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  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-7.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-6.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-3.jpg
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13912-4.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13914-6.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13918-10.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25832.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25826.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25821.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25819.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 25.tif
  • Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon Dr. Edward Fields gives an inflammatory speech at a KKK rally near the town of Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 13_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_Ken Hawkins03.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-9.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-10.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-4.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-5.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-6.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-7.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-8.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-2.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-3.tif
  • Candace Gingrich born June 2, 1966 is an American LGBT rights activist at the Human Rights Campaign. Candace is the half-sibling of former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who is more than 20 years Candace's senior.<br />
Although Gingrich's sexual orientation was publicly reported on as early as 1994, they first gained significant press attention in 1995 as a spokesperson for gay rights. They served as the Human Rights Campaign's National Coming Out Project Spokesperson for 1995 and was named one of Esquire's "Women We Love" and "Women of the Year" for Ms. magazine. They are currently the Senior Manager of the Human Rights Campaign's Youth & Campus Outreach, as well as the Human Rights Campaign's HRC University Internship Program coordinator.[10] Their autobiography, Accidental Activist: A Personal and Political Memoir, was released in 1996.<br />
Gingrich has guest-starred on the television sitcom Friends in January 1996, in which they officiated over a commitment ceremony for two recurring characters in the episode "The One With the Lesbian Wedding".They also appeared on the debut of Al Franken's TV program Lateline in 1998.<br />
Gingrich endorsed President Barack Obama in 2012, despite Newt Gingrich's candidacy for the Republican nomination.<br />
Gingrich married playwright Rebecca Jones in 2009. The Gingrich-Joneses lived in Hyattsville, Maryland, where Gingrich played rugby with the Washington Furies. In 2013 it was reported the couple were divorcing. In 2017, Gingrich married Kelly Cassidy, a member of the Illinois House of Representatives
    © Ken Hawkins Candice Gingrich-1.tif
  • Bay Buchanan, sister of 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-10.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-8.jpg
  • Bay Buchanan, sister of 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-9.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-4.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-1.jpg
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-2.jpg
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13915-7.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13917-9.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13913-5.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13916-8.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13910-2.tif
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13909-1.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25831.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25830.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25829.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25828.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25824.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25823.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLAMAR ALEXANDER-25818.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan20.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 29.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 30.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 26.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 02.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 02.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 08.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 07.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 05.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 01.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 04.tif
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 12_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Female Ku Klux Klan members sign a new member to their cause at a rally where Ku Klux Klan members simulated the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 11_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Hooded Klansmen at cross burning at Ku Klux Klan rally - Macon, Georgia - 1975.
    Ku Klux Klan 10_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Ku Klux Klan members simulate the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 03_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Cross Burning at Ku Klux Klan Rally - Macon, Georgia - 1975.
    Ku Klux Klan 02_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Flashing the "W" or "white power" symbol, Ku Klux Klan members simulate the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 04_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 05_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 09_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • A Ku Klux Klan member wipes a bayonet with a clump of grass at a KKK rally in Macon, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 01_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins38...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins38...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins38...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins39...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins38...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins39...tif
  • Supporters of Texas billionaire businessman  Ross Perot and the Reform Party staged rallies and demonstrations around the United States to draft Perot as a presidential candidate in the 1992 election.<br />
In the 1992 election, he received 18.9% of the popular vote, approximately 19,741,065 votes -but no electoral college votes - making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
    © Ken Hawkins RossPerot_KenHawkins39...tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_KenHawkins09.tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_Ken Hawkins01.tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_Ken Hawkins05.tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_Ken Hawkins04.tif
  • A rain-soaked President George H.W. Bush campaigns for a second four year term as President of the United States in Woodstock, Georgia.  Bush was unsuccessful in his bid, losing to Bill Clinton.
    © Ken Hawkins GHW Bush_Ken Hawkins02.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLamar Alexander_KenHawk...tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLamar Alexander_KenHawk...tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLamar Alexander_KenHawk...tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLamar Alexander_KenHawk...tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan speaks at a campaign rally in Marietta, Georgia.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan-5.jpg
  • Radio talk show host Don Imus on the air from the Georgia Governor's Mansion in 1997.Governor Zell Miller, guest. John Donald Imus Jr. (born July 23, 1940) is an American former radio personality, television show host, recording artist, and author. He is known for his radio show Imus in the Morning which aired on various stations and digital platforms nationwide until 2018. A former railroad brakeman and miner, Imus attended broadcasting school in the 1960s and secured his first radio job in 1968 at KUTY in Palmdale, California. Three years later, he landed the morning spot at WNBC in New York City before his firing in 1977.<br />
<br />
In 1979, Imus returned to WNBC and stayed at the station until 1988 when the show moved to WFAN. Imus gained widespread popularity when the show entered national syndication in 1993. He was labelled a shock jock radio host throughout his later career and his programs have been popular and controversial.[1] After nearly 50 years on the air, Imus retired from broadcasting in March 2018
    _KH13911-3.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 22.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 03.tif
  • 1992 Republican Presidential candidate Pat Buchanan and his wife Shelly at campaign stops at a Barbecue restaurant in rural Elijah, Georgia, saying the pledge of allegiance in Marietta, Georgia and in television ads in the Atlanta broadcast market.
    © Ken Hawkins Pat Buchanan 1992 06.tif
  • Tennessean Lamar Alexander makes his first run for governor of Tennessee by crisscrossing the state in his red and black plaid shirt and his down home, man of the people manner. 1979
    © Ken HawkinsLamar Alexander_KenHawk...tif

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