NORMA BRASTAD GOODRICH – ’25

Norma Brastad was born in Oakes, North Dakota, in 1907. Her family moved to Anaheim in 1916. She graduated from the old Central School and enrolled at Anaheim High in the fall of 1921, graduating in the spring of 1925. She served on the student body self-government committee and as a senior class officer. She was also the calendar editor of the 1925 yearbook. A well-rounded student, Norma also enjoyed sports and ran track and managed the girls’ basketball team. The caption next to her senior photo said: “Just imagine her doing anything naughty.” Her best friends included Grace Jackson, the younger sister of druggist Earl Jackson, Sarah Fay, who later married long-time Anaheim mayor Charlie Pearson, and Elizabeth “Sis” Schweinfest.

After graduating from AHS, Norma attended UCLA, earning an elementary teaching credential. She went on to teach grade school for many years in the Placentia-Yorba Linda and Ventura school districts. She married Jerry Goodrich of Santa Ana and settled once again in Anaheim to raise her two sons, both AHS graduates. John graduated in 1958; Bob in 1963. Her sons remember her as a “very loving and wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and teacher.” She died in 2008 at age of 100 years.

LARRY TAYLOR – ’64

Larry Taylor

Larry Taylor was actively involved in the AHS drama program and Mozart Choir. After leaving Anaheim, he became a successful stage actor in New York. His classmates remember his grand entrance at their 25th reunion in 1989. Always a showman, Larry arrived in a limo, dressed in a tuxedo with his “date,” Mrs. Thompson, his former drama teacher. Larry was very appreciative of her and he thanked her for the guidance that led to his acting career. Larry is remembered by his 1964 classmate Candice (Hintenberger) Linn.

JOHN HENRY MASON – ’30

John Mason Henry, an AUHS Class of 1930 graduate, was born in Anaheim on June 18, 1913, and passed away in his sleep on Tuesday, October 25, 2011. He is survived by Helen, his wife of 61 years, and his children, Susan, Cathy, Douglas and David.
While at AHS, Mason was a member of the Honor Society – ’27, ’28, ’29, ’30; Classic Club – ’27, ’28, ’29, ’30; Commerical Club; R.O.G.D.; Hi-Y; Forensics; Mozart Club; Orchestra; Music Club and Junior Play. He also spoke German and French.
He was a teacher and counselor at Anaheim High School for 42 years, leaving between 1942 and 1946 to serve in the U.S. Navy during WWII.
Mason’s grandfather was Captain Alexander Henry, who lived on the corner of Broadway and Claudina streets. Captain Henry showed his patriotism every Fourth of July by pulling a canon onto his front lawn and into the street to shoot of several rounds. Mason’s father and uncles owned the Henry Drug Store on Lemon and Center.

FAYE KERN SCHULTZ – 1918

Faye Kern Schulz

After graduating from USC, Faye Kern Schultz was hired in 1922 to teach speech and social studies at her alma mater, Anaheim Union High School. She later became the drama coach and filled that role for many years. She co-wrote the school’s first musical comedy, HEIGH-HO, presented in 1928. Her co-writer was Charles Walter, who later became a Hollywood director and choreographer most noted for his work in MGM musicals and comedies. Mrs. Schulz retired in 1963 after teaching at Anaheim High School for 41 years. She is remembered by Barbara Mahaffie as “My teacher, my friend.”

ELIZABETH DICKERSON – ’28

Elizabeth Dickerson entered the world of academia after graduating from Anaheim Union High School in 1928. She achieved the position of principal of Cypress Elementary School and later became the superintendent of the Cypress School District. There is a elementary school named for her in Buena Park. She is remembered by Barbara Mahaffie as “a distinguished educator, compassionate woman and my friend.”

RUTH SHAVER CHANCE – ’32

A true blue Colonist , Ruth Shaver Chance, who graduated from Anaheim High in 1932, saw her four children, Dennis ’59, Sallie ’63, Dee Ann ’64, Gary ’67, and two grandchildren, David ’90 and Jennifer ’92, also graduate from her alma mater. (Her children were taught by many of the same teachers, including Miss Faye Schultz and Mr. Henry Mason and Miss Dora Jean Golder.)

An Anaheim resident since age 9, her family home was a citrus ranch on the property where Katella High School is now located. She also attended Broadway Elementary and Fremont Junior High.

A fun-loving young woman, Ruth participated in all her alma mater had to offer in her favorite areas of music and athletics. She played basketball, baseball, volleyball all four of her years at Anaheim High. She was also played hockey for three of those years. She served as the Varsity Basketball Team Manager her senior year, earning her Block A membership in the Girls’ Athletic Association because of her athletic abilities.

GARY CHANCE – ’67

The youngest of the Chance family, Gary, a ‘67 grad, enjoyed academics, especially math and history, and also excelled in woodshop classes. In fact, he went on to teach woodshop for 29 years at Antelope Valley High School, then spent nearly another decade teaching wood shop at a continuation school and a high school independent study program. His mother, brother and two sisters also graduated from Anaheim High.

FRED FRANK – ’53

Anaheim High Class of 1953 graduate Frederick Byron “Fred” Frank III passed away at age 76 on April 15, 2012. He was born on February 12, 1936, to Charles and Irma Frank and raised in Anaheim. After graduating from Anaheim High and serving in the Army, he earned a degree from Chapman College in 1960.

Fred then launched into a music career, working in the studios of Los Angeles singing on many television and film projects. He performed in many stage plays, was one of the first members of the Dapper Dans Barbershop Quartet at Disneyland. He also shared his talents as a teacher and spent 10 years in education and taught choral music at Los Alamitos High School.

Another major accomplish was serving as the choral director and soloist on the T.V. program “Hour of Power” at the Garden Grove Community Church. Fred began a traveling music ministry for over 20 years, visiting churches in all 50 states.

Fred Frank – Age 75

In the early 1990s, he moved to San Clemente and started a music production company, Comfort Music, which focused on the funeral industry. More recently, he began a company “Growing Through Grief” that brings comfort and encouragement to those who are dealing with the loss of a loved one.

Click on the following link for a tribute to this outstanding Colonist:

http://pinterest.com/donpayne7/fred-frank-tribute/

 

1983 Class year contact

Representatives of Class of 1983 are: Ray Esparza, Mary Braver Gonzales or Wiley Randolph at AHS1983classreunion@gmail.com or via Facebook .

AHSAA Awards First Scholarship to 2009 Grads

In keeping with its mission “to promote and support opportunities and programs for the benefit of AHS students,” the Anaheim High School Alumni Association named senior Kimberly Alvarez as its first Colonist Spirit Award winner. Kimberly, who received a $1,000 scholarship toward her four-year degree, was selected from a field of 34 applicants for her well-rounded background in academics, extra-curricular activities and pride in being a Colonist.

Top six finalists of the first AHSAA Colonist Spirit Award were Irvin Rodriguez, Ana Montoya, Stephanie Ibarra, Reyna Hernandez and Kymberly Alvarez.

Two other Anaheim High graduates who benefited from alumni-funded scholarships were Luis Amaya and Melissa Mateos, male and female athletes of the year. These students were selected by their coaches to receive the Bud Fassel Memorial Scholarship. Each received $1,000 toward their educational expenses.

Luis Amaya, recipient of the Bud Fassel Memorial Scholarship, is congratulated by Jerry Woodward from class of ‘59. A star athlete in football and track, Jerry was mentored by the Bud, a ‘36 AHS grad who returned to his alma mater in 1956 as the first full-time equipment manager at the high school level. Bud’s son is ’67 AHS graduate Jim Fassel who went on to quarterback for the Chicago Bears and coach the New York Giants.

A 1936 grad, Fassel was the football team manager and basketball captain. He returned to his alma mater in 1956 as the first full-time equipment manager at the high school level and was an important member of Anaheim football program for the next 25 years. He greatly influenced the career of his son, ’67 graduate Jim Fassel, a Colonist football star who went on to quarterback for the Chicago Bears and coach the New York Giants. Both father and son are inductees of Anaheim High’s Hall of Fame.