Family ties bind Bruin baseball family at St. Joe

By Lauri Collins
MADISON – The St. Joseph High School webpage for the baseball team reads, “Family.”  Twenty guys and their families who are at the ballpark together for four months, day-in and day-out, weekends included. Parents run the concession stands, plan team snacks; the boys practice, play, practice, then play again. Everyone cheers.

Russell Paterson, who just graduated, transferred in as a junior from Texas. He played second base.

Russell Paterson, who just graduated, transferred in as a junior from Texas. He played second base.

The family atmosphere at DM Howie Field was stronger than ever this spring because of a parliament of Rooks who practically lived at the field. Not blackbirds, but the descendants of Jack and Bettie Rooks, whose children attended St. Joe in the 1980s. St. Joe Senior Will Butts, son of Helen Rooks Butts (1983); Russell Patterson, son of Frances Rooks Patterson (1985); and Charlie Rooks, son of Joe Rooks (1980), all played together on the baseball team. The chemistry among the three was as fun to watch as the adult family members in the stands.
Russell, who just graduated, transferred in as a junior from Texas, and played second base. He was quick and agile, tall and lean. His cousin Charlie who will be a senior this fall, pitches and plays shortstop and is new to St. Joe this year.  He reads the ball well and knows Russell’s style. You can watch the mutual respect between them.
Will Butts, who almost passed on playing his senior year, stuck with it because of his cousins. “I didn’t want to miss out being on the team with both of them. We all get along really well off the field, so I knew it would be special on the team with them,” he said. Will has pitched, played in the outfield, and done some pinch running.  “Will has more heart than most athletes. He is happy to be on the team and participate in whatever way he can help,” Coach Gerrard McCall said.

Charlie Rooks, who was new to St. Joe this year and will be a senior this fall, pitches and plays shortstop.

Charlie Rooks, who was new to St. Joe this year and will be a senior this fall, pitches and plays shortstop.

McCall noticed the family ties among the boys. “Their small family of three on the team helped our baseball team as a whole to understand what family should look like.  They were united, strong and there for each other all the time,” he explained.
The family force is not just on the field and in the dugout. Will’s dad, Larry, is the voice of the Bruins at home games. He has been in the press box calling games since 2009 when their older son Jack played. Their mom Helen was the team mom, doing the work of three volunteers. Helen stocked the concession stand, scheduled the workers, organized meals, cleaned the bathrooms; and, much like her son Will, did anything the team needs her to do.
Helen was quick to recruit sister Frances and her husband Greg when they moved back to Mississippi two years ago. Frances helped with concessions, and the former Bruin cheerleader could be heard cheering for the entire team. Greg and Joe joined the cooking squad and help flip burgers and fry fish before home games.

Will Butts said he didn’t want to miss out being on the team with his cousins.

Will Butts said he didn’t want to miss out being on the team with his cousins.

Joe and his wife Lisa say the atmosphere at St. Joe is just what Charlie needed, and having so much family around is even better. Joe played football and baseball during his time at St. Joe.
And there are more Rooks family members to cheer for the three on the baseball team. Tim Rooks, the youngest of the family, and his wife Kim have three boys at St. Joe. Though not on the field for the Bruins this year, Sam, Max and Luke are there to cheer on the cousins.
Since Russell and Will both graduated last month, this year was the only one that the three had together. Special to them, their families and to the team. The Bruin team had a stellar year, finishing 27-7 for the season, leaving a feeling of family for those left to carry on the Bruin tradition.
(Lauri Collins is director of advancement at St. Joseph Catholic School in Madison.)

Bishop blesses St. Joseph High School chapel

By Elsa Baughman
MADISON – Bishop Joseph Kopacz blessed a new chapel during Mass at St. Joseph High School on Friday, May 20.
Present and remembered were those who through the years worked faithfully to see that this new place of worship became a reality, including retired Bishop Joseph Latino.
“This new chapel will be a special place for students, teachers, alumni and friends to come together to pray and celebrate the Eucharist,” said Bishop Kopacz. “This place of worship will nurture and strengthen the faith of all who are part of the St. Joe community,” he added.
The chapel is located in the administration building between the library and the counselor’s office.
At the end of Mass, Catherine Cook, superintendent of Catholic Schools, recognized all the donors and artists who contributed to the construction of the chapel:
– Tom Gerrets’ family. He chaired the committee to build the chapel, but died before it was completed.
– Arthur Schmidt, class of 1958, and his wife Brenda donated the stained-glass window of the Holy Family which was designed by Rob Cooper and Andy Young of Pearl River Glass.
– Nancy McGhee and her daughter, Shanon Brumfield, class of 1985, donated the stained-glass window of the symbols of the Gospels and St. Joseph, in memory of their son/brother, Dean, class of 1984, who died in 1989, and her husband/father, Charles, who died in 2013.
– The late Bishop Emeritus, William Houck. The stand for the sanctuary candle came from Bishop Houck’s personal chapel.
– Betsy Edge, class of 1974, donated the paintings of Mary and Joseph placed at each side of the altar.
– Lou Ann Turner teaches pottery at the school and made the holy water font.
– Fletcher Cox, a member of the Craftsmen’s Guild of Mississippi, made the altar, ambo, credence table and matching cabinet under the tabernacle.
– St. Gabriel Parish and School in Mound Bayou. The parish and school have closed so the Sisters currently running the community center on the site, donated the crucifix, the Stations of the Cross and the tabernacle.
Sister Donald Mary Lynch, who served in Mound Bayou for years, said that the sisters and parishioners of St. Gabriel are truly honored that the tabernacle and Stations of the Cross are being used at another school. “St. Joseph was also founded by the Sisters of Mercy. The mission church in Mound Bayou opened in 1949 and closed in 2013,” she said adding that two men from St. Gabriel Church found their priestly vocation in Mound Bayou. “We are pleased that God’s glory continues.” Sister Lynch now lives in St. Louis. Sister Monica Mary DeQuardo, from the current community of Franciscans who continue to run the St. Gabriel Mercy Center in Mound Bayou, attended the dedication to represent the community.
The stained-glass window of the symbols of the Gospels and St. Joseph, donated by the McGhee’s family, was modeled after the window of the St. Joseph School chapel on Boiling Street, as a way to honor the old school in Jackson.

New basketball coach

MADISON  – Tyler O’Hara, who has coached the St. Joseph middle school basketball team for eight years, has been named head varsity basketball coach for St. Joseph High School. O’Hara, 31, who currently teaches 12th grade English and handles discipline at the school, will take over a team that went 24-4 this year – winning the district tournament and making it all the way to the third round of the state playoffs.
“I’m honored that principal Doug Jones and athletic director Todd Lott have entrusted me with the future of our basketball team,” O’Hara said. “We have a great group of athletes at our school, and I look forward to building on the success we have had with our basketball program.”
O’Hara will take over from former basketball Coach Nick Stamps, who resigned at the end of the 2015-2016 season. O’Hara will continue to teach English classes while also taking care of his basketball coaching responsibilities.
O’Hara, a New Orleans native, has a bachelor’s degree in English from Millsaps College. Lott said   O’Hara brings a lot of valuable experience to the coaching position – including his familiarity with the school’s student athletes and a strong, passionate love for the game of basketball.
Jones said he also has been impressed with O’Hara and what he brings to the table. Jones said that O’Hara’s knowledge of basketball and his desire to help students become better players and student athletes will keep a strong basketball program headed in the right direction.
“This is a great move for our school, our athletes and Coach O’Hara,” Jones said. “Tyler’s dedication to his players, to our students and to our school will make an already great athletic department and academic institution that much stronger.”

St. Joseph students honored

MADISON –St. Joseph High School took home a record 61 awards from the 2015 Mississippi Scholastic Press Association Convention on the campus of the University of Mississippi – including four statewide honors and 22 first-place awards – for student work on the newspaper and yearbook. Last year, St. Joseph took home 33 awards.
Journalism teacher Terry Cassreino, a longtime Mississippi journalist, was named yearbook adviser of the year. The Bear Facts, the student newspaper, was named best high school newspaper for the third straight year. And The Shield, the school’s yearbook, took third place among high school yearbooks.
“These awards show what hard work and dedication can produce,” St. Joe principal Keith Barnes said. “Our talented students have worked hard on the newspaper, the yearbook and our streaming Internet sports radio station – and their efforts show.
“Our journalism students and our student media program are examples of what we do best at St. Joe,” Barnes said. “Mr. Cassreino is a dedicated, experienced teacher who has guided a group of talented, hardworking, determined students – helping them perform to their maximum ability.”
Junior Jack Hall received the Orley Hood Sports Writer of the Year award for the second straight year. Hall is serving as a U.S. Senate page this semester.
Junior Joseph “JoJo” Katool Jr. was named Broadcast Staffer of the Year for his work calling varsity football games live on Bruin Sports Radio, St. Joe’s streaming Internet radio station.
Junior Noah Greene was named Newspaper Staffer of the Year for his leadership role in guiding the publication of The Bear Facts. Greene serves as managing editor of the newspaper; he also is a member of the St. Joseph Speech and Debate Team and will serve this year as lieutenant governor at Mississippi Youth & Government Youth Legislature.
The journalism awards capped a full day Thursday, March 26, for more than 500 high school students from 32 schools across the state who attended the MSPA annual convention. St. Joseph took a delegation of 12 students to this year’s event.
Cassreino, in his fourth year at St. Joseph and third leading the journalism program, was named Yearbook Adviser of the Year – one year after being named Newspaper Adviser of the Year. Cassreino began teaching in 2011 after more than 27 years as a media consultant and an award-winning political reporter, political columnist and editor at Mississippi newspapers. See the full list of winners on www.mississippicatholic.com.
At the annual Mississippi Junior Classical League convention, 33 of St. Joe’s finest Latin scholars journeyed to Millsaps College in Jackson on Friday, March 20, to attend the annual Mississippi Junior Classical League convention for a day of classical competition, academic tests, triumphal processions, and Latin cheers.
There they joined over 250 Latin students from ten different schools. St. Joseph students earned 23 awards in mythology, vocabulary, Latin mottoes, phrases and abbreviations, grammar and reading, history, classical omnibus, videos, maps and charts.