Vi Smith, a former Los Angeles Times reporter and author so
intertwined with Orange County's aviation history that the concourse
art gallery at John Wayne Airport was named in her honor, died
Thursday. She was 82.
Smith, who lived in Santa Ana and for 15 years served on the airport's
arts commission, died of congestive heart failure, daughter Andrea
Kastner said.
"This was a woman who was analytical, who was sharp, who loved a good
story and asked a ton of questions," Kastner said.
Smith joined The Times in 1963 and covered a variety of stories,
including homicide and human interest, winning awards for photography
as well as reporting.
Her 1974 book "From Jennies to Jets: The Aviation History of Orange
County" traced the county's flight path from ballooning to aerospace.
Orange County "must have looked like a land of great promise" to
aviation pioneers, she told The Times in 1986.
Smith was also a radio news writer, president of the Orange County
Press Club, the first female member of Orange County's Society of
Professional Journalists chapter, and a contributing writer for the
book "From Goat Hill to City of the Arts: The History of Costa Mesa,"
according to a family statement.
Smith was "the foremost authority on Orange County's aviation
history," wrote Orange Coast magazine columnist Jerry Hicks, also a
former Times reporter, last year. Her book "is the best local history
book I've come across, on any subject. There isn't even a close
second."
A Philadelphia native, Smith did editing work on "Just Call Me Eddie,"
the autobiography of longtime friend Eddie Martin, who established
what became John Wayne Airport. As an events coordinator at Martin
Aviation, she oversaw the airport's annual World War II heavy bomber
display.
As an airport arts commission member, Smith sought "museum-quality"
work for the concourse, said airport spokeswoman Jenny Wedge.
Orange County supervisors once named her volunteer of the year. Smith
helped coordinate the airport's current exhibit, "Orange County on
Display."
She also dreamed up A Basket Case, a company that put together gift
baskets.
Smith, her family's statement said, relished recorded jazz and
classical music, basketball, gourmet dining and flying in "unusual
airplanes."
She is survived by her children Lawrence, Andrea and Christy Kastner;
stepchildren Matthew, Michael and Janette Smith; seven grandchildren;
and four great-grandchildren.
A son, Gene Kastner, and her husband, Don Smith, who worked as a Times
reporter and editor for three decades, are deceased.
Services are scheduled for noon May 11 at Waverly Chapel in Santa
Ana.
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By Ashley Powers, Times Staff Writer
April 27, 2007