Minard Duncan – Class of 1950
Long-time educator Minard Duncan will join 60 other outstanding Colonists in the Anaheim High Hall of Fame when he is inducted March 4 at a reception in the school’s library. Duncan was selected for his decades of work as an educator and for his role as an activist who has made a significant impact in his community.
Duncan has been highly involved in the North Orange County community for more than 58 years, serving children in the Fullerton School District. An educator who never left a child behind even before it was a national mandate, Duncan created programs that increased test scores and parent involvement and also founded a free children’s dental clinic with the help of Anaheim dentist Dr. Harris Done.
A home-town boy who attended Lincoln Elementary and Fremont Junior High before attending Anaheim, Duncan went on to Santa Ana College where he earned an A.A. degree in 1952. His education was interrupted when he joined the U.S. Army in 1952 to serve in Korea through 1954. As soon as he returned home he enrolled in CSU Long Beach and earned his B.A. in elementary education in 1957. Shortly thereafter, he began his 41-year career with the Fullerton School District, where he taught elementary school for eight years and served as a principal for 33 years.
During that time he earned his master’s degree from CSU Long Beach in elementary education with an administrative emphasis, as well as a master’s in governance from the California School Board Association. He retired from the District in 1998, but continued working in education for CSU Fullerton until 2002, when he was elected to the Fullerton School District Board of Trustees, a position he held for eight years.
Duncan made a major impact in the lives of the children he served by recruiting the help of local business owners. When he took on the principalship of a low performing school, he recruited 50 small businesses to provide incentives to increase parent participation which, in turn, helped increase test scores from a 22 to 80 percent pass rate.
Another example of his town-and-gown efforts included starting the first free dental clinic in the City of Fullerton for children without dental insurance. He still is involved by securing funding for the clinic.
Duncan has received numerous awards for his work in education and the community, including the PTA Golden Oak Award, the highest PTA award presented; the Orange County Department of Education Outstanding Contribution to Education Award; the CSU Fullerton Honored Educator Award; and the Spirit of Volunteerism Award from the Volunteer Center of Orange County and the Orange County Register and the Leon Owens Foundation Making a Difference Together Award for Education Services.
Still an active community member, Duncan continues to participate in numerous organizations, including serving on the board of Pathways of Hope (formerly known as the Fullerton Interfaith Emergency Service); the Rotary Club of Fullerton; and on the board of the Museum of Teaching and Learning (MOTAL), an organization whose purpose is to educate people about education with traveling exhibits on subjects including the Mendez vs. Westminster School District court case that consequently desegregated schools in the United States
In his spare time, Duncan enjoys golf, reading, water volleyball, camping and travel and, of course, spending time with his family, including son Phillip Duncan, daughter and son-in-law Denise and Richard Godhardt, three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
A founding member of the Anaheim High School Alumni Association, Duncan is also busy supporting his alma mater by participating in alumni events and serving as one of his class leaders who have helped plan reunions for several decades.
Click here to view photos from his March 4, 2016 AHS Hall of Fame Induction.
James Burns – Class of 1971
Jim Burns, Ph.D., is a renowned youth and family expert, an acclaimed author, and the founder of HomeWord, a radio program that reaches more than a million people across the country each day.
In partnership with Azusa Pacific University, where he is an adjunct professor, he established and now provides leadership for the HomeWord Center for Youth and Family, a research and training institute offering biblically based resources for parents and youth. Under Burns, the center has become the largest provider of Christian parenting and youth seminars in the United States.
His passion is communicating to adults and young people practical truths to help them live out their Christian lives. Burns is a three-time Gold Medallion Award-winning author and has written books for parents, youth workers, and students. He also speaks in person to thousands of people each year around the world. His recent books include Teaching Your Children Healthy Sexuality, Confident Parenting, and Creating an Intimate Marriage.
Burns and his wife, Cathy, and their daughters, Christy, Rebecca, and Heidi, live in Dana Point. For more information about Burns, visit homeword.com.
Invitation to March 4 Celebration of Anaheim High Authors & Colony-Inspired Literature
Anaheim High, with support from the school’s Alumni Association, is staging a Read Across America celebration highlighting Anaheim High authors, as well as books that feature Anaheim High and its graduates. Student activities promoting literacy are also part of the week-long celebration that kicks off Feb. 29 and runs through March 4.
Appearances on the stage of Cook Auditorium by four authors, including OC Weekly editor and AHS Class of ’97 graduate Gustavo Arellano, student activities, an Alice In Wonderland-themed reception in the school’s library and a Hall of Fame induction are among activities that will take place during the week. All the events are free and open to the public.
Throughout the week the AHS Library will serve as the event hub and site of a display featuring Anaheim High authors, including Lois Battle, a Class of ’56 graduate who achieved success in the literary world with seven bestselling novels. The display will also spotlight books about famous alumni, including Charles Walters (’30), an MGM director and choreographer during Hollywood’s Golden Age, and Marie Wilson (’33) of My Friend Irma fame who earned three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her work in radio, TV and film.
The celebration will culminate Friday, March 4, with an Anaheim High Authors’ Forum, 3 to 5 p.m. in Cook Auditorium, featuring a graduate who has become a celebrated voice in the Latino community, a Colony writer who published a book featuring Anaheim High haunts, an alumnae who has authored of a popular mystery series based on her experience as a forensic handwriting analyst, and writer and historiam Dennis Bateman, Class of ’89, who will talk about his book Anaheim Colonists Football – A Century of Tradition and The Orange County Football Book.
Returning to his alma mater for the first time since graduating in 1997, Gustavo Arellano, editor of OC Weekly, is also the author of several books and a nationally syndicated column Ask A Mexican. He will speak about his evolution from an Anaheim High student leader to an award-winning writer.
Like her fictional character Claudia Rose in the award-winning forensic handwriting mystery series, Sheila Lowe from Class of ’67 is a practicing forensic handwriting expert. Also the author of the acclaimed The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Handwriting Analysis, Handwriting of the Famous & Infamous, and Handwriting Analyzer software, she is president of the American Handwriting Analysis Foundation, a nonprofit organization that promotes education in the area of handwriting. Sheila holds a master’s degree in psychology and lectures around the country and in Canada and the UK. Her analyses of celebrity handwritings are seen throughout the media.
Lowe and Suspense Publishing have made her book Inkslingers Ball available to Anaheim High students to read as part of the celebration.
A popular subject among Anaheim High students is the rumor of ghosts that haunt the high school. It’s also a favorite subject of Tom Zaradich, author of Anaheim’s Dead – Ghostly Encounters With the Passed, which includes a chapter on Anaheim High and interviews with several AHS graduates and staff members.
After the authors’ forum, attendees will be invited to the AHS Library for a reception celebrating Anaheim High authors and supporters of literacy in the Colony community. A special mention will be given the school’s SkillsUSA program for its creation of free little libraries being placed throughout the Colony community.
June Glenn’55 and Susan Faessel ’67 will also be recognized for their support of literacy in the Anaheim community. Another event highlight will be the induction of long-time Anaheim High teacher, writer and historian Louise Booth in the school’s Hall of Fame.
Thanks to a sponsorship by the AHS Alumni Association, all activities are free but donations of books are encouraged. For a list of titles requested by the AHS Library, visit: https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/?ie=UTF8&cid=A1SDJXD5BSLQVG
Books may also be brought to the Friday event to be donated to the school library or the little free libraries.
The AHSAA has identified 19 alumni authors who will be recognized as part of A Celebration of Anaheim High Authors and Colony-Inspired Literature. Biographies, with photos, on each of these individuals, as well as information on books written about Anaheim High alumni, literature that includes photos or information on Anaheim High, are available at https://anaheimcolonists.com/celebration-of-anaheim-authors/
To RSVP for the reception or to inform the AHSAA of additional authors, please contact Janet Brown at anaheimalumni@yahoo.com or 714-726-4372.
WWII Hero Hal Le Duc – Class of 1940 – Nov. 22, 1922 – Feb. 17, 2016
The Colony community has lost Hal LeDuc who passed away Feb. 17, 2016, at age 93.
LeDuc, a WWII hero who distinguished himself as a U.S. Army Air Corps bomber pilot, shared memories of growing up in Anaheim at his son Mike’s funeral service in 2014. All three of his children are Anaheim High graduates including Jim from Class of ’63; Mike, Class of 65; and Dena, Class of ’77.
In an interview conducted by the AHS Alumni Association, LeDuc shared that he was born Nov. 22, 1922, in a home on the north side of the 1400 block of Lincoln. He remembered the Fluor family living nearby, as well as the Karchers and Dr. Utter, who lived in a two-story home at Lincoln and Ohio.
Hal’s dad was a citrus rancher and his family moved from the Colony to an acreage located at Placentia Avenue and State College. Their address was Route 4, Box 41.
Hal had his driver’s license by age 14 and recalled driving with his father to the mid-west. During the trip in a Model-A Ford soft-top coupe purchased for $150, LeDuc said they had to deal with 22 flat tires and a swarm of locust.
Life at Anaheim High was a happy time for LeDuc. He was a star tennis player throughout his four years at Anaheim. He won the Sunset League Double Tennis CIF championship in his junior and senior years, as well as several other tennis contests. He was also a member of the Hi-Y and the Varsity A Club during his time at Anaheim and played basketball.
A shadow was cast on his life with the advent of WWII. Hal talked about losing his friend John Minogue, the first Anaheim boy killed in WWII. Minogue, who was four years older than Hal and lived on the 600 block of Claudina, lost his life during a mission on Aug. 1, 1943 to bomb Romania’s Ploesti oil refinery, which was occupied by Nazi Germany.
“It turned out the raid wasn’t the surprise they thought it was. The Germans knew they were coming,” said LeDuc, who added that the mission was deemed a success, even though 54 of the 177 bombers that took part were lost, including the plane piloted by 2nd Lieutenant Minogue.
LeDuc fought as a tail gunner in the Pacific Theater with the US Army Air Corp, 5th Air Force, 380th Bomb Group, 529th Bomb Squadron from February 1943 to December 1945. A staff sergeant, LeDuc flew 25 missions, taking off and landing on a crude runway hacked out of the jungle. As a newspaper article about LeDuc documented (see below), he had several close calls but came home to take up residence again in Anaheim.
He married his first wife Doris and raised his family at a home on Birchmont Drive. Doris passed away from cancer in 1976. He then married Carol Young and their combined families included eight children, 23 grand-children and 11 great-grandchildren.
7th Annual AHSAA Golf Classic Textbook Example of Spirited Colonist Celebration
The AHS Alumni Association’s 7th Annual AHSAA Golf Classic, Dinner and Auction was a textbook example of a spirited Colonist gathering filled with pride and tradition.
From student volunteers, to teachers, alumni, friends and family, all reunited to spend a day designed to raise scholarship funds, as well as celebrate Colonist comradery.
The AHSAA scholarship fund most certainly gained a boost thanks to the success of Feb. 15 tournament at Western Hills Country Club headed by Chairman Phil Anton ’63. Golf, contests, an opportunity drawing, awards dinner, a silent and live auction all contributed to raising more than $10,000.
Hall of Famer Jim Fassel ’67, a former New York Giants Super Bowl coach, was a crowd favorite on and off the course. As auctioneer for the seventh year running, he helped raise thousands of dollars by encouraging bids for travel packages and tickets to sporting events and to Anaheim’s favorite theme park.
The club house activities were kept running smoothly thanks to event MC Ed Munson, a sports activist with many titles including official score keeper for Angels Baseball, president of the OC Sports Hall of Fame and the Cypress Chamber of Commerce.
The following tournament sponsors also played an important role in raising scholarship funds: Miller Toyota of Anaheim (hole-in-one sponsor), AHSAA President Gerald Woodward ’59 and former California State Senator Lou Correa ’76 (lunch sponsors); Anaheim’s ARCO AM/PM owner Jerry Zomordian (beverage sponsor); and the Anaheim Packing House and J&M Promotions owner Jack Ohanian ’72 (golfer goodie bags). Correa also raised funds by contributing two dinners for four that brought in several hundred dollars through the live auction.
Support was provided by numerous alumni who donated their time and talents, including artists Ann Betts Sullivan ‘54 and Janice D. Marco ’72, and Armando CossyLeon, COE of Casa Mexico Tequila who brought his CM crew to the course to share his Mario Lopez-endorsed libation.
Many more contributions to numerous to list all contributed to the event’s happy ending. Click here to view photos from the event.
Alumni Inspiring Literacy
The Anaheim High School Alumni Association salutes the many graduates who have some way inspired and supported literacy. The list of graduates who have become teachers would be too long to include but we honor them for their years of dedication to teaching our youth.
In addition, many graduates have gone on to serve in positions within their communities that help promote literacy. Graduates we’ll recognize here include:
Dr. June (Jungkeit) Glenn – Class of 1955
Susan Warden Faessel – Class of 1966
Reggie Massey – Class of 1944
Thank you for your dedication to the Anaheim community.