1991 - 92

Class Leaders

Student Body Officers – Michael Murphy, president; Charlotte Eggert and Franco Aloia.

Senior Class Core – President Tom Peters, Martin Munoz, Megan Sherry, Michaela Keller and Shelley Brown.

Junior Class Core – President Andrew Cheng, Johanna Bailey, Emily Cvar, Anthony Gardner, Bill Trentman and Kimberly Pertl.

Sophomore Class Core – President Becky Ellis, Aimee Le Duc, Tony Furano and Courtney Lords.

Freshman Class Core – President Angela Parenti, Kimberly Barnett, Mark Paoletti, Carrie Richardson, Alex Scott and Charlotte White.

During the Summer

John McGean departed as principal after 23 years as a teacher and administrator. He first arrived in the fall of 1968, just four years after graduating from Judge as senior class president. “I have finally graduated (after twenty-three graduation ceremonies) and will be shortly heading off with my well-earned diploma,” he wrote in his final Judge News newsletter in June. “I am eager at the prospects of my new career, but will certainly miss for a long, long time my large, gifted and caring Judge family.”

Other teachers who left at the end of the school year were Phil Starr, Ruth Ann Holt, Judy Cooke, Karla Frost, Jody Duffy-Brings, Judy Weber, Marianne Dray, Fr. Andrew Skrzypiec and Kazuko Prisbey.

A study tour of Ireland was organized by Susan Northway, Liz Sonne and Chris Sloan.

Music teacher Susan Northway sent three students to the Greeley (Colo.) Jazz Festival – guitarist Joe Hamilton, bass player Sarah Northway and alto sax player Steve Smith.

During Reunion Weekend over the Labor Day holiday, a Mass honoring St. Mary of the Wasatch featured a first reading by Florence Smith, Class of 1929. The second reading was provided by Jim Maher, Judge Class of 1942. The Mass was celebrated by Fr. Terrence Fitzgerald, with concelebrants Fr. John Norman, Fr. James McHugh and Fr. Kenneth Vialpando.

Former Judge Coach Bill Price, who was now an assistant football coach at East High School, was injured by a stray bullet when a gunfight broke out between two gangs – the Eight Ball Bloods and the Tongan Crip Gang – on the East football field.

The Year

Fr. Terrence Fitzgerald, Class of 1954, replaced John McGean as principal.

New teachers: Linda Mercurio (math), Sr. Sharlet Wagner, Maxine Kaiser, Gerald McDonough, Fr. Ken Vialpando, Calli Short, Deborah Recksiek, Patrick Brimmer, Janice Salazar and Fr. Bill Carnutte.

Leaving Judge after a decade at the school were Brother John, the librarian, and Betty McLaren, an administrative secretary who left to marry Vice Principal Jim Yerkovich.

The Varsity Cheerleaders were Amy Zupon, Ken Oliphant, Heather McGinley, Scott Redington, Brandi Gabardi, Ryan Skollingsburg, Jen Morrison, Nicole Bagley, Kristina Poljak, Katie Ellis, Amie Fullmer, Kristen Kurilich, Heather McGinley, Alana Yates, Brandi Gabardi, Veronica Herrera, Sophia Valdez, Jennifer Sharp, Katherine Chilton, Leah Jaramillo, Jeri Morrison, Amber Ramon, Loretta Nehls and Stephanie Poulton. Former Judge cheerleaders Peter Benton and Doug Phillips helped out.

Junior Academic Awards – Mathematics: Justin Boevers; Computer Science: Robert Vandeveegaete, Chemistry: Lara Brewer; U.S. History: Scott Selberg; English: Aaron Shaheen; Debate: Loretta Nehls; Religious Studies: Dana Lombardi and Patrick Pezel; Drama Production: Aaron Shaheen; Dance Production: Kara Jones; Chorus: Sam Francis; Junior A.P. Music: Joan Ekdale; Jazz Band: Scott Smith; Concert Band: Scott Selberg; Health and Physical Education: Katie McHugh and Eric Swartz; Spanish III: Justin Boevers; French III: Sarah Semerad; German III: Scott Selberg; Japanese III: John Migliaccio; Greek III: Michael Bapis; Latin III: Brittany Watne.

Sophomore Academic Awards – Mathematics: Jennifer Schleifer; Biology: Emily Sanford and Aaron Ballard; American Government: Angela Kearns; Geography: Emily Sanford; English: Emily Sanford; Religious Studies: Rocky Conner and Emily Sanford; Drama: Angie Kearns; Dance: Lisa Schneckloth; Health and Physical Education: Natalie Swain and Drew Dannels; Enriched Spanish II: Edward Campos; Spanish II: Stephanie Paulson; Enriched French II: Margaret Mulder; French II: Emily Sanford; German II: Brian Hardy; Japanese II: Rachele McCarthey; Latin II: Aaron Ballard.

Freshmen Academic Awards – Mathematics: Abigail Sanford; World History: Alyssa Thirsk and Abigail Sanford; English: Daniel Solorio and Abigail Sanford; Drama: Chuck Veltri; Cadet Band: Michele Bass; Dance: Cami Barker; Junior Chorus: Alyssa Thirsk; Health and Physical Education: Aimee Le Duc and Daniel Solorio; Enriched Spanish I: Daniel Solorio; Spanish: Laurie Lovato; Enriched French I: Abigail Sanford; French I: Jennifer Ellis; German: Senja Siebeneck; Japanese: Brian Stanga; Greek: Chuck Veltri; Latin: Peter Duberow.

Sam Francis was editor-in-chief of the Bulldog Press, aided by editors Angie Francone, Emily Sanford, Todd Paoletti, Witney Williams and business manager Samantha Kemper. Staff writers included Lisa Book, Mary Libsch, Mary Ann Ward, Rebekah Huffman, Jenny Layman, Dana Lombardi, Daniel Solario, Melissa Jenko, Anna Garcia, Adia Waldburger, Abigail Sanford, Sarah Larrabee, Michael Westley, Todd Mathes, Matt Schelble, Angie Kearns, Lindsey Rindflesh, Darrick McCasland, Jason Johnson, Luke Kelly, Lara Brewer, Mike Carlson, Martin Munoz and photographer Pat Kelly. The adviser was Chris Sloan.

In its October edition, the newspaper endorsed Deedee Corradini for Salt Lake City mayor; Dana Lombardi said Judge students were into wearing wool socks, Birkenstocks, crystals, gold wire-rim glasses, tie-dye shirts, hair wraps and some sort of khaki pants; Abigail Barnett chronicled Pamela Barnett’s participation in beauty contests.

Katie McHugh was crowned Homecoming queen and Santino Aloia was the king. McHugh’s attendants were Jen Calame, Tammy Hamilton and Lisa Schneckloth. Aloia was attended by Gary Green, Dominic Sanone and Anthony Gardner.

The Chess Club included Tim Roelofs, Adam Freedman, David Dannels, Steve Sawaya, Scott Selburg, Chris Johnson and David Mares. The Diplomacy Club featured David Mares, Ted Ream, Steve Sawaya, Robert Vandeveegaete and Scott Selburg.

The Utah Department of Transportation sent a certificate of appreciation to the Judge sophomore class for participating in the “Adopt-A-Highway” program.

Winners of Book Awards were Lara Brewer (Dartmouth), Brittany Watne (Smith), Anna Woodruff (Wellesley) and Scott Selbert (Yale).

Members of the Amnesty International chapter were Carrie Richardson, Carli Cook, Jim Robinson, Elizabeth Felt, Tiffany Panos, Mary Ann Ward, Bess Bernell and Sarah Koelsch. Bill Straub was adviser.

Priests J. Terrence Fitzgerald, Robert Pollock and Francis Mannion became monsignors.

Led by Michael Murphy, Franco Aloia and Charlotte Eggert, the Student Council organized book sales, Sub for Santa, the Winters Dance, the Big Sisters/Little Sisters event and put on a party for the children at the Guadalupe Center. Their advisers were Peter Van Orden and Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb.

Under the auspices of teacher John Tabish, the Junior Classical League was led by president Mike Carlson and included Sam Francis, Brittany Watne, Mary Libsch, Charlotte White, Sarah Stein, Mike Sorich, Julius Calderon, Andrew Cheng, John Neeway, Eric Ekdale and Matt Wolack.

Following in his father’s footsteps, junior Pat Kelly won a photography contest sponsored by The Salt Lake Tribune, where his dad, Tim, Class of 1963, was a longtime photographer. Junior Bryan Byerly received an honorable mention.

Sr. Sharlet Wagner advised the Literary Magazine, whose editors were Mike Carlson, Witney Williams and Steven Lloyd. The staff featured Kami Burnett, Kory Lair, Mary Ann Ward, Darby Lacy, Sarah Stein, Ellen Rosentreter, Molly McGean, Jim Robinson, Aaron Shaheen, Dana Lombardi and Steven Shultz.

Salt Lake City attorney Edward McDonough, in his Sunday column in The Salt Lake Tribune, cited Judge’s sex-education program, called “Respect for Life,” as an appropriate example of how religious-based values can be incorporated into the program. But that’s because Judge is a private school, McDonough noted, adding public schools are not allowed under the constitution to include religion-based values. He criticized the Utah State Board of Education for hiring a Mormon religious-education teacher to add “values” to the sex-education curriculum created by a Board of Education committee.

Members of the Odyssey of the Mind Club were Andrea Sadler, Winston Winson, Cindy Howard, Ryan Pera, Sarah Allen, Chris Thomas, Alex Scott, Willy Kocher and Chris Hyden.

Christian Service requirements enabled seniors to help out at Ronald McDonald House, Shriner’s Hospital, Holy Cross Hospital, Habitat for Humanity, the Children’s Shelter, the AIDS Coalition headquarters and Forest Service offices. Participants included Brian Veltri, Christina Coondrat, Eric Swartz, Sheela Bachus, Franco Aloia, Lara Brewer, John Olsen and Chris Denkers.

The chapel was renovated and named after Jeffrey Glass Robinson, who was killed in an accident in 1988. Robinson’s mother, Claire Gaylord, made the renovation possible.

Singing in the Choir were Sophia Valdez, Shannon McCall, Samantha Kemper, Kami Burnett, Allison Martin, Antoinette Maginnis, Marie Scott, Ellen Rosentreter, Katie Ellis, Becca Derouin, Stephanie Tobey, Susan Weaver, Jeff Fazzio, Jenny Layman, Joan Ekdale, Angie Kearns, Michael Westley, Adia Waldburger, Erin Weyland, Bryan Duberow, Becky Hollubeck, Nicole Bethers, Gina Caruso, Margaret Mulder and Tammy Hamilton. Their conductor was Susan Northway.

Amber Eresuma, Kory Lair and Heather Tennant were three members of the Peer Leadership Team, overseen by teacher Mary Bailey.

Attending the Teton Science School were Gavin Noyes, Cara Tangaro, Alyssa Stransky, Sarah Semerad, Chad Warner, Andy Solez, Michaela Keller, Franco Aloia, Bob Thompson, Loik Henderson, Eric Byrne and Mike Lucero. Teacher Jim Markosian was the chaperone.

The American Red Cross provided a three-day training session on cardio pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and other first aid techniques for Judge faculty and staff, such as kitchen worker Florence Holtshouser. “With all the students we have here I think it would be advantageous to anybody in their school to know these skills and be qualified,” she told the Intermountain Catholic. “Schools have relied on coaches, who have to be located and called in to administer first aid. It’s good for many, not just a few, to be able to help instead of just standing around in an emergency.” A photograph with the story showed teachers Kip Sayre, Deborah Recksiek, Charlene Furano and Chris Francone administering CPR to each other.

STATE CHAMPIONS – The Mock Trial team won the 3-A title, led by sophomore Abigail Sanford, who was named “Best Attorney” and sophomore Alyssa Thirsk, the “Best Witness.”

The Debate Team was led by Duane de Four, Diana Herrera, Ann Lawrence and Brandon Rodriguez along with Alison Pitt, Amy Howa, Mari Hrebenar, Robert Maris, Kari Richardson, Amanda Gavura, John Mejia, Samantha Kemper, Tristan Maheriya, Andrea Sadler, Ryan Ballard, Winston Winson, Kelly Knudsen, Kari Hadfield, Elizabeth Maddis and Scott Simpson.

Performing in the Concert Band were Antoinette Maginnis, Molly Gras, Anna Woodruff, Antje Kablitz, Jergin Chen, Alexandra Woodruff, Eric Ekdale, Nicole Bethers, Matt Liapis, Mike Bass, Scott Simpson, Matt Wolach, Julius Calderon, Rocky Conner, Stephanie Angelides, Kim Courtney, Jackson Adams, Allison Zumbro, Ronald Markovich, Greg Baker, Trent Adams, Matt Oswald, Katie Hamilton and Ed Bennett.

Orchestra members were Diana Herrera, Ken Oliphant, Hannah Castle, Brock Cahill, Staci Bennett, Michael Westley, Nicole Selmer, Brynn Anderson, Anna Skorut, Samantha Kemper, Mary Ellen Baron, Joan Ekdale and Chloe Tay. Their conductor was John Chatelain.

Teacher Chris Long led a 140-mile bike trip over the Kokopelli Trail in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah, ending at Moab. Participating students included Amanda Smith, Bob Thompson and Sarah Mandleco. Teacher Jim Markosian offered information about the Anasazi Indians along the way.

The Basilean yearbook was put together by editors Brittany Watne, Jim Robinson, Elliot Cruz, Lara Brewer, Stephanie Tonin, Gavin Noyes and Mike Carlson and staff members Hadley Becker, Allison Schull, Debbie Brimmer, Judge Evans, Roslyn Clay, Nick Ferrone, Meg Mulder, Elizabeth Schultz, Nicole Selmer, Molly Gallivan, Alana Yates, Amanda Moxley, Jen Calame, Diedre Austin, Traci Rainaldi, Katie Bayer, Lisa Prokop, Sophia Valdez, Tom Peters, Anna Woodruff, Alex Gardiner, Julie Lachowski, Amy Park, Stephanie Angelides, Greg Johnson, Susan Weaver, Sasa Woodruff, Jared Strand, Ronald Markovich, Becky Frank and Nicole Bethers. Tim Dolan was the adviser.

Some of Tom Bettin’s top art students were Tamara Hamilton, Nicole Nicholson, Stephanie Tonin, Jeff Baird and Cara Tangaro.

The Jazz Band featured Eric Ekdale, Jeff Fazzio, Ed Bennett, Mike Bass, Matt Liapis, Samantha Kemper, Stephanie Tobey, Katie Hamilton, Jergin Chen, Josh Scales, Scott Selberg, Matt Wolach, Michael Westley, Tad Timothy, Greg Baker, Jodie Shiotani, Mike Sorich, Matt Bergener, Julius Calderon, Josh White, Jackson Adams, Mike Givens, Steve Smith, Brandon Adams and Brian Banks.

The “Focus on Excellence” capital campaign had raised $2.1 million in its first year, according to Principal and President Msgr. J. Terrence Fitzgerald. He told The Tribune that 34% came from friends of the school, 26% from local corporations and foundations, 22% from alumni and families of current students and 18% from parishes in the Salt Lake Diocese.

Departing teachers: Christine Perkins, Liz Sonne, Gary McDonough and Bill Straub.

For a while, there was doubt the Spring Dance Concert would take place as usual because director Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb gave birth in the spring to her first son, Max. But 1990 graduate Alison Le Duc stepped up and offered to oversee the 100-plus dancers performing in “Best Foot Forward.” Dancers included seniors Amy Zupon, Brittany Veltri, Lieu Anne Woodhead, Sophia Valdez, Nikki Sikalis, Dominic Sanone, Mary Reed, Amber Ramon, Jeff Parkinson, Todd Paoletti, Gina Novasio, Jennifer Morrison, Katie McHugh, Antoinette Maginnis, Kristen Kurilich, James Kimball, Meghan Kelly, Kara Jones, Suzanne Franklin, Casey Foley, Karen Dobson, Jennifer Agraz and Sheela Bachus, Pamela Barnett and Trey Barber.

Plays

“We,” written by Gerald McDonough, music by Susan Northway, choreography by Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb and Judge graduates Rosie and Angela Banchero, starring Gary Green, Dana Lombardi, Nick Francone, Nick Ferrone, Jenny Layman, Kami Burnett and Elliott Cruz.

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” starring Dana Lombardi, Antoinette Maginnis and John Welsh.

Sports

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, STATE CHAMPIONS – Peter Matus reigned supreme in boys tennis, where the Bulldogs shared the 3-A title with West, each team scoring 24 points. The Judge senior went through his high school career without a loss, capping it with his third straight state championship at No. 1 singles, beating West’s Ricky Skaar 6-2, 6-2. “He’s an incredible player,” said Coach Bob Juhasz. While Matus was a standout, he was not alone in leading Judge to a second straight state 3-A championship. The Bulldogs were represented in all five finals matches, and its prospects of winning came down to the final competition. That’s when the No. 2 doubles team of Gary Green and Justin Henderson came through, defeating a team from Logan 6-1, 6-2, to lift the team into the tie with West. The Bulldogs were loaded, with Josh Brown reaching the finals at No. 2 singles and John Migliaccio at No. 3 singles. Both lost to West players, as did the No. 1 doubles team of Chris Barra and Casey Foley. Other team members were Peter Duberow, Andrew Cheng, Jeremy Agraz and Steve Love.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, CHAMPION – For the second year in a row, the boys cross country team captured the 3-A state title, beating the Bulldogs’ closest challenger by a remarkable 46 points. Coach Eric Houle’s squad was led by Ted Hansen, who captured the individual crown in a time of 15 minutes, 39.8 seconds. “A runner who is as talented as Ted picks the entire team up,” said Coach Houle. Evidence? At the state meet, Jeremy Ortega finished fifth (16:04.5), Gary Green was ninth (16:17.1), Mike Givens 15th, Scott Ambre 17th, Mike Klass 34th and Brandon Allen 45th. “This is the best team ever,” Houle told The Bulldog Press after his charges scored just 44 points in the race, blowing away runner-up Cedar City (90). “They weren’t supposed to do it – we lost three of the top five runners from last year. [But this team] wants to win and knows how to win. … I’m in it to win. Why try for anything less?” Rounding out the championship squad for Houle were Mark Paoletti, Lenny Brewer, Todd Mathes, Peter Agrapides, Zack Kovkos, Craig Britter, Mike Givens, Eric Reynolds, Bryan Duberow, Chris Newlin, Aleko Campos, Jeremiah Calame, Matt Sause and Tim Roelofs.

The girls cross country team finished second in 3-A, led by third-place finisher Katie McHugh. The Bulldogs finished with 88 points, trailing Logan’s winning 77. McHugh’s time of 19:35.1 was half a minute behind the winner, but half a second ahead of the fourth-place finisher. Other runners for Coach Eric Houle were Jen Calame (19th), Lisa Schneckloth (25th), Yvonne Howe (26th), Lara Brewer (30th) and Mary Reed (45th). Kristin Derr, Molly Gras, Tallee Weldele, Sarah Richey, Susan Nowell, Clare Wallin, Angelina Castagno, Suzannah Valdez, Laurie Lovato, Amy Roberts, Becky Harold, Toby Thaller, Ellen Rosentreter, Debbie Duricy, Sheela Bachus, Sarah Mandleco, Megan Hess, Erin Gras, Elisabeth Mattes and Andrea Sadler.

Eight shutouts during the regular season carried the girls soccer team into the 3-A state tournament, where the Bulldogs finished third. Judge opened the tourney with a 3-2 upset win over Ogden, the Region 5 champion. But the Bulldogs lost 3-1 in the semifinals to Jordan. Sarah Semerad and Sarah Stuyvesant led the squad, which included seniors Meg Friar, Tamara Hamilton, Michaela Keller, Sarah Metcalf and Cara Tangaro. Other key players were Beth Hildebrand, Chelise Ford, Rebecca Wilson, Ami Hansen, Simami Kappus, Jenny Stanchfield, Amy Stuyvesant, Beth Hildebrand, Lisa Schneckloth, Kari Smith and Albertina Cabal. The coaches were Wayne Voorhes and Bill Hoge.

The football team went through a winless season for Coach John Colosimo. The Bulldogs were led by quarterbacks Pat Pezel and John Fassel, running backs Adam Kerbs and Brandon Davis, and seniors Santino Aloia, Brandon Bilanzich, Marcel Buranek, Colin Chummers, Anthony Duricy, Nick Gibson, David Gonzales, Craig Hemingway, Luke Kelly, Jesse Otero, Tom Peters, Jamey Sage, Dominic Sanone, Eric Swartz and Brian Veltri. Colosimo’s assistants were Chuck Miller, Warren Jefferies, Jim Markosian, Dick Ruberts, Joe Colosimo, Stan Finn, Greg Valdez, Sam Aloia and Jerry Brady.

The volleyball team struggled to a 1-13 record, led by captain Natalie Swain and a half dozen seniors – Elena Biljanic, Kristi Herron, Alyssa Stransky, Rebecca Roberts, Jennifer Kos and Traci Rainaldi. Kos led the team in kills and was right behind Biljanic in passes. Roberts and Herron were the top servers. Coach Kim Anderson’s squad also included underclasswomen Kim Pertl, Melissa Miller, Holly Barber, Sarah Larrabee and Cami Barker.

Five players qualified for the 3-A boys golf tournament, led by Mike Bapis and Casey Foley, who placed fourth and fifth at region. Along with Cash Peterson, Bryan Dalton and Anthony Gardner, the quintet finished the tournament with a 345-stroke total, good for 11th place. Springville won with 311. The squad also included Jennifer Ellis, Justin Boevers, Matt Wolach, Andy Schroeder, Joey Zone, Tom Le Duc, Amanda Brown, Bryan Dalton and Clay Cutshall. The team had a 3-4 dual match record for Coach Dennis Dunlap.

STATE CHAMPIONS – Two individual titlists and two champion relay quartets lifted the girls swimming team to second place at the 3-A state meet, just one point behind champion Cedar City (325 to 324). Ashley Smith was a double medalist, setting a 3-A state record in the backstroke (1:01.56) and also winning the 500-yard freestyle (5:20.74). Freshman Corina Smith also stood atop the medals stand after the 50-yard freestyle, which she won in 25.32 seconds. The 200-yard freestyle relay team also set a state record for Coach Casey Jackson, the Women’s Coach of the Year, completing its course in 1:43.97. Also capturing a state title was the 400-yard relay team (3:50.10). The Bulldogs also picked up important points at state from Susan Nowell, who placed third in the 100 freestyle and fifth in the 200 free. Lisa Book contributed a third in the 100 butterfly and a fourth in the 50 free, while Liz Laney finished third in the 100 breaststroke. Team members included co-captains Julie Lachowski and Becky Etter, along with Catherine Tucker, Suzanne Schelble, Denise Pera, Nicole Selmer, Becca Naylor, Tracy Pera, Megan Williams, Amy Park, Nicole Bethers, Ashley Razor, Holly Barber, Amanda Moxley, Kate Leonard and Sarah Larrabee.

STATE CHAMPIONS – The boys swimming team finished fourth at the 3-A state meet, relying on one relay and several individual state titles. “Swimmer of the Year” Joey Zone broke the 3-A record in the 100 backstroke, previously set by Judge’s Nick Satovick, completing the race in 54.12 seconds. Zone also won the 50 freestyle, sprinting to the finish line in 22.35 seconds. Carter Young added a third individual state championship for the Bulldogs, capturing the 100-yard butterfly in 52.87 seconds. He also finished fifth in the 200 freestyle and teamed with Bryan Duberow and Jeff Perrick to set a new record in the 200-yard freestyle relay (1:30.92). Rounding out Coach Casey Jackson’s squad were Matt Sause, Lenny Brewer, Mike Givens, Ryan Levier and Andrew Chiodo.

Magnus Edling was captain of the hockey team, which finished second in its state tournament with a 12-3 record. The Bulldogs lost 3-1 to Highland in the finals. All-Star goalie Dean Begum led the Bulldogs, whose roster included offensive force Jason Furness, Josh Hutchinson, Chris Johnson, Judge Leverich, Tonino Copene, Brock Cahill, Greg Hoge, Mike McDonald, Brian Scholl, Chris Pike, Brendan Reimer, Matt Wolach and Jackson Adams.

Colin Chummers finished sixth in the 130-pound weight class to lead the Judge wrestling team to 23rd place at the 3-A state tournament. The Bulldogs finished with 13 points. Three team members placed at region – Drew Dannels, Josh Stanchfield and Chad Allen. Other wrestler were Gavin Noyes, Eric Swartz, Eddie Arroz, Bob Thompson, Wade Little, Jason McDonald, Brian Veltri, Jed Clark, Damion Lee, Brian Ballard, Brett Veltri, Will Siska and Ray Reynoso. The coaches were Chris Long, Mike Klonizos and Shawn Chacon.

Coach Jim Yerkovich’s boys young basketball team had a rough season, finishing 2-12 with only three seniors on the roster – Michael Bapis, Anthony Duricy and Gavin Malcom. Rounding out the squad were Justin Henderson, Jason Scales, Jim Murray, T.J. Greenwood, Jimmy Reynolds, Ben Melmeth, Zach Pino, Luis Lovato, Anthony Gardner, Aaron Guss and Mike Martinez. Yerkovich’s assistant coaches were Marty Giovacchini, John Colosimo, Dan Del Porto, Tom Bettin and Danny Medina.

After dropping its first four games, the girls basketball team ran off 11 straight wins under coaches Sonny Tangaro and Nick Bapis. But that was not quite enough to qualify for the 3-A state tournament. Junior Erin Hartigan was the team’s top player, joined in the starting lineup by Heather Betit, Nicole Nicholson, Cara Tangaro and Jen Kos. The rest of the roster included Albertina Cabal, Chelsie Acosta, Carrie Christensen, Melissa Miller, Kami Barker and Alethia Bapis.

Evionne Mecham was state gymnastics champion.

STATE CHAMPION – Ted Hansen won the 1,600-meter run for the boys track team at the 3-A state meet, crossing the finish line in 4:20.56. Hansen also placed fourth in the 3,200-meter run, accounting for all of Judge’s 14 points, good enough for 14th place at the meet at BYU. Coach Eric Houle’s squad also included Mike Givens, Brandon Davis, Jerome Bennett and Geoff Wallin.

Eric Houle also coached the girls track team, which finished 14th at the 3-A state meet with 12 points. The Bulldogs were led by Katie McHugh, who was the runner-up to Mountain Crest’s Anna Watkins in the 3,200-meter run. McHugh was fourth in the 1,600-meter run, also won by Watkins. Amy Sida and Lindsey Rindflesh also were members of the team.

The 3-A girls tennis tournament was a two-team affair: Judge and Ogden. All five finals matches of the tournament at BYU featured Bulldogs versus Tigers. On this day, unfortunately, the cats prevailed. In winning all five decisions, Ogden pulled away for the title, compiling 30 points to 20 for Judge and Coach Bob Juhasz. Finishing second at state for the Bulldogs were Mari Hrebenar (No. 1 singles), Stephanie Tonin (No. 2 singles), Erin Hartigan No. 3 (singles), Heather Bourne and Christina Tonin (No. 1 doubles) and Amanda Smith and Carrie Christensen (No. 2 doubles). The alternates were Genevieve Kiley, Stacey Collins, Rebecca Naylor and Alethia Bapis. Amanda Smith and Stephanie Tonin were co-captains of the team, which was undefeated in region.

The boys soccer team advanced to the semifinals of the 3-A state tournament, where it lost a 2-1 decision to Bountiful, the eventual state champion. The Bulldogs were region champions and opened the tourney with a 3-1 win over Jordan. Members included Brock Cahill, Chris Medley, Scott Berry, Carter Young, Dave Ravarino, Ryan Witherow, Clay Cutshall, Anthony Gardner, Greg Hoge, Jim Berry, Chris Denkers, Mark Schneckloth, Jamey Sage, Gavin Malcolm, Matt Schwobe, Dean Gordon, Jeff Lachowski, Chris Garcia, Matt Carson, Chevy Kelker, Ryan Slack, Joe Alamilla, Kevin Minix and Justin Manikowski.

The baseball team finished 3-11 under Coach Dan Medina, whose roster included co-captain Duaine Miller, Bill Trentman, Jesse Otero, Todd Paoletti, Adam Achter, Sam Maio, Anthony Jefferies, Brian Scholl, Todd Orges, Mike Steinke, Justin Boevers, Steve Smith and Jan Mirka. The Bulldogs did not qualify for the 3-A state tournament.

Amy Howard was the main pitcher for the softball team, coached by Lynn Hoffman-Brouse and Kip Sayre. The squad, which went 0-13, featured seniors Elena Biljanic, Brandi Gabardi and Shelley Brown along with Laurie Lovato, Jamie Martinez, Jennifer Ellis, Natalie Swain, Jennifer Verbeck, Hillard Gordon, Misty Perez, Katy Ellis, Piper Hartt, Mandy Evans, Becky Ellis, Taya Ray, Sarah Larrabee, Annette Mascarena and Dee Lindquist.

Playing lacrosse on Judge’s club team were Chris Delaney, Scott Smith, Josh Stanchfield, Shane Backman, Dominic Murphy, Andy Moeller, Ian Skomski, Bob Thompson, Jason Robinson, Jeremiah Johnston, Marc O’Brien, James Kimball, Trey Barber, Loik Henderson, Magnus Edling, Jarvis Chang, Trent Adams, Eric Swartz, Steve Schultz, Chris Medley and Jeremy Agraz.

Graduation

212 graduates on May 31 at Symphony Hall.

Valedictorian: Scott Selberg

Salutatorian: Brittany Watne

Gold honor cords that represented being part of the top quarter of the class academically were worn by 50 graduates. Rotary Club scholarships were given to Elena Biljanic, Lara Brewer, Chantel Graham. Antoinette Maginnis received an appointment to West Point, Nicholas Gibson to the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Ted Hansen to West Point Preparatory School and Scott Redington to Naval Boost School.

Christ the King Awards: Elena Biljanic and Sam Francis

Alumni

Marty Jemison, Class of 1983, competed in the U.S. Nationals in Altoona, Pa., hoping to secure a spot on the Olympic bicycling squad; Amy Albo, Class of 1984, became editor of Salt Lake City Magazine.


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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