Jim Ranchino
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April 20, 1936
Jim Ranchino | |
|---|---|
| Born | James Lewis Ranchino April 20, 1936 Herrin, Illinois, U.S. |
| Died | November 7, 1978 (aged 42) Little Rock, Arkansas, U.S. |
| Resting place | Rest Haven Memorial Gardens in Arkadelphia, Arkansas |
| Alma mater | |
| Occupations | |
| Years active | 1964–1978 |
| Spouse(s) | Veda Ranchino, later Veda Ranchino Morgan |
| Children | 2 |
James Lewis Ranchino (/rænˈkiːnoʊ/; April 20, 1936 – November 7, 1978), known as Jim Ranchino, was a pollster, political consultant, and political scientist on the faculty of Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. He died of a massive heart attack while awaiting to appear on Little Rock ABC television station KATV on the night of the 1978 general election.[1]
Ranchino was a strong supporter of his fellow Democrat, future U.S. President Bill Clinton,[2] who that night easily defeated the Republican Lynn Lowe to win the first of five non-consecutive terms as governor of Arkansas.
Ranchino was the fourth of five children born in Herrin, Illinois to Angelo "Comp" Ranchino and Esther (Verna) Ranchino.[3] His siblings were three sisters, Alma Joy Hise of Kansas City, Missouri,[4] Mariann Hunt of Des Moines, Iowa,[5] and Cheryl Ranchino Trench, a newspaper columnist in Herrin,[6] and one brother, John Edward Ranchino, who died in infancy.[5] Ranchino and his wife, Veda, had two children, Tony A. Ranchino (b. 1969), a photojournalist for KATV in Little Rock, where his father collapsed, and Nicole "Niki" R. Jackson (b. 1971), who was seven at the time of her father's death and operates a children's camp. After her husband's early death, Veda continued to live in Clark County and the next year married local prosecuting attorney Henry Morgan.[7]
Ranchino graduated from Herrin High School in 1954. He received a Bachelor of Arts from Louisiana College in 1961.[8] In 1963 or 1964, he received his Master of Arts in history from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas; his thesis is entitled "The Work and Thought of a Jeffersonian in the Populist Movement: James Harvey 'Cyclone' Davis" and is a study of the Populist organizer and Democratic U.S. Representative James "Cyclone" Davis of Texas.[9] He studied graduate political science, and also history under the historian William Appleman Williams,[10] during his time at the University of Wisconsin - Madison, where he was from 1963 to 1965.[8] Ranchino was described as a "campus radical".[2]