106
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 08:08 pm
LOL, Bob, so where is the list of things men are looking for in women of various ages? Hmmm?

Just emailed Letty to make sure everything is OK with her.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 08:15 pm
Hi Diane. As you know men are simpler than women. The answer too is as simple as men.
0 Replies
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 08:26 pm
Hee, hee, I just thought you were chicken....
0 Replies
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 08:28 pm
Reading your post made me remember some of the photos you brought to one of the Boston gatherings. What about posting a few on this thread? The hawks and eagles are so beautiful.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 08:50 pm
No, I'm not chicken......I'm hawk. Reason I don't post pictures is I don't know how. See, we're simple. BTW, I of course brought new pictures to the Diddies meeting in Boston. I'm eagerly looking forward to August and a new banding season. My pal Mike has now been banding for over 55 years.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 09:02 pm
THE HANGING TREE
(M. David - J. Livingston)
MARTY ROBBINS ( 1959)

I came to town to search for gold
And I brought with me a memory
And I seem to hear the nightwind cry
Go hang your dreams on the hanging tree
Your dreams of love that could never be (never be)
Hang your faded dreams on the hanging tree
(The hanging tree)

I searched for gold and I found my gold
And I found a girl who loved just me
And I wished that I could love her too
But I'd left my heart on the hanging tree
But I'd left my heart with the memory (memory)
And the faded dream on the hanging tree
(The hanging tree)

Now there were men who craved my gold
And men to take my gold from me
When a man is gone, he needs no gold
So they carried me to the hanging tree
To join my dreams and a memory (a memory)
Yes, they carried me to the hanging tree
(The hanging tree)

To really live, you must almost die (wop-do-wah)
And it happened just that way with me (wop-do-wah)
They took the gold and set me free
And I walked away from the hanging tree
I walked away from the hanging tree (the hanging tree)
And my own true love, she walked with me
That's when I knew that the hanging tree
Was a tree of life, new life for me
A tree of hope, new hope for me
A tree of love, new love for me
The hanging tree (the hanging tree)
The hanging tree (the hanging tree)
The hanging tree
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 09:10 pm
Allan Sherman

Strange Things In My Soup


(parody of "Strangers In The Night" by Frank Sinatra)
Soupy doopy doop,
Oh soupy doopy.
Soupy doopy doop,
Oh soupy doopy.
Strange things in my soup,
That's what I found there.
Little tiny things
That move around there.
Looking down I see,
They're looking up at me.
Strange things can be seen,
They're scattered sparsely.
Strange things that are green,
But are not parsely.
In my bowl they've made
Their little aquacade.
Soup was meant to be
Completely free of all extraneous debris
Except for now and then a noodle or some rice
But these things aren't nice.
See them swimming, splashing, thriving,
Holy smoke, they're scuba diving.
In my bouillabaisse
I looked and then I
Saw a tiny face
With large antennae
And I heard him say,
"Ooh, the soup is good today."
I let out a whoop,
I hollered, "Waiter, there are Strangers in my soup!"
And when he came I said, "Now I'm a connoisseur,
I ordered soup de jour."
He said, "Look, I'm just a waiter,
You need an exterminator.
You ordered soup de jour,
I knew you dug soup.
I brought the soup de jour,
Today it's bug soup.
That explains the group
Of strangers in your soup."
Soupy doopy doop,
Oh soupy doopy.
Soupy doopy doop,
Oh soupy doopy.
Soupy doopy doop...
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 31 May, 2005 09:29 pm
Cecilia

Chorus
Cecilia, you're breaking my heart,
You're shaking my confidence daily.
Oh cecilia, I'm down on my knees,
I'm begging you please to come home.

Chorus

Making love in the afternoon with cecilia
Up in my bedroom,
I got up to wash my face
When I come back to bed,
Someone's taken my place.

Chorus

Jubilation,
She loves me again,
I fall on the floor and I'm laughing

Jubilation,
She loves me again,
I fall on the floor and I'm laughing.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 03:25 am
Pat Boone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Pat Boone (born June 1, 1934) is a singer whose smooth style made one of the most popular performers of the 1950s and 1960s. His cover versions of rhythm and blues hits had a major impact on the development of the broad popularity of rock and roll. He is also an actor and television personality.


Biography and career

Born Charles Eugene Patrick Boone in Jacksonville, Florida, USA, Boone is a direct descendent of the legendary American pioneer Daniel Boone. He grew up in Nashville, Tennessee, attended David Lipscomb College and began recording in 1954 for Republic Records. His 1955 version of "Ain't That a Shame" was a hit, selling far better than Fats Domino's original version. This set the stage for the early part of Boone's career, which focused on reworking R&B hits with a cleaner image, bringing rock 'n' roll tunes to a much wider audience, but also brought attention to the original artists. Little Richard once said "Pat Boone is the man who made me a millionaire."

Known as "The Kid in White Buck Shoes", Boone sported a cleancut image that appealed to teens and parents alike. His singing style, a rich baritone, followed in the tradition of his idol, Bing Crosby. Preferring to carry on in the Crosby tradition, he soon began turning more and more to ballads. Some of his biggest hits included "Love Letters In The Sand" (with the instrumental break featuring Boone's whistling), "April Love", "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)", and "Don't Forbid Me".

His teen idol popularity in the late 1950s was secondary only to that of Elvis Presley, and like Elvis, soon tried his hand at acting. Pat's pictures were fewer in number than Elvis', but significantly higher in quality, including 1960's Journey to the Center of the Earth along with Hollywood notable James Mason.

His recording of the theme song from the 1957 film 'April Love' topped the charts for six weeks and was nominated for an Academy Award. Pat also wrote the theme song for the movie Exodus.

A devout born-again Christian, he refused both songs and movie roles that he felt might compromise his standards, including a role opposite the decade's reigning sex symbol, Marilyn Monroe. Among his other achievements, he hosted a TV series in the late 1950s, and began writing in the early 1960s, a series of self-help books for adolescents, including Twixt Twelve and Twenty.

The British Invasion effectively ended Boone's career as a hitmaker, though he continued recording throughout the 60s. In the 1970s, he switched to gospel and country, and he continued performing in other media as well, most importantly radio. He's currently working as the deejay of a popular oldies show, and runs his own record company which provides a much-welcomed outlet for new recordings by 1950s greats who can no longer find a place with the major labels.

Boone married Shirley Lee Foley, daughter of Red Foley in 1953, and they had four daughters: Cherry, Lindy, Debby Boone, and Laury. In the '60s and '70s the Boone family toured as gospel singers and made gospel albums, such as The Pat Boone Family and The Family Who Prays.

In 1997, Boone released No More Mr. Nice Guy, a collection of heavy metal covers revamped to fit Pat Boone's style. To promote the album, he appeared at the American Music Awards in black leather, shocking audiences and losing his respectability among his largest constituency, conservative Christians. He was then fired from Gospel America, a TV show on the Trinity Broadcasting Network. About a year later, the controversy died down and many fans accepted his explanation of the leather outfit being a "parody of himself". He was re-hired by TBN and Gospel America was brought back.

In recent decades, a contingent of rock 'n' roll fans and fans of "African American music," as it was known, have successfully boycotted Pat Boone's cover records from the majority of oldies stations. Despite his having played a crucial role in the popularization of rock 'n' roll, he has yet to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. However, in 2003 the Gospel Music Association of Nashville, Tennessee recognized his gospel recording work by inducting him in its Gospel Music Hall of Fame.

Boone lives in Los Angeles, California with his wife Shirley. They are influential and respected members of The Church on the Way in LA's San Fernando Valley.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Boone


April Love

-Artist: Pat Boone
-the # 20 hit of the 1955-1959 rock era
-was # 1 for 6 weeks in 1957
-title song from the 1957 movie starring Boone and Shirley Jones
Words by Paul Francis Webster and Music by Sammy Fain


April love is for the very young
Every star's a wishing star that shines for you
April love is all the seven wonders
One little kiss can tell you this is true




Sometimes an April day will suddenly bring showers
Rain to grow the flowers for her first bouquet
But April love can slip right through your fingers
So if she's the one don't let her run away



Sometimes an April day will suddenly bring showers
Rain to grow the flowers for her first bouquet
But April love can slip right through your fingers
So if she's the one don't let her run away
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 03:33 am
THE YEAR 1905
Maybe this will boggle your mind, I know it did mine!
The year is 1905 one hundred years ago. What a difference a
century makes!

Here are some of the U.S. statistics for 1905:

The average life expectancy in the U.S. was 47 years.

Only 14 percent of the homes in the U.S. had a bathtub.

Only 8 percent of the homes had a telephone.

A three-minute call from Denver to New York City cost
eleven dollars.

There were only 8,000 cars in the U.S., and only 144 miles
of paved roads.

The maximum speed limit in most cities was 10 mph.

Alabama, Mississippi, Iowa, and Tennessee were each more
heavily populated than California.

With a mere 1.4 million residents, California was only
the 21st most populous state in the Union.

The tallest structure in the world was the Eiffel Tower!

The average wage in the U.S. was 22 cents an hour.

The average U.S. worker made between $200 and $400 per year.

A competent accountant could expect to earn $2000 per year,

a dentist $2,500 per year,
a veterinarian between $1,500 and $4,000 per year, and
a mechanical engineer about $5,000 per year.

More than 95 percent of all births in the U.S. took
place at home .

Ninety percent of all U.S. physicians had no college
education.

Instead, they attended medical schools, many of which
were condemned in the press and by the government as
"substandard."

Sugar cost four cents a pound.

Eggs were fourteen cents a dozen.

Coffee was fifteen cents a pound.

Most women only washed their hair once a month, and used
borax or egg yolks for shampoo.

Canada passed a law prohibiting poor people from
entering the country for any reason.

The five leading causes of death in the U.S. were:

1. Pneumonia and influenza

2. Tuberculosis

3. Diarrhea

4. Heart disease

5. Stroke

The American flag had 45 stars.

Arizona, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Hawaii, and Alaska
hadn't been admitted to the Union yet.

The population of Las Vegas, Nevada, was 30!!!

Crossword puzzles, canned beer, and iced tea hadn't
been invented.

There was no Mother's Day or Father's Day.

Two of 10 U.S. adults couldn't read or write.

Only 6 percent of all Americans had graduated high
school.

Marijuana, heroin, and morphine were all available
over the counter at corner drugstores.

According to one pharmacist, "Heroin clears the
complexion, gives buoyancy to the mind, regulates
the stomach and bowels, and is, in fact, a perfect
guardian of health." (Shocking!)

Eighteen percent of households in the U.S had at
least one full-time servant or domestic.

There were only about 230 reported murders in the
entire U.S.

And I forwarded this from someone else without typing
it myself, and sent it to you in a matter of seconds!
Try to imagine what it may be like in another 100 years .
it staggers the mind.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 04:58 am
Walking to New Orleans



This time I'm walking to New Orleans
I'm walking to New Orleans
I'm walking to New Orleans
I'm gonna need two pairs of shes

when I get through walking me blues

when I get back to N. O.

I've got my suitcase in my hand

now ain't that a shame.
I'm leaving here today

yes
I'm going back home to stay.
Yes
I'm walking to N. O.

You used to be my honey


till you spent all my money.
No use for you to cry

I see you buy and buy

'cause I`m walking to n. O.

I've got no time for talking.
I've got to keep on walking.
N. O. is my home

that's the reason while I'm gone

yes
I`m walking to N. O.
I'm walking to N. O.
I'm walking to N. O.
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 05:34 am
Good Morning All. I hope Letty will stop in today so that we know everything's OK.

Great posts Bob. You surprised me with Pat Boone. I expected to see a Marilyn Monroe bio upon arrival at the station this morning. Smile

June 1 Birthdays:

1637 Père Jacques Marquette, Jesuit missionary and explorer (Laon, France; died 1675)
1801 Brigham Young, Mormon religious leader (Whittingham, VT; died 1877)
1878 John Masefield England, 15th poet laureate (Salt-Water Ballads), died 1967
1921 Nelson Riddle Oradell NJ, musical conductor (Batman, Frank Sinatra) died 1985
1926 Andy Griffith, actor (Mount Airy, NC)
Marilyn Monroe, actress (Los Angeles, CA; died 1962)
1929 James Billington, librarian of Congress (Bryn Mawr, PA)
1930 Edward Woodward England, actor (Breaker Morant, Wickerman)
1934 Pat Boone, singer (Jacksonville, FL)
1937 Morgan Freeman, actor (Memphis, TN)
Colleen McCullough, writer (Wellington, New South Wales, Australia)(The Thornbirds)
1939 Cleavon Little, actor (Chickasha, OK; died 1992)
1940 Rene Auberjonois, actor (New York, NY)
1945 Frederica Von Stade, opera singer (Somerville, NJ)
1947 Ron Wood, musician and member of the Rolling Stones (London, England)
1974 Alanis Morisette, singer (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)

http://www.tvcrazy.net/tvclassics/articles/image/twilight-zone/andy_griffith.jpghttp://www.jonathanprice.de/Morgan_Freeman.jpg
http://www.pjs.net/wr/Marilyn/dl/Pix/Marilyn-Monroe-14.jpg
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 07:30 am
Marilyn Monroe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


Marilyn Monroe (June 1, 1926 - August 5, 1962) was an American actress of the 20th century. Her sizzling screen presence and premature death would make her a perennial sex symbol and later a pop icon.


Early life

A Los Angeles native, she was born Norma Jeane Mortensen in the charity ward of Los Angeles County Hospital. Her grandmother, Della Monroe Grainger, later had her baptized Norma Jeane Baker by Aimee Semple McPherson. Biographers used to differ on whether the man listed on her birth certificate, Norwegian Martin Edward Mortensen, was not her true biological father. The most likely candidate for a while seemed to be Charles Stanley Gifford, a salesman for the studio where Marilyn's mother, Gladys Pearl Monroe Baker, worked as a film-cutter. However in later years, more and more have gone for the theory that Mortensen was in fact her true father.

Unable to persuade Della to take the baby, an overwhelmed Gladys placed Norma Jeane with Albert and Ida Bolender of Hawthorne, southwest of Downtown Los Angeles, where she lived until she was seven. The Bolenders were a religious couple who supplemented their meager income by being foster parents. In her autobiography, My Story, ghostwritten by Ben Hecht, Marilyn said she thought Wayne and Ida were her parents until Ida, rather cruelly, corrected her. After Marilyn's death, Ida claimed that she and Wayne had seriously considered adopting her, which they could not have done without Gladys's consent.

According to My Story, Gladys visited Norma Jeane every Saturday, but never hugged or kissed her, or even smiled. One day, Gladys announced that she had bought a house for them. A few months after moving in, she suffered a breakdown. Marilyn recalled Gladys "screaming and laughing" as she was forcibly removed to the State Mental Hospital in Norwalk, where Della had died; Gladys's father, Otis, died in a mental hospital near San Bernardino.

Norma Jeane was declared a ward of the state. Gladys's best friend, Grace McKee, later Goddard, became her guardian. After Grace married in 1935, Norma Jeane was sent to Los Angeles Orphanage, then to as many as twelve foster homes, in which she was subjected to abuse and neglect. However, there is no evidence that Marilyn had actually lived in so many foster homes and that she really had been abused. In her interviews Marilyn often gave exaggerated information about her childhood. Then in September 1941, Grace took her in again. She was then introduced to a neighbor's son, James Dougherty, who would become her first husband. The Goddard family was moving to the East Coast and felt marriage would be the best solution for the teenaged Norma Jeane. Since Marilyn was underage at the time, she had to get married or otherwise she would have had to return the orphanage. Norma Jeane had come to think little of herself, yet also developed a gritty, opportunistic side and a super-human drive. She was very intelligent and more unhappy than her screen image suggested.


Start of career

In 1945, Norma Jeane worked as a parachute inspector while her husband was in the Merchant Marines. One day, a photographer spotted her and asked if he could take her picture to boost morale for the war effort. Soon afterwards, she moved out of her mother-in-law's house and signed with a modeling agency, which led to her first contract with Paramount Studios allegedly secured with the aid of mobsters John Rosselli and Tony Accardo as Monroe had supposedly been dating the influential Rosselli, who had spearheaded the Chicago Mafia led multimillion-dollar extortion of the Hollywood studios during World War II. Her first part was in the second-rate film Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hey!, first as a woman exiting a church (speaking a line), and then as a woman in a canoe. Most of her scenes were cut, save for a far shot of Monroe in the canoe.

In My Story she recounted how she chose her stage name. When Norma Jeane told Grace that "Marilyn" had been suggested by a Paramount employee, Grace replied that it went well with Gladys' maiden name, Monroe, then told her she was keeping documents for Gladys proving she is a direct descendant of President James Monroe. No such papers have ever surfaced. Marilyn's maternal grandfather, Otis Monroe, was the son of Jacob Monroe (1831-1872), so such a descent is unlikely.

The next few years were lean. Biographers maintain she was working "the party circuit" when she met Johnny Hyde, a partner of the William Morris Agency, on December 31, 1948 at a party thrown by producer Sam Spiegel. Like Grace Goddard, he believed she was destined to become a great star; unlike Grace, Hyde - who discovered Lana Turner and counted Rita Hayworth among his clients - had the power to do something about it. Despite being married and old enough to be her father, Hyde fell madly in love with her. Due to his persistence, Marilyn landed the two movies that put her on the map: The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve.


Fame


She posed completely naked for photographer Tom Kelley on May 27, 1949, and was paid $50. The picture was shown all around the world. The model of the Miss Golden Dreams calendar from that shoot was billed as "anonymous." In 1952, a blackmailer threatened to reveal her as Marilyn, but she thwarted the scheme by announcing the fact herself. When asked why she did it, she said, "I was hungry" (in My Story, she said she did it to get her car out of hock). Hugh Hefner bought the rights to use the photo for the first issue of his new men's magazine, Playboy; although the term had not yet been coined, Monroe is considered to be the magazine's first "Playmate".

A dying Hyde repeatedly asked Marilyn to marry him, assuring her that she would be a rich widow. But she refused. She loved him, she explained in My Story, but was not in love with him. According to Donald Spoto's biography, she renewed contact with producer and "party circuit" host Joseph Schenck, ignoring Hyde for weeks at a time. When Hyde suffered a fatal heart attack in Palm Springs on December 18, 1950, Marilyn, who had refused to join him, blamed herself for his death. His family threw her out of his Beverly Hills estate. The day after his funeral, she attempted suicide.

By late 1951, Fox was convinced of her potential and gave her a big buildup. Though she was the biggest star in the world by 1954 (with films such as Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, How to Marry a Millionaire, and There's No Business Like Show Business), she tired of the dumb blonde roles Darryl F. Zanuck assigned her. She broke her contract and went to New York to study acting at The Actor's Studio; she formed her own production company with photographer Milton H. Greene, in which the first venue was Marilyn's blockbuster hit The Seven Year Itch. These moves were met with both success and failure with the movie industry (Marilyn's next film under her production company, The Prince and the Showgirl, flopped). Yet, when Jayne Mansfield, Mamie Van Doren, and Sheree North failed to click with audiences, Zanuck finally admitted defeat, but most of Mansfield, Van Doren, and North's roles were originally meant for Monroe, but Marilyn turned them down due to fear of typecasting (so the studio put her on suspension). Her new contract gave her more creative control and the right to make one movie a year; the first project under the deal was Bus Stop. Her co-stars during these years included Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Laurence Olivier, Joseph Cotten, Richard Widmark, Jane Russell, Lauren Bacall, Ethel Merman, Charles Laughton, Tony Curtis, and Yves Montand (with whom she had an affair during the filming of Let's Make Love).


Marriages

She married James Dougherty on June 19, 1942. Grace, moving with her husband, wanted Norma Jeane to marry to avoid going to an orphanage. In "The Secret Happiness of Marilyn Monroe" and "To Norma Jeane With Love, Jimmie," Dougherty *[1] (http://www.familyforest.com/captainslog/64.html)confirms that they were in love and would have lived happily ever after had not dreams of stardom lured her away. She divorced him in 1946. He lives in Maine, and was married to his third wife until her death in 2003.
Monroe and Joe DiMaggio on their wedding day
Monroe and Joe DiMaggio on their wedding day

In 1951, Joe DiMaggio saw a picture of Marilyn with two Chicago White Sox players, but waited until after he retired from baseball to ask the PR man who arranged the stunt to set them up on a date. But she did not want to meet him, fearing him the stereotypical jock. Their January 14, 1954 elopement at City Hall in San Francisco was the culmination of a two-year courtship that had captivated the nation.

The union was complex, marred by his jealousy and her casual infidelity. DiMaggio wanted to settle down. Marilyn wanted to as well, but she craved fame and would do just about anything for it. DiMaggio was also said to have been disgusted by Marilyn's sloppiness and poor hygiene. DiMaggio biographer Richard Ben Cramer asserts things got violent as a result. One incident allegedly happened after the skirt blowing scene in The Seven Year Itch was filmed on New York's Lexington Avenue before hundreds of fans; director Billy Wilder recalled "the look of death" on DiMaggio's face as he watched. When she announced she would seek a divorce - just 274 days after the wedding - (on grounds of mental cruelty), she was quoted as telling 20th Century Fox "our careers just seemed to get in the way of each other." Oscar Levant quipped it proved no man could be a success in two pastimes.


She married playwright Arthur Miller, whom she met in 1951, in a civil ceremony on June 29, 1956, then in a Jewish ceremony two days later. When they returned from England after she wrapped The Prince and the Showgirl, they learned she was pregnant. Sadly, she suffered from endometriosis; the pregnancy was ectopic and had to be aborted to save her life. A second pregnancy ended in miscarriage.

By 1958, Monroe was supporting them. Not only did she pay alimony to Miller's first wife, he reportedly bought a Jaguar while they were in England, shipped it to the States, and charged it to her production company. His script The Misfits was meant to be a Valentine to her. Instead, by the time filming started, the marriage was broken beyond repair. Marilyn's behavior?-fueled by drugs and alcohol?-was erratic. A Mexican divorce was granted on January 24, 1961.

DiMaggio re-entered her life as her marriage to Miller was ending. On February 4, 1961, she was admitted by her then-psychiatrist into Manhattan's Payne-Whitney Clinic, reportedly placed in the ward for the most seriously disturbed. He got her out six days later, and took her to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. After her release on March 5, she joined him in Florida where he was a batting coach for his old team, the New York Yankees. Their "just friends" claims did not stop remarriage rumors from flying. Bob Hope even "dedicated" Best Song nominee "The Second Time Around" to them at the 1960 Academy Awards. According to DiMaggio biographer Maury Allen, Joe quit his job with a military post-exchange supplier on August 1, 1962 to return to California and ask Marilyn to remarry him.

On February 17, 1962, Miller married Inge Morath, one of the Magnum photographers recording the making of The Misfits. In January 1964, his After the Fall opened, featuring a beautiful, child-like, yet devouring shrew named Maggie. It upset all of Monroe's friends. His newest Broadway-bound work, Finishing the Picture, is based on the making of The Misfits.

In May of 1962 she sang Happy Birthday, Mr. President at a televised birthday party for President John F. Kennedy. The French chiffon dress she wore that night was sold at auction by Christie's for a world-record $1.3 million. 20th Century-Fox fired her soon after the infamous event while she was working on her soon-to-be unfinished film Something's Got to Give, co-starring Dean Martin and Cyd Charrise and directed by George Cukor.


Death and aftermath

Marilyn Monroe was found dead August 5, 1962 in the bedroom of her Brentwood, California, home at age thirty-six from an overdose of barbiturates. As with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, conspiracy theories have sprung up around the circumstances of her death, nearly all involving allegations that she was killed due to her involvement with the Kennedy family. However, the fact that Kennedy's many girlfriends, including Judith Campbell Exner (who was also the paramour of mobster Sam Giancana), outlived the president, would cast doubt on this interpretation. Nevertheless, a plausible case was made for the Kennedy/Mob connection in "The Last Days of Marilyn Monroe" by author Donald Wolfe.

Marilyn's body was discovered by live-in housekeeper, Mrs. Eunice Murray, assigned to Marilyn's care by her psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson. Controversy today still surrounds the unexplained timeframe of events on the night of Monroe's passing. Interestingly, Murray attempted to cash a $200.00 check made out to her by Monroe several days after Monroe's death. City National Bank of Beverly Hills declined to pay Murray and marked the check "deceased." The un-cancelled check is today on display in the Monroe exhibit at the Hollywood Entertainment Museum. In the Fall of 1962, Murray, a widow of modest means, left the country for an extended European cruise on the Queen Mary. Pat Newcomb, Monroe's personal publicist from Hollywood, joined the Kennedy administration during the ensuing months. Eventually in the 70s, Murray told her own sanitized version of that fateful night in "Marilyn, The Last Months." The book was written by a ghostwriter while Murray was living in a guest house in Santa Monica; Pat Newcomb was a frequent visitor then. In her later years, Murray moved back East, possibly to Martha's Vineyard, remarried for a short time, and oddly survived the passing of her second husband within very short order. Murray has since passed away.

A formal investigation in 1982 by the Los Angeles County District Attorney came up with no credible evidence of foul play, but the stories persist. Los Angeles County coroner Dr. Thomas Noguchi, who'd performed the autopsy (and the autopsies of Robert F. Kennedy, Natalie Wood and William Holden, among other celebrities), wrote in his book Coroner that Marilyn's death had been highly likely a suicide. Yet he'd conceded that during the autopsy he could find no trace in the stomach or intestines of any of the overdose of barbiturates that had reportedly been the cause of death; some conspiracy theorists claim this proves the drug overdose had been forcibly administered to Monroe (after she'd been rendered unconscious with chloral hydrate) perhaps by intravenous injection or, more likely, by rectal suppository, leaving no marks. Some researchers believe Chicago Mafia soldier, longtime Sam Giancana crony and poisoning expert Leonard "Needles" Gianola, had been directly responsible for administering the fatal overdose to Monroe.

A devastated DiMaggio had claimed her body and arranged her funeral. According to her half-sister, Berniece Baker Miracle, he just took over and she allowed him to do so. For 20 years, he had a dozen red roses delivered three times a week to her crypt. Unlike the other men who knew her intimately (or had claimed to), the highly private DiMaggio never publicly spoke about her nor wrote a book about his life with her, although he had once reportedly told Frank Sinatra that he had firmly believed the Kennedys were responsible for her death, a claim supported by DiMaggio's staunch refusal to greet then-New York Senate candidate Robert F. Kennedy during a 1965 reunion of current and former Yankee ballplayers at Yankee Stadium, supposedly saying that he "didn't want to be in the same building with that man."

Years after Monroe's death, actress Veronica Hamel (best known for her role as defense attorney Joyce Davenport in the popular television crime drama Hill Street Blues) had purchased Monroe's Brentwood home. During Hamel's remodeling of the home, workers had found bundles of hidden thin wires, the kind often used to connect audio "bugs." This discovery had lent further support to the claims of conspiracy theorists that Monroe had been under surveillance by the Kennedys and the Mafia.

Marilyn is interred in a crypt at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery just off of Wilshire Boulevard. She had Grace Goddard interred there because Grace's aunt - who cared for Norma Jeane briefly - is there. Just as her career took off, she asked her make-up man, Whitey Snyder, to promise he would make her up when she died. Snyder joked he would if her body was brought to him while it was warm. A few days later, he received a money clip: "Whitey Dear, While I am still warm, Marilyn." He fulfilled that promise with the help of a bottle of whiskey.

When Gladys was between mental hospitals, she married her last husband, John Stewart Eley, who died in 1952. Diagnosed as schizophrenic, she walked out of a sanitarium in the early 1970s and flew to Florida, where Berniece picked her up at the airport. She died of congestive heart failure on March 11, 1984 at a nursing home. Obsessed by Christian Science, she would refuse to discuss Norma Jeane or Marilyn Monroe, perhaps unable to relive the past. A woman once so fascinated with movie stars that she named her daughter after one, Norma Talmadge, apparently never knew she had given birth to one of the most famous women in history.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_Monroe



I Wanna Be Loved by You by Marilyn Monroe


I wanna be loved by you, just you,
And nobody else but you,
I wanna be loved by you, alone!
Boop-boop-de-boop!

I wanna be kissed by you, just you,
Nobody else but you,
I wanna be kissed by you, alone!

I couldn't aspire,
To anything higher,
Than, to feel the desire,
To make you my own!
Ba-dum-ba-dum-ba-doodly-dum-boo

I wanna be loved by you, just you,
And nobody else but you,
I wanna be loved by you, alone!

I couldn't aspire,
To anything higher,
Than to feel the desire,
To make you my own,
Ba-dum-ba-dum-ba-doodly-dum-boo!

I wanna be loved by you, just you,
Nobody else but you,
I wanna be loved by you,
ba-deedly-deedly-deedly-dum-ba-boop-bee-doop

Boop-boop-a-doop!
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 07:57 am
Poor little robin walkin', walkin', WALKIN' TO MISSOURI;
He can't afford to fly.
Got a penny for a Poor little robin, walkin' walkin' WALKIN' TO MISSOURI
Got a teardrop in his eye.

I hope my story don't make you cry,
But this birdie flew too high;
He flew from his old Missouri home.
He fell right into the city ways, like dancin' in cabarets,
From party to party he would roam.

He met a birdie who looked so nice,
A real bird of paradise,
Good lookin' but fickle in the heart.
She gave him kisses and gave him sighs,
But oh, how she told him lies,
'Cause she loved another from the start.

His dreams are battered, his feathers bent,
Now he hasn't got a cent;
He feels like his heart is gonna break.
So if he ever walks up to you,
Please throw him a crumb or two,
'Cause you could have made the same mistake.
0 Replies
 
Diane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 10:14 am
And one more for the birds:

Rockin Robin
Bobby Day

He rocks in the tree-top all a day long
Hoppin' and a-boppin' and a-singin' the song
All the little birds on J-Bird St.
Love to hear the robin goin' tweet tweet tweet
[Chorus]

Rockin' robin (tweet tweet tweet)
Rockin' robin (tweet tweet tweet)
Oh rockin' robin well you really gonna rock tonight

Every little swallow, every chickadee
Every little bird in the tall oak tree
The wise old owl, the big black crow
Flapping them wings sayin' go bird go
[Chorus]

A wordy little raven at the bird's first dance
Taught him how to do the bop and it was grand
He started goin' steady and bless my soul
He out popped the buzzard and the oriole

He rocks in the tree-top all a day long
Hoppin' and a-boppin' and a-singin' the song
All the little birds on J-Bird St.
Love to hear the robin goin' tweet tweet tweet
[Chorus]
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 10:39 am
Spike Jones


Album: Come Away with Me



Nightingale
Sing us a song
Of a love that once belonged
Nightingale
Tell me your tale
Was your journey far too long?

Does it seem like I'm looking for an answer
To a question I can't ask
I don't know which way the feather falls
Or if I should blow it to the left

Nightingale
Sing us a song
Of a love that once belonged
Nightingale
Tell me your tale
Was your journey far too long?

All the voices that are spinnin' around me
Trying to tell me what to say
Can I fly right behind you
And you can take me away
...you can take me away
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 10:41 am
Well, well, WA2K radio folks. Good to see that you're still playing and singing.

As for me, I have been having a marvelous conversation with a handsome young man who attempted to instruct me in the art of computers. Unfortunately, only about half of what he said registered.<smile> Unfriendly weather left me with absolutely nothing to do except work puzzles and clean out corners and nooks.

Thanks to Diane, dj, Raggedy and all for your concern. I will need some review time, and then I shall be once more fit as a fiddle and ready for love.

"...what is so rare as a day in June...." Right?
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 11:01 am
Letty wrote:
As for me, I have been having a marvelous conversation with a handsome young man who attempted to instruct me in the art of computers. Unfortunately, only about half of what he said registered.<smile>


But the half that registered is the half that brought you back to WA2K. You won't need the other half. Laughing
0 Replies
 
Eva
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 11:16 am
Better yet, you'll have to have ANOTHER marvelous conversation with him so you can understand the other half!

Welcome back.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Wed 1 Jun, 2005 11:20 am
Ah, how dear you both are, Eva and Raggedy.

Hmmm. We're missing Europe. Wonder what it will take to get them back on the air?
0 Replies
 
 

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WA2K Radio is now on the air, Part 3 - Discussion by edgarblythe
 
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