For sponsorship information contact mdemola@belenjesuit.org
Special thanks to: Cres Ruiz, Javier Mariscal, Jose Lopez Varela, and Peter Montadas
the things we did ... 4 the friends we made ... 22 the books we read ... 88 the people we served ... 100 the games we played ... 130 the events we attended ... 178 the times we shared ... 198
ANumerous celebrations, events, and accomplishments marked the jubilee year of this institution. After 50 years of tradition in Miami, the show must go on. After all, there is always room for improvement.
After all the years of textbooks and papers, everything will now be digitized on the iPad. The entire community begins a new era of teaching and learning with a brand new tool in their hands. Backpacks will slim down to a bare minimum as the iPad replaces binders, books, lined paper, pens, and pencils. Classes will become more interactive and new projects will spark the immediate attention of all students. New words will emerge in the student/teacher lexicon such as Nearpod, Evernote, and Edmodo. Dropbox will be added to everyone’s device, as well as the occasional Flow and Light Bike.
After all the years of playing on grass, many of the sports will now be played on artificial turf. A new turf field was laid out throughout the summer in De La Cruz Stadium. The new field named after Pepe Sanchez was first tried and tested by the varsity football team early in the year, but it was also the new playground for the soccer and lacrosse teams during the second semester. The teams and staff no longer had to worry about the field flooding, mud pits, painting the grass, mowing the lawn, or the natural wear and tear of the grounds. The runners were not to be left behind, as a new 10 foot high hill was added to the cross country loop. It acted as a roof to the new tunnel that makes up the amazing running course.
After the first 50 years of our school in Miami, the 51st year will be even better. It is a time to reflect and look into the future and see what it has in store for all of us. We, as a community, will take a giant leap towards that future by revamping the curriculum and the facilities in an effort to continue improving. Yes, it requires adjustment; and yes, we are all willing and ready to apply versatility and persistence to overcome any obstacles that may come our way.
After all the changes that were made, our core values continue to remain the same. Magis, Cura Personalis, and Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam are still very much alive in our community. Regardless of which electronic device we use in the classroom, or which surface we play on, we are all still brothers.
After all… we are still Men for Others.
In the city of Madrid, senior Anton Martinez-Cid learns to dance Flamenco from a Spanish instructor. “I enjoy gong back to my homeland and ancestry to learn the culture and better understand who I am,”said Martinez-Cid.
At the Olympic Games in London, junior Robert De La Hoz and seventh grader Marcos De La Hoz, visit the London Bridge. While at the Olympics, the De La Hoz brothers witnessed the opening ceremony and the soccer match in which the US women won the gold medal.
In China, junior Miguel Zaldivar, takes time to do a little sightseeing. While studying there last summer, Zaldivar met up with fellow alumnus Juan Mora. Zaldivar learned how to speak Madarin during his time in China.
Oh, the places you will go...
By: David Hondal
Summer is a time to kick back, relax, and forget about school. Some kids just stay home and sleep all day, while others are traveling the world and seeing some unbelievable sights. Some students travelled with their families, and some went with the faculty.
Last summer, the world celebrated the 2012 Olympics, which were held in England. Most students watched the games at home, but two lucky students were able to see them up close. Junior Robert De La Hoz and his younger brother, seventh grader Marcos De La Hoz, were actually there in London.
“It was one of the greatest
experiences of my life and I will never forget it. I was able to see the women’s gold medal soccer match,” said Robert De La Hoz.
`The De La Hoz family were not the only lucky ones to travel this summer. Junior Miguel Zaldivar visited China through a study abroad program, where he picked up some Mandarin.
Mr. Collins took a group of students and faculty around Europe for an unforgettable experience, too.
“To commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the school in Miami, the Overseas Study Program followed the life of St. Ignatius of Loyola from his birth country of Spain to his nal
resting place in Italy. In addition to the grand cities of Madrid, Barcelona, Florence, Siena, and Rome, the Overseas Study Program concentrated on the life of the founder of the Society of Jesus by traveling to Manresa and Montserrat. Along the way, Father Christian Saenz, SJ provided extensive and inspiring presentations of church history and traditions.
The summer was lled with many adventures that took some of the students from the comforts of their own homes, to the most amazing and inspiring avenues of the world.
At the Saint Peters Basilica in Vatican City, members of the Overseas Study Program take a moment to proudly pose for a picture in front of the statue of St. Ignatiyus of Loyola. A total of 30 students, seven family members, and ve faculty members took part in this one of a kind summer trip that included countries such as Spain and Italy.
DOUBLE SEEING DOUBLE
Although they are identical twins the Keenan twins, Nicholas and Alexander, in the tenth grade share some major differences. Having opposite personalities, the brothers had their share of disagreements, but in the end they admitted to always having each other’s back. The twins constantly argued about what to wear so that they wouldn’t always look the same.
While competing against each other in the Mini Olympics, the sixth grade Miguez brothers, Lucas and Juan, have to admit that they had the time of their life. The brothers who were identical twins also ran together in the crosscountry team. They were born only eight minutes apart.
with the Krekorians
By: Robert VanScoy
Despite the diversity in the school, there were some who appeared to be in two places at the same time. One simple explanation for this effect: Twins!
Although most twin brothers looked alike, some were complete opposites. This was the case for the Keenan twins who were identical at birth, yet their personalities were completely opposite of one another.
Now in the case of the Krekorians, being tripplets was nothing short of chaotic. However, in the chaos, there was also a strong sense of family.
“Even though sometimes we get into fights, at the end of the day, we’re family and that is all that matters,” said seventh grader Gabriel Krekorian.
Confusion sometimes led to misunderstandings and even frustration when it came to the teachers who had the terrific trio in the same class.
“Sometimes people don’t know my name. They just call me Krekorian because of my brothers,” said Nicholas.
All challenges aside, being part of a family of multiples always prevailed.
Being a triplet can be quite unusual as in the case of seventh grade brothers Andres, Nicholas, and Gabriel Krekorian. Since they were all in the same grade, and shared some of the same classes, it made note taking and test studying a lot easier. “Being a triplet means that you have to deal with sharing, but the best thing is always having someone to have fun with,” said Gabriel Krekorian.
Just in case... iPad covers
The Keyboard
After nally nding his locker, seventh grader Cristian Garcia places a single binder in his nearly empty storage. The iPad contained all the books and notes that most students used to house in their lockers in previous years. Since most students did not have a need for their lockers, many forgot where their lockers actually were located.
Michael Gomez- 12
The Mini Laptop
The Smart Case
The Otter Box
Eloy Fernandez- 7
The Attention Grabber
Drew Chinigo- 7
The Robot Arm
Take the o my back
By: Ryan Murphy
The new school year didn’t just bring new things like the iPad, but it also took some things away. And the best of those things were all the heavy books that were weighing students down.
In years past, some students had to lug around over 50 pounds of books. Often times, one bag wasn’t even enough.
This year though, some found out that a backpack wasn’t even necessary. An iPad and a pencil was good enough for their daily schedule.
“It was easier to move from
BOOKBAGS WEIGH T
class to class because I didn’t have to stop at my locker,” said senior Giovanni Companioni referring to the replacement of hard cover books by the digital versions.
The lack of books not only slimmed down the bags that carried them, but also decreased greatly the need for a locker.
“My book bag is a lot lighter now and I don’t even use my locker anymore,” said eighth grader Carlos Machado.
Everything students needed could easily be held in an average
two-zipper Jansport bag. But students got much more creative than that when it came to carrying their supplies, and especially in protecting their iPads.
iPads protection meant tons of di erent cases to choose from. While many just opted for a standard black case, other students got a little more creative. Some cases even included keyboards to help students take better and faster notes.
Regardless of the bag or case, everyone agreed that no lockers was a good thing.
with
Showing o their colorful personalities through their slim backpacks, seventh Christian Tinoco and eighth grader Matias Vazquez stop in the hallway to chat in between classes. With more choices of bags available, students were able to personalize their backpacks. Bright colors were always popular to facilitate quick identi cation among the hundreds of bags around the school.
Brandon Almeida - 12
Gio Companioni - 12
Tomas Gonzalez - 9
Austin Riveron - 12
Andres Vila - 9
The Traditional
The Satchel The String Bag
style
Volkswagon FeverDAS AUTO ...
The school parking lot has seen many cars over the years; from Hummers to Mini-Coopers to Astro Vans. Last year, however, was the year of the Volkswagons. With all types of models including GTI’s, Gulfs, and one particular 1975 model, the VW brand dominated the lot.
Junior Lorenzo Guio had inherited a 1975 model Volkswagon from his father who collects antiques. Guio had this car for about one year and was very satisfied with some things, but claimed there were a couple of setbacks.
“I love how much attention this car gets, but it just breaks down on certain occasions,” said Guio.
Along with Guio, there were a good number of juniors and seniors who owned Volkswagons as well. Among them were senior Mateo Buraglia who owned a Rabbit and senior Juan Aguila who drove a GTI.
“I love this car, absolutely love it, the way it rides, how comfortable it is,
By: Jorge Pola
everything about it,” said Aguila.
The German VW brand was revamped last year with new Beetles and usually ranged in price from $19,000 all the way to $43,000. Regardless of price, the cars became popular among the younger teen crowd, in part due to the low miles per gallon.
The German engineering was definitely prominent in the school parking lot, and the savings in the wallets.
“The
-
Junior Jose Vicente Sanchis
Sitting on the hood of his Rabbit, senior Mateo Buraglia shows con dence in his white VW. Buraglia has this car since his sophomore year claimed he could not be more satis ed.
in front of his
his love for his car. Just as other VW owners,
emphasized the reliability of this car and the understated power its engine.
“The
- Freshman Manrique Iriarte
Posing
Volkswagon GTI, senior Juan Aguila shows
Aguila
Out-of-this-world
music
By: Robert Vanscoy
You can tell a lot about someone based on the genre of music they listen to. As a matter of fact, music can be a medium on which friendships are formed.
For instance, take someone like sophomore Jorge Aguilera. Aguilera was a man of many musical tastes. Based on his varying taste of music, he could relate to just about anyone.
The average teenager will tell you that he enjoys rock, rap, and maybe even country. Aguilera, on the other hand, preferred to listen to Gregorian Chants.
“Gregorian Chants are a form of praying used mostly by monks, it’s like singing, but more sacred,” said Aguilera.
If you thought that listening to Gregorian Chants was bizarre, this student was also a master of all trades when it came to musical instruments. From the banjo to the saxophone, Aguilera played it all.
Jazz was another music genre that few students chose as their top listening choice. If you met junior Daniel Perez, you would never guess that he enjoyed listening to the smooth sounds of jazz. He had been a part of the music appreciation club since the sixth grade, where he got a weekly dose of jazz. In addition to being an avid listener, he also played piano, guitar, harmonica, trumpet, and trombone.
“Jazz is nice to listen to and very different from other music genres,” said Perez. “When I listen to the music I can see myself playing in front of a crowd.”
Hip hop and rock may be the most popular, but there certainly is room for those who think outside the music box.
Outside the V Section, junior Daniel Perez listens to jazz on his iPad after his lunch period. One of his favorite radio station was 88.9 FM, a popular jazz radio station in Miami.
Playing the banjo is one of sophomore Jorge Aguilera ’s favorite past times. He played a wide array of instruments including the saxophone and the guitar, that are reflected in his unusual musical taste.
APP-dicted
Carlos Salazar - junior
“iMessage allows me to communicate with my peers, especially when I miss class.”
Appsolutely heading to the APP store
By: Robert Vanscoy
With all the technological advancements this school has made in the past year, one of the biggest changes is the new iPad. The iPad has become a necessary learning tool that everyone on campus has within arms distance at all times. It is safe to say that it is a necessity.
The iPad, alongside all of the educational apps, also has a certain level of entertainment that is vital to a student’s freetime.
When asked about what apps were their favorites, many students replied with the first game that came to their mind. These games all bring something new to the tablet.
Whether it’s connecting virtual pipes or dominating your friends in a virtual village, these apps have become a must on everyone’s iPad.
The iPad has also become a means of communication between students. As junior Carlos Salazar mentioned “My iPad is my go-to device when it come to reaching my classmates.” With the new iPad, students are given a chance to study and communicate in more efficient ways then ever before.
Sebastian Chamito - 6th grade
“I really like Pages because it is easy to use and it’s great for taking notes.”
Middle school students unwind by playing their favorite games during their lunch period. In addition to games, there were numerous apps that helped students to get organized and connected with their teachers and each other.
OUTSIDE
SCHOOL SPORTS
Football, basketball, soccer and track are all typical school sports that all kids either partcipate in or play at school. Even though the majority of the students play these sports, there is also a big group of students who take their sports to the extreme.
Instead of playing the stereotypical sports, these students use their free time to go out and do things very few people even attempt.
Hunting was one of those extreme sports. For students such as eighth grader Alejandro Smith, baseball and tennis was not going to cut it. Smith travelled on the weekends to his family ranch in Kentucky where he hunted deer and turkey, and fished for bass.
Other students such as sophomore Ryan Guso found his fix for extreme on his 29 foot Seavee as he headed out to the middle of Key Biscayne Bay to wakeboard with his friends. Wakeboarding involved a great deal of balance at a very high speed over sometimes choppy water.
“I love the adrenaline rush of wake
By: Guillermo Pujals
boarding,but there is nothing worse than tryingout a new trick and face planting in the water,” said sophomore Christian Lopez Fishing was one of the more popular and relaxing sports for many students. Living in a peninsula made it easy for students and their famiies to spend time on the water and catch the big fish. Senior Javier Alvarez went out fishing in his boat and even practiced underwater spear fishing almost every weekend with his father and brother.
“ I love going out on the water by myself. It gives me a chance to do what I want without having to worry about others and lets me enjoy the beautiful underwater,” said senior Adrian Rives who enjoyed spearfishing by himself on a kayak.
There is a sport out there for just about anyone wiling to play, but for some, the playing field needs to be more extreme. There is nothing wrong with playing the regular, every day sports. But for some, the world is their playground, and the game has just begun.
At Big Shot paint ball arena senior Kyle Hernandez and his paint ball team get ready to start off a match. Hernandez often competed in tournaments and practiced his game on a constant basis.
(Middle) In the Bay near Key Biscayne, sophomore Ryan Guso enjoys a ride on his wake board. Guso was a big fan of the water sports and often went with friends to the bay and to work on different wake boarding tricks.
(Far left) Near Orange Cay in the Bahamas, senior Javier Alvarez shows off his catch of the day along with his father Mr. Pablo Alvarez and his brother Pablo, Jr. With fishing as a favorite hobby, Alvarez and his family tried to get out to the ocean as often as they could.
After eight hours of long waiting in a tree stand in Africa, eighth grader Alejandro Smith shows off his trophy elk. Smith went on many extreme trips to different parts of the world to hunt for big trophy animals.
NO RESPECT No Check ...
By: David Hondal
For the past few years, Nike has been the brand of choice. Some would say that it was the hottest trend. Almost everyone was wearing the latest Nike gear wether it was to play a sport or just to hang out.
Whether that was your favorite brand or not, everyone had to admit that Nike has made a major impact in fashion. They were all over TV and plastered over professional sport teams.
But what made Nike better than its competitors like Addidas or Under Armour?
“Nike is no doubt the best brand out there. No Check, No
Respect,” said by junior Jack Flood. The Swoosh became a world wide known symbol, and the only logo to have its own name.
What also made Nike a very popular brand to wear were their clever shirts. Many had inspirational phrases on them such as JustDoIt, which was their famous slogan.
Among athletic gear, Nike was at the top of the charts followed by Addidas, then Under Armor. Yet not everyone was a Nike fan.
“I think Under Armor is the best because it is the most comfortable and they’re the best for sports,” said
freshman Alexander Falla. Some claimed that each brand worked best with a particular sport.
“I think for football, Nike is the best, but for basketball players prefer Jordan’s, and soccer players prefer Adidas,” said sixth grader Manuel Becerra.
Despite the di erent varieties of sports brands, no one can deny that Nike deserves the award for best company to market a brand.
Trends I wish would just go away
Alexander Adams
“Power balance bands. They don’t work.”
Clyde Dozier
“People saying Y.O.L.O.”
Orlando Calas
“The game Clash of Clans. It isn’t even a fun game.”
In his Adidas gym bag, freshman Joseph Garcia, looks for his PE clothes. After the school bags, the majority of the sports bags around school were Nike.
Walking through the hallway, seventh grader Carlos Romero, carries his books and ipad in his Under Armour bag. The Under Armour brand really took off in the past year.
The crowd goes wild as star football player, senior Keonte Cash, makes his round around the gym. The entire student body clammored for Cash when he was introduced, and middleschoolers battled to get a high ve from the popular o ensive lineman.
Homecoming King, senior George Alfaro, sets up to take a blindfolded half-court shot. Alfaro was told that if he made a shot on one of his three attempts, he would be rewarded $100. The entire student body roared a er his third attempt as if he made it; unfortunately for Alfaro though, he was told just a few minutes later that he had actually missed.
Mr. Artiz, played by senior Andres Garcia, comes up to Mr. DQ, played by senior Eric Couto and tells him about his plan for them to take over the world. Garcia and Couto both played two major roles in the skit, and without a doubt got the most laughs from the audience.
“PA’st,” played by Alexander Lorenzo, tells his babies to get ready for a pop quiz. Lorenzo and the entire science department had one of the funniest scenes in the skit.
H H HH
Homecoming urricane its ome
By: Ryan Murphy
omecoming week is the mid-semester ‘break’ that all students need in the rst half of the year. Although they still have to go to class, do homework, and take tests, there is just something in the air that makes the week fun.
Obviously, the rst di erence is that students dress up in something other than their same old shirt and tie. They get to dress up according to the theme, and for the die- hards like senior Diego Rojo, it is a great chance to display school spirit.
“Homecoming week is the only week in which the school allows you to forget the burden of your uniform to express your Wolverine pride. It’s a week of freedom where friends and teachers can express their creativity while alleviating the everyday stress of school life,” said Rojo. The themes this year were repetitive to some of the past, such as Favorite Athlete Day and Wolverine Day.
However, the student council got original as well and implemented Twin Tuesday and Way Back Wednesday.
Twin Tuesday conjured up a bunch of laughs from fellow students, but not quite as many as the senior skit that took place later that day.
The 2013 senior class put together a senior skit for the ages.
“I have been here for a long time... and that is the best skit I have ever seen,” said Eighth grade science teacher Mr. Carlos Bravo.
And he wasn’t the only one. Praise came from all over the student body, from teachers, and even the custodians who were depicted in the skit.
The feature performance on Wednesday was viewed by a large number of students who returned to see the nale, along with many parents, and other members of the community. The theme of the skit was that the world
was ending (2012) and Mr. De Quesada had to make an all-star cast of teachers that he could save in order to keep the school alive. Just as the giant meteor was about to crash down on the earth though, the beloved disciplinarian Julio saved everybody by talking to the Mayan God controlling the meteor.
The school week ended with a bang, with one of the most memorable pep rallies that had been thrown in a while. It was highlighted by students from all di erent grades dancing the Gangnam Style , and faculty members singing the missing lyrics of songs being played.
Unfortunately for the football team and the entire community, the homecoming game was cancelled due to Hurricane Sandy. However, the high schoolers’ homecoming dance still went on as planned and proved to be a great end to the week.
Junior Nicolas Iparraguirre rocks his ‘Way Back Wednesday’ Michael Jordan jersey. Other famous jerseys worn that day included names such as Dan Marino, Larry Bird, and Pele.
Wearing their favorite athletes’ jerseys, sophomore Frank Battle and juniors Alejandro Cortes and Carlos Salazar enjoy lunch outside the cafeteria. Students were encouraged to wear attire from their favorite sports teams throughout Homecoming Week.
After All... the friends we
People
Seniors ... 24
Juniors ... 40
Sophomores ... 46
Freshmen ... 54
Eighth graders ... 62
Seventh graders ... 68
Sixth graders ... 74
Faculty and Staff ... 80
Class of 2013
Sergio Leos, Walford Campbell and Antonio Casuso.
Michael Aguad Juan Aguila George Alfaro
“A wise man will make more opportunities than he nds”
- Francis Bacon
“Excellence is not a skill. It is an attitude”
- Ralph Marston
“Engineering is for all intents and purposes, magic, and who wouldn’t want to be a magician?”
- Elon Musk
Brandon Almeida Alejandro Alvarez
“Logic will get you from A to Z, imagination will get you everywhere”
- Albert Einstein
“Dream as if you’ll live forever. Live as if you’ll die tomorrow”
- James Dean
Javier Alvarez Jose Alvarez Roberto Alvarez Diego Anell Alfredo Arguelles
“Some people want it to happen, some wish it would happen, others make it happen”
- Michael Jordan
“Too many people miss the silver lining because they are expecting gold”
- Maurice Setters
Jose Arosemena Marcel Arzola
“I’ve never let my school interfere with my education”
- Mark Twain
“It’s nice to be great, but far greater to be nice”
-Joe Newton
“It always seems impossible until it is done”
- Nelson Mandela
“A great pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do”
- Walter Bagehot
“Think outside the box, collapse the box, and take a sharp knife to it”
- Banksy
Thomas Avallone Myles Bachrach Julian Ballestas
“Believe you can and your halfway way there”
- Theodore Roosevelt
Evan Banciella Nicolas Becerra Luis Blanco
“The man who sets about making others better is wasting his time, unless he begins with himself”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
“Float like a butter y, sting like a bee”
- Muhammad Ali
“The only way to nd true happiness is to risk being completely cut open”
- Chuck Palahniuk
“The color white is the absence of memory”
- Stephen King
“Happiness is only real when shared”
- Christopher McCandless
Nicolas Briscoe Mateo Buraglia
“We shall draw from the heart of su ering itself the means of inspiration and survival”
- Winston Churchill
“Let us think of nothing but serving God”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Andres Busse Stephen Busse
“Teach us to give and not to count the cost”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
“Nothing behind me, everything ahead of me, as is ever so on the road”
- Jack Kerouac
Maximino Caballero Gomez Oscar Cabanas
“Someone’s sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago”
- Warren Bu et
“The di erence in winning and losing is most o en not quitting”
- Walt Disney
Patrick Cabrera Walford Campbell
“I came to Miami to win a championship, nothing less”
- Lebron James
Mr. Belen
“God, grant me serenity to accept things I cannot change, courage to change things I can, and wisdom to know the di erence”
- Reinhold Niebur
David Capetillo Keonte Cash
“A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool”
- William Shakespeare
“The only place success comes before work is in the dictionary”
- Vince Lombardi
Steven ‘Tato’ Tyler
Most school spirit
Javier ‘Kenji’ Martinez
Carlos Castellanos Franz-Joseph Castillo
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then is not an act, but a habit”
- Aristotle
“The biggest mistake people make is not trying to make a living at doing what they most enjoy”
- Malcolm S. Forbes
Nicolas Castillo Antonio Casuso
“Fall in love, stay in love, and it will decide everything.”
- Fr. Pedro Arrupe, S.J
“Each man is the bard of his own existence”
- Cormac McCarthy
Nicholas Chikuji Dominic Chinigo Alvaro Chirinos Salvador Cisneros Giovanni Companioni
“Half the lies they tell about me aren’t true”
- Yogi Berra
“I have learned to use the word “impossible” with the greatest caution”
- Wernher von Braun
Manuel Corbea Herzen Cortes
“I became insane with long intervals of horrible sanity”
- Edgar Allen Poe
“Adults are just obsolete children”
- Dr.Seuss
“Imagination is more important than knowledge”
- Albert Einstein
“Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die tomorrow”
- James Dean
“Hombres de acción, sobre todos aquellos cuyas acciones son guiadas por el amor, viven para siempre “ - Jose Martí
Robert Cosio Eric Couto Matthew Cristobal
“The only time success comes before work is in the dictionary”
- Vince Lombardi
“Kites rise highest against the wind, not with it”
- Winston Churchill
”It’s always good to be underestimated”
- Donald Trump
Kevin Cruz Giancarlo Cueto Eric De Cardenas Roberto De Leon Manuel De Ovin-Berenguer
“Good, better, best. Never let it rest. Until your good is better and your better is best”
- Tim Duncan
The only way to escape fear is to trample it beneath your feet”
- Nadia Comaneci
“Try not to become a man of success but a man of value”
- Albert Einstein
“I have not failed. I have just found ten thousand way that won’t work”
- Thomas A. Edison
“The day you become old is the day you’re not looking for new experience”
- Billie Joe Armstrong
Luis Del Cueto Matthew Diaz Eric Diaz-Padron Alexander Diblasi Carlos Espina
“A hungry dog hunts best. A hungrier dog hunts even better”
- Norman Augustine
“Well done is better than well said”
- Benjamin Franklin
William Fabra Gabriel Farias
“The measure of who we are is what we do with what we have”
- Vince Lombardi
“Love takes up where knowledge leaves o ”
- St. Thomas Aquinas
Carlos Fernandez Michael Fernandez
“For everyone to whom much is given, of him much shall be required”
- Luke 12:48
“There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you”
- Marianne Williamson
“Time you enjoy wasting, was not wasted”
- Marthe Troly-Curtin
“Look up, get up, and don’t ever give up”
- Michael Irvin
“Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are simple”
- Dr. Seuss
Jose Roca
Most Likely to become a Belen teacher
Nikolas Fernandez Rene Fernandez Jr. Lucas Fernandez-Rocha Andres Garcia Cristian Garcia
“The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven”
- John Milton
“To dare is to lose one’s footing momentarily. To not dare is to lose oneself”
- Soren Kierkegaard
Nicholas Garcia Erik Garrigo
“Success is never nal, failure is never fatal. It is courage that counts”
- John Wooden
Most senioritis
“To give anything less than your best is to sacri ce the gi ”
- Steve Prefontaine
“I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul”
- William Ernest Henley
Gabriel Garrigo
“To insure peace of mind, ignore the rules and regulations”
- George Ade
Kevin Pavon
“its lack of faith that makes people afraid of meeting challenges, I believe in myself”
- Muhammad Ali
“Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from indomitable will”
- Mahatma Gandhi
Daniel Gomez Michael Gomez
“You deserve what you earn, not what you think you are entitled to”
- David F. Alfonso
“The best way to make your dreams come true is to wake up”
- Paul Valery
Daniel Gonzalez Francisco Gonzalez
“Remember that sometimes not getting what you want is a stroke of luck”
- Dalai Lama XIV
“The di erence between a cow and a bean is a bean can begin an adventure” - Stephen Sondheim
Jesse Gonzalez Kevin Gonzalez
“A man may die, nations may rise or fall, but an idea lives on”
- John F. Kennedy
“Set your goals high, and don’t stop until you get there”
- Bo Jackson
Manuel Gonzalez Jake Guso
“We made too many wrong mistakes”
- Yogi Berra
“The only place success comes before work is in the dictionary”
- Vince Lombardi
Jason Gutierrez Thurman Hall
“Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude”
- Zig Ziglar
“Whether you think you can or think you can’t, you are right”
- Henry Ford
Juan Aguila
Pablo Hereter Kyle Hernandez Daniel Hillman
“Freedom is nothing but a chance to be better”
- Albert Camus
“Doing nothing is very hard to do; you never know when you are nished”
- Leslie Nielsen
“It is not so hard to obey when we love the one whom we obey”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Javier Incera Peter Jackson Daniel Jose
“The greatest accomplishment is not in never falling, but in rising again a er you fall”
- Vince Lombardi
Best hair
“If I must choose between peace and righteousness, I choose righteousness”
- Theodore Roosevelt
“Risk comes from not knowing what you’re doing”
- Warren Bu et
Xavier Hines Eduardo Iglesias
“Failure is a man who has blundered, but is not able to cash in on the experience”
- Elbert Hubbard
“An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest”
- Benjamin Franklin
Enrique Lam Luciano Laratelli
“No one can make you feel inferior without your consent”
- Eleanor Roosevelt
“True friends stab you in the front”
- Oscar Wilde
Most Likely to be a millionaire Michael Fernandez
Jake Larson Nicholas Leonard
“We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek”
- Barack Obama
“Don’t count the days; make the days count”
- Muhammad Ali
Sergio Leos Avery Lopez
“Duc in Altum”
- Luke 5:4
“To give anything less than your best is to sacri ce the gi ”
- Steve Prefontaine
Daniel Lopez Nicholas Lopez Alexander Lorenzo Justin Lorenzo Juan Lorido
“Only a fool learns from his own mistakes. The wise man learns from the mistakes of others”
- Otto von Bismarch
“Every man dies. Not every man really lives”
- William Ross Wallace
“Don’t quit, su er now and live the rest of your life as a champion”
- Muhammad Ali
“The most massive characters are seared with scars”
- Kahlil Gibran
“If two wrongs don’t make a right, try three”
- Laurence J. Peter
Jonathan Lucas Bernardo Manrique Andres Manzanares Christopher Marrero Matthew Marrero
“Some people want it to happen, some wish it would happen, others make it happen”
- Michael Jordan
“The harder the con ict, the more glorious the triumph”
- Thomas Paine
“I need, therefore I imagine”
- Carlos Fuentes
“The only place where success comes before work is the dictionary”
- Vince Lombardi
“A man who stands for nothing will fall for anything”
- Malcolm X
Javier Martinez Javier L. Martinez Mario Martinez Anton Martinez-Cid Ricardo Martinez-Cid
“Be the change that you wish to see in the world”
- Mahatma Gandhi
“Don’t ght a battle if you don’t gain anything by winning”
- Erwin Rommel
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are”
- Theodore Roosevelt
“So long and thanks for all the sh”
- Douglas Adams
“All moments past, present, and future, always have existed and always will exist”
- Kurt Vonnegut
Alberto Maza Rafael Melendez Enrique Menendez Diego Mion Jesus Modino-Diaz
“Life isn’t about yourself. Life is about creating yourself”
- George Bernard Shaw
“What is essential is invisible to the eye”
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Elias Monsalve Hugo Montero
“Hitting is an art, but not an exact science”
- Rob Carew
“It’s always too early to quit”
- Norman Vincent Peale
Adrian Montoto Christopher Morales
“Glory is eeting, but obscurity is forever”
- Napoleon Bonaparte
“If we do not succeed, we run the risk of failure”
- Dan Quayle
“It is kind of fun to do the impossible”
- Walt Disney
“Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools because they have to say something”
- Plato
“If you are not in over your head, how do you know how tall you are?”
Most Likely to wear his letterman at 50 Oscar Cabanas
“Never put o until tomorrow what you can do the day a er tomorrow”
- Mark Twain
Ryan Murphy Alberto Naya
“When you are going through hell, keep on going. Never, never, give up”
- Winston Churchill
Most athletic
“Shoot for the moon, even if you miss you’ll land among the stars”
- Les Brown
“Dreams are the touchstones and our character”
- Henry David Thoreau
Jorge Orbay
“Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known”
- Carl Sagan
Willy Pujals
Carlos Muniz
“The di erence between screwing around and science is writing it down”
- Adam Savage
Jorge Orta
“Either you’re the one erasing or you’re the one being erased”
- Jim Carrey
Camilo Padron
“Set your goals high, and don’t stop until you get there”
- Bo Jackson
Alexander Paneda
“There’s never enough time to do all the nothing you want”
- Bill Watterson
Robert Munoz
“Nothing resists the truth for long: it may be assailed, but never overcome”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Hector Ortiz
“All I’m going do is just go on and do what I feel”
- Jimmy Hendrix
Christian Padron
“If opportunity doesn’t knock, build a door”
- Milton Berle
Jose Paneda
“I have not failed, I’ve just found ten thousand ways that won’t work”
- Thomas A. Edison
Daniel Parets Kevin Pavon
“The best way to predict your future is to create it”
- Abraham Lincoln
“The greater the di culty, the more the glory in surmounting it”
- Epicurus
Cristian Paz John Pendas
“By failing to prepare, you are preparing to fail”
- Benjamin Franklin
“Do not quench your inspiration and your imagination; do not become the slave and your model”
- Vincent Van Gogh
Daniel Perdomo Alejandro Perez
“It is good to have an end to journey toward; but it is the journey that matters in the end”
- Ernest Hemingway
Andy Garcia
Perez
“Stand rm and immovable as an anvil when it is beaten upon”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Miles Pope Felipe Prellezo
“To create something exceptional your mindset must be relentlessly focused on the smallest detail”
- Giorgio Armani
“Pain is weakness leaving the body” - Daniel Evans
“Fall seven times, stand up eight”
- Dwayne Wade
“Try not to become a man of success but a man of value”
- Albert Einstein
Most humorous
“Live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart”
- Chief
Jose A. Prieto Patrick Puig-Corve Guillermo Pujals
“The man who fears losing has already lost”
- George R.R. Martin
“Always forgive your enemies, nothing annoys them so much”
- Oscar Wilde
“Ships are safe in the harbor but that’s not what ships are made for”
- John Shedd
James
Victor Perez-Abreu Daniel Poo
Tecumseh
Most Likely to be King Adrian Montoto
Erik Rivacoba Adrian Rivas
“Time you enjoy wasting, was not wasted’
- Marthe Troly-Curtin
“Better to have a short life full of what you love, than a long life spent miserably”
- Alan Watts
Alfredo Ramirez Eduardo Ramirez
“Caminando en linea recta no puede uno llegar muy lejos”
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
“A coward dies a thousand deaths, a hero only one”
- William Shakespeare
Edwin Ricardo Francisco Rios
“Speak little, listen much”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
“Every time I go to a movie, it’s magic, no matter what the movie’s about”
- Steven Spielberg
Austin Riveron Dylan Rives Andres Robledo
“Wealth is of the heart and mind, not the pocket”
- Pharrell Williams
“Good artists copy, great artists steal”
- Pablo Picasso
“If you’re going through hell, keep going”
- Winston Churchill
Jose Roca Andres Rodriguez Anthony Rodriguez Daniel Rodriguez Ethan Rodriguez
“The man who can drive himself further once the e ort gets painful is the man who will win”
- Roger Bannister
“It’s kind of fun to do the impossible”
- Walt Disney
“He who has God lacks not”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
“If you want something you’ve never had, you have to do something you’ve never done”
- Thomas Je erson
“In order to succeed, your desire for success should be greater than your fear of failure”
- Bill Cosby
George Rodriguez Giovanni Rodriguez
“Only those who will risk going too far can possibly nd out how far they can go”
- T.S. Elliot
“The ones who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do”
- Steve Jobs
Alejandro Romero Diego Rosette
“I intend to live forever, or die trying”
- Groucho Marx
Kevin Rodriguez Steven Rodriguez Diego Rojo
“Imagination is more important than knowledge”
- Albert Einstein
“To strive, to seek, to nd, and not to yield”
- Lord Alfred Tennyson
Anthony Rueda Christopher Ruiz
My music is best understood by children and animals”
–Igor Stravinsky
“If music is the food of love, play on”
- William Shakespeare
Daniel Saavedra Jose Saca-Pujals
“We may have all come from di erent ships, but we’re on the same boat now”
- Martin Luther King Jr.
“A person who never made a mistake, never tried anything new”
- Albert Einstein
“Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing”
- Benjamin Franklin
“The art of being happy lies in the power of extracting happiness from common things”
- Henry Ward Beecher
Devon Roura Cornelis Rowaan Benzo Rudnikas
“Stay hungry, stay foolish”
- Steve Jobs
“Someone’s sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago”
- Warren Bu et
“Su er now and live the rest of your life as a champion”
- Muhammad Ali
Immediately a er receiving his graduation ring, senior Eric De Cardenas takes a moment to re ect on this much anticipated event in his life. The ring ceremony was held in October in the school gym. It was followed by a beautiful reception in the central patio.
Michael Saenz Vikram Sairam
“The price of victory is high, but so are the awards”
- Paul Bryant
“Greatness is a lot of small things done well”
- Ray Lewis
Alejandro Senior Anthony Sierra
“An artist is someone who can hold two opposing viewpoints and still remain fully functional”
- Francis Scott Fitzgerald
“I am the greatest, I said that even before I knew I was”
- Muhammad Ali
Victor Saladin
“We can easily forgive a child who fears the dark, the real tragedy is when man fears the light”
- Plato
Nicholas Sanchez
“Passion is anger and love combined”
- Robert T. Kiyosaki
Christopher Sanu
“All I ask is the to prove that money can’t make me happy”
- Spike Milligan
Jose Silva William Singer Andres Smith
“The only time we waste is the time we spend thinking we’re alone”
- Mitch Albem
“The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance”
- Socrates
Francisco Smith
“He who carries God in his heart bears heaven with him wherever he goes”
- St. Ignatius of Loyola
Nicholas Suarez
“The di erence between ordinary and extraordinary is that little extra”
- Jimmy Johnson
“Whatever you are, be a good one”
- Abraham Lincoln
Christian Suarez
“People say I’m di cult and sometimes that’s a badge of honor” - Bill Murray
Fernando Tavara
“Don’t be afraid to give up the good to go for the great”
- John D. Rockefeller
At the very beginning of the Baccaulareate Mass, senior Francisco Villafañe proudly escorts his mother Mrs. Carmen Villafañe to her seat. The Baccaulareate Mass, which included a special homily for the graduating seniors, was o ciated by Father Lewis, SJ, from the New Orleans province. The mass was held in late April. at St. Kevin’s Catholic Church.
Christian Tello Nicholas Torralba Jorge Trelles-Cabarrocas
“Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly”
- Robert F. Kennedy
“Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will”
- Mahatma Gandhi
“How come when it’s us, it’s an abortion, and when it’s chicken, it’s an omelet?”
- George Carlin
Andrew Tremblay Steven Tyler
“You can never understand one language until you understand at least two”
- Geo rey Willans
“Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of shore”
- Andre Gide
Nicolas Valdes Eduardo Valle Alexander Vazquez Vincent Vazquez Steven Vega
“The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page”
- St. Augustine of Hippo
“Something deep in my character allows me to take the hits and get on with trying to win”
- Lionel Messi
“Your love makes me strong, your hate makes me unstoppable”
- Cristiano Ronaldo
“If you’re going through hell, keep going”
- Winston Churchill
“Each year is entirely di erent”
- Tom Brady
Eduardo Velez Alejandro Verdecia Jaime Vergara Julian Vidal Francisco Villafane
“Because we have a talent for deceiving ourselves, subjectivity, may not freely reign”
–Carl Sagan
“Patience with others is love, patience with self is hope, patience with God is faith”
- Adel Bestavros
“Do not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men”
- John F. Kennedy
Gabriel Von Der Osten Sebastian Wermuth Anthony Yabor
“Wise men talk because they have something to say, fools because they have to say something”
- Plato
“Aviation is proof that, given the will, we have the capacity to achieve the impossible”
- Eddie Rickenbacker
“We make a living by what we get; we make a life by what we give”
- Winston Churchill
“Some people feel the rain. Others just get wet”
- Bob Marley
James Zamora
“If opportunity doesn’t knock, build a door”
- Milton Berle
“History will be kind to me for I intend to write it”
- Winston Churchill
Class of 2014
Carlos Salazar, Alexander Navarro and Alejandro Cortes
Andres Abate
Carlos Acevedo
Joseph Acosta
Alexander
Thomas Ahearn
Andrew Ahrens
Adrian Alepuz
Andreas Alvarez David
Henry
Jonathan Amaro-Barron Bryant
Eric
Andres Barrios
Joseph Beguiristain
Henry Benitez
Nicholas Berenguer
Andrew
Robert
Esteban Bruna
Matias Buedo
Nicholas Bustamante
Alexander
Gabriel
Daniel
Anthony
Juan
William Candela
Eric Castellanos
Michael Castellanos
Daniel Cendan
Vincent Cendan
Michael
Giovanni Cintron
Eduardo Coloma
Daniel Concepcion
Alejandro Cortes
Eugenio Cosculluela Leonardo Cosio
Jessie
Kevin Cuellar
Alexander Davila-Wollheim
Peter De Armas
Agustin De La Guardia
Robert De La Hoz
Tao De Landaburu
Boleck De Pawlikowski
Andres De Varona
Anthony Defurio
Andre Deshon
John Diaz-Silveira
Michael Diaz-Silveira
Santiago Dipilla
Eliah Dominguez
David Dukenik
Dylan Echevarria
Derek Escarra
Andres Fernandez
Andres Fernandez
Eddy Fernandez
Jordi Fernandez
Matthew Fernandez Nicholas Fernandez
Justin Ferrer
Jorge Figueras
Jorge Fleites
Jack Flood
Carlos Frisbee
Roberto Gallinar
James Garcia
Juan Garcia
Alejandro Gaston
Gabriel Gaviria
Maxwell Goldberg
Pedro Gomez-Faccio
Alejandro Gonzalez
Diego Gonzalez
Javier Gonzalez
Jorge Gonzalez
Osiel Gonzalez
Adrian Gonzalez-Camps
Marcus Gonzalez-Jacobo
Julian Guerra
David Guevara
Diego Guimaraes-Blandon
Lorenzo Guio
Armando Hassun
Albert Hermida
Alejandro Hernandez
Javier Herrera
Jonathan Herrera
Brandon Hevia
David Hondal
Alistair Humphreys
Benjamin Incera
Nicolas Iparraguirre
Alexander Isaac
Michael Jasman
Peter Kiliddjian
Mark Lagunas
Rene Lamar
Kevin Lastres
Domingo Leos
Antonio Linares
Marcos Llobell
Simon Londono
Gabriel Lopez
Manuel Lopez
Guillermo Lopez-Castro
Nicholas Lorenzo
William Lorenzo
Andres Loret De Mola
Michael Loven
Reynaldo Madiedo
Michael Magoulas
Michael Marina
Cristian Marquez
Anthony Martin
Christopher Martin
Lantz Martin
Oscar Martinez
Paul Martinez
Gabriel Martinez-Varela
Omar Masri
Samuel Maya
John Medina
Alvaro Mejer
Carlos Mencio
Alexander Mertz
George Michel
Xavier Michelena
Jason Miranda
Richard Moncada
Ricardo Montalvan
Kevin Montiel
Sebastian Munoz
Juan Naranjo
Alexander Navarro
Daniel Neptune
Nicholas Novo
Alejandro Novoa
Gabriel Nunez
Nicolas Ocampo
Christian Ortega
Pedro Ortega
William Pallissery
Julio Palomera
Jorge Paoli-Torres
Gabriel Parada
Kevin Pascual
Matthew Pastor
Jonathan Pereyra
Andres Perez
Christian Perez
Daniel Perez
Michael Perez
Nicolas Perez
Pablo Perez
Juan Perez-Costa
Genaro Poulat
Jorge Powell
David Prida
Alfredo Quiroga
Daniel Ramirez
Carlos Ramos
Jorge Reyes Christian Roatta
Adolfo Rodriguez Bryan Rodriguez Hector Rodriguez
Juan Rodriguez
Ryan Rodriguez-Mena Christian Rondon
Ralph Rosa
Carlos Rosell
Rosete Michael Ruiz
Guillermo Saade Mark Saavedra
Carlos Salazar
Christian Salinas
Richard Salinas
Sergio Sanchez
Josevicente Sanchis
Michael Sayman
Marlon Seijo
Kristopher Serrate
Ryan Sigler
Jose Sirven
Patrick Siu
Jose Smith
Steven Solis
Richard Sotolongo
Andre Suarez
Eduardo Tamborrel
Fabian Tomas Miguel Torres De Navarra
Daniel Ugas John Ukenye
Valiente Robert Vanscoy
Vargas Matthew Vega-Sanz Michael Vega-Sanz
Vidal
Class of 2015
Michael Franca, Alberto Pardo, Mariano Macias and Carlos Torres de Navarra.
Eduardo Abascal
Michel Abud-Pichardo
Victor Acevedo
Luis Acuna
Jorge Aguilera
Oreste Albelo
Gerard Albert
Ricardo Alvarez
Daniel Andujas
Miguel Angarita
Pedro Aragone
Jose Armengol
Alexander Aspuru
Ricardo Azze
Alvaro Baez
John Balloveras
Christian Thomas Baptista
Joshua Barditch
Ernest Barral
Juan Barrero
John Barroso
Miguel Basalo
Frank Battle
Nicolas Beasley
Christopher Blanco
Guillermo Bogardus
Brandon Borino
Daniel Botero
Otto Boudet
Amir Boulos
Jorge Cabrera
Pablo Cabrera
Enrique Caldera
Eric Calero
Alexander Candia
Rafael Cariello
Raul Carreras
Matthew Casamayor
Andres Casariego
Francisco Castellanos
Jose Chan
Andres Chavez
Jose Chegwin
Steven Chikuji
Andres Chinchilla
Joseph Cirera
Alberto Cosio
Jose Cosio
“Irrelevant” by Ms. Sosa
- Eduardo Cruz
“Fellas, it’s common knowledge” by Mr. Martinez
- Eric Calero
Eduardo Cruz
Ezequiel Cuevas
Javier Davila-Wollheim
Juan De Campos
Gaston De Cardenas
Nicolas De La O
“Stupid iPads” by Mr. Toledo
- Raul Carreras
“I am not a policeman” by Ms. Fernandez
- Kevin Guzman
Alejandro Diaz
Matthew Diaz
Isaac Dominguez
Max Dominguez
Christian Dopico
Hugo Duenas
William Elias
Julian Esain
Jose Escallon
Andrew Escobar
Christian Estrada
Nicholas Fajardo
Ryan Falcon
Andres Fernandez
Benny Fernandez
Manuel Fernandez
Nicolas Fernandez
Levi Fernandez-Rocha
what teacher quote will you never forget? After All...
After All...
what is the best/worst part about driving?
Liam Fernandez-Rocha
Augusto Fonte
Hector Formoso-Murias
Christian Fowler
Michael Franca
Stephane Francoeur
“I like the freedom to go wherever I want.”
- Anthony Seicentos
“I can’t stand drivers without manners.”
“I can’t stand the Miami tra c.”
“I don’t like people who cut me o .”
Francesco Fuentes
Julio Galvez
Horacio Garcia
Jose Garcia
Nikulas Garcia
Calixto Garcia-Velez
Giovanni Gaviria
Louis Giordano
Francisco Gomez
Michael Gomez
Cesar Gonzalez
Julian Gonzalez
Dante Gonzalez-Abreu
Javier Guerrero
Ryan Guso
Jonathan Gutierrez
Ryan Gutierrez
Kevin Guzman
- Gabriel Rovira
- Jose Chegwin
- Antonio Montadas
Erik Halvorssen
Alejandro Hasegawa
Justin Hassun
Adrian Hermida
Daniel Hernandez
Marcello Hernandez
Javier Hernando
Brandon Herrera
Andres Hidulgo
Andres Ibarra
Rashad Ismail
Enrique Iturregui
Juan Javier
Carlos Jimenez
Andres Juan
Carlos Juan
Mikel Juan
Alexander Keenan
Nicholas Keenan
Leonardo Lamarche
Joshua Lascano
Lorenzo Laurita
Michael Leyva
Bernardo Lima
Michael Limia
Jose Llanes
Alberto Llorente
Saul Lola
Christian Lopez
Cristian Lopez
Kevin Lopez
William Lopez
Jose Lopez-Varela
Christopher Lorenzo
Manuel Lovo
Mariano Macias
Jose Maguina
Marcos Marimon
Armando Marquez
Carlos Martinez
Gustavo Medina
Joseph Menendez
Enrique Mercado
Carlos Michel
Sebastian Milanes
Ander Mion-Bet
Fernando Molina
Antonio Montadas
Felipe Montes De Oca
Matthew Mullin-Garcia
Andrew Muriedas
Matthew Murphy
Albert Naon
Alexander Novoa
Osvaldo Nunez
Santiago Nunez
Joseph Ordonez
Carlos Pablos-Aguirre
Anthony Padura
Alexandros Pantazis
Alberto Pardo
Alejandro Pedrozo IV
Jose Pelegri
Ignacio Perez
Johnathon Perez
Joseph Perez
Marcos Perez
Christian Perez De Corcho
Carlos Perez-Heydrich
Anthony Perez-Pino
Robert Pertierra
Nicholas Peterson
Steven Peterson
Oscar Pinate
Steven Placeres Hanler Portal
Andrew Powell
Gunther Prussing
Marc Pugliese
Robert Pulles
Michael Qureshi
Jake Ramirez
Michael Ramon
Jonathan Rey Brooks
Jesus Rincon
Alexander Roa
Tyler Roberts
Benjamin Rodriguez
Casey Rodriguez
Jake Rodriguez
Jorge Rodriguez
Luis Rodriguez
Nicholas Rodriguez
Richard Rodriguez
Ryan Rodriguez
Agustin Rodriguez Granda
Nikolas Rojas
Nicolas Ros
Javier Rosario
Gabriel Rovira
Tito Ruiz
Inigo Sagarduy
Nicolas Salazar
Gabriel San Roman
Alec Sanchez
Andres Sanchez
Eric Sanchez
Manuel Sanchez
Wilfredo Sanchez
Andres Santiago
Eduardo Santos
Jonathan Sanz-Perez
Osvaldo Sarduy
Alejandro Seda
Anthony Seicentos
Brandon Sierra
Brandon Silvestry
Daniel Simms
Carlos Solanilla
Luis Suarez
Michael Tefel
Nicholas Tenorio
Walter Tomasino
Carlos Torres De Navarra
Alejandro Torvis
Cristian Trujillo
Nicholas Ureta
Guillermo Vadell
Giovanni Valdes Guicciardi
Jonathan Varela
Karol Vargas
Luis Vargas
Nicholas Vazquez
Alexandr Vento
Alexander Vidal
Lucas Vigil
Roberto Villasante
Jose Vina
Robert Waechter
Mark White
Jerry Williams
Robert Woodry
Brandon Zaldivar
Roger Zaldivar
Class of 2016
Carlos Rodriguez, Fernando Pujols and Ted Huertas.
Edel Abad
Gabriel Abril
Dorian Acosta
Erich Aguilar
Julio Aira
Alexander Alepuz
Wilfredo Allen
Victor Alvarez
David Andreu
Patrick Arean
Pablo Arevalo
Nicholas Arias
Andres Artime
Jonathan Avila
Kristian Batista
Jason Belisario
Tomas Bello
Michael Beovides
Christopher Billoch
Daniel Bogardus
Arturo Bonnet
Thomas Borell
Alessandro Borges
Andres Borroto
Alexander Boza
Rodrigo Bustamante
Gabriel Cabrera
Michael Cairo
Orlando Calas
Mark Candela
Juan Carabeo-Nieva
Emilio Cardenal
Benjamin Cardenas
Alec Castillo
Anthony Castro
Andrew Cecol
Alfredo Cepero
Andres Cesin
Sebastian Chamorro
Christian Collazo
Andres Concepcion
Alfredo Consuegra
Nicholas Coronado Luis Corps
Carlos Cristobal
Eric Cruz
Daniel Dager
Joaquin De Goytisolo
“I will not procrastinate”
- John Powell
“I will do all my homework”
- Ted Huertas
“I will raise my GPA”
- Richard Perez
“I will study for all my tests and quizzes”
- Daniel Silva
Francisco De La Camara
Alfredo De Zayas
Armand Del Castillo
Christian Del Castillo
Gabriel Diaz
Ignacio Diaz Garza
Andres Echeverria
Jason Egusquiza
John Egusquiza
Jorge Escobar
Robert Espinosa
David Fager
Alexander Falla
Alexander Fals
Matthew Feiler
Alexander Fernandez
Javier Fernandez
Kevin Fernandez
Max Fernandez
Javier Fonseca
Christopher Font
Harry Formoso-Murias
Benjamin Frisbee
Joseph Fuentes
what will you do better in high school?
After All...
After All...
how is high school more di cult than middle school?
Edward Fuller
Basilio Garcia
Gabriel Garcia
Jonathan Garcia
Joseph Garcia
Joseph Garcia
“There’s more homework”
- William Kindelan
“Teachers are more strict”
- Gabriel Cabrera
Nicolas Garcia
Daniel Garcia-Tuñon
Patricio Garzon
Benjamin Gilbert
Jorge Gomez
Alejandro Gonzalez
Christian Gonzalez
David Gonzalez
Gabriel Gonzalez
Kevin Gonzalez
Michael Gonzalez
Otniel Gonzalez
- Giovanni Menocal “Teachers have more expectations”
“Everything counts”
- Ernesto Ruiz-Sierra
Ricardo Gonzalez
Tomas Gonzalez
Alberto Gonzalez Del Valle
Dary Groblacher
Pablo Guerra
Alejandro Guerrero
Andres Guisasola
Fernando Guruceaga
Albert Gutierrez
Daniel Halphen
John Hermida
Adrian Hernandez
Alexander Hernandez
Alexander Hernandez
Christopher Hernandez
Justin Hernandez
Luke Hernandez
Alejandro Hillman
Daniel Hondal
Ted Huertas
John Hyland
Manrique Iriarte
Christopher Jauregui
Ariel Jimenez
Gabriel Jimenez
Jose Jimenez
William Kindelan
Claudio Laratelli
Kristian Lastre
Adrian Lazo
Sebastian Leiter
Kevin Lemos
Nicholas Llobell
Jaime Lopez
Michael Lopez
Luis Lopez-Cabrera
Alfredo Lopez-Sotillo
Lucas Lorenzo
Daniel Lugo
Sebastian Manrique
Francisco Marcos
Steven Marin
Rafael Marmol
Andres Marquez
Luis Marquez
Humberto Marrero
Roberto Martell
Alfonso Martinez
Daniel Martinez
Ryan Martinez
Thomas Mas
Erik Masis
Cristian Matos
Albert Maury
Conor Meagher
Luis Mejer
Daniel Mejia
Enrique Mendia
Christopher Menendez
Giovanni Menocal
Giancarlo Mesa
Marcelo Mion
Santiago Molero
Liam Mullin-Garcia
Joshua Munoz
Ryan Navarro
Christian Norniella-Burke
Francisco Odon
Nicholas Ordieres
Jonathan Orta
Oscar Ortega
Christian Ortiz
Lucas Osorio
Daniel Pacios
Jorge Padron
Francisco Palacios
Sebastian Paoli-Torres
Dylan Pareja
Alexander Parekh
Brian Pascual
Christian Perez
Richard Perez
Ryan Perez
Alexander Piccolo
Fernando Piñera
Giancarlo Pinto
Adrian Pombo
Daniel Portuondo
John Powell
Matthew Powell
Peter Prieto
Daniel Puente
Diego Puig-Corve
Fernando Pujals
Christopher Quintero
Ghulian Ramos
Kevin Ramos
Dajour Resiere
Adrian Rey
Tavish Rice
Gabriel Rigueiro
Holman Rios
Diego Rivera
Mario Robaina
Nicolas Roca
Carlos Rodriguez
Daniel Rodriguez
Francisco Rodriguez
Justin Rodriguez
Justin Rodriguez
Osvaldo Rodriguez
Ryan Rodriguez
Manuel Rojas-Romero
Daniel Romeu
Jose Rubio
Alejandro Ruiz
Ernesto Ruiz-Sierra
Mathew Salas
David Salazar
Steven Santos
Ignacio Sapetnitzky
Renato Scerpella
Kyle Schaeppi Souza
Andres Signoret
Daniel Silva
Daniel Silva
Daniel Sixto
Joshua Sliva
Carlos Somarriba
Carlos Suarez
Nicolas Tamborrel
Daniel Tejada
Nicolas Thompson
Zane Todywala
Nicholas Tootle
Julio Torrente
Ryan Torres
Gabriel Tozo
Antonio
Nicolas
Joel
Jean
Juanbruno
Jerry Trujillo
Kevin Valdes
Valencia
Vega
Pablo Venegas
Andres Vila
Frederico Vivacqua
Nicolas Waterhouse
Dominic Wermuth
Julio Yanes
Yanez
Zamora
Zayas
Manuel Zuniga
Class of 2017
Nicolas Aguilar
Michael Ahearn
Cristian Alonso
Carlos Arazoza
Rafael Arbex-Murut
Andres Arenas
Jose Arevalo
Francesco Armstrong
Stephen Artigues
Christopher Avallone
Michael Balbuena
Andres Balcazar
Kevin Baloyra
Alejandro Barnola
Spencer Barreira
Manuel Barreto
Matthew Bec
Oscar Berlanga
Alain Bonvecchio
Michael Borell
Antoine Brandt
Matthew Bravo
Edward Briscoe
Daniel Brown
Adrian Bruna
Christopher Caballero
Michael Cabeza
Lucas Cabrera-Ramon
Steven Calles
Christian Carr
Alejandro Carriazo
Juan Carrillo
Nicholas Carvajal
Alejandro Chalela
Bill Chan
Daniel Chavez
Jun Hyung Cho
Alejandro Cicero
Christian Cognigni
Daniel Coulombe
Andre Cozier
Mathew Crespo
Nicholas Curry
Richard De Aguiar
Daniel De La Fe
Christian Delgado
Andres Diaz
Marcus Diaz
Richard Diaz
Austin Dominguez
Carlos Dominguez
Anthony Duarte
Jossan Elias
Alejandro Fernandez
Guillermo Fernandez
Rafael Gallardo
Carlos Gallo
Jordan Galvez
Brian Garcia
Javier Garcia
Pedro Garcia
Maximiliano Garcia Del Pozo
Daniel Garrastazu
Lucas Gomez
Luis Gomez
Zachary Gomez
Michael Goncalves
Nicolas Gonzalez
Esteban Guio
Adrian Hernandez
Javier Hernandez
Justin Hernandez
Miguel Hernandez
Nicolas Hernandez
Alejandro Hunter
Alexander Iduate
Jovier Jimenez
Pedro Jimenez
Jose Juez
Gabriel Kasabdji
Pablo Kurzan
Ricardo Labrada
Erick Labrador
Daniel Lage
Dante Lang
Carlos Lara
Joshua Lara
Kevin Lemus
Agustin Leos
Jacob Lopez
Patricio Lopez
Victor Lopez De Mendoza
Matias Lorenzo
Joseph Luzarraga
Carlos Machado
Alejandro Maduro
Patrick Maher
Carlos Marin
Tristen Marin
Peter Martin
Daniel Martinez
David Martinez
Rafael Martinez-Varela
Luis Mathison
Javier Mederos
Sebastian Melendez
Francisco Melo
Francisco Menendez
Jonathan Menendez
Manuel Menendez
Norberto Menendez
Maurice Milton
Jorge Miro-Quesada
Carlos Moreno
Michael Moreno
Nicolas Munoz
Richard Munoz
Santiago Munoz
Jandrice Nacier
Marc Novas
Diego Ortega
Daniel Otero-Pfae e
Joseph Parlade
Carlos Peralta
Jacob Perea
Andres Perez
Daniel Perez
Patrick Perez
Albert Perez-Abreu
Raphael Perez-Blanco
Marco Perosch
Andres Pinate
Javier Pita
Lucas Pola
Andres Poveda
Michael Prado
Roberto Pupo
Alexander Pusch
Juan Ramirez
Franco Rivera
Aaron Rodriguez
Alfonso Rodriguez
Andrew Rodriguez
Christian Rodriguez
Javier Rodriguez
Mario Rodriguez
Juan Rodriguez Verde
Daniel Romero
Teobaldo Rosell
Alejandro Sanchez
Joseph Sanchez
Stefano Santamaria
Adrian Santana
Daniel Sarmiento-Urrego
Eduardo Scheuren
Gabriel Seda
Sean Sempere
Nicholas Senior
Felipe Sequeira
Christian Silva
Kevin Simauchi
Christopher Siu
Alejandro Smith
Sebastian Suarez
Michael Sueiro
Federico Tamborrel
Mateus Tordin
Javier Torres De Navarra
Brandon Torricella
Gabriel Trastoy
Santiago Ugas
Carlos Uribe
Carlos Valderrama
Jorge Valdes
Carlos Valverde
Matias Vasquez
Carlos Vazquez
Gabriel Vazquez
Daniel Velasquez Neira
Kristian Ventura
Nicolas Vila
Christian Winch
Conor Wolfe
Class of 2018
Javier Arazoza, Carlos Grande, and Christian Martinez
Leonardo Abate
Nicholas Abunassar
Guillermo Amore
Ian Anderson
Gabriel Aparicio
Michael Aparicio
Javier Arazoza
Juan-Pablo Arenas
Alec Arrizurieta
Raul Banos
Anthony Baradat
Jonathan Barditch
Ivan Barral
Francisco Barrera
Christian Bayo
Maxwell Belisario
Jeremy Bencomo
Nicholas Besada
Alessandro Billau
Eric Blanco
Jose Blanco
Angelo Borges
Javier Bustamante
Ivan Cabrera
Miguel Cala
Nicolas Candela
Andre Caputo
Kyle Castellanos
Nicolas Castellanos
Robert Castro
Victor Castro
Alejandro Cepero
Sebastian Chamizo
Gerald Chang
Jose Chaviano
Drew Chinigo
Lucas Christie
Sebastian Clark
Gabriel Cobas
Joshua Collins
Alberto Conti
Alejandro Conti
Daniel Corrada
Alejandro Corzo
Jaime Cosio
Joseph Cruz
Gabriel Dacal
Marcos De La Hoz
Diego De La Vega
Christian De Los Santos
Cory Del Prado
Eduardo Delgado
Federico Diago
Carlos Diaz
Luis Diaz
Andres Dones
Fraga
Juan Carlos Garrastazu Mark Garrigo
Daniel
Andres Krikorian
Gabriel Krikorian
Nicholas Krikorian
Eric Labrador
Roberto Lacasa
Juan Lam
Christian Lamar
Luis Larios
Eric Lastres
Noel Lazaro
Jon Lemos
Carlos Lenis
Claudio Leyva
Jesus Linares
Rafael Llaneza
Sebastian Llano
Maximiliano Llorente
Ignacio Lopez-Castro
Robert Lopez-Irizarry
Justin Louden
Lorenzo Luaces
Brandon Lubian
Timothy Mackle
Jonathan Manrique
Hugo Marin
Rodrigo Marin
Christopher Marrero
Matthew Martin
Christian Martinez
Emilio Mascaro
Ricardo Mayo
Andres Maza
Alejandro Mejer
Eric Mena
Richard Morales
Bernardo Moro
Jorge Moscoso
Christopher Moustafa
James Mullis
Rodrigo Munoz
Allan Navarro
Daniel Neret
Tyler Newlin
Carlos Novo
Diego Nunez
Guilherme Oliveira
Ivan Pachon
Alejandro Pacios
Alec Palacio
Felipe Pardo
Juan Pereira
Diego Perera
Alfred Perez
Andres Perez
Mario Perez
Nicholas Perez-Blanco
Philip Pingree
Daniel Pinto
Jose Plasencia
Bernardo Poulat
Hunter Prindle
Alec Priscal
Deiter Prussing
Matthew Pulles
Javan Rice
Sean Riera
Andres Rodriguez
Jason Rodriguez
Lucas Rodriguez
Nicolas Rodriguez
Raul Rodriguez
Evan Rojas
Carlos Romero
Juan Rubio
Max Salazar
William San Pedro
Daniel Sanchez
Jacob Sanchez
Alessandro Sardina
Javier Saumell
Adrian Senra
Michael Sexton
Francisco Sibauste
Kearan Singh
Andres Smith
Nicolas Smith
Anthony Soler
Carlos Sosa
Nicolas Sosa
Harrison Stoker
Milan Suarez
Ylian Suarez
Christian Tinoco
Nicolas Tobon
Jose Toledo
Daniel Tormo
Roger Torres
Alejandro Toyos-Sitjes
Mark Trimino
Placido Valdes
David Velasco
Santiago Venegas
Lucas Verdeja
Enrique Vila
Lucas Villa-Tena
Ignacio Villasmil
Class of 2019
Tyler Abella
Anthony Abinader
Dominic Abreu
Ignacio Aguilar
Cesar Aguzzi
Armando Albert
Alberto Arazoza
Pedro Arbex-Murut
Carlos Ariza
Gabriel Arteaga
Carlos Avila-Mata
Orlando Baella
Rodrigo Barquero
Jack Barrios
Manuel Becerra
Giancarlo Benitez
Ryan Bermudez
Luciano Bettocchi
Sion Bissessar
Lucas Blanco
Manuel Bruzos
Daniel Bustos
Jose Bustos
Julian Caballero
Guillermo Cadima
Julian Calas
Daniel Cantens
Javier Canto
Eduardo Cardonne
Nicholas Casariego
Aramis Castano
Andres Chiossone
Francesco Cimo
Jacob Collins
Daniel Corzo
Robert Curbelo
Gabriel De Zendegui
Gianpaolo Defelice
Ian Degwert
Andrew Deiters
Erik Delgado
Gonzalo Dorta
Dustin Duprey
Carlos Echenique
Lukas Escapil
Daniel Esteban
Brian Feal
Jonathan Feiler
Kyle Ferbeyre
Mario Fernandez-Riera
Victor Ferraz
Gabriel Gallardo
Christopher Galliano
Gregory Gallinar
Adrian Garcia
Lucas Garcia
Orlando Garcia
Jose Garcia-Chirino
David Garzon
Manuel Gil
Victor Giorgini
Andres Gomez
Carlos Gonzalez
Daniel Gonzalez
Patricio Gonzalez
Roberto Gonzalez
Santiago Gonzalez Irigoyen
Andre Hall
Seth Hart
Carlos Hernandez
Raul Herrero
Sean Hickey
Alejandro Huembes
Carlos Huembes
Kyle Huynh
Jorge Jimenez
Zachary Jimenez
Thomas Kurzan
Marco Lanz
Andres Lara
Andres Larrea
Samuel Linares
Michael Lopez
Jorge Lopez-Cabrera
Sebastian Lopez-Ibanez
Federico Lozano
Gabriel Lugo
Jorge Machado
Rodrigo Madiedo
Daniel Maduro
Nelson Marin
Javier Mariscal
Enrique Martin
Kevin Martin
Matthew Martin
Christopher Menendez
Michael Menendez
David Meza
Juan Miguez
Lucas Miguez
Guillermo Molero
Christopher Montero
Matthew Morales
Peter Morales
Brandon Moran
Gabriel Moreno
Juan Moreno
Matthew Moreno
Michael Morera
Nicholas Mullis
Guillermo Najera Sweeney
Diego Navarro
Rodrigo Nieto
Joaquin Novoa
Christian Ojeda
Lucas Oliveira
Lucas Otero
Jorge Paez
Alejandro Pardo
Gabriel Pardo
Adrian Paredes
Nicholas Patricios
Christian Paz
Michael Penaranda
Carlos Perez
Juan Perez
Maximo Perez
Nicholas Perez
Ricardo Perez
Sebastian Perez
Gabriel Perez De Corcho
Gabriel Polo
Christopher Ponce
Jose Prendes
Sebastian Prieto
Andres Puello
Guillermo Quintero
Nicholas Quintero
David Raez
Sebastian Rafuls
Aaron Ramirez
Ethan Ramirez
Julian Ramirez
Mason Rapp
Bryan Reyes
Bruce Ribbeck
Sebastian Roa
Alec Rodriguez
Edward Rodriguez
Jorge Rodriguez
Jose Rodriguez
Julien Rodriguez
Michael Rodriguez
Michael Rodriguez
Joseph Rubio
Rafael Ruiz
Raul Sague
Alejandro Salas
Virgilio Sanchez
William Sanchez
Damian Sangles
Josep Sendra
Antonio Serrano
Eric Silva
Alejandro Suarez
Jorge Suarez
Nicholas Suarez
Nicolas Suarez
Daniel Sueiro
Stefan Todywala
Waldo Toyos
Christian Trastoy
Patrizio Trippetti
Anthony Vadell
Nicholas Valdes
Jasen Velken
Matthew Villalba
Alejandro Villarreal
Nicolas Vurgait
Matthew Watkins
Jacob Wutzler
Julian Zulueta
Andres Zuniga
Facul& Staff
School President Father Pedro Suarez, SJ and civics teacher Mr. Eugene Zoller. Mr. Zoller retired at the end of the school year.
Gerard Albert Anthony Alexander Maria Alonso Pedro Añon Annette Anton
Angel Aparicio Arnaldo Arencibia Paola Arencibia
Roberto Artiz Diego Ayala
Eric Ballesteros
Claudia Basso
Andres Blanco
Antonio Botella
Carlos Bravo
George Busse Patricia Bustamante Heriberto Cabada Carola Calderin Johnny Calderin
Miriam Cambo-Martinez Teresita Campos
Maria Cartaya
Maria Elena Cartaya
Javier Castillo
Enriqueta Cespedes
Jose na Chirino Charles Cleveland
Patrick Collins Maria Consuegra Susana Corzo Marta Cosculluela Miguel Couto
Setting up the daily morning news show, juniors Kevin Montiel, Alejandro Paneda, and senior Jose Roca make the nal adjustments to begin taping the broadcast. The broadcast students prepared the show 30 minutes before the rst bell rang every morning. They had only 44 minutes a er that to produce, record, and render the entire show so that it would be ready for viewing during homeroom.
In a pre-production meeting, seniors Jose Saca-Pujols, Nicholas Fernandez, and Alberto Maza go over their shot list, schedules, and storyboards. The lm students had to secure numerous details before beginning to actually record the material.
After All ...
the details
By; David Hondal
Everyone goes through reading the newspaper or yearbook and watching the news shows, but few ever wonder what goes on behind the scenes?
Before students are able to watch WBLN, there are many details that have to be worked on. The script must be written, the team must set up the audio and visual equipment, then the recording must be completed in time for the students to make it to their second period.
“Before every show, it gets really hectic. Once the show is finished, I feel relieved,” said Junior Nicholas Cambo.
No one really notices how much work it takes to make a yearbook or write a newspaper either. It takes a lot of hard work and attention to detail.
Everyday the staff goes in to class to make a layout, write copy, and take the pictures. You have to make sure everything is correct before the
work is printed. They never get a day off.
The film class is no different. The attention to detail it takes to make a movie is unbelievable. They have to make sure every scene is perfect, and they have to map it out ahead of time. Then add the attention to setting, lighting, and the time limitations. It is safe to say that this department is definitely detail oriented.
Checking out the books in the library, sophomore John Borosso prefers looking for research information the old fashioned way. Although the technology offered many online databases, some students preferred to sift through actual pages of data.
the research papers
By; David Hondal
The one advice returning students will always give to current students is: get ready for the college papers. Fully aware of the college demands, the English department always worked hard at sharpening the researching and writing skills in students.
The ever intimidating research paper process begins as early as the sixth grade. However, it is not until the ninth grade that students are required to write an entire paper for their English class.
Students pay numerous visits to the library to learn about the databases with Mr. Eric Ballesteros where to get the right information. Students can choose to read through a book or look for electronic sources such as e-books.
”I remember writing my first research paper. I thought I would never finish,” said junior Oscar Vila. Then came the really hard part: writing the paper. Some students it in one sitting while others opted a week long event that included a minutes here or there of typing time.
Regardless of which method the student used, the research paper was a definite part of the high school experience, and a wake up call for those heading off to college.
With their iPads in tow, juniors Robert Brown and Alejandro Cortes, locate their sources for their chosen research topics. The library offered numerous electronic databases that could be accessed through the iPads.
While looking up information, freshmen Lucas Hernandez, Brian Pascual, Daniel Hondal, and John Powell, gather the information necessary to write their research paper. Freshman year officially started the journey into writing research papers, proper citation, and the infamous Turnitin.com.
the words of advice After All...
By; Jorge Pola
When a student has a problem, question, or just wants to talk, there is no better place to go to than the guidance department. The guidance department consists of three different departments: personal, spiritual, and college.
Personal guidance stretches from academics to any complications or worries in a student’s life. Mr. Jorge Muñoz-Bustamante was one of the seven counselors available to all students, and one of the most popular on campus.
The counselors are there everyday of the week to help students with any dilemmas they may have.
Sometimes students want to take a different approach to their problems or situations, and that’s where the spiritual guidance comes in handy. Spiritual counselors, such as Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ and Sister Maria Cartaya, help kids relieve their stress while helping them to strive in their day to day spiritual life.
“Without their help I would not have learned how to study,” said eighth grader Tristen Marin.
Lastly, the rather new department of college guidance has been helping students deal with the stress and complications of getting into their preferred schools. Part of their job
was to make sure that all the college deadlines were met and that college bound students followed the track to getting into the university of their choice.
“The counselors are one of the best resources we have at school,” said junior James Williams. “Since the sixth grade they have helped me and taught me ways on staying disciplined in my works, as well as the spiritual counselors who comfort me when I am stressed.”
Despite not being an academic department, the guidance personnel were a part of every student’s life.
Father Jorge Rojas, SJ speaks with sixth grader Matthew Watkins during the homeroom period. The spiritual counselors were always on hand for the students to nurture their faith and ensure their spiritual growth.
The chair of the counseling department, Mrs. Teresa Gutierrez sits down and chats with sixth grader Gregory Gallinar. Counselors were always known for listening and speaking to students throughout the day.
After All ... the skits we performed
By: Jorge Pola
Middle school drama was definitely an active class. Mr. Francisco Padura, the middle school drama teacher, made sure that there was very little sitting still and lots of movement throughout the class. This was one of the few classes where yelling was acceptable, and were often students discouraged from sitting still. One of the most popular activities in class were the skits.
Mr. Padura challenged his students to get out of their comfort zone, and have a little fun while learning about drama and its different aspects.
“For a quiet person like myself, this class helps a lot,” said freshman Jonathan Garcia. “Mr. Padura will definitely make you get out of your shell.”
Another popular activity among middle schoolers in drama was the Machine. This activity helped incorporate physical action with vocal action, using repetition. Multiple students from the class stood around in an assigned positions and a set of golf balls was passed around in a certain motion by each student while they were making their own unique sounds. The end result was a human clockwork mechanism where all students worked together to create one single machine.
“I love this class, it’s cool, fun, and I learn a lot about acting and drama at the same time, its a class that I personally look forward to through out my day,” said seventh grader Ian Escarra.
It is clear to see that the drama classes emphasized and encouraged the thinking outside the box.
Performing “The Machine”, seventh grader Kyle Gomez participates in Mr. Padura’s class. This activity was by far one of the most popular among the seventh graders in drama class.
While performing his monologue, seventh grader Eric Garcia uses all the acting techniques taught by Mr. Padura to address the audience. Aside from stage presence and entonation, the monologue helped many students to get out of their shells.
After All...
Guillermo Pujols
Last year with the implementation of the iPads, the math department set out to look for a way to combine math and technology. Some even doubted that math could be implemented with these devices and had legitimate concerns about taking notes and doing homework.
The sixth grade math faculty found an easy way for students to get the math practice they needed while having fun. Three letters said all: IXL.
IXL was a web based program that generated specific types of math problems for students.
the math problems
Mr. Charles Curry, sixth grade math teacher and proud proponent of this program, would let the students know which problems to tackle, and the students would do them in class and from home as homework.
“Using IXLs for homework was long and tiring, but it really helped us review what we learned in class and prepare for the tests,” said six grader Joaquin Novoa.
The way IXLs work is students attempt to answer a series of math problems correctly. Starting at one, each answer was worth a number of points. The value of the questions decreased as the level of difficulty
increased. The only draw back was the removal of points for every question the student got wrong. The goal was to try and reach the highest point value per assignment.
“Although there are so many IXLs, I think it will pay off later when I move on to the next grade,” said sixth grader Julian Ramirez.
IXLs were a great tool for learning and incorporating technology in the classroom. Most students agreed that as it stated in the main page of the IXL program, math learning could be fun.
Six grade math teacher Mr. Charles Curry goes over the lesson before assigning a series of IXLs for students to practice. The sixth graders awaited eagerly with their iPads ready. IXLs could be accessed trough the iPad and helped students to increase their math potential in a fun manner.
After All...
By: Guillermo Pujols
Sometime in mid October the central patio was brought to life with color, music, and some amazing food. Last year, the Modern Language Department added a great component to the classic annual celebration. The Fair hosted individual student performances from di erent Spanish classes.
One of the most stellar performances of the night was the dancing of the Macarena by one of the six grade Spanish classes. The students were a little nervous at rst, but they warmed up to the audience in no time.
“The fair was fantastic,” said Brandon Moran. “My favorite part was when we released the balloons and the festival began.”
Although Spanish was the
the food, fun, and festivities
dominant language of the night, it wasn’t the only language spoken at the Modern Language Fair. In addition to the Spanish performances, the French National anthem was performed by Ms. Alonso’s French class.
There were food booths surrounding the central patio from every country. Booths managed by students from all Spanish classes o ered tasty treats from the di erent countries around Latin America.
Another major change to the Modern Language Fair was its location. Last year the Spanish fair was not held in its customary home in the Ignatian Center of the Arts. It was celebrated in the new central patio which was decorated with colorful
piñatas and streamers. This venue worked extremely well for the fair due to its open space and the beautiful decorations. There was also a beautiful stage with a backdrop of cardboard trees that gave the scene a sense of life.
“My favorite part of this fair was that there was more space and it was easier to move around,” said sophomore Carlos Jimenez.
The new venue, the addition of new performances and the availability of food for all contributed to a great success that night. All those who went would say that it was a great production over all and gave everyone a night to remember for years to come.
Dressed in traditional Peruvian garb, sophomores Alejandro Torvis, Brandon Zaldivar and Nicholas Fernandez serve gallo pinto and carne asada to the crowds of people. Other goodies at this booth included churros and traditional soda from the South American country.
Sixth grade students from Ms. Alicia Fariña’s Spanish class kick off the Modern Language Fair with the release of hundreds of balloons in the school’s central patio. The central patio was beautifully decorated with colorful piñatas made by the students.
By: James Garcia
After All...
Health and P.E. have always been regarded with great importance in the school. The physical education department is a good contributor to keeping the students healthy and in top shape.
The best way to do this was with the numerous physical tests given by the coaches. In addition, there was information shared with the students about the different diets that would best suit each particular student.
P.E. also gave students better knowledge about athletics with the large variety of sports that were taught and practiced throughout the year. Students were always tested on the rules and regulations of those sports to ensure their knowledge of the game.
“It was fun playing different sports with my
the miles we ran
classmates and uncovering some talents I didn’t know I had in these different sports, “ said junior Michael Ruiz.
The one thing that every student and alumni always remembered about P.E. was the miles, and miles that they ran in all their years in the school.
The mile for me at the start was always a challenge... “ ”
The mile test was always dreadfully disliked by students due to the fact that the grade was determined by the time you came
in to the finish line. The coaches would make sure that their students would make the time by practicing before the mile test was given. This was also a good example of how the coaches put their students in tip-top shape by making them run several miles per week.
“The mile for me at the start was always a challenge but due to all the time that we practiced, by the time the test came I was definitely ready,” said freshman Fernando Pujals.
The culmination of the running of the miles came in January when P.E. students participated in the ING marathon in Downtown Miami.
Though the mile wasn’t always enjoyed by all students and very few looked forward to running them, in the long run it was worth every step.
In their PE classes, a group of freshmen run laps around the track. By running one mile just about every day, students in PE classes would amass close to 25 miles in the rst semester alone. The last mile was completed in the ING marathon that took place in January every year.
With Coach Eduardo Fraga measuring time, seventh grader Dieter Prussing completes his laps around the track. Even when focusing on swimming or waterpolo, students were still required to run in the track.
After All...
By: James Garcia
Everyone knows that the best part of the science program is the chance for hands-on learning. Every year, from life science to AP chemistry, labs were crucial experiences that would always be remembered. In the sixth and seventh grades, labs were usually fun and normally dealt with colors or holiday-themes.
“My favorite lab was the crystals lab in Ms. Lascano’s class,” said sixth grader Manuel Gil.
In high school the theme of the labs included looking at blood
the science experiments
samples and finding out ways to use chemicals to change the composition of an item. Students worked their way up until reaching the most challenging lab, which was the Lab Practical exam in anatomy and physiology during the junior or senior year. For this lab there was only one way to prepare and that was to pay close attention and do all other labs correctly. The way this lab practical exam worked was that at the beginning of the class students received a blank page with 50 lines
for answers. They then received instructions to walk around the different lab stations in segments of 30 seconds.
In thirty seconds students had to answer questions ranging from the bones of a human to the organs in a rat. Once they visited all the stations and answered the questions, students turned in their tests and hoped for the best.
“Labs give you an insight and a different perspective of the material presented in class,” said junior Javier Gonzalez.
During a lab, science teacher Ms. Lidice Lascano shows sixth graders Daniel Corzo and David Meza how to measure density in a test tube. Sixth graders had numerous labs throughout the year including the infamous Halloween experiment put together by Mr. Padilla and other science teachers.
Senior Albert Naya and junior Simon Londono look over previous labs to prepare for an upcoming lab practical. The lab practical tested the students on their ability to identify di erent objects on numerous slides.
By: Robert VanScoy
After All ....
Geography has always been a class of maps. The iPad brought to the plate something that had never been seen before. Students were able to use their iPads to learn about maps in a fun and creative way.
Geography teacher Mr. Eduardo Delgado, discovered one of the more popular apps for map learning. This app facilitated map quizzing for the entire class, and also put a di erent spin on the traditional roll out mapa mundi.
”I really like using the iPad for class. Playing a game that helps me study has given me the best results the day of the test,” said seventh grader Joshua Ferrer.
the people and places
For the most powerful e ect, many students opted for Google Earth, which really placed them anywhere they wanted to go in the world. The 3-D feature helped students to closely examine land masses, rivers, ranges, deserts, and things many students would not have been able to experience rst hand.
In contrast to the technology, some teachers opted for the more traditional route. This was the case of the ninth grade world history classes taught by Dr. Orlando Gutierrez. His students brought home-made armors and weapons to school to prepare for a Phalanx battle.
A group of freshmen, including
To emphasize and bring the lesson to life, social studies teacher Dr. Orlando Gutierrez had his students dress in home made armor and engage in a battle formation known as the Phalanx. The battle was an intense one which resulted in many broken shields and a better understanding of the pressure that came with commanding an army.
With iPad in hand, geography teacher Mr. Eduardo Delgado leads his class through their rst run of the new app U.S. Puzzle. U.S. Puzzle was an app that allowed the students to take quizzes on maps of the world, furthering their understanding of the world they lived in.
Michael Cairo, were in charge of their own make-believe troops that followed the leader’s commands. The commands had been taught during class prior to the event. While battling in the school’s central patio, Cairo was able to practice what he learned earlier in class from Dr. Gutierrez.
“The Phalanx formation was very di cult to replicate, but in the end we all worked together and defeated our enemies,” said Cairo.
One way or the other, the teachers made history and the world came to life for their students.
After All ....
With all of the stress and excitement of the average school day, having a day of re ection was something that just about every student looked forward to.
Led by students, retreats provided a great opportunity for all to express and share their love of God. Aside from the religious aspect, retreats were also just that: a retreat. A retreat meant a break from school work, quizzes, tests, and everything else that every student dreaded, and this was always welcome. Whether it was the delicious sandwiches, or the fun activities that united the classes, retreats had something for everyone.
the reflections
the reflections
Being a peer minister gave these days of re ection a very personal meaning. Members of Ms. Angie Fernandez’s sophomore peer ministry class spent many class periods preparing for such a day.
“Retreats are a great learning experience, although they are a lot of work, the hard work always pays o ,” said sophomore peer minister Gus Fonte.
By preparing these retreats, the students also grew together and came to learn more about themselves. By being leaders, these peer ministers were preparing themselves for the responsibilities that come later in life. Days of re ection were a
By: Robert VanScoy
monumental part of every student’s academic life. Not every school had the opportunity to join together as a class and enjoy a full day of meditation and prayer while having fun.
“Being a minister means a great deal to me because I get to help younger students to nd their path to God,” said peer minister sophomore Otto Boudet. “My favorite part is being able to set up the retreats and plan the activities.”
For any student with a heavy load, whether it was spiritual or academic, a day of re ection was the perfect x.
Trust is a huge aspect of personal growth and development, as shown by eighth grader Matthew Bravo, who was blindfolded and told to place his trust in his classmates. This retreat activity helped him to build a better bond with his classmates and learn the true meaning of having someone’s back.
During one of the many retreats throughout the year, sophomore Gus Fonte leads a small group discussion with students of Mr. Javier Castillo’s eighth grade theology class. Peer Ministers like Fonte led the retreats that proved to be a great way to get to know your classmates and get closer to God.
After All... the people we
Organizations
RC Club ... 102
Astronomy ... 103 Robotics ... 104
Sailing ... 105
Altar Servers ... 106
Respect Life ... 106
Fishing ... 107
Key Club ... 108
Student Council ... 109
Fencing ... 110
Music Appreciation ... 111
Thespians ... 112
& furious
By: James Garcia
The R.C., or Remote Control Club was a small club composed of middle school students who met every Thursday to race their very fast and luxurious remote controlled vehicles. It was often difficult to see these cars with the naked eye because of the speed at which they moved. When you could see them, you had to admire their extreme speed and the height that these cars would reach when the students sent them sky rocketing in the air.
To the middle school students, this club was a great pastime and something to help them get away from all the studying and homework given at school. Getting used to a new school can be very difficult, so it was nice to spend some time making new friends in a non academic environment.
“This club is awesome! Every Thursday I’m excited to see what new tricks I can pull off with my vehicle,” said sixth grader David Meza.
Club members got together every week under the bleachers near the track to get their cars ready and race them on the cross country hills. Aside from racing, it was always neat to see the vehicles doing new tricks in the air. Members would also look forward to seeing who brought in a new model and what the new cars could do.
President
Roster: Jossan Elias, Jacob Perea, Diego de la Vega, Christian De los Santos, Manuel Gil, Zack Jimenez, Daniel Maduro, David Meza, Michael Morera, Mason Rapp, Matthew Villalba and Alejandro Villarreal. Moderator: Dr. John Gustavsen.
Near the school track, eighth grader Josan Elias revs up the engine and sends his remote crontrol vehicle flying on the mound. Elias was one of the original founders of the club when he was only in the sixth grade.
Jossan Elias
President Jacob Perea
the starsBeyond
By: Robert VanScoy
If you show up to the school at 7:30 on any given Tuesday night, there will be a few cars in the parking lot, and the windows of the observatory will be wide open. For 25 years now, the observatory has been educating the minds of the young on the secrets of the universe.
Ever since he was a little boy, Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ, has had a passion for the universe and its immensity. It was through his vision and the help of one of his classes, that Father Cartaya was able to attain an observatory that would educate countless generations of young men.
Astronomy has been something that has interested junior Javier Gonzalez, and a passion he shared with Father Cartaya.
“I like the experience of being able to explore the universe, realizing that there is something bigger than ourselves out there,” said Gonzalez.
The astronomy club helped students like Gonzalez to gain a more humble idea of who they are and the role they play in the universal spectrum. After all, it is only when we observe the vastness of the universe that we truly realize how grand it really is.
“This club has taught me so much, but the most important lesson was that no matter how large the universe may be, we are all unique individuals,” said sophomore John Balloveras.
Aside from looking at the stars and studying the universe, the students in this club study planet orbits, new stars, meteors, and even solar flares. With the state of the art equipment and an experienced moderator, students in this club could truly experience something that is out of this world.
President
Vice President
Gabriel Farias
Roster: Javier Gonzalez, Peter Prieto, Gabriel Farias, Manny De Ovin, Leonardo Cosio, Carlos Espina, Manuel Fernandez, Antonio Rueda, Patrick Puig, Daniel Botero, Rafael Melendez, Steven Solis, Andres Abate, Adrian Hernadez, Andres Concepcion, Javier Mosqueras, Patricio Garzon, Michael Cairo, Kris Serrate, Jose Prieto, Michael Gonzalez, Sebastian Suarez, Christian Ojeda, Carlos Valverde, Kevin Galego, Leonardo Abate, Maximo Perez, Ricardo Espina, Nicholas Beseclen, Manuel Gi and Carlos Perez. Moderators: Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ and Mr. Pedro Añon.
Javier Gonzalez
Moderator of the club Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ helps senior Jose Antonio Prieto to point the telescope correctly at the skies. Father Cartaya, SJ has always been the moderator of this club since it was started in the school in 1987.
Metal bits
pi es ec
By: Guillermo Pujals
The robotics club is the fastest growing club at the school today. Every year it seems that more and more students are called to participate in the world of robotics. The club that started four years ago with only a handful of students has now grown to a full network of close to 30 students ranging from the sixth through the twelfth grade.
“Robotics seemed like something I would enjoy and something that grabbed my attention the second I heard about it,” said junior Miguel Torres de Navarra.
Last year, the robotics club stepped up its game and became more serious and involved in competitions and collaborations with other schools. The team participated in nationwide tournaments with the expectations to win.
The team of students, who never settled for
“There is no better feeling than building something by hand.”
- George Alfaro
“
mediocrity, strived to be victorious in all the competitions.
Throughout the year, the team as a whole worked on a wide variety of robots. Robots ranged from battle bots to robots that were used to perform certain tasks like picking up objects and carrying them across rooms.
There were also numerous competitions in the local Miami area as well as all over the state of Florida.
“There is no better feeling than building something that works by hand,” said senior George Alfaro.
The team got together after school in the engineering room about three to four times a week to work on their robots and perfect their engineering skills.
There is much more that went into building robots than just bolts and nails binding together sheets of metal. There was endless math and electrical engineering that went into each robot. Due to this level of difficulty, robotics was mostly for those who wanted to challenge themselves academically outside of the normal everyday classroom.
Roster: George Alfaro, Javier Martinez, Jesus Modino-Diaz, Luis Blanco, Eduardo Velez, Chris Ruiz, Adrian Alepuz, Miguel Torres de Navarra. Nicholas Fajardo, Nicholas Beasley, Rafael Cariello, William Lopez, Manuel Fernandez, Albert Naon, Alexander Alepuz, Orlando Calas, Rafael Marmol, Daniel Tejada, Robert Espinosa, Andres Gutierrez, Ivan Barral, Andres Rodriguez, Christian Martinez, Gabriel Krikorian, Timothy Mackle, Alan Fernandez, David Velasco, Ian Degwert, Santiago Gonzalez, Matthew Martin, Raul Sague, Jacob Wutzler, Andres Zuniga, Matthew Morales, Maximo Perez, Joey Sendra, Alejandro Villarreal, Anthony Vadell, Andres Larrea, Carlos Huembes, Julian Calas, Anthony Abinader and Justin Louden. Moderator: Mr. Julian De Zulueta.
Inside the engineering room tucked away in the back of the Ignatian Center, six graders Carlos Huembes and Matthew Martin work diligently on their robot for an upcoming competition. Although being some of the youngest on the robotics team Huembes and Martin never failed to surprise their fellow teammates with the skill they had for building amazing battle bots.
Sail Awa y
By: Robert VanScoy
When school counselor Mr. Jorge MuñozBustamante brought up the idea to Dean of Students Mr. Thomas De Quesada to create a sailing club, the idea was immediately welcomed. All it took was for the announcement to go out, and a group of approximately 15 students from all grade levels came together to form the school’s first ever sailing club.
“It’s a lot of fun being on a boat in the middle of the ocean,” said Justin Louden.
It was a great combination, after all, Miami is one of the greatest sailing areas in the world. With the perfect combination of year long sunshine and surrounding waters, it was only a short time before the students found themselves sailing along.
With the help of an alumnus who happened to be the director of youth sailing for the Upper Keys Sailing Club, students were able to learn how to sail on their own in a variety of boats.
“I have been doing it for four years, and I get so much satisfaction out of it,” said seventh grader Sebastian Clark. “Something about the wind and the salt in the air; it’s awesome.”
Soon enough, students were confidently sailing by themselves and finding a certain peace in the challenge of sailing in open waters.
It’s a lot of fun being on a boat in the middle of the ocean
President
David Andreu
Vice President
Justin Louden
Club member sixth grader Sebastian Clark feels at ease sailing in the warm waters of the upper Keys. Although he was one of the youngest members of the club, Clark was selected for the United States International Competition team in the Optimist category, and represented the United States in Braassemermeer, Holland in the spring.
Roster: David Andreu Jr., Andres Artime, John Barroso, Orlando Calas, Nicolas Candela, Sebastian Chamizo, Sebastian Clark, Marcos De La Hoz, Jorge Figueras, Jose Garcia-Chirino, Calixto Garcia-Velez, Juan Javier, Justin Louden, Gabriel Lugo, Rodrigo Marin, Carlos Marin, Kenji Martinez, Sebastian Melendez, Rafael Melendez, Enrique Mercado, Sebastian Milanes, Francisco Palacios, Alberto Pardo, Franco Rivera, Aaron Rodriguez, Carlos Romero, Jose Sirven and Nicolas Valdes. Moderator: Mr. Jorge Muñoz-Bustamante.
SERVING
Respect-
By: Guillermo Pujals
One of the fundamental teachings always instilled in all students was the need for service.
This school taught all students to help in all aspects of the community, in both religious and nonreligious ways. There were two clubs in particular that encompassed the concept of giving and serving others.
Altar Servers and Respect Life were two religious organizations where students worked towards helping others in the community.
Altar Servers aided and helped out in all religious events that the school held. Whether it was a school wide mass or a grade level event, the Altar Servers were always available to lend a helping hand.
Last year the Altar Servers helped out in all the masses throughout the year and did this with little preparation; normally meeting just once before the actual event. They did
manage to move mass along smoothly and made it an enjoyable experience for all those in attendance.
“Altar serving gives me a chance to participate in the most sacred custom as a Catholic,” said senior Giovanni Rodriguez.
Another club that helped in a broader sense was the Respect Life Club. Respect Life this past year spent most of their time fund raising and spreading awareness about the preservation of the sanctity of life.
“Spreading awareness on being pro life is the main focus of this club,” said senior Carlos Fernandez.
Last year the club participated in two main events. There was the Chain for Life held here in Miami, and the March for Life in Washington, D.C..
Both the Respect Life Club and the Altar Servers worked tirelessly to promote religious values in the local community and the nation at large.
Respect Life Roster: Edel Abad, Alessandro Borges, Daniel Cendan, Vincent Cendan, Andres Concepcion, Otniel Gonzalez, Kevin Lastre, Jorge Lopez, Humberto Marrero, Gabriel Martinez-Varela, Erik Masis, Ghulian Ramos, Giovanni Rodriguez, Alejandro Ruiz, Michael Saenz, Carlos Somarriba, Jerry Trujillo and Francisco Villafane. Moderators: Sylvia Davalos and Javier Castillo.
Altar Servers Roster: Giovanni Rodriguez, Timothy Mackle, Christian Dopico, Christian Baptista, Nicholas Vazquez, Matthew Pastor, Alexander Alepuz, Oscar Berlanga, Alberto Naya, Santiago Gonzalez Irigoyen and David Raez. Moderator: Deacon Robert O’Malley.
Altar server senior Giovanni Rodriguez and junior Matthew Pastor lead the procession after a mass along with Brother Michael Wood, SJ. Altar Servers were always on hand to help during the religious ceremonies.
At the March for Life in Washington, D.C. freshman Andres Concepcion, seniors Michael Saenz and Adrian Rivas, junior Ricardo Montalvan, freshman Humberto Marrero and junior Anthony Martin participate in the event. Students traveled with their Theology teachers to make a stand against abortion.
smoothly for senior being participated and
Roster: Agustine de la Guardia, Alejandro Suarez, Andres Concepcion, Andres Manuel Fernandez, Andre Deiters, Anthony Padura, Brandon Moran, Carlos Huembes, Carlos Sosa, Chrsitian Lamar, Clyde Dozier, Damian Sangles, Daniel Ferro, Daniel Maduro, Juan Daniel Perez, Daniel Silva, David Fagger, David Garcia, Eric Silva, Frank Battle, Gabriel Dacal, Javier Bustamante, Javier Gonzalez, Javier Mariscal, Jonathan Garcia, Joseph Gambin, Kyle Gomez, Lucas Blanco, Marcos de la Hoz, Matthew Fals, Matthew Morales, Matthew Salas, Nicholas Carvajal, Nicholas Quintero, Nicholas Vasquez, Nicolas Castellanos, Nicolas Hernandez, Nicolas Rodriguez, Nicolas Sosa, Nicolas Suarez, Nicolas Vurgait, Orlando Garcia, Rafael Melendez, Ricardo Leonzio Gonzalez, Ricky De Aguiar, Robert Curbelo, Victor Ferraz, Victor Giorgini and Zachary Gomez. Moderator: Mr. Eric Ballesteros.
of the day
By: Guillermo Pujals
Aside from fishing, anglers from the fishing club spent a great deal of time participating in fishing clinics and rod-building seminars. Any angler who had been with the club for more than one year was allowed and encouraged to participate in these workshops. The seminars, which took place throughout the year and were held in the school library, provided the opportunity for students to learn how to make and customize their own rods. The rods created were later entered in the Youth Fair competition where students received numerous prizes.
Fishing clinics were also popular among the club members. During these clinics, approximately 70 students showed up to the Cosculluela Hall to receive fishing rods, tackle boxes and club shirts. In this seminar they learned casting techniques, tackle rigging, tying knots, and how to throw cast nets. The clinics lasted approximately three hours, and even though they were opened primarily to students, families and friends were always welcomed.
“The highlight of the year was when we got to go out on the fishing trip to Jupiter; it really shows you the power of God and all his creations,” said eighth grader Clyde Dozier.
The highlight of the year was in the annual fishing trips. There were about six trips to numerous fishing spots including Isla Morada and Jupiter. Students and chaperones boarded a charter boat, and set off to try and get the biggest catch. Excursions took place both in the day time and at night time. Most importantly, everyone got to eat their catch later.
Javier Gonzalez
With the help of Mr. Reinaldo Castellanos (father of Nicolas Castellanos), seventh grader Clyde Dozier struggles to reel in the big one. The fishing club went out to sea numerous times during the year.
Vice President
Rafael Melendez President
HELPING
By: Guillermo
For those who don’t know, Key Club is an international student-led organization which provides its members with opportunities to provide service, build character and develop leadership.
Last year Key Club was one of the biggest clubs at school in both the amount of students in the club and the amount of help that they provided for the community and for the school.
During the school year, club members worked on several service projects including working weekdays at San Juan Bosco to tutor small children on basic homework and provide after school care.
In addition, they worked with Blue Lakes Elementary and
the autism program to provide a family day for the students and their parents.
“Helping those kids taught me life lessons that I will never find anywhere else,” said senior Lucas Fernandez-Rocha.
This club strives on helping the community and teaching life lessons to both the people they serve as well as the students in the club.
Key Club also participated in the nationally acclaimed program Habitat for Humanity. They helped to paint and prepare a new home for a deserving low income family.
“Key club taught me to help those less fortunate than me,” said junior Alexander Adams.
At Reading for Rainbows located at the school’s previous location on 8 street, sophomore Nicolas De La O reads a book to the pre-K students who attend the after school care program in the facility. Key Club members lent a helping hand with the small kids every Thursday after school. ”Spending time with the kids after school has taught me how important it is to help children, especially kids who don’t have anywhere to go after school,” said De La O.
Roster: Adrian Alepuz, Brian Pascual, Nicholas Llobell, Ryan Navarro, Jose Rubio, Daniel Silva, Julio Aira, Alfredo Lopez-Sotillo, Kevin Gonzalez, Alexander Alpuz, Christopher Hernandez, Joshua Munoz, Andres Borroto, Justin Rodriguez, Alex Hernandez, Peter Prieto, Francisco Palacios, Albert Gutierrez, Mark Candela, Anthony Castro, Ryan Perez, Daniel Silva, Daniel Romeu, Luis Mejer, Steve Marin, Santiago Molero, Daniel Dager, Nicholas Coronado, Gabriel Gonzalez, Alfonso Martinez, Giancarlo Pinto, Antonio Valencia, Alejandro Ruiz, Rafael Marmol, John Hyland, Daniel Rodriguez, Levi Fernandez-Rocha, Austin Rodriguez, Jonathan Garcia, Osvaldo Sarduy, Andres Casariego, Nikolas Rojas, Gabriel San Roman, Andres Santiago, Calixto Garcia-Velez, Eduardo Santos, Felipe Montes De Oca, Andres Ibarra, Liam Fernandez-Rocha, Alex Candia, Enrique Mercado, Otto Boudet, Jesus Rincon, Nico Rodriguez, Pedro Aragone, Juan Javier, Johnathan Perez, Fernando Molina, Nico De La O, Hanler Portal, Alejandro Hasegawa, Carlos Torres De Navarra, Walter Tomasino, Christian Lopez, Mariano Macias, Justin Ferrer, Roberto Gallinar, Jorge Figuras, Christopher Martin, Daniel Ramirez, Cristian Marquez, Andres De Varona, Kevin Pascual, Pablo Perez, Jose Sirven, Gabriel Martinez-Varela, Kevin Cuellar, Carlos Mencio, Alexander DavilaWollheim, Anthony Calvo, Jonathan Amaro-Barron, Andres Fernandez, Gabriel Nunez, David Prida, Miguel Zaldivar, Michael Marina, William Pallissery, Jorge Paoli, Bryan Rodriguez, Nicholas Perez, David Dukenik, Andy Fernnandez, Ivan Botero, Nicholas Novo, Carlos Ramos, Joseph Beguirstain, Oscar Cabanas, James Perez, David Saaverdra, Erik Garriago, Peter Jackson, Lucas Fernandez-Rocha, Robert Morgado, Eduardo Ramirez, Anthony Sierra, Steven Vega, Nicholas Suarez, Jose A Prieto, Roberto Alverez, George Michel, Marcos Lobell, Victor Saladin, Daniel Parets, Alejandro Alvarez and Nicholas Chikuji. Moderator: Mr. Johnny Calderin.
Adrian Alepuz
President
Pujals
Vice President
Lucas Fernandez-Rocha
Roster: Javier Martinez, Carlos Fernandez, Victor Perez-Abreu, Steven Tyler, Vikram Sairam, Mateo Buraglia, Andres Smith, Eric Couto, Carlos Castellanos, Walford Campbell, Francisco Gonzalez, Juan Aguila, Jose Roca, Lucas Olivera, Michael Menendez, Samuel Linares, Albert Arazoza, Rodrigo, Madiedo, Lucas Blanco, Luciano Bettocchi, Daniel Sueilreo, Michael Morera, Gregory Galinar, Nicolas Casariego, Nicolas Perez, Lucas Garcia, Robert Curbelo, Eddy Delgado, Michael Aparicio, Andres Perez, David Gonzalez, Placido Valdes, Eduardo Fidalgo, Andres Pones, Juan Lahm, Felipe Pardo, Javan Rice, Nicolas Sosa, Andres Erikorian, Sebastian Hernandez, Carlos Novo, Javier Guerrero, Ignacio Villasimil, Anthony Soler, Ian Escarra, Eddy Briscoe, Diego Ortega, Eduardo Scheuren, Santiago Ugas, Roberto Pupo, Tristen Marin, Marc Novas, Danny Martinez, Kevin Simquchi, Patrick Mahen, Christian Silva, Jose Juez, Lucas Pola, Matthew Bravo, Cristian Gonzalez, Manrique Iriarte, Danny Dagger, Fernandez Piñeda, Enrique Mendia, Santiago Molero, Connor Meagher, Dury Groblacher, Kevin Fernandez, Nico Arias, Jerry Trujillo, Alex Fats, Kevin Ramos, Taush Rice, Michael Lopez, Alejandro Ruiz, Nicholas Tootle, John Hyland, Andres Chinchilla, Jose Chegwin, Enrique Mercado, Cristian Estrada, Robert Pulles, Fernando Molina, Handler Portal, Piti Pertierra, Mark White, Andrew Muriedas, Ignacio Perez, Nicolas Salazar, Luis Vargas, EJ Santos, Miguel Angarita, Julian Gonzalez, Agustin Pedro, Isaac Dominguez, Ernest Barral, John Balloueras, Danny Perez, John Medina, Javi Gonzalez, Christian Marquez, Oscar Vila, Matthew Vega-Sanz, David Hondat, Kevin Pascual, Jose Smith, Jorge Figueras, Andres Perez, Lorenzo Guio, Anthony Calvo, Jonathan Pereira, Alvaro Mejer, Michael Vega-Sanz, Adrian Montoto, Alejandro Verdecia, Anton Martinez-Cid, Michael Fernandez, Brandon Almedia, Matt Cristobal, George Alfaro, Stephen Busse, Oscar Cabanas, Camilo Padron, Juan Aguila, Eric Couto, AJ Rodriguez, Gabriel Garrigo, Francisco Rios and Danny Rodriguez. Moderator: Mr. Thomas De Quesada.
President Steven Tyler
Vice President Javier A. Martinez
By: Ryan Murphy of
Last year Student Council received much praise for its work around school and for introducing a new era of pep rallies.
The members of the Student Council were completely focused on improving the involvement of school wide activities by the entire school and not just the senior class. They worked diligently in setting up pep rallies for the entire school to enjoy for the different sports throughout the year.
Whether it was going into the classrooms of all the grades and talking to the younger students to get ideas for events throughout the year, or getting the opinions of other seniors, this student council group aimed to hear everyone to make it the best year it could be.
The Student Council ran two outstanding pep rallies which gained much praise for its innovative ideas of teacher karaoke and dance offs. Those ideas brought a fresh element to the old pep rally schedule.
Dances were also a huge success, particularly the kickoff dance where three different DJ’s performed and students came to enjoy a wide variety of light and music that kept the party going all night.
Members of the Student Council also attended a leadership conference in New Orleans where they were able to visit a Jesuit high school in New Orleans and talk to the students there about leadership. They came back with numerous ideas for making school activities a big success for all.
“My opportunity to serve the school through Student Council was an incredibly rewarding and fulfilling experience that taught me valuable lessons of leadership and service to others,” said Student Council President senior Steven Tyler.
During the Rebound Week pep rally, Student Council Vice President Javier Martinez introduces senior Andres Garcia to the pumped up crowd. Martinez, along with class president Steven Tyler orchestrated numerous school-wide events in an effort to increase school pride and attendance to the sporting events.
D on’t fence me in
By: Jorge Pola
such as honor, pride and has also been a part of the Jesuit tradition. Many of the members join the club for the lessons and rigorous requirements demanded by the sport. Fencing also teaches its participants about respect and discipline through the art of self-defense.
“I love fencing because of the trifecta that we have to put into play; strategy, endurance, and perseverance,” said junior Gio Cintron.
Students from all grades were allowed to participate in the fencing club. The club was supervised by Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ and Mr. Sean Myer. The students were trained by Mr. Gustavo Orteli ever Monday when they met in the wrestling room to learn new strategies and practice their lunges.
President
Roster: Esteban Guio, Daniel Chavez, Gabriel Arteaga, Kevin Lemus, David Reaz, Matthew Diaz, Daniel Silva, David Garzon, Marco Perosch, Billy San Pedro, Lucas Fernandez, Armando Marquez, Sebastian Milanes and Gio Cintron. Moderators: Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ and Mr. Sean Myer.
Participating in a sparring session, sophomore Armando Marquez gets into position to make a move. The fencing club met once a week to participate in different drills and sparring sessions.
Sebastian Milanes
Vice President Armando Marquez
By: David Hondal
to jam
Music has always been a huge part of society and a huge part of the school. Almost everyone in the school listens to music. That is why the Music Appreciation Club was created. It was made for students to jam out after school. It was a great way to chill after school and either play or just listen to music. The club met every Tuesday in the band room and were allowed to jam out either on their own or together. Even Mr. Alexander, the club moderator, joined the session with his drums.
“What I love about Music Appreciation is that I am given the chance to play music after school with some friends,” said junior Daniel Perez.
Music Appreciation was not just for musicians, but also for those who simply loved music. Members often got together after school to listen to music, socialize and talk about different types of music. Everyone had the opportunity to bring their own likes and dislikes to the table, and talk about the different sounds.
“I love to come after school and play the guitar. Music is one of my biggest passions and I love how I am able to play after school with friends,” said by junior Julian Balboa.
Each individual in the club had a different musical talent. The club members mastered just about every musical instrument like the guitar, drums, piano, and even the banjo. If you were a talented musician or simply just loved to listen to music, the Music Appreciation club was the perfect place for you.
Playing the piano, junior Daniel Perez, improvises during a jam session with the music appreciation club in the music room in the Ignatian Center. “Music Appreciation has not only helped me discover new kinds of music, but it has also enhanced my improvisation skills,” said Perez.
Roster: Daniel Perez, Anthony Rueda, Kearan Singh, Jorge Aguilera, Julian Balboa, William Sanchez, Bill Chan, Daniel Velasquez, Patrick Puig, Ernie Barral, Peter de Armas, Luciano Laratelli, Eddie Iglesias, Antonio Casuso, Diego Rojo, Christian Padron, Adrian Gonzalez-Camps, Junhyung Cho, Gaston de Cardenas and Myles Bachrach. Moderator: Mr. Anthony Alexander.
President
Daniel Perez
Vice President
Jorge Aguilera
Set-
the stage
The Thespian club was a great club for the students who wanted to go into the drama business or simply enjoyed the spotlight. This club, moderated by Mr. Francisco Padura and Mr. Leo Williams, always crafted young students into great actors. In this club there was no room for stage fright or butterflies, because all participants were expected to be a part of at least one of the two annual plays.
Last year, the thespians had their first break of the year with play CareerAngel,which was a hit performance put together all the cast members. This play required a great deal of practice and dress rehearsals in order to perfect it. CareerAngelwas about orphanage for boys that was run by two religious brothers. One the brothers, Brother Seraphim, was visited by a guardian angel who shows him where to get the rough draft of the Declaration of Independence, which was worth a lot of money. Seraphim began consulting with his Angel frequently, but since he was the only one who could see or hear him, he ended up getting committed.
“We’re not just a club. We are a family. The creativity and diversity of the people who become thespians make for an amazingly extracurricular activity. We are a brotherhood”, said by Junior Jonathan Amaro-Barron.
The second semester the cast of thespians put together the musical called JosephandtheAmazingTechnicolorDreamcoat . This was the tale of a young man of great gifts punished by those around him for having such great strength. He stayed true to himself, and doing so, he achieved great things. It was a powerful story that all students could learn from.
Roster: Oscar Berlanga, Daniel Coulombe, Christian Delgado, Dante Lang, Kevin Lemus, Daniel Martinez, Javier Mederos, Diego Perera, Michael Rodriguez, Sebastian Suarez, David Capetillo, AJ Rodriguez, Giovanni Rodriguez, Jonathan Amaro-Barron, Franz-Joseph Castillo, Jose Pelegri, Lucas Vigil, Anthony Padura, Rafael Cariello, Jaime Lopez, Roberto Villasante, Peter Kiliddgian, Daniel Perez and Jorge Orbay. Moderators: Mr. Leo Williams and Mr. Francisco Padura.
During one of the dance scenes of the musical “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat”, junior Jonathan Amaro-Barron sings and dances with the rest of the cast. The play, which was an immediate success, was directed by Mr. Francisco Padura during the spring semester. “The play was an infectious tour-de-force that instantly swept the audience and kept it hooked until the last note was sung,” said Amaro-Barron
President Francisco Gonzalez
Vice President Alejandro Senior
James Garcia
After careful contemplation, seventh grader Raul Baños makes his move against sixth grader Guillermo Cadima. The chess club met on a weekly basis to practice and keep up with numerous strategies.
Chess
President David Fager
Diabetes
Roster: Daniel Cendan, Albert Hermida, Giovanni Cintron, David Fager, Raul Baños, Guillermo Cadima, Daniel Fager, Jose Chaviano, Jonathan Manrique and Rodrigo Barquero. Moderator: Mr. Sam Vega.
Roster: Michael Leyva, Ryan Gutierrez, Raul Carreras, Rashad Ismail, Kasser Ismail, Jose Chan, Brandon Herrera, Andres Krikorian, William San Pedro, Andres Fernandez, Manny Fernandez, Jose escallon, Giovanni valdes guicciardi, Antonio Montadas, Hanler portal, Carlos Michel, Manuel Sanchez, Brandon Zaldivar, Michael Qureshi, Enrique Mercado, Alejandro Hasegawa, Enrique Iturregui, Julian Gonzalez and Marcos Marimon. Moderator: Mr. Carlos Maza.
President Anthony Perez-Pino
Vice President Eric Calero
President Enrique Menendez
Vice President Jorge Orbay
National Science Honor
Roster: Andre Abate, Joseph Acosta, Alexander Adams, Jr., David Alvarez, Jonathan Alvarez, Jonathan Amaro-Barron, Joseph Beguirstein, Matias Buedo, Gabriel Cabrera, Anthony Calvo, William Candela, Eric Castellanos, Michael Castellanos, Daniel Cendan, Vincent Cendan, Alexander DavilaWollheim, Peter de Armas, Agustin del la Guardia, Andres de Varona, Santiago Dipilla, Andres Fernandez, Eddy Ethan Fernanadez, Matthew Fernandez, Nicholas Fernandez, Justin Ferrer, Jorge Figueras, Maxwell Goldberg, Diego Gonzalez, Javier Gonzalez, Diego Guimaraes-Blandon, Lorenzo Guio, Jonathan Herrera, Brandon Hevia, Benjamin Incera, Rene Lamar, Antonio Linares, Nicholas Lorenzo, Reynaldo Madiedo, Michael Magoulas, Michael Marina, Christopher Martin, Oscar Martinez, Omar Masri, Alvaro Mejer, Alexander Mertz, George Michel, Jason Miranda, Sebastian Munoz, William Pallissery, Julio Palomera, Kevin Pascual, Matthew Pastor, Andres Perez, Christian Perez, Michael Perez, Pablo Perez, Genaro Poulat, Jorge Powell, David Prida, Christian Roatta, Bryan Rodgriguez, Ryan Rodriguez-Mena, Omar Rosete, Marlon Seijo, Jose Smith, Steven Solis, Oscar Vila, Alejandro Villasmil, Miguel Zaldivar, Michael Aguad, Myles Bachrach, Antonio Casuso, Eric de Cardenas, Carlos Espina, Eric Garrigo, Daniel Gonzalez, Enrique Lam, Jake Larson, Andres Manzanares, Mario Martinez, Enrique Menendez, Diego Mion, Justin Moraels, Carlos Muniz, Jorge Orbay, Kevin Pavon, John Pendas, Jose Roca Jr., Daniel Rodriguez, Kevin Rodriguez, Devon Roura, Daniel Saavedra, Vikram Sairam, Victor Saladin, Nicholas Torralba, Sebastian Wermuth and James Zamora. Moderator: Ms. Lucila Espinosa.
Junior National Honor
President Justin Hernandez
Vice President
Michael Cairo Roster: Nicolas Aguilar, Carlos Arazoza, Christopher Avallone, Kevin Baloyra, Matthew Bec, Michael Borell, Matthew Bravo, Daniel Brown, Christopher Caballero, Steven Calles, Bill Chan, Daniel Chavez, Jun Hyung Cho, Daniel de la Fe, Christian Delgado, Marcus Diaz, Richard Diaz, Austin Dominguez, Daniel Garrastazu, Luis Gomez, Michael Goncalves, Nicolas Gonzalez, Esteban Guio, Miguel Hernandez, Alejandro Hunter, Jovier Jimenez, Pablo Kurzan, Kevin Lemus, Agustin Leos, Victor Lopez de Mendoza, Joseph Luzarraga, Patrick Maher, Carlos Marin, Tristen Marin, Francisco Melo, Francisco Menendez, Maurice Milton, Jorge Miro-Quesada, Michael Moreno, Nicolas Munoz, Jandrice Nacier, Daniel Otero-Pfaeffle, Andres Perez, Daniel Perez, Raphael Perez-Blanco, Lucas Pola, Roberto Pupo, Mario Rodriguez, Daniel Romero, Adrian Santana, Gabriel Seda, Nicholas Senior, Kevin Simauchi, Alejandro Smith, Sebastian Suarez, Javier Torres de Navarra, Brandon Torricella, Gabriel Trastoy, Carlos Vazquez and Kristian Ventura. Moderator: Mr. Eugene Zoller.
Senior National Honor Society
Roster: Eduardo Abascal, Victor Acevedo, Jorge Aguilera, Miguel Angarita, Pedro Aragone, Jose Armengol, Ricardo Azze, Alvaro Baez, John Balloveras, Christian Thomas Baptista, Joshua Barditch, Ernest Barral, John Barroso, Frank Battle, Christopher Blanco, Daniel Botero, Otto Boudet, Amir Boulos, Jorge Cabrera, Pablo Cabrera, Eric Calero, Rafael Cariello, Matthew Casamayor, Andres Casariego, Jose Chan, Alberto Cosio, Eduardo Cruz, Ezequiel Cuevas, Alejandro Diaz, Matthew Diaz, Christian Dopico, Hugo Duenas, Julian Esain, Jose Escallon, Christian Estrada, Ryan Falcon, Manuel Fernandez, Nicolas Fernandez, Levi Fernandez-Rocha, Liam Fernandez-Rocha, Christian Fowler, Michael Franca, Calixto Garcia-Velez, Julian Gonzalez, Javier Guerrero, Jonathan Gutierrez, Ryan Gutierrez, Kevin Guzman, Javier Hernando, Brandon Herrera, Andres Hidalgo, Rashad Ismail, Juan Javier, Carlos Juan, Mikel Juan, Alexander Keenan, Nicholas Keenan, Michael Leyva, Bernardo Lima, Michael Limia, William Lopez, Manuel Lovo, Mariano Macias, Marcos Marimon, Carlos Martinez, Joseph Menendez, Carlos Michel, Sebastian Milanes, Antonio Montadas, Albert Naon, Alexander Novoa, Osvaldo Nunez, Santiago Nunez, Joseph Ordonez, Carlos Pablos-Aguirre, Alberto Pardo, Ignacio Perez, Johnathon Perez, Joseph Perez, Marcos Perez, Carlos Perez-Heydrich, Anthony Perez-Pino, Robert Pertierra, Oscar Pinate, Andrew Powell, Marc Pugliese, Michael Qureshi, Jake Ramirez, Michael Ramon, Jesus Rincon, Tyler Roberts, Casey Rodriguez, Richard Rodriguez, Nikolas Rojas, Nicolas Ros, Alec Sanchez, Manuel Sanchez, Andres Santiago, Eduardo Santos, Osvaldo Sarduy, Alejandro Seda, Daniel Simms, Luis Suarez, Michael Tefel, Walter Tomasino, Carlos Torres de Navarra, Alejandro Torvis, Guillermo Vadell, Luis Vargas, Nicholas Vazquez, Alexander Vidal, Roberto Villasante, Robert Waechter, Mark White, Jerry Williams, Brandon Zaldivar, Andres Abate, Alexander Adams, Adrian Alepuz, Andreas Alvarez, David Michael Alvarez, Jonathan Alvarez, Jonathan Amaro-Barron, Bryant Aristy, Christian Ayala, Andres Barrios, Ethan Bauer, Joseph Beguiristain, Ivan Botero, Matias Buedo, Alexander Cabrera, Gabriel Cabrera, Anthony Calvo, Juan Carlos Campuzano, William Candela, Eric Castellanos, Michael Castellanos, Daniel Cendan, Vincent Cendan, Eugenio Cosculluela, Leonardo Cosio, Kevin Cuellar, Alexander Davila-Wollheim, Peter De Armas, Agustin de la Guardia, Andres de Varona, Anthony DeFurio, John Diaz-Silveira, Santiago Dipilla, Andres Fernandez, Andy Fernandez, Matthew Fernandez, Eddy Fernandez, Nicholas Fernandez, Justin Ferrer, Jorge Figueras, Jorge Fleites, Roberto Gallinar, Juan Garcia, Maxwell Goldberg, Javier Gonzalez, Jorge Gonzalez, Diego Gonzalez, Adrian Gonzalez-Camps, Diego Guimaraes-Blandon, Lorenzo Guio, Albert Hermida, Alejandro Hernandez, Javier Herrera, Jonathan Herrera, Brandon Hevia, Benjamin Incera, Nicolas Iparraguirre, Mark Lagunas, Rene Lamar, Domingo Leos, Marcos Llobell, Nicholas Lorenzo, Andres Loret de Mola, Reynaldo Madiedo, Michael Magoulas, Michael Marina, Christopher Martin, Oscar Martinez, Gabriel Martinez-Varela, Omar Masri, Alvaro Mejer, Alexander Mertz, George Michel, Jason Miranda, Kevin Montiel, Sebastian Munoz, Gabriel Nunez, William Pallissery, Julio Palomera, Jorge Paoli-Torres, Kevin Pascual, Matthew Pastor, Jonathan Pereyra, Andres Perez, Christian Perez, Michael Perez, Pablo Perez, Genaro Poulat, Jorge Powell, David Prida, Alfredo Quiroga, Daniel Ramirez, Christian Roatta, Bryan Rodriguez, Ryan Rodriguez-Mena, Christian Rondon, Omar Rosete, Carlos Salazar, Christian Salinas, Michael Sayman, Marlon Seijo, Kristopher Serrate, Jose Sirven, Jose Smith, Steven Solis, Andre Suarez, John Ukenye, Oscar Vila, Alejandro Villasmil, Miguel Zaldivar, Michael Aguad, Juan Aguila, Javier Alvarez, Diego Anell, Myles Bachrach, Luis Blanco, Mateo Buraglia, Maximino Caballero, Walford Campbell, Carlos Castellanos, Franz-Joseph Castillo, Nicolas Castillo, Antonio Casuso, Dominic Chinigo, Giovanni Companioni, Eric Couto, Giancarlo Cueto, Eric de Cardenas, Carlos Espina, William Fabra, Carlos Fernandez, Michael Fernandez, Nikolas Fernandez, Lucas Fernandez-Rocha, Nicholas Garcia, Erik Garrigo, Daniel Gonzalez, Francisco Gonzalez, Eduardo Iglesias, Javier Incera, Peter Jackson, Daniel Jose, Enrique Lam, Jake Larson, Sergio Leos, Nicholas Lopez, Avery Lopez, Justin Lorenzo, Jonathan Lucas, Andres Manzanares, Javier Martinez, Mario Martinez, Ricardo Martinez-Cid, Enrique Menendez, Diego Mion, Hugo Montero, Adrian Montoto, Justin Morales, Robert Morgado, Ryan Murphy, Alberto Naya, Jorge Orbay, Jose Paneda, Kevin Pavon, Cristian Paz, John Pendas, Victor Perez-Abreu, Daniel Poo, Jose Prieto, Jose Roca, Anthony Rodriguez, Daniel Rodriguez, Giovanni Rodriguez, Kevin Rodriguez, Steven Rodriguez, Andres Rodriguez, George Rodriguez, Diego Rojo, Alejandro Romero, Diego Rosette, Devon Roura, Cornelis Rowaan, Anthony Rueda, Daniel Saavedra, Vikram Sairam, Victor Saladin, Nicholas Sanchez, Anthony Sierra, Jose Silva, William Singer, Andres Smith, Francisco Smith, Christian Suarez, Nicholas Suarez, Nicholas Torralba, Steven Tyler, Vincent Vazquez, Alejandro Verdecia, Sebastian Wermuth, Anthony Yabor and James Zamora. Moderator: Ms. Dolores Toledo.
President Michael Fernan-
Vice President
Nicolas Valdes
Senior National Beta
Roster: Alejandro Alvarez, Jose Arosemena, Keonte Cash, Matthew Diaz, Mike Fernandez, Matthew Marrero, Daniel Lopez, Javier Martinez, Rafael Melendez, Alex Paneda, Miles Pope, Ethan Rodriguez, Nicolas Valdes, Francisco Villafane, Derek Escarra, Alistair Humphries, Carlos Frisbee, Simon Londono, Guillermo Lopez-Castro, Carlos Mencio, Daniel Neptune, Nicolas Perez, Antonio Permuy, Jorge Pola, Richard Salinas, Robert VanScoy, James Williams, Javier Davila-Wollheim, William Elias, Benny Fernandez, Stephane Francoeur, Horacio Garcia, Erik Halvorssen, Alejandro Hasegawa, Danny Hernandez, Enrique Iturregui, Enrique Mercado, Fernando Molina, Andrew Muriedas, Matthew Murphy, Nicholas Peterson, Javier Rosario, Nicolas Salazar, Gabriel San Roman, Brandon Silvestry, Carlos Solanilla, Eduardo Tamborrel and Roger Zaldivar. Moderators: Ms. Maria D. Alonso and Ms. Carmen Villafañe.
Mu Alpha Theta
Rho Kappa
Roster: Adrian Alepuz, Alexander Alepuz, Maximino Caballero, Eric Castellanos, Jose Chan, Lorenzo Guio, Andres Concepcion, David Fager, Manuel Fernandez, Jorge Figueras, Jake Larson, Christopher Martin, Mario Martinez, Sebastian Milanes, Jorge Orbay, David Prida and Anthony Rueda. Moderators: Mr. Eugene Cruz and Ms. Gisela Vichot.
Roster: Andres Abate, Joseph Acosta, Alexander Adams, Adrian Alepuz, Matias Buedo, Alexander Cabrera, Dylan Echevarria, Santiago Dipilla, Andes Fernandez, Nicholas Fernandez, Roberto Gallinar, Julian Guerra, Javier Herrrera, Armando Hassun, Michael Jasman, Michael Loven, Christian Marquez, Paul Martinez, Christian Perez, Daniel Perez, Pablo Perez, Carlos Rosell, Omar Rosete, Eduardo Tamborrel, David Villa, Calixto Garcia-Velez, Jorge Aguilera, Gerard Albert, Alexander Aspuru, Christian Baptista, Joshua Barditch, Frank Battle, Christopher Blanco, Pablo Cabrera, Ezequiel Cuevas, Christian Estrada, Giovanni Gaviria, Kevin Guzman, Enrique Iturregui, Bernardo Lima, Marcus Morimon, Ryan Navarro, Michael Ramon, Andres Santiago, Giovanni Valdes Guicciardi and Jason Egusquiza. Moderators: Mr. Octavio Ramos and Mr. Heriberto Cabada.
Spanish Honor Society
Roster: Alejandro Raúl Álvarez, Diego Anell, Walford Addaman Campbell, Giovanni José Companioni, Carlos Andrés Fernández, Nikolas Amiguet Fernández, Eduardo Ramón Iglesias, Jonathan Lucas, Andrés Manzanares, Matthew Marrero, Ricardo Javier Martínez-Cid, Adrian Oscar Montoto, Alfredo José Ramírez, Giovanni Rodríguez, Kevin Christian Rodríguez, Steven Richard Rodríguez, Diego Rosette, Devon Michael Roura, Vikram Sairam, José Ignacio Silva, Andrew Tremblay, Nicolás Adrian Valdés, Joseph Alec Acosta, Adrian Jude Alepuz, Jonathan Tyler Álvarez, Jonathan Ryan Amaro- Barron, Luis David Blanco, Matías Gabriel Buedo, Maximino Caballero, Alexander Cabrera, Juan Carlos Campuzano, Vincent John Cendan, Leonardo Alberto Cosio, Anthony Arellano DeFurio, Santiago Ariel Dipilla, Juan Andrés García, Maxwell Obregón Goldberg, Javier David González, Jorge González, Diego Roberto, Guimaraes- Blandon, Lorenzo Guio, Javier Enrique Herrera, Domingo Leos, Sergio Leos, Antonio José Linares, Marcos Gastón Llobel, Andrés Emilio Loret de Mola, Reynaldo Madiedo, Michael Anthony Marina, Christopher Martin, Oscar Alfredo Martínez, Álvaro José Mejer, Hugo Alberto Montero, Carlos Manuel Muñiz, Alberto Luis Naya, Eduardo Enrique Neret, Julio César Palomera, Matthew Alexander Pastor, Jonathan Michael Pereyra, Michael Alexander Pérez, Pablo Alberto Pérez, Genaro Poulat, David Andrés Prida, Alfredo Nicolás Quiroga, Bryan Alexander Rodriguez, Omar Joel Rosete, Michael Arthur Sayman, Marlon Seijo, José Luis Sirven, José Carlos Smith, Oscar Enrique Vila, Alejandro José Villasmil and Miguel Oreste Zaldivar. Moderator: Ms. Annette Anton.
Spanish State Team
Quill and Scroll
Roster: Ryan Murphy and Jose Antonio Prieto. Moderator: Ms. Sujayla Collins.
President Sergio Leos
Vice President
Andres Manzanares
Roster: Sergio Leos, Maximino Caballero, Alfredo Ramirez, Andres Manzanares, John Pendas, Adrian Montoto, Sebastian Wermuth, Anton Martinez Cid, Santiago Dipilla, Miguel Angarita, Luis Vargas, Andres Hidalgo, Ignacio Perez, Javier Guerrero, Lorenzo Guio and Julian Esain. Moderator: Ms. Annnette Anton.
President Miles Pope
Captain Sergio Leos
A.L.P.H.A.
Roster: Kyle Castellanos, Gabriel Nunez, Francisco Garcia, Andres Gomez, Sebastian Hernandez, Michael Jasman, Gabriel Krikorian, Luis Antonio Larios, Daniel Lopez, Paul Martinez, Rodrigo Muñoz, Allan Navarro, Alexander Navarro, Juan Felipe Pereira, Miles Pope, William San Pedro, Jose Sirven, Andrew Tremblay, Nicolas Valdes, Ivan Botero, Ryan Perez and Diego Nuñez. Moderator: Ms. Maria Inez Leanez.
Roster: Sergio Leos, Maximino Caballero, Alfredo Ramirez, Andres Manzanares, John Pendas, Adrian Montoto, Sebastian Wermuth, Anton Martinez Cid, Santiago Dipilla, Miguel Angarita, Luis Vargas, Andres Hidalgo, Ignacio Perez, Javier Guerrero, Lorenzo Guio and Julian Esain. Moderator: Mr. Julian De Zulueta.
Athletes for Charity
Roster: Devon Roura, Alejandro Senior and Samuel Maya. Moderator: Ms. Paola Arencibia.
Roster: Alejandro Ruiz, Alexander Lorenzo, Alvaro Mejer, Andres de Varona, Andres Jose Fernandez, Andres Manzanares, Antonio Montadas, Avery Lopez, Avery Lopez, Brandon Almeida, Brandon Hevia, Carlos Espina, Carlos Muniz, Carlos Ramos, Cesar Gonzalez, Christian Perez, Christopher Sanu, Christopher Sanu, Daniel Hillman, Diego Anell, Eric Couto, Eric de Cardenas, Erik Garrigo, Gabriel Cabrera, Hugo Montero, James Garcia, Joseph Garcia, Joshua Munoz, Juan Aguila, Marc Pugliese, Marcos Llobell, Mikel Juan, Osiel Gonzalez, Patrick Siu, Raul Carreras, Robert Gallinar, Santiago Nunez, Victor Saladin, Vincent Vazquez, Santiago Dipilla, Anthony DeFurio, Ricardo Martinez-Cid, Eric Castellanos, Kevin Pavon, Austin Riveron, Nicholas Garcia, Alexander Alepuz, AJ Maza, David Capetillo, Cristian Garcia, Andres Garcia, Carlos Michel, Cristian Marquez and Nicholas Suarez. Moderators: Ms. Olga Ramon and Ms. Kathleen Mackle.
President Andres Manzanares
Vice President Hugo Montero
President
Andy Manzanares
Vice President Hugo Montero
President Enrique Menendez
Vice President Jorge Orbay
Biomedical
Roster: Myles Bachrach, Walford Campbell, Rafael Cariello, Michael Castellanos, Alexander Davila-Wollheim, Eric de Cardenas, Andres Manzanares, Marcos Marimon, Gustavo Medina, Kevin Rodriguez, Cornelis Rowaan and Alejandro Verdecia. Moderator: Mr. Andres Jimenez.
Best Buddies
Roster: Luis Acuna, Brandon Almeida, Javier Alvarez, Henry Alvarez, Jonathan Alvarez, Joseph Beguiristain, Brandon Borino, Otto Boudet, Alex Boza, Jorge Cabrera, Michael Cairo, Jose Chan, Andres Chinchilla, Christian Estrada, Robert de la Hoz, Andres de Varona, Julian Esain, Andrew Escobar, Carlos Fernandez, Levi Fernandez-Rocha, Liam Fernandez-Rocha, Gus Fonte, Robert Gallinar, Francisco Gonzalez, Albert Gutierrez, Alejandro Hasegawa, Marcello Hernandez, Jake Larson, Jose Lopez-Varela, Christopher Lorenzo, Andres Loret de Mola, Manuel Lovo, Christian Marquez, Ricardo Martinez-Cid, Enrique Menendez, Sebastian Milanes, Nicolas Ocamp, Jorge Orbay, Alberto Pardo, Victor Perez-Abreu, Adrian Rivas, Daniel Rodriguez, Giovanni Rodriguez, Steven Rodriguez, Devon Roura, Alejandro Senior, Walter Tomasino, Alejandro Torvis and Brandon Zaldivar. Moderator: Ms. Cristina Ramirez.
Green Club
Roster: Ignacio Villasmil, Christian Tinoco, Tyler Newlin, Rafael Martinez–Varela, Alex Pusch, Tristen Marin, Guillermo Fernandez, Kevin Simauchi, Joshua Lara, Anthony DeFurio, Francisco Rios and Salvador Cisneros. Moderator: Ms. Shyara Lara.
Cangrejos
Roster: Carlos Acevedo, Victor Acevedo, Juan Aguila, Julio Aira, Brandon Almeida, Stephen Artigues, David Bared Dukenik, Kevin Baloyra, Jason Beli, Michael Beovides, Nicholas Besada, Daniel Bogardus, Guillermo Bogardus, Michael Borell, Andres Borroto, Otto Boudet, Matias Buedo, Mateo Buraglia, Christopher Caballero, Gabriel Cabrera, Jorge Miguel Cabrera, Emilio Cardenal, Carlos Castellanos, Frankie Castellanos, Sebastian Chamorro, Daniel Chavez, Christian Cognigni, Ezequiel Cuevas, Anthony DeFurio, Christian Del Castillo, Marcus Diaz, Santiago Dipilla, Isaac Dominguez, Christian Dopico, John Egusquiza, Jorge Escobar, Ricardo Espina, Alejandro Fernandez, Andres Jose Fernandez, Benny Fernandez, Robert Fernandez, Benjamin Frisbee, Carlos Frisbee, Robert Gallinar, Christopher Garcia, Jonathan Garcia, Alejandro Gaston, Daniel Gomez, Luis Gomez, Zachary Gomez, Pedro Gomez-Faccio, Michael Goncalves, Cesar Gonzalez, Osiel Gonzalez, Otniel Gonzalez, Ricardo Gonzalez, Tomas Gonzalez, David Gonzalez, Julian Guerra, Pablo Guerra, David Guevara, Jonathan Herrera, Brandon Hevia, Gabriel Jimenez, Jose Juez, Wiliam Kindelan, Nicholas Krikorian, Eric Labrador, Erick Labrador, Bobby Lacasa, Rene Lamar, Andres Larrea, Eric Lastres, Kevin Lastres, Sebastian Leiter, Bernardo Lima, Albert Llorente, Patricio Lopez, Guillermo LopezCastro, Ignacio Lopez-Castro, Alfredo Lopez-Sotillo, Lorenzo Luaces, Daniel Maduro, Tristen Marin, Andres Marquez, Cristian Marquez, Carlos Martinez, Daniel Martinez, Carlos Mencio, Christopher Menendez, Michael Menendez, Enrique Mendia, Carlos Michel, George Michel, Maurice Milton, Ricardo Montalvan, Felipe Montes de Oca, Kevin Montiel, Christopher Moustafa, Richard Muñoz, Ryan Navarro, Francisco Odon, Jorge Orta, Jonathan Orta, Carlos Andres Pablos-Aguirre, Julio Palomera, Alexander Paneda, Jose Paneda, Jonathan Pereyra, Daniel Perez, Michael Perez, Nicolas Perez, Pablo Perez, Ryan Perez, Juan Antonio Perez Costa, Marco Perosch, Nicholas Peterson, Alexander Piccolo, Lucas Pola, Adrian Pombo, Daniel Portuondo, Michael Prado, Alexander Pusch, Christopher Quintero, Francisco Rodriguez, Jorge Rodriguez, Diego Rivera, Alejandro Ruiz, Guillermo Saade, Mark Saavedra, Nicolas Salazar, Alec Sanchez, Nicholas Sanchez, Sergio Sanchez, Eduardo Santos, Sean Sempere, Alejandro Senior, Anthony Sierra, Carlos Solanilla, Carlos Sosa, Harrison Stoker, Walter Tomasino, Ryan Torres, Carlos Torres de Navarra, Javier Torres de Navarra, Brandon Torricella, Waldo Toyos, Christian Trastoy, Gabriel Trastoy, Daniel Ugas, Santiago Ugas, John Ukenye, Brian Valiente, Pablo Venegas, Santiago Venegas, Lucas Verdeja, Roberto Villasante, Frederico Vivacqua, James Williams, Jerry Williams and Miguel Zaldivar. Moderator: Mr. Daniel Montesi.
President Francisco Rios
President Anthony De Furio
President Cristian Marquez
Vice President Julio Palomera
Bishop San Pedro
Italian
Roster: Steven Vega, Alexander Cabrera, Javier Herrera, Manuel Gonzalez, Waldo Toyos, Alejandro Guerrero, Francisco Rios, Nicolas Salazar, Cristian Trujillo, Daniel Corzo, Alejandro Corzo, Nicolas Rodriguez, Christian Lopez, Javier Guerrero, Tyler Roberts, Guillermo Saade and Roberto Pertierra. Moderator: Mrs. Margarita Guerrero.
Roster: Andrian Montoto, Antonio Casuso, Sergio Leos, Enrique Lam, Andrew Tremblay, Eduardo Velez, Cornelis Rowaan, Marcel Arzola, Thomas Avallone, Diego Mion, Marcelo Mion, Caros Peralta, Pedro Arbex-Murut, Vincent Cendan, Alec Castillo, Michael Cairo, Erik Rivacoba, Diego Anell, Kevin Sarmuchi, Claudio Laratelli, Julian Balboa, Luciano Laratelli, Jorge Figueras, Christian Tello, Miguel Zaldivar, Brandon Hevia, Eduardo Velez, Brian Valiente, Peter Diego Prieto, Myles Bachrach, Vincent Cendan, Giovanni Cintron, Diego Rivera, Antonio Permuy and Dominic Chinigo. Moderator: Mr. Ramon Nicosia.
President Manuel Gonzalez
Vice President Alexander Cabrera
President Adrian Montoto
Vice President Antonio Casuso
French
Roster: Javier Alvarez, Gabriel Lopez, Guillermo Lopez-Castro, Brian Valiente, Jose Sanchis, George Trelles, and Robert De Leon. Moderator: Ms. Maria I. Alonso.
Roster: Jose Sanchis, Christian Trujillo, Kristopher Serrate, Alvaro Chirinos, Christopher Estrada, Enrique Mercado, Michael Ruiz, Xavier Michelena, Sebastian Wermuth, Richard Salinas, Michael Franca, Javier Hernando , Jose Cosio, Samuel Maya, Stephane Francoeur, Steven Vega, Nicolas Valdes, Jorge Trelles, Juan Naranjo, Christian Dopico, Ezequiel Cuevas, Carlos Torres de Navarra, Adrian Montoto, Andres Busse, Christian Rondon, Brian Valiente and Andrew Tremblay. Moderator: Ms. Maria I. Alonso.
Wermuth
Culture
President Walford Campbell
Vice President Vikram Sairam
President
Michael Fernandez
Vice President Andres Loret de Mola
Vice President Jose Paneda
Roster: Walford Campbell, Steven Tyler, Cornelis Rowaan, Sebastian Wermuth, Kevin Pavon, Hugo Montero, Gio Companioni, Alejandro Verdeia, Sergio Leos, Franz-Joseph Castillo, Luis Del Cueto, Anthony Rueda, Herzen Cortes, Alfredo Ramirez, Erik Garrigo, Steven Rodriguez, Frankie Gonzalez, Devon Roura, Jorge Orbay, Vikram Sairam, Jose Roca, Anton Martinez-Cid, Joshua Munoz, Andres Fernandez, Luis Blanco, Diego Rossette, Javier Mosquera, Alejandro Ruiz, Pedro Gomez, Nick Garcia, Andres Manzanares, Nicholas Chikuji, Rene Fernandez, Daniel Jose, Pablo Hereter, Kyle Hernandez and Adrian Alepuz. Moderator: Kimberly Homans.
Business
Roster: Brandon Almeida, Juan Lorido, Jake Guso, Jose Paneda, Nicholas Leonard, Alex Paneda, Michael Fernandez, Andres Loret de Mola, Jonathan Alvarez, Robert de Leon, Andres Robledo, Matthew Cristobal, Francisco Smith, Christopher Sanu, Bernardo Manrique, Javier Incera, Francisco Smith, Jorge Trelles-Cabarrocas, Eric Garrigo, Derek Escarra, Guillermo Saade, Steven Vega, Anthony Rodriguez, Eduardo Valle, John Barroso, Andres de Varona, Joseph Beguiristain, Jorge Orbay, Alec Castillo, Guillermo Lopez-Castro, Jose Smith, Carlos Acevedo, Alex Vazquez, Michael Saenz, Rafael Melendez, Alex Lorenzo, Daniel Gomez, Diego Anell, Anthony Rueda, Andres Fernandez, Robert Cosio, Christian Perez, Augusto Fonte, Ryan Gutierrez, Levy Fernandez-Rocha, Michael Loven, Robert de la Hoz, Oscar Vila, Osiel Gonzalez and James Williams. Moderator: Andres Jimenez.
Coffee House
Roster: Antonio Casuso, Michael Perez, Gio Cintron, Francesco Fuentes, Daniel Botero, Andreas Alvarez, George Rodriguez, Christian Perez, Daniel Ramirez, Albert Naon, Sebastian Milanes, Jack Balloveras, Lantz Martin, Alexander Aspuru, Daniel Portuondo, Alec Castillo, Julian Balboa, Adrian Alepuz, Andres Santiago, Ernest Barral and Jorge Aguilera. Moderator: Ms. Marisol Sosa.
Statistical Analysis
Roster: Hugo Montero, Gio Companioni, Steven Tyler, Albert Hermida, Anthony Calvo, Diego Anell, Carlos Espina, Andres Jose Fernandez, Eric Castellanos, Christian Salinas, Daniel Rodriguez, Alfredo Quiroga, Bryan Rodriguez, Jason Gutierrez, Marcel Arzola, Miles Pope, Nicholas Leonard, John Diaz-Silveira, Camilo Padron, Brandon Almeida, David Capetillo and Michael Sayman. Moderator: Ms. Olga Ramon.
Devon Roura
Juan Aguila
Antonio Casuso
President Michael Perez
Future Doctors of America
President Cristian Paz
Vice President
Johnathan Lucas Roster: Joshua Lara, Matias Vazquez, Diego Puig-Corve, Kevin Fernandez, Otniel Gonzalez, Daniel Halphen, Nicholas Llobell, Alexander Piccolo, Kevin Gonzalez, Ryan Perez. Francisco Marcos, Renato Scerpella, Anthony Castro, Francisco De la Camara, Erick Aguilar, Jerry Trujillo, Daniel Sixto, Alejandro Ruiz, Francisco Palacios, Juan Carabeo–Nieva, Nicholas Arias, David Andreu Jr., Chris Quintero, Gabriel Rigueiro, Basilio Garcia, Alexander Vidal, Johnathan Perez, Marcos Marimon, Agustin Rodriguez, Nikolas Rojas, Michael Qureshi, Giovanni Guicciardi, Rafael Cariello, Jerry Williams, Brandon Zaldivar, Carlos Jimenez, Julian Esain, Jose Cosio, Johnathan Amarro-Barren, Mark Saavedra, Derek Escarra, Adrian Alepuz, Anthony DeFurio, Jorge Figueras, Christopher Martin, Jose Sirven, Andres De Varona, Christian Rondon, Justin Ferrer, William Pallissery, Reynaldo Madiedo, Alejandro Villasmil, Nicholas Lorenzo, Diego Guimaraes-Blandon, Eliah Dominguez, Juan Naranjo, Eduardo Ramirez, Francisco Rios, Jake Larson, Michael Aguad, Salvy Cisneros, Thomas Avallone, Victor Saladin, Jose Arosemena, Cristian Paz and Johnathan Lucas. Moderator: Ms. Shyara Lara.
Film Production
President Alec Castillo
Vice President Michael Perez
Roster: Alec Castillo, Michael Perez, Nico Ros, Albert Naon, Gabriel Rovira, Donte Gonzalez Abreu, Rafael Cariello, Joseph Arthur Garcia, Nick Llobell, Matthew Casamayor, Humberto Marrero, Joaquin de Goytisolo, Manuel Gi, Francisco Marcos, Enrique Mendia, Jonathan Garcia, Jason Belisario and Francisco Rodriguez Moderator: Mr. Johnny Calderin.
Forensics
Roster: Alain Acha, Joseph Acosta, Andrew Ahrens, Christopher Alberro, Alfredo Arguelles, Ricardo Azze, Andres Barrios, John A Barroso, Nicholas Berenguer, Ivan Botero, Otto Boudet, Stephen Busse, Walford Campbell, Juan Carlos Campuzano, Franz-Joseph Castillo, Andres Chinchilla, Giovanni Companioni, Agustin De la Guardia, Anthony DeFurio, Jordan Diaz, Jordi Fernandez, Nicholas Garcia, Diego Gonzalez, Francisco Gonzalez, Jason Gutierrez, Thurman Hall, Pablo Hereter, Javier Herrera, Benjamin Incerra, Marcos Llobell, Alberto Llorente, Bernardo Manrique, Anton Martinez-Cid, Ricardo Martinez-Cid, Albert Pardo, Jose Pelegri, Daniel Perez, Nicholas Perez, Victor Perez-Abreu, Antonio Permuy, Robert Pertierra, David Prida, Alfred Ramirez, Daniel Ramirez, Christian Roatta, Tyler Roberts, Andres Rodriguez, Hector Rodriguez, Carlos Rosell, Diego Rosetti, Christopher Ruiz, Vikram Sairam, Jonathan Schultz, Kristopher Serrate, Jose Sirven, Andres Smith, Nicholas Torralba, Steven P Tyler, Alejandro Verdeccia, Jaime Vergara, David Villa and James Zamora. Moderator: Mr. Luis M. Dulzaides.
Entrepeneurship
Roster: Alex Alvarez, Andres Robledo, Christopher Sanu, Dominic Chinigo, Eduardo Valle, Erik Garrigo, Francisco Smith, Giovanni Companioni, Jake Guso, James Perez, Javier Incera, Jesse Gonzalez, Juan Lorido, Luis Blanco, Mario Martinez, Nicholas Torralba, Nico Becerra, Nicolas Castillo, Roberto De Leon, Steven Tyler, Vince Vazquez and Alfredo Arguelles. Moderator: Mr. Charles Cleveland.
Jake Guso
Dominic Chinigo
Group Leader
Victor Perez-Abreu
Urgent Action Coordinator John Ukenye
De
Secretary General of the High School Thurman Hall
Secretary General of the Middle School Nicolas Briscoe
Model United Nations
Nicolas
Thurman
Dominic
Beacons for the Blind
Vice President Andreas Alvarez President Michael Perez
Roster: Diego Anell, Salvador Cisneros, Giovani Companioni, Jason Gutierez, Javier Incera, Jake Larson, Andres Manzanares, Camilo Padron, Victor Perez-Abreu, Genaro Poula, Francisco Rios, Devon Roura, Jaime Vergara, Andrew Bernal, Juanky Campuzano, Peter De Armas, Robert
La Hoz, Jorge Fleites, Guillermo Lopez-Castro, Michael A. Marina, Christian Marquez, Ricardo Montalvan, Jorge Powell, Christian Salinas, Carlos Rosell and Frank Battle. Moderator: Mr. Pat Collins.
Roster:
Briscoe,
Hall, Daniel Jose,
Chinigo, Javier L. Martinez, Eduardo Velez, Luis Blanco, John Ukenye, Andres Perez, Peter Kiliddjian, Nicolas Perez, Daniel Cairo, Adolfo Rodriguez, Michael Sayman, Marcos Llobell, Sebastian Muñoz, Gabriel Nuñez, Michael Ruiz, Jonathan Herrera, Antonio Permuy, Jose Sirven, Jorge Figueras, Julian Balboa, Kris Serrate, Eduardo Tamborrel, Eduardo Abascal, Ricardo Azze, Alexander Aspuru, Alvaro Baez, Enrique Mercado, Amir Boulos, Ernest Barral, Alberto Pardo, Nicolas Tamborrel, Federico Tamborrel, Michael Cairo, Renato Scerpella, Adrian Hernandez, Justin Hernandez, Kevin Lemos, Daniel Romero, Nicolas Muñoz, Edward Briscoe, Oscar Berlanga, Patrick Maher, Daniel Martinez, Michael Gonclaves, Javier Guerrero and William San Pedro. Moderator: Mr. Orlando Gutierrez.
Roster: Michael Perez, Andreas Alvarez, Matthew Pastor, Anthony DeFurio, Daniel Ramirez, Thomas Ahearn, Daniel Cendan, Vincent Cendan, Omar Masri, Alexander Mertz, Sebastian Munoz, Jonathan Pereyra, Christian Perez and Kristopher Serrate. Moderator: Ms. Valeria Flores.
S.A.D.D.
Roster: Liam Fernandez-Rocha, Felipe Montes de Oca, Levi Fernandez Rocha, Alistair Humphreys, Nicolas Salazar, Cristian Marquez, Michael Qureshi, Juan De Campos, Osvaldo Nunez, Adrian Hermida, Steven Peterson, Richard Sotolongo and Gus Fonte. Moderator: Ms.
Psychology
President Felipe Montes de Oca
Vice President Michael Qureshi
President Mario Martinez
Operation Smile
President Carlos Fernandez
Vice President Javier A. Martinez
Roster: Mario Martinez, Eric Diaz Padron, Jorge Figueras, Hector Ortiz, Jose Silva, Marcel Arzola, Kyle Hernandez, Danny Gomez, Luis del Cueto, Danny Poo, Michael Aguad, James Zamora, Nicholas Garcia, Chris Morales, Diego Anell, Erick Rivacoba, Evan Banciella, Anthony Yabor, Andres Busse, Matthew Cristobal, Peter Jackson, Keonte Cash, Alejandro Verdecia, George Alfaro, Anthony Sierra, Javier Martinez, Alex Vazquez, Bernardo Manrique, Michael Saenz, Nicholas Briscoe, Eduardo Ramirez, Daniel Rodriguez, Thurman Hall, Jason Gutierrez, Rafael Melendez, Victor Saladin, Nick Suarez, Francisco Villafañe, Javier Incera, Chris Padron, Franz Joseph Castillo, Eduardo Valle, Andrew Tremblay, Nicolas Chikuji, James Perez, Diego Rojo, Kyle Hernandez, Patrick Puig Corve, Jesse Gonzalez, Anthony Rodriguez, Walford Campbell, Albert Naya, Robert Alvarez, Andre Suarez, Daniel Lopez, Daniel Gonzalez, Carlos Fernandez, William Fabra, Manny Gonzalez, Steven Rodriguez, Alex Romero, Michael Muñoz and Michael Fernandez. Moderator: Dr. Brian Wentzel.
Teresa Gutierrez.
Roster: Brandon Almeida, Jack Barrios, Ryan Bermudez, Jose Blanco, Matthew Bravo, Mateo Buraglia, Emilio Cardonal, Juan Carlos, Nicholas Casariego, Michael Chang, Salvy Cisneros, Jacob Collins, Alejandro Corzo, Daniel Corzo, Eric De Cardenas, Anthony Ebbage, Carlos Fernandez, Joseph Garcia, Lucas Garcia, David Garzon, Maxwell Goldberg, Albert Gonzalez del Valle, Alistair Humphreys, Jorge Iglesias, Eric Lastres, Jesus Linares, Samuel Linares, Sebastian LopezIbanez, Andres Loret de Mola, Cristian Marquez, Lantz Martin, Gabriel Martinez-Varela, Kenji Martinez, Christopher Menendez, Enrique Menendez, Michael Menendez, Ricardo Montalvan, Diego Navarro, Lucas Otero, Ivan Pachon, Albert Perez-Abreu, Nicholas Perez, Ricardo Perez, Sebastian Rafuls, Ethan Ramirez, Andres Rodriguez, Edward Rodriguez, Mario Rodriguez, Nicolas Rodriguez, Carlos Romerot, Devon Roura, Joseph Rubio, Alejandro Ruiz, Nicolas Salazar, Alejandro Senior, Anthony Sierra, Vlado Toyos, Christian Trastoy, Gabriel Trastoy, Brian Valiente, Matthew Villalba, Alejandro Villareal and Robert Waechter. Moderator: Ms. Maria D. Alonso.
After All... the games
F OOTBALL Varsity
A er getting the double-hando on the ‘criss-cross,’ runningback senior Alexander Diblasi sprints past the defense. Diblasi made a transition early in the season from defense to o ense and played very well on the o ensive side of the ball, providing explosive plays on a weekly basis. Unfortunately, Diblasi became the second player to lose his season due to a torn ACL midseason, a er starting senior fullback Alejandro Alvarez tore it in the rst game of the season. Injuries plagued the Wolverines all year long, as well as departures by two starting linemen before the season even started.
Row: Ryan Murphy, James Garcia, Kevin Pascual, Alejandro Alvarez, Camilo Padron, Austin Riveron, Jaime Vergara, Eric de Cardenas, Jorge Powell, Jorge Pola, Daniel Perdomo, Andrew Muriedas, Coach Richard Stuart. Second Row: Coach CJ Flores, Coach Christoper Esteban, Christoper Marrero, Andres Garcia, John Medina, Frank Battle, Alexander Adams, Alexander Diblasi, Victor Perez-Abreu, Daniel Neptune, Eugenio Cosculluela, Mateo Buraglia, Xavier Hines, Alexander Navarro, Michael Gomez, Coach Nicolas Echeverria, Coach Jorge Reyes. Third Row: Coach German Delgado, Coach Eduardo Delgado, Coach Augusto Venegas, Brandon Silvestry, Alejandro Cortes, Jorge Fleites, Ivan Botero, Nicholas Bustamante, Justin Lorenzo, Carlos Salazar, Mark White, Christian Suarez, Jack Flood, Derek Escarra, Jorge Reyes, Nicholas Garcia, Coach Jose Capote. Fourth Row: Coach Frank Moreno, Guillermo Pujals, Keonte Cash, Nicholas Lorenzo, Alfredo Arguelles, Juan Garcia, Jorge Gonzalez, Marlon Seijo, Nicholas Cambo, Ralph Rosa, Michael Diaz-Silveira, Juan Aguila, Matthew Diaz, Cristian Garcia, Coach Angel Aparicio, Coach Michael Curiel. Not pictured: Christian Barrial, Marcus Gonzalez- Jacobo, Ariel Jimenez, Jose Llanes, Mariano Macias, Christian Estrada, and Fernando Molina.
A er an interception, senior Justin Lorenzo lead-blocks for fellow defensive lineman, senior Cristian Garcia. Garcia was also the only player who started on both o ense and defense for the Wolverines, playing both o ensive guard and tackle on o ense and defensive end on defense.
Fullback sophomore Brandon Silvestry, sprints through the hole. Silvestry
Defensive end senior Andres Garcia sheds the block to tackle the Gulliver runningback. Garcia spent his third full season on
varsity squad and was one of the leaders that other players always looked up to. His infamous haka chant got the team hyped up before every game.
First
After All...
those games in the mud
By: David Hondal
Quarterback senior Ryan Murphy, pulls up to pass the ball to Jaime Vergara on the waggle out. Murphy was the vocal leader of the team throughout the year, and his speed and versatility provided a dual threat in the passing and running game. The back eld had many explosive young players like Daniel Neptune and Christian Barrial to help the Wolverines to over 200 yards rushing per game.
Third-year starting o ensive lineman senior Keonte Cash, explodes out of his stance to pop the Homestead defender. Cash played both center and tackle in his senior season, and was a great role model for the younger players. He was selected to the All-Dade team for the second consecutive year, and the rst team All-State as well.
Linebacker senior Christian Suarez runs to meet the Columbus runningback. Suarez was the defense’s leading tackler for the second year in a row, and made big plays throughout the season to keep the team in games. He and Camilo Padron maintained the middle of the eld all season.
Kicker senior Mateo Buraglia, boots the ball to the opposing Carol City Chiefs. Buraglia was the only fourth-year player on the team, and his powerful leg helped the team with eld position, especially against opponents in the nationally ranked best district in high school football.
Center senior Guillermo Pujals fires out of his unique 4-point stance. Pujals was one of the most versatile players on the team, playing all offensive line positions, and also contributing as defensive tackle.
Against a Gulliver defender, senior Xavier Hines sti arms the competition for extra yards in the team’s biggest rivalry game. Hines was the starting free safety for the Wolverines, but also made many contributions at runningback and on special teams.
JV
F OOTBALL
By: David Hondal
Blowing by the corner, freshman Mario Robaina, makes a terrific catch along the sideline. Robaina was a duo-threat runningback by not only running the ball but making crucial catches too. He was one of the
offensive weapons.
GROW...
to be a pro
Michel Abud-Pichardo, Giovanni Menocal, Victor Acevedo, Fernando Molina, Gerard Albert, Matthew Murphy, Nicholas Arias, Sebastian Paoli-Torres, Joshua Barditch, Dylan Pareja, Jason Belisario, Brian Pascual, Jorge Cabrera, Johnathon Perez, Orlando Calas, Richard Perez, Francisco Castellanos, Robert Pertierra, Andres Cesin, Nicholas Peterson, Joseph Cirera, Giancarlo Pinto, Luis Corps, Steven Placeres, Alejandro Diaz, Hanler Portal, Max Dominguez, Daniel Portuondo, Jorge Escobar, John Powell, Matthew Feiler, Fernando Pujals, Max Fernandez, Robert Pulles, Augusto Fonte, Jake Ramirez, Stephane Francoeur, Dajour Resiere, Edward Fuller, Tavish Rice, Joseph Garcia, Diego Rivera, Nicolas Garcia, Mario Robaina, Patricio Garzon, Carlos Rodriguez, Alejandro Gonzalez, Jake Rodriguez, Andres Guisasola, Justin Rodriguez, John Hermida, Luis Rodriguez, Daniel Hernandez, Ernesto Ruiz-Sierra, Brandon Herrera, Alec Sanchez, Daniel Hondal, Wilfredo Sanchez, John Hyland, Eduardo Santos, Manrique Iriarte, Jonathan Sanz-Perez, Ariel Jimenez, Brandon Sierra, Joshua Lascano, Cristian Trujillo, Sebastian Leiter, Giovanni Valdes Guicciardi, Jose Llanes, Jonathan Varela, Alberto Llorente, Karol Vargas Saul Lola, Pablo Venegas, Jose Lopez-Varela, Alexandr Vento, Mariano Macias, Jean Zamora, and Cristian Matos. Coaches: Mario Pino, Nick Echeverria, Joey Capote, Daniel Hidalgo, Jorge Reyes and Chris Esteban.
Turning the corner, sophomore Daniel Hernandez, returns an interception. Hernandez was one of the leaders of the team and played defense and special teams.
Sacking the QB, freshman Joseph Garcia, gets the safety. Garcia was one of the team’s leading tacklers and even started on the final game of the year on the varsity team.
team’s
Roster: Patrick Perez, Francisco Menendez, Roberto Fernandez, Javier Hernandez, Alfonso Rodriguez, Matthew Crespo, Lucas Pola, Anthony Duarte, Diego Ortega, Adrian Bruna, Albert Perez-Abreu, Cory del Prado, Christian Lamar, Deiter Prussing, Pedro Jimenez, Conner Yurkon, Emilio Mascaro, Gabriel Estrada, Carlos Valderrama, Victor Lopez de Mendoza, Daniel Garrastazu, David Martinez, Clyde Dozier, Jordan Galvez, Gabriel Aparicio, Joshua Lara, Ian Anderson, Manuel Menendez, Eloy Fernandez, Ehren Fernandez, Alejandro Toyos-Sitjes, Stefano Santamaria, Andres Maza, Jorge Valdes, Ricardo Mayo, Adrian Senra, Michael Prado, Marc Novas, Daniel Sanche, Andres Smith, Carlos Sosa, Matthew Martin, Nicolas Vila, David Garcia, Javier Garcia, Joseph Parlade, Pedro Garcia, Max Salazar, Andres Gomez, Jeremy Bencomo, Hunter Prindle, Jandrice Nacier, Roberto Pupo, Peter Martin, Ian Escarra, Norberto Menendez, Javier Rodriguez, Matthew Bravo, Carlos Arazoza, Daniel OteroPfaeffle, Joseph Cruz, Jose Plasencia, Gabriel Seda, Michael Moreno, Mateus Tordin, and Alain Bonvecchio. Coaches: Mike Curiel, Carlos Maza, Roger Lara, Henry Brimo, and Matthew Moro.
free, eighth
Francisco
strides straight passed
Michael
Daniel Esteban, Ethan
Kurzan,
Armando Albert, Nicholas Mullis, Aramis Castano, Lucas Oliveira, Daniel Corzo, Adrian Paredes, Erik Delgado, Juan Perez, Gonzalo Dorta, Sebastian Prieto, Dustin Duprey, Aaron Ramirez,
Ramirez, Adrian Garcia, Bryan Reyes, Daniel Gonzalez,
Rodriguez, Seth Hart, Joseph Rubio, Thomas
Rafael Ruiz, Michael Lopez, Antonio Serrano, Federico Lozano, Alejandro Suarez, Peter Morales, Nicholas Valdes. Coaches: Eduardo Fraga, Eddie Crespo, Pedro Jimenez, and Mario Martinez.
Around the defense, eighth grader Adrian Bruna uses his agility to get the edge on the sweep. Bruna led the offensive attack with his blazing speed leaving most defenders in the dust.
Breaking
grader
Menendez
Doral defenders . Menendez was a great asset to the running game and a major contributor to the team’s offensive attack.
Making the big hit, sixth grader Daniel Esteban wraps up his man and brings him down for crucial tackle. Esteban led the Wolverine’s first ever sixth grade football team to a winning record.
At the UF Invitational, sophomore Ryan
At the Appalachee Regional
C ROSS C OUNTRY
GREENTREE INVITATIONAL FIRST FALCON INVITATIONAL T HIRD
UF INVITATIONAL F IRST
S OUTH F ORK HS F LEETFEET F IRST
F LRUNNERS COM INVITATIONAL F IRST DADE COUNTY YOUTH FAIR FIRST CELTIC INVITATIONAL FIRST DISTRIC C HAMPIONSHIP F IRST
R EGIONAL C HAMPIONSHIP FIRST STATE CHAMPIONSHIP FIRST
Park, junior Michael Magoulas is encouraged by coach Frankie Ruiz as he nears the nish line. Magoulas came in seventh place at the State competition.
Rodriguez makes his move to pass the competition. Rodriguez was top ten in the State Competition.
Looking to take over the competition, junior Fabian Tomas competes in the UF Invitational. Tomas has been a valuable member of the team for the past three seasons.
Standing: Jose Roca, Andres Fernandez, Ryan Rodriguez, Osiel Gonzalez, Alexander Isaac, Avery Lopez, Michael Magoulas, Fabian Tomas, Diego Rojo, ALvaro Mejer, Gabriel Von Der Osten. Kneeling: Diego Anell, Marcel Arzola, Andrew Ahrens, Antonio Montadas, Nicholas Tenorio, Kevin Montiel, Jaime Lopez, Lorenzo Gui, Omar Rosete, and Eric Garrigo. Sitting: Roberto Martel, David Fager, Jorge Gomez, Nicolas Roca, Rodrigo Bustamante, Dominic Wermuth, and Juan Zayas. (Not pictured: Tomas Bello)
After All...
we’re still leading the pack
At the State competition, senior Avery Lopez keeps the other runners at bay. Lopez was the solid number one man all season long. “It was a great experience to lead the team through a successful season to States,” said Avery Lopez. “My goal was to be the front runner and help my team to do their jobs well. In the process, I was able to improve my personal best by 19 seconds.”
By: David Hondal
Top: At the Dade County Youth Fair Meet, junior Andres Fernandez helps to clinch the county title for the Wolverines. Fernandez had been running cross-country since the sixth grade. Middle: At FlRunners, junior Alexander Isaac and freshman Tomas Bello make their way through the pack. Both runners were valuable members of the team. Bottom: At Larry and Penny Park junior Osiel Gonzalez keeps the pace. Gonzalez helped the Wolverines through an outstanding season.
Top: The team competes at the FLRunners Invitational in Titusville, Florida. Despite its inexperience, the team exceeded expectations bringing home the Dade County Championship trophy. Middle: Seventh grade runners Sebastian Dueñas and Alejandro Corzo help the Wolverines secure another win. Both runners were consistent top performers. Bottom: Fighting for a top spot, eighth grader Brandon Torricella passes the competition. Torricella contributed to the team throughout the year.
NDENIABLY... NDEFEATED UU
the
M IDDLE S CHOOL C ROSS C OUNTRY
PLACE
Standing: Anthony Fraga, Albert Fraga, Joshua Collins, Steven Calles, Christopher Garcia, Brandon Torricella, Michael Ahearn, Matthew Falls, and Nicholas Castellanos. Kneeling: Eric Labrador, Rodrigo Madiedo, Giancarlo Benitez, Sebastian Dueñas, Sebastian Roa, Andrew Dieters, Javier Fraga, Michael Aparicio, and Alejandro Corzo. Sitting: Daniel Fager, Rodrigo Nieto, Juan Miguez, Gregory Gallinar, Lucas Miguez, and Nicholas Suarez. (Not Pictured: Luciano Bettocchi and Head Coach Victor Arrieta).
At
first St. Theresa meet of the season, seventh grader Joshua Collins takes the lead among the competition. Collins was a consistent top runner on the team.
ALWAYS ONE STEP AHEAD
Along with other sixth graders,
a valuable member of the middle school team.
PLACE SIX TH G RADE C ROSS C OUNTRY
Standing: Michael Rodriguez, Jacob Collins, Andre Hall, Rodrigo Barquero, Ian Degwert, and Carlos Avila. Kneeling: Rodrigo Madiedo, Sebastia Roa, Giancarlo Benitez, Nicholas Suarez, Andrew Dieters, and Javier Mariscal. Sitting: Rodrigo Nieto, Juan Miguez, Gregory Gallinar, and Lucas Miguez. (Not pictured: Luciano Bettocchi, Christopher Galliano, Carlos Ariza, and Head Coach Victor Arrieta).
Top: At Tropical Park, sixth grader Juan Miguez outruns the competition. Miguez ran along with his twin brother Lucas who was also on the team. Middle: Pushing to do his best, sixth grader Giancarlo Benitez sprints to the finish. Benitez was also the ACC champion. Bottom: Inspired by Athletic Director Carlos Barquin, sixth grader Luciano Bettocchi heads to the finish line.
Bettocchi was
At the second St. Theresa meet of the season, sixth grader Rodrigo Madiedo takes the lead to win the race. Madiedo won every single race that he ran at the sixth grade level.
During the District Tournament junior Daniel Perez blasts it out of the bunker at The Redlands golf course. This was Perez’s rst year on the varsity team and he was very consistent for the Wolverines.
Junior Pedro Gomez-Faccio launches the ball down the fairway. Gomez-Faccio made great strides on varsity this season a er playing JV last year and was known as the team’s ‘clutch’ putter on the greens. The young guys proved to be pivotal throughout the season.
Sophomore Joaquin Trigueros stares down his approach shot at the Doral White Course. Trigueros was the top performer on the golf team besides four-year letter winner Cabanas.
At the pristine Doral White Course, senior Oscar Cabanas tees it up. Cabanas was the leader of the team and represented the young Wolverine squad at the State Championship for the third consecutive season. He, along with seniors Francisco Smith and Steven Vega led the team to a 5-5 record.
After All... the putts and pars
By: Ryan Murphy
Concentrating on the shot, freshman Kristian Lastre aims at the flag. Lastre was the youngest member on the varsity team.
Using the flat stick, freshman Victor Alvarez finishes the job on the green at Deering Bay. The JV team had an undefeated season last year.
Discussing a new strategy, seventh grader Andrew Perez and sixth grader Jack Barrios get ready to execute their next shot at the Briar Bay Golf Course. “This middle school golf team was the hardest working group that I have ever coached in my time at the school,” said Coach Gerardo Portela.
W
M INSTER C HRISTIAN F OURTH
BULLDOG FOURTH DADE C OUNTY YOUTH FAIR EIGHTH
LOSS
LOSS
I
FIFTH
Junior Varsity
Guillermo Saade, Daniel Perez, Francisco Smith, Joaquin Trigueros, Steven Vega, Coach Mario Avello, Oscar Cabanas, Pedro Gomez-Faccio, Andrew Cecol, and Armando Marquez, (Not pictured: Kristian Lastre).
Coach Gerardo Portela, Jorge Iglesias, Alejandro Smith, Andres Perez, Guillermo Najera, Jack Barrios, Jorge Moscoso, Daniel Chavez and Carlos Lara.
Coach Gerardo Portela, Victor Alvarez, Andrew Powell, Nicholas Vega, Joel Yanez, AJ Martinez, Walter Tomasino, and Andrew Cecol. (Not pictured: AJ Sardina)
The Lightweight 8 boat gets under way at the San Diego Crew Classic. The boat advanced to the grand nal and nished in fourth place. “Hard work really does pay o because it was a great season,” said junior Andres Fernandez.
A Ahead
by: Jorge Pola
Preparing for their next regatta, sophomores Nicolas Keenan and Nicolas Fernandez as well as junior Andres Fernandez row during a practice session. The crew team practiced not only on the lake, but also on machines called ergs which allowed athletes to practice their stroke.
Beginning their race, the Lightweight 4 boat swi ly moves across the water. The crew team was comprised of approximately 80 students from all grades.
As the Lightweight 8 takes the boat out to shore in preparation for the race at the San Diego Crew Classic, coxswain junior Miguel Zaldivar carries his equipment with his boat members. In this event, the Wolverine crew team competed against the best crew teams of the west coast.
Working hard in practice, sophomore Manuel Sanchez and junior Daniel Ugas lead the Varsity 8 boat. All the hard work paid o in events such as the Miami International Regatta where members of the crew team from middle and high school won a total of fourteen medals: eight gold, four silver, and two bronze.
Participating in the Oars Invitational Regatta, the Lightweight 8 boat races towards the nish line. The team always had supporters from the community at their regattas, no matter where the events were held.
the Varsity 8
state
Competing in the Manny Flick Regatta in Philadelphia, the lightweight 8 boat powers through the water. The crew team participated in over een regattas throughout the year, many of which were against teams from all over the country.
Roster: Julian Rodriguez, Waldo Toyos, Nicolas Gales, Julian Zulueta, Chritian Trastoy, Andres Lara, Kasser Ismail, Daniel Giacosa, Lucas Zumpano, Diego Perera, Sebastian Hernandez, Andres Dones, Ricardo Labrada, Miguel Hernandez, Christian Ventura, Carlos Dominguez, Santiago Ugas, Jonathan Menendez, Michael Balbuena, Michael Congalvez, Christian Collazo, Christian Burke, Alex Fals, Harry Formoso, Ben Gilbert, Jorge Padron, Nicolas Waterhouse, Sebastian Chamorro, Liam Mullin Garcia, Josheph Garcia, Basilio Garcia, Lucas Lorenso, Conor Meagher, Fernando Pinera, Andres Borroto, Arturo Bonnet, David Gonzalez, Alexander Keenan, Nicolas Keenan, Joseph Perez, Andrew Escobar, Joseph Menendez, Hector Formoso, Ryan Gutierres, Nicolas Fernandez, Alexander Vidal, Joey Armengol, Luis Suares, Manuel Sanchez, Alejandro Seda, Robert Woodry, Rashad Ismail, Robert Waechter, Andres Sanchez, Horacio Garcia, Nicolas Vazquez, Alexander Roa, Jose Vina, Carlos Solanilla, Francesco Fuentes, Casey Rodriguez, Roberto Villasante, Christian Lopez, Andres Jose Fernandez, Jonathan Pereira, Vincent Cendan, David Alvares, Alejandro Novoa, Miguel Zaldivar, Matias Buedo, Diego Guimaraes, David Dukenik, Santiago Dipilla, Daniel Ugas, James Perez, Vincent Vazquez, Christopher Sanu, Nicolas Castillo, and Manuel de Ovin Berenger. Coaches: Aris Nelson Aguiar, Jose Ugas, Yunian Cabrera and Yosbel Martines.
Leading
boat, sophomore Nicolas Fernandez guides the boat through the Indian Creek Regatta race. The team attended two
events: the Sculling State Final and the Sweeping State Final, both held in Sarasota.
AfterAll...
By: Willy Pujols
THE HOURS IN THE WATER
VARSITY S WIMMING
R ESULTS
R EAGAN W
D ORAL & K EY W EST W
DADE C OUNTRY FAIR F IRST
GULLIVER W
PINE C REST W
R ANSOM W
MIS. INVITATIONAL W
C OLUMBUS W
DISTRICTS FIRST
R EGIONALS F IRST
S TATES FIRST
Top row: Thomas Avallone and Miguel Basalo. Middle row: Boleck De Pawlikowski, Coack Kirk Peppas, Kerzen Cortes, Jake Guso, Ryan Guso, David Andreu, Alejandro Perez, Nicolas Tamborrel, Adrian Hernandez, and Justin Hernandez. First row: Julian Ballestas, Alejandro Carriazo, Michael Limia, Evan Banciella, Bernardo Lima, Juan Perez-Costa, Edel Abad, Manuel Lopez, Maximiliano Garcia Del Pozo, Coach Brandon Murphy, Christian Fowler, Alfredo Ramirez, and Sebastian Wermuth.
Diving o the block, senior Thomas Avallone starts the 50-yard freestyle at the Doral Academy Meet. Avallone was a valuable member of the team qualifying for states as the last leg of the 200-yard freestyle relay.
the
Entering the water, senior Jake Guso begins the 50-yard freestyle at the Columbus Meet.
to districts in this event. The majority of the varsity swim team was comprised of seniors. Their
and
was showcased during the States competition where they won their sixth State Title.
Starting
200-yard freestyle relay against Ronald Reagan High, senior Evan Banciella dives in as teammate Boleck De Pawlikowski gets ready to swim behind him. Banciella swam in States the 50-yard freestyle and the 200-yard freestyle relay. The team won rst place in the 200-yard relay at the State competition and quali ed All-Dade.
Guso made it
talents
experienced
Swimming the 200-yard Individual Medley, junior Boleck De Pawlikowski comes in rst place at the Columbus Swim Meet. De Pawlikowski placed in the nals at States in the 100-yard backstroke and the 500-yard freestyle.
Diving o the block, junior Juan Perez-Costa starts o the 100-yard butter y at the Ronald Reagan Meet. PerezCosta swam in States the 100-yard backstroke and the 100-yard butter y. He also swam the 400-yard freestyle relay at States where the team took rst place.
During the Ronald Reagan Swim Meet senior Julian Ballestas leaves the competition behind in the 100-yard butter y. Ballestas was the fastest swimmer on the team and committed to the Michigan swim team early on in his senior year. Ballestas started swimming for the school’s team in the sixth grade, and he was last year’s team captain. He capped o his senior year by winning another State Title and an individual title in the 200-yard freestyle.
Jumping off from the block, eighth grader Mario Rodriguez, takes a dive into the pool to start the race. Rodriguez received the second fastest time for the 50M breast in the Districts meet.
While doing the breaststroke, eighth grader Juan Ramirez swims ahead of the competition. Ramirez has been swimming for the team since the sixth grade and was an essential part of their overall success.
Swimming the butterfly, eigth grader Maximiliano Garcia del Pozo, leads the race as he heads to a victory. Garcia Del Pozo was one of the top swimmers in the middle school swim team. “Attitude is everything. I was really impressed with our team this year,” said
MAKING
M IDDLE S CHOOL S WIMMING
WARRIOR INVITATIONAL 2ND
BELEN INVITATIONAL 2ND
MIS INVITATIONAL 2ND
MS YOUTH FAIR 2ND
Garcia del Pozo.
Roster: Nicolas Aguilar, Jason Khoury, Maxwell Belisario, Jorge Machado, Alessandro Billau, Jonathan Manrique, Daniel Bustos, Hugo Marin, Ivan Cabrera, Michael Morera, Christian Carr, Mario Perez, Alejandro Carriazo, Gabriel Perez De Corcho, Jose Chaviano, Philip Pingree Alberto Conti, Gabriel Polo, Alejandro Conti, Matthew Pulles, Andre Cozier, Juan Ramirez, Robert Curbelo, Franco Rivera, Alex Doval, Andres Rodriguez, Carlos Echenique, Andrew Rodriguez, Brian Feal, Jorge Rodriguez, Gabriel Gallardo, Mario Rodriguez, Maximiliano Garcia del Pozo, Alejandro Salas, Kyle Gomez, Kevin Simauchi, Matthew Gomez, Nicolas Suarez, Zachary Gomez, Roger Torres, Sean Hickey, Placido Valdes, Zachary Jimenez and Matthew Watkins. Coach: Brandon Murphy.
They were few They were
Getting in position to make his move, sixth grader Julian Ramirez contemplates his strategy before going for the attack. Although Ramirez was the youngest wrestler on the team, he had the drive and determination of a veteran athlete.
By: Jorge Pola
Roster: Benzo Rudnikas, Paul Martinez, Keonte Cash, Andres Chavez, Carlos Frisbee and Julian Ramirez, Coach: Fidel Abelo and Ivan Enriquez.
During one of the key matches, senior Keonte Cash grips his opponent and dominates the play. Cash was the team’s leader and went on to win the District Championship.
to
towards
Beginning the match, junior Paul Martinez gets his low center of gravity for his first take down. “This year was great, despite our size, all of us experienced success individually and as a team,” said Martinez.
his opponent to finish him off. Rudnikas was a key member of the wrestling team bringing in three years of experience. “Although we were small in number this year, we had a great season overall,” said Rudnikas.
With the Columbus defender in his face, shooting guard senior Eric Couto pulls from three. Couto was the sharp shooter on the team and always had the con dence of his teammates to take shots. He led the team in fast break lay-ups from the many steals he got thanks to his agility. Couto wore #44 all season but is wearing #1 in this picture to honor teammate Ryan Murphy who missed the entire season for the second consecutive year.
Guard senior Michael Fernandez drives past the Viper defender. Fernandez was the only third year player on the varisty and could stretch the defense with his shooting. Fernandez committed to take his talents to Cornell University and play at the collegiate level.
(Far Right) Against district foe Northwestern, guard/ forward junior Nicholas Iparraguirre pulls up for a jumper. Iparraguirre was on the team for his second year and his lankiness helped tremendously on defense. He had four dunks this season, and will be a vital part of the team’s success next year.
Second-year starting pointguard senior Javier Alvarez drives past the Westland defender. The senior was the leader of the team in points, assists, and steals for the second year in a row, and recorded a career high 28 points against Columbus. His quickness and tenacity carried the team, and led to his selection to the All-Dade Team.
History
By: James Garcia
WILL REDEEM US
With the ball in the high post, senior center Guillermo Pujals drives to the basket. Pujals was great at scoring inside against much larger defenders. His trademark pump fake earned him many trips to the free throw line and got other teams in foul trouble.
B ASKETBALL
Front Row: Johnathan Herrera, Javier Alvarez, Michael Fernandez, Eric Couto, Matthew Fernandez, Jose Roca. Back Row: Coach Ruben Marrero, Andres Perez, Guillermo Pujals, Ryan Murphy, Michael Diaz-Silveira, Frank Battle, Nicholas Iparraguirre, Coach Jose E. Roca.
Sophomore guard Louis Giordano gets by the defender and makes a move towards the basket against the Columbus Explorers at the Bank United Center. Giordano was one of only two returning players to the JV squad, and had it not been for a broken arm that kept him out for a month, he would have had an even better season.
Junior Varsity
B ASKETBALL
Winning the jump ball, sophomore Daniel Romeu starts o the game strong by winning the rst possession. Romeu was the second freshman on the team, and even though he was one of the youngest players on the team he made numerous contributions. Romeu was one of the leaders in both rebounds and points per game. Along with being an o ensive threat, he also contributed with his shot blocking ability.
Kneeling: Andrew Powell, Eduardo Cruz, A.J. Consuegra, Louis Giordano, Brandon Silvestry, Guillermo Vadell. Standing: Coach Ruben Marrero, Carlos Perez-Heydrich, Ignacio Perez, Daniel Romeu, Joseph Cirera, Joseph, Ordonez, Richard Rodriguez and Mariano Macias.
Pasing o the ball to his teamate, point guard freshman Alfredo Consuegra drives to the lane. Consuegra was one of only two freshman on the team, and took over as the starting point guard when second year JV player, Eduardo Cruz, hurt his knee. Consuegra was the leader in assists and has a very bright future ahead of him. (Above le ) As the defense collapses around him, center sophomore Joseph Ordonez, hits the fade away jumper. Ordonez was one of the top rebounders and defensive players.
Pulling up in the paint, freshman Giancarlo Pinto glides past the defender for a jumpshot. Pinto was a very agile player who could stretch the oor with his speed and passing skills.
Driving down the lane, freshman Steven Marin, goes through two defenders to score a layup. Marin was a great defender and always found a way to get to the basket.
F RESH S TART...
BRIGHT
By: Ryan Murphy
Easily passing the defenders, guard freshman Armand Del Castillo makes a strong drive to the basket at a home game. Del Castillo was an outstanding player at the point guard position.
Against an aggressive defender forward freshman Luis Mejer takes a jump shot to make the basket. Mejer was one of the top rebounders on the squad.
Freshman
B ASKETBALL
US T HEM
Roster: Gabriel Cabrera, Armand del Castillo, Christopher Jauregui, Sebastian Leiter, Steven Marin, Luis Mejer, Daniel Mejia, Giancarlo Pinto, Johnny Powell, Daniel Puente, Nicolas Roca, David Salazar and Daniel Sixto. Coach: Jean Paul Mendez.
B ASKETBALL
L OURDES 49 30
ST. T IMOTHY 52 14
ST. PETER&PAUL 59 24
E PIPHANY 47 35
ST. K EVIN 63 8
L OURDES 40 30
A MERICAN H ERITAGE 61 20
ST. K EVIN 38 11
ST. T IMOTHY 59 19
R ANSOM 69
Seventh Grade
B ASKETBALL
E PIPHANY 15 41 ST. T HOMAS 29 37 ST. T HERESA 30 33 ST. AGATHA 40 52 A MERICAN H ERITAGE 42 14 ST. AGATHA 26 29
ST. T HOMAS 20 23
ST. BRENDAN 32 35 R ANSOM 42 4
F LA . C HRISTIAN 30 24 ST. BRENDAN 45 14
ST. T HERESA 27 29 W ESTMINSTER 39 35 R ANSOM 46 10
U NIVERSITY 49 37 PALMER T RINITY 55 12
W ESTMINSTER 31 33
PALMER T RINITY 40 12 JCC 25 4
F LA . C HRISTIAN B T EAM 37 26 NORTHWEST C HRISTIAN 41 37 A MERICAN H ERITAGE 46 43
W ESTWOOD 42 38
W ESTWOOD 36 32 US T HEM
Driving down the base line, eighth
beats a defender and takes the ball to the basket.
was aggressive with his play on the court.
Pulling up for the jumper, seventh grader Roberto Fernandez makes the shot. Fernandez was a huge contributor to both the offense and defense.
Putting up the shot, eighth
whose inside play and rebounding were valuable to the team.
Roster: Jonathan Barditch, Richard Morales, Carlos Diaz, Jose Plasencia, Luis Diaz, Alec Rodriguez, Roberto Fernandez, Eric Mena, Milan Suarez, Jared Hart, Christian Tinoco, Ricardo Mayo, and Jose Toledo. Coaches: Christian Marrero and Eugene Cruz.
Roster: Kevin Baloyra, Teobaldo Rosell, Alejandro Barnola, Gabriel Seda, Matthew Bravo, Nicholas Senior, Juan Carrillo, Christian Silva, Francisco Menendez, Michael Sueiro, Maurice Milton, and Javier Torres de Navarra. Coach: Jorge Martinez.
grader Matthew Bravo, gets a rebound and scores. Bravo was a versatile, powerful forward
grader Michael Sueiro,
Sueiro
Driving down the lane, sixth grader Alec Rodriguez takes the layup. Rodriguez was the leading scorer for the team and propelled the o ense throughout the year. He was de nitely the go-to-guy the entire season.
With perfect form, sixth grader
free
a huge part of the team and an outstanding
was a lot of hard work that will de nitely pay o next year,” said
By:
Workingthe paint
Roster: Manuel Becerra, Kevin Martin, Daniel Cantens, Joaquin Novoa, Javier Canto, Nicholas Patricios, Francesco Cimo, Ricardo Perez, Gabriel de Zendegui, Christopher Ponce, Raul Herrero, Alec Rodriguez, Nelson Marin and Daniel Sueiro. Coaches: Carlos Bravo and Christian Marrero.
Manuel Becerra, hits his
throw. Becerra was
defender. “It
Becerra.
David Hondal
A er a rebound, sixth grader Joaquin Novoa puts back a shot. Novoa was both a presence down low and at the top of the key handling the ball. Although Novoa su ered an injury during the season, he was still one of the most valuable players on the team.
By: Robert Vanscoy
With growing anticipation, junior William Lorenzo awaits patiently for his opponent’s serve. Lorenzo was a part of the district champion doubles team, and a solid member of the
With great precision, junior Bryan Rodriguez returns his opponent’s serve. “This season was very successful and I am very proud of the overall outcome,” said Rodriguez.
PLAYING
LIKE THE
Varsity squad.
With extreme concentration, senior Juan Lorido looks on as his return catches his opponent o guard. Senior captain and year varsity letterman, Lorido led the Wolverines all the way to their second Regional Championship. Lorido ended his school career as a four time District Singles Champion.
Timing his swing perfectly, junior Christian Perez makes contact with the served ball. Perez played both singles and doubles during the season.
Roster: John Barroso, Enrique Mercado, Daniel Concepcion, Christian Perez, Gabriel Farias, Genaro Poulat, Alejandro Hasegawa, Bryan Rodriguez, Javier Incera, Patrick Siu, Mark Lagunas, Michael Tefel, William Lorenzo, Santiago Vidal, and Juan Lorido. Coach: Mr. Timothy VanScoy.
Roster: Andres Balcazar, Felipe Pardo, Sebastian Dueñas, Bernardo Poulat, Carlos Grande Juan Rodriguez Verde, Javier Guerrero Vicente Eduardo Scheuren, Miguel Hernandez, Christopher Siu, Matias Lorenzo, Daniel Tormo and Rafael MartinezVarela. Coach: Mr. Timothy VanScoy.
Springing back, eighth grader Andres Balcazar prepares to rocket the ball back to his opponent. Balcazar played middle school tennis for the past three consecutive years and was a huge contributor to the successful 2013 season.
With perfect form, seventh grader Sebastian Dueñas prepares for a textbook return. A two-sport player, Dueñas was a top ve singles player for the middle school squad and was known for giving 100% at every match.
Captain of the middle school team, eighth grader Christopher Siu uses all his upper body strength to propel the ball back to the opponent’s court. Siu who provided leadership and determination during the season hoped to join his brother Patrick on the 2014 varsity team.
Defenseman sophomore Jose Maguina clears the ball against American High. Maguina was a great defender and had a bright future with the Wolverines. The team played on the brand new Sanchez eld this year and were actually the rst team in the school to win a game on the eld.
Flying past the Sunset defender, forward senior Eduardo Valle looks to score. Valle had tremendous skill moves and speed and was one of the team’s most lethal goal scorers. Valle was part of a core group of seniors who headed the team.
Center back senior Diego Mion steals the ball from the American forward. Mion was a third year letterman on the varsity team. He was the leader of the defense and was one of the best headerers on the team.
Defenseman senior Mateo Buraglia gets past the defender and advances the ball. Buraglia was the co-captain of the team and was a leader to all the young players. Buraglia had one of the biggest leg on the team and was always called upon for free kicks.
Just
Kickin’ It
By: Ryan Murphy
Junior mid elder Carlos Acevedo keeps the ball in bounds in the District Semi nal game against Westland. Acevedo was one of the team’s most skilled players and was primed to be the leader of a team with a bunch of young, up-and-coming talent next season.
Attacking mid elder freshman Frankie De La Camara looks to score on the Westland defense. De La Camara was one of the best freshmen players on the team, and was always able to distribute the ball extremely well.
Forward senior Kevin Gonzalez dribbles the ball o his knee and looks to score. Gonzalez was the co-captain of the team, and was one of the top goal scorers, with 15 goals on the year. Gonzalez nished the season, and capped his high school career extremely well, scoring 8 goals in the nal 10 games.
Kneeling: Jose Maguina, William Pallissery, Steven Peterson, Ignacio Sapetnizky, Marcello Hernandez, Kevin Montiel, Kevin Gonzalez, Alvaro Chirinos, Anthony Castro, Fernando Pujals, Santiago Vidal, Nicholas Lopez. Standing: Felipe Prellezo, Mateo Buraglia, Carlos Acevedo, Jose Vicente Sanchis, Eduardo Valle, Jorge Orta, Gabriel Lopez, Diego Mion, Tavish Rice, Alexander Parekh, Frankie De La Camara, Christian Barrial, Jonathan Alvarez and Coach Tanger Mendonca.
Goalie junior Gabriel Lopez clears the ball at Westland. Lopez started in the goal for the second year in a row and played very well all season. Although the Wolverines played great all season long, they were upset in the District Semis.
Midfielder sophomore Mikel Juan loads for the big kick to set his team up in scoring range. Juan was an all around player for this team and produced a lot on both offense and defense. He was also one of the team captains.
Holding down the defense, freshman Nicholas Tootle steals the ball from the opponent. Tootle was
on defense this past year, only allowing a
the goalie.
Making an athletic play on the ball, freshman Holman Rios splits the opposing attackers to clear the ball for the Wolverines. Holman was a great contributor to the team with his hustle and effort.
Roster: Francesco Armstrong, Rafael Marmol, Santiago Molero, Joshua Silva, Willian Kindelan,Jose Jimenez, Joseph Fuentes, Tomas Gonzalez, Claudio Laratelli, Alexander Hernandez, Adrian Pombo, Christopher Hernandez, Benjamin Cardenas, Mark White, Cristian Gonzalez, Oscar Pinate, Alfredo Lopez-Sotillo, Otto Boudet, Nicholas Tootle, Carlos Juan, Holman Rios Andres, Casariego, Pedro Aragone, Mikel Juan, Lorenzo Guio, Andres Juan,Andres Barrios, Daniel Cairo, Bryant Aristy, Domingos Leos, Dorian Acosta, and
Tenorio. Coach: Jorge Powell.
By: James Garcia
Roster: Francesco Armstrong, Carlos Moreno, Matthew Bec, Christopher Moustafa, Alain Bonvecchio, Rodrigo Munoz, Robert Castro, Juan Pereira, Jose Garces, Alfred Perez, Lucas Gomez, Javan Rice, Nicolas Hernandez, Daniel Sarmiento-Urrego, Maximiliano Llorente, Nicolas Sosa, Robert Lopez-Irizarry, Mateus Tordin and Rodrigo Madiedo. Coach: Gabriel Mion.
Tyler Abella, Andres Fernandez, Pedro Arbex-Murut, Cristian Garcia, Rafael ArbexMurut, Mark Garrigo, Francisco Barrera, Agustin Leos, Javier Bustamante, Sebastian Llano, Andre Caputo, Luis Mathison, Alejandro Chalela, Daniel Neret, Sebastian Clark, Diego Nunez, Joseph Cruz, David Velasco and Richard De Aguiar. Coach: Patrick Houlihan.
Forward eighth grader Francesco Armstrong races down the field and looks to score. Armstrong was one of the top goal scorers for the Gold Team and helped lead the team to
Roster:
Roster: Tyler Abella, Rodrigo Madiedo, Cesar Aguzzi, Guillermo Molero,Pedro Arbex-Murut, Juan Moreno, Lukas Escapil, Guillermo Najera Sweeney, Gregory Gallinar, Gabriel Polo, Lucas Garcia, Guillermo Quintero, Carlos Gonzalez, Alejandro Salas, Jorge Jimenez, Patrizio Trippetti, Zachary Jimenez, Jasen Velken, Jorge Lopez-Cabrera and Nicolas Vurgait. Coach: Patrick Houlihan.
SERVING UP
By: Robert Vanscoy
Varsity
V OLL E YBALL
PLACE
C ORAL G ABLES W
S OUTHWEST L
F LORIDA C HRISTIAN L
C ORAL PARK L
M IAMI C HRISTIAN W
SMOOTHIE K ING W
SMOOTHIE K ING L
R ANSOM L
C OLUMBUS L
C OLUMBUS L
C ORAL PARK L
F LORIDA C HRISTIAN L
W EST PALM BEACH L
GREATER M IAMI ACADEMY W
C ORAL G ABLES L
S OUTHWEST L
SUNSET L
R ANSOM L
Roster: Jonathan Alvarez, Nicolas Iparraguirre, Andres Perez, Sebastian Paoli-Torres, Michael Diaz-Silveira, Eduardo Cruz, Levi Fernandez-Rocha, Jorge Paoli-Torres, Miguel Torres de Navarra, Javier Guerrero, Andres Hidalgo and Liam Fernandez-Rocha. Coach: Juan David Zapata and Sebastian Zapata.
Getting ready to serve, junior Nicholas Iparraguirre takes on the competition. “My team played with a ton of heart and took every game to the wire. I was really proud of the way we played this year,” said Iparraguirre.
Preparing to serve the ball, eighth grader Maurice Milton strategizes his next move. “Being a member of the 2012-2013 season has been a blast. We have come a long way and I am excited for the future of the team,” said Milton.
Varsity Roster: Gabriel Cabrera, Andres Casariego, Francisco De la Camara, Anthony DeFurio, Jonathan Herrera, Christopher Jauregui, Alfonso Martinez, Joseph Ordonez, Roberto Gallinar, Diego Gonzalez, Cristian Marquez, Juan Naranjo, Lucas Osorio, Francisco Palacios, Pablo Perez and Alejandro Villasmil. Coach: Juan David Zapata and Sebastian Zapata..
With the support of eigth grader Andres Poveda, fellow classmate eigth grader Daniel de la Fe sets up for the perfect return. The young middle school team was a definite force to reckon with.
With his teammates anxiously awaiting the contact, eighth grader Daniel Perez lines up the ball for the next play. Being a tight group was a very important component of this team’s success.
Middle School Gold Roster: Cristian Alonso, Daniel de la Fe, Nicolas Gonzalez, Esteban Guio, Adrian Poveda, Teobaldo Rosell, Javier Torres de Navarra and Fernando Garcia-Chacon. Coach: Juan David Zapata and Sebastian Zapata.
Middle School Blue Roster: Daniel Perez, Francisco Barrera, Andre Capato, Sebastian Charnizo, Lucas Fernandez, Eril Lastres, Nicolas Tobon, Cristian Garcia and Michael Penerarda. Coach: Juan David Zapata and Sebastian Zapata.
Junior
Setting up for a spike, junior Alejandro Villasmil knows just how to hit the ball to ensure maximum effect. Being one of the few juniors on the team, Villasmil was not only a great player, but also a great leader.
Launching into the air to make contact with the ball, sophomore Christopher Jauregui sets up the play for the team. Jauregui was intrumental in the growth and development of the JV volleyball team.
Winding his arm back, junior Anthony DeFurio gets ready to dish out the perfect serve. Much like Villasmil, DeFurio was one of the most experienced players on the team.
After All...
we are a team
By: Ryan Murphy
Pitcher senior Daniel Parets hurls the pitch in the District Championship game against the Mater Academy Lions. Parets was the ace of the pitching sta and had some unbelievable performances, including a 10-inning scoreless outing against Mater, that eventually ended up in a 1-0 loss. He had a fastball that topped out in the upper 80s, which helped get him to the next level of college baseball.
A er hitting a ground ball into the gap, out elder junior Ryan Rodriguez-Mena sprints to rst to try and move on to second. Rodriguez-Mena batted second in the lineup and was a key contributor on defense. The team had a great season and played one of the toughest teams in the state in Mater Academy to two heartbreaking, one-run losses, including in the District Final.
Looking to get on base in the District Final, senior Lucas Fernandez-Rocha eyes the pitch. Fernandez-Rocha had played catcher for the majority of his time in the baseball program, but found himself playing a lot of first base this year due to the needs on the defense. Fernandez-Rocha will continue his baseball career at Swarthmore College.
Jerry
A er elding the short grounder, shortstop junior Alexander Cabrera launches the ball over to rst for the out. Cabrera was the lead-o batter for the Wolverines and had a great on base percentage. His quickness and skills with the glove helped him make some outstanding plays in the eld.
Roster: Alexander Cabrera, Javier Herrera, Oscar Cabanas, Christian Del Castillo, Christian Ayala, Ryan rodriguez-Mena, Lorenzo Laurita, Pablo Cabrera, Albert Naya, Lucas Fernandez-Rocha, Alexander Lorenzo, Daniel Parets, Nikolas Fernandez, Ivan Botero, David Villa, Joseph Acosta, William Fabra, Eric Artigues, Robert Morgado, Elias Monsalve and Daniel Guevara. Coaches:
Albert, Ivan Montane, Jorge Prieto and Chris Jaile.
In the District Semi nal, senior William Fabra throws the o speed pitch against Hialeah Miami Lakes. Fabra also played rst base in spurts throughout the year and was the team’s best power-hitter. He will play baseball in Manhattan College with teammate Elias Monsalve, making them the only two D-1 players from the team.
Shortstop junior Pablo Cabrera slings the ball to rst from second base. Cabrera was a very reliable hitter in the back of the linup and had a great glove at second base. He was one of
Looking into the eye of the hitter, sophomore Jonathan Gutierrez, winds up to get ready to deliver his pitch. Gutierrez was the team’s best pitcher and was known for his speed with every throw.
A er the catch from the pitcher, sophomore Gabriel San Roman, goes down to tag the runner at rst. San Roman led the JV team in walks.
Roster: Jonathan Gutierrez, Hugo Duenas, Jose Chegwin, Marcos Perez, Francisco Gomez, Michael Gomez, Alex Novoa, Alex Falla, Albert Maury, Brandon Herrera, Jon Varela, Luis Vargas, Julian Gonzalez, Andres Fernandez, Joshua Barditch, Nick Ureta, Kevin Guzman, Christopher Lorenzo, Gabriel San Roman and Willie Sanchez. Coaches: Jorge Prieto and Patrcick Houlihan.
B ASEBALL
In the catcher position, sophomore Marcos Perez waits for the ball thrown by the pitcher. Perez was known for his canon of an arm to get any runner trying to steal.
MOVING UP THE
At the shortstop position, eighth grader CJ Vazquez elds a ground ball to center. Vazquez was the only eighth grader on the freshman team last season.
Known for his o speed pitches, freshman Robert Espinosa takes the batter by surprise. Espinosa’s arm included great accuracy and showed tremendous potential for future plays.
Roster: Pablo Arevalo, Tommy Bello, Julio Aira, Ghulian Ramos, Gabe Gonzalez, CJ Vazquez, Albert Guttierez,
Pinto, Mario
Josh
Robert
and Steven Santos. Coaches: Angel
and Julio Aira.
Middle School Gold
BASEBALL
Middle School Blue
BASEBALL
Roster: Alec Arrizurieta, Jonathan Barditch, Alessandro Billau, Eric Blanco, Eloy Fernandez, Kyle Gomez, Nelson Graveran, Nicholas Guthrie, Andrew Hernandez, Eric Lastres, Emilio Mascaro, James Mullis, Ivan Pachon, Alejandro Pacios, Alfred Perez, Jason Rodriguez, Nicolas Smith, and Milan Suarez. Coaches: Eduardo Fraga and Jorge Rodriguez.
Roster: Jose Arevalo, Daniel Brown, Michael Cabeza, Alejandro Cicero, Andres Diaz, Marcus Diaz, Brian Garcia, Carlos Lara Jorge MiroQuesada, Santiago Muñoz, Jacob Perea, Alfonso Rodriguez, Joseph Sanchez, Gabriel Trastoy, Carlos Valderrama, and Christian Winch. Coach: Andres Blanco.
Going in for the bunt, eighth grader Brian Garcia, tries to move the runners over to the next base. Garcia, a player for the gold team, was known for his blazing speed giving him the ability to bunt and steal bases.
About to pitch the ball, seventh grader Alec Arrizurieta aims to strike out the batter. Arrizurieta also played third base and played a tremendous role on the offense as a hitter.
Swinging for the
By: David Hondal
Sliding into second, sixth grader Michael Rodriguez, runs as fast as he can to make it before the catcher can throw him out. Rodriguez played le eld and was well known for his canon arm.
Releasing the pitch, sixth grader Armando Albert prepares to strike out the opposing batter. Although Albert threw righty, he actually batted le y. In addition to pitching, he also played center elder.
Roster:
Getting under the y ball, sixth grader Nick Suarez makes the play and takes out the runner. Suarez played the position of right elder.
Clearing the 13 ‘6” mark, senior Carlos Muñiz wins a vault o to capture the Regional Pole Vault title. Along with other vaulters such as senior Jose Roca and senior Andres Manzanares, Muñiz scored a key number of points that propelled the team to win the Regional Championship. He was selected to be on the All County Team together with the 4x800m.
TRACK AND FIELD Varsity
PLACE
FATHER LUIS RIPOLL , SJ RELAYS FIRST
M ARTIN C OUNTY FIRST
SAM BURLEY F IRST
DUAL MEET # 1 W
F ERGUSON FALCONS I N V. SECOND
DUAL MEET # 2 W
F SU R ELAYS F OURTH
DUAL MEET # 3 W
DADE C OUNTY YOUTH FAIR FOURTH F ERGUSON W
BRIAN JAEGER THIRD
DISTRICT C HAMPIONSHIP SECOND
R EGIONAL C HAMPIONSHIP FIRST
S TATE C HAMPIONSHIP EIGHTH
Running the 4x1600
during the year set a new
the
in
relay, senior Avery Lopez takes
lead at the Father Luis Ripoll, SJ Relays. Lopez
school record
the 3200m at the FSU relays by running it in 9:10:34. Lopez went on to nish second in the state in the 1600m and fourth in the 3200m.
Roster: Ethan Bauer, Osvaldo Rodriguez, John Egusquiza, Jason Egusquiza, Juanbruno Zayas, Nicolas Roca, Jorge Gomez, Roberto Martell, Dominic Wermuth, Benjamin Frisbee, Jose Rubio, Nicholas Novo, Nicholas de la O, Gerard Albert, Andres Fernandez, Kevin Montiel, Jaime Lopez, Marc Pugliese, Diego Anell, Diego Rojo, Avery Lopez, Carlos Muñiz, Jose Arosemena, Daniel Neptune, Christopher Blanco, Samuel Maya, Eric Castellanos, Kevin Lemos, Alexander Navarro, Christian Rondon, Marcos Gonzalez-Jacobo, Otniel Gonzalez, Fabian Tomas, Gabriel Nuñez, Andres Manzanares, Stephane Francoeur, Bernardo Manrique, Alexander Isaac, Jose Roca, Michael Magoulas, Eric Couto, Eric de Cardenas, Alvaro Mejer, Omar Rosete, Ryan Rodriguez, Richard Moncada, Henry Benitez, Richard Salinas, Marcel Arzola, Francisco Odon, Antonio Montadas, Michael Gomez, Ariel Jimenez, Matthew Mullin-Garcia, Augusto Fonte, Tao de Landaburu, Michael Castellanos, Oscar Martinez, Nicholas Tenorio, Julian Esain, Andre Deshon, Vikram Sairam, Stephen Busse, Gabriel Von Der Osten, Giovanni Menocal, Kevin Valdez, Daniel Mejia, Eliah Dominguez, Peter Kiliddjian, Rene Lamar, Gabriel Abril, Anthony Perez-Pino, Eric Calero, Joshua Lascano, Daniel Simms, Mark White, Keonte Cash, Omar Masri, Nicholas Peterson, Alexander Candia, Simon Londono, Armand Del Castillo, Ryan Perez, Gabriel Tozo, and Michael Aparicio. Coaches: Victor Arrieta, Carlos Barquin, and Joey Scott.
After All....
the blood, sweat,
By: Ryan Murphy and
tears
Making the exchange senior Diego Rojo passes the baton to junior Alexander Isaac in the 4x800m relay. Together with Lopez and Rosete, the relay ran a season best of 7:58:77. The relay squad went on to win the State Championship at the University of North Florida, in Jacksonville.
Clearing the starting height, senior Jose Roca competes at the FSU Relays. Roca ended up clearing 13 feet. The team was in fourth place when the meet was called o due to bad weather.
At the Brian Jaeger Meet, sophomore Stephane Francouer anchors the 4x400m. Francouer was also an outstanding 300m hurdler who competed in the Regional Championships.
While running the 110m high hurdles, junior Daniel Neptune takes the lead for good and wins the race at the Brian Jaeger Meet in Winter Park. Neptune advanced to the Regional Meet in this event.
With a fast start, eighth grader Matthew Bravo widens the gap between the competition. Bravo tied the 400 meter dash record of 56 seconds and set a personal record of clearing 5’ 4” in high jump. He also got an unbeatable 25 at in the 200 meter dash.
During a practice run, seventh grade hurdlers Gabriel Aparicio, Francisco Barrera and Eric Labrador work on the jump before the actual race. The hurdling team was a very competitive goup that will continue to be a threat on the track.
Roster: Gabriel Aparicio, Francisco Barrera, Maxwell Belisario, Jeremy Bencomo, Joshua Collins, Alejandro Corzo, Clyde Dozier, Carlos Diaz, Sebastian Duenas, Albert Fraga, Javier Fraga, Antonio Fraga, Thomas Gallinar, Christopher Garcia, Matthew Gomez, David Gonzalez, Eric Labrador, Claudio Leyva, Brandon Lubian, Daniel Pinto, Nicolas Rodriguez, Juan Rubio, Javier Samuell, Conner Yurkon, Cristian Alonso, Carloz Arazoza, Antoine Brandt, Matthew Bravo, Adrian Bruna, Christopher Caballero, Steven Calles, Matthew Crespo, Anthony Duarte, Javier Fraga, Carlos Gallo, Esteban Guio, Justin Hernandez, Alejandro Hunter, Pedro Jimenez, Diego Ortega, Brandon Torricella and Nicholas Senior. Coaches: Tina King, Rob Novak, and Isa Betancourt.
Middle School
T RACK AND F IELD
PLACE
MIAMI DADE C OUNTY FAIR EIGHTH ACC R ESPECT L IFE F IRST FATHER SARDINA INV F IRST ACC R ELAYS SECOND DADE C HRISTIAN INV F IRST
C HAMPIONSHIP
With ease seventh grader Joshua Collins breezes by the St. Peter and Paul runner gaining and keeping the rst place spot within the rst lap. Collins was one of the team’s best long distance runners winning most of the races by a wide margin and setting a personal record with a 4:58 mile in his last meet.
Handing o the baton to seventh grader Christopher Garcia, seventh grader Alejandro Corzo completes the rst leg of the 4x800 relay. The 4x8 team was a true force to reckon with nishing rst in all of the races.
As he loads for the toss, eighth grader Steven Calles sends the shot put 38.6 feet across the green. In addition to the discus and shotput, Calles also ran the 400m.
Running...
in the fast lane
With a mighty launch sixth grader Bryan
put soaring for a great score.
By: James Garcia
Sixth Grade
T RACK AND F IELD
With amazing speed and a great start sixth graders Rodrigo Barquero and Jasen Velken take off at the beginning of the 200 meter race. Both Barquero and Velken ran fantastic legs placing first in almost every short distance event they ran.
Roster: Dominic Abreu, Cesar Aguzzi, Carlos Avila, Rodrigo Barquero, Giancarlo Benitez, Nicholas Casariego, Jacob Collins, Daniel Corzo, Andrew Dieters, Gregory Gallinar, Jose GarciaChirino, Andre Hall, Zach Jimenez, Samuel Linares, Rodrigo Madiedo, Jake Miguez, Luke Miguez, Brandon Moran, Lucas Otero, Ricardo Perez, Nicholas Perez, Gabriel Polo, Sebastian Rafuls, Bryan Reyes, Sebastian Roa, Jose Rodriguez, William Sanchez, Stefan Todywala, Raul Sague, Alex Suarez, Jasen Velken and Nicolas Vurgai. Coaches: Tina King, Rob Novak, and Isa Betancourt.
sends the
was an outstanding contributor to the field events being one of the best among the
Reyes
shot
Reyes
team last year.
Sitting in a comfortable spot, sixth graders Cesar Aguzzi and Luke Miguez look to place first and second in the mile. Both wolverine runners topped in the long distance races.
Leading the way, sixth graders Rodrigo Madiedo and Gregory Gallinar pass opposing runners with ease and finishing in the top in this race. This young team had a perfect season and showed tremendous potential for the years to come.
After All...
By: David Hondal
Awaiting a shot, senior Francisco Villafañe gets in position to make a save. Villafañe had an outstanding season with 103 saves throughout the year.
Covering his defender, senior Matthew Marrero plays tight defense to make sure his man doesn’t score.
was known for his great defense and his ability to clear the
(Far right) A er beating a defender, senior Ethan Rodriguez goes to rip a shot from outside the box. Rodriguez was the second highest scorer on the team.
ready to
or
the rst evers #1E
Dodging hard toward the goal, senior Robert Cosio looks ahead to score a goal. Cosio not only led the team in goals, but also led the entire district. “This has de nitely been the best year of lacrosse I have ever played due to the fact that we made districts and how much fun I had with my teammates,”
Marrero
ball.
Getting
score, senior Daniel Hillman, dodges around the crease to score
nd an open man. Hillman was known for his speed and his vicious contacts, usually leaving his man at on the ground.
A er winning the faceo , senior Matthew Cristobal picks up the ground ball and looks to start a fastbreak. Cristobal was the vocal leader of the team and one of the best defenseman in the county. He was named to the rst All Dade team.
said Cosio.
Getting ready to apply a check, freshman Ted Huertas plays tight defense on his man. Huertas was one of the team’s best defenders and also played long stick mid eld.
Going toward the goal, freshman Richard Perez rips a shot from outside the crease. Perez was an attackman and the leading scorer on the team.
Roster: Thomas Borell, Enrique Mercado, Nicolas Castellanos, Maurice Milton, Anthony Castro, Andres Chinchilla, Brian Pascual, Luis Corps, Patrick Perez, Alberto Cosio, Richard Perez, Daniel Dager, Christian Perez, Gabriel Garcia, Robert Pertierra, Jose Garcia, Andres Poveda, Daniel Garcia-Tunon, John Powell, Calixto Garcia-Velez, Adrian Rey, Alejandro Gonzalez, Diego Rivera, Luke Hernandez, Nicholas Rodriguez, Daniel Hondal, Nikolas Rojas, Ted Huertas, Teobaldo Rosell, Joshua Lara, Mathew Salas, Carlos Machado, Anthony Seicentos, Carlos Martinez, Carlos Torres de Navarra, Enrique Mendia and Cristian Trujillo. Coach: John Okunski, Allan Balando, Joey Balando and Matthew Balando. Coaches: John Okunski, Allan Bellando, Matthew Bellando, Joey Bellando and Roger Lara.
Roster: Michel Abud-Pichardo,Nicholas Leonard, Alexander Adams, Guillermo Lopez-Castro, Matthew Marrero, Patrick Arrojo, Anthony Martin, Christian Barrial, Robert Munoz, Kevin Pascual, Gabriel Cabrera, William Candela, Jorge Powell, Carlos Castellanos, Felipe Prellezo, Michael Chang, Edwin Ricardo, Eugenio Cosculluela, Christian
Robert Cosio, Ethan Rodriguez, David Hondal, Matthew Cristobal, Derek Escarra, Carlos Rosell, Jordi Fernandez, Michael Saenz, Oscar Vila, Daniel Hillman, Francisco Villafane, and Oscar Ortega. Coaches: John Ukunski, Allan Bellando and Matthew Bellando.
About to pass out to an outlet man, freshman Matthew Salas clears the ball to start the o ense. Salas had an amazing season with 140 saves
By: Guillermo Pujals
P OLO Varsity
Roster: Eduardo Abascal, Adrian Hernandez, Adrian Alepuz, Justin Hernandez, Alexander Alepuz, Enrique Lam, Alfredo Arguelles, William Lopez, Alexander Boza, Alberto Maza, Herzen Cortes, Sebastian Milanes, Michael Fernandez, Santiago Nuñez, Maxwell Goldberg, Alfredo Ramirez, Cesar Gonzalez, Ryan Rodriguez, Jake Guso, Eduardo Tamborrel, Ryan Guso and Nicolas Tamborrel. Coaches: Jimmy Aguilera and Lazaro Fernandez.
Getting ready to shoot, senior Jake Guso beats the goalie to score a goal. Guso was considered one of the premier players in the state and was nominated as the Dade County player of the year for water polo. He led the Wolverines to a Regional Championship giving them the opportunity to compete for a state title.
Ripping a shot to the net, senior Herzen Cortez makes one of his three goals against Southwest. Cortez was the leading goal scorer for the Wolverines last season and was considered one of the elite players in the entire state of Florida. He was notorious for energizing the crowd with his after goal celebrations and his fan favorite helicopter shots.
Backing down his defender, senior Alfredo
creates space from his defender to gain position for a potential goal. Ramirez was a force inside and frustrated opposing teams with his ability to score from the most difficult positions.
Rising up to block the shot, sophomore Ryan Guso stops the potential goal. Guso was one of two sophomores who started for the varsity team, and despite his young age, he was able to perform like a true veteran. He was respected by the entire team and was recognized as one of the best goalies in the state of Florida by the Miami Herald.
Staring down the goalie right before putting the ball past him, sophomore Santiago Nuñez scores an early goal against Columbus High. Nuñez, although being one of the youngest players, had a huge influence on the team’s successful season.
Ramirez
Moving the ball down, senior Enrique Lam sets up the offense to run a play. Lam was great off the bench and very influential in keeping the team calm under high pressure situations like the State Championship tournament.
Setting up for a pass, junior Maxwell Goldberg passes the ball for an assist. Goldberg was a defensive presence for the team, which is considered by many to be the hardest defensive position to play.
Raising the
Bar
By: James Garcia
Closing out on his defender, eighth grader Pablo Kurzan attempts to steal the ball. Kurzan was, throughout the team’s season, the leader in steals and takeaways for the team. He played a huge role in the defensive leadership for the team.
Holding the ball out of the water, eighth grader Federico Tamborrel throws a fake shot at the goalie to set up for an easier shot. Tamborrel was a leading goal scorer for the team and was crucial to the team’s success during the season.
Blocking the shooting lane, seventh grader Jose Chaviano interrupts the shot before getting to the goalie. Chaviano was crucial on the defensive side of the ball and always shut down the o ensive players he covered.
Roster: Nicolas Aguilar, Kevin Simauchi, Jose Chaviano, Ignacio Aguilar, Andre Cozier, Nicolas Gonzalez, Christopher Galliano, Gabriel Kasabdji, Zachary Gomez, Pablo Kurzan, Andrew Hernandez, Erick Labrador, Jason Khoury, Tristen Marin, Jonathan Manrique, Sebastian Melendez, Norberto Menendez, Andres Puello, Alessandro Sardina and Federico Tamborrel. Coach: Lazaro Fernandez.
After All...
the strikes
By: David Hondal
With perfect form, junior Anthony De
bowl for a strike.
was one of the top
to this very young team.
Talking to his players, Coach Luis Dulzaides, talks to the team about their plan of action. “I believe all members contributed to the establishment of a team that will definitely experience tremendous success for years to come,” said senior Diego Rosette.
Looking down the lane, senior Andres Smith, prepares to set the pins in motion. Smith was one of the team founders and leaders. He was highly involved in creating the bowling team and making it an official sport. Although they suffered many losses, the team showed signs of progress and potential for the following year. “At first I wasn’t sure about how the season would go, being a new sport in the school, but it was good to see the team come together,” said Smith.
Roster: Marcos Marimon, Anthony Perez-Pino, Cristian Paz, Andres Casariego, Andres Smith, Anthony DeFurio, Lucas Fernandez-Rocha, Anthony Baradat, Adrian Pombo, Diego Rosette, Alejandro Verdecia. Coaches: Luis Dulzaides and Andres Blanco.
Furio, tries to
DeFurio
contibutors
CLC ... 180
Youth Mission... 181 Lock in/Mini Olympics...182
Grandparents’ Day... 183 Father and Son Day... 184 Family Day... 185 Mother and Son Day ... 186 Band ... 187
188
Ceremony... 190
grade prom... 191
Prom... 192
Prom... 193
194
Community chris ians
By: Jorge Pola
Participating in their activity, sophomores Andres Casariego and Jose Pelegri work together on their iPads to complete their spiritual task. Activities such as looking up Bible passages and interpreting them were some of the many enriching exercises performed in this organization.
CLC moderator Ana Mora has a discussion with her sixth grade group. One of the purposes of this organization was not only to grow spiritually, but also to speak about present issues that one might encounter in life as a student and teenager.
Peer Ministry group leader and head of Campus Ministry Dr. Jose na Chirino leads her group in discussion. CLC met every Tuesday during homeroom throughout the year. Dr. Chirino was one of the founders of the organization under the leadership of Father Marcelino Garcia, SJ.
BRIDGING
...the gap
By: Jorge Pola
Several students in the school community including many alumni come together to build a bridge to help locals travel from town to town. Last year the Youth Mission trip took all its participants to the town of San Felipe Abajo -a quaint little village in rural Dominican Republic. (Inset above) The bridge a er it was completed.
At the clinic, senior Austin Riveron gives a helping hand while a mother and her daughter are in line to get a check up. During this trip, a makeshi clinic was set up where locals could get physicals, children could be vaccinated, and all people were screened for potential illnesses.
Father Willie Garcia Tuñon, SJ blesses the newly built bridge and opens the new travel way for all locals. A total of 100 participants travelled to the Dominican Republic last year including approximately 60 current students and faculty members.
When not building bridges, seniors Carlos Castellanos and Michael Gomez helped to pass out gi s and supplies to some of the locals. The trip took place from June 29 through July 08, 2012.
Sixth grade students from Mrs. Lascano’s homeroom make their entrance into the gym for the opening ceremony. Students from each homeroom created their own banners displaying a creature from Greek mythology, and carried it into the
Sixth graders run to pop the
of
By:
LET T HE MEMORIES...
gym.
hundreds
balloons that were released in the gym that day. All the activities for the sixth grade mini Olympics were held in the gym because it rained heavily that Saturday morning.
Under the supervision of the seniors and Mr. Thomas De Quesada, the sixth graders crawl into their sleeping bags and get ready to sleep during the last two hours of the night. In addition to pizza and a movie, the students listened to motivational speakers during the Lock In. The event that started at 9 pm, ended at 7 am the following morning.
Before starting the dodgeball match, senior Eric Couto teaches the sixth graders how to perfect the student ritual of ‘The Bus’. At the Lock-In, sixth graders spent the entire night with a few seniors inside the school gym.
Jorge Pola
Never Young B I N G O 2 4
By: Jorge Pola
Enjoying a game of dominoes, seventh grader Andres Fernandez and his grandmother Mrs. Ana Ayo get to spend some quality time together. Grandparents’ Day was kicked o by a very moving mass presided by Father Marcelino Garcia, SJ.
Highly engaged in a game of Bingo, seventh grader Timothy Mackle and his grandfather Mr. Ralph Yale work together as a team.
was one of the more popular events during Grandparents’ Day.
Standing in line outside of the cafeteria, seventh grader Daniel Ferro and his grandmother Mrs. Carmen
the
a
Bingo
Feal look forward to
delicious lunch that was prepared by the sta . Grandparents were also treated to
live musical trio that played for them throughout the day.
Me 'n My Pops
By: Jorge Pola
Taking his time to concentrate on the hoop, eighth grader Joseph Sanchez competes with his dad in a round of freethrow. Last year, the eighth grade class entered a contest to design the Father and Son Day t-shirts.
In the central patio of the school, eighth graders and their fathers enjoy a relaxed game of dominoes. Eighth grade students rotated through a series of events including ag football, kickball, and dodgeball.
Fathers and their eighth grade sons compete in a friendly game of outdoor basketball. The event began at 9 am and continued through the a ernoon.
While enjoying fresh pastelitos and orange juice, eighth grader Andres Perez and his father Mr. James Perez get ready to begin their father and son adventure. The event was kicked o with a mass o ciated by school chaplain Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ.
Fam-Jam
By: David Hondal
At the basketball courts, freshmen Nicolas Tamborrel, and Luis Marquez, take on Mr. Eduardo Tamborrel and his hoop talents. Family Day took place in October and was a de nite success among the members of the freshman class.
Enjoying a game of dominoes, freshman Conor Meagher and his parents Mrs. and Mr. Phillip Meagher spend some quality family time. The event included other family activities such as a rock climbing wall and the football toss.
Playing volleyball, the freshman class engages in some friendly competition with members of their family. Freshman Family Day was kicked o by a mass that was held in the Roca Theater. The homily included a deep discussion on the value of family.
In the sandwich making station, freshmen Alex Valdes and Gabriel Riguero along with members of their families, make peanut butter and jelly treats. The sandwiches were later distributed to the homeless population in Downtown Miami. This event not only gave students an opportunity to bond with their families, but also to provide a service for the less fortunate.
MomTIME
By: Ryan Murphy
Learning how to line salsa, sophomores Jake Ramirez and Benjamin Rodriguez try to keep their moms in rhythm. Mother and Son Day was held in the school gym in early May.
A er having just learned how to dance salsa, sophomore Stephane Francouer and his mother take on the dance oor to show o the latest moves. The event begun with a beautiful mass in the Roca Theater presided by Father Pinzon, SJ.
In the bu et line, sophomore Andres Ibarra and his mother help themselves to the served meal. The bu et included shrimp, grilled chicken, rice, salad and cupcakes.
Accompanying their mothers, members of the sophomore class enjoy a hearty meal in the school gym. While the moms and sons ate, a violinist played background music for all attendees.
Musically in-
Performing with world renown actor and singer Carlos Ponce, the Jazz Band band truly demonstrates their professional skills. The jazz band came in second place and received a Superior rating at the national competition held in Washington, DC.
By: Jorge Pola
While warming up with the piano in the music room, sixth grader Andre Hall demonstrates his technique to older pianists seventh graders Rafael Llaneza and Ehren Fernandez. All three students along with violinist eighth grader Jun Hyung Cho won First Place prizes at the Youth Fair and Exposition for their musical talents.
Performing for a large crowd, one of the beginners band kept everyone’s toes tapping at the Spring Concert Celebration of the Arts. This concert also included performances by the drum line, the jazz band, and the concert band.
With a view from above at the Christmas Concert, the orchestra performs under the direction of music teacher Mr. Jose Urbay. The orchestra was comprised of over 50 instrumentalists who performed in numerous concerts.
At the Disney Music Festival, the Concert Band performs in competition. The Concert Band received a rating of Excellent Category at this event. They also performed in the Spring Concert Celebration of the Arts.
During the Tombola festival junior Tao De Landaburu, freshman Wilfredo Allen, and sophomore Carlos Juan perform in the Central Patio. The drumline also performed in other school events including sport venues and pep rallies.
Celebrating its h year, the Jazz Band participates in the DC Festivals of Music event. Representatives Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Joe Garcia presented band directors Ms. Marlene Urbay and Mr. Jose Urbay with a special plaque.
Showcasing their talents, senior Kenji Martinez and sophomore Anthony Padura perform a song in the talent show. Other performances that day included a musical performance by the Jazz Band as well as a jam session by the Music Appreciation Society.
At the alumni booth, sophomores Ezequiel Cuevas, Andres Sanchez, and Michael Leyva view an old yearbook and were amazed to see the images of their school back then. The alumni booth was a place for the alumni visiting Tombola to reminisce and purchase school memorabilia like throwback basketball uniforms.
Serving a smoothie to junior Miguel Zaldivar, sophomore Osvaldo Sarduy holds a pitcher of a perfectly blended fruit smoothie. Fruit smoothies were a main attraction at Tombola for refreshment and also because of their sensational taste. “If I wanted something di erent from soda or water, the smoothies were the best thing,” said Zaldivar.
Led by junior Tao De Landaburu, the drumline puts on a thrilling show for those in the central patio enjoying the wine and tapas bar. The central patio served as the main stage during Tombola for all the performances.
During the third day of Tombola, seventh graders Joshua Ferrer and Carlos Diaz arrive early in search of something good to eat or something fun to do. The festival was lled with plenty of stu to do such as rides, food, and di erent varieties of booths that had activities like paintball and darts among others. This past year, close to half a million dollars were raised for student scholarships.
Tom...with swag
By: Jorge Pola
With the ball on its way to hit the small target,
and
always
in the
of the
and faculty members.
Sharing some laughs, juniors Juan Naranjo and Julian Guerra along with freshman Pablo Guerra socialize together while waiting to ride. Tombola was a great place for students to hang out with each other as well as with people of other schools.
junior Nicholas Cambo waits anxiously for the moment he is dunked
soaked
cold water. The dunking booth was
one
more popular booths of the Tombola. The list of dunkees included both students
Following their homeroom and science teacher Mr. Sean Myer, homeroom 8-5 participates in the entrance procession to the Pin Ceremony. The ceremony was held in the school gym and included all the eighth grade students and their teachers.
A er delivering an
Immediately following the pin ceremony, eighth grader Daniel Otero-Pfae e is escorted by his proud grandfather to the reception in the school’s central patio. During the reception, students and their families enjoyed an amazing bu et.
As his homeroom teacher Mr.
on,
Carlos Bravo proudly looks
eighth grader Antoine Brandt receives his pin from school president Father Pedro Suarez, SJ. The pins were blessed earlier that evening during the o cial Pin Ceremony Mass presided by Father Suarez, SJ with Father Jorge Rojas, SJ, Father Pedro Cartaya, SJ, and Father Lionel Lopez.
amazing speech, eighth grader Lucas Pola is proudly greeted by eighth grade English teacher Mrs. Maria D. Alonso. In his speech, Pola described his middle school experience and thanked all the members of the community who supported them throughout their middle school years.
This journey is about to ...Be -
By: David Hondal
As soon as they walked in to the dance, eighth grader Daniel Brown checks to see if his date Parker Leiro needs anything. The dance was held in the school gym in early May, and the theme of the event was A Night in the Tropics. A group of dedicated eighth grade moms helped to plan and decorate the party.
the
To
sounds of the Cha Cha Slide, eighth graders Daniel Chavez, Gabriel Trastoy, and Alex Pusch try out their moves on the dance oor. The eighth grade dance was hosted by a DJ who kept the party going until midnight.
Checking out the goodies in the candy bar, eighth grader Maurice Milton and his date Sophie Giordano look for a sweet treat to cap the night. In addition to the candy bar, the menu for the evening included sliders, coconut shrimp, chicken tenders, and french fries served in a bu et style.
The party starts ...
By: Jorge Pola
Before the party started, juniors Carlos Ramos, Dylan Echevarria, Jonathan Herrera, and William Palissery enjoy a good laugh before getting ready to escort their dates into the ballroom. The junior prom was held at the Coral Gables Hilton and started around 7 pm. The celebration lasted through midnight.
check out one of the many
made an appearance at the party. In addition to the stilt
the prom also included a bu et style menu consisting of chicken ngers,
While posing for a group prom picture, juniors Jordi Fernandez, Juan Carlos Campuzano, David Hondal and their dates, Sophia Barbra, Isabella Loret de Mola, and Alexandra Pacheco were excited to get the party started. The party included many props that were used by the students and their dates such as top hats, colored feathers, and stick-on mustaches. The theme of the party was Mardi-Gras.
Right around La Hora Loca, junior Michael Chang and his date Isa Ruiz stop to
stilt walkers that
walkers,
macaroni and cheese, and cupcakes.
Just a er dinner, Bane made an appearance and pretended to take over the prom by taking Student Council President senior Steven Tyler hostage. Other characters from the
In the midst of the dance oor, seniors Diego Rojo and Guillermo Pujals take time to socialize with their dates and Batman. The theme of the senior prom was The Dark Knight and besides the Batman symbol constantly ashing on the wall, senior moms decorated the entire room to look like the popular movie.
Making his entrance into the ballroom and feeling red up, senior Anthony Rodriguez checks in with Dean of Students Mr. Thomas de Quesada. The senior prom was held in the Doral Resort and Spa, and lasted all the way through midnight.
movie such as Batman, played by a school alum, and catwoman were on hand to carry on the theme.
Under the guidance of Dean of Students Mr. Thomas de Quesada, senior Michael Fernandez gets ready to enter the auditorium and take his seat on the main stage. The graduation ceremony was held at the James L. Knight Center in downtown Miami.
With the saxophone, graduating senior Anthony Rueda plays a very moving rendition of the national anthem for the audience. Ruedas excelled in music in his years at the school, mastering a number of musical instruments and performing at various events.
In his commencement speech, salutatorian Jake Larson used a number of cliches to describe his graduating class. Larson concluded his speech by stating that although the world may seem intimidating, as the cliche goes, anything is possible.
During the graduation ceremony, Alumni Association President Mr. Carlos Batlle delivers the commencement address to the graduating class. Mr. Batlle’s speech included a walk through memory lane of his own high school years from taking the entrance exam to graduation, and not forgetting to mention the delicious empanadas that had him hooked from day one. Mr. Batlle graduated from the school in 1980.
After All...
we reached the end.
By: Jorge Pola
Class valedictorian Ricardo Martinez-Cid delivers his graduation speech to his peers. Martinez-Cid alluded in his speech to the movie “The Dark Knight” which had been a prevalent theme for this particular class throughout the school year. He inspired the graduates at the end of his speech by asking them if they had started the re, to which the entire class responded with a loud and boisterous “YES!”
School president Father Pedro Suarez, SJ hands the diploma to a very excited Myles Bachrach. A total of 201 graduating seniors received their diplomas that evening.
During one of the most memorable moments of the evening, graduating senior Steven Tyler hands Father Eddy Alvarez, SJ the class of 2013 banner. Tyler was the Student Council president for the class of 2013 and Father Eddie graduated in the year 1963.
Recently graduated Diego Rojo and his mother get down on the dance oor. A reception including dinner and dance followed the commencement ceremony, where all family members and recent graduates celebrated the end of the high school journey.
Graduation Awards
Javier A. Martinez JSEA
Jose E. Roca. Jr
Pedro Hurtado, SJ Communications Arts
Sergio Leos
Jose Rubinos, SJ Modern Languages
Steven P. Tyler Outstanding Senior of the Year
Jose A. Prieto III
Gerard M. Hopkins, SJ English
Andres Manzanares
Francis Xavier, SJ Scholar Athlete
Eric Couto Archbishop Award
Javier A. Martinez
Andrea Pozzo, SJ Humanities
Jake P. Larson
Pierre T. de Chardin, SJ Science
Diego Anell Christopher Clavius, SJ Mathematics
Andres J. Smith
John Carroll, SJ Social Studies
Karl Rahner, SJ Theology
Jorge A. Orbay
Silver Knight Awards NOMINEES
Honorable Mention
Jake Larson SALUTATORIAN
Ricardo Martinez-Cid VALEDICTORIAN
John Pendas ART
Myles Bacharach SCIENCE
Giovanni Rodriguez MUSIC AND DANCE
After All... the times we
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FELIPE BALLESTAS
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incred ible young man and you are a blessing in our lives Congratulations on your achievements, wt are supe r p roud o( you. Continue working hard to achjeve your dreams and remember lhat sky is the limit. Yot•e ave bcoome an incredible young man and you are a b lessing in our lives. Love you, Dad, Mom, Olgui Nati, Jo rge. your grandparents and the rest of the furoily.
We ore so proud of oil and sacrifice duri ng hig h schoot May Jesus and Mary guide you t hroughout your life!! Row Hard and Never Quit We love you so much,
"'fake time 10 Jc.we. 10 hear. lo xe. Bu1 most of All lake time lo be" Love )'OU.. Mom. Oiid. N:rue ond Oab<
Ryan Murphy
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In Loving Memory
1996 - 2012 1934 - 2012
God our Father, Your power brings us to birth, Your providence guides our lives, and by Your command we return to dust.
Lord, those who die still live in Your presence, their lives change but do not end.
I pray in hope for my family, relatives and friends, and for all the dead known to You alone.
In company with Christ, Who died and now lives, may they rejoice in Your kingdom, where all our tears are wiped away. Unite us together again in one family, to sing Your praise forever and ever.
Maria E. Eireos
Johnathon Perez
After All ...
colophon
After All...
There were so many events and celebrations that transpired in our 50th anniversary that it seemed like every week our school was in the news, or we were having a special event. We chose the theme “After All...” because we could not think of, at the time, what could possibly top the 50th anniversary celebration.
the copy, pictures, ... and layouts
Acknowledgements...
The written theme was used in some of the headlines. We also incorporated that really cool font in most headlines, but not in the copy because it was not reader friendly. It just looked cool. The cover picture is of our only returning yerd Ryan Murphy. He is also featured in a similar fashion in all the dividers. We used the ellipsis...in our folio tabs...and some headlines as well. We colored the school tie on black and white backgrounds in several key photos throughout the book, like the superlatives and the people starters. We felt it gave it a classy appeal and highlighted our school colors.
The 51st year included the successful launch of the iPad, a well deserved face lift to the school facade, and yes, a Jesuit Hispanic Pope. Can’t get any better than that. In sports, the cross country team repeated as state champions... again. The water polo, track and field, lacrosse, basketball, soccer, and golf teams all made playoff runs, and a new sport was added with the birth of the bowling team.
Most importantly, after all the ups and downs, we really encompassed what it means to be brothers. We overcame tragedies and we enjoyed the successes, but we always stayed together. In the classrooms, on the fields, and outside of the school...we will always be brothers. Even the six of us in this yearbook class stuck together. With only one returning ‘yearbooker’, and only two seniors in total, this year proved to be more difficult than others. Four newbies came along for the ride, and will hopefully stick with it next year. Two senior editors had to sometimes carry the brunt of the work, but it was all worth it in the end. After all... here’s your yearbook.
We would like to thank everyone who helped us and supported us throughout the year with our publication. Very few people understand the complexity of putting together 348 pages of information. Even less people are probably aware of the hard work and countless hours that it takes to produce this book. We started in April of 2012 and we finished some time in the summer of 2013. We worked tirelessly after and before school, and on many occasions, throughout the weekends. We still feel it was worth it, and we would do it again in a heart beat.
First and foremost we would like to thank Father Suarez for allowing us the opportunity to express ourselves freely and stamp the publication with our personalities and individual creativity. We would also like to thank Mr. Jose E. Roca for being our second pair of eyes and checking our facts. Mr. Victor Arrieta has been a tremendous help all year long, especially with the sports statistics and games that are played away. Last but certainly not least, Mr. Johnny Calderin who taught us some really cool Photoshop tricks.
We would also like to thank the two best reps in the world: Patty and Vicky from Herff Jones Publishing. What would we do without you? Also Uly from Herff Jones Photography who is always there to help us any way he can, and accepts all of our suggestions for improvement. A special shout out to Lisa Merino from the Herff Jones plant in Kansas, who is just getting to know us. Welcome to our insanity Lisa! We would also like to recognize Ms. Teresa Martinez who sends us the much needed alerts for the many unscheduled school events. Last but certainly not least, we would like to thank all the parents and students who sent us their pictures and information, particularly when our staff could not travel during school hours to cover the events.
We tip our hats to all of you and honestly say, we could not do this without your continuous support and enthusiasm. Thank you.
Equipment
12 Hewlett Packard computers with Windows XP.
Adobe Master Collection CS5.
Two 7-year old Nikon D40 and two Cannon Rebels that were replaced half way through the year with five new Cannon Rebel T3i. APPs: Color Effects and Inkflow.
Fonts
AHJ Ferrara
AHJ University Oldstyle
AHJ Benjamin Ballroom Waltz
Cover
HJ Full color Vista litho ink with a protective coating of lamination and gloss. HJ base material: permocote. Smyth sewn round and back. Artwork created by editor-in-chief Ryan Murphy.
Printing
Herff Jones Publishing Edwardsville, KS
Paper: gloss 80#
Submitted through EPage with EProof on CD.
Photography
Herff Jones Photography, Miami, Fl Awards for 2012
Echoes
After All... the names
AAbad, Edel 56, 106, 144
Abajo, San Felipe 181
Abascal, Eduardo 48, 115, 128, 174
Abate, Andres 42, 103, 114, 115, 116
Abate, Leonardo 70, 103
Abella, Tyler 76, 159
Abelo, Fidel 147
Abinader, Anthony 76, 104
Abreu, Dominic 76, 171
Abril, Gabriel 56, 169
Abud-Pichardo, Michel 48, 134, 173
Abunassar, Nicholas 70
Acevedo, Carlos 42, 121, 124, 157
Acevedo, Victor 48, 115, 121, 134
Acha, Alain 127
Acosta, Dorian 56, 158
Acosta, Joseph 42, 114, 116, 117, 127, 162
Acuna, Luis 48, 120
Adams, Alexander 18, 42, 108, 114, 115, 116, 132, 173
Cosculluela, Marta 83 Cosio, Alberto 48, 115, 173 Cosio, Jaime 70 Cosio, Jose 48, 123, 126 Cosio, Leonardo 42, 103, 115, 117 Cosio, Robert 28, 124, 172, 173 Costa, Juan Antonio Perez 121 Coulombe, Daniel 64, 112 Couto, Eric 20, 28, 109, 115, 119, 148, 149, 169, 182, 196 Couto, Miguel 83 Cozier, Andre 64, 146, 176 Crespo, Eddie 135 Crespo, Mathew 64, 135, 170 Cristobal, Carlos 56 Cristobal, Matthew 28, 109, 124, 129, 172, 173 Cruz, Eduardo 49, 115, 150, 160 Cruz, Eric 56 Cruz, Eugene 83, 116, 152 Cruz, Joseph 70, 135, 159 Cruz, Kevin 29 Cruz, Raul 42 Cuellar, Kevin 42, 108, 115 Cueto, Giancarlo 29, 115 Cuevas, Ezequiel 49, 115, 116, 121, 123, 188
Curbelo, Robert 76, 107, 109, 146, 167
Curiel, Mike 132, 135, 167 Curry, Charles 83, 94 Curry, Nicholas 64
DDacal, Gabriel 70, 107
Dager, Daniel 56, 108, 109, 173 Davalos, Sylvia 83, 106 Davila-Wollheim, Alexander 42, 108, 114, 115, 120
Davila-Wollheim, Javier 49, 116
De Campos, Juan 49, 129 De Cardenas, Eric 29, 37, 114, 115, 119, 120, 129, 132, 169 De Cardenas, Gaston 49, 111 De Furio, Anthony 43, 115, 117, 119, 121, 126, 127, 128, 161, 177 De Goytisolo, Joaquin 56, 126 De La Camara, Francisco 57, 126, 157, 161
De La Cruz, Gustavo 83 De La Guardia, Agustin 42, 107, 114, 115, 127
De La Hoz, Robert 6, 7, 42, 120, 124, 128
De La Roza, Maria 83
De La Vega, Diego 70, 102 De Landaburu, Tao 42, 169, 187, 188
De Lemos, Rosario 83
De Leon, Robert 29, 123, 124, 127
De Los Santos, Christian 70 De Ovin Berenger, Manuel 29, 103, 143
De Pawlikowski, Boleck 42, 144, 145
De Quesada, Thomas 21, 83, 105, 109, 182
De Varona, Andres 43, 108, 114, 115, 119, 120, 124, 126 De Zayas, Alfredo 57
De Zendegui, Gabriel 76, 153, 167 De Zulueta, Julian 79, 83, 104, 118, 143
Defelice, Gianpaolo 76 Degwert, Ian 76, 104, 139 Deiters, Andrew 76, 107, 138, 139, 171
Del Castillo, Armand 57, 151, 169
Del Castillo, Christian 57, 121, 162 Del Cueto, Luis 29, 124, 129
Gallinar, Roberto 43, 108, 115, 116, 119, 120, 121, 161 Gallinar, Thomas 71, 170 Gallo, Carlos 65, 170 Galvez, Jordan 65, 135 Galvez, Julio 50
Gambin, Joseph 71, 107 Garces, Jose 71, 159 Garcia, Adrian 77, 135 Garcia, Andres 20, 30, 35, 109, 119, 132
Garcia, Basilio 58, 126, 143 Garcia, Brian 65, 166
Garcia, Christopher 71, 121, 138, 170
Garcia, Cristian 10, 30, 71, 119, 132, 159, 161
Garcia, David 71, 107, 135 Garcia, Eric 71, 93 Garcia, Father Marcelino 180, 183 Garcia, Francisco 71, 118 Garcia, Gabriel 58, 173 Garcia, Horacio 50, 116, 143 Garcia, Hugo 71
Perez, James 35, 108, 127, 129, 143, 184 Perez, Johnathon 52, 108, 115, 126, 134, 336 Perez, Joseph 52, 115, 143 Perez, Juan 78, 107, 135 Perez, Marcos 52, 115, 164 Perez, Mario 72, 146 Perez, Maximo 78, 103, 104 Perez, Michael 44, 114, 115, 117, 121, 125, 126, 128 Perez, Nicholas 78, 108, 127, 129, 171
Perez, Nicolas 44, 109, 116, 121, 128
Perez, Pablo 44, 108, 114, 115, 116, 117, 121, 161
Perez, Patrick 66, 135, 173 Perez, Ricardo 78, 129, 153, 171 Perez, Richard 57, 60, 134, 173 Perez, Ryan 60, 108, 118, 121, 126, 169
Perez, Sebastian 78 Perez De Corcho, Christian 52 Perez De Corcho, Gabriel 78, 146 Perez-Abreu, Albert 66, 129, 135 Perez-Abreu, Victor 35, 109, 115, 120, 127, 128, 132
Perez-Blanco, Nicholas 72 Perez-Blanco, Raphael 66, 114 Perez-Costa, Juan 44, 144, 145
Perez-Heydrich, Carlos 52, 115, 150
Perez-Pino, Anthony 52, 113, 115, 169, 177
Permuy, Antonio 45, 116, 122, 127, 128
Perosch, Marco 66, 110, 121
Pertierra, Robert 52, 115, 122, 127, 134, 173
Peterson, Lisa 86
Peterson, Nicholas 52, 116, 121, 134, 169
Peterson, Steven 52, 129, 157 Piccolo, Alexander 60, 121, 126
Pinate, Andres 66
Pinate, Oscar 52, 115, 158
Pinera, Fernando 60, 143
Pingree, Philip 73
Pino, Mario 134
Pinto, Daniel 73, 170
Pinto, Giancarlo 60, 108, 134, 151 Pinto, Giovanni 165