Alphabetical Alumni
Andrus, Merle

Andrus, Merle

Merle Andrus

Class of 1915. Merle Andrus. He received a BYH Normal Certificate in 1915. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 8, page 361.

Andrus, Newton Warnick

Andrus, Newton Warnick
Orem, Utah US

Newt and Kris Andrus

Class of 1960. Newt Andrus. Student Body Business Manager. Baseball, Football, Lettermen, Concert Band, Key Club, Boys State, Seminary Graduate, Pep Band, Marching Band. BYU BS Geography 1967. Married Kristine Knudsen, BYH Class of 1962. They have four children - three sons and one daughter. Served as a bishop. Occupation, Vice President Worldwide Facilities, Novell, Inc. Newton's brother, Joe, graduated from BYH in 1967, and his mother, Erma Warnick Andrus, graduated from BY High [in 1932?]. ----1996 EXECUTIVE FOCUS: NEWTON ANDRUS, VICE PRESIDENT, WORLDWIDE FACILITIES, NOVELL INC. VITAL STATISTICS -- Age: 53. Born: Provo. Family: Married, four children. Education: Bachelors degree in Geography from Brigham Young University; Masters in Regional Planning from University of North Carolina. Primary products: NetWare. Number of employees: 94 (in facilities division). PERSONALITY PROFILE -- First ``real'' job: Planner, Port of Portland, Ore. Management style: Empowered delegation. Keys to success: Hire good people, train them well, let them go. One lesson I've learned in my work: Change happens every day. What I like about my line of work: The variety and constant need to get things done. My heroes: President Spencer W. Kimball, President Gordon B. Hinckley and Abraham Lincoln. Leisure time and hobbies: Scouting, golf, yard work. Favorite book: Churchill biography. Favorite movie: ``Four Weddings and a Funeral.'' [Published in the Deseret News, Wednesday, February 14, 1996.] --- 2000. NOVELL BUILDING IS REALLY WIRED. By Edward L. Carter, Deseret News staff writer. PROVO — It may not be the tallest building in Provo, but the new Novell Inc. office tower is probably the most wired. Building H has 25 miles of fiber-optic cable, and it is one of the smartest buildings in Provo, too. With 25 miles of fiber-optic cable running throughout the eight floors of Building H, the new tower is one of the "smartest" buildings in the city as well. And at a cost of nearly $90 million, the building might be the most expensive ever built in Provo. "It is as high tech as they come," said Newton Andrus, Novell's director of worldwide facilities. "It is a very smart building." [Deseret News, Thursday, April 13, 2000.] ~ ~ ~ ~ Newt served on the 50th Anniversary Reunion Committee of the Class of 1960 in 2010. @2010 ~ ~ ~ ~ HIS OBITUARY: Newton Warnick Andrus passed away April 22, 2020, at the age of 77 due to congestive heart failure. Newt was a man who loved to see and understand the world, loved his family, and lived the gospel of Jesus Christ. Newt was born July 3, 1942, in Provo, Utah, to Albert LaMar and Erma Warnick Andrus. At the time of his birth, his father was serving in the Army in World War II. Newt grew up in Provo and attended Brigham Young Training School, Maeser and Joaquin Elementary Schools, and Farrer Junior High. He was active in the Boy Scouts, earning his Eagle Scout and Silver Explorer awards. Newt attended Provo High School and graduated from Brigham Young High School in the Class of 1960. He played clarinet in the band, played baseball and football, was a student body officer, and attended Boys State. Following graduation from high school in 1960, Newt enrolled at Brigham Young University. Newt served in the Hawaii Mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1961 to 1963. His mission instigated in him a lifelong love of the Hawaiian islands and Polynesian culture. He married Kristine Knudsen, his high-school sweetheart, on June 17, 1964, in the Salt Lake Temple. She graduated from BY High School in the Class of 1962. Newt graduated from BYU in 1967 with a bachelor’s degree in geography. Newt and Kris then moved to North Carolina, where Newt graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a Master’s of Regional Planning. During this time, their first child, Samuel, was born. From 1969 to 1978, the family lived in Oregon, where Newt worked as a city and urban planner for the Port of Portland. During their time in Oregon, Newt also served as a bishop, and the rest of their children were born: Scott “Andy,” Amy, and Jonathan. In 1978, the family returned to Provo, where Newt worked with his father-in-law, Wes Knudsen, managing video arcade games, vending machines, and kiddie rides. In 1989, Newt began working at WordPerfect as the purchasing manager and retired in 2003 as Novell’s Vice President of Real Estate and Facilities. Newt served faithfully as a bishop of a family ward and two young single adult wards, a temple worker, a high council member, and a Young Men’s leader. Together Newt and Kris served as employment specialist missionaries in Washington D.C., and as facilitators in the Addiction Recovery Program at BYU. Newt also served a family history service mission and loved doing genealogy. Newt and Kris loved to travel. They took trips all over the world together and enjoyed organizing family trips to Disneyland, Hawaii, the Oregon Coast, Jackson Hole, and Church history sites. Newt loved his family and often expressed his desire that they remain close. He supported them in all their endeavors, taught them correct principles and service through his example, and helped them explore the world. He had a strong and enduring testimony of his Savior, Jesus Christ. He is loved and will be missed. He was preceded in death by his parents, Albert LaMar Andrus and Erma Warnick Andrus, and by his wife, Kristine Knudsen Andrus. He is survived by his brother Joseph (Holly) Andrus; his children Samuel (Amy) Andrus, Scott “Andy” (Christian) Andrus, Amy (Brooks) Snow, and Jonathan; and by his grandchildren Olivia, Isabel, Caleb, Benjamin, Henry, William, Dylan, Phineas, and Seth Andrus, and Kolby, Bryson, and Claire Snow. Due to the current circumstances, there will be a graveside service for immediate family in the Provo City Cemetery on Monday, April 27, 2020, at 11 a.m. A live broadcast of the service may be viewed online at www.walkersanderson.com (click the Live Stream link on the homepage). After the service is over, a recording of the service will be available on Newt’s obituary page at the same website. You may also share condolences and memories with the family there. In lieu of flowers, please add stories and photos to Newt’s FamilySearch webpage. Provo Daily Herald, April 25, 2020

Andrus, Philip
97 North Meadowbrook Drive
Alpine, Utah 84004-1776 US

Philip Andrus
  • Work: 801-492-9242

Class of 1969. Philip Andrus. Alternate address: 650 E 600 S, St. George, Utah 84770-3838 - 435-673-6774.

Andrus, Ralph
167 North 100 West
Spanish Fork, Utah 84660-1708 US

Ralph and Ruth Andrus

BYH Class Unknown? Ralph Andrus. Married Ruth Facer, BYH Class of 1938.

Andrus, Renon

Renon Andrus

Class of 1958 - Honorary. [Students who attended BYH or BYJrH but for one reason or another graduated from other schools.]

Andrus, Roman Raphael
1805 North Andrus Lane
Provo, Utah 84604-1870 US

Ray and MaryAnn Andrus
  • Work: (801) 377-1804

Class of 1952. Roman Raphael "Ray" Andrus. Football, Band, Beaux Arts, Wildcat Yearbook Art Editor & Co-Editor, Chorus, Western All-Conference Chorus, All State Band, Y'ld Cat Newspaper Art Editor. ~ ~ ~ ~ Roman Raphael (Ray) Andrus married MaryAnn Olson, and they have ten children. His parents: James Roman Andrus (Dr. J. Roman Andrus, artist and BYU faculty member) and Irva Rose Pratt, married July 3, 1933. They had the following children: Roman Raphael (Ray) Andrus [BYH Class of 1952] and MaryAnn Olson Andrus; James Gregory Andrus [BYH Class of 1956] and Joan Morrison Andrus; Alec Veigh Andrus [BYH Class of 1961] and Linda McDonald Andrus; Aniene Andrus [BYH Class of 1957] (twin) Porter; and Aniece Andrus (twin, born on 24 Sep 1939, died on 6 Oct 1939.)

Andrus, Rose Mary
3006 East Fairfield St.
Mesa, Arizona 85213-5449 US

Rose Mary & Dennis Blackhurst
  • Home: (480) 654-0244

Class of 1956. Rose Mary Andrus. Varsity Cheerleader. Wildcat Yearbook Editor & Copy Editor, Junior Class Secretary, Debate State Champs, Childrens Theater, Quill & Scroll, Pep Club, Y'ld Cat Newspaper Reporter, Chorus, Girls State, Twirlers, Exchange Assembly, Junior Prom Committee, Graduation Committee. ~ ~ ~ ~ BYU BS Elementary Instruction 1960. She married Dennis P. Blackhurst in July 1960 and went from coed to schoolmarm in a hurry, replacing my own Fourth Grad Teacher, Ida Leichty, at Joaquin Elementary, where many of us first became friends. Law School took us to Tucson, Arizona, where I was secretary to the Pima County Attorney, the first year. (Pregnant women were not allowed in public schools, and I was expecting the first of our five daughters.) Teaching junior high English the next two years got us to graduation, thus ending the first round of my brilliant career. After a move to Phoenix, with Denny in the Maricopa County Attorney’s office as a criminal prosecutor, we moved to Mesa where Denny was a founding partner in the law firm Udall, Shumway, Blackhurst, etc. We hunkered down there for the next four decades, raising our gaggle of girls. That’s – count ‘em – twenty-five years of dance recitals! When our baby went to junior high, I went too. Well, not to her school, but to junior high as an English teacher. I eventually found my niche herding the gifted and talented of Patterson Elementary in Gilbert, Arizona. My community service centered around two women’s organizations which provided funding for Mesa’s Child Crisis Center, Prehab (drugs), Tri-City Mental Health, and lots of scholarships to local community colleges. I also served a decade as publicity director for Mesa Musical Theatre and produced a couple of shows for Mesa Little Theatre. My church service included the usual rotation of auxiliary callings, but I seemed to specialize in Young Women. I directed two stake musicals and wrote and directed far too many road shows. I also did my time, three times, as choir director, or -- dictator, as Denny liked to call me. The highlight of church service was our mission to BYU-Hawaii, 2001-2003, where Denny taught Business Law and Ethics, and I worked for the Vice President in charge of public relations. I enjoyed interviewing international students and editing their conversion stories for use in various films and publications. We are the grandparents of 15 grandchildren. We have served in the New York, New York North Mission. @2010

Andrus, Wanda

Andrus, Wanda
Provo, Utah US

Wanda Andrus

Faculty & Staff. Wanda Andrus, Physical Education, 1938-1939.

Angus, Bee

Angus, Bee

Bee Angus

Class of 1917. Bee Angus. She received a BYH Normal Certificate in 1917. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 56.

Apostol, Kip C.
PO Box 1185
Kamas, Utah 84036 US

Kip Apostol

Class of 1972. Kip Apostol. BYU BS Finance 1978. Kip C. Apostol.

Apostol, Konn
, New Mexico US

Konn Rauschenbach

Class of 1970. Konn Apostol (female). Her parents: Chris J. Apostol and Marva Funk Apostol, married March 16, 1950, in Logan Utah. They had five children: Kristine Apostol [BYH Class of 1969] (Dave) Cunningham, St. George, Utah; Konn Apostol Rauschenbach [BYH Class of 1970], New Mexico; Kip (Sandy) Apostol, Lindon, Utah; Kurt Apostol, Alpine, Utah; and Kami Apostol (Tim) Sullivan, Washington [2003].

Apostol, Kristine

Apostol, Kristine
377 West Mariposa Drive
Washington, Utah 84780-2128 US

Kris and Dave Cunningham
  • Work: 435-628-6158
  • Home: 435-275-4591

Class of 1969. Kristine Apostol. BYU BS Elementary Education & Teaching Certificate 1973. She married David G. Cunningham, also BYH Class of 1969. Her parents: Chris J. Apostol and Marva Funk Apostol, married March 16, 1950, in Logan Utah. Her parents had five children: Kristine Apostol [BYH Class of 1969] (Dave) Cunningham, St. George, Utah; Konn Apostol Rauschenbach [BYH Class of 1970], New Mexico; Kip (Sandy) Apostol, Lindon, Utah; Kurt Apostol, Alpine, Utah; and Kami Apostol (Tim) Sullivan, Washington @2003

Arbon, Norman
16543 High Desert Way
Parker, Colorado 80134 US

Norman and Betty Arbon
  • Cell: 303-482-7740
  • Home: 303-771-8114

Class of 1949 ~ Honorary. Norman Arbon. ~ ~ ~ ~ Four years USAF after HS. Married Betty Doty of East Carbon City, Utah in 1956. Graduated from University of Utah, BSME in 1960, 35 years in aerospace industry, Denver, Colorado. Four children, three boys, one daughter, three grand children, all boys, 21, 6 and 5. Two youngest live two miles from us so we see them almost daily. Attend Newland Meadows LDS Ward in Parker.

Argyle, Virgie Izetta

Argyle, Virgie Izetta
Oakland, California US

Virgie and Chester Wilson

Class of 1917. Virgie Argyle. She received a BYH Normal Diploma in 1917. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 9, page 120. ~ ~ ~ ~ Her parents were Lorenzo Argyle and Emily Manwill Argyle. Lorenzo and Emily had five sons and nine daughters, including Claude Viron (LuDean Peharson) Argyle, of Salt Lake City; Virgie Argyle Wilson, of Oakland, California. ~ ~ ~ ~ Virgie Izetta Argyle was born on July 29, 1898 in Lake Shore, Utah County, Utah. Her parents were Alonzo Lorenzo Argyle and Emily Elizabeth Manwill Argyle. Virgie married Arnold Willard Soderberg on July 29, 1918, and they were later divorced. Virgie also married James Edwin Worsley. Virgie also married Chester Andrew Wilson on December 12, 1936 in Elko, Nevada. Virgie Izetta Argyle Wilson died on August 18, 1991 in Oakland, California.

Argyle, William Robertson

Argyle, William Robertson

William and Rose Argyle

Class of 1910. William R. Argyle. Graduated from Brigham Young High School in 1910, in the High School Department. Source 1: 1910 BYU Banyan, BYH section, list on p. 83. ~ ~ ~ ~ Source 2: Annual Record, B. Y. University (BYU Records Office), Book 4, page 382. ~ ~ ~ ~ William Robertson Argyle was born on June 18, 1891 in Spanish Fork, Utah. His parents were Benjamin Argyle and Jane Robertson. He married Rose Cease on December 24, 1920 in Washburn, Wisconsin. He died on June 6, 1964.

Armitstead, Reo Bliss

Armitstead, Reo Bliss
Ventura, California US

Reo & Agnes Armitstead

Class of 1918. Reo B. Armitstead (male). Business Department. Graduated Monday Evening, May 27, 1918. Source: 1918 Graduation Program. ~ ~ ~ ~ Reo Bliss Armitstead was born April 9, 1899 in Provo, Utah. He married Agnes. Lived from 1929 to 1950 in Ventura, California (in the Carpinteria, Santa Barbara, California area. Died November 1980 in Cottage Hospital, buried Ivy Lawn Cemetery. His parents: John Emer Armitstead & Naomi Bean Armitstead.

Arnett, Marvin Rex

Arnett, Marvin Rex
Mesa, Arizona US

Rex & Ruth/Anna/Lois Arnett

Faculty & Staff 1962-66 - Spanish Language Teacher. BYU BA Spanish 1961. BYU MA Spanish 1967. U. of Texas PHD 1968. First wife: Ruth Ann Snow, dec. Second wife: Anna _____. Third wife, Lois _____. Perhaps the most infamous prank played in the BYU Eyring Science Center involved a cat and a carillon. As a gift from four senior classes in the mid-1950s, a carillon was mounted on the roof of the ESC. The instrument played through four huge speakers, loud enough to be heard at Utah Lake on a clear day, claims Rex Arnett, then a student carillonneur. According to legend, someone put a cat to sleep with chloroform and placed the animal inside the locked rolltop carillon keyboard. When the cat woke up, it began walking around and playing loud, obnoxious noises in the middle of the night. But Arnett remembers it differently. As the one who discovered the cats (there were two), he insists it was a Sunday afternoon and the cats only made a brief disturbance. The big ruckus, he says, actually happened a few weeks later in March 1956. About 11:30 one Friday evening, the carillon started going berserk, remembers Arnett. As lights came on all over Provo, Arnett and a police officer struggled through several sets of doors with soldered locks. By the time they reached the carillon, the noise had been going on for more than 30 minutes. "The console was open," Arnett explains, "and there was a little Erector Set motor that had been attached to the lower part of the keyboard. It had two little arms that came around on the motor and hit two particular keys--bong bong, bong bong, bong bong." The incident made quite a stir at BYU and in Provo, but the pranksters were never caught, says Arnett, who graduated with a Spanish degree in 1961. ---------- ARNETT NOTE, AUGUST 2005: "I left the year before it was announced that BY High would be closed, on a sabbatical leave to attend the University of Texas at Austin. Before I left I requested a personal interview with three people: the director of the Lab School (BY High), the Dean of the College of Education, and the academic vice-president of BYU, all of whom were in the chain of command involving BY High. I sought assurance from them that BY High would not be closed and that I could continue to teach there after doctoral studies at Texas. All three said the crisis over whether or not BY High would be closed as had been rumored, was over, and that firm decisions had been made assuring its future existence. I took it as a personal blow in December of 1967 when I was called from a class and summoned to the University of Texas College of Education office where I was instructed to get in touch with BYU officials immediately. Dr. Glen Ovard took my returned call and said he was notifying me that the next day the announcement would be officially made public that BY High was to be closed. On paper BYU transferred me to the College of Education with the rank of Instructor, and carried me on leave for two more years hoping that I would return as a faculty member. Other opportunities became available which BYU could not match, so that was the end of my association with BYU. I am retired but currently serve as an adjunct professor of Spanish at Mesa Community College in Mesa Arizona." Rex Arnett @2005 ~ ~ ~ ~ HIS OBITUARY: Marvin Rex Arnett, 78, of Mesa, Arizona, passed away peacefully on Thursday, May 1, 2014 in Gilbert, Arizona. Rex was born on March 29, 1936 in Franklin, Arizona. He is preceded in death by his parents, Marvin and June Arnett, and sister, Ilene Crawford. Rex is survived by his wife Lois, and children, David Arnett, Diane (Bryon) Blackburn, Susan Arnett, Michelle (Aaron) Clark, Jon Arnett, Christopher (Danielle) Arnett, 5 granddaughters, 1 grandson, brothers, Tom (Sheryl) Arnett, Don (Marsha) Arnett, Steven (Bobbi) Arnett, and sisters, Junetta (Harvey) Clifford, Barbara (Jim) Wright, and Mary Ann Price. Rex will be remembered for his remarkable talent as an organist, musician, teacher, and story teller. He enjoyed many years as an educator and school administrator, shaping countless lives teaching music, Spanish, English, and giving private music lessons. He had a wonderful wit and sense of humor, and a deep love for his family, his heritage, music, the Spanish language and hispanic culture, the gospel of Jesus Christ, and telling stories to delight children and adults alike. He was an active and faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which membership he cherished, and particularly enjoyed serving in the Mesa LDS Temple in his later years. A visitation in honor of Rex will be held Thursday, May 8, 2014, from 6 - 8 p.m. at the Bunker Garden Chapel, 33 N. Centennial Way, Mesa, Arizona. Funeral services will take place Friday, May 9, at 10 a.m. at the LDS Kimball East Stake Center, 4640 E. Holmes Ave., Mesa, Arizona, with a one-hour visitation preceding. Rex will be buried in his birthplace of Franklin, Arizona, with graveside services to be held Friday, May 9, 2014 at 4 p.m. at the Franklin, Arizona Cemetery. Source.

Arnold, Frank
4123 E Sundance Ave
Gilbert, Arizona 85297-6620 US

Frank Arnold
  • Work: (480) 279-2454

Faculty & Staff 1960s - Physical Education & Health Teacher & Basketball Coach. Later BYU head coach, teams unbeaten at home 1978-79 (14-0) and 1980-81 (13-0), later head coach, University of Hawaii. Author Name: Arnold, Frank. Title: RISE & SHOUT. Binding: Hard Cover. Publisher: Orem, Utah Generation Press 1980 ISBN Number: 0-936852-02-X. BIOGRAPHY-UTAH; 8vo ; Autobiography of Frank Arnold BYU Cougar Basketball Coach. Includes B&W illustrated photos. A reunion of the BYU 1981 "greatest basketball team" was held in February of 2002. Most of the team got together Friday night for a banquet and to discuss old times. "We haven't seen each other in years," said '81 coach Frank Arnold, who is currently serving a mission in Salt Lake City for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. "The stories get a lot better as the years go by." ----- Gib Arnold, son of Frank Arnold, is in his third season at Pepperdine [in 2002]. Gib began his coaching career as an assistant under Craig Drury at Provo High. He also coached a couple of AAU All-Star teams that featured Utah's Chris Burgess and former Cougar Mekeli Wesley. Gib Arnold graduated from BYU in 1995. ---October 2002: Frank Arnold and his wife spend winters in Phoenix, summers in the Show Low, Arizona, cabin they built with their own hands. They are currently working on a two-story home next door. They have a small TV that picks up only two fuzzy stations and no daily newspaper delivery. If you want to call, you'll have to get Arnold's cell phone number because there's no land line to the cabin. The couple recently completed an LDS mission to the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. ~ ~ ~ ~ Frank Harold Arnold (born October 1, 1934) is a retired American college basketball coach who was head coach at BYU from 1975 to 1983 and at the University of Hawaii at Manoa from 1985 to 1987. Early life and college playing career Born in Ogden, Utah, Arnold grew up in Pocatello, Idaho and graduated from Pocatello High School in 1952. He then attended Idaho State University in Pocatello and lettered on the Idaho State Bengals basketball team from 1954 to 1956. Coaching career After graduating from Idaho State in 1956, Arnold became an assistant basketball coach at Payette High School in Payette, Idaho in 1956. In 1958, Arnold became head coach at Brigham Young High School in Provo, Utah and enrolled in graduate school at the Brigham Young University College of Education, from which he earned a master's degree in education in 1960, then coached at BYU's laboratory school until 1962. In 1962, Arnold enrolled in a doctoral program at the University of Oregon and became a graduate assistant on the Oregon Ducks basketball team. In 1963, Arnold returned to Pocatello High to be head coach. The following year, Arnold moved to Vancouver, Washington to be head coach at Clark Junior College, where he would stay for two seasons until 1966. Arnold then returned to the University of Oregon to be assistant coach under Steve Belko, who coached Arnold at Idaho State. Arnold joined John Wooden's staff at UCLA in 1971 to replace Denny Crum, who left to take the head coaching position at Louisville. Arnold was hired to replace BYU coach Glenn Potter in 1975. Prior to coming to BYU, Arnold had been tutored by UCLA legendary coach John Wooden, working as an assistant for the “Wizard of Westwood” during the school’s glory years. Arnold was Wooden's assistant coach for three NCAA championships. Arnold led the Cougars to a 137-94 (.593) record, won three Western Athletic Conference basketball titles and also coached them to three trips to NCAA Tournament and another to the NIT. BYU made it to the NCAA Final 8 with a team starring future NBA players Danny Ainge, Greg Kite and Fred Roberts. Arnold struggled after the 1981 season and finished coaching at BYU in 1983. Arnold accepted the head coaching position at the University of Hawaii in 1985 and coached at the school for two seasons and led the Rainbow Warriors to an 11-45 (.244) record. He resigned in 1987 and noted that his lack of success at the school was because "In order to win here you have to have J.C. transfers and that doesn't fit into my recruiting or coaching style". Arnold then was an assistant at Arizona State for two seasons. Personal life His son Gib Arnold also became a basketball coach and was most recently head coach at Hawaii from 2010 to 2014. Source.

Arrowsmith, J. T.

Arrowsmith, J. T.
Utahville, Arizona US

J. T. Arrowsmith

J. T. Arrowsmith (male) is included on a list of 59 names of the earliest students of Brigham Young Academy, taken from a file in the BYU Archives, made by an unknown contemporary student. ~ ~ ~ ~ 1880 U.S. Census: J. Arrowsmith, male head of household, born <1860>, age 20, Farmer, married, white, parents both born in Denmark. Place of census: Utahville, Maricopa County, Arizona. ~ ~ ~ ~ Josiah T. Arrowsmith was born about 1861. He is from Springville, Utah, and may have been born there. He married Roseina Marie Gardiner on June 23, 1893 (sic) [1883?]. She was born on November 20, 1865 in Springville, Utah. Her parents: Jesse Gardiner and Martha Wheeler Gardiner. Roseina died on August 8, 1892 (sic).

Asay, Richard C.
19322 East El Dorado Drive
Aurora, Colorado 80013-3719 US

Richard & Cassandra Asay
  • Work: 303-690-3753

Class of 1965. Richard Asay. Football, Track, Y Club, Forensics, Band President, All State Band, Seminary 4 years, Junior Class Social Chair. BYU BS Accounting 1971. MS 1981. Married Cassandra D. @2014

Asay, Sandra

Asay, Sandra
Tempe, Arizona US

Sandy and James Harrison

Class of 1957. Sandra Asay. Interpretive Speech, Childrens Theater, Wildcat Yearbook Photography Secretary, Band, Chorus, Senior Hop Committee. BYU BA Child Development & Family Relations 1962. Married James Harrison. ~ ~ ~ ~ HER OBITUARY: Sandra Asay Harrison, December 2, 1938 ~ September 8, 2020 (age 81) Our very cherished, loving, Sandra Lou, (Mom, Mumsey) passed to the other side on Tuesday morning September 8, 2020, in peace and comfort, surrounded by loved ones in her daughter’s home. Sandy was born December 2, 1938 in Roosevelt Utah to Bert and Sally Asay. Her younger years were spent in Ogden and American Fork. Her family then moved to Provo where she grew up with her younger sister Kathleen, and later her younger brother Michael. She did all her schooling in Provo. She graduated from B.Y. High School in the Class of 1957. She then attended Brigham Young University. It was while at BYU that Sandy met several special people who became life long friends and a special man who became her husband. After graduation, on June 5, 1962, Sandy married the love of her life, James M. Harrison. They enjoyed a long and joy filled marriage. They lived in several places briefly and then chose Bountiful as the place to raise their children. They ended up with seven children, a large and very happy family. Though busy with raising a family Sandy made time to serve in Church and community as well. The year she served as the Bountiful High School PTA president, her PTA was named the “Best PTA in the State of Utah” by the national PTA Association. She served as the Chairman of the Pennies by the Inch fundraising Executive Committee for the Primary Children’s Medical Center in SLC. At church she enjoyed singing in the choir, and teaching in the Primary, Sunday School, and Relief Society. She served as Primary President, and as an Ordinance Worker in the Bountiful and Mesa Temples. Sandy was talented, creative, and dedicated, and brought that with her into every responsibility she was given. Sandy loved people and found great satisfaction in helping and serving those in need. She always had a list of people to visit, to read to, to make meals for, all while raising seven children and fulfilling her other responsibilities. After the kids were raised, Jim and Sandy moved to “warmer Arizona” where they had old friends and made many more. Some of the family joined them there and several grandchildren were born and raised close by, so they enjoyed that very much. Sandy loved reading to her children and grandchildren and really loved to sing to them and teach them songs. Sandy’s greatest loves were her Savior, her husband, and her family (and BYU football). If Sandy loved you, you had no doubt about it. She was the sweetest, most genuine, loving, caring, and honest person that her family knew. Sandy is preceded in death by her husband, her parents, and her siblings, and is survived by her children: JB, Sissy (Blake Izatt), Chris (Doug Peterson), Jared (Jackie), Andi (Aaron Raty), Jen (Chad Martin), Jim, and fifteen grandchildren and sixteen great-grandchildren! A viewing was held Saturday morning, September 12, followed by a funeral service at the Bountiful 17th Ward Chapel, 650 E. 2150 S., Bountiful, UT. The service was streamed and is available on the Goff Mortuary Facebook page. Source.

Ash, Cecil L.

Ash, Cecil L.

Cecil Ash

Class of 1922. Cecil L. Ash. He received a BYH Normal Diploma in 1922. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 348. ~ ~ ~ ~ Collegiate Grad of BYU, Class of 1932. Cecil L. Ash. He received a BS Degree in Education in 1932. Source: Annual Record, B.Y. University, Book 10, page 348.

Ashby, Hardy

Ashby, Hardy

Hardy Ashby

BY Academy High School Class of 1886. Hardey (Hardeu?) Ashby. Awarded Special Certificate in Bookkeeping. Source: The (Provo) Daily Enquirer, May 25, 1886.

Ashby, John Howard

Ashby, John Howard
30 Northridge Way
Sandy, Utah 84092-4906 US

John and Lenore Ashby
  • Work: (801) 571-6617
  • Home: 801-571-1623

Class of 1957. John Ashby (twin). Wrestling, Chorus, Ski Club, Gun Club. BYU BS Political Science 1967. New President of the Romania Mission, beginning July 1, 2005: John Howard Ashby, 65; Northridge Ward, Sandy Utah Crescent Stake; former high councilor, bishop, ward Young Men president and missionary in the Romania Bucharest and Eastern States missions. Retired owner and president of Intermountain Sports, a Murray Utah motorhome dealer. Former bishop of his ward in the Pepperwood area of Sandy, Utah. Born in Nephi, Utah, to George Marion and Minnie Payne Ashby. John married Lenore Sturdy, and they have seven children. A gospel doctrine teacher, Lenore Ashby served with her husband in the Romania Bucharest Mission, and is a former stake family history center director, Young Women adviser and Relief Society teacher. Born in Chicago, Ill., to Joseph Frederick and Charlotte Martha Dochterman Sturdy. John's twin sister, Karolyn (Kelly) Ashby is a graduate of BYH, also in the Class of 1957. [Note: Email sent to lnashby@juno.com is being returned unopened. @Feb 2007]

Ashby, Karolyn [Kelly]

Ashby, Karolyn [Kelly]
PO Box 152
Sugar City, Idaho 83448-0152 US

Kelly and Brent Strong
  • Work: (208) 356-0354

Class of 1957. Karolyn [Kelly] Ashby (twin). Senior Class Social Chair, Seminary Play, Pep Club, Notre Maison Vice President, Wildcat Yearbook Financial Secretary, Chorus, Senior Hop Committee. Church College of Hawaii [BYU Hawaii] 1960. BYU BS Child Development & Family Relations 1963. Married to Brent M. Strong, Chair of BYUI Foreign Language Department. Ricks College [BYU Idaho] Elementary Education 1992. They were called as mission leaders beginning July 1999: Brent M. Strong, 59, Austria Vienna South Mission; Sugar City 3rd Ward, Sugar City Idaho Stake; stake Sunday School president; former stake president and counselor, counselor in mission presidency, high councilor, bishop, and missionary in the North German Mission; chairman of the Foreign Language Department at Ricks College; received bachelor's degree in German at BYU, master's degree in German from Georgetown University, and doctorate in foreign language education from Ohio State University; born in Idaho Falls, Idaho, to Marvin Albert Strong Jr. and Reba Pope Strong; married Karolyn Ashby, six children. She is a former stake Primary music leader, counselor in stake Relief Society presidency, ward and branch Primary president, counselor in Relief Society presidency; received bachelor's degree in elementary education from BYU; born in Nephi, Utah, to George Marion and Minnie Payne Ashby. ~ ~ ~ ~ Alternate address: Kelly Strong, Rexburg, ID 83440 - (208) 356-0354. ~ ~ ~ ~ Her twin brother is John Howard Ashby, BYH Class of 1957.

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