‘Beverly Hillbillies’ star Donna Douglas dead at 81

Donna Douglas and Elvis in Frankie and Johnny.

Donna Douglas and Elvis in Frankie and Johnny.

Donna Douglas, the actress who won over TV viewers as Elly May Clampett on “The Beverly Hillbillies,” has died. She was 81.

The star’s granddaughter told TMZ Douglas died in her Louisiana home surrounded by friends and family.

The cause of death was pancreatic cancer, her niece told The Associated Press.

Douglas appeared “The Beverly Hillbillies,” a comedy about a backwoods Tennessee family who moved to Beverly Hills after striking it rich from oil on their land. for all nine seasons of the show and reprised her role in a TV movie reboot of the series in 1981.

As Elly May, she seemed blissfully unaware of her status as a bumpkin blond bombshell. Typically she was clad in a snug flannel shirt and tight jeans cinched with a rope belt, and she seemed to prefer her critters to any beau.

Chosen from more than 500 other actresses, Douglas said she felt at ease playing the role because, like her character, she grew up a poor Southern tomboy. Her childhood in Pride, Louisiana, came in handy when she was asked during her audition to milk a goat.

Read more at FOX News

Good-bye Cowboy… Good-Bye Sir!

Senate Web Site photo

Senate Web Site photo

By Lyle J. Rapacki

This Saturday, August 9th, 2014, I will have to say, “Good-bye” to a friend who just happened to be a real-life cowboy, as well as a real-life Arizona State Senator. When the sun sets this coming Saturday our Arizona State Flag will not shine as bright; the red and yellow rays which represent the original thirteen colonies in our Republic and also represent the beautiful sunsets for which Arizona is known will be a little duller, a little less vibrant. One of Arizona’s Favorite Sons has died, and with the last rays of the beautiful Arizona sun sinking in the west so will the last drops of tears be sliding down the cheeks of those who knew the cowboy and the senator – Chester Crandell.

Senator Chester Crandell was a fifth-generation rancher who loved the dirt of Arizona, as much as the people and the state itself! I enjoyed the privilege of working with him quietly and behind the scenes these past three years on a number of issues related to the safety and sovereignty of our Great State of Arizona, and her people. Many hours of private meetings, private telephone conversations, meals, and even traveling somewhere alone in a vehicle…you get to know a person well after hundreds of hours over three years! Chester Crandell never took himself seriously, but studied hard and took his position as a legislator seriously. He faced the mounting challenges coming to our state with the same determination as he did herding his cows (and herding is not for the faint-of-heart). Many times on his way to the senate floor or to Chair the Senate Committee on Public Safety, where serious issues awaited, he would grin at me and say, “I’m just a country boy.” He was a country boy, and a cowboy who loved riding the range bringing in his herd. I spent the day with him just a couple of months ago on his ranch as another State Senator snapped the photo above of Chester bringing in his herd for branding; he even had me the “City Slicker” being a real cowboy! He was a man who vigorously studied and then defended the rights and traditions of rural Arizona private property owners, ranchers, businesses, industry, the beauty of forests and high deserts, the rocks and mountains, and all that contributes to make Arizona still a rugged and beautiful place in which to live, much like other Favorite Sons of Arizona: Barry Goldwater, Carl Hayden, Sam Steiger, Bruce Babbitt, Mo Udall; they all had in common a respect for the land, and the nurturance of the same along with the enjoyment of all that God gave us through natural resources.

Chester Crandell believed he was a servant of the people, someone honored to have passing time at the State Capitol in which to leave a legacy, to make a difference for the good of Arizona, not be there to build a resume or maneuver for self-interest. “Service above Self” is the motto of a famous civic organization, but that statement also reflected the values in this man’s heart, captured in his daily attitude and telegraphed for all to hear in his public speeches. The senator gave up time with his family, he withstood the long 5-hour trips back and forth from the capitol, surrendered privacy we as citizens take for granted, missed community activities and traditions for official meetings in Phoenix, and the list goes on but I never heard him complain. He saw a moment in time that he could make a positive difference, and he went for it! So very many of us are still shocked that his moment was over far much sooner than any of us would have liked. I know his truly lovely, funny, and gracious wife, Alice, along with his wonderfully kind nine children have feelings that flow much deeper than any of us who shared the public side of this man with them.

Senator Chester Crandell saw himself as a simple country boy, and in ways he was just that. But he was also so very much more. Arizona truly lost a highly educated man who stood to defend our wonderful state from those who would just as soon rob us of our heritage as a sovereign western state. Senator Crandell could be called a cowboy in the truest and dearest terms of the west. But he also earned the privilege of being called, “Sir.” After a very long, hot, and dirty day working cattle with him on his ranch, Chester Crandell grinned when I called him a fellow cowboy. I also called him “Sir…Mr. Chairman…Senator.” I shall deeply miss this cowboy. I shall deeply miss this senator and true servant of the People of Arizona. Good-bye, Sir!


Lyle J. Rapacki, Ph.D. is an Intelligence and Threat Assessment Specialist. Since June of 2010, Dr. Rapacki has provided selected members of the Arizona State Legislature Intelligence Briefings on Border Security and related threats to Arizona State sovereignty. Lyle analyzes and disseminates critical intelligence and policy information from and to law enforcement, intelligence and governmental communities in Arizona and nationally, as well as to selected clients in industry and the private-sector.

‘Brady Bunch’ housekeeper Ann B. Davis dies in San Antonio

0601_ann_b_davisby LORENA BLAS, Posted on June 1, 2014 at 7:36 PM

Ann B. Davis, who played beloved housekeeper Alice on TV’s The Brady Bunch, has died in San Antonio, according to multiple reports.

Davis, who played Alice Nelson during the show’s run from 1969-74, turned 88 on May 3.

She fell and hit her head in her bathroom Saturday morning, according to reports. Close friend Bishop William Frey tells CNN that she suffered a subdural hematoma and never regained consciousness.

Read more at KENS5 San Antonion

Mickey Rooney, Master of Putting On a Show, Dies at 93

mickey-rooney1Mickey Rooney, the exuberant entertainer who led a roller-coaster life — the world’s top box-office star at 19 as the irrepressible Andy Hardy, a bankrupt has-been in his 40s, a comeback kid on Broadway as he neared 60 — died on Sunday. He was 93 and lived in Westlake Village, Calif.

His death was confirmed by his son Michael Joseph Rooney.

He stood only a few inches taller than five feet, but Mr. Rooney was larger and louder than life. From the moment he toddled onto a burlesque stage at 17 months to his movie debut at 6 to his career-crowning Broadway debut in “Sugar Babies” at 59 and beyond, he did it all. He could act, sing, dance, play piano and drums, and before he was out of short pants he could cry on cue.

As Andy Hardy, growing up in the idealized fictional town of Carvel, Mr. Rooney was the most famous teenager in America from 1937 to 1944: everybody’s cheeky son or younger brother, energetic and feverishly in love with girls and cars. The 15 Hardy Family movies, in which all problems could be solved by Andy’s man-to-man talks with his father, Judge Hardy (played by Lewis Stone), earned more than $75 million — a huge sum during the Depression years, when movie tickets rarely cost more than 25 cents.

More at New York Times

Jeremiah A. Denton Jr., Vietnam POW and former U.S. senator, dies at 89

obit0331395960841MARCH 28 – Jeremiah A. Denton Jr., a retired Navy rear admiral and former U.S. senator who survived nearly eight years of captivity in North Vietnamese prisons, and whose public acts of defiance and patriotism came to embody the sacrifices of American POWs in Vietnam, died March 28 at a hospice in Virginia Beach. He was 89.

The cause was complications from a heart ailment, said his son Jim Denton. Adm. Denton was a native of Alabama, where in 1980 he became the state’s first Republican to win election to the Senate since Reconstruction.

Adm. Denton lost a reelection bid six years later. But he remained widely known for his heroism as a naval aviator and prisoner of war, and particularly for two television appearances that reached millions of Americans through the evening news during the Vietnam War.

In the first, orchestrated by the North Vietnamese as propaganda and broadcast in the United States in 1966, he appeared in his prison uniform and blinked the word “torture” in Morse code — a secret message to U.S. military intelligence for which he later received the Navy Cross.

Read more at The Washington Post

Highly decorated rodeo Hall of Famer dies at 63.

robert-shallARLEE – Robert H. Schall Jr., 63, from Arlee, passed away Friday, March 21, 2014, after a two-year battle with cancer. He was born June 25, 1950. He spent his entire life in Arlee, most of it on the Schall Ranch.

His rodeo career is legendary. He was an accomplished bareback rider, team roper and steer wrestler, winning countless championships in the PRCA, NRA and other regional associations. He traveled extensively throughout the U.S. and Canada and on occasion to Australia. He was a Montana State University alum, being most proud of his membership on the 1972 NIRA National Championship Men’s Rodeo Team and of being a member of the MSU Athletic Hall of Fame. He won the coveted PRCA Linderman Award in 1986. He was a past president of the Northern Rodeo Association. He was recently inducted into the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame and is listed on the Montana Rodeo Wall of Fame at Metra Park in Billings.

He was a dear friend and mentor to many. Bob was incredibly proud of being a father to Emily, she was the light of his life. He never missed an opportunity to be with her or support her throughout her youth. He drove many tireless miles to be wherever she may need him.

He was an avid outdoorsman who loved to fish, hunt and pack. His favorite dessert was pie and ice cream. His ability to complete math calculations in his head was astounding.

Read more at The Missoulian

Comedian David Brenner dies at 78

DavidBrennerDavid Brenner, the gangly, toothy-grinned “Tonight Show” favorite whose brand of observational comedy became a staple for other standup comedians, including Jerry Seinfeld and Paul Reiser, died Saturday. He was 78.

Brenner, who had been fighting cancer, died peacefully at his home in New York City with his family at his side, according to Jeff Abraham, his friend and publicist.

“David Brenner was a huge star when I met him and he took me under his wing. To me, historically, he was the godfather of hip, observational comedy,” comedian Richard Lewis said in a statement. “He mentored me from day one. … His passing leaves a hole in my life that can never be replaced.”

Read more at FOX News

Glenn McDuffie, World War II Vet in Iconic Kissing Photo, Dies

glenn-mcduffie-600A man who became known for claiming he was the sailor kissing a woman in Times Square in a famous World War II-era photo taken by a Life magazine photographer has died. Glenn McDuffie was 86.

McDuffie died March 9 in a nursing home in Dallas, his daughter, Glenda Bell, told the Associated Press.

After World War II, McDuffie, who was born in Kannapolis, N.C., and moved to Houston in 1960, became a mail carrier and semi-professional baseball player.

But his life became more exciting about six years ago when Houston Police Department forensic artist Lois Gibson was able to identify him as the young man leaning over the woman in his arms to kiss her.

Read more at People

First Native American Arizona Senator dies at age 102.

Art_HubbardPHOENIX – Arthur Hubbard, Sr., American Navajo Code Talker and Arizona’s first Arizona State Senator, was laid to rest in Phoenix after a service at Pinnacle Presbyterian Church in Scottsdale at 102-years old.

Mr. Hubbard was born in January of 1912 in Topawa on the Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation, but was raised on the Navajo reservation with Christian, Navajo and O’odham traditions.

He joined the Marines and during World War II trained Navajo code talkers who were instrumental in success in the war in the Pacific. They used their native language to describe various Japanese military equipment and movements in their own native language which became the code the Japanese could not break.

Other Native American code talkers were deployed by the United States Army during World War II, including Cherokee, Choctaw, Lakota, Meskwaki, and Comanche soldiers. Soldiers of Basque ancestry were used for code talking by the U.S. Marines during World War II in areas where other Basque speakers were not expected to be operating.

FOX 10 News | myfoxphoenix.com

According to Indian Country, Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly said

“The Navajo Code Talkers are living treasures of the Navajo Nation. With the passing of Arthur Hubbard, Sr., we have lost a true American hero. The Nation offers our heartfelt condolences to the family during this time.”

In 1972 he became the first Native American Arizona Senator and served six terms.

Shirley Temple Black, iconic child star, dies at 85

Shirley-temple-ca-1936-everettShirley Temple Black, who as the most popular child movie star of all time lifted a filmgoing nation’s spirits during the Depression and then grew up to be a diplomat, has died. She was 85.

Black died late Monday at her home in Woodside, Calif., according to publicist Cheryl J. Kagan. No cause was given.

From 1935 through 1938, the curly-haired moppet billed as Shirley Temple was the top box-office draw in the nation. She saved what became 20th Century Fox studios from bankruptcy and made more than 40 movies before she turned 12.

Read more at The LA Times