In the coming days, Georgetown will celebrate Hoyas in the Class of 2024 as they earn their degrees.
As these students prepare to graduate, many of them will remember the lifelong friendships, treasured lessons and favorite memories long after they’ve flipped their graduation tassels. Ingrained in every Georgetown experience are those little moments that make a deep impression, from random conversations in Lau with friends to a daily morning stroll under Healy Hall and countless hours of studying in the library.
We asked the seniors behind Georgetown Stories about those little moments and what they’ll miss the most about Georgetown. Here’s what the soon-to-be graduates said.
Countless Hours in Leo’s
Ava Culoso (C’24)
I’ve been off the Georgetown meal plan for a year now, and even though I found ways to complain about the dining hall my sophomore and junior year, some of my fondest memories in college happened while sitting with my friends. We would turn hopes of “quick dinners” into hours of chatting. It always seemed whenever we had the most work, we would sit in Leo’s after we finished eating, just talking and laughing and losing track of time.
I still have dinners with my roommates in my off-campus house, but nothing compares to the many nights when Leo’s dinner ended up being over two hours long. When I graduate and leave Georgetown, what I’ll remember are those conversations about nothing that somehow meant everything to me.
Daily Joys on the Hilltop
Renato Llontop Calosi (SFS’24)
Waking up to the sight of beautiful Healy Hall right outside my window, walking to Leo’s for breakfast and greeting Suru — the front desk worker at Leo’s — working out early with all my roommates, and having bagels with Chaplain Michelle are just some of the daily joys that make Georgetown special. From greeting many students while walking around campus to making a new friend in class every day, there’s nothing more meaningful than savoring the graces we’ve received here.
One of the things I’ll miss most is engaging in fascinating conversations about faith, culture, politics or simply Georgetown events with faculty and friends. Visiting our sacred spaces on campus, especially Dahlgren Chapel on Sundays, and chatting with our wonderful Campus Ministry staff — “God’s Squad” — are among those little things that truly make Georgetown so unique. As a campus tour guide since freshman year, I’ll miss showing our home to prospective students and their families. But I know for sure that every time I return, I’ll fall in love with this place all over again.