gastric ailments. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
mar1-mar-jpg-013 Inflamed tissue infected with helicobacter pylori, taken from the stomach of Dr. Barry Marshall after he deliberately infected himself. Courtesy of Dr. Barry Marshall
may1-cor-jpg-001 Professor Ernst Mayr stands under a painting of himself at the entrance to the Ernst Mayr Library at Harvard University, 2002. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
may1-cor-jpg-002 Ernst Mayr at the Museum of Comparative Zoology, where he was director for 10 years. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
may1-cor-jpg-003 Ernst Mayr , Professor Emeritus, still immersed in work in his tenth decade of life. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
may1-cor-jpg-004 Ernst Mayr among spectacular exhibits at the Museum of Comparative Zoology. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
may1-cor-jpg-005 Ernst Mayr at the Museum of Comparative Zoology, where he was director for 10 years. © Rick Friedman/Corbis
may1-har-jpg-006 Ernst Mayr in his office at the Museum of Comparative Biology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Courtesy of Ernst Mayr Library, MCZ, Harvard University. Not to be reproduced without permission.
fri0-cor-jpg-001 Economist Milton Friedman, photographed in 1983. © Roger Ressmeyer/CORBIS
fri0-cor-jpg-002 Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman, 1988. © Ed Kashi/CORBIS
fri0-cor-jpg-003 Milton Friedman in 1988, the year he was honored with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. © Ed Kashi/CORBIS
fri0-cor-jpg-004 Milton Friedman, photographed at a ceremony at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, where President George H.W. Bush honored Dr. Friedman on the occasion of his 90th birthday. © Brooks Kraft/CORBIS
fri0-get-jpg-005 (R Row, from front to rear) Milton Friedman, George Shultz, Pres. Ronald Reagan, Arthur Burns, William Simon and Walter Wriston & unknown at a meeting of White House economic advisers. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
fri0-get-jpg-006 Nobel prize-winning economist Milton Friedman, 1989. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
fri0-get-jpg-007 TIME magazine featured Milton Friedman on its cover, December 19, 1969. Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
fri0-get-jpg-008 Milton and Rose D. Friedman, partners and collaborators for over 60 years. Getty Images
may1-aaa-jpg-007 Ernst Mayr at 96. Academy of Achievement
may1-har-jpg-008 Ernst Mayr in his office at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology. Courtesy of Ernst Mayr Library, MCZ, Harvard University. Not to be reproduced without permission.
may1-har-jpg-009 Ernst Mayr, foremost evolutionary biologist of the 20th century, photographed in 1974.ÏÏ Courtesy of Ernst Mayr Library, MCZ, Harvard University. Not to be reproduced without permission.
fri0-aaa-jpg-009 Arthur F. Burns (1904-1987), Austrian-born American economist, served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board from 1970 to 1978. Getty Images
fri0-aaa-jpg-010 Homer Jones (`906-1986), teacher and mentor of Milton Friedman, later Sr. Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Getty Images
str0-str-jpg-001 The Honorable Robert S. Strauss, diplomat and presidential adviser. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-002 Robert S. Strauss and his wife Helen, at their home in the Watergate complex. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-003 Carl Albert, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Robert S. Strauss, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, at a press conference during the Watergate crisis, 1974. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-004 President Jimmy Carter with Robert S. Strauss, special representative to the Mideast peace negotiations, and Moshe Dayan, Israel's Minister of Foreign Affairs. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-005 President Jimmy Carter greets Robert S. Strauss while Strauss's wife Helen looks on. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-006 President Jimmy Carter awards Robert S. Strauss the Presidential Medal of Freedom, January 16, 1981. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-007 Robert S. Strauss confers with President Lyndon B, Johnson at the White House. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-008 President Johnson welcomes Helen Strauss to the White House. Robert Strauss's association with Lyndon Johnson began with Johnson's first congressional campaign in the 1930s. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-009 Robert S. Strauss and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin during Mideast peace negotiations, 1979. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-010 President Jimmy Carter and Democratic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss celebrate their victory in the 1976 election. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-011 Robert S. Strauss and his longtime friend, Texas Governor John B,. Connally, enjoy a day at the races. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-012 Robert S. Strauss and his wife Helen are welcomed to the White House by President Ronald Reagan. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-013 Robert S. Strauss and his wife Helen. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-014 Robert S. Strauss and First Lady Nancy Reagan. The First Lady sought Strauss's advice on behalf of her husband, the President. Strauss and Mrs. Reagan became good friends. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-015 President Ronald Reagan and Robert S. Strauss. Although they first met as political adversaries, Reagan and Strauss got along well, and President Reagan benefited from Strauss's advice. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-016 Robert S. Strauss is welcomed to China by the country's premier. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-017 Robert S. Strauss receives the greeeting of an old friend, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. Vice President George H,W. Bush, later president, is seen in the background. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-018 Robert S, Strauss has long been a sought-after speaker on politics and international relations. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-019 Robert S. Strauss, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, in the 1970s. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-020 Robert S. Strauss and his wife Helen with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-021 President George H. W. Bush was the second Republican President to seek the counsel of longtime Democrat Robert S. Strauss. Here the two meet at the White House before Strauss's departure for Russia. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-022 President Jimmy Carter greets Robert S. Strauss and his wife Helen at the White House. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-023 First Lady Rosalynn Carter, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Robert S. Strauss and Helen Strauss at the White House. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-024 Boris Yeltsin, the first elected President of Russia, greets Robert Strauss, the American ambassador. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-025 Speaker of the House of Representatives Carl Albert with Robert Strauss, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, during the Watergate crisis, 1974. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-026 Vice President Walter Mondale with Robert S. Strauss, during the Carter presidency. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-027 Robert S. Strauss and Henry A. Kissinger, trusted advisers to different presidents, compare notes at a Washington party. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-028 Moderator LawrenceSpivak and Robert Strauss on the long-running political discussion program Meet the Press. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-029 Robert S. Strauss, with his mother and his brother, Theodore, in the late 1920s. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
str0-str-jpg-030 Robert S. Strauss, counselor, power broker, attorney and diplomat. Courtesy of Robert S. Strauss
car0-jcl-bwp-042 Rosalynn and Jimmy Carter at home. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library
kin2-bbk-jpg-014 B.B. King, "the Beale Street Blues Boy," at age 23, advertising his show on Memphis radio station WDIA in 1948. Courtesy of B.B. King.
alb1-alb-jpg-001 Edward Albee, three-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Courtesy of Edward Albee
alb1-cor-jpg-002 Edward Albee in 1962, the year of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. © Bettmann/CORBIS
alb1-cor-jpg-003 Edward Albee at work in his Greenwich Village apartment, 1963. © Bettmann/CORBIS
alb1-cor-jpg-004 Edward Albee, three-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. © Christopher Felver/CORBIS
alb1-cor-jpg-005 Playwright Edward Albee receives a Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement, June 6, 2005. © PETER FOLEY/EPA/Corbis
alb1-get-jpg-006 Edward Albee, at home in Greenwich Village with his dog and his paintings, 1967. Truman Moore/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
alb1-get-jpg-007 Edward Albee in rehearsal for his play, The Man Who Had Three Arms, 1981. Ray Fisher/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
alb1-get-jpg-008 Melinda Dillon and Arthur Hill in the original Broadway production of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, 1962. Henry Grossman/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
alb1-get-jpg-009 Edward Albee in London for the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of his play A Delicate Balance, 1967. Hulton Archive/Getty Images
joh2-wwp-jpg-015 Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr. enters the Federal Court in Montgomery, Alabama, January 26, 1959, during one of many courtroom encounters with his old law school classmate, George C. Wallace, later Governor of Alabama. World Wide Photos
joh2-cor-jpg-016 Judge Frank M. Johnson in his chambers, during the 1965 federal civil rights trial of three Klansmen accused of murdering Viola Liuzzo. © Bettman/CORBIS
joh2-cor-jpg-017 Judge Frank M. Johnson at the time of his appointment as FBI Director in 1977. Although approved by the Senate, he would withdraw his name from consideration while recuperating from surgery. © Bettman/CORBIS
joh2-aaa-bwp-018 Judge Frank M. Johnson in his chambers at the Federal Courthouse in Montgomery in the 1960s. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.
joh2-aaa-clp-019 Judge Frank M. Johnson in 1978. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.
joh2-aaa-clp-020 Judge Frank M. Johnson at the bench, Federal Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, in 1978. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.
joh2-aaa-bwp-021 Judge Frank M. Johnson at the time of his reassignment to the newly created Eleventh Circuit, 1981. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.
joh2-aaa-bwp-022 Frank M. Johnson, Jr. (back row, third from left) as a member of the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals created in 1971 to resolve cases arising from the Wage and Price Controls enacted under President Nixon. Courtesy of the Office of Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr.
atv012-bet-bwp-016 American troops landing in Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
joh2-cor-bwp-023 American troops landing in Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944. UPI/Corbis-Bettmann
joh2-cor-bwp-024 Rosa Parks rides at the front of a city bus in Montgomery, after Frank Johnson's decision in Browder v. Gale, desegregating public transportation. © UPI/Bettman
joh2-cor-bwp-025 Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., leaders of the Montgomery bus boycott © UPI/Bettman
joh2-get-jpg-026 Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King on the march from Selma, Alabama, to the state capital in Montgomery, March 1965. Judge Johnson ordered one side of Route 80 to be opened for the march, citing "the enormity of the wrongs" being protested. Hulton|Archive by Getty Images
amb0-cor-jpg-007 Dwight David Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States. Corbis
joh2-cor-jpg-028 Injured Freedom Riders: Future Congressman John Lewis (L) and James Zwerg (R) after being attacked and beaten by segregationists in Montgomery, Alabama, May 20, 1961. © Bettmann/CORBIS
joh2-bet-bwp-029 Rosa Parks in Montgomery after the Supreme Court upheld Judge Johnson's decision outlawing segregation on public transit. © UPI/Bettman
joh2-car-clp-030 James E. (Jimmy) Carter, Jr., 39th President of the United States. Courtesy Jimmy Carter Library
kin1-cor-jpg-012 Coretta Scott King holds her sleeping daughter Bernice at the funeral of her husband, Martin Luther King Jr. Corbis/Bettman
joh2-cor-jpg-031 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King on the five-day march to Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
kin1-cor-jpg-012 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King on the five-day march to Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
mar0-jlc-bwp-046 Wynton Marsalis, Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Photo by Stephanie Berger; Courtesy of Jazz at Lincoln Center
mar0-jlc-bwp-047 Wynton Marsalis, Artistic Director of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Photo by Janusz Kawa; © Sony Music
lew0-bet-bwp-010 Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Their words and actions inspired the young John Lewis. © UPI/Bettman
lew0-cor-jpg-011 John Lewis left his hospital bed to join Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King on the march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama in 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
jon0-quj-bwp-056 Quincy Jones and his lifelong friend Count Basie. from Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones
win0-cor-jpg-022 Former South African President Nelson Mandela greets Oprah Winfrey during a grondbrekaing ceremony for the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa, December 6, 2002. The Oprah Winfrey Foundation contributed $10 million to build the academy. Juda Ngwenya © Reuters/CORBIS
win0-cor-jpg-023 Nobel Prize-winning author Toni Morrison joins Oprah Winfrey on Oprah's Book Club in 1996. © Reuters/CORBIS
win0-cor-jpg-024 Quincy Jones and Oprah Winfrey at the 1995 Academy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles, where Jones received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. & copy; Steve Starr/CORBIS
win0-cor-jpg-025 Oprah Winfrey arrives at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles for the 77th annual Academy Awards, February 27, 2005. © Lucy Nicholson/Reuters/CORBIS
win0-cor-jpg-026 Oprah Winfrey attends the Valentino fashion show in Paris, France, 2004. © Stephane Cardinale/People Avenue/CORBIS
win0-get-jpg-027 Tina Turner performing with Oprah Winfrey on stage at the launch party for Winfrey's new magazine, O , April 17, 2000 in New York City. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
win0-get-jpg-028 Television personality, actress and media entrepreneur Oprah Winfrey with producer and composer Quincy Jones in New York City, 1995. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
win0-get-jpg-029 Oprah Winfrey presents the first issue of her new magazine, O, at the magazine launch party in New York City, April 17, 2001. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
win0-get-jpg-030 TIME magazine featured Oprah on the cover of its October 5, 1998 issue. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
mar0-get-cor-048 Wynton Marsalis triumphed at the 1984 Grammy Awards. © Bettman/CORBIS
mar0-cor-jpg-049 Wynton Marsalis and his proud father, pianist Ellis Marsalis, 1983. © Lynn Goldsmith/CORBIS
mar0-cor-jpg-050 Turmpet legends, Dizzy Gillespie and Wynton Marsalis.
mar0-cor-jpg-051 Wynton Marsalis shares his music with New Orleans schoolchildren, 1993. © Nubar Alexanian/CORBIS
mar0-cor-jpg-051 Wynton Marsalis shares his music with New Orleans schoolchildren, 1993. © Nubar Alexanian/CORBIS
mar0-get-jpg-052 TIME magazine featured Wynton Marsalis on its cover, October 22, 1990. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
mar0-get-jpg-053 Wynton Marsalis in his New York apartment, October 7, 1999. Arnold Newman/Getty Images
elb0-elb-jpg-001 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Peace. Courtesy of IAEA
elb0-cor-jpg-002 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, speaks to the press outside the White House, March 17, 2004 following a meeting with U.S. President George W. Bush. © JASON REED/Reuters/Corbis
elb0-cor-jpg-003 United States Secretary of State Colin Powell confers with Mohamed ElBaradei at UN headquarters in New York, March 7, 2003. © Reuters/CORBIS
elb0-cor-jpg-004 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei displays Nobel Prize diploma and medal during award ceremony in Oslo, Norway, December 10, 2005. © ALEX GRIMM/Reuters/Corbis
elb0-cor-jpg-005 Mohamed ElBaradei as a young man, with his mother, Aida Hegazi, while he was studying Law at the University of Cairo, Egypt. Photo provided by Corbis, courtesy of Mohamed ElBaradei
elb0-cor-jpg-006 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei briefs the media at IAEA headquarters in Vienna, Austria: December 13, 2002. © LEONHARD FOEGER/Reuters/Corbis
elb0-cor-jpg-007 Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei with nuclear inspectors and safety experts of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, Austria: October 13, 2005. © Micheline Pelletier/Corbis
elb0-cor-jpg-008 Mohamed ElBaradei with his wife Aida and daughter Laila, at home in Vienna, 2005. © Micheline Pelletier/Corbis
elb0-aaa-jpg-009 U.S. Congresswoman Jane Harman and Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei discuss global security issues at the International Achievement Summit, Los Angeles, 2006. Academy of Achievement
fue0-fue-jpg-001 Author Carlos Fuentes. Courtesy of Carlos Fuentes
fue0-cor-jpg-002 Author Carlos Fuentes speaks at the Gielgud Theatre in London, England: November 24, 2003. © Rune Hellestad/Corbis
fue0-cor-jpg-003 Mexico's foremost man of letters, Carlos Fuentes, photogrpahed in 1990. © Abilio Lope/CORBIS
fue0-cor-jpg-004 Carlos Fuentes at home in Mexico City in the 1980s. © Sergio Dorantes/CORBIS
fue0-cor-jpg-005 Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes, at home in London, 1985. © Christopher Cormack/CORBIS
fue0-cor-jpg-006 Carlos Fuentes in the study of his London home, 1985. © Christopher Cormack/CORBIS
fue0-cor-jpg-007 Carlos Fuentes poses at his home, San Geronimo in Mexico City: February 11, 2001. Photo by Henry Romero © Reuters/CORBIS
fue0-cor-jpg-008 Carlos Fuentes listens to questions during a UNICEF conference, "Latin America between two millenniums, challenges and hopes." Guatemala City, August 28, 2001. The eyes shown on the poster behind Mr. Fuentes are his own. Photo by Jorge Silva © Reuters/CORBIS
fue0-aaa-jpg-009 Author Carlos Fuentes addresses the Academy of Achievement in Los Angeles, 2006. Academy of Achievement
elb0-jcl-jpg-010 James E. (Jimmy) Carter, Jr., 39th President of the United States. Courtesy of Jimmy Carter Presidential Library
fue0-aaa-jpg-011 Carlos Fuentes is presented with the Golden Plate of the Academy of Achievement by Carlos Slim Helú, Chairman of Teléfonos de México. Academy of Achievement
but0-tim-jpg-022 Five-time Iditarod champion Susan Butcher, with one of her sled dogs. Sports Illustrated
but0-tim-jpg-023 Susan Butcher, at home in Alaska with her sled dogs. Sports Illustrated
tay0-tay-jpg-001 Theater, opera and film director Julie Taymor. Courtesy of Julie Taymor
tay0-cor-jpg-002 Julie Taymor in Los Angeles, prior to the opening of her film, Frida. © Jonathan Alcorn/ZUMA/Corbis
tay0-cor-jpg-003 Theater, opera and film director Julie Taymor. © Rufus F. Folkks/CORBIS
tay0-cor-jpg-004 Director Julie Taymor displays a mask of actor Anthony Hopkins, used in the production of her film, Titus. © MAIMAN RICK/CORBIS SYGMA
tay0-cor-jpg-005 Actor Josh Tower portrays Simba in Julie Taymor's Broadway poduction of The Lion King. © Ralf-Finn Hestoft/Corbis
tay0-cor-jpg-006 Actor Buyisile Zama sings "The Circle of Life" in Julie Taymor's production of The Lion King. © Paul Miller/epa/Corbis
tay0-cor-jpg-007 Mexican painters Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, photographed in Mexico City, 1939. Their tempestuous relationship was recounted in Julie Taymor's award-winning film, Frida. © Bettmann/CORBIS
tay0-cor-jpg-008 Actress Salam Hayek played painter Frida Kahlo in Julie Taymor's film, Frida. © SERVIN HUMBERTO/CORBIS SYGMA
tay0-cor-jpg-009 Julie Taymor's partner in art and life, composer Elliot Goldenthal, won a 2003 Oscar with his original score for their film Frida. Photograph by Lucy Nicholson © Reuters/CORBIS
tay0-cor-jpg-010 Eric Owens sings the monstrous title role in Julie Taymor's world premiere production of Elliot Goldenthal's opera Grendel, Los Angeles, 2006. © Max Morse/Reuters/Corbis
tom0-wwp-jpg-043 Clyde Tombaugh, at home in Las Cruces, New Mexico in 1980. Dale Wittner/AP
min0-min-jpg-001 The Honorable Norman Y. Mineta Courtesy of Norman Mineta
min0-apr-jpg-002 Norman Mineta pauses for a moment of silence during a dedication ceremony at the Heart Mountain Relocation Center, June 25, 2005, AP Photo/The Powell Tribune, Justin Lessman
min0-apr-jpg-003 Alan Simpson and Norman Mineta speak at a dedication of the Heart Mountain Relocation Center, near Powell, Wyoming, June 25, 2005. AP Photo/The Powell Tribune, Justin Lessman
min0-apr-jpg-004 Construction of the Heart Mountain Relocation Center near Powell, Wyoming, 1942. Associated Press
min0-apr-jpg-005 The internment camp at Heart Mountain, Wyoming. AP Photo/Powell Tribune, Steve Moseley
min0-cor-jpg-006 In 1987, Congressman Norman Mineta revisits the spot where he and his family boarded the train that carried them from their home to the internment camp at Santa Anita in 1942. © Roger Ressmeyer/CORBIS
min0-cor-jpg-007 Norman Mineta revisits the childhood home from which he was evacuated in 1942 during the wartime internment of Japanese Americans. © Roger Ressmeyer/CORBIS
min0-cor-jpg-008 Norman Mineta and his sister Helen sit on the steps of the childhood home from which they were evacuated during the forced relocation of Japanese Americans in 1942. © Roger Ressmeyer/CORBIS
min0-cor-jpg-009 Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee in the wake of the terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington DC. September 20, 2001. © Martin H. Simon/Corbis
min0-cor-jpg-010 President William J. Clinton and outgoing Secretary of Commerce William Daly listen as newly appointed Secretary of Commerce Norman Mineta speaks in the Oval Office, June 29, 2000. © Reuters/CORBIS
min0-cor-jpg-011 President George W. Bush listens as Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta makes remarks after his swearing in ceremony at the Oval Office, February 8, 2001. © Reuters/CORBIS
rol0-rol-jpg-001 Sonny Rollins, elder statesman of jazz. Courtesy of Sonny Rollins
rol0-get-jpg-002 Sonny Rollins in 1965, back from his sabbatical and taking on all comers. Photo by Frank Driggs/Frank Driggs Collection/Getty Images
rol0-get-jpg-003 Old friends Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins reunited at The Newport Jazz Festival in 1957. Getty Images
rol0-get-jpg-004 Sonny Rolins in the 1950s, during his first flush of fame. Getty Images
rol0-cor-jpg-005 Sonny Rollins peforms at 20th Century Fox studios during the 2006 International Achievement Summit, as images of his long career appear on a giant screen behind him. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-006 Sonny Rollins performs at 20th Century Fox studios during the 2006 International Achievement Summit, as images of his long career appear on a giant screen behind him. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-007 Sonny Rollins gives an inspired solo performance at the 2006 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-008 Sonny Rollins gives an inspired solo performance at the 2006 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-009 Sonny Rollins gives an inspired solo performance at the 2006 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-010 Sonny Rollins acknowledges applause at the International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-011 Sonny Rollins receives the Gold Medal of the Academy of Achievement from a longtime admirer, basketball great and Academy member Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-012 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-013 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-014 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-015 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-016 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-017 Sonny Rollins accompanies tap dance phenomenon Savion Glover at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. Academy of Achievement
rol0-aaa-jpg-018 Tap dance master Savion Glover pays his respects to jazz legend Sonny Rollins at the International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
and0-and-jpg-001 Dame Julie Andrews, legend of stage and screen. Courtesy of Julie Andrews
and0-aaa-jpg-002 Julie Andrews addresses the Academy of Achievement at 20th Century Fox Studios. Academy of Achievement
and0-aaa-jpg-003 Julie Andrews addresses the Academy of Achievement at 20th Century Fox Studios. Academy of Achievement
and0-get-jpg-004 Julie Andrews in her most popular film, The Sound of Music. Getty Images
and0-get-jpg-005 Julie Andrews as Maria von Trapp in The Sound of Music. Getty Images
and0-get-jpg-006 In the 1950s, Julie Andrews was a regular on the popular BBC radio show Educating Archie. Getty Images
rol0-cor-jpg-019 Saxophonist, bandleader, vocalist, songwriter and all-around entertainer, Louis Jordan was a popular star in the 1940s, and a hero to the young Sonny Rollins. Louis Jordan's style of "jump blues" provided a transition from the swing music of the 1940s to the rock and roll of the 1950s.
rol0-cor-jpg-020 Sonny Rollins takes a break during the recording his 1957 album, Sonny Rollins, Volume II. This photo by Francis Wolff has become one of the iconic images of jazz in the '50s. © Mosaic Images/CORBIS
rol0-cor-jpg-021 Henry Wallace campaigns with President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1940. Wallace served as Vice President through most of World War II. He ran for President himself as the candidate of the Progressive Party in 1948. © Bettman/CORBIS
rol0-cor-jpg-022 Former Vice President Henry Wallace (L) and actor-singer-activist Paul Robeson (R) with U.S. Congressman Vito Marcantonio. First elected as a Republican in 1934, Marcantonio was elected to six more terms in Congress as a member of the American Labor Party. All three men were heroes to the Rollins family of Harlem in the 1940s. They are shown here before a 1949 rally in Madison Square Garden, supporting Marcantonio's unsuccessful campaign for Mayor of New York City. © Bettman/CORBIS
rol0-get-jpg-023 Bassist Charles Mingus, drummer Roy Haynes, pianist Thelonious Monk and saxophonist Charlie Parker performing at New York's Open Door nightclub in 1953. Brilliant musical innovators, Monk and Parker were heroes and mentors to the young Sonny Rollins. Photo by Bob Parent/Getty Images
rol0-get-jpg-024 Charlie Parker (1920-1955), pre-eminent voice of the be-bop era. His genius inspired Sonny Rollins and an entire generation of jazz musicians. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
rol0-get-jpg-025 Sonny Rollins playing at the Berkshire Jazz Festival in 1956. His recordings and performances in the mid-50s made him the dominant saxophonist in American jazz. Getty Images
and0-cor-jpg-007 Julie Andrews in the 1960s, a Broadway star ready to take on Hollywood. © CinemaPhoto/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-008 Julie Andrews at play in the family music room in this 1947 publicity photo. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-014 Richard Burton and Julie Andrew as King Arthur and Guinevere in the original Broadway production of Camelot. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-009 Julie Andrews was rigorously schooled in music from an early age by her pianist mother. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-010 Julie Andrews, age 18, arrives in New York with the English cast of The Boy Friend, 1954. From L to R: Millicent Martin, Stella Claire, Dilys Lay, Julie Andrews. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-011 Julie Andrews in the opening scene of My Fair Lady on Broadway. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-012 Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison in the original Broadway production of My Fair Lady in 1956. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-013 Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Moss Hart directed Julie Andrews in the original productions of My Fair Lady and Camelot. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-015 Friendly rivals Audrey Hepburn and Julie Andrews at the 1965 Academy Awards. Hepburn beat out Andrews for the leading role in the film of My Fair Lady, but Andrews won the year's Best Actress Oscar for her performance in Mary Poppins. © Bettmann/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-016 Julie Andrews scored another fabulous hit in the 1980s with Victor/Victoria. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
and0-cor-jpg-017 Julie Andrews and her real-life leading man, husband Blake Edwards, at their home in Gstaad, Switzerland, 1993. © Pascal Le Segretain/CORBIS SYGMA
deh0-aaa-gif-001 Olivia de Havilland, photographed at the International Achievement Summit in London, England, 2000. © Academy of Achievement
deh0-cor-jpg-002 From L to R: Hatttie McDaniel, Olivia de Havilland and Vivien Leigh in Gone With the Wind, often voted the greatest motion picture of all time. © Sunset Boulevard/Corbis
deh0-get-jpg-003 Olivia de Havilland tries to escape from a hellish mental institution in the 1948 film, The Snake Pit. Getty Images
deh0-cor-jpg-004 From L to R: Producer David Selznick, stars Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland and director George Cukor meet to sign contracts for Gone With the Wind. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-005 Olivia de Havilland and Errol Flynn in a publicity pose for their 1939 film Dodge City. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-006 Olivia de Havilland won two Best Actress Oscars, one for To Each His Own and one for The Heiress. She displays the trophies to photographers in this 1957 picture. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-007 Olivia de Havilland, age one, in Tokyo, Japan. © John Springer Collection/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-008 Teenage Olivia de Havilland and her sister, Joan Fontaine, dressed for a costume party in Saratoga, California, 1934. By the end of the year, Olivia will be in Hollywood. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-009 Olivia de Havilland, as Catherine Sloper in The Heiress, pleads with her father, played by Ralph Richardson, to let her marry the penniless Morris Townsend, played by Mongtgomery Clift. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-010 The great German director Max Reinhardt rehearses his cast for a massive outdoor production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream in Los Angeles, 1934. Olivia de Havilland, age 18, is second from left. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-011 Film director John Huston, serving in the Army Signal Corps, escorts Olivia de Havilland to the 1943 Oscar ceremony before heading overseas. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-cor-jpg-012 Charles Boyer and Olivia de Havilland in a scene from Hold Back the Dawn. © Bettman/CORBIS
deh0-get-jpg-013 Olivia de Havilland as an infant, with her father, Walter A. de Havilland, her mother, Lilian de Havilland (later Fontaine) and two Japanese nurses. Olivia was born in Japan, where her father had a successful patent law practice. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-014 Mickey Rooney as Puck and Olivia de Havilland as Hermia in Max Reinhardt's 1935 film of Midsummer Night's Dream. Rooney and De Havilland were the only two actors from Reinhardt's stage production to be retained for the film. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-015 Actor Bill Goodwin and Olivia de Havilland in To Each His Own (1946). De Havilland won her first Oscar for her complex performance as Josephine Norris in this film. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-016 Olivia de Havilland as Maid Marian, with co-star Errol Flynn in The Adventures of Robin Hood(1938), perhaps the most popular of the many films they made together. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-017 Olivia de Havilland as the selfless Melanie in Gone With the Wind, a performance cherished by genrations of moviegoers. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-018 Olivia de Havilland as Catherine Sloper and Montgomery Clift as Morris Townsend in The Heiress (1949). De Havilland won her second Oscar for her powerful performance in this classic film. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-019 Olivia de Havilland attends a party for the 40th anniversary of Time magazine in 1963. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-020 Olivia de Havilland's performance in The Snake Pit put her on the cover of this December 20, 1948 issue of Time magazine. Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-021 A portrait of Olivia de Havilland in 1945. Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-022 At home in Beverly Hills, California in 1942, Olivia de Havilland reads Transposed Heads, by the exiled German author Thomas Mann. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
deh0-get-jpg-023 A 1938 studio portrait of Olivia de Havilland, at the beginning of her film career. John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images
deh0-cor-jpg-024 Clark Gable embraces co-star Viven Leigh in a memorable scene from Gone With the Wind. © Bettman/CORBIS
cro0-cro-jpg-001 Award-winning singer and songwriter Sheryl Crow. Courtesy of Sheryl Crow
cro0-aaa-jpg-002 Sheryl Crow and two of her bandmates perform at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-003 Songwriter Sheryl Crow performs at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-004 Sheryl Crow singing at the International Achievement Summit in Los Angeles, 2006. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-005 Sheryl Crow played an intimate set of her hit songs for the Academy of Achievement. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-006 Sheryl Crow at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-007 Sheryl Crow performs at the International Achievement Summit, 2006. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-aaa-jpg-008 Sheryl Crow taking a turn on the electric bass. © Academy of Achievement
cro0-get-jpg-009 Sheryl Crow onstage in a solo performance Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images
cro0-get-jpg-010 Sheryl Crow performs on the NBC Today Show at Rockefeller Center in New York City, 2006. Photo by Peter Kramer/Getty Images
cro0-get-jpg-011 Sheryl Crow won Best New Artist and Best Female Rock Vocal Performance prizes at the 1995 Grammy Awards. Dan Groshong/AFP/Getty Images
cro0-get-jpg-012 Sheryl Crow performs a duet with Michael Jackson during a concert in Rome,1988. Photo by Dave Hogan/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
cro0-cor-jpg-013 Sheryl Crow sends a message with her t-shirt at the 2003 American Music Awards. © Frank Trapper/Corbis
cro0-cor-jpg-014 Sheryl Crow cuts loose at the 2004 Snowmass Festival in Aspen, Colorado. © Lynn Goldsmith/Corbis
cro0-cor-jpg-015 Sheryl Crow with her mother Bernice and sister Kathy at Glamour magazine's "Women of the Year 2000" Awards at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. Gregory Pace/ CORBIS SYGMA
cro0-cor-jpg-016 Sheryl Crow in Orlando, California, in 1994, on the brink of the career breakthrough that would make her famous. Neal Preston/CORBIS
vid0-vid-jpg-001 Author and activist Gore Vidal. Courtesy of Gore Vidal
vid0-cor-jpg-002 Gore Vidal's grandfather, Senator Thomas P. Gore of Oklahoma, in his Washington office, 1933. © Bettmann/CORBIS
vid0-cor-jpg-003 Gore Vidal at home in Ravello, Italy in 1987. © Sophie Bassouls/CORBIS SYGMA
vid0-cor-jpg-004 Gore Vidal greets President-elect John F. Kennedy at the Morosco Theater in New York City. JFK has come to see Vidal's political drama The Best Man. © Bettmann/CORBIS
vid0-cor-jpg-005 Gore Vidal in the 1940s. © Corbis
vid0-get-jpg-009 Gore Vidal at work in his studio at La Rondinaia, his villa on Italy's Amalfi Coast, 2004. Getty Images
vid0-get-jpg-006 1933 Time magazine cover featuring Gore Vidal's father, Eugene Vidal, Director of Air Commerce in the Roosevelt administration. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
vid0-get-jpg-007 This 1976 Time magazine saluted Gore Vidal on the publication of his novel, 1876. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
vid0-get-jpg-008 Gore Vidal in his Roman apartment, 1993. Photo by Ulf Andersen/Getty Images
vid0-aaa-jpg-010 Author Gore Vidal speaks at the 2006 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
did0-did-jpg-001 Author Joan Didion, 2006. Courtesy of Joan Didion
did0-get-jpg-002 Joan Didion, a young journalist in the 1960s. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
did0-get-jpg-003 Joan Didion hits the L.A. freeways in a white Stingray in 1970, the year of her L.A. novel Play It As It Lays. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
did0-get-jpg-004 At home in Malibu, Quintana Roo Dunne and her parents, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion, in 1976. Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
did0-cor-jpg-012 Author John Gregory Dunne (1932 - 2003). He and Joan Didion were married for almost 40 years and collaborated on half a dozen screenplays. © Michael Brennan/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-005 Joan Didion in her New York apartment, 2003. © Neville Elder/Corbis
did0-cor-jpg-006 Author Joan Didion in the year 2000. © Christopher Felver/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-007 Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne, partners in life and literature, at home in New York City, 2000. © Richard Schulman/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-008 Joan Didion covered the rise and fall of the '60s counterculture in her books Slouching Towards Bethlehem and The White Album. © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-009 Joan Didion investigates a "Happening" at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park in 1967. © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-010 Joan Didion in San Francisco, conducting research for her non-fiction book, Slouching Towards Bethlehem. © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS
did0-cor-jpg-011 In the era of the New Journalism, Joan Didion combined close observation with emotional detachment. © Ted Streshinsky/CORBIS
rid0-rid-jpg-001 Dr. Sally Ride, America's first woman in space. Courtesy of Sally Ride
rid0-get-jpg-002 The crew of the Space Shuttle Challenger's 1983 mission STS-7. Sally Ride (L), crew commander Robert Crippen (center), pilot Frederick Hauck (R) and mission specialists John Fabian and Norman Thagard. AFP/Getty Images
rid0-cor-jpg-003 Sally Ride arrives at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida in 1983. © Bettmann/CORBIS
rid0-cor-jpg-004 Sally Ride at a press conference before her historic 1983 space mission. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
rid0-cor-jpg-005 Sally Ride and her fellow astronaut, Challenger pilot Frederick Hauck, laugh during a press conference at Edwards Air Force Base, 1983. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
rid0-cor-jpg-006 June 18, 1983: The Challenger is launched into space from Cape Canaveral, Florida. On board is Dr. Sally Ride, America's first woman in space. © Bettmann/CORBIS
rid0-cor-jpg-007 Mission specialist Sally Ride, the first American woman sent into space, totes her own luggage following her arrival at the Kennedy Space Center. © Bettmann/CORBIS
rid0-cor-jpg-008 Sally Ride communicates with ground control from the flight deck of the Earth-orbiting Space Shuttle Challenger. © Bettmann/CORBIS
hal0-hal-jpg-001 Author and journalist David Halberstam (1934-2007). Courtesy of David Halberstam
hal0-apr-jpg-002 David Halberstam in 1964, the year he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting, Associated Press
hal0-apr-jpg-003 David Halberstam at his desk at The New York Times in 1964. Associated Press
hal0-apr-jpg-004 David Halberstam of The New York Times, Malcolm Browne of Associated Press and Neil Sheehan of UPI, between helicopter lifts in the Mekong Delta in 1963. Photo by Horst Faas
hal0-apr-jpg-005 David Halberstam and the Polish actress Elzbieta Czyzewska in Lazienki Park in Warsaw, Poland, 1965. Their romance was a cause celebre of the cold war era. Associated Press
hal0-apr-jpg-006 David Halberstam at work in his New York office in 1993. He had just completed six years of research for his new book, The Fifties. Associated Press; Photo by Mark Lennihan
hal0-apr-jpg-007 Author David Halberstam, 1993. Associated Press; Photo by Mark Lennihan
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geh0-cor-jpg-024 Architect Frank Gehry with the orange fish lamp, a trademark of his work in the 1980s. ©1991 Roger Ressmeyer; Fish Lamp © Frank Gehry & New City Editions/CORBIS
geh0-cor-jpg-025 Frank Gehry's masterpiece, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain. © Jose Fuste Raga/CORBIS
geh0-cor-jpg-026 Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, one of Frank Gehry's signature works. © Tim Street-Porter/Beateworks/Corbis
geh0-cor-jpg-027 A crowd gathers outside the Marques of Riscal's warehouse complex in Elciego, Spain during King Juan Carlos's visit for the 2006 inauguration of the principal building, a hotel designed by Frank Gehry. CORBIS
geh0-cor-jpg-028 Frank Gehry's Walt Disney Concert Hall opened in 2004 in downtown Los Angeles. © Rufus F. Folkks/CORBIS
geh0-cor-jpg-029 Frank Gehry relaxing in one of his Easy Edges cardboard recliners, at the warehouse in 2001. © Tim Street-Porter/Beateworks/Corbis
geh0-cor-jpg-030 The Rasin Building, also known as the Dancing House or the Fred and Ginger Building, designed by Frank Gehry in Prague, Czech Republic. © Paul Seheult/Eye Ubiquitous/Corbis
geh0-cor-jpg-031 Architect Frank Gehry, photographed in 1982. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
geh0-cor-jpg-032 Architect Frank Gehry works on a model for a new building in 1993. Behind him is a model of his well-known Disney Hall. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
geh0-geh-jpg-033 Frank Gehry's Santa Monica residence. A breakthough in his work, it was initially resisted by his Santa Monica neighbors. Frank Gehry & Associates
geh0-geh-jpg-034 Frank Gehry's house in Santa Monica, first completed in 1978, remodeled in 1993. Frank Gehry & Associates
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abd0-cor-jpg-001 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 1985. © Aaron Rapoport/Corbis
abd0-cor-jpg-002 A teenage Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, then known as Lew Alcindor, proudly displays his "Most Valuable Player" trophy after leading his team to victory in the Catholic High School AA championships in New York City, 1965. © Bettmann/CORBIS
abd0-cor-jpg-003 A young Lew Alcindor, later known as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, blocks a shot during a high school basketball game in 1964. © Bettmann/CORBIS
abd0-cor-jpg-004 1970: Lew Alcindor Sr. congratulates his son on being named NBA Rookie of the Year. In his first season as a professional, Lew Alcindor, Jr., the future Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, led the Milwaukee Bucks from last place to the Eastern Division playoffs. © Bettmann/CORBIS
abd0-spi-jpg-005 April 1, 1968 issue of Sports Illustrated shows Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Lew Alcindor) playing for UCLA against Houston. Rich Clarkson/Sports Illustrated
abd0-spi-jpg-006 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar makes a hook shot for the L.A. Lakers in this 1988 game, while Bill Laimbeer of the Detroit Pistons tries to block. Richard Mackson/Sports Illustrated
abd0-spi-jpg-007 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in action against the Philadelphia 76ers in the 1982 finals. Manny Millan/Sports Illustrated
abd0-spi-jpg-008 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar shoots over the head of the Philadelphia 76ers' Caldwell Jones in the 1980 NBA finals. Manny Millan/Sports Illustrated
abd0-apr-jpg-009 UCLA Bruins (L to R) Mike Lynn, Lucius Allen, Mike Warren and Lew Alcindor (later known as Kareem Adul-Jabbar), with coach John Wooden, celebrate after beating North Carolina to win the 1968 NCAA championship. Associated Press
abd0-apr-jpg-010 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar shoots a sky hook in a game against the Utah Jazz in Las Vegas, 1984. Associated Press/Lennox McLendon
abd0-apr-jpg-011 The young Kareem Abdul-Jabbar listens intently to UCLA coach John Wooden during a workout before a 1969 game against Purdue. Associated Press
abd0-spi-jpg-012 The December 5, 1966 issue of Sports Illustrated celebrated Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and his first season at UCLA. Neil Leifer/Sports Illustrated
pag0-pag-jpg-001 The founding CEO of Google, Larry Page, photographed in 2000. Courtesy of Google, Inc.
pag0-aaa-jpg-002 Academy Student Delegates Sergey Brin and Larrry Page return to the International Achievement Summit as Honorees of the Academy in Chicago, 2004. Academy of Achievement
pag0-aaa-jpg-003 Larry Page addresses the Academy of Achievement at the 2005 Summit in New York City. Academy of Achievement
pag0-apr-jpg-004 Google co-founders Larry Page, left, and Sergey Brin at company headquarters in Mountain View, California, January 15, 2004. Associated Press/Ben Margot
pag0-apr-jpg-005 Google founders Sergey Brin, left, and Larry Page answer questions from journalists in Bangalore, India, October 13, 2004. Associated Press/Gautam Singh
pag0-apr-jpg-006 Google co-founders Sergey Brin, right, and Larry Page speak with reporters in Mountain View, California, May 10, 2006, discussing the release of the Desktop 4 file-search utility. Associated Press/Noah Berger
pag0-apr-jpg-007 Google co-founder Sergey Brin during a news conference at IndTV offices in San Francisco, April 4, 2005 as he joins former U.S. Vice President Al Gore in unveiling a new television network called Current. Associated Press/Paul Sakuma
pag0-cor-jpg-008 Larry Page, co-founder of Google, gives a keynote speech at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Page revealed a new service that will give consumers access to many features in one software download called Google Pack. Page also revealed an agreement with CBS and the National Basketball Association to provide video downloads of TV shows and games . © Barry Sweet/epa/Corbis
pag0-cor-jpg-009 Google Co-Founders Larry Page (L), Co-Founder and President for Products, and Sergey Brin, Co-Founder and President for Technology, at Google's campus headquarters in Mountain View, California, April 8, 2003. © Kim Kulish/Corbis
pag0-cor-jpg-010 Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, at Allen and Company's 23rd Annual Media Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, July 6, 2005. © Peter Foley/epa/Corbis
pag0-apr-jpg-011 Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page at the International Book Fair in Frankfurt, Germany, 2004. Associated Press
pag0-pag-jpg-012 The founding President of Google, Sergey Brin, photographed in 2000. Courtesy of Google, Inc.
pri0-pri-tif-001 Harold Prince, master showman. Courtesy of Harold Prince)
pri0-cor-jpg-002 Harold Prince, producer and director, in the 1970s. © John Springer Collection/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-003 Harold Prince, at work in the theater in the 1980s. © Jacques M. Chenet/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-004 Larry Kert and Carol Lawrence as Tony and Maria in the original Broadway production of West Side Story, produced by Harold Prince in 1957. © Bettmann/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-005 Zero Mostel as Tevye in the original 1964 Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof, produced by Harold Prince. © Bettmann/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-006 Eugene O' Neill (1888-1953), the American playwright. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1936. Young Harold Prince read his plays avidly.
© Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-007 Playwright, director and producer George Abbott (1887-1995), Harold Prince's mentor in the theater. He is shown here in 1955, between directing the Pajama Game and Damn Yankees with Prince as producer.
© Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-008 Choreographer Bob Fosse (1927-1987) staged the musical numbers for Harold Prince's shows Pajama Game, Damn Yankees and New Girl In Town. He too later became a successful director. © John Springer Collection/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-009 Jerome Robbins (1918 -1998), Broadway director and ballet choreographer, shown here in the early 1960s, between directing West Side Story and Fiddler on the Roof for producer Harold Prince. © Bettmann/CORBIS
pri0-apw-jpg-010 Joel Grey as the Master of Ceremonies in Hal Prince's original Broadway production of Cabaret in 1966. © Associated Press
pri0-cor-jpg-011 Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman, stars of Harold Prince's production, The Phantom of the Opera, London, 1986.
© Deborah Feingold/Corbis
pri0-cor-jpg-012 Orson Welles in his famous modern-dress production of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar in 1938. Welles's dramatic staging made a deep impression on the young Harold Prince. Photograph by Cecil Beaton. © Conde Nast Archive/CORBIS
pri0-apw-jpg-013 Composer Kurt Weill and his wife, singer and actress Lotte Lenya, at home in 1942. The composer and star of the The Threepenny Opera, they fled Germany for the United States in the 1930s. Harold Prince dramatized their love story in his 2007 musical LoveMusik. Associated Press
pri0-cor-jpg-014 Joel Grey as the sinister Master of Ceremonies in Cabaret, a role devised for him by director Harold Prince. Grey won a Tony for his performance on Broadway, and an Oscar when he repeated the role in the film version. © Douglas Kirkland/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-015 Jerome Robbins rehearses dancers for the 1961 film version of West Side Story. Harold Prince cites Robbins's influence on his own work.
© Bettmann/CORBIS
pri0-cor-jpg-016 Composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim. Harold Prince directed many of Sondheim's most memorable shows, including Sweeney Todd and A Little Night Music. © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
lea0-lea-jpg-001 Richard Leakey, paleoanthropologist and conservationist. Courtesy of Richard Leakey
lea0-get-jpg-002 A 1977 Time magazine cover shows Richard Leakey with a representation of Homo habilis. Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
lea0-apw-jpg-003 Richard Leakey addresses the local and international press in front of the National Museums in Nairobi, 1996. Leakey formed the opposition Safina party to oppose abuses like the illegal sale of Museum land to a private individual. Associated Press
lea0-apw-jpg-004 1995: At a press conference at Safina party headquarters, Richard Leakey displays whip lashes he received in an attack outside a court house. He accused police and supporters of the ruling party of participating in the attack. Associated Press
lea0-cor-jpg-005 As Director of the Kenya Wildlife Service, Richard Leakey, burned tons of contraband elephant tusks, the ivory off the international market and to discourage the illegal killing of elephants. © Andrew Holbrooke/Corbis
lea0-cor-jpg-006 Louis Leakey takes measurements of a 600,000 year old hominid skull found in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. As a boy, Richard Leakey accompanied his father and mother on all their expeditions. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-007 Anthropologists Donald Johanson (L) and Richard Leakey (R), hold a joint news conference in 1978 to announce new discoveries in the Great Rift Valley. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-008 In 2001, Richard Leakey resigned his cabinet position in Kenya's government. Here he is seen leaving Kenya's high court after answering accusations used to drive him from office. © Reuters/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-009 Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, the site of the Leakey family's discovery of early human fossils. © Wolfgang Kaehler/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-010 Kenyan palaeoanthropologist Richard Leakey. Christopher Cormack/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-011 Dr. Louis Leakey and his wife Mary Leakey display the skull of a human ancestor, Zinjanthropus, in 1959. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-012 Mary Leakey displays the mold of footprints left by two-legged human ancestors 3.6 million years ago. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-013 Louis and Mary Leakey, digging for fossils in 1961. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-014 Richard Leakey showing casts of 2.5 million-year-old human skull and leg bones at a London press conference, 1972. © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS
lea0-cor-jpg-015 Richard Leakey, conducting field work in Kenya, 1981. © William Campbell/Sygma/Corbis
lea0-cor-jpg-016 Richard Leakey with an Australopithecus skull. © William Campbell/Sygma/Corbis
lea0-cor-jpg-017 As Secretary General of the Kenyan opposition party Safina, Richard Leakey could not be intimidated. © GILBERT LIZ/CORBIS SYGMA
lea0-cor-jpg-018 Richard Leakey speaks at a Safina party press conference in 1995. For two years, the government of Kenya refused to legally recognize the opposition party. © GILBERT LIZ/CORBIS SYGMA
lea0-cor-jpg-019 Richard Leakey, photographed in London, 1972. © William Campbell/Sygma/Corbis
lea1-ngs-jpg-003 Meave Leakey and her daughter, Louise Leakey, at Lake Turkana. National Geographic
lea1-cor-jpg-004 Complete Homo erectus skull unearthed by Meave Leakey's team at Lake Turkana in 2000. Associated Press
lea1-ngs-jpg-005 Richard Leakey, unearthing a fossil in the 1970s. National Geographic
lea1-cor-jpg-006 Louis Leakey takes measurements of a 600,000 year old hominid skull found in the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. As a boy, Richard Leakey accompanied his father and mother on all their expeditions. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-007 Anthropologists Donald Johanson (L) and Richard Leakey (R), hold a joint news conference in 1978 to announce new discoveries in the Great Rift Valley. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-008 Meave Leakey speaks at the 2004 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
lea1-cor-jpg-009 Meave Leakey acknowledges applause after her presentation at the 2004 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
lea1-cor-jpg-010 Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, the site of the Leakey family's discovery of early human fossils. © Wolfgang Kaehler/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-011 Dr. Louis Leakey and his wife Mary Leakey display the skull of a human ancestor, Zinjanthropus, in 1959. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-012 Mary Leakey displays the mold of footprints left by two-legged human ancestors 3.6 million years ago. © Bettmann/CORBIS
lea1-aaa-jpg-013 Meave Leakey receives the Golden Plate award from archaeologist Kent Weeks at the 2004 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
lea1-cor-jpg-014 Searching for fossils in Olduvai Gorge. © Ric Ergenbright/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-015 Sifting sediment for fossil fragments. © Ric Ergenbright/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-016 Excavation in Olduvai Gorge, the first of the great East African paleontological sites. © Ric Ergenbright/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-017 Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania. Louis Leakey took the young Meave Epps for a tour of this historic site shortly after her arrival in Africa. © Wolfgang Kaehler/CORBIS
lea1-cor-jpg-019 Richard Leakey, photographed in London, 1972. © William Campbell/Sygma/Corbis
man0-man-jpg-001 Super Bowl champion quarterback Peyton Manning. Courtesy of Peyton Manning
man0-aaa-jpg-002 Peyton Manning at the 2007 International Achievement Summit. Academy of Achievement
man0-cor-jpg-003 Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning (18) in action against the Baltimore Ravens, January 13, 2007. The Colts won 15-6 to win the AFC championship. © Icon SMI/Corbis
man0-cor-jpg-004 Peyton Manning celebrates with his fellow Colts after beating the Chicago Bears 29-17 at Super Bowl XLI in Miami, Florida. © Tomasso DeRosa/Corbis
man0-cor-jpg-005 Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning leaves the field with turf on his helmet, after the second quarter of the 2004 AFC Championship game. © Mike Blake/Reuters/Corbis
man0-cor-jpg-006 Two generations of quarterbacks: Archie, Eli and Peyton Manning meet the media at Tavern on the Green in New York City, April 22, 2004. Two days later, Eli Manning would be the first player selected in the NFL Draft. © David Bergman/Corbis
man0-cor-jpg-007 Peyton Manning, playing for the University of Tennessee, gets last minute advice from coach Phil Fulmer before going into action against the University of Florida, 1997. © Corbis
man0-cor-jpg-008 Peyton Manning watches from the sideline during the 2005 AFC Divisional playoff against the New England Patriots. © Jessica Rinaldi/Reuters/Corbis
ber1-ber-jpg-001 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, father of the World Wide Web. Courtesy of Sir Timothy Berners-Lee
ber1-aaa-jpg-002 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, Director of the World Wide Web Consortium. © Academy of Achievement
ber1-aaa-jpg-003 A pair of knights: Sir Timothy Berners-Lee and Sir Roger Bannister meet at the 2007 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
ber1-aaa-jpg-004 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee receives the Golden Plate award of the Academy of Achievement from journalist Thomas L. Friedman. © Academy of Achievement
ber1-aaa-jpg-006 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee at the 2007 International Achievement Summit © Academy of Achievement
ber1-get-jpg-009 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee smiles after planting a cherry tree in the gardens at Sans Souci Palace in Potsdam, Germany. The tree-planting was part of the ceremony surrounding the Quadriga Award, given to Berners-Lee in Berlin on October 3, 2005 Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images
ber1-get-jpg-010 UN Secretary General Kofi Annan Timothy Berners-Lee meet with schoolchildren during the UN Summit on the Information Society, in Geneva, Switzerland, 2003. Jean-Philippe Ksiazek/AFP/Getty Images)
ber1-get-jpg-011 Timothy Berners-Lee fell in love with electronics at an early age. His creation of the World Wide Web made the once-obscure Internet accessible to millions of computer users around the world. Photo By Catrina Genovese/Getty Images
ber1-get-jpg-012 Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, receiving the Quadriga award in Berlin on October 3, 2005. The Quadriga awards are bestowed every year, on the anniversary of German reunification, to reward individuals for their vision, courage and sense of social responsibility. Marcus Brandt/AFP/Getty Images
ber1-get-jpg-013 Timothy Berners-Lee speaks at a press conference in Helsinki, Finland after receiving the first ever Millennium Technology Prize. Jaakko Avikainen/AFP/Getty Images
par1-par-jpg-001 Playwright Suzan-Lori Parks. Courtesy of Suzan-Lori Parks
par1-aaa-jpg-002 Suzan-Lori Parks addresses the Academy of Achievement. "Practice radical inclusion. This is just inclusion. Radical inclusion is bigger." © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-003 "I stand on one foot a lot. I think I was a flamingo last time." Suzan-Lori Parks at the 2007 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-004 "I plugged one extension cord into the other. That was lights up." Suzan-Lori Parks recounts her early theatrical adventures. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-005 Suzan-Lori Parks makes a characteristically ebullient presentation at the 2007 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-006 "I used to be little, but I was never small." Suzan-Lori Parks at the 2007 International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-007 Suzan-Lori Parks and her husband, bluesman Paul Oscher, at the Banquet of the Golden Plate. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-008 Suzan-Lori Parks receives the Academy of Achievement's Golden Plate award from poet and novelist N. Scott Momaday. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-009 "I'm a ham!" playwright Suzan-Lori Parks proclaims at the International Achievement Summit. © Academy of Achievement
par1-aaa-jpg-010 Suzan-Lori Parks meets student Honor Delegates of the Academy of Achievement. © Academy of Achievement
par1-cor-jpg-011 Mos Def and Suzan-Lori Parks celebrate outside the Ambassador Theatre after learning her play Topdog/Underdog had won the Pulitzer Prize. Mos Def played the role of Booth in the play. © Steve Sands/New York Newswire/Corbis
par1-cor-jpg-012 Suzan-Lori Parks in the study of her home in Venice, California, 2003. On the shelf behind her is a double photograph of her mentor, author James Baldwin. © Jamie Painter Young/Corbis
par1-cor-jpg-013 Suzan-Lori Parks at home in Brooklyn, New York, 2002. © Todd France/Corbis
par1-cor-jpg-014 Suzan-Lori Parks at home in Brooklyn, New York, 2002. © Todd France/Corbis
par1-cor-jpg-015 Suzan-Lori Parks and her husband, blues musician Paul Oscher, at home in Brooklyn, 2002. © Todd France/Corbis
par1-cor-jpg-016 Novelist and civil rights activist James Baldwin (1924-1987), the author of Go Tell It on the Mountain and other works. As her creative writing teacher, he was the first to suggest that Suzan-Lori Parks apply her creative talents to the theater. He called her "a beautiful and astounding creature." © Corbis
par1-apw-jpg-017 Suzan-Lori Parks celebrates in front of Broadway's Ambassador Theater shortly after learning her play, Topdog/Underdog, had won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The play had opened on Broadway the night before. Associated Press
par1-get-jpg-018 Suzan-Lori Parks arrives at the opening night of Topdog/Underdog at the Ambassador Theater in New York City. April 7, 2002. Getty Images