The 2025 AHSAA Colony Classic Car Show is set for Saturday, Oct. 18 on the Anaheim High campus. The free day of family fun and Colonist connections will take place between 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and will include a wide array of classic cars, Colonist memorabilia displays, music, food, and vendors selling an assortment of items including Colonist spirit wear.
An awards ceremony with custom trophies will be among show highlights. Attendees will also want to check out a silent auction for an opportunity to bid on restaurant gift cards, tickets to local sporting events, and much more.
Add to that entertainment on the Pep Stage featuring student performers and other family-friendly activities, and you have a day of free fun that benefits Anaheim High students with scholarships for college and trade school.
Click here for the the Car Show Sign-Up Form. Cost is $50 per car through Oct. 1; $60 thereafter. All classic makes and models welcome! Bikes also welcome!
Become an event sponsor and receive a car entry or vendor space and receive other benefits such as the promotion of your business or product on the AHSAA website and social media sites, depending on the sponsorship level. Sponsors are what make this event possible and profitable!
To sign up as a vendor, please click this link.
Questions may be addressed to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com.
Legendary hot rodder and custom car builder, Stan Betz from Class of ’46, passed away today (Sept. 28). An AHS Hall of Famer, Stan had recently celebrated his 90th birthday.
A 1946 grad, Betz confesses to having spent most of days at Anaheim High in the machine shop working on hot rods. He owned a Model-A roadster with a V-8 engine that was shoe-horned in during welding shop. Three years later he built a track T that he raced on local outlaw tracks when he wasn’t working the night shift at a gas station.
Back in the ‘50s, when hot rodding and car clubs were in high gear, Stan’s shop (a single car garage he rented for five bucks a month located in the alley behind the police station) was the meeting spot for The Street Sweepers, a car club he founded, named and sponsored.
Along with holding their meetings, the Sweepers would punch louvers, which are vents located in strategic positions on a car’s body to allow hot air to escape. Betz and his team were stamping louvers in hot rods, racecar hoods, deck lids, fenders, or anything a custom-car owner wanted punched. Guys came from miles around to get ventilated.

One of his award-winning vehicles was a roadster he named “2032,” a completely custom-crafted candy raspberry red highboy pickup with Lincoln Mark VIII running gear.




