2015 - 16

Class Leaders

Student Body Officers – Joey Walz, president; Yahya Yussuf, vice president: Sarah DiGregorio, secretary; Tanner Larson, treasurer.

Senior Class Core – President Miranda Rougelot, Max Butcher, Lance Gui and Maisen Knight.

Junior Class Core – Foster Dennin, Will Ryan, Ben Butcher, Vanessa Austin, Victoria Stevens, Marren Silcox, Qiqi Chen, Madeline Horiuchi and Rose Anna Tafaoialii.

Sophomore Class Core – Myles Bennett, Tommy Walz, Bobby Lopez, Beth Leo, Isabella Dodson and Sophia Cordova.

Freshman Class Core – President: Ari Elorreaga, Lindsey Morton, Nick Toth and Johnny Walz.

Fifty years earlier, Joey Walz’s grandfather, Leo Walz, was elected student body president. “It created a nice bond that not many grandfathers have with their grandkids,” said Joe Walz Sr., Joey’s dad and Leo’s son. “My dad used to tell us a lot of stories, and I was a student there as well, and my sons go there. Judge is really a big part of our family.”

During the Summer

While representing Judge at Girls State, Anna Naranjo was elected state treasurer.

Sean Lambourne represented Judge at Boys State.

Philanthropist Phil McCarthey was made an honorary member of the Judge Class of 1970 during Reunion Weekend. McCarthey would have been a member of that class after attending elementary school at J. E. Cosgriff, but he went instead to a boarding school in Massachusetts. The McCarthey family had supported Judge financially and emotionally for generations, including funding of McCarthey Stadium for football, soccer and lacrosse, and the baseball field at St. Ann’s. “The Judge Memorial connection for me means tradition, history, friendship, a sense of belonging – a place where I kind of grew up,” McCarthey told the Intermountain Catholic. “There is something about the Judge community that remains with me. It’s nice they completely opened the doors to me tonight.”

Humanitarian projects took Amanda Maxfield to Panama, Addie Freeman to Peru and Markie Hoggan to South Africa. Costa Rica beckoned Maclaine Reemsnyder, Sarah Beth Anderson, Miranda Rougelot and Emmi Koszinowski. Teacher Art Holder and students Rebekah Casper, Sierra Meyer, Sean Hemmersmeier and Adam Mueller were part of a GAPP group in Germany. Adventures around the West were experienced by Vanessa Austin, Grace Nakamura, Kathleen Jensen and John Jensen.

Judge students participating in the Ulster Project, playing host for a month to teens from Northern Ireland, included Veronica Start, Beth Leo, Sam Schmiett, DaVinci Eccles, Anna Jackson and Eric Hall.

The Year

National Merit Finalists: Alysa Bradbury and Mila Sherman

Patrick Lambert, Class of 1997 and a veteran of 14 years in the Catholic school system, began his tenure as Judge’s principal. “The building hasn’t changed all that much, we used to wear ties every day so the uniforms have changed a little bit. The field, that has changed quite a bit. When I played football and lacrosse on that field, it was a swamp,” Lambert told David Musci of the Bulldog Press. “But the one thing that hasn’t changed about Judge is my favorite part. And that’s Judge Pride. It’s something that everyone cherishes and when I talk to alumni, friends of alumni, even parents, you can not only see it, but feel the pride in them.”

New teachers: Matthew Vanderlaan, English; Natalie Smith, physical education; Michele Gelaude, theology, campus minister and peer ministry; Paul Kuczynski, theology; and Annie Perng, Chinese.

Bulldog of the Month: Sophomores Kathleen and John Jensen, September; Max Butcher, October; Pricilla Fehoko, November; Emanuel Condas, December; Amy Cremer, February; Eva Barajas, March; Joe Walz, April.

Serving as Judge Ambassadors were Seth Brown, Isabel Harris, Douglas Gosselin, Alexis Maggelet, Philip Start, Annemarie Purcell, Matthew Benvegnu, Megan Pauley, Jacob Loose, Addie Freeman, Annalise Hodge, MacKenzie Mick and Melissa Aguilar.

“Arabian Nights” was the theme of Homecoming.

The Varsity Cheerleaders were led by captains Sarah DiGregorio and Miranda Rougelot, captain’s assistant Leena Ngo, spirit officer Anna Naranjo and seniors Alicia Canales and Chihiro Kajiura. The rest of the squad consisted of Lindsey Morton, Lauren Mitchell, Olivia Colman, Mae Rodgers, Abigail Garside, Markie Hoggan, Emma Graham, Ari Elorreaga, Kayla Kaleel-Jarvis, Savannah Nord and Ellie Harmston. DiGregorio was the MVP, with Rougelot deemed most inspirational.

Yahya Yussuf, Chloe Schafer and Mary Oliver were co-editors of the Bulldog Press, overseeing a staff of 11 writers: Katie Scott, Sean Parent, Anna Naranjo, Alex Schilling, Andrew Luras, Brandon Chung, Alex Maxwell, David Musci, Noah Hill, Foster Dennin, Joey Mancini, Tom Marron, Nicholas Krivanek, Sarah Beth Anderson, Allyson Schmidt, Zach Shubella and Victoria Sandoval. The photographers and videographers were Kassandra Parry Villavicencio, Palak Jayswal, Matthew Lamy, David Musci, Yahya Yussuf, Sean Parent, Xintong Liu, Chloe Schafer, Andrew Luras, Katie Scott, Foster Dennin and Mary Oliver. Chris Sloan was the adviser.

In the first edition, Yahya Yussuf wrote about the Robotics Club; Brandon Chung introduced the Fishing Club begun by bass fishing champion Tyler Rollman; Alex Maxwell outlined the activities of the Chinese Club, such as playing shuttlecock, a game enjoyed by Jackson Wills, Yahya Yussuf and Jing Chen; and David Musci interviewed members of the Bowling Club, including Zach Southam, Kathleen Jensen, Adrian Chavez, John Jensen, Zachary Burgener, Deonno Avila and Sean Leonard. Inspired by the Harry Potter novels, Ciarra Nafus and Maria Stokes were senior co-captains of the Quidditch Club, as documented by Sean Parent; Foster Dennin described the opportunity senior peer minister Carlos Hernandez had to see Pope Francis at the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia; Anna Naranjo did a Q&A with Niko Kershisnik, who started the “Backyard Broadcast” as a for-youth, by-youth movement to prevent domestic child sex trafficking; Yussuf profiled senior Amanda Maxfield, who did a service project in Panama; Katie Scott wrote about Grace Driffill’s history as a bow hunter, including killing a bear when she was 12; Zach Shubella interviewed junior guitarist Eric Heideman, whose goal was to become “a rock star and icon;” Andrew Luras and Alex Schilling reviewed video games; Luras also authored a piece on Salt Lake Comic Con; and Chloe Schafer offered tips on hiking in the Wasatch Mountains.

The Literary Magazine Catharsis was assembled by editors Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis, Maclaine Reemsnyder, Nicholas Krivanek, Victoria Sandoval, Foster Dennin and Mary Oliver along with staff members Emma Jones, Sophia Kennedy Overfelt, Nick McCullagh, MacKenzie Mick, Max Nelson, Zoe Glasgow, Zach Shubella, Abby Powell, Rebecca Henkels, Alex Aubry, Megan Aubry and Sofie Barajas. The adviser was Bryan Jeffreys.

Serving as Peer Ministers were Loveleen Ghuman, Max Butcher, Amy Cremer, Ethan Gruis, Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis, Kepler Sticka-Jones, Olivia Pratt, Tim Hemmersmeier, Victoria Sandoval, Carlos Hernandez, Madison Ulibarri, Atticus Mannebach, Rachel Shubella, Nicholas Krivanek, Jasmine Masih, Sean Lambourne, Maria Stokes, Tanner Larson, Emily DeCarolis, Ciarra Nafus, Joey Walz, Amanda Maxfield, Emanuel Condas, Maddy Reid, Olivia Pratt, Pricilla Fehoko, Marissa Ulibarri and Rebecca Henkels. Their adviser was Michele Gelaude.

The Praise Band featured Harry Pendergrast, Maddie Smith, Nick McCullagh, Z Brothers, Ramiro Fernandez, Anna Naranjo and Ethan Kelso. Their director was Marjoris Regus.

Pope Francis’s speech to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops was piped into Judge religion classes. “I really like that he’s such an inclusive pope,” said senior Kepler Sticka-Jones, a peer minister. Added senior Emily DeCarolis, another peer minister: “I can take his message of mercy and Church teachings and spread them throughout, giving that joy of the Church.”

George Angelo’s Sports Medicine program included Anne Sansone, Emmanuel Lam, Loveleen Ghuman, Trevor Montrone, Jasmine Masih, Austin Candelario, Maliha Masud, Atticus Mannebach, Skylar Lister, John Jensen, Mackenzie Villegas, Zachary Burgener, Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis, Nate Pupunu, Dahlia Neuman and Gabriel Gaitan.

Junior Foster Dennin was invited to the weeklong Lyceum Philharmonic Music Festival.

The Fall Music Concert featured performances by the concert band, with Harry Pendergrast on the ukulele; the concert choir, with Jack Wilkinson on guitar and Jelena Cingara on piano; the chamber orchestra, with piano accompaniment by Cingara, the drum line and jazz band.

The Christmas card sent out by Judge featured art work by senior Maclaine Reemsnyder.

Participants in the Teton Science School included Emma Dingman, Matt Valentine, Charissa Boniface, Douglas Gosselin, Isabel Harris, Ben Butcher, Madison Ulibarri, Aidan Larson, Tessa Ganellen, Will Ryan, Maddie Moeller, Sam Garcia, Marren Silcox, Philip Start, Annika Dean, Jake Sauer, Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis, Max Butcher, Jack Maloney and Marissa Ulibarri. Teacher George Angelo oversaw the group with help from Principal Patrick Lambert.

In conjunction with the Lassonde Entrepreneur Institute at the University of Utah, Judge developed an innovation program to help students launch creative businesses. Judge graduates Cole Preece (2014), Sean Wright and Max Lamb (2010) addressed Judge students as part of Innovation Days. The student leaders were seniors Kepler Sticka-Jones and Rache l Shubella.

The Latin Club included Tanner Nilson, Victoria Garcia, Ferdinand Bambabate, Kaden Brewer, Shane Calufetti, Avery Young, Sophia Kennedy Overfelt, Olivia Sandoval, Aurora Francone and Charlie Berceau. Their adviser was Tim Soran.

Wayne Hentschel oversaw the Quidditch Club, whose members included Ethan Gruis, Rachel Shubella, Sean Lambourne, Alysa Bradbury, Sean Parent, Katelynn Smith, Kyle Williams, Janell Schroeder, Kepler Sticka-Jones, Victoria Sandoval, Mark Brunetti, Maddy Reid, Emanuel Condas, Maria Stokes, Tyler Rollman, Olivia Pratt and Israel Contreras.

The Anime Club featured Marisol Padilla, Henry Anderson, Whitlee Neeley and Olivia Sandoval.

Salt Lake Tribune columnist Robert Kirby wrote two articles about his efforts to help Judge teacher Dasch Houdeshel test the structural resilience of concrete beams built by his engineering class. Kirby’s approach: Fire bowling balls at them. Kirby praised Houdeshel as “one of those unique teachers who can take an otherwise pointless bit of destructive fun and spin it into something educational for even the most learning-resistant student.” He said students Jacob Belzer and Charlotte Brown explained the science of dropping bowling balls on concrete beams but “I didn’t get most of it,” praised Abigail Ramirez for making sure nobody cheated and was blown away when “Mary ‘Deadeye’ Ndeze crushed it from 10 feet.”

Helping organize fiestas for Spanish classes were Kimberly Padilla, Thalia Tran, Luis Ramirez, Yamirth Arano, Savannah Nord, Valencia Archuleta, Niko Kershisnik and Grace Greis. Spanish teacher Maricruz Fimbres was their adviser.

The University of Utah’s Perry Outreach Initiative, designed to entice high school girls into college science programs, attracted Judge seniors Loveleen Ghuman, Miranda Rougelot, Mira Thompson, Maliha Masud and Jasmine Masih.

Marjoris Regus directed the Concert Choir, which featured Anna Naranjo, Maddie Smith, Danielle Inglesby, Lucila Spannaus, Z Brothers, Cheryl Winters, Kathleen Jensen, Sophie Barajas, McKenzie Huffman, Angelica Rodriguez, Miriam Smith, Alexa Punzo, Emmanuela Androulidakis and Sera Cazares.

The Environmental Club included Gillian Williford, Alicia Canales Esparza, Anna Naranjo, Yahya Yussuf, Amy Cremer, Erin Morgan, Charissa Boniface, Rebecca Henkels and Mary Oliver.

Performing at Chamber Night were guitarist Charlie Dean, Sera Cazares, Nick Turner, Maddie Smith, Jacob Bowersox, Alexa Punzo, MacKenzie Mick, Angelica Rodriguez, Kyle Williams, Zoe Glasgow, Ramiro Fernandez, Anna Naranjo, Ethan Kelso, Z Brothers, Sophie Barajas, Nick McCullagh, Eric Heideman, Ethan Archibald, Truman Hight, Hayes Hiller and Harry Pendergrast.

Experiencing adventures in Chinese were Madeline Horiuchi, Ryan Kenny, Andrew Campbell, Roman Ashdown, Malachi Vazquez, Kyle Kelley, Viviann Ipina-Benitez, Sharlee Lin, Sarah Eatmon, Carlo Antola, Alex Barnett, Jack Cawdery, Seiji Nagasawa, Missy Fang and Gexi Guo. Their adviser was Annie Perng.

Jonathan Tsu was voted the “most inspirational teacher.” His response: “When I went up there and gave that speech in front of the whole school, it transformed me.”

Making up the Peace and Justice Alliance were Maliha Masud, Viviann Ipina-Benitez, Izabela Tinoco-Guzman, Sakina Masud, Kassandra Parry Villavicencio, Melanie Montelongo, Diana Balcazar, Seth Brown and Marisol Montelongo. Advising them was Michael Lovett.

Sarah DiGregorio, an All-America cheerleader, was one of 600 high school cheerleaders who participated in the New Year’s Day parade in London. “It was a fantastic experience,” the senior told the Intermountain Catholic. “They don’t have cheerleaders in London, and many people told us they were amazed by our performances and wanted to learn more.”

Members of the Jazz Band were Ethan Archibald, MacKenzie Mick, Kyle Williams, Zoe Glasgow, Jacob Haertel, Caroline Flood, Ramiro Fernandez, Maddie Smith, Harry Pendergrast, Megan Thompson, Truman Hight, Eric Heideman, Nick McCullagh and Lance Gui.

Making up the Epicurean Club, overseen by Tim Soran, were Kasady Suchar, Ethan Hirabayashi, Dahlia Neuman, Christopher Cline, Olivia Sandoval, Hank Lister, Anna Jackson, Tanner Nilson, Gwen Orme, Tyler Rollman, Caroline Flood, Sean Lambourne, Janell Schroeder, Skye Fredericks, Audrey Hendarto, Serena Stueber and Janell Schroeder.

Teacher Art Holder led the German Club, which included Griffin Mozdy, Emma O’Neal, David Vazquez, Jazlynne Parry Villavicencio, Chanakya Duggineni and Christopher Athens.

STATE CHAMPION – A robot designed by Judge students calling themselves JudgeMent Call Robotics won the Utah Regional FIRST Robotics Competition at the Maverik Center in West Valley City. A Deseret News photo depicted their blue tank, #59 33, climbing over an obstacle. The robot qualified for the FIRST Championship in St. Louis. The team featured Kepler Sticka-Jones, Tanner Larson, Henry Anderson, Jing Chen, Christopher Clyne, Eric Hall, Jonghyuk “Kevin” Lee, Joseph Thomas, Hangzheng Qi, Declan Van Uitert, Kyle Williams and Grace Wise. Sonja McKown advised.

Led by teacher Michael Lovett, the French Club featured Rowen Kenny, Megan Aubry, Nick McCullagh, Zachary Burgener, Sean Leonard and Djivan Black.

The American Scholastic Press Association gave the Basilean yearbook its first-place award, citing its excellence in writing, photography and page design, adding that it contained “elements/sections of a memorable yearbook that will be treasured for years to come.” Led by editors-in-chief Sarah Farrell and Madison Ulibarri, staff members included Chase Harkleroad, Izabela Tinoco-Guzman, Sam Garcia, Beth Leo, Derek Wilsack, Grace Nakamura, Connor Stone, Erin Sleater, Douglas Gosselin, Emily Rougelot, Noah Hill, Z Brothers, Colin Bonk, Breanna Conte, Matthew Lamy, Annemarie Purcell, Giir Daw, Eliza Cook, Nick Cline, Lexi Hoggan, Kayden Trujillo, Sakina Masud, Palak Jayswal, Mikayla Herrera, Megan Aubrey, Sarah DiGregorio, Katie Scott, Isabel Harris and Marissa Ulibarri. Joan Jensen was the adviser.

Displaying their talent at Coffee Houses were Ethan Kelso, Sarah Weyrich, Sophie Barajas, Gillian Williford, Qiqi Chen, Maggie Lewis and Grace Schmidt.

Teacher Linda Simpson headed up English Quest, a club that included Dominique Byrd, Mary Oliver, Mary Muro Pardo, Audrey Hendarto, Christopher Clyne, Foster Dennin, Alexander Valeo, Nora Bonk, Maddy Reid, Kepler Sticka-Jones, Rachel Shubella, Maria Stokes, Christopher Parker, Whitlee Neeley, Anna Naranjo and Marisol Padilla.

Performing in the Drum Line were Penelope Richardson, Maddie Smith, Gillian Williford, Miriam Smith, Sophie Robertson, Olivia Pratt, Caroline Flood, Mariah Trujillo, Zoe Glasgow, Brendan Trujillo, Dominique Byrd, MacKenzie Mick, Neil Little, Jackson Murray, Ramiro Fernandez, Harry Pendergrast and Grace Wise.

The Salt Lake Exchange Club named senior Maria Stokes as its “Youth of the Year.”

Leena Ngo represented Judge at the Poetry Out Loud state competition at Westminster College. She recited “I felt a Funeral, in my Brain” by Emily Dickinson, “Let the Light Enter” by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and “Bleeding Heart” by Carmen Gimeniz Smith. Ngo told Intermountain Catholic she chose “Bleeding Heart” because she feared both public speaking and blood. “It was a personal challenge for me. I don’t necessarily memorize the poems. I let them stick to me. I feel the emotion of them and let it become a part of me so I can convey that to the audience.” Also competing in “Poetry Out Loud” were Marisol Padilla, Zach Shubella, Rose Anna Tafaoialii, Jack Dylan, Vanessa Austin, Dayi Hu, Pricilla Fehoko, Benjamin Someah, Alexandra Soran, Sam Loveland, Robin Young, Joey Mancini, Skye Fredericks, Nick Cline, Olivia Rollman, Sophia Gross, Tyler Rollman, Abigail Powell, Joseph Izampuye, Izabela Tinoco-Guzman, Foster Dennin, Viviann Ipina-Benitez, Janell Schroeder and Robert Lopez.

The Fishing Club included Yahya Yussuf, Tyler Rollman, Bobby Lopez, Tommy Walz and Trevor Montrone. Tim Gardner was the club’s adviser.

Sean Lambourne and Maggie Condas were co-captains of Judge’s two Mock Trial teams. Lambourne was part of a team that included Alexander Valeo, Robin Young, Audrey Matthews, Jing Chen, Qiqi Chen, Victoria Stevens and Aluwet Deng. The second team featured Condas and Nick McCullagh, Mary Oliver, Dayi Hu, Anna Drossos, Christopher Clyne, Erin Morgan, Miguel Saldivar, Skye Fredericks and Danielle Inglesby.

Teachers Susan Monserret and Darin Hathaway were among 20 educators honored by Utah Catholic Schools at the “Outstanding Employees Dinner.” St. Vincent honoree Stephanie Garlinghouse and Kathy Sandoval from Our Lady of Lourdes were both Judge parents.

The Archery Club featured Djivan Black, Ethan Firth, Kyle Williams, Olivia Haddadin, Lindsay Cruz-Chunga, Christopher Clyne and Diana Cruz-Chunga.

At the 11th annual Psychology Fair, seniors Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis and Max Butcher won the award for “Most Original Study” for their examination of “The Unbiased Brain” and gender inequality. Organized by teacher Ron Hill, the fair’s first-place winners were Giovanna “Gig” Spilman and Annalise Hodge for “The Science of Sweet Talk.” Hailey Pierce and Mason Orr took second place and Keegan Maloney and Keola Palau third place, while honorable mention awards went to Kaleel-Jarvis and Butcher, Reilly Edgar (best presentation) and Lauren Pasternak, Alexander and Megan Aubry, Isaac Guynn and Thalia Tran (Mr. Hill Award).

Making up the Bike Club were Charissa Boniface, Keenan Peters, J.D. Villareal and Charlie Oliver.

National Honor Society members were Eric Heideman, Charissa Boniface, Sarah Eatmon, Madeline Horiuchi, Chloe Schafer, Caroline Yannelli, Shelby Jimenez, Rachel Shubella, Allie Eggert, Erin Morgan, Lindsey Pelly, Miranda Rougelot, Jessica Jenny, Mackenzie Daily, Victoria Stevens, Olivia Pratt, Aluwet Deng, Amy Chen, Maria Stokes, Meghan Thomsen, Ciarra Nafus, Jacob Loose, Jackson Wills, Alexis Maggelet, Tyler Rollman, Matt Benvegnu, Trevor Montrone, Joey Mancini, Will Ryan, Danny Brown, Jackson Boomer, Ben Butcher, Anika Dean, Sean Lambourne, Youn Yu, Palak Jayswal, Seth Brown, Sarah Beth Anderson and Maggie Lewis.

The Interact Club featured Maria Stokes, Leena Ngo, Lucas Widdowson, Chihiro Kajiura, Nicholas Krivanek, Loveleen Ghuman, Shelby Jimenez, Malia Abramson, Sakina Masud, Allyson Schmidt, Youn Yu, Emma Dingman, Victoria Sandoval, Olivia Pratt, Reilly Edgar, Marisol Padilla, Serena Stueber, Audrey Hendarto and Ramiro Fernandez. Their adviser was Karla Keller.

Some of Tom Bettin’s top art students included Shelby Jimenez, Hugh McGirt, Melanie Montelongo, Carlos Hernandez, Milly Calufetti, Nicholas Krivanek, Allyson Schmidt, Tyrees Sidberry, Amy Cremer, Kassandra Parry Villavicencio, Israel Contreras, Sophie Campbell, Joseph Thomas, Killian Lamanna, Patricia Estrada, Ivy Edgar, Justin Jones and Maclaine Reemsnyder.

Hailey Maggelet formed a Business Club that included Kira Lane, Chloe Pierce, Han Nguyen, Mason Orr, Hailey Pierce, Sophia Gross, Peyton Pierce, Erica Maggelet and Chloe Lloyd. Their adviser was Pam Oles.

Participating in Debate were Hunter Crosland, who attended a national qualifier’s tournament, and Hannah Vazquez, Seth Brown, Mimi Roberts, Sean Hemmersmeier, Pricilla Fehoko, Matt Benvegnu, Sophia Gross, Mia Chase, Judge Kearns, Melissa Fang, Matthew Snyder, Chanakaya Duggineni, Lily Nilsen, Stephen Koss, Addie Freeman, Nicholas Toth, Olivia Haddadin, Sante Di Sera, Rian Trombetti, Harrison Payne, Haley Auer, Anthony Redding, Zoe Phillips, Conner Kenny and Karina Daghlian. Their adviser was Ben Macey.

Matthew Vanderlaan organized an endo Club, attracting Ravijot Ghuman, Zachary Burgener, Sebastian Suyoto, John Jensen and Jesus Balcazar.

“Bound” was the theme of the Spring Dance Concert. The Dance Company was led by co-presidents Alexis Maggelet and Alec Malouf, vice president Amanda Maxfield, secretary Ethan Gruis, senior officers Bryn Petron and Lexi Hoggan and junior officers Chloe Schafer and Isa Buscio. Dancers included Genevieve Liston, Ella Johnson, Montana Tabar, Victoria Stevens, Emily DeCarolis, Sarah Eatmon, Rihan Deng, Lindsey Pelly, Kelsin Pupunu, Niko Kershisnik, Sarah DiGregorio, Lexi Hoggan, Christopher “Tofa” Fainga’a, Max Butcher and Nick Weaver. Their adviser was Nathan Shaw.

Plays

“The Good Doctor,” directed by Darin Hathaway and assistant Howard “Tinker” Gravelle, stage managers Nick McCullagh and Dominique Byrd, lighting directors Ryan Bott and Charlie Oliver, sound managers Audrey Matthews and Emily Chung and props organizers Josh Davies and Ryan Madsen. Starring Michael Davies, Niki Rahimi, Foster Dennin, Janell Schroeder, Sean Lambourne, Pricilla Fehoko, Loveleen Ghuman, Jacob Haertel, Isabella Ingham, Martine Jan, Alex Junkins, Rowen Kenny, Abigail Powell, Alexander Valeo, Catherina Valeo, Annie Trentman and Sarah Weyrich.

“Grease,” directed by Darin Hathaway, choreography by Nathan Shaw, music direction by Marjoris Regus. Starring Duy Ramirez, Mira Thompson, Kelsin Pupunu, Sarah Weyrich, Ethan Kelso, Robin Young, Alex Junkins, Niki Rahimi, Juan Mucino, Annie Trentman, Janell Schroeder, Catherine Valeo, Mark Brunetti, Emily DeCarolis, Ethan Archibald, Deonno Avila and Averiel Bailey. The ensemble included Sophie Barajas, Gillian Williford, Abby Berceau, Nick Weaver, Eliza Cook, Lexi Thomsen, Michael Davies, Alexandra Soran, Rihan Deng, Katelynn Smith, Emma Flood, Maddie Smith, Martine Jan, Allyson Schmidt, Kathleen Jensen, Zachary Shaffer, Sean Lambourne, Chloe Schafer, Bobby Lopez, Alexis Maggelet, Boston Ravarino, Abby Powell, Keegan Maloney, Alec Malouf, Lindsey Pelly, Abbi Mancini, Nick McCullagh, Jessica Mulder, Whitlee Neeley and Amanda Maxfield. Supporting the students as “Teen Angels” were teachers Louise Hendrickson, James Cordova, Bryan Jeffreys, Patrick Lambert and Chris Sloan.

In region competition, Robin Young took third place in humorous monologues.

The Technical Production Crew was led by stage managers Josh Davies, Dominique Byrd and Nick McCullagh and techies Sahna Choi, Teagan Beaves, Jake Noorda, Charlie Oliver, Ravijot Ghuman, Matthew Storie, Brian Arano, Samuel Haertel, Jesus Balcazar, Ryan Madsen, Josh Davies, Adrian Chavez, Jonathan Stebner, Ryan Bott, Alex Kim, Adrienna Chacon, Thy Minh Cao, Derek Wilsak and Aurora Francone. Drama teacher Darin Hathaway oversaw the stage crew.

Sports

After back-to-back state championships in the 3-A ranks, Coach James Cordova’s football team moved up to 3-AA. The Bulldogs were the fifth-place finisher in the north, then lost a 20-17 heartbreaker to Cedar High in the opening round of the state tournament. Before injuries took a toll, the team had experience on both lines with seniors Jacob “Thor” Cline, Maisen Knight and Christopher “Tofa” Fainga’a, talented wide receiver and defensive back Xavier Price, running backs Kelsin Pupunu, juniors Sport Falemaka and Keola Palau and kicker Tim Hemmersmeier. The captains were Jacob Cline, Pupunu, Price and Joey Walz. Other seniors were Sam Garcia, Nick Cline, Danny O’Brien, Jacob Bowersox, Giir Daw, Rihan Deng, Zach Gill, Hunter Moreton, Atticus Mannebach, Chase Harkleroad, Ben Jones, Quincy Houston, Juan Mucino and Ethan Archibald. Knight was first team All-State in 3-AA and Pupunu was second team; Price and Jacob Cline were honorable mention. Price committed to play football at the Air Force Academy, Falemaka signed with the UofU, Hemmersmeier kicked for the University of San Diego and Jacob Cline signed to play for William Penn University. Pupunu was the team MVP. Fainga’a was the most inspirational player.

The girls tennis team finished 10-4 overall, 3-3 in region play, and qualified for four of five positions in the 4-A state tournament at Liberty Park. Advancing to state for Coach Tracey Valentine were freshman Katherine MacPhail (No. 1 singles), junior Sarah Lewon (No. 3 singles), senior co-captain Emmi Koszinowski and sophomore Emily Rougelot (No. 1 doubles) and seniors Sarah Beth Anderson and Mia Chase (No. 2 doubles). An injury boosted Chase to No. 1 doubles at state and allowed sophomore Veronica Start to fill No. 2 doubles. None won at state, which was won going away by Olympus. Anderson was an Academic All-State nominee. The team MVP was senior Mira Thompson, while Koszinowski was most inspirational. Rounding out the squad were Ruby Phillips, Hailey Maggelet, Ellie McCoy, Genevieve Liston, Isabella Buoscio, Lindsay Hafer, Juliana Valentine, Hannah Kelly, Anna Drossos, Chloe Lloyd, Emily Rougelot, Jessica Jenny, Amy Robinson and Mandy Zhang.

For the first time in Coach Nate Olson’s five years at the helm of the boys golf team, all of his players qualified to play in the 4-A state tournament, held at Soldier Hollow Golf Course in Midway. Three players advanced to the second day of play – senior Max Butcher, junior Ben Butcher and sophomore Carter Holyoak. Max Butcher was honorable mention All-State after shooting a 152 (77/75) at state. Ben Butcher finished with a 154 (76/78) and Holyoak shot a 165 (79/86). Other key players were Jake Sauer, Colin Bonk and David Turner. Team MVP honors went to Max Butcher. Holyoak was the most inspirational golfer. Coach Olson’s charges also included Thomas Silas, Matthew Lamy, Dylan Jack, John Hunt, Nathan Callahan, Jack Cawdery, Albert Sanchez, Jackson Murray, Charles Sauer, Matt Benvegnu, John Pernich, Simon Chamness and Ethan Iverson.

Allie Eggert, Katie Scott and Rachel Shubella set personal records to lead Coach Jason Heideman’s girls cross country team, with Eggert and Scott earning second team All-Region honors. Co-captains Maria Stokes, Ciarra Nafus and Shubella were Academic All-State nominees along with Olivia Pratt. Scott was team MVP and Shubella was the most inspirational runner. Isabella Dodson and Cheryl Winters rounded out the squad.

On the boys cross country team, Zach Shubella was MVP and captain Matt Shiramizu was the most inspirational runner. Shubella was second team All-Region for Coach Jason Heideman. Other runners included Alex Aubry, Mark Brunetti, Luke Chamberlain, Isaac Guynn, Eric Heideman, Tommy Kelly, Teddy Larcom, Mason McGowan, Jake Noorda, Sean Parent, Billy Riley, Tony Robinson, Matt Snyder and Jackson Start.

The girls soccer team improved to 4-10-1 but fell short of the 4-A state tournament, led by sophomore Emily Garcia, the team’s leading scorer, and goalie Rachel Shubella. Other key seniors were co-captains Lindsey Pelly, Mackenzie Daily and Alexus Murchison plus Marissa Ulibarri, Kenya Clark and Tessa Ganellen. Four players were Academic All-State nominees: Ulibarri, Daily, Ganellan and Shubella. Skylar Lister was the team MVP. Alexus Murchison was the most inspirational player. Rounding out the squad were juniors Samantha Kendall, Lily Nilsen, Grace Greis, Haley Auer, Annika Dean and Melissa Aguilar; sophomores Bailey Walker, Cicely Foley, Andrea Snow, Rachel Lake, Sara Bachmeier, Sofia Clark, Sophia Kennedy Overfelt, Ceceli Riffo-Drecksel, Beth Leo, Kathryn Wills, Isabella Dodson, Missy Fang and Angelica Marcus. The head coach was Cassadie Nelson. Her assistants were Savannah Spere, Delainee Spere and Steve Nelson.

Despite having only two seniors – Amy Cremer and Annemarie Purcell – the girls volleyball team finished 4-5 in region and just missed out on the 4-A state tournament. Team MVP honors went to Alea Bristow, with Purcell garnering most inspirational accolades. Making up the rest of the squad were Mia Kowalczyk, Anna Howard, Megan Pauley, Rose Anna Tafaoialii, Grace Bruggers, Anna Lower and Lauren Pasternak.

Sophomore Keenan Peterson won the Utah High School Mountain Bike state championship in October in St. George.

The girls basketball team made a memorable 4-A debut under Coach Paul Shiramizu, coming within an overtime loss from being the region champ, then winning its first game in the state tournament. Driven by the dominating play of Vanessa Austin, whose 17-point scoring average earned her “Prep of the Week” honors in late February from the Deseret News, the Bulldogs beat Box Elder 49-41 in the opening round of the 4-A tournament and were down by just two points in the fourth quarter against eventual runner-up Springville. But then Austin fouled out and Springville pulled away, 57-46. Besides Austin, the Bulldogs depended heavily on their backcourt of Grace Nakamura and Rachel Shubella, and their backups Haley Auer and Emily Garcia. Mayree Ellis was the power forward, Miyalla Tarver the small forward. After the season, Shubella received the PrepShowdown AFCU Scholarship at Vivint Arena. Austin was the team MVP. Shubella was the most inspirational player. The rest of the roster consisted of Samantha Kendall, Pricilla Fehoko, Lula Deng, Skylar Lister, Cicely Foley and Andrea Snow. Shiramizu’s assistant coaches were Stan Nakamura and Mele Vaisima. Matt Shiramizu and Ethan Gruis were the team managers.

Coached by Dan Del Porto, the boys basketball team struggled against tough 4-A competition and did not make the state tournament. Senior Tyrees Sidberry performed well in a losing effort, earning mid-season “Prep of the Week” honors from the Deseret News after scoring 29 points and pulling down 13 rebounds against Kearns, then adding 17 points against Olympus. Two players whose dads were Utah Jazz assistant coaches, Alan Lang and Justin Jones, were the subject of a profile written for the Preps Utah student journalism program by sophomore Zach Shubella, accompanying photographs by Matthew Lamy. Sidberry was team MVP while Jones was the most inspirational player. Sahith Jampala was the only other senior on the squad, which included Ben Davis, Nate Maudlin, Emmanuel Lam, Tom Riley, Isaiah Harris, Cy Austin and Danny Brown. Wrapping up a four-year role as basketball team manager was Ramy Ahmed.

The girls swimming team placed fourth in both the region and 4-A state meets. The Bulldogs compiled 186 points at state. Skyline won with 416.5. Coach Sage Maaranen’s swimmers were led by team MVP Caroline Yannelli, who had the top individual performance with a third in the 100 breaststroke and a fifth in the 200 individual medley. She also was part of the third-place 400 freestyle relay team (with Anna Shum, Erin Morgan and Victoria Stevens) and the fourth place 200 medley relay (with Amani Jammoul, Shum and Stevens). Morgan added a sixth-place finish in the IM and a seventh in the 100 backstroke and was named the team’s most inspirational swimmer. In the 100 butterfly, Jammoul was fourth and Shum fifth. Stephens and Morgan were co-captains of the squad, which also featured Kyle Cole, Sierra Hibl, Rebecca Henkels, Miranda Rougelot, Emily DeCarolis, Abigail Runnels, Dahlia Neuman, Hailey Grandy, Melissa Aguilar, Kimberly Padilla, Hannah Kelly and Heather Boland. The coaches were Sage Maaranen, Alicia Warren and Tori Echeverria.

Captain Alexander Valeo was the MVP of the boys swimming team. Reese Francone was the most inspirational swimmer. Other swimmers for Coach Sage Maaranen were Tommy Kelly, Isaac Eaton, Anthony Trujillo, Thomas Kearns and Charlie Berceau.

Luke Chamberlain and Colin Bonk received All-Star nominations for their play with the Catholic Independent Griffins, the hockey team uniting Judge and Juan Diego players. Coach Anthony Musci’s club finished seventh in a 12-team league, then entered the Division 1 Independent playoffs as a No. 4 seed. The Griffins won their first game in Vernal before losing 5-3 to Utah County Independent-North. David Musci was a co-captain along with two Juan Diego players. Colin Bonk was the team MVP. Musci was the most inspirational player. Other players from Judge were Sean Leonard, Anna Thomas, Zane St. Martin, Griffin Mozdy, James Colling, Robert Cheuvront and Zach Jerome. Judge parent Roger Rougelot was an assistant coach.

With firsts in the javelin, shot put and discus at the Cougar Relays at Kearns High School, senior boys track star Bapa Falemaka was the Deseret News “Prep of the Week” in mid-March. Xavier Price earned team MVP honors, while Rihan Deng was the most inspirational thinclad. Edwin Juang and Giir Daw were key contributors for the Bulldogs, who did not score any points at the 4-A state meet. Team members included Matthew Storie, Brandon Benson, Djivan Black, Jack Bithell, Jackson Liston, Joseph Thomas, Matthew Cotter, Sante Di Sera, Josh Ballard, Kayden Milburn, Zach Thomas, Dylan Jack, Hank Lister, Anthony Trujillo, Casey Randazzo, Tommy Kelly, Christopher Clyne, Eric Heideman, Jacob Noorda, Billy Riley, Hugh McGirt, Matthew Snyder, Zachary Thomas, Max Stireman, Parker Edgington, Casey Bouillon, Christopher “Tofa” Fainga’a, Josh Davies, Benjamin Someah, Michael Davies, Parker Hansen, John Luke Thomas, Ramy Ahmed and Israel Contreras. The coaches of both boys and girls teams were Mele Vaisima (throwing), Eric Heideman and Parker Mildenhall (long distance), Damara Walker (hurdles/sprinting), Stan Finn (jumping) and Anthony Alford (sprinting/jumping). 

For the girls track team, which finished 15th at the 4-A state meet, junior Mayree Ellis was team MVP after finishing fifth in the shot put and seventh in the discus. Sophomore Katherine Kranz received the most inspirational award for finishing seventh in the 100-meter dash and eighth in the 200 at the state meet. In addition, junior Vanessa Austin placed sixth in the shot put and 15th in the discus for Coach Mele Vaisima. Her athletes also included Lauren Woodbury, Annemarie Purcell, Maclaine Reemsnyder, Kenya Clark, Ciarra Nafus, Rachel Shubella, Maria Stokes, Abigail Powell, Olivia Pratt, Charissa Boniface, Ivy Edgar, Isabel Harris, Anna Shum, Maria Whitby, Alexus Murchison, Sophia Cordova, Sophia Kennedy Overfelt, Grace Bruggers, Anna Lower, Annika Dean, Kate Silcox, Lindsey Morton, Sophie Campbell, Katie Scott, Nina Marcus, Beth Leo, Allie Eggert, Heather Boland, Jessica Jenny, McKenzie Mosley, Emily Harris, Bella Coronado, Elena Justice, Jessica Mulder, Jillian Nelson, Madison Jones, Kianna Chacon, Samantha Kendall, Skylar Lister, Allison Ryan, Grace Humeniuk, Jazlynne Parry Villavicencio and Mary Muro Pardo.

Utah Lacrosse News did a Q&A with Judge midfielder Noah Hill, who committed to play at the University of Utah. Team MVP honors went to Douglas Gosselin, with Gabriel Gaitan designated the most inspirational player. Aidan Larson, Zach Gill and Gosselin were co-captains of the Bulldogs, who went undefeated in the “Best of the West” tournament in Las Vegas and won the Mohawk Division in the high school lacrosse league. Team members included Tommy Walz, Danny O’Brien, David Turner, Keola Palau, Matt Valentine, Joey Walz, Noah Hill, Keegan Maloney, Juan Mucino, Johnny Walz, Foster Dennin, Ben Butcher, Ryan Kenny, Alex Snarr, Gabe Gaitan, Sean Hemmersmeier, Zach Jerome, Keanu Palau, Sam Garcia and Philip Start. The coaches were Chuck Gosselin and Scott Clarke.

Maggie Lewis earned the MVP award for the girls lacrosse team. Maddie Moeller was its most inspirational player. Coach Kaely Kernan also depended on All-Region players Genevieve Liston and Kate Mattena, senior captains Sarah Farrell and Camilla Flores and junior captain Maggie Lewis, who also made the state’s Under-17 lacrosse team. Rounding out the squad were seniors Leena Ngo and Allyson Schmidt and underclasswomen Emily Chase, Emma Dingman, Marren Silcox, Grace Wise, Grace Driffill, Grace Greis and Genevieve Liston. Kernan’s assistant coaches were Dechie Sumapong and Amelia Daynes.

The girls golf team won the region championship, then finished ninth at the cold and rainy 4-A state meet. Coach Nate Olson’s Bulldogs had a team score of 566 in the Stableford scoring system. Corner Canyon won with 652. Judge was led by senior Grace Nakamura, who finished 16th with a two-day total of 150, 30 shots behind the winner. During the regular season, she was named a Deseret News “Athlete of the Week.” At the state tournament at Wasatch Mountain State Park in Midway, Nakamura was followed by team captain Anna Howard, who shot a 142, Alexandrea Jee (132), Sophia Gross (130), Sofia Clark (111) and Marissa Ulibarri (105). Nakamura was team MVP. Howard was the most inspirational player. Also playing for the Bulldogs were Kathleen Wilkerson, Emma Ballard, MacKenzie Mick and Madison Ulibarri.

Justin Jones was the baseball team MVP. Samuel Cassel was the most inspirational player for the Bulldogs, who fell short of qualifying for the 4-A state tournament. The seniors were Jacob Bowersox, Austin Candelario, Nick Cline, Jake Sauer, Connor Stone and Malachi Vazquez. Also seeing considerable playing time for coaches Tony Mendez and Zack Bernard were Joey Mancini, Cy Austin, Seiji Nagasawa, Jack O’Neal, Tom Riley, Trevor Montrone, Zach Shubella, Shane Calufetti, Ronnie Termunde, Ethan Hirabayashi, Alex Niemann, Chris McTeague, Keaton Yoshinaga, Koji Nagata-Brown, Anthony Richardson, Christopher Athens, Ozzie Valdez, Brandon Whaley, John Pernich, Emilio Garcia and Alex Carrillo.

The MVP of the girls softball team was Clara Williamson. The most inspirational player was Reagan Vigil. The rest of the Bulldog lineup included Veronica Start, Caleigh Knight, Sara Bachmeier, BayLa Anderson, Alexis DeTemple, Sophia Cordova, Marisela Garcia, Oakley Hill, Miriam Smith, Carin Reeves, Adrienna Chacon, Alexandra Soran, Avery Young and Olivia Haddadin. The team did not qualify for the 4-A state tournament.

The boys soccer team fell short of qualifying for the 4-A state tournament. The Bulldogs were led by MVP Moises Diaz and most inspirational player Jackson Wills. The team captains were Tim Hemmersmeier, Luis Ramirez, Moises Diaz and Jackson Wills. The seniors were Ian Green, David Musci, Allan Riad, Miguel Antola and Laurence Lanchbury. Rounding out the squad were Ethan Archibald, Tristan Brockbank, Connor McDonough, Nathan Thomas, Bas Van Thiel, Andrew Campbell, Carlo Antola, Maxi Gallegos, Caleb Castro, Ferdinand Bambabate, Sam Schmiett, Cameron Lundy, Roman Ashdown, James Colling, Eric Bambabate, Logan Seat, Hatcher Blair, Anthony Padilla and Joe Paul. Kolby Wheeler was the coach.

No. 2 singles player Anthony Robinson earned MVP honors on the boys tennis team, which did not score any points at the 4-A championships at Liberty Park. Callum Morham was the most inspirational player. Ryusei Tsuda was captain and played No. 1 singles. Other team members were Hunter Crosland, Ramiro Fernandez-Seoane, Jack Cawdery, Colin Bonk, Max Nelson, Chanakya Duggineni, Zach Southam, Luke Chamberlain, Jacob Behnken and Oliver Oelsner. Justin Archer was the head coach, Long Le his assistant and Jonathan Hsu was moderator.

Playing Ultimate Frisbee were William Stromquist, Alex Maxwell, Jackson Wills, Carter Causse, Matt Benvegnu, Tanner Larson, Callum Morham, Lauren Larson, Parker Hansen and Lance Gui. Their coach was xxx Smith.

Formed by John and Kathleen Jensen and Zachary Burgener, the Bowling Team was coached by Chad Hall, Jonathan Tsu and Susan Evans. Team members included Zach Southam, Deonno Avila, Adrian Chavez and Sean Leonard.

Alumni Athletes

Gil Cordova, Class of 1956, was named the 2015-16 “Super Fan” by the Utah High School Activities Association, recognizing his “extreme longevity in supporting high school activities through attendance at tournaments.” Said his son, James: “My father was the football coach, but [my brother Anthony and I] also played basketball, baseball and I ran track. Not a lot of parents go to track meets, but he was at every one;” Luke Puskedra, Class of 2008, finished fifth in the Chicago Marathon in 2:10:24, the year’s fastest marathon by an American; Will Huntsman, Class of 2011, was pictured standing next to President Barack Obama during a photo opportunity for the Army-Navy football game. The picture was posted online by Will’s dad, former Utah governor Jon Huntsman, Jr.; Kaden Ellis, Class of 2014, led the Idaho State Vandals as a freshman with 91 tackles, starting all 12 games. The Sun Belt Conference named him to the All-Newcomer Team and Pro Football Focus dubbed him a Freshman All-American; Chris Jones, Class of 1990, became an assistant basketball coach at the University of Utah after seven years at Utah State University.

Graduation

180 graduates on May 29 at Abravanel Hall.

Valedictorian: Maria Stokes

Salutatorian: Emanuel Condas

Gold honor cords representing cumulative GPAs of 3.5 or greater were worn by 84 graduates. Class members received college scholarship offers totaling $18.2 million and performed more than 21,000 hours of community service. Atticus Mannebach accepted an appointment to the U.S. Coast Guard.

Christ the King Awards: Pricilla Fehoko and Tim Hemmersmeier

First Honors, recognizing achievement in A.P. and Honors courses: Alysa Bradbury, Emanuel Condas, Rebecca Henkels, Amanda Maxfield, Ciarra Nafus, Olivia Pratt, Tyler Rollman, Bianca Ruiz, Rachel Shubella and Maria Stokes.

Presidential Service Awards: Palak Jayswal, Victoria Sandoval and Maclaine Reemsnyder, all gold medals; Rachel Shubella and Maria Stokes, both silver; Charissa Boniface, Max Butcher, Amy Cremer, Emily DeCarolis, Douglas Gosselin, Ethan Gruis, Rebecca Henkels, Alexis Maggelet, Hunter Moreton, Ciarra Nafus, Harry Pendergrast, Miranda Rougelot and Lucas Widdowson, all bronze.

International Student Service Awards: Qiqi Chen, Class of 2017, bronze; Hanzheng Qi, Class of 2018, bronze.

Outstanding Scholar-Participant in Activities: Tanner Larson and Maria Stokes

Outstanding Scholar-Participant in Athletics: Rachel Shubella and Justin Jones

Outstanding Achievement in Arts, Academics and Athletics: Kelsin Pupunu and Miranda Rougelot

Outstanding Dedication in Extracurricular Activities: Tessa Ganellen and Max Butcher

Outstanding Male Athlete: Xavier Price

Outstanding Female Athlete: Grace Nakamura

Moran Award for Football: Xavier Price

Yerkovich Award for Basketball: Tyrees Sidberry

Alumni Alliance Scholarship Award: Melissa Aguilar Padilla and Giselle Carreno

Demi Candelaria Scholarship Award: Melissa Aguilar Padilla and Annika Dean, both girls soccer, and Emily Garcia, girls basketball

Michael Starks Memorial Scholarship Award: Deonno Avila; Msgr. J. Terrence Fitzgerald “Champion of Youth” Award: Mike and Mary Jones.

Academic Awards – A.P. Calculus: Emanuel Condas; Mathematics: Oliva Pratt; Science: Maria Stokes; A.P. Biology: Jackson Wills; A.P. Physics: Emanuel Condas; Science (Edison Award): Tyler Rollman; Social Studies: Emanuel Condas.

Chinese: Carlo Antola; French: Ramiro Fernandez-Seoane; German: Olivia Pratt; Latin: Audrey Matthews; Spanish: Rachel Shubella; Theology: Maliha Masud; Peer Ministry: Maria Stokes. Christian Service: Maclaine Reemsnyder; Physical Education: Grace Nakamura.

A.P. Studio Art: Nicholas Krivanek; Dance: Kelsin Pupunu; Men’s Dance: Rihan Deng; Theater: Sarah Weyrich; Technical Theater: Dominique Byrd; Instrumental Music: Xiaofan “Lance” Gui; Vocal Music: Maddie Smith; English: Olivia Pratt; Journalism (Literary Magazine): Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis; Journalism (Newspaper) R. Alex Maxwell; A.P. Psychology: Youn Yu.

MVPs and most inspirationals: Anime Club: Henry Anderson and Marisol Padilla; Archery Club: Diana Cruz-Chunga and Lindsay Cruz-Chunga; Bowling Club: John Jensen, Kathleen Jensen and Deonno Avila; Bulldog Press: Mary Oliver and Yahya Yussuf; Chinese Club: Hanzheng Qi; Dance: Alexis Maggelet and Alec Malouf; Debate: Matt Benvegnu and Hunter Crosland; Epicurean Club: MacKenzie Mick and Harry Pendergrast; Interact: Loveleen Ghuman; Junior Classical League: Katelynn Smith and Caroline Flood; Mock Trial: Emanuel Condas and Sean Lambourne; Literary Magazine: Rylee Kaleel-Jarvis and Nicholas Krivanek; Music: Ramiro Fernandez-Seoane and Eric Heideman; Peace and Justice Alliance: Marisol Montelongo; Programming/Robotics: Kepler Sticka-Jones and Tanner Larson; Student Council: Miranda Rougelot and Joey Walz; Theater Tech: Audrey Matthews and Ryan Bott; Theatre: Eliza Cook and Janell Schroeder; Ultimate Frisbee: Xiaofan “Lance” Gui and Michael Ryon; Yearbook: Beth Leo and Miranda Rougelot.

Alumni

The National Day of Prayer and Remembrance for Mariners and People of the Sea was marked by Judge graduates Navy Capt. Justin James, Class of 1998; Jon Huntsman, Class of 2009; and Will Huntsman, Class of 2011; Matt Kierkegaard, Class of 2011, received a Fulbright Award to study water security and international development at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England.


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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