1954 - 55

Class Leaders

Senior Class Officers: Carl Benvegnu, president; Mary Ellen Burns, vice president; Glaydus Hayes, secretary; John Webb, treasurer.

Junior Class Officers: William Snarr, president; Mary Vitzthum, vice president; Gilbert Cordova, treasurer.

Sophomore Class Officers: xxx

Freshman Class Officers: xxx

During the Summer

Sr. Agnes Eugenie, who came to Judge from St. Mary-of-the-Wasatch Academy to teach religion and math, returned from a pilgrimage across Europe. She went to Rome, Lourdes and dozens of other religious sites, including a memorable sojourn to Ireland.

The Year

Enrollment was around 275. Students included a refugee from the Korean War. Teresa Shinye Ree enrolled in late September, shortly after being flown into the U.S. from the Pusan refugee camp. She and her family were in the camp for more than a year after fleeing Seoul, which Communist forces captured four times during the war. She contracted rheumatic fever in the camp and could not attend school – there were no schoolbooks anyway – until she came to Utah. Her father was a chemistry professor at the University of Utah.

Faculty: Fr. James Kenny, superintendent of schools; Sr. Claire Antoine, principal; Fr. Lawrence Spellen, religion, history; Sr. Jose Maria, religion, commerce, Pep Club; Sr. Eva Marie, religion, English; Sr. Judith Therese, religion, English, speech; Sr. Agnes Eugenie, religion, mathematics; Sr. Faith, religion, math; Sr. Miriam Rose, music; Sr. Stephanie, librarian; Frank Callen, physical education, science, basketball, baseball; George Melinkovich, PE, football, track; Emma Burbidge, PE; Vesta Seidel, domestic science; Claudia Sampson, health; Fr. John Sullivan, a Tooele native, chaplain for the Sisters of the Holy Cross.

Joyce Sawaya was Girls Sodality prefect and helped organize the Marian procession in early October. It had been postponed in May because of torrential rains. The Marian Year opened Dec. 8, 1953, inaugurated by Pope Pius XII to commemorate the pronouncement of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception. Junior girls, dressed in formals, were part of Queen Sawaya’s court. All other grade school and high school girls wore pastel colors. Boys wore suits and ties. The group formed a living rosary on the football field. Members of the Girls Senior Sodality included vice prefect Ruth Ann Agnew, secretary Margaret Clark, treasurer Patricia Rogers and members Valerie Stockman, Beatrice Hurtado, Ruth Ann Brown, Barbara Jean Foster, Dorothy Roser, Mary Gilhool, Glaydus Hayes, Janet Hopf, Patricia Niland, Mary Vitzthum, Rose Marie Eugster, Mary Ellen Burns, Nancy Rodriguez, Georgia Hamilton, Nancy Howa, Lorena Jacobson, Adella Leggett, Kathryn Adams, Marie Bennett, Idamae Waters, Celeste Gourley, Barbara Howes, Joan Bartley, Helen Fife and Marie Montoro. Sr. Eva Marie was the adviser.

Thomas Black was prefect of Boys Sodality. His fellow officers were vice prefect James Carrico, secretary John Coletti and treasurer Robert Servatius. Sodality included seniors Peter O’Connor, Thomas Gallegos and Joseph Brusatto and underclassmen Joseph Miller, Fred Gamble, George Fedor, Arthur Hurtado, Patrick Pickford, Kenneth Sullivan, Dennis McPherson, John Zucca, William Mackin, Robert Jarvis, Douglas Hunsaker, Richard Boyer, Jerry Francone, Ted Mika, Jack Moore and Sam De Luca.

Terrence Fitzgerald, Class of 1954, left in early September for Mt. Angel Seminary in Oregon to study for the priesthood.

The new gymnasium was dedicated Sept. 10 by Bishop Duane Hunt, who solemnly blessed all of the rooms on the ground and second floors before a large crowd. He was assisted by Fr. Mark Benvegnu, who had recently left Judge for a Diocesan post but had been responsible for the gym’s development. Designed by R. Bruce Folsom and engineer M. E. Hunt, the gym was praised for its “huge basketball court, six classrooms and other facilities.” An open house followed for parents. The Homecoming dance was held in the gym.

Reigning over the Homecoming dance were Queen Marie Hale and Mr. Football, John Webb. Hale’s attendants were Carroll Bell and Dorothy Roser. Webb’s ushers were Carl Benvegnu and Leon Allen. Joe Rotzler was the evening’s master of ceremonies.

The Cheerleaders were seniors Carroll Bell, Idamae Waters and Helen Fife, and juniors Jeanne Zaelit, Maxine Hopf and Cathy Bai.

Student Mary Kay Smith won third prize and $100 in a nationwide essay contest sponsored by “Seventeen” magazine. Smith’s short story “Nothing Normal” was selected as part of the publication’s ninth annual “It’s All Yours” program. It was published in the magazine’s January, 1955 edition.

The Judgeonian officially became the school newspaper. Its inaugural edition, co-editors Celeste Gourley and Thomas Black reported in the Intermountain Register, was “received enthusiastically by the student body.” Sr. Judith Therese was the newspaper’s adviser. Staff members included assistant editors Mary Vitzthum, Robert Servatius, Marie Bennett, James Carrico, Katherine Adams, Lynne Hummel, Leeann DeBouzek, Bill Snarr, Robert Larsen, Elaine Seidel and Dorothy Roser, and reporters Margaret Clark, Ruth Hernandez, Valerie Stockham, Rose Marie Eugster, Georgia Hamilton, Yvonne Bell, Sue Connole, Anton Eilers and Michael Mailhot. An editorial written by John Coletti won first place in a national contest sponsored by the Freedoms Foundation in Valley Forge, Pa. “Our American Freedom is alive,” he wrote. “On the dark nights of 1776, the fire of blazing guns sparked the tinder of freedom. On the hot summer days in the little town of Gettysburg, hope kept freedom alive. In a month of death in 1945 on the bloody sands of Iwo Jima, free men saved our cherished freedom.” The Columbia Scholastic Press Association awarded the Judgeonian a first-place certificate in a year-end contest. University of Utah certificates of merit went to Mary Vitzthum and Bill Snarr for photography, Elaine Seidel for sports writing and Tom Black for general excellence.

John Walker and Celeste Gourley were co-editors of the Basilean yearbook. Dorothy Roser and John Coletti were assistant editors, while additional help was provided by James Carrico, Vincent Schile, Bob Servatius, Mary Gilhool, Lynne Hummel, Mary Vitzthum, Patricia Rogers, Joyce Sawaya, Sue Connole, Tom Black, Conrad Nokes, Harry Shaw, Anthony Smith and Mike Mailhot. The 1954-55 edition was dedicated to Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Lennox Federal. Fr. James Kenny was the adviser.

Thirty Judge students took part in a 10-hour fire warden program sponsored by Salt Lake City Civil Defense and carried out by the Salt Lake City Fire Department. The Intermountain Catholic Register story included a picture of Gil Cordova being carried down a ladder by a firefighter. The students learned rescue techniques and the proper use of ladders, stretchers, ropes and fire extinguishers.

Junior English classes read James Hilton’s novel, “Goodbye, Mr. Chips,” and followed that up with lengthy discussion groups headed by Mary Vitzthum, Bob Servatius, Dorothy Roser, Conrad Nokes, Rose Marie Eugster, Valerie Stockham, John Coletti and Pat Cunningham.

As a reward for their vigorous support at sports events, Pep Club girls were treated to a trip to the Trappist Monastery in Huntsville to celebrate High Mass and have a post-church picnic. Ruth Ann Agnew was Pep Club president. Her fellow officers were vice president Marie Bennett, secretary Joyce Sawaya, treasurer Mary Vitzthum and sophomore representative Mary Ellen Brennan. Patricia Snarr planned activities for basketball season. Members included Leeann DeBouzek, Glaydus Hayes, Celeste Gourley, Mary Ellen Beesley, Elaine Seidel, Joyce Windle, Catherine Caputo, Vivian Montayne, Audrey Jellesma, Lea Rae Nichols, Barbara Foster, Mary Ellen Burns, Patricia Ann Amott, Kristeen Malouf, Jeanne Dent, Elise Leford, Kathleen Rosier, Kathryn Adams, Lynne Hummel, Nancy Rodriguez, Margaret Clark, Florence Bannon, Marjorie Vitzthum, Judy O’Hair, Adrienne Aberton, Joan Windle, Donna Murray, Donna Cordova, Beatrice Hurtado, Nancy Howa, Kathleen King, Connie Cunningham, Catherine Anderson, Janet Neeley, Patricia Brown, Mary Jo Cain, Judy Wendelin, Joan Bartley, Maureen Brooks, Patricia Gray, Joan Romano, Helen Clark, Margo Palmer, Josephine Keiser, Amerylus Tabish, Marlene Moeller, Barbara Hodges, Kathleen Durning, Bonnie Soltis, Margaret O’Carroll, Patricia Gardner, Barbara Eltz, Barbara Howes, Rose Marie Eugster, Patricia Niland, Valerie Stockham, Ruth Brown, Anna Marie Keiser, Georgia Hamilton, Sharon Clark, Arlene Inger, Neva Mae McElhatten, Esther Fellis, Patricia Vargas, Yvonne Rasmussen, Louise Keiser, Karen Connor, Anne Gannuscia, Patricia Friedley, Nana Gully, Linda Tavey and Lorena Jacobson. The majorettes were Marie Hale and Mary Gilhool.

In late October, the senior class was invited to tour the University of Utah campus as part of Hi-Ute Day, which concluded with a battle-of-the-bands featuring 19 musical groups and tickets to the Utah-Denver University football game.

Vigorous Debate Class discussion revealed student opposition to three referendums that were on Utahns’ ballots in the general election – to close Carbon College in Price and turn it over to the local high school, to reorganize the state Senate so that each of the state’s 29 counties would have one senator and to transfer Snow, Dixie and Weber colleges back to the LDS Church.

Seniors Leeann DeBouzek and Jim Carrico appeared on “Utah Health Council,” a 15-minute show on KUTV each Sunday, that focused on health topics. Acne was the main topic on their show.

In November, Fr. James Kenny decided his administrative duties at Judge were so extensive he moved his living quarters into the school building.

Boosters Club President Neil Plummer launched a membership drive to promote basketball season.

Girls at Judge Memorial donated dozens of dolls to Catholic Charities, which was providing Christmas goodies to 126 needy families.

A 1955 Chevrolet sedan, a two-door painted cream and green, equipped with power glide, was the prime prize of the annual January carnival. Bob Mulholland was event chairman.

Principal Sr. Claire Antoine attended the 121st meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science at Cal-Berkeley.

Fr. John Sullivan’s senior civics class took a first-hand look at Salt Lake’s public safety and criminal justice systems, touring city courts, the police department, a fire station and small claims court.

“Midnight Sun” was the theme of the Sophomore Strut, with entertainment by Neil White and his orchestra. Leading the dance committee were Sharon Garrett, Ted Mika, Judy Rogers. Edward Middendorf, Kristeen Malouf, Thomas Neuhausen and Patricia Ann Amott.

Judge girls began competing in the Betty Crocker Contest, a national cooking competition created by General Mills to help find the “American homemaker of tomorrow.” Three levels of scholarships were available in the contest, the top one worth $3,500. Celeste Gourley won the competition within Judge, earning a golden pin and cookbooks for herself and the school.

Junior Mary Vitzthum was among the national winners in a writing contest sponsored by Quill and Scroll, an international honor society for high school journalists. She wrote about Fr. William McDougall, Class of 1927, who was a journalist covering World War II when he was captured and put into a Japanese prisoner of war camp. McDougall later became a priest and taught for several years at Judge. Vitzthum’s classmate, Bob Servatius, received an honorable mention in the contest.

A dozen senior boys formed SAJs – a service organization pronounced sages – to emphasize the importance of “responsibility, trustworthiness and Christian gentlemanliness.” The founders were John Walker, Bob Larsen, Tom Gallegos, Calvin Reading, Tom Black, Jim Heaney, Jim Carrico, Mike Mailhot, Vincent Schile, Tom Stephens, Carl Benvegnu, Paul Keck and Leon Allen.

Leading the Glee Club were presidents Patricia Rogers and Joseph Brusatto, vice presidents Joyce Sawaya and Jack Moore, secretary Marie Bennett and treasurer Donna Murray. Members included Helen Fife, Janet Hopf, Mary Vitzthum, Henry Hansman, Jerry Francone, Fred Gamble, William Snarr, Patricia Niland, Kathleen Rosier, Lorena Jacobson, Carroll Bell, Lynn Hummel, Nancy Howa, Vera Dailey, Helen Welsh, Marjorie Vitzthum, Anna Marie Keiser, Audrey Jellesma, Barbara Howes, Dorothy Roser, Kristeen Malouf, Benny Hanley, Patrick Brennan, Jack Raterman, William Mackin, John Zucca, Francis Brunatti, Jeanne Zaelit, Lea Rae Nichols, Patricia Ann Amott, Gay Gallivan, Maxine Hopf, Toni Rappold, Georgia Hamilton, Janet Hopf, Joan Windle, Donna Cordova, Roberta Coletti, Yvonne Rasmussen, Catherine Caputo, Louise Keiser, Mary Ellen Beesley, Patrick Cunningham, Paul Keck, Bertram Theil, Jerry Wood, Gerald Braun, Raymond Nash, Sharon Garrett, Rose Marie Eugster, Judy O’Hair, Betty Crowder, Connie Cunningham, Judy Maher, Mary Ellen Brennan, Sally Pratt, Adrienne Aberton, Mary Roser, Kathleen Durning, Patricia Gray, Joann Romano, Nana Gully, Sharon Clark, Neva Mae McElhatten, Gilbert Cordova, Arthur Hurtado, Thomas Vogrinec, John Pazell, Robert Baker, Joseph Winterer, Judith Wendelin, Katherine Anderson, Janet Neely, Emma Hamilton, Karen Connor, Rosalie Dooley and Louise Keiser. The Glee Club chanters were Jerry Francone, Jack Moore, Paul Keck, John Zucca, Fred Gamble and Henry Hausmann. The adviser was Sr. Miriam Rose.

Joyce Sawaya won the annual Oratorical Contest, which also featured speeches by Janet Hopf, Harold Turner and Vincent Schile. The Glee Club sang three songs at the event, which also included a solo dance by Mary Vitzthum, accompanied by pianist Marie Bennett.

The Spanish class had a Mexican dinner at El Charro Café, entertained by Paul Keck on the accordion, dancers Ellen Smith and John Zucca, and a Mambo performance by Nancy Rodriguez and Cathy Caputo.

Mary Ellen Brennan was prefect of Junior Girls Sodality. Patricia Brown was vice prefect and Gay Gallivan was secretary.

Fr. O’Connor of the White Priests of Africa spoke to the student body about many Africans needing aid to cope with the horrors of the Mau Mau Rebellion (1952-60) against British colonial rule in Kenya.

James Carrico won a Veterans of Foreign Wars’ essay contest, submitting the top entry (out of more than 100) on “What Civil Defense Means to Me.” He also finished third in a National Council of Catholic Youth short-story contest for his work, “The Deal.” After graduation, he went to St. Thomas Seminary in Denver to study for the priesthood.

Two nuns from the Medical Mission Sisters organization presented an illustrated lecture on their work in India, Pakistan, Africa, Indonesia and South America. An Intermountain Register story on the address showed the nuns with seniors Bill McNamara and Ruth Ann Agnew.

The Judge auditorium was the setting for a concert featuring tenor Christopher Lynch, soprano Joan Walker and pianist Norma Holmes.

A fashion show, dubbed “Misses in Stitches,” was held in mid-May to display winter and spring clothes made by dozens of girls under sewing teacher Vesta Seidel. The event was planned by Mary Ellen Burns, Glaydus Hayes, Marie Hale, Idamae Waters, Barbara Foster, Carol Bell, Mary Patricia Rogers, Adele Legett, Mary Gilhool, Conrad Nokes and Leeann DeBouzek. Awards were later given to Audrey Jellesma, skirts; Joyce Windle, dresses; Bonnie Sault, jumpers; Judith Walker, wool suit; and Mary Roser, linen suit.

The Music Department’s year-end recital featured performances by Rosalia Dooley, Philip Schebel, Mary Arentz, Judy Rogers, Marjorie Vitzthum, Sally Pratt, Mary Alice Vitzthum, Mary Patricia Rogers and Marie Bennett. The Glee Club sang two numbers, accompanied by Bennett and Marjorie Vitzthum.

Plays

“The Bond Between,” directed by Sr. Judith Therese, starring Mary Ellen Burns, Ruth Ann Agnew, Marie Hale and Carol Bell.

“Mail Time,” an all-boy production by the senior speech class, starring Harold Turner, Vincent Schile, Tom Stephens, Mike Walz, Tom Giblin, Jack McNamara, Jim Heaney, Bob Barber, John Delaney, Tom Gallegos and Charlie Eidler.

“The Bamboozledyke Chair,” starring Helen Fife, Idamae Waters, Patty Roberts and Joyce Sawaya.

Sports

The football team went 4-3-1 in the final season under George Melinkovich, who resigned at the Judge Boosters banquet after three years and a 12-8 record. He went on to coach at St. Monica’s High School in Santa Monica, Calif. Junior Gil Cordova was the quarterback. His favorite receiver was senior halfback John Webb. In a 44-12 win over Park City, both Harry Shaw and Tom Giblin blocked punts, setting up touchdowns by Webb, who scored 31 points himself. When Judge beat North Summit, 19-14, a Leon Allen fumble recovery set up the winning touchdown. “Some fine Cordova passing moved the Bulldogs deep into North Summit territory and dependable John Webb rammed over the locals’ third score,” the Catholic Register said. The season’s low point came the first week of October. On Judge’s schedule, the Bulldogs were supposed to travel to Morgan for a Friday night game. But on Morgan’s schedule, the game was supposed to be played two days earlier, on Wednesday night. So its team and fans showed up that evening, but Judge was nowhere to be found. League officials decided to call the game a tie and to not make it up unless necessary. It wasn’t. A week later, Cordova and Webb teamed up on a “time-honored Statue of Liberty play” in a 25-7 win over Grantsville.

The team’s seniors were Bob Barber, Vince Schile, John Webb, Harry Shaw, Bill McNamara, Mike Walz, Jack McNamara, John Delaney and Leon Allen. Sophomore George Fedor drew accolades during the season. He also was pictured (along with Harry Shaw) in the Register wearing protective nose and teeth guards, precursors to the face mask. Shaw won the Moran Award as the team’s most outstanding player. Cordova was singled out as the most improved player. Other players included Tom Giblin, Pat Cunningham, Bob Sullivan, Bill Snarr, Charles Manca, Sam DeLuca, Pete O’Connor, Joe Mansuy, George Fedor, Jerry Francone, Jack Moore, Sam Kounalis, Fred McNamara, Peter Pence, Tom Vogrinec, Fred Gamble, Dick Boyer, Tom Linnerbur, John Zucca, Ned McDonough, Mike Giblin, Jack Raterman, Arthur Hurtado, Leo Leonard, Paul Gini, Tony Smith, Fred Pinkerton, David Booth, Neil Plummer, Bob Jarvis, Harold Turner and Jay Gamble.

Frank Callen, the police chief in Bingham Canyon, was hired as basketball coach after a year of helping with the baseball team. He was also an assistant football coach to George Melinkovich. An All-State quarterback his junior and senior years at Bingham High School, Callen attended Notre Dame then played football and basketball at St. Mary’s College in California. He graduated with a history degree in 1947. He coached in Montana before moving to Utah to be the police chief. In her column in the Intermountain Register, “Judge Jottings,” Mary Vitzthum quoted Callen as being appreciative of the contribution that the Pep Club makes to athletic success. “Very few people realize the importance of the Pep Cub,” he said. “The spirit of the cheering section during a game definitely has an effect on the boys.”  Callen’s basketball team was led by juniors Joe Banchero, Bob Sullivan, Benny Gardner and Gil Cordova along with veterans John Delaney, Jack McNamara, Harry Shaw, Fred Gamble, Leo Walz, Sam DeLuca, Bill Snarr, Joe Mansuy, Jim Middendorf, Garf Bai and Mike Walz. The team posted a 3-12 record in the new gym. Banchero was the team’s most valuable player.

Judge fielded a girls basketball team to play in an Inter-Church Basketball League that included Rowland Hall, St. Paul’s Episcopal, Wasatch Presbyterian and Hellenes Greek Orthodox. Emma Burbidge and Helen Coburn were the coaches. Vera Dailey, Class of 1957, was the captain. The team lost its first game to First Presbyterian, 24-23 on two late free throws. Team members included juniors Donna Cordova, Donna Murray, Rose Marie Eugster, Yvonne Bell, Elise Leford, Sue Connole, Beatrice Hurtado and Joan Windle, sophomores Dailey, Judy Rogers and Judy Maher and freshman Roberta Coletti.

The Judge ski team finished sixth among 10 teams at the Jackson Hole ski tournament, led by Ski Club president Harold Turner. Also racing were Tom Eilers, Dave Keyser, Joe Miller, Butch Palmer, Peter Pence and Neil Plummer. Ski Club members received free lessons each Saturday morning at Brighton. At the Knudsen Cup, Turner finished fifth among 43 high school skiers, followed by Tony Eilers (eighth), Butch Palmer (15th), Joe Miller and Neil Plummer. Carol Sue Timmermeyer finished fourth for the girls, trailed by Lynn Hawkesworth, Patty Rogers and Lee Miller. Other members of the Ski Club included vice president Pat Rogers, secretary-treasurer Dorothy Roser, Henry Hansman, Bascomb Palmer, Mary Gilhool, Judy Imhoff, Judy Maher, Jeanne Zaelit, Toni Rappold, Gay Gallivan, Judy Rogers, Sally Ann Pratt, Judy Walker, Roberta Coletti, Mary Roser, Adella Leggett, David Booth, Ted Mika, John Coletti, Barbara Howes, Georgia Hamilton, Charles Manca, Thomas Neuhausen, Paul Gini and James Middendorf.

A golf team was formed.

Frank Callen also coached the 6-1 baseball team to the Summit Division championship, secured with a 22-7 thrashing of Morgan. Judge then lost 7-2 in Bingham in the Region II playoff. Bingham catcher Tom Lovat, a future University of Utah head football coach, hit for the cycle, knocking in five of the Miners’ seven runs. Fred Gamble, Bob Barber, Bob Sullivan, Charlie Eidler and John Webb were the team’s top hitters. Carl Benvegnu, Sullivan, Joe Mansuy and Fred Pinkerton formed the mound staff. The squad also featured Harry Shaw, Pete O’Connor, Gil Cordova, Bill Snarr, Sam DeLuca, Pat Cunningham, Garf Bai, Fred Gamble, Dick Boyer, Tom Linnebur, Mike Abbato, Sandy Dolowitz, Tom Vogrinec and Joe Derbridge.

Gil Cordova was on the football, basketball and baseball teams.

Graduation

48 graduates on June 1 at the Cathedral of the Madeleine.

General Excellence Award, now called the James E. Cosgriff Award, for the highest scholastic average over four years: Celeste Gourle

McGean Award: Carl Benvegnu

Moran Award: John Webb

McHugh Award for excellence in religion: Mary Ellen Burns

Science Award: Thomas Black

Water Works Co. scholarship for highest GPA by a Lourdes student: William McNamara

Sr. Francis James Memorial Award: Mary Pat Rogers

Harry Smith qualified for U.S. Naval Reserve officer training and was assigned to Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. John McNamara was administrator of Utah’s juvenile court system from 1972 until his retirement in 1997.

John Webb went on to play collegiately at San Jose State, where his position coach was future San Francisco 49ers coach Bill Walsh and his quarterback was Dick Vermeil, who coached St. Louis to a Super Bowl title in 2000. Webb joined Walsh and Vermeil as members of the San Jose State Sports Hall of Fame. He also boxed for San Jose State’s boxing team, which won three NCAA championships in the late 1950s. He coached at the high school and college levels (San Jose St. and Northridge State University).

Alumni

Larry Thatcher, Class of 1950, graduated summa cum laude from the University of Utah in biology and had his sights set on medical school; Richard Goldsworthy, Class of 1953, was killed in an automobile accident in Texas, where he was a private at Gary Air Force Base; Thomas Ivers, Class of 1944, was named manager of the investment services department of J.A. Hogle and Co. in Salt Lake City; Dr. Michael J. Sweeney, Class of 1940, directed the scientific division of the pharmaceutical company Mead Johnson in Evansville, Ind.; Norman Harmon, Class of 1946, received a Fulbright scholarship to study physics for nine months in Paris and southern France; Class of 1952 graduates Roger McDonough and Patricia Ann Houghton were married at Sacred Heart Church; dance teacher Patricia Snarr, Class of 1954, attended the National Association of Dance and Affiliated Artists convention in Los Angeles. She was accompanied by Mary Jane Gaffney and Margaret Hedderman.


Written by Mike Gorrell

Year by Year at Judge - Our Living History, was researched and written by Mike Gorrell, 1972 Judge Memorial alum and award-winning journalist who spent more than 44 years in the newspaper business, including the last 35 at The Salt Lake Tribune. A former teacher, John "Sonny" Tangaro, recruited Gorrell to help the Alumni Committee plan the school's Centennial Celebration. This project is his contribution, recapping what Judge Memorial's 12,000-plus graduates accomplished in their time as Bulldogs. 

Learn about the extensive process Gorrell used to produce the class summaries. If you look through a summary and know of details that are missing or have questions, please reach out to Gorrell. 

Learn about the process and contact Mike Gorrell »

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