Obituaries in the newsCharley Ane LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Charley Ane, a standout tackle for Southern California in the early 1950s and then an All-Pro lineman for the Detroit Lions, has died. He was 76. Ane died Wednesday in Honolulu of pneumonia following a long illness. He graduated from Punahou High in Honolulu and attended Compton College in California before going to USC. The school confirmed his death. Ane helped the Trojans to a 10-1 record in the 1952 season, including a victory over Wisconsin in the 1953 Rose Bowl. The Lions picked him in the second round of that year's draft. In seven years with Detroit, he was an All-Pro center-tackle and a member of the Lions' 1953 and 1957 NFL champs, and was team captain in 1958-59. After his playing days, Ane returned to Hawaii, where he coached football at five high schools. Ane, inducted into the USC Hall of Fame last weekend, also pitched for the Trojans' baseball team in 1951. ___ Bernard Gordon LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Bernard Gordon, a screenwriter blacklisted during Hollywood's anti-communist crusade in the 1950s, has died. He was 88. Gordon died Friday at his Hollywood Hills home after a long battle with cancer, according to his daughter, Ellen Gordon. Gordon wrote dozens of movies but many never carried his name until the Writers Guild of America began restoring credits to blacklisted writers in 1980. About a dozen of Gordon's credits were restored, more than any other writer, said Dave Robb, a longtime friend. Among them was Gordon's co-writing credit on 1957's "Hellcats of the Navy," which starred Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Gordon's movies included "55 Days at Peking," "Battle of the Bulge" and the 1962 science fiction cult classic, "Day of the Triffids," along with low-budget fare like "Zombies of Mora Tau." In the 1950s, Gordon was subpoenaed to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, which was investigating Communist influence in Hollywood. He was never called to appear but an acquaintance named him before the committee and he was fired from a studio and blacklisted, along with hundreds of other film industry workers. He worked under other names for years. ___ Bill Wagner SAN ANTONIO (AP) _ Bill Wagner, a longtime Texas journalist who served as the executive editor of San Antonio's afternoon newspaper, has died. He was 65. Wagner died Monday after a lengthy illness affecting his central nervous system. He was the managing editor of the San Antonio Evening News when President John F. Kennedy was shot in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. He and his staff put out seven editions that day, "just one after the other," said Sterlin Holmesly, who was managing editor of the Evening News' sister paper, the morning Express. The two papers merged in 1984, becoming the San Antonio Express-News. Wagner flew 35 combat missions as a B-17 navigator during World War II before landing his first job in journalism with the Houston Chronicle. He began work in San Antonio in 1947, working in nearly every capacity from reporter to managing editor at the morning and afternoon newspapers. He later moved to Austin to work for the Texas Department of Human Resources and taught journalism at Concordia College in Austin. At the time of his death, he was the editor of Texas' monthly publication of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.
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