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VeritasThe Magazine of the Dominic Old Scholars Association
in this issue
Dezani Design Centre
2011 Reunion Program
News from Collegians
ISSUE 1 FEBRUARY 2011
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2 veritas: February 2011
What’s in a name?
In Roman mythology,
Vertias, was the goddess of
truth. It was also the name
given to the Roman virtue
of truthfulness, which was
considered one of the main
virtues any good Roman
should possess. This Latin
word appears in the mottos
of many schools and
colleges around the world,
and was part of the Savio
College crest, featuring on
school blazers.
When Savio College, Holy
Name Secondary School
for girls, Savio Primary
and St John’s Primary
amalgamated in 1973 to
form Dominic College, a
new motto for the College
was created - Live by the
Truth
The motto is a clear and
concise message taken
from the Third Letter of St.
John the Apostle. It should
be the ambition of every
Christian student to live
by the truth as personified
in Christ, our model. This
idea is strengthened by the
College Shield, where the
Torch symbolises the light
of Truth that will guide us to
our Star, Christ.
welcome
Dominic College is a Kindergarten to Year 10, Catholic, Co-educational College, conducted by the
Salesians of Don Bosco. We aim to educate the whole person, spiritually and academically, to ensure
each of our students achieve incredible goals.
Welcome to our first edition of Veritas, the inaugural
publication of Dominic College’s Old Scholars’
Association. The purpose of Veritas is to support Old
Scholars to stay connected with each other and sustain
a sense of connectedness to our College Community.
We hope to celebrate the continuing lives and
achievements of our ex-students and to share with
our current students and families the possibilities of life,
once they leave our care.
Inspiration for our Students
Old Scholars act as a very significant source of
inspiration for our students. The success of our Old
Scholars in building upon their education at Dominic to
reach their potential in their professional and personal
lives inspires our students. Your lives encourage our
present students to reach high to achieve their goals
and to be happy.
Don Bosco’s great desire was that all of his students be
happy. This desire of our founder and guide still drives us
in the work that we undertake at Dominic. Veritas aims
to be a window into that happiness and the journey
of our Old Scholars in the pursuit of happiness in their
lives.
Old Scholars Continue our Story
through their Children
Old Scholars play a very significant role in the
continuing story of Dominic College. A number of
our former students return to work with us in our
educational endeavours with children and young people.
These staff members greatly enrich our capacity to be
an authentic school in the tradition of Don Bosco.
We have many Old Scholars who return to our
community as parents wishing to enrol their children in
their alma mater. Even though the school environment
and academic programs look different to their school
days, they are seeking to have their children experience
and be formed in the same Salesian values in which
they have been formed. They want their children to
have diverse opportunities for their development and
to make life-long friendships at Dominic as they have
made.
New Facilities bring New Learning
Opportunities
It is a great joy for us to have our Old Scholars return
to visit the College either individually or as a group in
reunion and remembering. The College might look a
little different but it still retains that atmosphere of a
welcoming family home.
The expansive grounds and green fields of Dominic
College continue to be one of our unchanging
treasures. Our new facilities developments begun
18 months ago through the Commonwealth
Government’s Building in Education Revolution are
coming to final fruition in 2011.
Last year we completed and opened the Br Peter
Dezani Design Centre. This year we will bless and
open our new Science facilities, our K-10 Dance studio
that will also be used for a diverse range of integrated
learning activities and our new multi-purpose Savio
Centre. The Savio Centre is designed for K-10 Health,
PE and LOTE. These facilities represent a new era of
creative learning at Dominic College. Old Scholars
are warmly invited to these celebrations of the
ongoing development of the College as a dynamic and
contemporary learning community.
Your lives are part of our past, present and future story
of Dominic and we pray always that you continue to
connect with each other and with us.
Beth Gilligan
Principal
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veritas: February 2011 3
DOSA Committee
During 2010, a number of passionate Old
Scholars and current Dominic staff began
work to revive the Dominic Old Scholars
Association (DOSA) with the aim of
exploring avenues for communication,
participation and connection with the
College.
The Committee is represented by:
- Ms Beth Gilligan, College Principal
- Fr Frank Bertagnolli SDB, College
Rector
- Mrs Caroline Jager, Old Scholars
Coordinator
- Mr Tony Webb, Old Scholar (1963),
former parent and staff member
- Ms Diane Byrne (Cerritelli), Old
Scholar (1973), former parent and staff
member
- Ms Leesa Baker, Old Scholar (1986) and current
parent
In 2011, the focus for the Committee will be:
- decadal class reunions (full details on page 7)
- establishing a membership program for all Old
Scholars
- fundraising opportunities
- specific DOSA events for Old Scholars to get
together and reconnect with the College
With the Committee wishing to widen the appeal of
the Association to all Old Scholars, the Class of 2010
were inducted into the Association during the Year 10
Graduation Mass held at St John’s Parish. All students
were presented with a keyring to mark their transition
from student to Old Scholar.
In addition to the presentation of the commemorative
key rings, DOSA has been a long-standing supporter
of the College Awards. The Association presents the
Br Peter Dezani Award to the Year 10 student who
has achieved overall academic excellence supported
by an active school spirit as displayed by leadership,
community service and sporting commitment.
Above: DOSA Committee
members (l-r) Leesa
Baker, Tony Webb, Beth
Gilligan and Diane Byrne.
Left: Diane Byrne and
Leesa Baker present
graduating Year 10
students with a
commemorative DOSA
keyring.
Left: Year 10 student
Jessica Edmundson
accepting the Br Peter
Dezani Award for Best
All-round Student from
Mr Tony Webb.
The Committee is looking for an Old Scholar who left the College between the years of 1990-1999 and
2000-2009 to join them in raising the profile of DOSA and coordinating DOSA events. If you are interested,
please contact Caroline Jager via email: [email protected]
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4 veritas: February 2011
Br Peter Dezani SDB 1925 – 2000 A contemporary man moulded in the spirit of Don Bosco
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veritas: February 2011 5
Opening of the Dezani Design Centre
On Saturday 13 November 2010, around a 100 people
from the wider College community gathered at the
College to celebrate the Blessing and Dedication of the
Dezani Design Centre.
Most of the people gathered had known the man after
whom the Centre is named – Br Peter Dezani – a
religious Salesian Brother, who spent the last 34 years
of his life at Dominic College teaching and instructing in
the areas of Technical Drawing and Woodwork.
During the ceremony one could almost feel the
presence of a wonderful and unassuming man, even
though the event was aligned with the 10th anniversary
of his death. He was a man with a large heart, a warm
smile, a welcoming word and peculiar sayings that have
become part of the Dominic folklore.
In the ten years since his death, many things have
changed, and life has moved on. A few things still
remain as a “memorial” to his vision and commitment
the DOSA sporting teams continue to play in various
competitions and the Christmas Vigil Mass is still
celebrated in the Chapel every year. And now his name
is associated with a building that embodies the Dominic
tradition of offering skills, training and opportunities for
our students. We hope that the students who learn
new practical skills in the Dezani Centre also learn to
cherish the values of life and service as testified by
Brother Peter in his life.
Top left: Fr Frank Bertagnolli
SDB cuts the celebratory cake.
Above: Diane Byrne (Cerritelli,
1973), Beth Gilligan, Fr Frank
Bertagnolli SDB and Elizabeth
Bowes (1970) enjoying
the celebrations hosted by
the Dominic Old Scholars
Association.
Above left: Mrs Selina Kinne,
Head of Technology and
Applied Studies, welcomes the
wider College community to
the Blessing and Dedication.
Left: Fr Frank Bertagnolli SDB
blesses the Dezani Design
Centre and congregation with
holy water.
Br Peter Dezani SDB 1925 – 2000
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6 veritas: February 2011
Holy Name Reunion class of:
In November 2010, a group of 16 girls
gathered at Dominic College, 40 years
after they left Holy Name. This was the
first reunion that had been organised,
so there was a lot of news to catch up
on. The girls had travelled from Western
Australia, South Australia, Queensland
and Victoria to re-connect with one
another and to reminisce about their
days at school together.
They talked non-stop, shared
photographs, laughed and cried and all
shared something of their life journey
with one another. The women spoke of
the things that had nourished them in
their lives, where and with whom they’d
found love, their great joys, their disappointments and
terrible losses and their struggles.
Most had not seen each other in 40 years and their
honesty and truth with which they spoke showed that
the College’s motto of Veritas had been held in their
hearts all their lives.
One student, Ann Tolman, recounted this story from
their days at Holy Name:
As a group of young girls we went through a lot together.
Everyone remembers the 1960’s as strange new times for
music, sex and drugs. Living in Hobart was no different
except that we mainly read about these things in US and UK teen magazines and tried to live out our version of this new age when we actually had very little to go on. Short skirts, long hair and loud music seemed so outrageous yet we didn’t want to miss out on anything.
We watched the moon landing together in our third year of high school and (on occasion) were (gingerly) introduced to boys from the ‘mainland’ who came to play football with Savio students.
It was a ‘new’ school, and I can remember marvelling at ‘indoor’ slippers, bunsen burners and the wall-mounted buzzer that would herald the change of classes. Prior to this, hand-held bells (or cow bells as we called them) were rung to signal the change of class.
Sr Lucy Davey was one of our class teachers and most of us thought she was ‘pretty cool’. She taught English in 1970 and one of our books was Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. A line from that book was ‘we talk, I believe, all day long’. Sr Lucy thought this was very appropriate for our class.
In the book it was a reference to conversations between Jane and Mr Rochester – for us it was purely the fact that,
as young girls, in the aforementioned 1960s full of hope
Images, clockwise from
top: Class of 1970 Holy
Name students (l-r): Claire
Delany, Ann Tolman, Carol
Lasky (Gibson), Tess Prince
(Healey), Noreen Kurowski
(Barry), Judy Blackwood
(Rosson), Lindy Bateman (
Walsh), Elizabeth Scurrah
(Bowes), Vicki La Fave
(Castles), Yvonne Lazenby
(Van Luxemborg), Lorraine
Williams (Buzza), Jackie Fish,
Sandra Taylor (Cashion), Ruth
Baker (Geary) and Joylene
Boner (Goss).
Ruth Baker (Geary) and
Lorraine Williams (Buzza).
Sandra Taylor (Cashion), Ann
Tolman, Noreen Kurowski
(Barry) and Carol Lasky
(Gibson)
Below: The illusive school bell.
1970
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veritas: February 2011 7
This year DOSA will be hosting a number of class reunions, to be held at
the College. Old Scholars are invited to attend the reunions, reconnect with
their classmates and share news from their lives after Dominic.
Reunions being held in 2011 include:
1961 50-year reunion Saturday 21 May
1971 40-year reunion Saturday 16 July
1981 30-year reunion Saturday 15 October
Please contact the Class of 1981 reunion committee members:
Michele Guy (Cleary) on 0417 564 429 or via [email protected]
Allana Hyland on 0439 865 990 or via [email protected]
1991 20-year reunion Saturday 27 August
2001 10-year reunion Saturday 12 November
Please contact the Class of 2001 reunion committee member:
Aaron Wojcik on 0408 961 648 or via [email protected]
If you would like to assist with your class reunion, or have current contact
details for any Year 10 student from these years, please contact:
Caroline Jager, Old Scholars Coordinator
via email: [email protected]
and excitement, and hormones and expectations, none of
us valued silence.
I don’t know whose idea it was, but Carol Laskey (Gibson)
and I decided on our last day of school in 1970 to abscond
with the bell and have it engraved with these words. Our
idea wasn’t to get caught – of course - but to replace it the
next day and forever have our class motto left within the
halls of Holy Name.
The wide variety of fields that these women are
now working in includes, education, disability services,
childcare, the arts, health and medical, community
services, retail and private enterprise.
Thanks and appreciation must go to Claire Delany
who dedicated so much of her time tracking down
her classmates from across the nation and to Lindy
Bateman (Walsh) for providing Moorilla wine that was
thoroughly enjoyed over the course of the day.
2011Reunions
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8 veritas: February 2011
Births
Kylie (Briers, 1996) and Luke Nelson – Oliver
James (August 2010)
Daniel (1998) and Anna Burke - Essie Su
(September 2010)
Chris (1994) and Claire D’Silva – Oliver Richard
Antony (September 2010)
MarriagesAllison Taylor (1995) to Rob Cooley –
November 2010. Allison, who is an Old Scholar and
current staff member, married Rob at St Peter’s Church
New Norfolk followed by the reception at Barrilla Bay.
There is a little family history to St Peter’s with a few
generations from both the bride and grooms families all
marrying in the church:
- The bride’s grandparents, Ivy and Owen Cashion
- The bride’s parents, Jim and Sandra Taylor
- The groom’s parents, Kevin and Rosemaree Cooley
- The groom’s sister, Kristina and Brett Marriott
Both mothers, Sandra Taylor (Cashion,
1970) and Rosemaree Cooley (Miller, 1968)
are Old Scholars of Holy Name and also joining
in the wedding celebrations were a number of
Old Scholars from Dominic, including Thomas
Hazi (1995), Rachael Miller (Hazi 1998),
Chad Nichols (1995), Christie Hajduk
(1995), Amelia Nichols (Di Palma 1995),
Matthew Taylor (1998), John Cooper
(1995), Nathan Dunn (1998), Ben Thain
(2001) and Alison Nichols (1995).
Above: Old Scholars celebrating
Allison and Rob Cooley’s
wedding - Back row (l-r): Dianne
and Craig Hazi, Rachael Miller,
Nathan Dunn, Alison Nichols.
Front Row: Justin Miller, Kristel
and Thomas Hazi and Chad
Nichols.
Middle: Allison and Rob Cooley.
Far right: Samuel and Laura
Dix outside Narryna Heritage
Museum.
Below: Rowena Byrne, Tanja
Wells and Andrew Palmer
celebrating Rowena’s marriage
to Mike Conacher.
Deaths
James (Jim) Brophy Jim was born in Melbourne
and joined the Salesians in the 1940s and spent a
couple of years at the school when it was known as
Boys Town. After leaving the Salesians, Jim settled in
Launceston but over the years would often call in to
see the Salesians at Glenorchy. Jim was 85 when he
passed away in November 2010
Rowena Byrne (1995) to Mike Conacher – March
2010. Rowena, who lives at Tranmere and is a Maths
and Science teacher at Fahan, and Mike were married
at Avalon Retreat. The wedding was attended by a
number of Old Scholars, including Tanja Wells
(1995), who lives on the Sunshine Coast and works in
pharmaceuticals, and Andrew Palmer (1994), who
is married with four children, lives in Launceston and
runs his own dance school.
Samuel Dix (1999) to Laura Tinning – June 2010
Samuel and Laura were married at the Narryna
Heritage Museum, where Samuel works as the Manager.
The reception was held at Forcett Lakes, which the
couple run together on weekends and they have
recently moved into their new home close by.
News from Collegians
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veritas: February 2011 9
Lucia Visentin (Di Santo, 1986) and her
family are living in Doncaster, Victoria and currently
undertaking major renovations to their house.
Luisa Cavarretta (Frediani, 1988) has great
memories of the days spent collating DOSA News in
the Rat Hole with Br Peter, drinks and pizza. Luisa was
the Secretary of DOSA for two years in the 1990s,
when the Association was very “alive”.
Matthew Byrne (1997) is married with two
children, living in Bellerive and works in Game
Management at DPIWE.
Sherri Ring (1987) lives in Hobart with her
19-year-old daughter (Amy) and loving life. She is
working in the area of personal health and fitness and
corporate health and wellbeing and has been running
her own business for the past three years. www.
energyhealthconcepts.com
Heidi Pinkett (1986) is currently living in Sydney
and is a mother of five and a grandmother of one.
Gina Taylor (1986) is married and living near Brisbane
and is a mother of four and a grandmother of two.
Thomas Dix (2001) is working in Hobart, but being
a snowboard aficionado, follows the snow when he can.
News from Collegians
Lenny Bartulin with Year 8 English students.
ENGAGEMENTS
Aaron Davey (1999) proposed to his partner, Natalie Brown, in Melbourne last
year and will be married in March, 2011. Both Aaron and Natalie work at Dominic
College – Aaron is the Bosco House Co-ordinator and Natalie is the Health and
Physical Education Co-ordinator.
Daniel Lamont (1993) proposed to Caroline Baker in the picturesque setting
of white sands and crystal clear waters of a beach in Esperance, WA. Daniel scribed
his proposal in the sand, strategically placing the diamond ring in the centre of a large
heart. The wedding is planned for early 2012.
Luke Curtain (1999) recently proposed to his partner, Jade Vecchione.
Marriages
Cameron Golding (1999) to Sara Paynter –
New Years Eve 2010. Cameron, who is an Old Scholar
and current staff member, married Sara at Stonefield
in Brighton on a beautiful, sunny day, with the groom
commenting that his bride looked absolutely stunning,
definitely jaw dropping stuff when she walked down the
aisle.There were many Old Scholars involved in the
wedding. Best Man Luke Golding (1997), Maid
of Honour Jess Thompson (2002), bridesmaid
Aleesha Golding (2001) and all of the
Groomsmen - Aaron Davey (1999), Andrew
Fagan (1999), Patrick Carroll (1999),
Daniel Price (1999) and Tim Golding
(2001). Joining in the celebrations were also 30 Old
Scholars. The live music entertainment for the night was
provided by one of Cameron’s friends from his time at
Dominic, Joel Everard (1999) who, along with his
duet partner Jake, played and saw the New Year in.
Gavin Hanlon (1997) married Jen Aplin in January
2011 at Barilla Bay.
Nathan Abrahams (2000) and Rebecca
Benson (2000) were married at the beach in Lower
Sandy Bay in February 2011.
Benn Dance (1997) married Megan King in
February 2011.
Lenny Bartulin (1987) visited the College to
address the Year 8 English students, discussing what it
means to be an author, how the story writing process
begins and also shared some of his memories of
Dominic. Lenny is the author of two successful novels,
A Deadly Business and The Black Russian, and has
returned to live in Hobart the past year to write a new
crime novel based in Hobart.
In September, more than 500 people gathered at
Wrest Point to celebrate the 2010 Tasmanian Training
Awards which recognise excellence in apprentices,
trainees, vocational students, employers and training
organisations. A number of Old Scholars were
recognised at the Awards, including: Steven
Lampard (2004) – Apprentice of the Year Finalist
Marc Brockman (2004) – Apprentice of the
Year Finalist Rhys McGuire (2007) – VET in
Schools Student of the Year Finalist
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10 veritas: February 2011
News from CollegiansIn October 2010, the Theatre Royal was home to the
rambunctious Monty Python musical Spamalot. For
those who caught the production, you may have seen
the familiar face of Danielle Lipscombe (2005)
performing in the colourful and side-splitting comedy.
The College’s Visual Arts exhibition, Generate, was held
at the Long Gallery in early November, showcasing the
talents of current Dominic students as well as staff and
Old Scholars. At the official opening of Generate, Old
Scholar and world renowned opera singer Michael
Lampard (2001) addresses the audience, talking
about his days at Dominic and how he was always
encouraged to pursue his dreams. Following his
address, Michael wowed the audience with a rendition
of the Impossible Dream.
Like so many families that have passed through the
halls of Dominic College, the Chappel family had
four students at the school during the 1980s. All
the children are now spread across the globe, while
their mother remains in Tasmania, living in St Helens.
Christine Schubert (Chappel 1980) has
two teenage children, living on the northern beaches
of Sydney and working as a theatre nurse one day a
week and as support staff at Mater Maria College the
rest of the week. Jackie Chappel (1981) has three
teenage children and lives in Queensland working
in Mental Health. Michael Chappel (1984) is
married to Debbie, living in New York and working for
the United Nations. Yvette Chappel (1986) is
living in Western Australia and is kept busy by her two
young children.
Michael Marshall (1997) Since leaving Dominic
and completing Years 11 and 12 at Guilford Young,
Michael started an Engineering degree, but changed
course and studied Human Movement. In his final
year of study, Michael worked for the western Bulldogs
Football Club as a Biomechanist/Performance Analyst.
Michael was offered a position with the Tasmanian
Cricket Association and moved back to Tasmania
in 2005 and worked in a number of positions with
the TCA until 2008. Highlights of his time with the
TCA include being a part of the support staff for the
Tasmanian Tigers first Pura Cup win, being appointed
Head Coach of the South Hobart/Sandy Bay Cricket
Club and being named in the 07/08 TCA Team of the
Year as coach. In August 2008, Michael took up the
position of Performance Analyst for the Australian
Cricket Team, which was a full time coaching position
travelling with the team. After two years travelling
the world, Michael left the position and returned to
Tasmania just in time for the birth of his first child,
Andrew Michael is now working as a Policy Officer in
Workplace Health and Wellbeing, but still maintains his
links with cricket by resuming as Head Coach of the
South Hobart/Sandy Bay Cricket Club.
Above: Paul Williams (1969)
and Michael Lampard at the
Generate opening.
Above right: The Chappel
family (l-r): Christine, Mrs Anne
Chappel, Michael and Debbie
Chappel, Mr Tony Chappel,
Yvette and Jackie.
Far right::Michael Marshall
(centre) at work as the
Performance Analyst with the
Australian Cricket Team on tour.
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veritas: February 2011 11
Jess Palermo (Lyden,1998)
Secondary Campus The thing that has changed the most at the College is
the facilities - they are more modern and updated - the
quality of teaching is still excellent and the same safe,
secure environment exists. The only other thing that had
changed, and has since been changed back, is that the
girls cannot dye their hair, or wear makeup or jewellery.
LydenPhil Roberts (1974) PRIMARY CAMPUS There are so many changes: the style and method of teaching, there is a greater range of educational sporting and co-curricular activities, stronger support for those students requiring it and the school is now very well established and recognised as having an excellent reputation in the wider community.
Roberts
Michele Guy (Cleary, 1981)
Campus Administration
The main change for me has been the progress of the
buildings and the technology implemented into the
classrooms. Computers were in very early development
then and now we have an IT team with wireless network
s,
interactive whiteboards and the implementation of
individual laptops. It is my belief the Salesian ethos
is as strong now as it was 30+ years ago......I am just
experiencing it now through the eyes of an adult!
Cleary
Cameron Golding (1999)
PRIMARY CAMPUS
The one thing that has changed the most at the
College for me is the amazing Primary campus
that has been built.
Golding
Old Scholars on StaffWith almost twenty Old Scholars as current staff members at Dominic, we posed the following question to some of them:
What’s the one thing that has changed the most at the College since you were a student?
Clinton Baker (1982) Campus Administration The biggest change since I was a student would have to be the move of the Primary Campus from Bowden Street to Tolosa Street, creating one campus to cater for Kindergarten to Year 10.
Baker
Paul Williams (1969) SECONDARY CAMPUS The biggest change is that every room and building now has a different use. For example, when I was a student the machine and woodwork rooms were located off to the side of the White House and as a boarder in my final year, I had nightly dinners in what is now my office.
Willams
Rosemary Street (Fielding, 1969)
Campus Administration
The uniform has changed the most. Being a
student of Holy Name, we had to wear the
thick tunics, hats and gloves...no matter how
hot the weather was.
Fielding
Kimbra Burke (1988)
PRIMARY CAMPUS
We are now all together, as one
school, on the one campus.
Burke
Matthew Taylor (1998) E-Learning Services The physical spaces have changed the most – we used to play soccer where the Primary students now learn and basketball where the Design Centre now sits.
Taylor
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What’s your news?Do you want to add or update your details on the Old Scholars’ mailing list? Do you have some news
about yourself or an Old Scholar that you’d like to share?
If you have some news of a graduation, career achievement, birth, marriage, death, past or present
activities or simply a fond memory from your school days, please get in touch with the College.
Please complete this form and return to the College at the address below, or send an email to
Caroline Jager at [email protected] including the following details.
Name: Maiden Name (if applicable):
Current Postal Address:
Telephone (mobile preferred):
Email:
Year left Dominic College: Highest Year level attained at Dominic College:
Please attach your news and return to:
Dominic Old Scholars Association, PO Box 256, Glenorchy , Tasmania 7010
Dates for
your diary
College Open Day Thursday 17 March
College Twilight Fair Friday 25 March, 4.00 – 7.00pm
Foundation Day of Dominic College Friday 13 May
Class of 1961 Reunion Saturday 21 May
Class of 1971 Reunion Saturday 16 July
Class of 1991 Reunion Saturday 27 August
Class of 1981 Reunion Saturday 15 October
Class of 2001 Reunion Saturday 12 November
Old Scholars Christmas Vigil Mass Saturday 24 December
204 Tolosa Street, Glenorchy 7010, PO Box 256, Glenorchy 7010 P: 6274 6000 [email protected] www.dominic.tas.edu.au
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If you have any queries regarding
the publication of Veritas, please
contact the Old Scholars
Coordinator, Mrs Caroline Jager
on 6274 6000 or