1988 - 89

Class Leaders

Student Body Officers – Don Warner, president; Matt Arabasz, Barney Brockwell, Pat DePaulis, Casey Sherman, Kathy Stumpf.

Senior Core – Elizabeth Sawaya, president; Paul Burke, Tom Carlson, Martin Combs, David Kolesky.

Junior Core – Jennifer Razor, president; Christina Albo, Matt Davis, Gordon Gibbs, Chris Van Dyke.

Sophomore Core – Jackie Stumpf, president; Chrissy Daly, Danielle Drew, Celeste Eggert, Sue Kim, Paul Richardson.

Freshman Core – John Welsh, president; Michael Murphy, James Kimball, Pamela Barnett, Michaela Keller.

During the Summer

Staffing was increased to reduce the student/teacher ratio and to make teacher loads lower than that of Utah public schools. Judge added a reading/writing center and a math/science center, the English department rewrote its freshman curriculum, the science department added electives for juniors and seniors, a one-semester geography requirement was added, more AP classes were offered, more electives were available in religion and the language department was expanded to include classes in Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Latin and Greek.

Teachers Susan Northway, Chris Sloan and Dan John led a 10-day tour of Ireland, including a side trip for some to Omagh, Northern Ireland, home town of the 15-year-olds participating with many Judge students in the annual Ulster Project. Students Ann Cheri Olsen and Suzanne Reiland were among the participants. The trip cost $1,200. Mexico was the destination for another group led by Jim Markosian and Wendy Condrat. This tour explored the Mayan ruins of Palenque, Uxmal and Chichen Itza and included stops in Merida and the Caribbean island of Cozumel. Peter Van Orden organized his annual trip to Washington, D.C. in conjunction with the Close Up Foundation. John LeCavalier helped arrange two trips, one to Mount St. Helens Volcanic Monument (with Jennifer Razo, Justin Walsh and Amy Shields) and the other a float trip down the San Juan River (along with Tim Dolan). Rachel Riser went fly fishing near Sun Valley.

Concerned about rising absenteeism the previous year, Judge imposed a policy stating that students who miss more than eight classes in a quarter will lose academic credit for that class.

The boys basketball team won the South Tahoe Shootout Summer Tournament for the first time since 1987. The tourney had teams from California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Utah.

Varsity cheerleaders were deemed the “Top Squad” at a summer clinic.

The new auditorium was dedicated. Student body officers acted as ushers.

The Year

National Merit Finalist: John Ehresman

National Merit Commended Students: David Webster, Ed Morrison, James Smith, Monique Van Stiphout.

David Webster was a commended student in the National Merit Scholarship Achievement Program for Outstanding Black American Students.

Christina Lavadie was a National Hispanic Scholarship semifinalist.

The Administration: Fr. Thomas McNamara, president and former principal; John McGean, principal; Jim Yerkovich, vice principal of academics; Fr. Dennis Kelsch, dean of students for seniors and juniors; Renee Genereux, dean of students for sophomores and freshmen; Helen Eugster, treasurer; Mary Bailey, freshman counselor; Fr. John Norman, director of activities. Cherrie Evans joined the staff as administrative secretary.

“Regular” tuition for the 1988-89 school year was set at $2,896. Non-subsidized tuition for Catholic students was $2,260, while Catholics students on a pastor-approved subsidy list could attend for $1,742. Needy students could see that figure drop to $1,275 (plus fees) if they provided financial-disclosure information.

John Ehresman received the Harvard Book Award. The Smith Book Award went to Deanna Dannels. Christina Lavadie got the Wellesley Book Award.

A bonfire was built to get Judge students fired up for Homecoming, with Coach John Colosimo introducing the football team and encouraging the crowd to cheer “Defense!” At a rally later, students played “Pop Goes the Beetdigger” since Jordan was the Homecoming foe. Cans of beets were given out in a skit and the seniors beat the faculty in a tug-of-war.

Michelle White was Homecoming Queen and Mike Chummers was King, presiding over a dance at the Doubletree Inn. Kathy Stumpf and Rob Sonne were first attendants, Ginny Mommsen and Steve Prokopis were second. Sarah Edson and Kris Akiyama were junior attendants.

Senior Katy Robinson was news editor of the Bulldog Press and Ed Morrison was editorial editor. Other editors were Amy Garcia, Donna Lochhead, Annetta Dolowitz and Una Pett. Jeff Wright and Stephanie Zone were photographers and Nathan Goyen was the cartoonist. Staff writers were Amie Ader, Vijay Bachus, Eric Brown, Greg Brown, Sean Foley, Julie Galbos, Tim Green, Stephanie Jones, Colleen Lewis, Jenna Mahay, Suzanne Manning, Matthew McGee, Amanda Mitchell, Lesley Nicholes, Ryan Pollick, Erin Poulsen, Jennifer Ravarino, David Sasich, Christopher Slatore, Chris Sotiriou, Chris Van Dijk and Monique Van Stiphout. Katy Robinson was one of 60 high school students nationally to receive an American Society of Newspaper Editors Foundation scholarship.

The magazine drive raised $30,000 for Judge (subscriptions worth $74,900 were sold). By class, the freshmen led the way with sales of $22,300, followed by the sophomores ($20,400), juniors ($16,500) and seniors ($14,200). Individually, the top student sellers were Tim Clark ($2,100, worth a trip to Hawaii), Annetta Dolowitz ($1,100) and Mike Bapis ($800). A “Reach for the Peak” pin had to be worn at all times to get free dress during the drive.

Members of the Peer Leadership Team were Jamie Vieta, Katie Peters, Justin Walsh, Dustin Telford, Andrew Hale, Christina Lavadie, Jolene Lucey, Jason Smith, Brian Jaffe, Shab Puri, Chip Dance, Tonia Shields, Joanna Angelides, Sabrina Warner, Nicole Showell, Pat Jefferies, Sheela Bachus, Emily Whitehead, Amy Nuttall, Melissa Barrett, Jean Calderon, Heather Starr, David Chong, Celeste Eggert, Danielle Drew, Christy Allgood, Alison Le Duc, Jayde Holder, Corrie Reilly, Wendy Dunn, Amanda Mitchell, Sarah Maggio, Megan Smith and Amara Christensen.

Performances in the new auditorium included the International Language Assembly, where Peter Eernisse, Chris Clark and Luke Kelly portrayed the Beatles playing in Germany while Lisa Van Hook, Gavin Noyes, Steven Schultz, John Migliaccio and Sheela Bachus spelled out “good-bye” in Japanese in a “Wheel of Fortune” takeoff. Teacher Tim Dolan’s band, “Rhythm Fish” also performed at several events.

Juniors and seniors volunteering time to the needy as Christian Service projects included Michelle White, Francine Wanner, Stephanie Lobato, Gloria Gonzalez, Amy Nuttall, Nicole Hawkins, Jennifer Smith, Jennifer Peterson, Craig Spencer, Jennifer Whiteman, Angie Weaver, Karen Riekhof, Erin Poulsen, Nicole Shiflar, Anne Porter, Scott Ravarino, Matt Nelson, Laurie-Ann Mandryk, Heather Walker, Heather Graham and Marianne Maxfield.

English teachers selected juniors Eli Powell and Chris Gregory for writing awards in the National Council of Teachers of English Achievement Awards competition. Luke Arabasz won a Salt Lake Diocese writing contest with his essay, “We Are One Flock That Serves a Single Shepherd.”

Deanna Dannels was editor of the Literary Magazine. She put it out along with Elisabeth Mitchell, Monica Burchett, Amanda Lee Smith, Maria Ramirez, Denice Lloyd, Tim Petsche, Shauna Lorenzo-Rivera, Frances Mejia, Joanna Angelides, Michael Murphy, Chris Leonard, Donna Lochhead, Christopher Givens and Justin Walsh. Judy Cooke was the moderator.

Judge students got into the Christmas season in a variety of ways. The Student Council sponsored a Christmas party for children from the Guadalupe Center, giving Martin Combs a chance to give a kid a ride on his shoulders. Gifts collected in the Sub-for-Santa program were organized for needy children by Aileen Toomey, Michael Murphy, Suzanne Velarde, Elizabeth Felt and Sondra Rogozinki. The Christmas Concert featured a dramatic reading by Patrick Horne and Deanna Dannels and a performance by Jeanette Sawaya’s dance class.

The State Capitol Rotunda was the site of the Winters Dance.

The Junior Classical League was one of the larger organizations on campus. Its members included Mark Speicher, Monica Howa, David Nichols, Debbie Miller, Sage Fuller, Evionne Mecham, Pat Horne, Michelle Powers, Mike Carlson, Rashid Saber, Kathy Stumpf, Steve DeNiro, Paul Adams, Kim Keller, Dan Nowicki, Chris Bereshnyi, Maria Alcas, Robert Benda, Annetta Dolowitz, Jen Whiteman, Jim Walsh, Wes Keller, Paul Burke, Leslie Salaz, Ed Morrison, Rob Marostica, Kristen Lopez, Seth Friedman, Eddie Arriola, Courtney Green, Don Warner, Natalie Bereshnyi, Brittany Watne, Mary Libsch, Liza Feilner, Suzanne Manning, Eric Schwartz, Brett Baker and Mary Rigdon. The moderators were John Tabish and Nancy Miller.

Members of the Greek Club were Matt Gaddis, Peter Couman, Chris Sotiriou, Chip Dance, Nathan Goyen, Rebecca Sapp, Shauna Lorenzo, Joanna Angelides, Michele Fotes, Tom Peters and James Simos.

The Japanese Club included Gavin Noyes, Steven Lloyd, Scott Redington, Steve Smith, Samantha Kemper, Steve Schultz, Tess Rogers, John Migliaccio, Sheela Bachus, Sean Wright, Jen Agraz, Chad Warner, Nichole Adams, John Welsch, Lisa Van Hook, John Yerkovich and Michael Murphy, Sr. Renee Genereux was the moderator.

Making up the Spanish Club were Christina Lavadie, Deanna Dannels, Lorena Ascencios, Derek Wild, Daryll Brose and Jeremy Tangaro. The moderator was Wendy Condrat.

Members of the French Club were Dana Lombardi, Cash Peterson, Becky Frank, Craig Hemingway, Allison Smith, Molly McGean, Robyn Wherritt, Cara Tangaro, Megan Ravarino, Sarah Semerad, Stephanie Tonin, Sarah Stuyvesant, Camilla Reese-Moore, Alyssa Stransky, Lieu Ann Woodhead and Amanda Smith. Gabrielle Montgomery was the moderator.

In cooperation with the Utah Arts Council, a series of concerts were held at Judge featuring “Ten Penny,” which played traditional Irish music, the “New World String Quartet” and the Jensen-Woodbury String Quartet with Ricklan Nobis.

School was evacuated in February because of a bomb threat.

Participating in the Teton Science School were Joe Lachowski, Ashley Harris, Matt Keane, Nancy Schultz, Patrick DePaulis, Tom Carlson, Martin Combs, Paul Stanchfield, Wendy Hill, Katie Peters, Portia Ogara, Karen Quinn, Michelle Powers, Tanya Florin, Paul Burke, Una Pett, Mary Catrow and Mario Raso. John LeCavalier was the moderator.

The U.S. Department of Education named Judge an “exemplary school,” one of only 47 private secondary schools in the country receiving the designation. This was the first year that Judge was eligible to apply for the honor after having been singled out in 1983-84.

For the Close-up trip to Washington, D.C., teacher Peter Van Orden supervised Rachel Goldstein, Gordon Gibbs, Krista Guss, Jennifer Razor, Kelli Aramaki, Vijay Bachus, Craig Eaton, Shab Puri, Michelle Wilson, Lori Haddan, Rashid Saber, Denice Lloyd, Amy Nuttall, Chris Gregory, Tony Chiodo, Brandon Grace, Jenni Jo Howard, Keith Rupp and Cliff Stebner.

Paul Burke and John Ehresman were co-editors of the Basilean yearbook. Their associate editors were Don Warner, Greg Turpin, Kathy Stumpf, Joanna Angelides, Brigg Noyes, Rhea Gray, Michelle Powers and Patrick Horne. The copy and layout staff included Daryll Brose, Judy Cheng, Nicolle Gregory, Jayde Holder, Samantha Kemper, Michael Murphy, Danny Nowicki and Stephanie Tonin. Jamey Simos was darkroom manager, working with photographers Matt Burke, Jim Carlson, Mark Cheminant, Ryan Cook, Kathleen Eugster, Tanya Florin, Erin Gamble, Shauna Lorenzo, Corrie Reilly, Renee Salz and Heather Williams. The business managers were Annetta Dolowitz and Jim Walsh. Teachers Tim Dolan and Tom Bettin were advisers.

Some of the top artists developed by teacher Tom Bettin included Mark Cheminant, Jenna Mahay, Kristin Varner, Eddie Arriola and Nathan Semerad.

The a cappella choir was composed of Julie Carlson, Tony Chiodo, Michelle Johnson, Matt Briggs, Colleen Lewis, Nathan Goyen, Amie Ader, Ben Nowell, Kelli Aramaki, Matt Keane, Marlana Kosky, Chad McCarthy, Kristen Sroczynski, Carey Pearce, Mike Steele, Jolene Lucey, David Kolesky, Christina Lujan and Rachel Goldstein.

The Chamber Orchestra included Una Pett, Ken Oliphant, Brock Cahill, Jon Jemming, Diana Herrera, Sarah Mandleco, Sue Kim, Hilary Minix, Tess Rogers and Brigg Noyes.

Forming the Junior Chorus were Judy Conner, Aimee Nunez, Greg Poulter, Samantha Kemper, Michael Bapis, Richard Coffey, Chris Clark, Tami Hamilton, Kristen Lopez, Regina Sparks, Nicole Showell, Christy Allgood, Dan Lombardi, Marnie Barker, Shane Sandoval, Gina Furano, Steffanie Smith, Eric Mirka, Dustin Telford, Ronielle Peltier, David Chong, Dee Dee Trentman, Hadley Becker, Evan Grennan, Bernie Smith, Jeanette Watkins, Travis Krumsick, Heather Strong, Gary Green, Sophia Valdez, Nicholas Gibson, Jackie Stumpf, Michelle Casey, Samuel Francis, Anne Hunter, Michele Fotes, Melissa Miller, Kim Housler, Sue Kim, Sheela Bachus and Jean Calderon.

Making up the Jazz Band were Regina Sparks, Steve Smith, Mike Digregorio, Tim Haren, Dave Hamilton, Joe Lachowski, John Migliaccio, Jim Gourde, Paul Richardson, Kimberly Helzer, Melinda Kirigin, Judy Conner, Mary Libsch, Sarah Northway and Scott Selberg.

The Concert Band featured Tim Metcalf, Heather Strong, Chris Clark, Judy Conner, Danny Coole, Kristen Van Stiphout, David Hamilton, Sarah Northway, Robert Benda, Liza Feilner, Scott Selberg, Monica Howa, Albert Gilman, Regina Sparks, Eddie Cameron, Kimberly Helzer, Joe Hamilton, Jeanette Watkins, Robert Watkins, Brett Baker, Nathan Etter, Paul Richardson, Mike Digregorio, Joe Lachowski, Janson Vogt and Paul Adams.

Playing in the Cadet Band were Mary Libsch, Lieu Ann Woodhead, Camilla Reese-Moore, Vincent Manzanares, Ted Hausen, Amberly Sherman, Alyssa Stransky, Rebecca Huffman, Scott Selberg, Steve Smith, Molly Gras, John Migliaccio, Tim Haren, Steve Schultz, Heather Betit, Michaela Keller and Elliott Cruz.

Receiving “Superior” ratings at the region Solo and Ensemble Festival were Shane Cook, Robert Benda, Monica Howe, Sarah Northway, Carey Pearce, Ben Nowell and Melinda Kirigin. Nowell and Benda also received a “Superior” as a duet.

Tutors in the Math Center were Rick Zitzman, Nancy Schultz, Shane Cook, Amy Nuttall, Erik Selberg and Derek Wild. Rick Wagoner was their adviser.

Judy Cooke oversaw the Writing Center, which included tutors Jayde Holder, Kelli Aramaki, Una Pett, Christopher Givens, Amy Garcia, Erin Poulsen, Chris Van Dijk, Edward Morrison and Stephanie Jones.

Sophomore Jeffrey Robinson, a hockey player, was killed in a November automobile accident. Belen Montoya, 16, also passed away during the year.

“A Second Decade” was the theme of the Judge Follies, held March 3-4 in the Judge Auditorium. Jim Hill provided musical accompaniment on the piano for the program, staged and directed by Joan Erbin, Robert Bruce Smith, Marilyn Schultz and Pam Marron Olsen. Billy Chase played the drums, Jim Fugett was on base and backstage work was done by Brian Burke, Jo Patterson and Anne van Horssen. Johanna Syms sold tickets.

Senior Erik Selberg had the top score as 65 Judge students participated in the American High School Math Exam. Tied for second were senior Karen Quinn and junior Jim Gourde.

Peter Van Orden’s senior political science class was a state finalist in the National Bicentennial Competition.

Philip Starr was Judge’s “Teacher of the Year.” He taught English, religion and meditation.

Concerns about too much partying surrounding graduation resulted in the drafting of a letter, sent to the parents of graduating seniors, by Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Chabries and the principals of Judge (John McGean), Highland (former Judge principal Ivan Cendese), East, Rowland Hall-St. Mark’s, West, Salt Lake Community High and Realms of Inquiry.

After the Student Council received approval to change the structure of student government, reducing the number of student body officers to three and allowing freshmen to run for office, Ted Vogt became the first sophomore elected as student body president.

The Spring Dance Concert received sterling reviews, particularly for the dance “Wah Cheesah, Hold the Line.” Directed by Jeanette Sawaya, the program included performances by Tawni Brown, Veronica VanCouwenberghe, Lorena Ascencios, Holly Lobato, Kristen Hall, Joey Forward, Maria Chavez, Nicole Casey, Brandi Jolley, Shiloh Edwards, Kris Martinez, Natalie L’Etoile, Amy Green and Rakelle Rasmussen.

Plays

“You Can’t Take It With You,” director by Jodi Duffy-Brings, starring Deanna Dannels, Monica Howa, Robert Benda, Seth Friedman, Katherine McCaa, Regina Sparks, Paul Richardson, Dustin Telford, Shane Cook, Pat Horne, Lori Haddan, Elliott Cruz, Tony Chiodo, Ben Nowell, Megan McEnulty, Dmitri Muna, Brandon Grace, Don Warner and Maria Ramirez. The backstage crew, led by managers Kelli Aramaki and Julie Carlson, included Rick Wagoner, Joe Doubek, Kevin Jemison, Tom Welsh, Rebecca Britter, Carli Cook and Elizabeth Ann Felt.

“Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” directed by Jodi Duffy-Brings, music by Susan Northway, choreography by Jeanette Sawaya. The cast and crew were Melinda Kirigin, Carey Pearce, David Kolesky, Robert Benda, Marnie Barker, Jason Allen, Steve Prokopis, Patrick Horne, Ben Nowell, Mike Steele, Julie Carlson, Monica Howa, Jolene Lucey, Kristen Sroczynski, Sarah Northway, Dusti Telford, Brandon Grace, Mark Cheminant, Sean Foley, Derek Aramaki, Ian Metcalf, Travis Krumsick, Michael Carlson, Elliott Cruz, Maria Ramirez, Kelli Aramaki, Joanna Angelides, Rebekah Barrett, Debbie Brimmer, Rebecca Britter, Julie Kotlyar, Megan McEnulty, Molly McGean, Libby Mitchell, Tracy Rainaldi, Megan Smith, Sarah Stuyvesant, Julie Swift, Steve Smith, Lieu Ann Woodhead, Heather Strong, Chris Clark, Regina Sparks, Scott Selberg, Joe Lachowski, Mike Digregorio, John Migliaccio, Suzi Grover, Matt Keane, Al Gilman, Jeanette Watkins, Casey Sherman, Nicole Adams and Rick Wagoner.

Sports

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, CHAMPIONS – Lisa Paal won the No. 2 singles title for the third consecutive year to lead the girls tennis team to back-to-back 3-A state championships. Paal, who secured the crown with a 7-5, 6-2 victory, was one of three singles players to reach the finals for Judge Coach Bob Juhasz. Becky Markosian dropped a tight decision at No. 1 singles, while Chelsea Deakins captured the No. 3 singles championship, winning the tie-breaking match 6-2. Both doubles teams also advanced to the finals. The No. 2 team of Erin Gamble and Una Pett faced deficits in both sets before rallying to win, while the No. 1 doubles team of Corrie Reilly and Stephanie Tonin had to settle for second behind Ogden. Rounding out the state championship squad were Jia Jia Chen, Kathy Becker, Amanda Smith and Genevieve Kiley.

STATE CHAMPIONS – The boys tennis team finished second in the 3-A state tournament but had two individuals crowned as state champions. Gordon Gibbs captured the No. 2 singles title and freshman Peter Matus won the No. 3 singles crown to lead the Bulldogs, who also won the region championship. Coach Bob Juhasz’s roster also included Andrew Mecham, Todd Jorgenson, Craig Eaton, Jon Eyre, Geoff Adams, Casey Foley, Josh Brown and John Migliaccio. Bob Juhasz was the coach.

The girls soccer team was young, with seven sophomores playing for coaches Wayne Voorhes, Carol Floyd, Joe Veltri and John Ouellette. Members of the squad were Rachel Riser, Jennifer Brennan, Mary Catrow, Sarah Stuyvesant, Katie Peters, Krista Guss, Dannielle Drew, Leigh Anne Voorhes, Una Pett, Kristen Warner, Megan Friar, Chrissy Daly, Sarah Maggio, Corrie Reilly and Toni Ouellette.

Coach John Colosimo’s football team lost a heartbreaker to Dixie in the opening round of the 3-A state tournament. Leading 6-0, the Bulldogs surrendered a touchdown and extra point with four minutes left but had a chance to win it on the final play. A rushed field goal attempt from 45 yards out by Kurt Terrill bounced off the crossbar, sealing a 7-6 loss. Judge entered the tournament with a 3-6 record, the highlight being a 14-13 victory over West that spoiled the Panthers’ homecoming. Rob Sonne was quarterback and Mike Chummers was captain. The lowlight, which forced the Bulldogs to travel to St. George, came at the end of the Murray game when Judge appeared to score a tying touchdown late in the fourth quarter similar to the famous “Immaculate Reception” by Pittsburgh’s Franco Harris. Sonne passed downfield to Steve Prokopis, who was hit as the ball arrived. The ball popped into the air and came down in the arms of Bulldog tight end Ken Reynoso, who ran it in for a TD. But the officials wiped the touchdown off. Sonne was across the line of scrimmage when he threw his scrambling pass. Colosimo’s squad featured Eric Brown, Scott Ravarino, Matt Nelson, Chuck Stackhouse, Nicholas Parkin, Chris Sotiriou, David Sasich, Kurt Terrill, David Kolesky, Steve Prokopis, Eric Detmer, Ken Reynoso, Rob Sausedo, John Young, Chad McDonald, Tom Kane, David White, Chris Van Dijk, Eric Shiotani, Mike Steele, Michael Anderson, Alontre Gardner, Matt Davis, Lane Cannon, Tim Clark, Lance Barry, Matt Griffin, Eddie Cameron, James Powers, Todd Jackson, Ryan Cook, Eric Rogers, Chris Giles, Mike Coffey, Adam Sessions, Steve Ochs, Mark Backman, Travis Silver and James Hoskins. Colosimo’s assistant coaches were Mike Klonizos, Jim Markosian, Stan Finn, Gabriel Colosimo and Dan John.

The girls cross country team finished second at the state 3-A meet, compiling 94 points to finish behind Timpview’s winning 64. Suzi Newman was the fastest Bulldog runner, finishing seventh, while Chelsea Deakins was ninth and Katie McHugh 18th. Also competing at state were Julie Swift (36th), Kris Mickler (42nd) and Ginny Mommsen (61st). Coach Eric Houle’s runners had swept the top four spots at region with, in order, Deakins, Mommsen, Newman and McHugh putting the rest of the field behind them. Houle also got eight-place points at region from Jennifer Calame and 12th-place points from Mickler. Mommsen and Newman were captains of the team, which included Leslie Salaz, Sarah Northway, Katie Robinson, Jenna Mahay, Therese Roper, Amie Rosenburg, Andrea Iccabazzi, Marnie Barker, Cara Tangaro and Tami Hamilton.

Led by captain Mark Ellison, the boys cross country team finished second in region and seventh at the 3-A state meet. The top four runners at state for coaches Eric Houle and Joaquin Mixco finished between 34th and 38th place – Jake Crocker, Mark Ellison, Bryan Duberow and Jim Walsh. Rounding out the squad were Sean Meade, Jim Walsh, John Yerkovich, Brian Veltri, Danny Nowicki, Mike Wolters, Daryll Brose, John Duricy, Wes Keller, Jamey Sage, Gerald Green, Richard Essary, John Ehresman, Ted Hansen, Jeff Parkinson, Bill Roper and Travis Pera. The boys JV team finished first in its state meet.

Tricia Dilley was first team All-Region and her sister Jana was second team to lead girls volleyball. Coached by Lynn Hoffman-Brouse and Christine Perkins, the squad included Michelle White, Trisha Valley, Toni Ouellette, Catherine Johnson, Jolene Lucey, Tess Rogers, Maggie Perkins, Allison Smith, Mindy Jorgenson, Kristin Herron, Elena Biljanic, Jeannette Walsh, Christina Albo, Marlana Kosky, Stephanie Johnson, Julie Bennett and Mary Herron.

Five boy golfers advanced to state after Judge took second in region. Barney Brockwell and Jimmy Soto were the top players for Coach Fr. John Norman, whose squad also included Andrew Mecham, Nathan Semerad, Travis Fisher, Dave Carlson, Bryan Jaffe, Todd Jorgenson, Mike George, Chris Newson, Mike Bapis and Richard Lobato.

Senior Jimmy Soto and junior Chris Jones received first team All-State honors in leading Coach Jim Yerkovich’s team to second place in the 3A state boys basketball tournament. Judge made 35 consecutive free throws in the finale, but that was not enough as Timpview pulled away to an 88-81 victory over the Bulldogs. Soto completed his career, which started at South and ended at Judge, with 1,945 points, including 776 in his senior year. He also had 118 points in the Class 3-A playoffs. The team averaged 83.6 points per game in winning the region championship as well as the South Tahoe Tournament for Yerkovich, who collected his 300th career win during the season. Far from a two-man team, the Bulldogs also received All-Region play from Rob Solvason and Nathan Semerad. Soto was the MVP at the Alhambra Catholic Invitational Tournament in Maryland. Then, in May, he and Jones were named to the Utah All-Star team that beat a squad from the Soviet Union 104-85 at the University of Utah. The Bulldogs entered the 3-A tournament with a 20-1 record, the only loss coming to Tooele in the first game of region play. In the tourney, Judge beat Payson 83-72 then struggled to finish off Ogden 91-86 in overtime. A 63-56 triumph over Provo set up the final’s loss to Timpview. Rounding out the Judge squad were David Webster, Matthew Kitterer, Jerome Bennett, Tim Green, Matt McNamara, Mike Beierschmitt, Tim Clark, Justin Walsh, Tom Kendall and David Hamilton. Yerkovich’s assistants were Marty Giovacchini, John Colosimo, Galey Colosimo, Dan Del Porto, Tom Bettin, Stan Finn and Dan Medina.

The girls basketball team finished the season with a 9-10 record (5-6 in region). Seniors Tricia Dilley, Francine Wanner and Michelle White were key players for three seasons while Marlana Kosky was the top rebounder for coaches Bill Schleifer and Eric Houle. Rounding out the roster were Jenny Richey, Ellisha Redington, Kjirsten Hanson, Jeannette Walsh, Natalie L’Etoile, Kris Thompson, Joann Jorgensen, Catherine Johnson, Jana Dilley and Amy Green.

STATE CHAMPION – Nick Satovick won the state championship in the 100 backstroke and finished second in the 200 freestyle to lead the boys swimming team to sixth place in 3-A. Satovick also was on the medley relay team that placed second. His teammates included Rashid Saber and Matt Vicario. Satovick was region champion in the 100 backstroke, while the medley and 400 freestyle relay teams took second in leading the boys to fourth in region. Between the two teams, 18 Judge swimmers qualified for state. Members of the team, coached by Patty Bradley and Wendy Condrat, included captain Edward Morrison, Jason Smith, Aaron Shaheen, Steve DeNiro, David Chong, Nathan Etter, Brett Baker and Paul Hartor.

The girls swimming team finished eighth at the 3-A swim meet, led by Jen Razor, who finished third in both the 50- and 100-yard sprints. She also was part of the medley relay team that placed fourth, joined by Shauna Lorenzo-Rivero, Stephanie Zone and Brita Moeller. Razor’s title in the 50 free boosted the girls to second in region. Second places finishes were recorded by Lorenzo (100 free) and the medley relay team. Also racing for coaches Bradley and Condrat were Kristin Herron, Alyssa Stransky, Kristen Lopez, Jeanette Watkins, Kathleen Eugster, Sage Fuller, Megan Sherry, Sheela Bachus, Debbie Miller, Anna Markovich, Tiffany Collins, Shauna Lorenzo-Rivero, Jenna Mahay, Laura Thomas and Jackie Stumpf.

Coached by Mike Kimball, the gymnastics team won its second straight region title. Natasha Montoya led the way, finishing first in the All-Around. Nancy Schultz was third. Also qualifying for state were Mandy Olsen, Evionne Mecham, Mary Ward and Jeanette Watkins. Turning in solid showings were Andrea Ball, Sarah Ball, Julie Galbos, Steffanie Smith and Laura Steinke.

Co-captain Mike Chummers finished third in his weight class, losing a close semifinal match to an eventual champion from Skyline, to lead Judge wrestlers. Chummers was one of seven Bulldogs to qualify for the 3-A state meet, joined by Colin Chummers, Jim Gourde, Paul Stanchfield, Mario Raso, Ken Reynoso and Matt Davis. Dan Reilly was the other captain, while individual honors were racked up during the season by Ryan Cook, Jeff Winters, Tim Metcalf and Chris Noble. Also wrestling for coaches Chris Long and Mike Klonizos were Gavin Noyes, Chris Giles, Josh Stanchfield, Chad Allen, Eddie Arroz, Martin Munoz, Kelly Shiotani, Rob McCall, Brigg Noyes, Mike Giles, Travis Silver, Chris Leonard, Mike Higgins and Chad McDonald.

The hockey team finished 2-10-1, but one of those wins was certainly the season highlight. The Bulldogs trailed by five goals after the first period before rallying for an 8-7 win. The low point was a 27-0 loss to Brighton. Team members included All-Star defenseman Shawn Friar, goalie James Suchar, Jason Tabish, Joe Doubek, Kevin Jemison, Andy Jagoe, Brock Cahill, Luke Kelly, Jeff Moll, Mark Cheminant, Mike Kolan, Jeff Robinson, Chris Smith, Craig Hemingway, Joe Stansky and Mike Mason.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, CHAMPIONS – The girls track team won the 3-A state title, led by the Dilley sisters – Jana won two sprints at the state meet, with Tricia finishing third and fourth in those races. They also teamed with Denise Reynolds and Grace Anne McDonough to set a new state record in the 1,600-meter relay. Reynolds also added big points with third-place finishes in the low and high hurdles, while Chelsea Deakins was fourth in the 800. Also competing on the championship squad for coaches Eric Houle and Steve Cotterell were Jennifer Gately, Angie Lepore, Leslie Salaz, Julie Swift, Natalie L’Etoile, Heidi Petersen, Shannon Collins, Trish McCormick, Heather Petersen, Jennifer Razor, Laura Thomas, Stephanie Zone, Pamela Barnett, Megan Sherry, Alyssa Stransky, Amanda Smith, Katie McHugh, Jennifer Calame and Ashley Wagner.

STATE CHAMPION – Toby Sausedo’s state title in the pole vault lifted the boys track team to second place in 3-A, its best showing since 1969. Also competing for coaches Eric Houle and Steve Cotterell were Chuck Stackhouse, Tom Peters, Gavin Malcom, Damon Hutchins, Sean Foley, Pat DePaulis, Edward Morrison, Chris Gregory, Mike Wolters, Bryan Duberow, Brandon Davis, Richard Wilson, Justin Walsh, Danny Nowicki, Gary Green, Clay Cash, John Welsh, John Yerkovich, Brian Veltri, Sean Wright, John Olsen, Richard Fields, Anthony Duricy, Jeff Parkinson, Richard Essary, Ted Hansen, Ken Neider, Santino Aloia, Nick Gibson, Geoff Fischer, Eric Swartz, John Duricy, Tony Chiodo, Jim Walsh, James Kimball, Travis Pera, Mark Backman, Sean Moore, Matt Salazar, Franco Aloia, Travis Silver, Wes Keller, Ted Vogt, Bill Roper, Mark Ellison, Tim Green, Matt Kitterer, Kelly Shiotani and Daemion Patillo.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP – The boys soccer team won its second 3A state championship in three years, avenging two earlier losses to Jordan with a 2-0 victory in the title game. Nathan Semerad scored what proved to be the winning goal, with Nat Hildebrand knocking in the clincher. Coming at the end of the school year, the championship was celebrated at the Baccalaureate Mass, where co-captain Rick Zitzmann brought the trophy in for all to see – along with the “tail” of hair that Peter Topaz cut off his head, as promised, if the Bulldogs took state. Coach Peter Schenk also counted on Shawn Friar, Mike Coffey, Mike Beierschmitt, Dane Carlson, Brian McGinley, Jim Berry, Chad Mellison, Mike Stuyvesant, Jayson Kelker, Ian Metcalf, Kurt Terrill, Adam Wood and Don Westlund.

Seniors Chad McCarthy, Troy Zupon and Kent Duncan formed the baseball team pitching staff. Other seniors were Rob Sonne, Jimmy Soto, Derek Aramaki, Steve Prokopis and Chad Albanese. Filling out the sophomore-heavy roster for Coaches Dan Medina and Don Sessions were Adam Sessions, Chris Noble, Mike Molteni, Steve Ochs, A.J. Lewis, Richard Lobato, Jason Vandenberg, Matt Nelson and Tim Clark.

Christine Perkins and Lynn Hoffman-Brouse coached the softball team, which featured Marianne Carpenter, Kris Mickler, Maggie Perkins, Hilary Minix, Amie Ader, Nicole Shiflar, Maria Chavez, Elena Biljanic, Maggie Perkins, Jeannette Walsh, Erin Poulsen, Anne Porter, Heather Betit, Bernie Smith, Alesha Mena, Jia Jia Chen and Kristen Sroczynski.

Members of the boys lacrosse team were Mark Speicher, Eric Detmer, Steve Schultz, Aaron Shaheen, Adam Eresuma, Trey Barber, Thomas Welsh, Jason Allen, Chris Gregory, Erik Selberg, Jim Gourde, John Slatore, Doug Phillips, Eli Powell, Mike Chummers, Chris Leonard, Scott Selberg, Nick Satovick, Burke Pederson, Nathan Goyen, Peter Eernisse, Tom Carlson, Martin Combs, Jason Smith, Mark Frazier, Mark Cheminant, Kevin Jemison, Casey Sherman, Chad Warner, Jason Martin, Jim Dillon and Jim Carlson.

Graduation

202 graduates (97 girls and 105 boys) on May 28 at The Capitol Theatre.

Valedictorians: Deanna Dannels and Edward Morrison

Highest GPA over the previous four years: Edward Morrison and Deanna Dannels

Highest GPA during senior year: Edward Morrison

Thirty-nine Grail Seal Bearers had “superior averages” during five of their eight semesters, and 51 wore gold honor cords reflecting cumulative GPAs of 3.54 or better.

Outstanding Scholar-Athlete: Virginia Mommsen and James Robert Sonne

Christ the King Awards: Deanna Dannels and Steven Prokopis

First Honors graduates, representing the class’s academic Top 10: Deanna Dannels, Edward Morrison, Christina Lavadie, John Ehresman, Virginia Mommsen, James Robert Sonne, John Jeremy Tangaro, Richard Zitzmann, Donna Lochhead and Julie Sadler.

Grail Seal Bearers: Richard Zitzmann, Derek Wild, Dan Wheeler, Angela Weaver, Monique VanStiphout, John Jeremy Tangaro, Matthew Sweeney, Rob Sonne, Christopher Slatore, Erik Selberg, Rebecca Schmidt, Elizabeth Sawaya, Renee Salz, Julie Sadler, Catherine Robinson, Karen Riekhof, Jennifer Ravarino, Karen Quinn, Michelle Powers, Erin Poulsen, Dmitri Muna, Edward Morrison, Virginia Mommsen, Brita Moeller, Katherine McCaa, Suzanne Manning, Donna Lochhead, Christine Lavadie, Erik Hove, Nicole Hawkins, Jennifer Hartt, Timothy Green, Christopher Gordon, Christopher Givens, Kandace Gabardi, John Ehresman, Deanna Dannels, Michael Chummers and Dane Carlson.

Academic Awards – English: Catherine Robinson and Edward Morrison; AP Political Science: Edward Morrison; Economics: David Webster; Psychology: Jennifer Ravarino; Business: Jane Lucero; Drama: Deanna Dannels; Art (Ceramics): Jennifer Gately.

Mathematics: Edward Morrison; Advanced Biology: Nicole Hawkins; Physics: John Ehresman; Religious Studies: Erin Poulson and Edward Morrison; German: Richard Zitzmann; French: Virginia Mommsen; Spanish: Deanna Dannels; Latin: Edward Morrison; Dance: Catherine Robinson; Music: Carey Pearce.


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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