	// The Array Function 

	function makeArray(len) {
	    for (var i = 0; i < len; i++) this[i] = null;
	this.length = len;
	}

	// This is where the array of text/images/sounds is created.

	ideas = new makeArray(13);
	ideas[0] = "DID YOU KNOW? The Santa Monica Pier was one of Marilyn and Norma Jeane\'s favorite places. At the tender age of 16, when she was first married to Jim Dougherty, Norma Jeane liked to visit Muscle Beach. She would bring her favorite lunch - a tomato, a wedge of Iceberg lettuce, and two raw hot dogs.";
	ideas[1] = "DID YOU KNOW? As a paying customer, Norma Jeane had a long association with the Grauman\'s Chinese Theater, beginning at age seven when she lived nearby. She often sat through double features twice and enjoyed fitting her hands and feet into the various imprints left by Hollywood\'s earliest stars.";
	ideas[2] = "DID YOU KNOW? Marilyn liked 1953 Dom Perignon champagne, caviar, steak, veal piccata, and fettuccine Leon. She particularly disliked olives, poseurs, and being patronized. Over time, she came to hate the Marilyn Monroe \"character\" because she felt it had become her personal albatross.";
	ideas[3] = "DID YOU KNOW? In 1942, Norma Jeane dropped out of UNIVERSITY HIGH SCHOOL during the spring semester of her sophomore year to marry Jim Dougherty. This was the last of her formal schooling. Marilyn always remained self-conscious of her \"10th grade\" education.";
	ideas[4] = "DID YOU KNOW? Marilyn changed residences some 60 times during her life. Her eight-year association with the DOHENY DR. APARTMENT was the longest. It was here where George Masters gave her the \"white on white\" look and she and Joe DiMaggio spent her last Christmas.";
	ideas[5] = "DID YOU KNOW? Marilyn's star was originally placed on the WALK OF FAME on Feb. 9, 1960. There was no formal dedication ceremony until June 1,1992 (M's 66th birthday). Among the speakers were Norma Jeane's foster sister Bebe Goddard and Marilyn's friend actress Susan Strasberg.";
	ideas[6] = "DID YOU KNOW? Marilyn (and probably Norma Jeane) dined on many occasions at the MUSSO and FRANK GRILL, especially in the mid-1950s with Joe DiMaggio. Opened in 1919, the restaurant has the look and aroma of Hollywood's glory years. A great place to espy a celebrity.";
	ideas[7] = "DID YOU KNOW? For a time, a young Norma Jeane lived in Hollywood with the Atkinsons, an English family of film performers. They taught her to throw knives, juggle oranges, and dance the hula. Norma Jeane even picked up their British accent.";
	ideas[8] = "DID YOU KNOW? Although Marilyn never made a picture for the storied PARAMOUNT STUDIOS, she and Clark Gable wrapped the final scenes of <u>The Misfits<\/u> there in 1960. It was the last time movie goers would ever see the two stars on the screen.";
	ideas[9] = "DID YOU KNOW? When Norma Jeane was at the Hollygrove orphanage, at night she would look through her dormitory window at the RKO STUDIOS water tower and think about one day being a star there. She later made <u>Love Happy<\/u> (1950) and <u>Clash by Night<\/u> (1952) at RKO.";
	ideas[10] = "DID YOU KNOW? Marilyn did not own a home until she purchased the FIFTH HELENA DR. property shortly before she died. Marilyn was never particularly interested in money and was very generous with what little she usually had. She mostly owned books and records. She was especially fond of Sinatra.";
	ideas[11] = "DID YOU KNOW? In 1962, Marilyn had most of her prescriptions filled at VICENTE PHARMACY, which is still in Brentwood. On August 3,1967, she had prescriptions filled for Phenergan (promethazine) and Nembutal (pentobarbital), two drugs that contributed to her death two days later.";
	ideas[12] = "DID YOU KNOW? Norma Jeane sometimes accompanied her mother when she was a film cutter at COLUMBIA STUDIOS. Marilyn's only Columbia film was the B-musical <u>Ladies of the Chorus<\/u> (1948). Columbia executive Harry Cohn didn't think Marilyn could act. He opted for Kim Novak instead.";


	// The random number generator.

	function rand(n) {
	seed = (0x015a4e35 * seed) % 0x7fffffff;
	return (seed >> 16) % n;
	}
        
	var now = new Date()
	var seed = now.getTime() % 0xffffffff

	document.write(ideas[rand(ideas.length)])	
