Loyola Academy Jesuit College Preparatory School
Loyola e h
A.M.D.G.
T Prep www.goramblers.org
Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Volume I Issue IX
Seniors Signoff: Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen Melody Ogoke Editor-in-Chief The days are down to single digits, the concluding words in the final chapter are being written, and the curtains are ready to be drawn in after our closing bow. For some, these terminating days seem to stretch on, but others may say it’s all approaching too soon. The moment has arrived where it is time for the seniors to say goodbye to Loyola Academy. Four years does not seem like enough time to accomplish much, but for some seniors, the activities they’ve participated will last them memories for a lifetime. Several students from the class of 2016 had the opportunity to comment on what they will miss and last moments they experienced at Loyola.
Bobby Desherow The thing I will miss most about Loyola football is the guys I worked with day in and day out. Whether it was early morning film sessions, two a day practices, or staying late after practice to lift, we always had each other’s backs and had one common goal in mind. Nothing can beat the feeling when taking the field with a group of guys you know are going to give it their all and leave it all on the field. The State Championship game was bittersweet because I would never get to take the field again with my brothers by my side. At the same time, however, it was the most amazing feeling in the world to accomplish the goal we have been working so long and hard for and achieve a perfect season on top of that. I’m excited for college
Senior captain Bobby Desherow brings down the Providence ball carrier during the team’s undefeated championship season. Photo Courtesy The Year
What’s Inside?
LA Aids Refugees page 4
Liturgical choir members Jimmy Oddo, Kellie Ann Hogan, and CJ Jaros bring life to school masses. Photo Courtesy The Year
football because hopefully I can make the same strong bonds with kids I made during Loyola football. CJ Jaros I don’t think there’s anything that makes me feel a bigger sense of community than the masses; even the smaller ones on the weekends. You all come together to sing these amazing songs. Someone once told me that “Beautiful things” is Loyola’s school song because more people know it than the actual one. Especially at the Sending Forth mass, I know I’m going to cry because I’ve been singing at these masses for four years and there’s no guarantee I will have an amazing community like that next year. Singing solos at the masses have been nerve wracking and I’ve learned how much I judge myself, but after every mass everyone always has the nicest things to say even if I
LADC Spring Dance page 4
completely mess up. I think those masses have just been a time for me to reflect on what I really love about being a Catholic which is the community. I struggle a lot with my faith, but I know that the community is a unique part of it that I love.
with all boys, the U-12 girls team at Wilmette, or the varsity girls team at Loyola, has taught me more than just how to play a sport on ice. It has taught me when to step up and be a leader, when to be the star player, but then also when to sit on the bench and be an enthusiastic teammate. However, my four years on the Loyola Academy Girls hockey team has taught me that being on a team is more than just playing a sport together. The twenty-one girls that I ended my final season with are more like family to me than they are teammates, which is our theory as to why we were able to take home the State Championship this year. We didn’t only have talented players; we had players that truly cared about one another. Winning
Continued on page 3 Emma Wright After thirteen years of playing h o c k e y, it’s easy to say that I will miss it the most a f t e r graduating high school. Being part of a team, whether it was Emma faces off against a Barrington player during the girls Championship win. squirt Photo Courtesy The Year hockey
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Pet Sounds Celebrates page 6