CHRIS PREMER Best known as the spokesman...
CHRIS PREMER
Best known as the spokesman for the Toshiba Senior Classic and for
his work with Hoag Hospital, Premer died in a plane crash on Oct. 1
three miles from the Ontario Airport. He would have turned 31 on Oct.
12. Premer worked as a communications specialist at the hospital
before striking out on his own. Premer took over as the Toshiba
Senior Classic’s media director in 1997 when the hospital took over
as the lead charity. The event is held each March at the Newport
Beach Country Club. The Costa Mesa resident and Cal State Fullerton
graduate then met Jeff Purser, the tournament’s director. Premer
managed all media relations and was integral in the planning and
marketing of the PGA Champions Tour event. He continued to write
freelance articles for Hoag publications. Family members described
Premer as a sports enthusiast and passionate writer who had a way
with words.
AL SCHMEHL
The 29-year veteran of the Newport Beach Fire Department died Aug.
27 after a seven-year battle with brain cancer. He was 52. Schmehl
served as one of the city’s first paramedics and helped form its
hazmat team. In 1995, he was diagnosed with the cancer after he
collapsed on the job. His cancer is believed to have been the result
of exposure to toxic substances on the job. He was one of the
firefighters who responded to the 1987 chemical blaze at Hixson Metal
Plating Inc., which is believed to have contributed to the deaths of
Newport Beach Police Sgt. Steven Van Horn and Newport Beach
firefighter Larry Parrish, who were the first to arrive on scene.
DONALD SHAW
The real estate developer and 40-year Newport Beach resident died
Aug. 18 at age 79. He was a principal in Shaw Properties, a
commercial and industrial development and consulting firm. Shaw moved
from Los Angeles to Newport in 1961 and served in the Navy during
World War II. He also supported several organizations, including the
Laguna Beach Art Museum, Planned Parenthood, the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, the United Way and Hoag Hospital. Shaw was a
graduate of Glendale High School and held two bachelors degrees from
USC -- one in naval science and another in business administration.
JOEL MANCHESTER
A director of cardiology at Hoag Hospital for more than 20 years
who was widely credited with helping to bring world-class cardiac
care to Orange County, Manchester died Aug. 23 at age 62.
Manchester’s career with Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian began in
1974 and included a number of accomplishments in cardiology. He
helped establish the Hoag Hearth and Vascular Institute and developed
numerous initiatives and patient-care procedures that helped earn
widespread acclaim for the hospital’s cardiovascular programs. A
Newport Beach resident, Manchester was active in the hospital’s
fundraising group and served on the committee for its annual
SweetHeart Ball. He was awarded the heart institute’s first Vin
Jorgensen Award in 1992 for his volunteer work.
MARCELLA SHELDON
A 70-year employee of Edwards Theaters for whom the Big Newport
Theater’s main auditorium is named, Sheldon died of heart failure at
age 91 on Aug. 4. Her career with Edwards began in 1930 when, right out of high school, she took a job as a secretary at the company’s
office at the Alhambra Theater to support her mother and two sisters.
When the company moved its headquarters to Newport Beach in 1975,
Sheldon moved to Mission Viejo. She was still working part-time at
the company last year when Edwards was absorbed by Regal Cinemas. To
honor her 70-year tenure with the company, Edwards named its main
auditorium at the Big Newport Theater after her.
CHARLIE BLEIKER
The teacher and coach at Newport Harbor High for 28 years died
Aug. 3 of natural causes at the age of 66. The longtime tennis coach,
also known as “Tex,” retired from education more than four years ago
after serving as the Sailors’ football coach, boys’ tennis coach and
girls’ tennis coach. He died suddenly while spending the day at the
beach with one of his six grandsons. A former tennis player at
Abilene Christian University and in the Army, in which he served
three years after being drafted in 1960, Bleiker became a teacher and
coach, first in New Mexico and West Texas before moving to California
in 1970. After a short stint at Costa Mesa High, Bleiker found a home
for the next 28 years at Newport Harbor. All three of his children
became teachers and married teachers.
LARRY GIBSON
The city of Newport Beach, as well as numerous civil and military
agencies at home and abroad, mourned the death of Gibson, who died on
June 26 of melanoma, a form of skin cancer. For nearly two decades,
Gibson served the city in several capacities, starting as a seasonal
lifeguard in 1962. He became a marine safety officer in 1972, and was
team manager of the 1978 U.S. Lifesaving Assn. A multifaceted person,
Gibson, upon retirement from the city in 1983, co-founded a private
organization called “Marine Rescue Consultants.” The firm trained
U.S. Coast Guard and Navy personnel, as well as people from many
public and private agencies, in the use of Rigid-Hulled Inflatable
boats. His business partner said no single person had a greater
effect on the profession o rescue boat operations in the United
States and abroad than Gibson.
BARRIE MOORE
The popular owner of Mi Casa restaurant in Costa Mesa died June 28
in Newport Beach of heart complications at the age of 85. The popular
Eastside restaurant opened in 1972. Crotchety, stubborn and set in
his ways were some of the words used to describe Moore, immediately
followed by adjectives such as loving, generous and kind. Moore loved
to greet his customers at the door and make them feel welcome, but he
hated it when his employees would dismiss them with a canned response
like “Thank you and have a good day.” Moore battled poor health in
his last years and was in and out of the hospital with heart
problems. When he was out, he was on the race tracks. Horses were his
passion. During one of his trips to Hoag Hospital, Moore caused quite
an uproar when he tried to have filet mignon and shrimp cocktail
delivered to his hospital room. He had just gotten the tubes taken
out and was finally off the breathing machines when he reportedly
called the Arches and demanded some mouth-watering, artery-clogging
food.
WILLIAM PASCOE III
The entrepreneur and horse-racing association founder died June 25
at his Newport Beach home at the age of 87. The founder of Pascoe
Metal Building and eventual chairman of parent company American
Cement, Pascoe was also a decorated soldier, an accomplished pilot
and sailor and a noted breeder and trainer of thoroughbred horses. He
helped found the Oaktree Racing Assn. and served as president of the
California Thoroughbred Breeders Assn. In 1970, he moved to Linda
Isle, where he continued to pursue his lifelong interests in sailing
and airplanes. A self-taught sailor, he was a member of the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club. His racing wins include the St. Francis Big Boat
Series in San Francisco, the Southern Ocean Racing Circuit in Florida
and the Los Angeles Whitney series. A longtime horse-racing expert,
Pascoe housed about 750 horses at a time at his farm in Murietta. He
served as member of the board of directors of Hollywood Park and Bay
Meadows.
DOROTHY GERNER
A 41-year Costa Mesa resident who dedicated her life to
volunteering in her community, Gerner died May 24 of cancer. She was
77. Gerner was active in several local groups, including the Mothers
March during the March of Dimes. Her daughter, Kathy Mauro, said her
mother started the practice of men accompanying the women during that
march. She was best known as a swimming instructor who specialized in
teaching disabled children. Gerner worked with several children with
disabilities from spina bifida to cerebral palsy. She received the
Henry Ford Award for volunteers four times for her work. Mauro said
her mother was “too modest” to run for office in city government, but
she ran campaigns for several former council members, including Jack
Hammett and Dominic Raciti.
BEVERLY SALATA
A longtime Linda Isle resident and wife of the man who founded
Irrelevant Week -- the Newport Beach event honoring the last man
taken in the NFL Draft -- Salata died May 23 of heart failure at age
77. Salata met her husband, a former USC and NFL wide receiver, at
USC, where she studied journalism. “Mom had a car, and dad thought
that was cool,” their daughter said. “And she liked football.” Salata
worked as a flight attendant for United Airlines and became somewhat
of a “beach girl” around that time. Years later, she and Paul would
spend summer days on El Morro Beach in Orange County and then in Bay
Shores. Paul and Beverly married in 1951 and moved to Linda Isle in
1968.
LANGDON W.
‘DON’ OWEN
A Newport Beach resident who once served as the Orange County
Water District’s general manager, Owen died April 24 at age 72. He
spent 10 years as the water district’s general manager and developed
the concept for the Water Factory 21, an internationally known water
treatment and groundwater recharge facility in Fountain Valley. The
present district general manager called Owen “an icon in the water
industry.” Owen essentially built a pilot ocean desalination plant in
Orange County in 1969 and saw this technology as a key component to
Southern California’s future water supply. Owen also helped create
policy on water-related issues. He had served as an appointed member
of the board of directors for the Metropolitan Water District of
Southern California since 1996.
ALVIN ‘BUD’ ANDERSON
A World War II pilot and local historian, Anderson died April 19
at his Huntington Beach home at the age of 84. Anderson was a
familiar face at the Costa Mesa Historical Society, where he
volunteered three days a week for more than a decade. Since 1988,
Anderson volunteered nearly 30 hours a week at the historical
society. He was known as the primary expert on the Santa Ana Army Air
Base, which existed on property now occupied by the Orange County
Fairgrounds. In his last decade, Anderson was known to regale
visitors to the historical society’s museum, which is in a one-story
building near Triangle Square. He also led tours of the center.
RANDY SMITH
The Orange County Fair board member known for his Hawaiian shirts
and sense of humor died March 30 at age 55. The colorful shirts
served as an extension of Smith’s jovial personality, said Emily
Sanford, who served with Smith on the board. Smith made his mark as a
lobbyist and Republican fundraiser, working on the expansion of John
Wayne Airport in 1990 and a contract for Motorola for a countywide
emergency system. The Yorba Linda resident served on the fair board
for 13 years and focused on making the fair all-inclusive. Smith was
also one of Centennial Farms’ strongest supporters.
LOU RUSSO
Founder of Russo’s Pet Experience in Fashion Island and a longtime
leader in the local business community, Russo died in March at age
80. Russo launched the innovative, boutique-style pet store in the
late 1960s well into a successful career breeding and showing
champion Italian greyhounds. Russo also wrote a book about Italian
greyhounds and went on to have a winner in the Westminster dog show.
In the 1970s, Russo held outdoor dog shows at Fashion Island, at what
is now the site of Nieman Marcus. He served on the board of the
Fashion Island Merchants Assn. as a founding member and was former
president of the retail pet association.
PATRICIA EMISON COX
Cox, who spent much of her life volunteering and fund-raising for
charity, died March 24 from complications from recent cancer
treatments at age 81. Cox was born Feb. 2, 1922, in Santa Ana, but
lived much of her life in a Santa Ana Heights home overlooking the
Back Bay. She served as a lieutenant in the Navy in World War II.
After leaving the service, Cox took a job as the recreation director
with the Balboa Bay Club. As an ardent environmentalist, Cox involved
herself in Friends of Newport Bay, Defend the Bay, the Newport
Conservancy and Sherman Library & Gardens. Cox’s diagnosis of breast
cancer in her 50s didn’t slow her down. After treatment, she returned
to public life as a dedicated fundraiser for the Alzheimer’s Assn.,
YWCA, Children’s Hospital of Orange County, Bowers Museum and other
groups.
RICHARD NALL
The former Daily Pilot editor died at his home in Laguna Beach on
March 13 at age 73. As assistant managing editor, Nall oversaw the
sections of the paper that published news from South County cities.
Nall was famous for the Kentucky Daily Derby parties he threw at his
home, an event that was a Daily Pilot tradition. A former football
player, Nall’s big build often intimidated young reporters, former
colleague Chuck Loos said. Nall left his job at the Pilot to become a
copy editor at the Los Angeles Times’ Orange County bureau.
DONALD ACKLEY
The longtime Orange Coast College librarian and dean of library
and media services died Feb. 15 from cancer at age 58. A Huntington
Beach resident, Ackley joined OCC’s faculty in 1971 as an evening
librarian and quickly climbed the ranks to head librarian and then
dean of library and media services. Ackley’s accomplishments include
establishing a Macintosh lab, creating electronic databases for
full-text journal and newspaper articles and establishing a
collection of rare books for the library. He maintained the college’s
official campus archives and designed and launched OCC’s first Web
site more than 10 years ago. He also received a Friend of the
Students Award from the Associated Students Assn. Ackley was still on
staff at the time of his death.
DONALD ROBERT
‘D.R.’ SEGAL
The national media mogul more intimately known around Cameo Shores
as the man with the sheepdog, Segal died Feb. 11 in his Corona del
Mar home. He was 82 and had been ill with Alzheimer’s disease. Segal
was the former president and chief executive of Freedom
Communications Inc., which owned 28 daily newspapers, including the
Orange County Register, 37 weeklies and eight television stations.
The Irvine-based and privately held company is the 12th-largest
newspaper chain in the nation. After stepping down from his executive
position, Segal remained on the board as one of a handful of
non-family members, although he represented the Hoiles family
interest. Family members said Segal came from humble beginnings as a
newspaper man and retained his unpretentious personality in light of
the societal influences surrounding him. He and his wife had lived in
the same modest Corona del Mar home for the past 24 years, where
Segal enjoyed walking his sheepdogs, Oliver I, Oliver II and Oliver
III. The journalist known for his wry wit also wrote a column in the
Orange County Register about his canine quests.
RACHEL ‘TONI’ OLIPHANT
A Corona del Mar resident better known as one of the three Knott
sisters, Oliphant died Jan. 29 of congestive heart failure at age 86.
She and sisters Virginia and Marion and brother Russell were the
children of Walter and Cordelia Knott, the couple who owned Knott’s
Berry Farm. Oliphant remained active in the growth of Knott’s Berry
Farm. She was involved in retail as a general partner and director
before it was sold to Cedar Fair L.P. in 1997. She was involved with
several organizations, including Corona del Mar High School, American
Red Cross, the Fashionables, the House Ear Institute, Angelitos de
Oro, Goodwill Industries and the New Majority. Oliphant gave $3
million to Chapman University to build the Ken and Toni Oliphant
Symphony Hall on campus this year.
ROBERT REED
A 23-year Newport Beach resident and former Newport Beach
lifeguard chief, Reed died Jan. 26 at age 86. Reed was “a dynamic
person who lived many lives,” son Robert Reed Jr. said. He worked for
the Office of Strategic Services during World War II, then owned a
cattle ranch, spent time in the oil business and led the marine
safety squad in Newport Beach. In 1958, he began working in Newport
Beach as the captain of the Sea Watch, the city’s lifeguard boat that
mostly searched for surfers in need of rescue. Reed then became the
lifeguard chief, a position later renamed marine safety director.
VIVI-ANNE HULTEN
The five-time Swedish figure skating champion and Corona del Mar
resident died Jan. 15 of heart failure in a local nursing home at age
91. Hulten was a bronze medalist in the 1936 Winter Olympics. She
turned pro in 1938 and skated with the Ice Follies and other shows.
She and husband Gene Theslof toured with the Ice Capades and other
shows in the United States and Europe. She served as show director of
the Ice Capades in the mid-1950s. The couple later taught skating in
the Carolinas and Tennessee and, in 1964, started a skating school in
St. Paul, Minn. Hulten ran the school from the time of her husband’s
death until about four years ago, when she suffered a stroke. She
moved to Corona del Mar to be near her son, Gene Theslof, a former
skater. A life-size statue of Hulten doing a spiral is on a lake in
Budapest, Hungary, and a miniature version of it is in the World
Figure Skating Museum and Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs.
BILL MAULDIN
The Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist who gave newspaper readers
at home a sardonic view of World War II died Jan. 22 at a Newport
Beach nursing home. He was 81. Mauldin, an Army rifleman during World
War II, captured the hearts of readers with his portrayal of Willy
and Joe -- two unshaven, slovenly soldiers who survived the war while
making sarcastic remarks about their orders to their equipment and
even their allies. The cartoons were published in “Stars and Stripes”
and other military journals. One of his famous cartoons in the
Chicago Sun-Times showed a grieving Abraham Lincoln slumped, with his
hands covering his face, at the Lincoln Memorial after President
Kennedy’s assassination. After the war, Mauldin briefly freelanced.
He joined the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1958 and moved to the
Sun-Times in 1962. He also acted in two movies, one of them John
Huston’s 1951 production of “The Red Badge of Courage.” He received
several letters of support from veterans, widows and others at the
nursing home.
JAMES ‘JAY’ STODDARD
The former mayor and longtime Corona del Mar resident died Jan. 12
at age 90. A graduate of Caltech, he moved to Corona del Mar 57 years
ago after working in the petroleum industry in the United States and
the Middle East. He was elected to the Newport Beach City Council in
1954 and served as a council member until 1964. During this time, he
was mayor several times. Former City Manager Robert Shelton remembers
Stoddard for his significant achievements as mayor, including
building the Big Canyon Reservoir “in record time.” Shelton said the
former mayor was also responsible for taking mom-and-pop snack shacks
off the Corona del Mar main beach, replacing the temporary structures
with permanent ones. An avid boater, Stoddard also designed the
Seacraft, a lifeguard rescue boat that several lifeguard departments
use as a model.
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