Helen Keller
Author and humanitarian Helen Keller, who is deaf and blind since childhood, is shown during her documentary film, "The Unconquered," on June 18, 1954. The movie, also known as "Helen Keller in Her Story," won an Academy Award as the best feature length documentary in 1955. (AP Photo)
Bill Russell On School Segregation 1963
Boston Celtics' star Bill Russell talks with newsmen about the boycott of Boston public schools by African Americans, June 18, 1963, in Boston. Russell spoke to some of the estimated 3,000 children who stayed away from regular classes but attended special sessions called by black leaders. Children were asked to stay away from regular classes by their parents in protest against what they said was actual if not legal segregation. (AP Photo/Frank Curtin)
Sports Car Club of America National Race
Actor Paul Newman patiently waits for his race to starts at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio Sunday, June 18, 1982. Newman, driving a turbocharged Datsun ZX in the GT-1 Class, finished in second place in the Sports Car Club of America National race for C production, D production and GT-1 models. (AP Photo/Fred Squillante)
Animal Actors 1987
"Project X" trainers Hubert Wells, left, Cheryl Harris and Mark Harden sit on the tailgate of a truck, June 18, 1987 outside the Los Angeles Press Club with Masiuio, one of the chimps used in the film. According to the trio, no one - animal or human - was injured in the course of filming despite allegations of abuse by a movie technician that trainers clubbed the chimps with blackjacks. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)
1994 World Cup
The crowd cheers at the Pontiac, Mich., Silverdome as the United States and Switzerland played their World Cup soccer championship Group a first round match on Saturday, June 18, 1994. The match in the Silverdome was the first World Cup game ever played indoors. (AP Photo/Bill Waugh)
Bruce Springsteen, Clarence Clemons,
FILE - In this Friday Sept. 28, 2007 file picture, Clarence Clemons, left, and Bruce Springsteen, right, perform on the NBC "Today" television program in New York's Rockefeller Center. A spokeswoman for Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band says saxophone player Clarence Clemons has died in Florida at age 69 on Saturday, June 18, 2011 .(AP Photo/Richard Drew, file)