Donald R. Betzsold – Oct. 28,1925 – May 6, 2014

Don Betzold funeral imageDonald R. Betzold 1943Donald Roy Betzsold from AUHS Class of 1943 passed away peacefully at age 88 on May 6, 2014, in Anaheim, where he was born Oct. 28, 1925. Donald lived in Anaheim most of his life except for a brief period in 1938, when he lived in Tacoma, Washington.

While at Anaheim High, Donald was a scholar-athlete, playing baseball and football. In recent years he enjoyed attending the varsity football games with his daughter Robyne Betzsold, a teacher at Anaheim High School.

He met his wife, Ruby Strange, to whom he was married for nearly 70 years, when he was serving in the U.S. Navy in WWII. She died in 2008.

Donald attended Fullerton College and later the University of Southern California, where he received his architectural degree. He worked for Frank Homolka and Associates in Long Beach, designing many Home Savings, as well as buildings at CSU Long Beach and the Belmont Plaza swimming pool for the 1984 Olympics. He also designed several private homes in Orange County.

On a community level, Donald served as president of the Anaheim Historical Society and organized their display at the 100th Anniversary of the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa.

Donald was especially proud of his 65 years in the Elks. He joined the Anaheim Elks with his father and brother. When that Elks closed, Donald moved to the Buena Park Elks Lodge 2046, the “Lodge with a Heart.” He held many positions with the Elks and served as Exalted Ruler from 1995 to 1996.

One of his most rewarding accomplishments was raising funds for Buena Park Junior High’s American Heritage Scholarship Program to send students to visit Washington, D.C. One year he traveled with them. In his last years, Donald kept active with the Elks and visited Walnut Village to help patients enjoy Bingo. He was living at Walnut Village at the time of his death.

Don Betzsold's parents, George and Mary, were owners of Betzsold Studios, a long-time Anaheim business.

Don Betzsold’s parents, George and Mary, were owners of Betzsold Studios, a long-time Anaheim business.

Donald is survived by his daughter, Robyne Betzsold; granddaughter, Jennifer Balsiger; and grandson, Austin Lawrence. He was interned at Anaheim Cemetery.

Wilhelmina G. Van Hunnick – July 27, 1936 – April 29, 2009

One of Anaheim High’s exemplary graduates was Wilhelmina Grace Van Hunnick from Class of 1954.

After graduating 15th in her class at Anaheim High, Willi (as she was known by her friends and family), she attended USC, where she was a business major and member of the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society. She also served as a USC Associate and on the Humanities Committee for Letters, Arts, and Science.

Anaheim was to continue benefitting from this pioneer daughter who returned to her hometown to teach for 32 years in the Anaheim Union High School District. She became a renowned business teacher at John F. Kennedy High School, earning Teacher of the Year three times and Orange County Teacher of the Year.

She served as chairman of Kennedy High Business Department and as an advisor for Future Business Leaders of America, a program with Wilhelmina G. Van Hunnick_NEW_0001which she was involved throughout her high school years. Her service as a student adviser, as well as a member of the organization’s Board of Directors at the state and national level, earned her a place in the FBLA Wall of Fame and the title of California Business Person of the Year.

Along with her passion for teaching, Ms. Van Hunnick loved the performing arts and chaired the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Foundation, helping establish a state-of-the-art auditorium at high school.

Wilhelmina and Elizabeth Van HunnickHer sister, Elizabeth Van Hunnick from Class of 1956, taught at Fremont Junior High School and is a Lifetime Member of the Anaheim High School Alumni Association and has donated many of her and her sister’s AUHS memorabilia items to the Alumni Association’s for preservation.

More about Wilhelmina’s life can be read at:

http://www.kpacfoundation.org/wilhelmina_vanhunnick.html

 

AHSAA Announces First Endowed Scholarship

Gania (Demaree) Trotter, an Anaheim Union High School Class of 1944 graduate, along with other alumni, has established an endowed scholarship through the AHS Alumni Association to honor her father, Dr. Paul H. Demaree, who served as a AUHS teacher and administrator from 1925 through 1958.

The income from the endowment will provide annual scholarships for Anaheim High graduates to further their educations and advancement to professional careers. All alumni are invited to contribute to this fund as a centerpiece of continuing care for their alma mater. Many former AUHS students may personally remember Dr. Demaree or may have parents who were students during his years at AUHS.

Demaree’s tenure at Anaheim High started when he joined the AUHS staff as a teacher of social studies and to coach football and baseball. In 1926, Demaree’s “B” team had the best record of all the AUHS teams. Upon the death of Joseph A. Clayes, who served as principal for nearly 22 years from 1919 to 1941, the School Board rehired Demaree, who had left Anaheim for three years to serve as principal of Capistrano High School.

At the first assembly of the 1941 school year, Demaree reminded the student body that “principal” ended in “pal,” a word he hoped would describe his relationship with the students. Not only was he a friend and father figure to Anaheim pupils and teachers, four of his students were his own children, including daughters Kathleen (’38), Gania (’44), Ruth (’45) and and son Dan (’50).

It was most definitely a family affair for Demaree and his wife, Mary, who often entertained students and teachers at their home and, for many years, prepared and served a turkey dinner to the faculty and staff as a prelude to the school holiday break.

He was also a beloved figure in the community and gave leadership to the Rotary Club, his church and the YMCA. Mr. and Mrs. Demaree worked each summer at the YMCA’s Camp Osceola in the San Bernardino Mountains, where they would cook elaborate meals for camp’s teenage occupants. Memorable to many from that era were the hot caramel yeast rolls the Demarees baked each morning for the hungry campers.

An active board member of the local YMCA, he also found time to be counselor for the Blue and Gold Hi-Y Club of more than 100 members. Six of them jointly shared valedictorian honors at graduation in 1950.

Demaree also organized a Toastmaster’s program to encourage public speaking skills in the community. He is credited with being one of the original founders of Toastmasters International. He also founded a Junior Toastmasters program at the high school.

The start of World War II dramatically changed the atmosphere of AUHS when 50 students of Japanese descent were forced to relocate with their families to concentration camps. Demaree was vocal in speaking out against the discrimination towards Japanese-Americans, a very courageous position to take considering the war fervor at the time. Demaree kept in touch with many Japanese-American students who were interred during the war and encouraged them to continue their studies.

Life at the high school was further affected as students left for jobs in the defense industry and to serve in the military. Demaree asked all his students to carry identification cards in case of bombings. On the first day of school in 1942, Principal Demaree called the student body together with all of them being sworn in the Victory Corps. Students participated in scrap metal drives and held contests to sell the most war bonds and stamps. All teachers were required to take a 10-week course in first aid.

When a manpower shortage affected the 1943 harvest, Demaree responded to pleas for student volunteers from local farmers by declaring half day schedules (called the Victory Schedule)  from the beginning of school in September through mid-October.

The popular Nutrition Period of today originated in 1943, when Demaree introduced a 10-minute “relaxation period” because too many students were coming to school without eating until noon. He felt their health and learning efficiency were impaired.

The war in Europe was over just as the Class of 1945 was getting ready to graduate. The Japanese surrendered in August, leaving a sense of freedom in the United States that had not been felt for years. Demaree held the first assembly on Sept. 24 at which he introduced the new student body president who read the list of AUHS students who had died in the war.

The next 10 years saw the City of Anaheim evolve from a sleepy farm community to a post-war boom town. Change was inevitable for the school as well. For the first time since the District’s establishment, Anaheim High’s principal vacated his post to become the full-time superintendent. Demaree and his staff kept up a frantic pace of buying land and building schools to keep ahead of the educational needs of the children moving into Anaheim. The District asked Anaheim residents to approve a bond measure for $6 million to help accomplish this monumental task.

Demaree retired in 1958 when the building program was in full swing. Yet even after retirement, Demaree continued to be involved in the dedication of new schools in the AUHSD. Throughout his time as Anaheim’s principal and the District superintendent, Demaree provided steady leadership and support to the students and teachers, continually espousing the “one family” concept for the faculties of schools as new ones opened.

Demaree left behind a legacy as one of Anaheim High’s most beloved principals, serving during a time of amazing transformation of the school system and its students. He will continue to serve as a benefactor to the students of Anaheim High School through the newly established “Dr. Paul Demaree Endowed Scholarship.”

To donate to this fund, which will be managed by the Scholarship Committee of the AHSAA, a non-profit 501(c) 3 corporation, please send a donation to the AHSAA, P.O. Box 389, Anaheim, CA, 92815, with the notation that the donation is to be placed in the Paul H. Demaree Endowment fund. Questions may be address to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com. For more information on the AHSAA, visit www.anaheimcolonists.com.

Stan Betz – Class of 1946

Stan Betz - Class of 1946

Stan Betz – Class of 1946

Stan Betz – Class of 1946 – An icon in the world of custom cars and hot rods who continues creating automotive master pieces into this late 80s: http://www.anaheimcolonists.com/stan-betz/

Coach Dave “Papa T” Torres

Football Coach Dave “Papa T” Torres

William “Bud” Fassel – Class of 1939

William “Bud” Fassel was born in 1919 in Anaheim and never strayed far from his hometown, except a trip to the Philippines from 1940 through ’44 courtesy of the U.S. Army.

While attending Anaheim High, Bud was football team manager in his senior year and a member of the Varsity A Club. He was an outstanding athlete and during his junior year was captain of the Varsity Basketball Team, playing forward and guard. At season’s end, his team finished only three points away from the first basketball Sunset League Championship and Bud was chosen for the All-Sunset League Team. [Read more…]

Alumni, Student Musicians Headline AHSAA Membership Mixer

Anaheim High alumni, family and friends enjoyed an evening of Colonist connections and outstanding entertainment at the AHS Alumni Association’s June 9 Membership Mixer, which featured entertainment by accomplished musician and famous piano man Dave Bourne from Anaheim High Class of ’57 and by the Anaheim High Jazz Band directed by Breysi Garcia from Class of 2000.D. Bourne

The event, which celebrated the Alumni Association’s 6th year as a non-profit corporation, was at the Anaheim Plaza Hotel and featured hors d’oeuvres, an opportunity drawing for special prizes, a silent auction and memorabilia display.

Thanks to the generosity of alumni, family, friends and the business community, the AHSAA has donated $80,000 to Anaheim High and its students, including this year’s scholarship awards totaling $10,500. Please join the AHSAA in supporting “Old AU” by joinging today: Click here for the 2014 Membership Donor Form!

Anaheim High Fallen Heroes & Colonist Veterans

Class of 1944 Colonists graduated on D Day, June 7, and left directly for boot camp in San Diego before heading to the Pacific Theater.

Class of 1944 Colonists graduated on D Day, June 7, and left directly for boot camp in San Diego before heading to the Pacific Theater.

The AHS Alumni Association is working diligently to honor the valiant men and women from Anaheim High School who perished while serving their country from WWI to the War on Terror. Thus far, the Anaheim High Fallen Heroes and Colonists Veterans Project has resulted in the identification of 59 Anaheim High Fallen Heroes who are listed here: Fallen Heros-2013 – NOV 11

Started in 2009, the Project is still undergoing and will ultimately produce a list on more than 1,000 Anaheim High veterans. Biographies and photos of several Anaheim High’s Fallen Heroes and Colonist Veterans are available by visiting the “Wall of Valor” on this website.

To submit a name, please fill out the AHSAA  Military Form and email back to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com or mail to AHSAA, P.O. Box 389, Anaheim, 92815.

As time permits, each Fallen Colonist will have his or her story published on the AHSAA website to ensure that our Anaheim High veterans, who served in the Pacific, Atlantic and all parts of the world in all branches of the military, will never be forgotten.

For additional information, e-mail anaheimalumni@yahoo.com.

 

 

Oanh Nguyen – Class of 1991

Anaheim High alumnus Oanh Nguyen, founder of the award-winning Chance Theater in Anaheim Hills, has built a career in the entertainment field as an actor and director since graduating in 1991.

Originally from Saigon, Oanh and his family came to the United States in the ‘70s. Spending most of his formative years in Orange County, it was at Anaheim High School where he first discovered theater.
[Read more…]

Al Wisser – Class of 1942

Al Wisser from Anaheim High Class of 1942, passed away peacefully with his family by his side on April 11, 2014 at age 89. He is pictured here at the Alumni Breakfast in June 2012 with his three daughters: Carol   ’70 (standing at left), Karen Walters ’72 (seated); and Susan Opperman ’75 (standing at right),
More about his life and his family’s ties to the City of Anaheim and Anaheim High School are included in this story published by the AHSAA in June 2012, titled “Wisser Sporting Goods: A Household Name in Anaheim.”
 
Wisser Sporting Goods A Household Name in Anaheim
As the only high school in Anaheim from 1898 to until 1959, it’s common for multi-generations of the same family to be Colonist graduates. The Wissers, whose roots in Anaheim go back more than 100 years, is one such Colonist family.
Wisser is a well-known name to Anaheim residents who remember their family-run sporting goods store that offered customers a personal relationship, advice and suggestions. The name was so trusted in the community that parents often sent their children to buy a ball glove or a pair of shoes with a blank check.

Opened in 1920, Wisser Sporting Goods operated at 169 Lincoln Ave. for more than 75 years until closing in 1981. The store became an Anaheim icon and was a favorite gathering place for local businessmen and neighboring farmers who came to town to tell tall tales of their fishing and hunting adventures.  One such adventure took place right in the store when one of the mounted taxidermy specimens, a stuffed bobcat, was jarred loose by the 1933 Long Beach earthquake and landed on a startled proprietor.

The store’s connection to the community and to Anaheim High was also realized through other family members, including Marion Wisser Harvey, Class of 1938, and her daughters, Norma Harvey Brown, 1960, and Barbara Harvey, 1968. Other family graduates include: Al’s wife, Jean Allen Wisser, Class of 1948; and Al’s brother Edwin Wisser, Class of 1940.

The popular store evolved from the business dealings of family patriarch Roman Wisser (pronounced Weeser), who first opened a restaurant on Los Angeles Street in Anaheim in 1886. When his cook proved unreliable, Roman sent to San Antonio for Miss Emily Meyers, a young woman he had met while living there. Emily became his bride and helper in the restaurant. They had a son, Lucien “Pete” Wisser, Class of 1907; and three daughters, Mary, Emma (Class of 1917) and Alice (Class of 1921). (Al is Pete’s son.)

Roman and Emily tried opening a saloon in Fullerton, but returned to Anaheim to stay in 1898. They next opened a new saloon in the building at 144 W. Lincoln Ave., a property that later housed Lind Rexall Pharmacy. They called their establishment“Favorite Saloon”and advertised Schlitz beer on draught. The family liquor trade prospered and, in 1906, Roman built a new “Favorite Saloon” across the street at 169 W. Center Street (now Lincoln Avenue).

When Roman died in 1913, Pete took over the business until 1917, then left to serve with the U.S. Army in Europe. Emily ran the saloon until Prohibition in 1918.

Pete returned to Anaheim following World War I and was reunited with his sweetheart, Edna Nichols, a Santa Ana school teacher, whom he married in 1920.

The significant changes in Anaheim during the 1950s, including the arrival of Walt Disney, occurred while Pete Wisser sat on the City Council from 1950 to 1958.

In 1958, blindness caused by a diabetes condition led to his retirement from the Council and the store. Sons Edwin and Allan, who both served in the Navy during World War II, returned in 1946 to join their father in the sporting goods store and, with their sister Marion, continued running the store until downtown redevelopment ended their long run as Anaheim’s favorite sporting goods store.

Check out the following links for more history and photos of the Wisser Family:

Wisser’s Favorite Saloon: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/EarlyAnaheim/saloon.htm

Wisser Sporting Goods: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/Newspaper/Post1950/wisserhistory.htm

Wisser Family Pictures and Documents: http://www.anaheimcolony.com/web/wissers/wisserpictures.htm