SA国际传媒

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By Dick Anderson
Anne Marie (Kurtz) '57 and George Novinger '54

Anne Marie (Kurtz) Novinger 鈥57 checks in at 89鈥攁nd shares her secret to 67 years of wedded bliss

It鈥檚 a meet-cute story that bears repeating: Anne Marie Kurtz 鈥57 met her future husband, George Novinger 鈥54, in a bedroom of the ATO house. 鈥淕eorge had been injured in a football game against Pomona, and he was sitting on the bed, with his leg in a cast, where the girls put their coats and purses,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 immediately fell for him because he was very good-looking. George said he鈥檇 been smiling and waving at me on the Quad for weeks, but I would look the other way because I was very nearsighted. I didn鈥檛 like to wear my glasses鈥擨 thought they made me look icky.鈥

When they finally went out on a date three months later, as the two said good night on the porch of Haines Hall, 鈥淚 said, 鈥楪eorge, I want to tell you a secret,鈥欌 Anne Marie says. 鈥淗e leaned down to me and I kissed his ear. George later said that was the moment he fell for me.鈥 Four months after that, the couple secretly eloped to Las Vegas before the school year was over.

Anne Marie (Kurtz) '57 and George Novinger '54
Newlyweds Anne Marie (Kurtz) 鈥57 and George Novinger 鈥54 on the porch of George鈥檚 family home on Burchett Avenue in Glendale in August 1954.

George graduated from SA国际传媒 in June 1954, but Anne Marie dropped out after a single year of study, much to the disappointment of her mother, 1922 alumna Anne Marie Jacobsen. 鈥淥ur family has seven people who went to SA国际传媒, and all of them graduated except for me and my mother,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I was determined to finish college.鈥

It would be another 15 years before Anne Marie, by then the mother of three, would complete her degree in biology from Cal State L.A., and from Pasadena City College鈥檚 nursing program two years later. She spent four years working in the Los Angeles and Glendale school districts before taking a job in 1975 as a nurse director at Glendale Community College Clinic, where she would remain for the next two decades.

In 1982, George was offered a job he couldn鈥檛 refuse: After 27 years at Herbert Hoover High School in Glendale, he was selected out of 62 applicants for the job of principal of Tehachapi High School. Anne Marie remained in Glendale, and the couple commuted for 13 years between Tehachapi and Glendale. 鈥淚t was good for our marriage, because we got on each other鈥檚 nerves when we were both working so hard down here,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t turned out to be a blessing.鈥

After retiring as principal in 1992, George became a ranger naturalist in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest east of Bishop. 鈥淗e was very popular teaching people about these ancient trees that were over 4,000 years old,鈥 Anne Marie says. Soon after she moved to Tehachapi in 1995 to be with her husband full-time, George announced that he and a business partner were going to buy an old packing shed that had belonged to Anne Marie鈥檚 uncle, J.C. Jacobsen, and turn it into a retail space. Initially, 鈥淚 sort of bristled,鈥 she admits, but the three opened the Apple Shed鈥攁 64-seat restaurant with a bakery, gift shop, and fudge factory鈥攊n 1996.

鈥淕eorge would work mornings on the restaurant side and I would work afternoons running the gift shop,鈥 Anne Marie says. Over the years, her customers included Oscar-winning actor Jack Palance, actress and comedian Lily Tomlin, and Oprah Winfrey, who dropped in one day for lunch with her boyfriend, Stedman Graham. 鈥淲hen they left, everybody waved at her from the porch鈥攁nd she waved back,鈥 she recalls.

Anne Marie Novinger book cover

In 2013, Anne Marie published her memoir, Where Did Murtz Come From? And How Did She End Up in Tehachapi? 鈥淚 wrote the book so that my children and grandchildren would know about my life and about their part in it.鈥 The process took more than six years, but 鈥淚 had a lot of fun doing it,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd readers told me they stayed up all night reading it.鈥 The book sold over 500 copies. (To answer the titular question: 鈥淢urtz鈥濃攁 play on her maiden name鈥攊s a childhood nickname that stuck.)

Following the death of their partner and manager, the Novingers sold a majority interest in the Apple Shed in 2005 with an eye toward finally enjoying retired life. In 2015, they sold the business to manager Mano Lujan and his wife, MeiMei, who renamed it The Shed. Citing family obligations, the Lujans closed the restaurant for good in December 2016.

Good news: There may be life in the old shed yet. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in the middle of a big process to turn the property into the Apple Shed Historical Museum,鈥 Anne Marie says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e setting up all the legalities and gathering memorabilia to go in the building.鈥

A fifth-generation Californian, Anne Marie now lives in La Crescenta with daughter Barbie Novinger 鈥81. She remains a big booster of Occidental, having created a charitable remainder trust (with George) with a gift of Apple stock to the College in 2006.

Much has changed in Anne Marie鈥檚 life since the book鈥檚 publication. Son George 鈥淭om鈥 Novinger 鈥81 and his wife drowned while vacationing in Hilo, Hawai鈥榠, in 2017; and her husband passed away in 2022 after 67 years of marriage. Does she have any desire to update her memoir? 鈥淲ell, I only have seven copies left, so I鈥檓 thinking I could just republish it,鈥 she says. (The occasional copy pops up on Amazon.) 鈥淚鈥檓 89, for heaven鈥檚 sake. I just walked four blocks and it feels good to sit down.鈥