The Anaheim Union Educational “The Pledge” program collaborative was celebrated today at Anaheim High School with a visit from UC President Janet Napolitano and UCI Chancellor Howard Gillman.
The celebration included an inspiring speech by AHS Class of 2016 graduate Kimberly Escalante, a AHS Alumni Association Spirit Award winner who is in second year at UCI.
AHS Princial and alumni Robert Saldivar welcomed all the attendees, including students who have taken The Pledge. Enjoy these photos from the event:
- AHS welcomes UC President Janet Napolitano
- UC President Napolitano and UCI Chancellor Gillman visited Anaheim High to celebrate the AUHSD Pledge Program
- AHS Principal and alumnus Robert Saldivar
- AUHSD Pledge Program
- Pledge program provides pathway to college
- AHS Class of 2016 Kimberly Escalante spoke an audience of students and dignitaries about her education pathway that’s taken her two UCI.
- UC President Napolitano
- AHS grad and UCI student Kimberly Excalante was a recipient of the AHSAA Spirit Award
- The AHS Jazz Band played for a full crowd in Cook Auditorium
- AHS students are taking the pledge to complete their college and career goals.
- ASB President Karina Moreno with her father Jose Moreno, an Anaheim City Councilman
- Keynote speaker Class of ’16 Kimberly Escalante and UCI Chancellor Gillman
- The Main Building corridor received special attention for the visit, including adding new memorabilia to the cabinets.
- Kimberly with UC President Napolitano
- Kimberly took time to visit her track coach Mr. Storm.
- Kimberly surprised Coach Storm with a visit
- Kimberly speaking to students in her former teacher, Mrs. Majewsk’s classroom.
- Members of the Anaheim Collaborative who all help uphold the Pledge Progam
- Mrs. Majewski is a UCI grad who mentored Kimberly.
- Kimberly in Mrs. Majewski’s classroom
- Kimberly and Principal Saldivar
- Anaheim – Home of the Colonists!










































































































































































The AHS Alumni Association recently learned of another Anaheim High graduate who competed as an Olympic athlete, increasing the Colonist Olympian count to six.
Anaheim High’s legendary swim and water polo coach Jon Urbanchek, himself an Olympic swimmer, is in Rio now as a special assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic Swimming Team, a position he also held in 2012.
water polo coach between 1963 and 1978, an era when his Colonist teams achieved CIF championships and All American honors.



Happy 100th birthday to Martin Geissler from Class of 1936. He will become a Centennial Colonist on Dec. 24, 2017.


Anaheim High’s Clayes Stadium served as more than just a place to sit and watch Colonist football, soccer games, track meets, graduations, band performances and other events.
Named after Anaheim’s longest serving principal, Joseph A. Clayes, the stadium evolved into an iconic structure. Along with a training facility below and above (generations of Anaheim athletics ran the stadium steps) and a place from which Colonist fans cheered on their teams, the grandstand also served as a vehicle for expressing class pride.
At some point during the stadium’s 90-year history, the tradition of painting the stadium surfaced. An upper classman privilege, painting the stadium became so much a part of becoming a senior that it was looked upon as a small infraction (provided of course that it is done in good taste) to NOT paint your class numbers in blue and gold on the stadium steps. Being a part of the paint crew for these secret evening sessions is a favorite memory of many Anaheim grads.
During his 22-year tenure, Principal Clayes oversaw the complete reconstruction of the school after being destroyed by the 1933 Long Beach earthquake. Along with the main building, auditorium, gymnasium, athletic fields and stadium, a new swimming pool was constructed in the 1920s and later replaced in the 1940s.
The stadium was condemned in recent years and the pool was emptied more than 10 years ago, both due to structural damage. With community support, including that of Anaheim alumni, the District is undertaking a major renovation of the school’s athletic facilities, including the construction of a new aquatics center and improvements to the gymnasium and fields.


















Roger J. Tapson, who lived in Scranton since June 2014, died in the comfort of his home on Sept. 28, 2017. Roger, born in Chicago on Aug. 8, 1950, was a lifelong resident of Southern California and a 1968 graduate of Anaheim High School. Although he missed the Pacific Ocean and watching the sun set over it, Roger loved learning about Pa. and the four seasons on the East Coast, which was new to him. His knowledge of music, literature and film was astonishing, and he was delighted and happy every day to learn and appreciate the music, art and talents of the people in Scranton. He felt every human being was important and should be told they were. You could not stop Roger from communicating with anyone and everyone he met in a positive, complimentary and respectful way.



