Giuliani, wife each married three timesRepublican presidential contender Rudy Giuliani has been married three times and, as it turns out, so has his wife. The campaign confirmed Friday that Judith Nathan Giuliani was married twice _ not once _ before she wed the former New York City mayor in 2003. It was Giuliani's third marriage, and, until Thursday, had been thought to be his wife's second. Mrs. Giuliani told The New York Post in an article on its Web site Thursday night that Giuliani was, in fact, her third husband. Her first marriage was to Jeffrey Scott Ross in 1974, when she was about 20. They divorced in 1979. She then met and married Bruce Nathan. They divorced in the 1990s. Campaign aides said Giuliani, close friends and family members had long been aware of her first marriage. Asked about the revelation, Giuliani told reporters during a campaign stop Friday in Oakland, Calif., that he and his wife knew everything about each other. "The core of a really good relationship is being honest with each other. And, frankly, information like that is really relevant (only) between the two of us," he said. Giuliani's first marriage to his second cousin, Regina Peruggi, ended in divorce after 14 years and was annulled. His second marriage, to TV personality Donna Hanover, ended in a bitter divorce after he announced their breakup at a news conference in 2000. ___ LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Some of California's deep-pocketed Democratic donors will be out in force Saturday at a Beverly Hills fundraiser for party front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. The campaign expects to raise $2 million. Clinton's fundraiser is expected to draw 1,000 people to billionaire Ron Burkle's estate, with tickets starting at $2,300. A $4,600 donation includes a VIP reception. The host committee includes more than two dozen people, including producer Steve Bing, former California Gov. Gray Davis and investment banker Sim Farar. March 31 marks the close of fundraising for the first quarter on the year, and the figures that candidates turn in will be judged as a measure of political strength. The tightly packed 2008 primary schedule will handicap any candidate who fails to raise enough cash to compete in numerous states simultaneously. Bill Clinton reminded supporters of that deadline in a short video and blast e-mail Friday. "I know Hillary will be the best president. If you agree, I hope you'll send in a contribution and support her campaign. And please, do it by the March 31st deadline," he said. New York's Democratic senator is only one of several contenders who will sweep through southern California, a traditional spigot of political dollars, in the closing days of the month. Republican Mitt Romney wants to sign up supporters who can raise as much as $250,000 for his presidential campaign at a Los Angeles fundraiser Tuesday at the home of developer Rick Caruso. The event is being co-hosted by California venture capitalist Brad Freeman, a major fundraiser for President Bush, and money manager Robert A. Day. Democrat John Edwards and Republican Rudy Giuliani will also swing through for events. ___ MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) _ Don't expect Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney to endorse hair dye products anytime soon. The former governor of Massachusetts laid to rest on Friday any rumors that he dyes his hair black. His sleek dark coif, with just a hint of gray on his sideburns, is completely natural, he told reporters following a fundraiser in Milwaukee. "I don't dye it. I don't color it and you can take a real close camera shot and see there's a lot of gray mixed in with all that black," said a laughing Romney. Earlier this month Romney turned 60, an age when many men are forced to decide between coloring their hair or living gray. Though Romney hasn't had to think about that just yet _ or so he says _ his campaign advisers worry that his hair is too perfect, according to an internal campaign document that recently surfaced in the media. Romney is trailing in polls behind two older, hair-challenged candidates _ former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, who is mostly bald, and Sen. John McCain of Arizona, whose hair is white. ___ Associated Press writers Michael Blood in Los Angeles, Emily Fredrix in Milwaukee, Wis., and Laura Kurtzman in Oakland, Calif., contributed to this report.
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