Marilyn Monroe 1926-1962 By Scott Harrah Senior Editor On August 5th, we will celebrate the 25th anniversary of Marilyn Mon roe’s mysterious and still unex plained death. If she had been any other star, we probably wouldn’t care. But one quarter of a century later, Marilyn is perhaps more fam ous than she was in life. “A sex symbol becomes a thing... and I just hate to be a thing," she once said. Not only was she a sex symbol, she was an American myth, the epitome of the whimsicality and self indulgence that is Hollywood. Only Elvis comes close to the magni tude of her legend, but unlike The King, nobody has ever questioned her veracity. She was the woman everybody wanted and/or wanted to be, and her half-shut eyes, and almost necrophiliac sense of sex appeal and glamour were the cause of that. She also showed that beneath the little girl giggle, breathy voice and exaggerated feminity was a serious actress who deserved all the pub licity and adulation. Born Norma Jean Mortensen in 1926 in Hollywood, she survived the typical unhappy star’s childhood, the typical bad marriage, then dyed her hair blonde, posed for several cheesecake photos and impressed the hell out of Hollywood moguls when she was cast in a bit part for John Huston’s “The Asphalt Jungle." When 20th Century Fox cast her in the Bette Davis camp classic "All About Eve," audiences everywhere wanted to know who that blonde was. She was cast in lead roles from then on and managed to eclipse rivals like Liz Taylor and Kim Novak, making her The Glamourous Female Star of the '50s. Her private life became a walking soap opera when she sustained two ill-fated marriages to athlete Joe DiMaggio and playwright Arthur Miller. But it was her hush hush affair with President John F. Kennedy that still baffles us today. Two months after she was fired from the production of "Something’s Got to Give” for taking off too many sick days and leaving for the East to sing "Happy Birthday" to .JFK, she was found dead in her home. The coroner claimed that Marilyn died from an overdose of sleeping pills, but years later there was speculation that John and Robert Kennedy secretly murdered her. flues have been found, including evidence that Marilyn kept a diary with some entries that Kennedy wanted kept under wraps. In 1982, Marilyn’s former housekeeper Mrs. Eunice Murray admitted to the press that Bobby Kennedy had been at Marilyn’s house the afternoon of her death before she was found. Since most of the principals involved are either dead or not talking, we may never know what really happened. Nevertheless, Marilyn has become an icon and a symbol of all that encompasses the notion of fame. i Elvis Presley 1935-1977 By Chris McCubbin Staff Reporter Elvis Presley, “The Com plete Sun Sessions” (RCA) Elvis Presley, “The Top Ten Hits” (RCA) Elvis Presley, “The Mem phis Record” (RCA) This August marks the 10th anni versary of the black day when King Elvis expired peacefully on his pot tie, the book “The Scientific Search for The Face of Jesus” laying open at his feet, as the ghosts of thousands of happy little percodans escorted the corpulant Hillbilly Cat peace fully into that good night. This 10th anniversary (tin, alum inum, or diamond jewelry according to the almanac) is becoming the occasion for yet another (with luck, the last) m