1997 - 98

Class Leaders

Student Body Officers – Kyle Swartz, president; Vice President: Jeanne Stuyvesant; Secretary/Historian: Megan Young.

Senior Class Core – Patrycja Zaplata, Erin McMahon, Matt Rojas, Jonathan Oslowski, Angela Keyser and Erica Bero.

Junior Class Core – Summer Bell, Gina Webb, Jennifer Sutton, Bryan Woody, Jeremy St. Romain and Nick Layman.

Sophomore Class Core – Tom Conner, Robert Bell, Jimmy Neeway, Chris Holdener and David Seal.

Freshman Class Core – Danielle Dorsch, Paige Tanner, Gina Gotay, Ryan Greenberg and Lucas Johnson.

During the Summer

Maintenance work was undertaken to make the school building more resistant to an earthquake and to fix the roof, which was leaking badly. In the fall, Janie Franks, Natalie Tangaro, Brooke DiAna, Anthony Nokes, Tim Connor and Jesse Flores were among the students “power cleaning” the cafeteria to the music of King Floyd (“Groove Me”), Louis Armstrong (“What a Wonderful World”), Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (“You Wreck Me”) and The Grateful Dead (“She Belongs to Me”). The work didn’t go well. The Bulldog Press issue in October showed teachers Tom Bettin and Charlene Furano standing on the roof, pointing at water that didn’t go down drains but went through the roof into the library or flooded a stairwell. Bettin’s art department also sustained damage from leaking water.

Amber Ivie represented Judge at Girl’s State at Southern Utah University in Cedar City.

Senior Angela Downs received a full scholarship to participate in a college-level “Language and Literature” seminar, the Telluride Association Summer Program at St. John’s College in Annapolis, Md.

Classmate Jeff Banks was 21st statewide in the Utah State Math Exam.

Fourteen seniors-to-be accompanied teacher Chris Long on a river trip in June on the Dolores River in southwestern Colorado, aided by guides from the Canyonlands Field Institute in Moab. Long later took 15 underclassmen on a wild ride through Westwater Canyon on a “flood-swollen” Colorado River. Long judged both trips successful: “All bodies were accounted for at the end of the trip.”

Summer travel took Marion Anderson to Northern Ireland, where she visited with Sinead, a girl from Omagh who had spent a month with Marion and her family two years earlier as part of the Ulster Project; Marco Mileti spent six weeks in Guatemala; four dozen students, including Jasmine Ferguson, Matt Rojas, Anne Fratto and Carlynn Worstell, toured Italy and Greece with teachers such as Ramira Alamilla; Teacher Chris Sloan and seniors Dagny Dingman and Marcie Young attended a journalism workshop at Kansas State University.

Senior Patrick Grisley, juniors Chris Dean, Brian Burchett, Peter Jones and Amanda O’Karma, and sophomore Hilary Leonard received scholarships to the Young Writers Conference in Park City; Senior Megan Carney attended a weeklong business-management seminar at Utah State University; Peer Leadership Team members Jennifer Larrabee, Amanda O’Karma and Rodrigo Luciano attended a three-day conference at the College of Eastern Utah in Price.

A Salt Lake Tribune feature noted that Fleetwood Mac “singing fairy-rock goddess” Stevie Nicks went to Judge for one month when she was a sophomore. Then her family moved out of town. “I was absolutely devastated when my dad told me we were moving,” Nicks said. She attended Wasatch Junior High for eighth and ninth grades before her parents sent her to Judge to improve her studies.

The Year

National Merit Scholars: Angela Downs, Rodrigo Luciano, Rebecca McDonald

National Merit Finalists: Angela Downs, Rodrigo Luciana, Rebecca McDonald, Scott George, Alex Muck.

National Merit Letters of Commendation: Christopher Bogus and Daniel Maland.

National Hispanic Scholar Recognition Program finalists: Rodrigo Luciano and Angela Downs.

Student body enrollment was 961.

Administrative changes: Jaqueline Stillings and David Land, directors of the Dean’s Office; Bob Jackson, freshmen and sophomore counselor; Tom Oden, director of activities; John Colosimo, athletic director. Colosimo’s move to AD resulted in the hiring of 1991 Judge graduate Tim Clark as the new football coach. As a student, Clark played inside linebacker and fullback for Judge. He also played briefly at Princeton University. He returned to Judge as a social studies teacher and coach in 1995.

New teachers: Wendy Hahn, English and Environmental Club; Celia Holt, Spanish; Stefanie Paulson, Spanish and dance; David Morath, Spanish and hockey; Ramona Mayer, music; Sandra Schultz, English and softball; Patricia Bradley, returning after a five-year absence to teach PE.

Junior Academic Awards – Mathematics: Jonathan Oslowski; Human Biology: Miguel DelToro; Honors Chemistry: Scott George and Jonathan Oslowski; Honors English: Angela Downs and Daniel Maland; English: Jess Morrison; A.P. U.S. History: Lindsay Dofelmier and Rodrigo Luciano; Early U.S. History: Daniel Maland; Modern U.S. History: Angela Keyser; Drama: Alicia Tetzloff; Tech Theatre: Daniel Maland; a capella Choir: Angela Downs; A.P. Music: Nicole Salazar; Jazz Band: Curtis Chapa and Kara Mayeda; Wind Ensemble: Mario Mendez; Dance: Nicholas Cendese; Ceramics: Tessa Furano and Patrick Keller; Drawing: Robert Conti; Girls Weightlifting: Megan Carney; Boys Weightlifting: Troy Grant; A.P. U.S. History: Lindsay Dofelmier and Rodrigo Luciano; Early U.S. History: Daniel Maland; Modern U.S. History: Angela Keyser; Computer Programming: Jeffrey Banks; Hypercard: Matthew Rojas; Web Publishing: Lindsey Pasek; Religious Studies: Justin Fuller and Angela Downs; Honors Spanish: Dagny Dingman and Adrianne Lobato; Spanish: Daniel Maland; Honors French: Andra Dingman and Scott George; French: Mary Duricy; German: Nathan Scott and Patrycja Zaplata; Japanese: Angela Downs and Kara Mayeda; Latin: Jonathan Oslowski.

Sophomore Academic Awards – Mathematics: Jonathan Lee; Enriched Biology: Emily Bereskin and Rebecca Farr; Modern World History: Britney Brinkman; Early World History: Jason Otterstrom; English: Britney Brinkman and Rebecca Farr; Religious Studies: Jason Costa and Britney Brinkman; Desktop Publishing: Jarett LaTour; Speech and Debate: Julianne Hancock; Drawing: Peter Oswald; Drama: Marco Mileti; Dance: Michelle Kowalczyk; Choir: Amanda O’Karma; Advanced Weightlifting: Peter Baron; Girls Weightlifting: Marian Anderson; Boys Weightlifting: Christopher Tetzloff; Enriched Spanish: Rebecca Farr, Jocelyn Jackman, Tyler Smith and Bryan Woody; Spanish: Abigail Anderson, Ian Atzet and Andrew Beagle; Enriched French: Jarett LaTour; French: Jason Otterstrom; German: Patricia Mayer and Adriana Rogoz; Japanese: Anthony Bucad and Peter Haslam; Latin: Tamara Fisher and Jennifer Sutton.

Freshmen Academic Awards – Mathematics: Melissa Beyer; Introduction to Physical Science: Meryl Biksacky and Keith Gardner; Geography: Meryl Biksacky; English: Sara South; Computer Literacy: Brandon Pasek; Keyboarding: Jacob Kresser; Religious Studies: Lauren Beach and Lance Johnson; Drama: Alex Cendese; Dance: Cecelia Peterson; Drawing: Meryl Biksacky and Jonathan Buck; Jazz Band: David Seal; Choir: Laurie Zentner; Wind Ensemble: Sarah Reeves; Boys Health: Elmer Downs and Jesse Portillo; Girls Health: Allison Faucett and Sara South; Girls P.E.: Jessica Evans; Boys P.E.: Michael Kennedy; Boys Weightlifting: Kyle Stetner; Enriched Spanish: Michael Gutierrez and Brook Mingo; Spanish: Elmer Downs, Hilary Leonard, Thomas Stuyvesant and Laurie Zentner; Enriched French: Meryl Biksacky, Spencer Quiel and Sara South; German: Lauren Beach and Lance Johnson; Japanese: Shaun Ernst; Latin: Keith Gardner.

The dress code was modified to allow more sweater options – Dennis uniform v-neck sweaters or vests or crew-neck sweaters – but cut down on the variety of colors allowed (to only blue or white) with the oxford cloth button-down shirts. Pink and yellow were dropped. The Dean’s Office also eliminated the demerit system in favor of an “immediate detention system.” That meant detentions had to be served the afternoon of the infraction or the next day – or else the student would be suspended until the dean met with parents. Later in the year, the Dean’s Office warned parents that “Judge Memorial does not sponsor a post-graduation senior trip to Mexico. We do not approve of or allow classroom meeting space or school time for the planning of this ‘unsupervised and potentially dangerous trip.’”

School officials also were concerned about “past incidents of fighting and discriminatory and harassing language and behavior among students,” Principal Renee Genereux wrote in the October-November issue of Judge News. To combat that, the school held an all-day workshop on topics including self-respect, conflict resolution and sexual harassment.

Many students celebrated the installation of new lockers during the summer.

Deliveries of laboratory goggles, anatomy coloring books and geometry texts were delayed to the Judge bookstore, frustrating manager Lajean Smith.

The Football Cheerleaders were Erika Maymi, Kourtney Farnsworth, Michelle Kowalczyk, Adrienne Lobato, Sarah Murphy, Theresa Reynoso, Jennifer Sciurba, Jessica van Klaveren, Jorja Jensen, Angela Haycock, Carrie Thomas, Jennifer Sutton, Sandi Ransdell and Kristy Ahlstrom. Their coach was Stephanie Egbert.

Patrycja Zaplata was crowned Homecoming Queen. Kyle Swartz was king. “Jailhouse Rock” was the theme of Homecoming, which included a pep rally, tug of war and a coffee house, where Andrei Lubomudrov was among the featured performers.

Peer Ministers were Sarah Don, Erica Bero, Troy Grant, Ana Gonzalez-Cabal, Tim Jackson, Rachel Reeves, Jess Morrison, Jorja Jensen, Jean-Paul Briggs, Theresa George, Mary Northway, Alex Muck, Marcie Young, Elmer Downs, Suzanne Itami, Lance Johnson, Angela Downs, Troy Grant and Katherine Hensleigh. Their advisers were Mary Lane Grisley and Michelle Mello.

Liturgical dancers included Jocelyn Romankowski, Emily Bogus, Kristy Ahlstrom and Jennifer Yamashiro.

STATE CHAMPION – Andra Dingman and Marcie Young were co-editors-in-chief of the Bulldog Press. Their editorial board consisted of Brittany Burt, Dagny Dingman, Kevin Fry and Megan Young. The newspaper unveiled its online edition in March. Staff members included Andrea Ellesson, Patricia Holt, Carly Bobbe, Britney Brinkman, Marian Anderson, John Soltis, Kara Osman, Abigail Anderson, Julianne Hancock, Christopher Dean, Spencer Quiel, Matthew Johnson, Meryl Biksacky, Kurt Courtney, Rebecca Farr, Katy Hartney, Erin McMahon, Annie Parsell, Erin O’Conner, Bryant Ross and Justin James. The cartoonists were Mario Mendez, Gina Welde and Nicole Welde, James Henry ran the photo lab, Julianne Hancock was the business manager and design was handled by Jarett LaTour and Marco Mileti. Chris Sloan was the adviser. The newspaper took first place at the Westminster Journalism Competition, which involved schools from Utah, Wyoming and Idaho.

The Coca-Cola Scholars Program selected Erika Dofelmeier as one of 1,100 semifinalists (out of 129,000 applicants) based on her leadership, achievements and potential.

A graphic in the October edition of the Bulldog Press showed Judge students scored two points higher than other Utah students in each ACT category – English, mathematics, reading, science reasoning and composite, and nearly 3 points above the national averages. A poll of students in the same issue showed that 97% of Judge students planned to attend college.

The estate of Thomas Kane “T.K.” O’Carroll, Class of 1934, bequeathed $50,000 to Judge after his passing in October, 1997. A military man, O’Carroll helped develop the B-52 and B-57 bombers for the Air Force’s Air Research and Development Council before retiring in Louisiana, where he operated Burger King restaurants around Lake Charles.

Amador Guzman was one of six youth testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee on “What Works: The Efforts of Private Individuals, Community Organizations and Religious Groups to Prevent Juvenile Crime.” Amador spoke about his involvement since age 5 at the Boys & Girls Club in his west-side neighborhood and how that experience helped him stay out of trouble despite being considered “at risk” – a Latino boy being raised by a single mother in an area of higher crime. With the aid of a scholarship from Judge, he played football, baseball, soccer and lacrosse while holding down jobs at various times with a restaurant, grocery store and a hotel.

Ramona Mayer conducted the senior and junior choirs, featuring Angela Downs, Matt Rojas, Sarah Don, Chris Gray, Patricia Mayer, Elmer Downs, Amy Jackson, Maren Slaugh, Shylo Drabner and Lindsay Browning.

Judge paid homage in October, 1997 to the 26 school graduates who went became members of the clergy. The list included:

11 priests – Msgr. Jerome Stoffel (1928), Rev. Tom Culton (1944), Rev. Lawrence Sweeney (1946), Rev. John Hedderman (1950), Msgr. Terrence Fitzgerald (1954), Msgr. Robert Servatius (1956), Rev. Jerry Lynch (1965), Rev. Joseph Mayo (1965), Rev. James McHugh (1965), Rev. Vincent Rigdon (1967) and Rev. John Norman (1971);

9 nuns – Sr. Kathleen Ann Nelligan (1922, St. Mary’s); Sr. Joan Allem (1946, St. Mary’s), Sr. Timothea Kingston (1947), Sr. Martha Ann Norwood (1947), Sr. Barbara Sullivan (1955, St. Mary’s), Sr. Mary Sullivan (1957), Sr. Marie Bernadette Rogers (1957), Sr. Madeline Marie Clayton (1961), Sr. Ruth Barbara Holtshouser (1963);

1 deacon – Sylvio Mayo (1942) and 1 Brother – Patrick Moore (1957);

5 Non-Catholic clergy – Rev. Marta Weeks (1947, St. Mary’s), John McGurk (1975), Margaret Claire O’Brian (1985), Miriam Phinney (1987) and Alison Paige Croswhite (1993).

The 16th annual Judge auction and dinner-dance, dubbed the “Tour de France,” raised $145,000. The event was chaired by Kim and Bob Hood, with Neel and Marianne Bennett as honorary chairs. In French tradition, members of the Judge Dance Department did a cancan dance to entertain patrons.

The Debate Team featured several students who were finalists at the 4-A state competition at Ogden High School. Finalists included Bart Brinkman (impromptu), Rodrigo Luciano and Jarett LaTour (both foreign extemporaneous), while the semifinals were reached by Sara South, Chris Muck, Stephanie Dean and Maggie Nelson. Danny Schoenfeld finished third in Lincoln Douglas Debate (Jason Papanikolas and Frank Lilly also competed), while Bryson Bennett was sixth and Julie Hancock seventh in Congress. Joanna Nortmann and Laura Hancock competed in policy debate at state. The squad also included captain Julianne Hancock, Kerri Sparks, Amanda O’Karma, Brian May, Anthony Watkins, Jennifer Williams, Alex Muck, Jennifer Larrabee, Abby Hunter, Adriano Luciano, Naresh Kumar and Bret Brinkman. Their adviser was Kip Sayre.

John and Jean Henkels, who put a slew of children through Judge, were featured in a Salt Lake Tribune article by Nancy Melich about invaluable donors to Utah’s nonprofit performing-arts community.

After passing the scene of a crash in which four teen-agers were killed by an intoxicated motorist, Michelle Villela from the Class of 2000 organized a Students Against Drunk Driving chapter at Judge. Members included Michael Misiewicz, Kris Schreiner, Gina Welde, Sarah Preston, Tonie Carl, Molly Wilton, Victoria Gonzalez-Cabal, Kourtney Farnsworth, Angelica Pardo, Amelinda Spek, Chea Trujillo, Lacey Eggen, Michael Gutierrez, Michelle Kowalczyk, Jesse Portillo and Rachel Reeves. The club’s moderator was Corethia Qualls.

Senior Leslie Love was one of many Judge students whose cars were broken into on city streets.

The Basketball Cheerleaders were captains Jorja Jensen and Jessica van Klaveren along with Jennifer Larrabee, Theresa Ferrone, Mandy Pool, Hollie Janovak, Sarah Reeves, Angela Bowman, Carrie Thomas, Ana Lorenzana, Ellie McBroom, Gina Webb and Merri Box. Stephanie Egbert was their adviser.

Students in teacher Jean Hill’s American history class asked if they could get extra credit for seeing the movie Amistad, about a 19th Century slave rebellion that precipitated a U.S. Supreme Court lawsuit. They offered to do it on their own time, paying their own way. “No need,” reported The Salt Lake Tribune. An unidentified mom informed Hill she would pay for not just the history class, but for the entire junior class to see the film.

Senior Jaison Hesleph was one of 14 Utah students selected by the University of Utah to receive the Dr. Martin Luther King Youth Leadership award for contributions to social action, cultural growth and positive relations within the community. Hesleph, fellow senior Ronnie Peltier and junior Jarett LaTour also were selected by the state Office of Black Affairs and the Black Advisory Council to receive 1997 Youth Awards for academic and leadership achievement.

An environmental newsletter was started by Karl Nelson, Patrick Keller, Jeremy St. Romain, Ellie McBroom and Helen Grisley.

Some of Tom Bettin’s top art students included Anthony Nokes, Janie Franks, Peter Oswald, Annie Hawkins, Brian Kolkebeck, Gianni Calfa, Neil Thon, Aaron Thompson, Corey Lundon, Patricia Holt, Thomas Batey and Tyson Carbaugh-Mason.

American Express honored senior Angela Downs for her “outstanding service” to the March of Dimes at a Utah Jazz game. Classmate Erika Dofelmier was one of nearly 1,100 students nationwide who reached the semifinals of a Coca Cola contest honoring top high school scholars.

The Student Council sponsored a “Disco Night” dance in February after boys and girls basketball games against Highland. Dancers included Sam Dadgari, Erin McMahon, Mike Parenti, Chris Howard, Tyler Smith, Nikki Manzanares, Adrian Andrews, Rosalba Dominguez, Janie Franks, Nick Hristou, Megan Young, Natalie Tangaro, Rachel Reeves and Jeanne Stuyvesant.

The Choir featured Ana Gonzalez-Cabal, Sarah Don, Maggie Nelson and Shylo Drabner.

Assembling the Basilean yearbook were Kara Mayeda, Adrienne Lobato, Jessica Bogdanich, Matthew Rojas, Carlyn Worstell, Brian Mayeda, Marcie Young, Jane McBroom, Tom Stuyvesant, Ann Selmer, Jean-Paul Briggs, Natalie Tangaro, Brad Rasmussen, Elmer Downs, Carolyn Fratto, Ben Hammond, Rebecca Farr, Jarett LaTour, Erica Bero, Andrew Beagle, Laurie Zentner, Megan Carney, Jeanne Stuyvesant, Katie Sticinski, Pat Holland, Patricia Mayer, Jocelyn Jackman, Erin O’Connor, Mary Borrowman, Samantha Potts and Sarah LeValley. The advisers were Ramira Alamilla and Pam Mayeda.

Judge took first in its inaugural participation in Mathfax, a national Catholic High School geometry competition, led by three sophomores who posted three of the highest scores – Nick Johnson, Melissa Beyer and Chris Holdener.

Freshman Dylan Hopkins was featured in a Bulldog Press story for his work with falcons. That issue included Bret Brinkman’s positive review of “The Big Lebowski.” Wrote Brinkman: “Despite a confusing plot and some unbelievable circumstances, the amazing visuals and funny moments, as well as great performances, make this one worth watching.” Writers Carly Bobbe, Bryant Ross, Michelle Chong and Matthew Johnson also explored religious diversity at Judge, developing stories on Catholic (Lance Johnson), Jewish (Sam Podolsky and Brian Reagan), Greek Orthodox (Jason Costa and Brianna Koucos) and Muslim (Sam Dadgari) students.

For their “Christian Service” program, a group of Judge seniors took 15 kids from Salt Lake’s winter overflow homeless shelter for a day of sledding and pizza at Sugarhouse Park. “As the good-byes were being said,” Tony Giovacchini wrote in the Intermountain Catholic, “we realized what an experience we had been part of. Not only did we brighten the day of 15 children we otherwise would never have met, we gave ourselves a feeling of joy that would carry into the other aspects of our lives. We learned first-hand that a little giving of oneself can actually be the receiving of something more valuable.”

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP – A team of Judge “lawyers” won the state Mock Trial competition and qualified for the national competition in Albuquerque. It finished 32nd at nationals, beating a team from Guam that had been the runner-up the previous year. One of two teams fielded by Judge, the winning “Team A” consisted of Tonie Carl, Jason Costa, Rebecca Farr, Christina Hawley, Suzanne Itami, Jesse Portillo, Catherine Robbins, Mary Thorne and Marcie Young. Making up Team B were Rodrigo Luciano, Chris Dean, Tyson Carbaugh-Mason, Jarett LaTour, Julianna Hancock, Jocelyn Jackman, Jennifer Larrabee, Bret Brinkman and Jonathan Oderda. Their advisers were Diane Pugh, Jean Hill and Judge William Thorne.

Participating in Debate were Brian May, Amanda O’Karma, David Robinson, Andy Skelton, Kerri Sparks, Anthony Watkins, Bret Brinkman, Jennifer Byrne, Julianne Hancock, Amber Ivie, Jennifer Larrabee, Adriana Luciano, Alex Muck, Maggie Perea, Betsy Schoenfeld, Sara South, Zach Turner, Lucas Atencio, Lindsay Browning, Ryan Greenberg, Abby Hunter, Naresh Kumar, Jarett LaTour and Rodrigo Luciano. Their adviser was Kip Sayre.

“Images & Words 98,” a joint venture between Judge and the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, matched works of art in the museum’s collection with poems written by students Ben Bombard, Jessica Clements, Angela Downs, Peter Jones, Shane Koenig, Nick Layman, David Mayes, Jennifer Perkins, Pama Rejali, Dominic Tartaro, Anthony Valerio and Ashley Wright.

Overseen by teacher Linda Simpson, the Literary Magazine was put together by Richard Suchar, Alicia Tetzloff, Katherine Ithurralde, Angela Downs, Tessa Furano, Sandra Smith, Melissa Villnave, Abigail Anderson, Kelcee Ventura, Lauren Beach, David Chipman, Roark Brewster, Dallas O’Very, Erin McMahon, Jennifer Kelleher, Kimberly Tonin, Christopher Dean, Anne Fratto, Katie Croudy, Jessica Nehring, Taylor Seldin, Jonelle Madsen, Jeff Ehleringer, Hilary Leonard, Helen Grisley, Julianne Hancock, Peter Jones, Jennifer Larrabee, Gloria Saputo and Amanda O’Karma.

A book by former Judge student and teacher Tim Carr, titled “Raising Children to be Moral and Good,” was being implemented by the Salt Lake Diocese as a guide for instilling Catholic values.

The Alumni Alliance honored 14 individuals for contributions to Judge Memorial and its community. They were Neel and Maryanne Bennett, Pat Clark, Gabriel and Connie Colosimo, Rae Ann Eck, Jim Maher, Pat and Mae McGill, Robert and Rosalie Neville, Jeff Paoletti and Richard and Kay Schubach.

Making up the Computer Club were Zachary Turner, James Henry, Katie Lewis-Kooring, Jonathan Lee, Shaun Ernst, Ryan McGuire, Naresh Kumar, Nick Benson, Sean Evans, Daniel Lemcke, Kyle Schmitt and Ryan Greenberg.

Judge students surrounded a press conference podium on the State Capitol steps and spread empty shoes around it to symbolize youth killed by guns in a protest against the Legislature’s “schizophrenic” approach to gun violence.

The Wind Ensemble was composed of Jason Otterstrom, Katie Augustine, Joel Carter, Angela Allen, Kurt Courtney, William Van Trump, Mario Mendez, Kara Mayeda, Curtis Chapa, Shawn Lambert, Brian Mayeda, Timothy Conner, Norman King, Patrick Emery, David Dodge, David Seal and Ronnie Peltier.

“Ripples,” a play on the heartwarming Grateful Dead song “Ripple,” was the theme of the Junior Ring Ceremony. Pete Oswald designed the cover for the ceremony’s program.

Chess Club members were Anthony Nokes, Chris Howard, Kurt Courtney, Tim Conner and Jeff Banks. Their adviser was Phil Schmitz.

The Salt Lake City Diocese appointed Holy Cross Sr. Catherine Kamphaus as superintendent of its 12 Catholic schools, replacing interim appointee Rev. Joseph Mayo. Kamphaus had been principal at Blessed Sacrament Elementary School.

Performing in the Jazz Band were Curtis Chapa, Tim Conner, David Dodge, Liam Duffy, Patrick Emery, Shawn Lambert, Tucker Marriott, Brian Mayeda, Mario Mendez, Ronnie Peltier, Kara Mayeda, Nicole Salazar and David Seal. Ramona Mayer was the instructor.

The Thespian Club included Alicia Mendez, Scott George, Elizabeth Downs, Daniel Maland, Emily Rasmussen, Brian Burchett, Jessica Quint, Nicholas Pope, Victoria Gonzalez-Cabal, Tony Vincent, Elizabeth Hunt, Lucas Johnson, James Henry, Patrick Alderman, Dustin Stark, Alicia Tetzloff, Nick Johnson, Sarah Don, Daniil Efros, Shannon Hollinger, Matt Rojas, Ana Gonzalez-Cabal, Rebecca McDonald, Angela Downs, Janida Grima, Nicole Salazar, David Burchett, Kathy Mayer, David Ward, Jane Whiteside, David Eldridge, Sara South, Erin O’Connor, Ashley Martin and Melanie Houston.

Suzanne Itami and Naresh Kumar represented Judge at the annual Hugh O’Brien Leadership regional meeting at Westminster College.

The music department’s Spring Concert provided offerings from Mozart to Henry Mancini, George Gershwin to Andrew Lloyd Webber, in performances by the chorale, madrigal choir, orchestra, jazz group and wind ensemble under the direction of Tom Delgado. That concert followed an Easter trip by the Madrigals to New York City, where they joined other singers from Arkansas, Missouri and South Dakota for a performance at Carnegie Hall. Lindsay Browning was chosen to sing a solo at another performance, while Shylo Drabner performed in a duet with a student from Missouri.

Singing in the Madrigal Choir, directed by Ramona Mayer, were Dustin Stark, Maren Slaugh, Ronnie Peltier, Amanda O’Karma, Jess Morrison, Patricia Mayer, Ana Gonzalez-Cabal, Kristy Giovengo, Shylo Drabner, Angela Downs, Sarah Don, Tim Conner, Amanda Cisneros, Lindsay Browning, Melanie Bradshaw and Jennifer Argoitia.

Members of the Chamber Orchestra were Patricia Mayer, Jennifer Kelleher, Gene Kim, Hillary Leonard, Justin VanDongen, Andra Dingman, Jeremy Mathews, Laurie Zentner, Jeff Banks, Chanda Bradshaw, Kathy Mayer, Chris Bogus, Angela Downs, Dagny Dingman and teacher Linda Simpson. Sophomores David Seal and Brian Mayeda played the guitar.

Serving as Campus Ministers were Denise Bonvouloir, Chris Dean, Elmer Downs, Shylo Drabner, Katy Hartney, Jaison Hesleph, Suzanne Itami, Lance Johnson and Robbie Woods. Their instructors were Mary Lane Grisley and Michelle Mello.

Dave Disorbio retired after 27 years of teaching, coaching and inspiring at Judge.

Ramona Mayer conducted the Instrumental Orchestra, which consisted of Laurie Zentner, Justin VanDongen, Jeremy Mathews, Patricia Mayer, Kathy Mayer, Hillary Leonard, Jennifer Kelleher, Angela Downs, Dagny Dingman, Chanda Bradshaw, Chris Bogus and Jeff Banks. She also oversaw the three-member Cadet Band – Lucas Atencio, Jana Hooper and Norman King.

“By Wind and Water, an environmental impact” was the theme of the Spring Dance Concert, which included 10 boys, eight of whom had never danced before. Said Jon Oslowski to the Intermountain Catholic: “As a senior, I wanted to leave school having experienced everything.” The dance concert program highlighted a quote from novelist Edward Abbey: “The highest treason, the meanest treason, is to deny the holiness of this little blue planet on which we journey through the void of space.” For the April 1-4 show, work began in January at St. Olaf’s elementary school in Bountiful where 20 students in alumnus Gary Green’s fifth-grade class studied poetry and dance with five Judge poets (Peter Jones, Patrick Grisley, Amanda O’Karma, Chris Dean and Angela Downs) and seven dancers (Benjamin Wheat, Adrienne Lobato, Mary Northway, Erin McMahon, Jorja Jensen, Theresa George, Nicole Fritz and Nick Cendese). The dancers then focused on “movement using the youngsters’ own poems as inspiration.” Alison Le Duc and Stefanie Paulson helped Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb as artistic directors. Linda Simpson was writer/editor and Tom Delgado handled technical direction. Simpson taught the students about the literal and figurative power of water in the Bible and life. “We live in a desert. I wanted the dancers to understand that water cannot be taken for granted. Jesus called himself the water of life. So I helped them to see what that might mean. After our discussion, their dance took on an astonishing depth.” Performers included Carlyn Worstell, D.J. Widmer, Kelcee Ventura, Jessica van Klaveren, Mary Thorne, Kyle Swartz, Dustin Stark, Sandra Smith, Maren Slaugh, Katherine Riser, Alex Rilk, Theresa Reynoso, Andrew Rakowski, Manuel Navarrete, David Mascarenas, Kristen Mar, Cynthia Kammeyer, Leslie Love, Brett Little, Jamie Kane, Nicholas Hristou, Rebecca Holtshouser, Ben Hammond, Ericka Eresuma, Miguel DelToro, Sarah Crowther, Adriana Bujnowski, Angela Bowman, Christopher Bogus, Patrick Alderman and Erica Bero. Nicholas Cendese, Class of 1998, auditioned for and received a four-year dance scholarship at the University of Utah.

Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb was named “Dance Educator of the Year” by the Utah Association of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.

Plays

“Grease,” directed by Tom Delgado, choreographed by Jeanette Sawaya-Lamb, music directed by Ramona Mayer. Nicole Salazar was stage manager. Starring Alicia Dawn Tetzloff, Alex Cendese, Mariel Alejandra Maymi, Marco Mileti, Maren Slaugh, Ronnie Peltier, Elizabeth Hunt, Matt Rojas, Sarah Don, Shannon Hollinger, Marty Maymi, Shylo Drabner, Adrienne Lobato and a chorus of 44 “teen angels.” The cast also included teachers John Colosimo and Dan John.

“The Curious Savage,” directed by Tom Delgado, starring Angela Downs, Lance Johnson, Carly Bobbe, Matthew Rojas, David Eldridge, Alicia Dawn Tetzloff, Sarah Don, Shannon Hollinger, Alexander Cendese, Dustin Stark and Jamie Jorgensen. Scott George was stage manager, Janida Grima handled costumes and makeup. Techies included Scott George, Becky McDonald, Nick Pope, Daniel Maland, James Henry, Brian Burchett, Nick Johnson and Daniil Efros.

Amanda O’Karma sang a solo of “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” at the music department presentation of “A Christmas Celebration.” Lindsay Browning and Shylo Drabner also performed a duet and Holly Norman Dodge was featured on the piano in the concert that showed off the school’s wind ensemble, string orchestra, jazz combo, chorale and madrigals. The evening was capped by “Silent Night,” with a solo by Angela Downs.

Sophomore drama students performed “Aladdin,” “The Velveteen Rabbit” and “Tom Sawyer” for “a lively audience of children” in the Judge auditorium, raising $100 for the Children’s Center of Salt Lake.

Sports

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, CHAMPION – Sophomore Pete Stone shot a 1-under-par 70 to lift the boys golf team to a three-stroke win in the 4-A state tournament over Spanish Fork, which had won the two previous crowns. It was his best round of the season and left the team with a score of 304, one stroke better than its best showing all year. Justin James also overcame three-putts on three of the first four holes to post a 73, good for second best individually at the meet. As a team, Judge shot 304. James Dyer, Arthur Rio and Justin Fuller turned in respectable scores to boost Coach Jim Beisel’s team to the championship. In July, Stone had stunned the Utah golf community when he beat three-time champion Doug Bybee in the match-play portion of the Utah State Amateur Golf Tournament at Alpine Country Club. “Did you see him? He’s not afraid of anything,” Bybee told The Salt Lake Tribune. “He kicked my butt.” Stone’s caddy was his dad, Brad, the head pro at Davis Park Golf Course. Jonathan Oslowski and Justin Fuller were named to the Academic All-State Golf Team. Other members of the championship squad were Justin James, Tanner Blonquist, Glen Rillston, Nathan Owens, Paul Matlin, Steve Kladis, Rachael Drown, John Hejna, Jessica Clements, Patrick Emery, Jennifer Sutton and Brian Reagan. The team’s MVPs were Justin James and Pete Stone, while Justin Fuller was the most inspirational player.

Stephanie Coppa came in second in No. 2 singles while Jennifer Kelleher and Danielle Henry were the runners-up in No. 2 doubles to lead the girls tennis team to fourth place at the 4-A state tournament. The Bulldogs finished with 11 points, just behind West and Timpview, which tied for second with 12 points. East won with 22. Coppa advanced to the finals against East’s Allison Hansen before falling. Likewise, Kelleher and Henry were defeated by a duo from East. Most inspirational player Jane McBroom and Kim Tonin scored points for the Bulldogs in No. 1 doubles. They were all seniors for Coach Zeke Totland, along with co-captain and No. 1 singles player Patrycja Zaplata and Leslie Love. Senior Diana Arena was region champion in No. 3 singles. Zaplata was team MVP and received Academic All-State recognition. Melanie Hall, Meghan McDonald, Lyndsey Tucker, Christina Athas and Ellie McBroom rounded out the squad. Coach Totland was assisted by Jacqueline Stilling.

Thomas Batey and Patrick Keller were the top runners on the boys cross country team, which finished in 13th place at the 4-A meet with 327 points. Coach Dan Quinn’s team featured team MVP Tim Jackson, most inspirational runner Jean-Paul Briggs and Shane Wilkinson, Jimmy Neeway, Zachary Winterfeld and Chris Holdener.

Coach Dan Quinn’s girls cross country team was led by Dagny Dingman, who finished eighth at the Class 4-A meet, completing the course in 19:02. Her performance lifted Judge to sixth place with 192 points and earned her team MVP honors. Dingman was joined on the squad by her sister Andra Dingman, the team’s most inspirational runner, along with Summer Bell, Katherine Hensleigh, Heidi Keller, Patricia Holt, Carly Bobbe and Christina Paal. Quinn’s assistant coaches were John Licciardo and Tom Niederee.

Co-captain Elisha Vaculin led the volleyball team in kills and digs, fellow captain Sarah Crowther set up the most assists while Hollie Janovak had the most aces and blocks for Coach Carol Rawson. Still, the Bulldogs had a rough year and did not qualify for the 4-A state tournament. Janovak made the All-Region team and was voted team MVP. Vaculin and Crowther shared most inspirational honors. Rounding out the squad were Ashley Wright, Jennifer Argoitia, Linsey Hunt, Tammy Pelton, Rebecca Farr, Liz Maronick, Katie Prestwich, Lindsey Wright and Kelly Sayre. Coach Carol Rawson was assisted by Jerad Jepson, Angie Telford and Jim Markosian.

Nicholas Hart was a captain and MVP of the 1-8 football team, whose highlight was a 3-0 victory over Murray on a field goal by Jeffrey Ehleringer. That win was particularly satisfying for Hart because Murray students had been blamed for breaking a window at Judge, and for painting MHS on the Judge football field and an M on the sidewalk in front of the school. First-year Coach Tim Clark’s 45-member squad was physically small, sporting 160-pound linebackers, and relied heavily on most inspirational player Andrew Rakowski, along with Ricky Simmons and Brennan Clark. Aaron Hughes was All Region, while Hart and Brennan Clark were honorable mention. Seniors included Patrick Chacon, Jason Atkin, Miguel DelToro, Troy Grant, Nicholas Hart, Nicholas Hristou, Justin Kearns, Andrew Rakowski, Joseph Thomason, Neil Thon and John Vaughan. Also earning letters were Dustin Bagley, Michael Barber, Joe Barbiero, Pete Baron, Charlie Bell, Robert Bell, Joel Carter, Michael Chiazzese, Ron Draughon, Jeff Ehleringer, Sean Erickson, Luke Fullmer, David Garcia, Daniel Hall, Jason Harris, Aaron Hughes, Jordan Kuretich, Zach Lund, Heikoti Maile Jr., Justin Manchego, David Mascarenas, Brian Mayeda, Bryan Morandi, John Oderda, Devin Orges, Jason Otterstrom, Joseph Pannunzio, Michael Roche, Jack Stahl, Kyle Stetner, Daniel Terreros and Esaul Viramontes. Tim Clark’s assistant coaches were Joe Colosimo, Sean Clark, Travis Young, Anthony Barbiero, Pat Jefferies, Steve Ochs and Jon Chiazzese.

Long-awaited victories over Olympus and Woods Cross lifted Coach Wayne Voorhes’s girls soccer team to a successful season, one that started 0-4 but ended with four straight victories – just not quite enough to qualify for the 4-A state tournament. The Bulldogs were led by senior co-captains Stephanie Schwobe, Katie Sticinski and Janie Franks, who made The Salt Lake Tribune’s All-State first team. Goalie Megan Young was team MVP while Brooke DiAna and Jeanne Stuyvesant shared most inspirational player honors. Other key players were Helen Grisley, Anne Fratto, Brooke Diana, Christen Tangaro, Claire Woods, Megan Terry, Brooke DiAna, Gitana Gotay, Ashley Rieper, Sarah Hawkins, Megan McGuire, Natalie Tangaro, Jeanne Stuyvesant, Heather Stanga, Anne Hawkins, Sandy Smith, Nicole Young, Megan Kelly and Angela Keyser. Pete Gallagher, Jenny Stanchfield and Charlene Furano were assistant coaches.

Senior Tony Giovacchini emerged as one of the top prep basketball players in Utah, drawing comparisons between his style of play and Utah Jazz Hall of Famer John Stockton. He was named “Prep of the Week” twice in local media, once for a 36-point effort against Woods Cross. The Bulldogs finished second in region (10-6, 12-8 overall) and advanced to the 4-A state tournament, only to drop an opening round game to American Fork. Coach Jim Yerkovich’s squad also featured senior team MVP Chris McGill, most inspirational player Nathan Owens, D.J. Widmer, sophomore Tony Reed, Mike Parenti, John Ortiz, Pete Oswald, Pete Stone, Jason Matalon, Adam Acosta and Dajon Thompson. Giovacchini was first team All-State for both The Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret News and was named to former Utah Jazz Coach Frank Layden’s “Terrific 12” stars. McGill was second team All-State for the Deseret News. The Utah Tip Off Club named Kyle Swartz “Manager of the Year.” Yerkovich’s assistants were Marty Giovacchini, Dan Del Porto, Jeff Baird, Dave Lang, Tom Hicks and Drake Bloebaum.

The girls basketball team advanced to the 4-A state tournament, where it was beaten in the opening round by Logan, 60-52. The Bulldogs were led by Elisha Vaculin and Janie Franks, who shared team MVP honors, and most inspirational player Dana Burgess. Rounding out the squad were Brittany Burt, Kate Sticinski, Kristen Valdez, Kristy Ahlstrom, Sarah LeValley, Megan Terry, Talia Hristou, Michelle Peterson, Brianna Koucos, Rose Hamilton and Tracy Jonas. Head coach Tom Bettin was assisted by Yolanda Holmquist, Steve Spurgeon and Rick Akers. Erica Redding was the manager.

Brian Reagan, captain of the hockey team and a two-time Utah High School Hockey All Star (MVP in 1997), was one of five Judge All Stars selected in that club sport. He was joined by Chris German, Nick Mason, Michael Pestotnik and team MVP Anthony Pike. Jonathan Ligori was named most inspirational player. Patrick Grisley was assistant captain. Other team members included Christian Worstell, Tamara Fisher, Matthew Bilanzich, Patrick Hovlka, Annika Anderson, Ben Bombard, Phil Bombard, Patrick Keller, Paul Matlin, Adam Nelson, Sam Podolsky, Paul Roberts, Aaron Leitko, Matt Usinowicz, Josh Santy, Matt Wolfe, Christian Schnurr and Sam Turpin. The head coach was Dewey Reagan. His assistants were Jeremiah Johnston, Dave Cannell, David Morath and Tom Johnston. Brian Reagan played collegiately at the University of Pennsylvania. He was killed in a 2007 automobile accident near Allentown, Pa.

Marcie Young and Rachel Reeves were captains of the girls swimming team, which finished ninth at the 4-A state meet, compiling 118 points. Lone Peak won with 278. The top performer was Reeves, who finished fifth in the 100 breaststroke and was the team’s most inspirational performer. Other swimmers included team MVP Emily Hausman, Diana Arena, Summer Bell, Annie Parsell, Maggie Sause, Katherine Hensleigh, Michelle Chong, Melanie Bradshaw, Carolyn Fratto, Stephanie Renna, Jayme Day, Samantha Dwyer, Elizabeth Parsell, Anne Fratto, Katie Murray, Joanna Eatchel, Maryann Sampson, Sarah Reeves, Meryl Biksacky, Samantha Dwyer, Chanda Bradshaw, Kate Eidens and diver Brittney Burns. Recent graduates Peter Duberow and Lisa Book replaced Casey Jackson as coach of both teams, aided by Fr. James McHugh and Tom Thorum.

The boys swimming team came in seventh at the 4-A meet, carried by its relay teams. The 200 freestyle foursome placed fifth, while the 200 medley relay team was sixth. Andrew Hunt had the best individual showing, a sixth in the 200 individual medley. He earned team MVP honors. The Bulldogs finished the meet with 115 points. Highland won with 327. The squad featured captains Hunt and Dan Wilson (the most inspirational swimmer) along with Geoffrey Hunt, Jonathan Dean, Cory Wynhof, Aldo Littig, Patrick Emery, Matthew Rothfels, Mark Smith, Christian Larson, Tyler Smith, Eric Cabana, Bryce Taylor, Sasha Skibine, Justin Birch, Bryant Ross and Jason Costa.

STATE CHAMPION – Senior Dagny Dingman led the girls track team to fourth place in the Class 4-A meet, capturing an individual state title in the 1,600-meter run in 5:09.30. She also had pair of fourth-place finishes, in the 800 and 3,200-meter runs, to earn team MVP honors. Summer Bell placed just ahead of Dingman in the 3,200. Katherine Hensleigh also reached the podium, coming in fourth in the 400. Judge got third place points from its medley relay team and fourth-place points from the 1,600-meter relay team. Marian Anderson was the team’s most inspirational athlete. The Bulldogs finished the meet with 47 points. Spanish Fork won with 88. Also competing for Coach Dan Quinn were Andra Dingman, Christina Paal, Erika Fuller, Elizabeth Eresuma, Merri Box, Sarah Preston, Amy Jackson, Taylor Conger, Summer Bell, Theresa Ferrone, Lauren Dreitzler, Laura Nice, Laurie Zentner, Andrea Ellesson, Amanda Nelson, Melanie Bradshaw, Chanda Bradshaw, Christina Davis, Carly Bobbe, Gitana Gotay, Danielle Scott and Carolyn Fratto. Quinn’s assistant coaches were Marquis Dupre and John Liccardo.

Coach Dan Quinn’s boys track team received 9.5 points at the 4-A meet from Jeff Banks, who finished third in the pole vault and was team MVP. As a team, Judge finished 19th. The rest of the squad consisted of most inspirational athlete Tim Jackson, Nick Hristou, Christopher Holdener, Travis Groce, Duncan Lindquist, Jake Wilberg, Zachary Winterfeld, Brian Kolkebeck, David Chipman, Steve Hart, Joey Pannunzio, Chris Chiazzese, Jesse Portillo, Mike Gallagher, Brett Little, Nick Aiello, Andrew Gill and Jeff Banks.

Ryan Taylor was the goalie on the boys soccer team, which lost a playoff game to Springville to get into the 4-A state tournament. The Bulldogs featured co-MVPs Alex Rilk and Nathan Scott, most inspirational player Robert Conti, and Dan Wilson, Chris DeIanni, Jeff Ehleringer, Jonathan Oslowski, Mike Stinson, Jimmy Neeway, Adam Acosta, Mike Kennedy, Quinn Martin, Ian Atzet, Ron Draughon, Jess Morrison, Eric Lynch, Anthony Conti, Cody Jensen, Michael Leibsla and Andy Taylor. Oslowski was Academic All-State. The coaches were Wayne Voorhes, George Angelo and Jeremy Mohrman.

Zeke Totland and Jacqueline Stilling coached boys tennis, which included MVP Nick Teseros and most inspirational player Matthew Wolfe, plus Matt Rothfels, Stephen Voss, Aaron Hughes, Jon Martin, Patrick Clark, Ryan Chapa, Alex Skibine, Naresh Kumar, Ben Jensen, Anthony Fleming and Shaun Ernst. The team fell short of qualifying for the 4-A state tournament.

Ken Hackmeister, Tom Rogers, Andrea Matheson and Ron Matheson coached the girls softball team, which advanced to the 4-A state tournament before losing 10-0 to Roy and 5-4 to Timpview. The Bulldog roster featured MVP Tracy Jonas, most inspirational player Dana Ewer and Michelle Peterson, Danielle Henry, Megan Hodges, Tracy Jonas, Courtney Thorne, Sarah LeValley, Nikki Manzanares, Ashley Bradley, Jamie Dwyer, Monique Lopez, Olivia Lucero, Chelsie Marinos, Liz Maronick, Alicia Mendez, Meghann Murray, Paige Tanner, Danielle Ypina and Samantha Dwyer.

The baseball team had five seniors under new Coach Bob Ferran, led by team MVPs Peter Oswald and Timothy Newlin and most inspirational player Justin Kearns. The roster included John Ortiz, J.P. Briggs, Patrick Chacon, Brennan Clark, Miguel DelToro, Dave Lovato, John Ortiz, Martin Smyth, Andrew Valdez, Kyle Stetner, Bryan Woody, Ben Sadler, Andy Shepard, Jack Stahl and Shane Koenig. The team fell short of qualifying for state. Ferran’s assistant coaches were Don Briggs, Paul Webb and Paul Rainaldi.

The boys lacrosse team was led by co-captains Steven Kladis, Patrick Keller and Graham Van Dusen, plus seniors Sam Podolsky, Patrick Grisley, Kyle Swartz, Nick Mason, Patrick Hvolka and Adam Nelson. Van Dusen was team MVP while Kladis was the most inspirational player. Rounding out the squad were Mike Franks, Liam Duffy, Peter Baron, Chris Tetzloff, D.J. Widmer, Peter Haslam, David Seal, Ben Nak, Nick Warner, Shawn Lambert, Brendan Ross, Rick Kladis, Robert Bell, Michael Grisley, Paul Matlin, Brian Reagan, Paul Roberts, Tyler Smith, Chris Tetzloff, Nick Warner and Ryan Love. The coaches were Dave Allen, Chris Connaby and Dave Morath.

Seniors Emily Klass and Angela Keyser and junior Tricia Holt were top players on the girls lacrosse team, coached by Jennifer Hadley, a former All American at the University of Delaware. Klass was the most inspirational player while Kristy Ahlstrom was the MVP. The rest of the Bulldogs included Ellie McBroom, Meghan McDonald, Shannon Corey, Lindsay Eckroth, Ale Pipella, Leslie Short, Sarah Mullen, Chelsea Zorn, Mary McCarthey, Jenny Firneno, Diana Arena, Katie Augustine, Whitney Kirsling, Jessica Evans, Melissa Beyer, Rebecca Pritchard, Cecelia Stratton, Anne Fratto, Sandy Smith, Anne Maurer, Janida Grima, Jenny Cook, Michelle Chong, Tricia Holt, Adrianna Naccarato, Chelsea Zorn and Ginger Gourde. Hadley’s assistant coach was Kat Stahler. The moderator was Amy Goicoechea.

Senior Zach Lund went on to become an Olympian, competing in skeleton at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. Lund competed on the World Cup circuit for a decade and was the overall World Cup Champion in the 2006-07 season. He made the U.S. Olympic team for the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, but was not allowed to compete for using a banned substance that was in a prescription he was using to combat baldness. He appealed. The Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled that while it was “entirely satisfied that Mr. Lund was not a cheat . . . he made a mistake” that could not be overlooked. In the February 1998 edition of the Bulldog Press, Lund wrote a front-page article talking about his introduction to the bobsled/luge track at Utah Olympic Park and his Olympic ambitions.

Graduation

225 graduating seniors on May 31 at Abravanel Hall.

Valedictorian: Patrycja Zaplata

Salutatorian: Scott George

Zaplata’s address followed a greeting by senior class president Jonathan Oslowski, who led a “changing of the tassel” with Erica Bero, Zaplata, Erin McMahon, Matthew Rojas and Angela Keyser.

Activities Involvement Award: Marcie Young and the drama technical crew of Scott George, James Henry and Daniel Maland.

Highest GPA during senior year: Daniel Maland

High GPA over four years: Patrycja Zaplata and Scott George

Scholar/Activities Award: Jeffrey Banks and Angela Downs

Outstanding Scholar Athlete: Dagny Dingman and Nathan Owens

Outstanding Female Athlete: Elisha Vaculin

Outstanding Male Athlete: Jonathan Oslowski

Champion of Youth Award: John Atkin

Gold honor cords representing cumulative GPAs of 3.5 or better were worn by 69 class members. Graduates received $2.8 million in scholarship offers. Jason Valenzuela joined the U.S. Marine Corps; Jeffrey Banks, Nathan Scott and Justin James received appointments to the U.S. Naval Academy.

Christ the King Award: Angela Downs and Daniel Maland

First Honors: Jeffrey Banks, Andra Dingman, Justin Fuller, Scott George, Rodrigo Luciano, Daniel Maland, Jonathan Oslowski, Nathan Owens, Nathan Scott and Patrycja Zaplata.

Grail Seal Bearers: Patrycja Zaplata, Megan Young, Marcie Young, Carlynn Worstell, Jonathan Warner, Jessica van Klaveren, Elisha Vaculin, Gina Tsoufakis, Kim Tonin, Alicia Tetzloff, Natalie Tangaro, Jeanne Stuyvesant, Katherine Sticinski, Sandra Smith, Maren Slaugh, Nathan Scott, Stephanie Schwobe, Nicole Salazar, Paul Roberts, Theresa Reynoso, Brian Reagan, Michael Pestotnik, Anna Pendleton, Nathan Owens, Jonathan Oslowski, Adam Nelson, Jess Morrison, Rebecca McDonald, Jane McBroom, Mariel Maymi, Kara Mayeda, Daniel Maland, Rodrigo Luciano, Livia Leonard, Andrei Lubomudrov, Leslie Love, Ana Lorenzana, Adrienne Lobato, Jennifer Larrabee, Emily Klass, Katherine Kireiev, Angela Keyser, Jennifer Kelleher, Jorja Jensen, Justin James, Andrew Hunt, Patrick Holland, Benjamin Hammond-Maxwell, Tony Giovacchini, Theresa George, Gregory Garcia, Tessa Furano, Justin Fuller, Jesse Flores, Shylo Drabner, Angela Downs, Sarah Don, Dagny Dingman, Andra Dingman, Sarah Crowther, Kurt Courtney, Nicholas Cendese, Eric Cabana, Lindsay Browning, Jean-Paul Briggs, Erica Bero, Jeffrey Banks and Nick Aiello.

Academic Awards – Calculus: Jeffrey Banks; Physics: Scott George; Advanced Biology: Rodrigo Luciano; A.P. Literature: Angela Downs; A.P. Language: Rodrigo Luciano; English: Nicholas Cendese; Political Science: Rodrigo Luciano; Economics: Angela Keyser; American Government: Jessica van Klaveren; Spanish: Nicholas Mason; French: Scott George; German: Patrycja Zaplata; Japanese: Alex Muck; and Latin: Jonathan Oslowski; P.E./Health: Angela Keyser and Wade Little.

Newspaper: Marcie Young; Yearbook (Photo Journalism): Marcie Young; Literary Magazine: Angela Downs; Aesthetics: Jennifer Kelleher; Ceramics: Tessa Ann Furano; Dance: Nicole Fritz and Nicholas Cendese; Music (Instrumental): Kara Mayeda; Music (Vocal): Lindsay Browning; Drama: Alicia Tetzloff; Technical Theatre: Scott George; Debate: Jennifer Larrabee; Communications: Gina Tsoufakis; Religious Studies: Adrienne Lobato and Daniel Maland.


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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