MARILYN MONROE DIED 53 YEARS AGO
Brentwood, California (JFK+50) Actress and singer Marilyn Monroe* died in the bedroom of her apartment here in Brentwood fifty-three years ago this evening, August 5, 1962.
Miss Monroe's body was found by her psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson, who was called to the home by Monroe's housekeeper, Eunice Murray, who had been unable to open the locked bedroom door.
According to www.history.com/, the body of the actress "was discovered lying nude on her bed, face down, with a telephone in one hand (and) empty bottles of pills...littered around the room."
Dr. Greenson, who had left Monroe's apartment at 5 p.m after a session for treating her depression, was called by Ms. Murray at 3 the following morning. He arrived in 45 minutes.
Five days later, the death, occurring between 9:30 and 11:30 p.m., was ruled a "probable suicide" from a drug overdose by the Los Angeles County Coroner's office.
Thomas C. Reeves writes...
"The events surrounding and including the actress's death have been painstakingly probed...and...some of the evidence remains controversial."
SOURCES
"A Question of Character: A Life of John F. Kennedy," by Thomas C. Reeves, The Free Press, New York, 1991.
"This Day in History: August 5," www.history.com/
At age 19, she signed with a modeling agency and later 20th Century Fox and Columbia Pictures.
Marilyn's 1st husband was James Dougherty (1942-46), her 2nd was NY Yankee baseball star Joe DiMaggio (1954) and the 3rd was playwright Arthur Miller (1956-1961).
Marilyn Monroe
Studio Publicity Still
"Niagara" (1952)
PT109 CREW AWAITS RESCUE
Solomon Islands (JFK+50) 72 years ago today, August 5, 1943, Barney Ross made a half-mile swim from Olasana to Naru Island on the 4th day following the sinking of the 109. While JFK and Ross were making their way to Naru, the other survivors were "resting in the bushes behind the beach."
Kennedy and Ross walked to the eastern side of Naru where they found a crate containing bags of "hard candy in the shape of teardrops" and crackers left by the Japanese. They also found an abandoned dugout canoe in the bushes "with a large tin of rainwater and also spotted a couple of natives who upon seeing them "paddled furiously away toward Blackett Strait."
The natives came to where the survivors were hiding. After some reassurance that these men were not Japanese, the natives, Buiku and Eroni came ashore.
Leaving Ross behind on the beach, Lt. Kennedy took the canoe filled with candy and water back to his men. He was surprised when he saw the natives among his men and didn't recognize them as the ones he and Ross had seen earlier.
JFK left the candy and water with his men and headed the canoe back toward Naru to rejoin Barney Ross. Although they attempted to take the canoe back into the Blackett Strait that night, the waves were too strong and they had to give up. They returned to Naru exhausted and slept on the beach during the rest of the night.
SOURCES
"PT 109: John F. Kennedy in WWII," by Robert J. Donovan, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1961, 2001.
"Solomon Islander who helped JFK dies at 93," AFP, August 4, 2014, www.news.yahoo.com/*
*Thanks to BostonMaggie for providing the link to this article on Twitter.
JFK PT-109 Coconut Shell
JFK Library Photo
Moscow, USSR (JFK+50) The Limited Test Ban Treaty was signed 52 years ago today, August 5, 1963, by representatives of the United States, Great Britain and the Soviet Union here in Moscow.
The treaty prohibited the testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere and under water. Secretary of State Dean Rusk signed for the United States, Alec Douglas-Home signed for Great Britain and Andrei Gromyko signed for the USSR.
The Limited Test Ban Treaty was ratified on September 24 and it was signed by President Kennedy on October 7, 1963.