1963 - 64

Class Leaders

Student Body Officers - President: Dennis Bianchi; Vice President: Joan Ree; Secretary: Pat McCurt; Treasurer: George Keiser.

Senior Class Officers – President John McGean, Vice President Heidi Enderlin, Secretary Michele Cartier, Treasurer Ray Thomas, student council representatives Patrick Clark, Joseph Terry, Jane Galland, Mary Jean Furner.

Junior Class Officers – President John Ravarino, Vice President Marcie Messina, Secretary Jo Ann Mayo, Treasurer Alan Crandall, student council representatives Dion Riley, Mike Lahey, Mike Kimball, Lynn Burns, Trudi Gourley, Cynthia Fuoco.

Sophomore Class Officers – President Brian Riley, Vice President Kathy Hernon, Secretary Francis Yanni, Treasurer John Hunter, student council reps Tom Bailey, Steve Dudley, Fred Diana, Chris Summerall, Judy Oki, Margie Koeferl.

Freshman Class Officers – President Bob Crowder, Vice President Colleen Furner, Secretary Sue Poehling, Treasurer Tim May, student council representatives Milan Buhler, Ronald Lilly, Steve Schubach, Melanie Morin, Jean Laufenberg, Linda Waters.

During the Summer

Recent graduates moved on quickly: Marshall Spalding left in June for six months of active Army duty at Fort Ord, Calif.; Pvt. Cliff Eccles was called away to duty with the U.S. Marines; and Danielle Clawson shipped off to art school in Brussels, Belgium.

Senior-to-be Thomas Sweet received a science grant for summer study at the University of Indiana.

Representing Judge at Boys State were John McGean, Michael Murray, Ray Mayewski and James Borden.

Judge was represented at Girls State by Kathleen Sabol and Patricia McGill.

Patricia McGill was one of two commissioners elected to the Girls State city government. Dennis Bianchi and Ray Thomas were the Bulldogs attending the American Freedom Academy.

Sr. Thomasita received a National Science Foundation fellowship to study radioisotope technique at Creighton University; Rendell Mabey took a four-year leave from teaching to work on his doctorate at Harvard, thanks to a Ford grant; and Fr. William Donohue received a National Education Defense Act grant to study Spanish at the University of Nebraska.

The Home and School Association fixed up the cafeteria, auditorium and lower-floor halls.

The Year

National Merit Finalist: Thomas Sweet

National Merit Semifinalists: Margaret Allen and Joanne Arnall

Enrollment rose to 705 from 619 a year earlier. Principal Fr. Thomas O’Neil predicted the growth would be permanent, each of the four classes having more than 100 students for the first time ever. The goal had been to add students each year after the new building was finished. Attendance at St. Mary-of-the-Wasatch declined by five – from 150 the previous year to 145. The four grades at Judge included 413 boys and 292 girls. St. Ambrose Parish contributed the most (83, including 24 freshmen), followed by St. Vincent’s (47), St. Ann’s (43), Lourdes-Salt Lake (41) and Cathedral (32). St. Olaf’s, Guadalupe and St. Patrick’s and Sacred Heart were all around 20. Non-Catholic enrollment was 8.9%.

New teachers: Fr. Murty Fahy, English and the newspaper; Fr. Francis Pileggi, math and director of athletics; Fr. Thomas McNamara, religion and yearbook; Oblate Brother James Dorazio, boys Glee Club and mechanical drawing; Sr. Mercedes, assistant Dean of Girls and guidance director; Sr. Marie Patrice and Sr. Margaret Denyse, both in languages; Sr. Irene, biology; Sr. Albert Marie, secretarial skills and business; Sr. Eustace, music director; Elsie Lynn, math; John Kenny, Latin; Thomas Dorney, biology, assistant coach to Frank Klekas, head coach of athletics. Also, “Mrs. Oser and Miss Smith, who teach their classes how to construct good English sentences and to speak in an educated manner.”

Administration: Fr. Thomas P. O’Neill, principal; Fr. Thomas Gillespie, Oblate superior; Sr. Giovanni, Sisters of the Holy Cross superior; Fr. John Fallon, dean of boys.

FACULTY BULLETIN for the weeks of Sept. 16th and 23rd – In all caps, “Please tell all students – that any other form of hazing or initiation is forbidden. All must be confined to the school building from 8:00 til 3:00 … the beginning and the end for the year. Any violation of this rule is punishable by expulsion.”

Leading the Senior Girls Sodality were Mary Kelly, prefect; Virginia Vegelen, vice prefect; Cheri Morin, secretary; and Karen Kuemmerle, treasurer. Also figuring prominently in the group were Mary Furner, Jane Galland, Roberta Martinez, Jo Beth Wesley, Helen Mack and Kathy Draper. At Christmas, a group effort to make Advent wreaths was featured in the Judgeonian, with a picture of Roberta Martinez, Maureen Duffy, Kathy Arnold, Dorothy Yarbrough, Kathy Tame and Karen Kuemmerle and their wreaths.

Boys Sodality senior leaders were Ray Mayewski, prefect; John Ravarino, vice prefect; Mark Clinton, secretary; and Richard Griffin, treasurer.

Michael Murray was “Mr. Football” for Homecoming, accompanying Queen Pat McGill “and her proud escort, George Raine,” editor of The Judgeonian and a future newspaper and magazine writer. Pam Cosco and Stu Holman were first attendants. The Junior Attendants were Sherry Sabol and John Ravarino. The Homecoming parade featured Sean Riley’s Stingray draped in red and gold bunting. At the dance, the Judgeonian noted that Sonny Hathaway and Paul Purcell, “and their best girls, Georgia Washko and Pam Hill, weren’t the least bit interested in admiring dance decorations. The only thing they were interested in was getting in on every single minute of the dreamy ‘n mellow last dance.”

The Pep Club, technically known this year as the Girls Athletic Pep Association, was led by officers Kathy Sabol, Martha McDonald, Paulette Fassio, Pat Smith, Kathy Arnold and Susan Cafarelli. Working representatives included Mary Kay Timper, Martha Fritz, Liz Cotterell, Georgia Washko, Connie Sherauski, Jean Polanshek and Diane Badovinatz.

George Raine was editor-in-chief of the Judgeonian. He and fellow editors Joan Ree, Kathy Sabol, Virginia Vegelen, Steve Hofmeister, Russ Davoren and Jim Sharp oversaw a staff of two dozen reporters, including Janice Dow, Kathy McGuire, Kris O’Donnell, Beth Tame, Mary Jean Furner, Lynn Burns, Kathy Arnold, Mary Engman, Kathy Wood and “wit columnist” Dan Tabish. Fr. Murty Fahy was the adviser.

The Judgeonian cover for Dec. 20, 1963 had a photograph of President John F. Kennedy in the top right half with the cutline “JFK: Profile in Courage,” and below that “Ask not what your country can do for you; ask instead what you can do for your country,” taken from his Inaugural Address, Jan. 20, 1961. Below that, “What more can a man do for his country than give up his life for it?” The story by Joan Ree started: “We all cried. We cried in pity for ourselves. For it was our loss when John Fitzgerald Kennedy departed from this world.” Margaret Allen wrote a sidebar about seeing Kennedy when he visited Salt Lake City on Sept. 26, 1963, less than two months before his assassination. “I never actually got into the [LDS Tabernacle] but I managed a place right next to the chain guarding the door. Once wedged in, I found that even when I picked my feet up, I didn’t move an inch. But as I watched him, I was happy because I had done what I had come for. It was the first and irrevocably the last time I saw him.”

The Basilean yearbook for the year was dedicated to Kennedy, with a photo of the smiling president at the airport, taken by an unidentified yearbook photographer, over the headline “Requiescat in Pace.” An accompanying block of text said “John Fitzgerald Kennedy was a man of great vigor, courage and determination. To the man, and to his ideals, the Senior Class of Judge Memorial Catholic High School dedicated the Basilean, 1964. In an era of passive conformity, President Kennedy emerged as a great personality who unwaveringly upheld the oral principles in which he firmly believed. Accepting these principles as a challenge, choosing them as guidelines, we will strive to follow this “Profile in Courage.”

Cytogenetics, the study of heredity and DNA molecules in the cells, was the focus of the Biology Club, led by Mike Heiser and Nancy Bailey. Sr. Irene was the moderator.

The French Club, directed by Sr. Marie Patrice, had Joan Cook as president, David Whiteley as vice president, Michelle Cartier as secretary and Carol Plautz as treasurer. Members included Jesse Emerick, Maureen Duffy, Ray Gillis, Beth Tame, Joan Cook, Patricia McGurk, Karen Kuemmerle and Lucy Schreiner.

Forming the Spanish Club were Kay Riley, Marsha Yeager, Dave Daly, Steve Mash, Joe Mayo, Jerry Lynch, Cecelia Archuleta, Kathy Arnold, Marilyn Fleisch, Sandra Canepari, Cheri Morin, Rosanne Cruz, Susan Grande, George Trosper, Linda Davis, Sherry Sabol, Jane Galland, Helen Mack, Joann Mayo and Kathy Long. The club’s adviser was Sr. Margaret Denyse.

Leaders of the Future Nurses Club were president Kay Riley, vice president Kay Kimball, secretary Peggy Looker and treasurer Cathy Colby, who was elected to a post in the Utah Future Nurses Club. Other members were Ruth Holtshouser, Peggy O’Donnell, Kathy Smith, Nancy Hofmeister, Martha Northrup, Mary Frowein, Brenda Hartt, Jean Polanshek, Frankie Lynn Cuatto, Kathy Spellings and Pam Cosco. Marjorie Pierce was the club’s adviser.

Rendering “service with a smile,” the kitchen staff of Roy Okamoto, Teru Okamoto, Marie Taylor, Rosemary Phillips, Donna Weiss, Margaret Eklund and Louis Vegas was highlighted in the yearbook.

Judge’s chapter of the Model United Nations was led by senior president Gary McDonough, senior vice president Margaret Allen, junior secretary Marcie Messina and junior treasurer Michael Lahey. Delegates included Jane Galland, Kathy Swan, Joan Ree, Roberta Martinez, George Keiser, Mike Lahey, Chris Trentelman, Randy Bills, Sandy Bryant, Neil Zeiger, George Trosper, Jim Sharp and Doug Hadley.

The Christmas program included performances by the full Glee Club, its separate female and male components, and The Cecelians. There was also a talent show featuring solos by Steve Frank, Kathy Swan, Steve Guss and Dennis Bianchi, followed by a play and an appearance by Santa and Mrs. Claus (Wynn Paoletti and Agnes Graven). Dueling singing groups featured the “Beatles”—Stu Holman, Steve Cotterell, Orville Leddy, Pat Clark, Tess Redmond and Sonny Hathaway – and their girl counterparts, the “Reindeer” – Pat McGill, Trisha Anderson, Pam Cosco, Georgia Washko and Kay Donohoe.

“Black Satin” was the theme of the Senior Ball. Charles Hathaway was crowned king and Heidi Enderlin queen. Their attendants were Pat Anderson, Pam Cosco, Dennis Bianchi and John McGean. Music was provided by Marc Antonio; during breaks, the crowd was entertained by Denny McGurk from the University of Utah and “The Taylors,” a group from Olympus High. Organizing the event were Heidi Enderlin, George Raine, Pat Anderson, Gary Olsen, Russ Davoren, Kay Donohue, Pam Smolik, Georgia Washko, Steve Cotterell, Sonny Hathaway and Tom Hickman.

Participating in the “Great Salt Lake Tractor Races” on Jan. 21 in Heber City were Kathy Sabol with her Ford and its 427 cubic inch engine; Tim Kelly, operating a Massey Ferguson combine with an oversized wheat scoop and heavy-duty bailer; Terry Redmond, driving an International Harvester snowplow; Dan Tabish, operating a road grader; Jim Sharp, maneuvering a black-top spreader; and Neil Zeiger, driving a roller. Ken Oswald and Sean Riley ran the races.

Science Club members Mike Bruce, Chris Trentelman, Sandy Bryant, Doug Hadley and Randy Bills assembled a “super telescope” with assistance from Fr. Gerald Merrill.

Senior Latin Club members included Cathy Ivory, Chris Trentelman, Cheri Morin, Sandra Canepari, Randy Bills, Marcie Messina, Sandy Bryant, Kathy Long, Jack Guthrie, Mary Clinton, Gary Olson, Kathy Swan and Ray Mayewski.

Senior Mike Murray represented Judge at The Salt Lake Tribune’s Teen-Age Traffic Safety Conference. Classmate Tom Sweet attended a CYO “Youth Leadership Training Course” at Camp Williams.

Among 86 girls attending a retreat at St. Mary-of-the-Wasatch were Judge students Janice Brown, Jane Galland, Mary Kelly, Carolyn Syata and Dorothy Yarbrough.

The Secretarial Service Club involved Paulette Fassio, Janet Kelly, Anne Bennett, Margo Salazar, Darlene Uhbach, Joanne Dyrenforth, Nicki Fata, Connie Sherauski, Robbie Martinez and Cathy Mancuso. Its adviser was Sr. Albert Marie.

Accelerating their speed in the advanced shorthand class were Anne Bennett, Linda Sakech, Betty Bell, Connie Sherauski, Pam Smolik and Roberta Martinez.

Senior Cheri Morin won the 1964 Diocesan CYO Oratorical Contest, addressing “Bonds of Union,” a 1963 statement by American bishops on race, and then speaking for four minutes on an encyclical by the late Pope John XXIII, “Pacem in Terris.”

The music, history and speech departments combined to put on a Spring Piano Concert under the direction of Sr. Eustace. Performers included Katherine Ivory, Dennis Bianchi, Steve Guss, Kathy Swan, George Trosper, Chauna Eikrum, JoAnn Mascaro, LeeAnn McMichael, Brenda O’Shanick and Karen Kuemmerle. The narrators were Dennis Bianchi, Dennis Caulfield, Sean Riley and Stanley Myles.

“Showboat” was the theme of the Junior Prom, where Kathy Babich was crowned queen and John Ravarino was king. Sheri Sabol and John Thompson were first attendants. The Junior Attendants were Rosanne Crus and Bill Papanikolas. Organizers included Ravarino, Randy Stack, Dion Riley, Rosanne Crus, Jan Brown and Marcie Messina. Pete Marcantonio’s orchestra provided the music.

Science teacher Sr. Irene was named Utah’s state chairwoman for the National Biology Teachers Association in Catholic schools.

Vesta Seidel’s sewing students included Cecelia Archuleta, Donna Wesley, Gladys Schonhardt, Petronella Dell and Susan Granieri.

The Rotary Club of Salt Lake City awarded $300 scholarships to senior Dennis Bianchi and five other high school students for “their abiding faith in America and its free enterprise system.”

Joan Ree oversaw the program as Judge students entertained the Catholic Women’s League at its annual luncheon at the Ladies Literary Club. Susan Granieri and Petronella Dell displayed work done by the sewing club, Patricia McGill and Kathleen Sabol gave reports on Girls State and introduced their successors, Janice Brown and Cheri Morin.

Judge represented Morocco at the Model United Nations. Dressed in a native Moroccan costume, Marcie Messina carried the country’s flag into the opening ceremony at the University of Utah. Two articles written by Kathy Sabol were printed in the Model U.N. Assembly’s paper, The Observer.

In a letter read Sunday (when? xxxx) from the pulpit at all Masses at all parishes, Bishop Joseph Lennox Federal said Judge would be all boys starting in 1963-64. Some 300 girls of the student body will attend St. Mary’s, leaving an expected 425 boys at Judge. “This move will give us accommodations for an additional 700 students without a new high school building,” Bishop Federal said. Space was needed because Judge received students from six Catholic grade schools and was expecting more with two additional elementary schools under construction. “More and better high school education for our youth,” Bishop Federal added.

Judge had been a co-educational institution since the 1920s, operated by the Salt Lake Diocese, while St. Mary’s was an exclusive girls’ academy run by the Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross. With the change, both schools would be run by the diocese, operated as twin institutions “whereby co-curricular activities of each of the schools will be coordinated.” Tuition was the same for both schools, with the Oblates running Judge while Holy Cross sisters operated St. Mary’s. “We want and desire the students of each of the schools to be associated,” Fr. James Kenney said.

When 125 Judge students went to see a University of Utah Little Theatre production of “Gideon,” the lights went out – not once but twice. Undaunted, the students used 20 flashlights to watch the show.

Forming the Junior Red Cross Club were Kathy Arnold, Don Jensen, Martha Northrup, Kris O’Donnell, Rosanne Clinton, Ruth Holtshouser, Janice Dow, Kay Riley, Peggy McGregor, Joe Lahey, Steve Guss and Mike Bruce.

For The Salt Lake Tribune’s Inquiring Editor news competition, Judge girls Margaret Allen, Carol Plautz and Kay Donohoe matched with Judge boys Raymond Mayewski, Gary McDonough and Stanley Myles.

Soprano Kathy Swan had a solo at the Spring Concert of the Girls’ and Boy’s Glee Clubs, directed by Sr. Eustace and Brother James Dorazio, respectively. Piano accompaniment was provided on various pieces by Karen Kuemmerle and Michael Bruce. Lee Ann McMichael was Cecelian Glee Club president. Its ranks included Chauna Eikrem, Karen Kuemmerle, Carolyn Davis, Kathy Swan, Helen Mack, Catherine Davis, Margie Belcolori, Peggy McGregor, Bob Crowder, Ron Lily, Michael Dicks, Tom Moran, Don Potter, Betty Jo Campana, Kathy Smith, Martha McDonald, Susan Pratt, Vicki Bernardo, Pat Terry, Peggy Looker, Monica Seitz, Kathy Spellings, Mary Pauley, Pam Belsom, Maureen Duffy, Kay Riley, Tom Carl, Dan Mates, Steve Guss, Steve Kuemmerle, Joe Mayo, Jerry Lynch, Peggy O’Donnell, Patty Warner, Jo Beth Wesley, Dorothy Yarbrough, Pete Stone, Jim O’Reilly, Joe Lahey, Kim Folsom, Mike Bruce, Craig Mole, Larry Hecht, John Tobinski, Pat Williams, Tom Sweet, George Trosper, Cathy Worley, Pat Swim and Kathleen Gini.

The theme of the Basilean yearbook was “This is Judge, 1964: A Prism Reflecting a Myriad of Colorful Moods.” Kay Donohoe and Allan Sloan were co-editors, assisted by fellow editors Tom Sweet, John McGean, Mike Mole, Neil Zeiger, Trisha Anderson, Janet Kelly and Virginia Vegelen.

At the Serra Club dinner, Bishop Joseph Lennox Federal presented awards for a religious vocations essay contest to juniors George Trosper and Karen Kuemmerle. They both had won awards three years earlier as eighth graders at Our Lady of Lourdes. Other essayists included John Trentelman, Tom Pace, Arthur Hudachko and Maureen Duffy.

Displaying clothes they sewed at the annual spring Fashion Show of the Home and School Association were Cheri and Eilene Wheeler, Darlene Graves, Catherine Riley, Betty Jo Campana, Agnes Graven, Marcia O’Brien, Cecelia Archuleta, Susan Granieri, Susan Pratt, Petronella Bell, Donna Wesley, Gladys Schonhardt, Nancy Badovinatz, Margo Salazar, Janice Dow, Erna Weller, Mary Helen Renkel and Kathleen McGuire. The commentators were Pamela Smolik and Connie Sherauski. Karen Kuemmerle and Cheri Morin provided musical accompaniment. Vesta Seidel was the sewing instructor.

A student-organized Alfred E. Newman Driving Contest awarded prizes to Teresa Dicks, for bad parking; John Lyons, for bad turns; Linda Heath, for sliding her vehicle into Fr. William Flegge’s garden; and Mike Bruno for getting into a wreck with the priests, earning the “General Excellence” award.

Membership in the National Honor Society Grail Chapter was earned by Margaret Allen, Joan Cook, Janice Brown, Rosanne Crus, Kathy O’Hara, Cathy Ivory, Caroline Heenan, Mary Kelly, Kathy Swan, Cathy Tame, Karen Kuemmerle, Maureen Duffy, Cheri Morin, Paul Purcell, Doug Hadley, Randy Bills, Chris Trentelman, Alan Crandall, Ray Thomas, Sandy Bryant, Ray Mayewski, Tom Sweet, George Trosper, Mike Lahey and Kay Donohoe.

Plays

“The Story of Christmas,” moderated by Jack Guthrie, starring Virginia Vegelen, Sean Riley, Robin Crandall, Robert Donohue, Steven Dudley, Jane Galland, Linda Heath, Kathy Hernon, Mike Murray, Kent Holland, Ray Thomas and John Ravarino.

“Arsenic and Old Lace,” directed by Fr. Thomas P. O’Neill, starring Timothy Hickman, Michael Bruce, Charles Hathaway, Maureen Duffy, Dorothy Yarbrough, Donald Jensen, Carol Plautz, Gary Olsen, James Sharp, Randy Bills, Paul Hurley, George Trosper, Mike Sandor and Robert Donohoe.

Sports

STATE CHAMPIONS – The football team won the Class B title with an undefeated season, climaxed by a 14-6 victory over Lehi in the championship game at the University of Utah. The Bulldogs swept through the regular season with five shutouts, allowing no more than 13 points in one game, seven and six in two others. It scored 255 in building an 8-0 league record. “This team certainly ranks with the best I have coached in nine years at Judge,” Coach Frank Klekas said happily. “It’s the biggest line I’ve ever had. Our team has more depth and balance this year than ever.” Quarterback Mike Murray ran the offense behind a dominating line, junior Jim Ravarino providing the punch inside while sophomore Mike Sandor had the speed to go outside. Freshman John Pezely served notice he would be a force in coming years, picking off a Lehi pass in the end zone late in the first half to stem one Pioneer threat. Sandor also had a key interception after Lehi had driven earlier to the Bulldog 10-yard-line. The Deseret News heaped praise on Judge: “With little question left that Judge Memorial is the top B football power in Utah, the only controversy remaining Monday was the 1963 team’s place in history. But there can be little doubt on one point – they repose on one of the higher rungs of prep grid greatness, this too from a school that has a long legacy of football accomplishments. They are the only school in the state with an unbeaten, untied record.” After a scoreless first half, Judge broke through in the third quarter when Sandor slipped into the end zone, capping a drive that featured the running of Ravarino and Stuart Holman. Lehi came back with a scoring drive but Mike Heiser blocked the extra-point kick, leaving the score 7-6. Judge responded with a 15-play drive. With linemen Tim Kelly, Paul Purcell, Ray Thomas, Sean Riley and Skip Papanikolas opening holes, backs Ravarino, Holman, Pezely and Murray carried the ball inside the 10. Ravarino took it in from there with seven minutes left. That’s when Pezely and Sandor came up with their interceptions to seal the championship. To get there, the Bulldogs beat Moab 20-6 in the semis. The game was a muddy battle on the Judge field, with Ravarino scoring two touchdowns. Murray, Stewart Holman, Mike Mole, Kelly and Heiser received All-State recognition. Holman and Murray were co-captains. Other key players were Sonny Hathaway, sophomore Bob Gamble, Wynn Paoletti, Purcell, Mike Kane, Ray Thomas, John Seeronen and Kent Holland. Rounding out the championship squad were John Kelly, Wayne Holtshouser, Jim Borden, Kent Holland, Alan Crandall, Dion Riley, Randy Stack, Jim Adams, Terry Pantuso, Warren Jefferies, Tony Marrelli, John Ravarino, Rogers Dannels, Bill Papanikolas, Skip Sandor, Brian Riley, John Peters, Al Leddy, Don Turner, Greg Kelsey, Dan Wells, Larry Canoso. Assisting Klekas were coaches Mitch Makris, Duane Jackson and Don Dorney. The managers were John Bircumshaw, Kenneth Walton, Pat Williams, Stan Myles and Ed Winter.

The boys basketball team finished third in the Class B state tournament, losing in the semifinals to South Sevier, 64-52. That was the only loss for Coach Frank Klekas’s 23-1 team, led by All-Staters Ray Thomas, Terry Redmond and Dennis Bianchi. At state, South Sevier came back from a nine-point halftime deficit (30-21) to lead 42-40 after three quarters. South Sevier then was able to break the press that Judge threw up in the fourth quarter and pulled away. South Sevier later went on to win the Class B crown, beating Lehi 61-52. Redmond led Judge with 18 points while Thomas and Bob Gamble had 10 each. In the battle for third place, Redmond had 21, Steve Cotterell 13 and Thomas 10 as Judge beat Emery 68-51. The Bulldogs swamped Moab 82-54 in the tourney opener, led by Ray Thomas (24 points), Redmond (19) and John Hunter (10). Judge then thumped Millard 69-54 behind 18 by Thomas, 13 by Bianchi, 11 each from Gamble and Cotterell and Redmond’s 10 rebounds. The rest of the lineup consisted of John Thompson, Dan Wells, Mike McKone, Paul Purcell, Mike Murray and Alan Crandall.

The girls basketball team posted a 9-1 record to win Salt Lake County Recreation’s Inter-Church League. Patricia Woll was the coach, Agnes Graven was the team captain. Her teammates were Darlene Graven, Ann Frowein, Vicki Nielson, Patricia Terry, Monica Seitz, Mary Praught, Peggy McGregor, Jo Beth Wesley, Mary Borick, Margaret O’Donnell and Lynn Burns.

Tim Kelly took second place in the unlimited weight division at the Class B state wrestling tournament, the best showing ever by a Judge wrestler. Coaching the team was Mitch Makris, who came to Judge after graduating from South High School and playing football at Western Montana College. Other wrestlers included Brian Riley, Tony Gallo, Mike Dicks, Jim Summers, Jim Langrom, Dick Folsom, Pat Williams, John Hunter, Dion Riley, Vince Ventura and John Kelly.

Ben Schreiner, Mike Mole and Roger Schultz were standouts on the swimming team, coached by Fr. Thomas Gillespie. They were joined by seniors Tom Sweet, Kent Holland, Mike Mole, Joseph Terry, Michael West and Duane Young, plus underclassmen Pat Redgate, Ron Butterfield, Craig Mole, Mike Howerton, Sean Dowse, Ernie Allen and Kelly Lahey.

Members of the girls swimming club were Heidi Enderlin, Monique Coburn, Lucy Schreiner, Mary Carraher, Margaret O’Donnell, Brenda Lee Hartt, Cynthia Fuoco, Kathleen Dicks, Andrea Glascock, C Richards, Linda Waters, Colleen Furner, Judy Spellings, Brenda O’Shanick, Margaret McGregor, Kathleen Gini, Janice Dow, Terese Dicks, Peggy Looker, Kathy Arnold, Catherine Quinn, Cathy Spellings, Gerry Taucher, Nancy Hofmeister, Cathy Smith, Cynthia Dow, Robin Crandall, Nancy McGill, Mary Praught, Mary Patricia Kelly, Jean Polanshek, Kathy Lawler, Susan Poehling, Linda Summers, Nancy Hogarty, Donna Thomas, Susan Galland, Jeanne Laufenberg, Melanie Morin, Gail Arnold, Nancy Fedor, Kay Riley, Teresa McGurk and Nancy Bailey.

The Marching Squad featured leader Martha McDonald along with Paulette Fassio, Trudi Gourley, Heidi Enderlin, Chris Sumrall, Frances Yanni, Judy Oki, Mary Jean Furner, Susan Kaschmitter, Joanne Mayo, Cecilia Archuleta, Cathy Draxler, Cathie McGuire, Kathryn Hernon, Peggy Looker, Michele Cartier, Betty Jo Campana, Terese Dicks, Lee Ann McMichael, Janice Dow, Pam Hill, Pat Smith, Rosanne Crus, Nicki Fata, Margaret Allen, Andrea Glascock, Nancy Bailey, Gayle Morris, Patricia Blake and Charlotte Ball.

The baseball team reached the state finals before losing at Derks Field to American Fork 3-0 on three unearned runs. Pat Clark scattered six hits in the loss. That strong showing came after Clark turned in a remarkable performance in the semifinals, throwing 15 innings and giving up just five hits in a 4-1 semifinal victory over Uintah. John Hunter tripled in the spacious Magna ballpark to lead off the 15th inning. After walks to Bob Gamble and Mike Murray, John Seeronen successfully laid down a suicide squeeze, enabling Hunter to race home to break a 1-1 tie. Ray Thomas’s single drove in two insurance runs. Uintah sophomore pitcher Gary Tassainer also threw 15 innings. Coach Frank Klekas’s squad also featured Mike Kane, Ray Thomas, southpaw pitcher Terry Redmond, George Raine, Greg Kelsey, Stanley Myles, Jerry Jefferies, Mike Sandor, Dick Fassio, Warren Jefferies and Richard Griffin.

Together, the football, basketball and baseball teams had a combined record of 48-3.

Alumnus Chris Segura, Class of 1959, became head coach of the tennis team, whose members were Mike Collette, Duane Young, Ed Bettin, Mike Lahey, Nick Arentz, Jim Thompson, Andy Brannen and Jerry Diana. Segura had lettered in football, basketball, baseball and tennis at Judge, then went to Westminster College where he was All-Conference in basketball and a singles and doubles champion in tennis. After Judge, he taught at Kearns High School and then became a Salt Lake County employee.

The track team had 30 athletes under new coach Tom Dorney, who had lettered in baseball at the University of Kansas. The top point scorers were javelin thrower Stu Holman, half miler Jack Guthrie, discus thrower Paul Purcell and pole vaulter John Hunter. Other competitors were Tim Kelly, John Thompson, Jack Guthrie, George Keiser, Dan Tabish, Jim Borden, John Cardwell, John Kelly, Steve Schubach, Tom Sweet, Mike Murray, Terry Mascher, Dave Daly, Guy Allen, Dan Smith, Ron Lilly, Pat Williams, Craig Mole, Bill Higham, Steve Rudman, Harry Bannon, Gary Holman, Mike McGinley, Terry Evans, Tom Skanter, Dan Mates and Larry Hecht.

Fr. Thomas O’Neill coached the golf team’s four players – Sean and Brian Riley, Skip Papanikolas and Jim Sharp.

Making up the tennis team were Mike Collette, Ed Bettin, Jim Thompson, Mike Lahey and Duane Young.

The Utah High School Activities Association raised Judge to the Class A ranks, starting in the fall of 1963. The Bulldogs moved up along with Pleasant Grove, American Fork and Uintah (all of which were joined in region by Lehi). The Bulldogs entered a region with Bingham, Hillcrest, Jordan, Murray and Tooele. There was some concern the loss of numbers due to the girls’ move to St. Mary’s would hurt Judge’s chances of being moved up. But Coach Klekas said “I hope we get the support of the girls at our games.”

Graduation

137 graduates in the last co-educational class (for a while) at Judge, 79 boys and 58 girls, on May 29 at the Cathedral of the Madeleine. It was also the largest graduation class up to then.

Valedictorian: Farrell Clark

Provincial Award of the Oblates: Dennis Bianchi

Provincial Award of the Sisters of the Holy Cross: Virginia Vegelen

School Spirit Awards: Joan d’Arc Ree and Raymond Thomas

Moran Award: Michael Murray

McHugh Award for religion: Mark Clinton

National Honor Society Scholarship trophy for highest GPA over four years: Pat Clark

Highest GPA over the past year: Thomas Sweet and Margaret Allen

Science Award: Thomas Sweet

Academic Awards – Mathematics: Ray Thomas and Margaret Allen; Physics: Thomas Sweet and Margaret Allen; Advanced Biology: Jerry Callahan; Chemistry: George Trosper and Carol Plautz; Biology: Gerald Callahan, Burt Stanga and Joan Zajac; Social Studies: Raymond Mayewski and Margaret Allen; English: Patrick Clark and Carol Plautz; Religion: Gary McDonough and Margaret Allen; Latin: Patrick Clark; Spanish: George Trosper and Sandra Canepari; French: Ben Schreiner and Carol Plautz; Library Service: Edward Winter.

Reading: Robert Wright and Mark Mende; Mechanical Drawing: Roger Schultz and Patrick Alsup; Library Service: Edward Winter and Marian O’Brien; Boys Glee Club: Michael Bruce, Robert Crowder and Laurence Hecht; Girls Glee Club: LeeAnn McMichael, Karen Kuemmerle, Kathy Swan; Journalism: George Raine and Kathy Sabol; Sewing: Susan Granieri, Kay Riley, Petronella Dell; Senior Business Student: Connie Sherauski; McGuire Awards for Outstanding Service: Gary Olsen and Paulette Fassio.

National Honor Society Grail Seal Bearers, for having a superior GPA over five of eight semesters: Margaret Allen, Joanne Arnall, Patrick Clark, Joan Cook, Mary Kelly, Raymond Mayewski, Patricia McGurk, Carol Plautz, Joan Ree, Thomas Sweet, Carolyn Syata and Raymond Thomas.

Mary Kay Timper was nominated to attend the Merchant Marine Academy.

Alumni

Robert Servatius, Class of 1956, was ordained May 23 at the Cathedral of the Madeleine by Bishop Joseph Lennox Federal; Margarette Cambron, Class of 1961, became an airman apprentice after completing training at the U.S. Naval Training Center in Maryland.


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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