Just to clarify, you're saying you had the "your file has been reviewed by the adcom.", and not the "you are under review" status, and then you later got an interview? If so that is fantastic news, thank you.
Hmm... Well, I received all my status updates by phone--I never got any e-mails and I don't think there was an online status check. So, the wording may have differed slightly.
Still, what I remember is being told something to the extent of "Your file is currently under review, and if the admissions committee decides to offer you an interview, you'll get an invite by phone." The other message I got was something like "Your file was reviewed by the admissions committee. We are not offering you an interview this month, but your file will be reviewed again in a month." So while I wasn't going to get any interview invite calls that month, I could get one the following month. Or the following month. Or the following month... In my case is was mid-January. At 7:00 AM in the morning. (I'm from CA).
Which message I received just depended on whether they had reviewed my file yet that month. I'm sure this applies right now as applications are being looked at for the first time, though I don't know if Loyola will still let you know if your file is under review again each month--the "Your file has been reviewed by the Committee on Admissions. The review process is continuous from now until the conclusion of our interview season in mid-April. If you are granted an interview, you will be contacted by phone and/or e-mail." sounds kind of generic enough that your status may simply stay as that until you are offered an interview or rejected. But the review process is definitely continuous!
Unless you get rejected outright, which is rare (I think the cut-off scores are fairly low), no one gets rejected until April.
It's unfortunately true that the vast majority of people who get these messages will end up not getting in--but that's true at any school. Loyola accepts about 6% of those who complete the secondary (only about 50-60% complete it--I'm sure you all know why
🙂 )
Still, these messages do not equal a rejection. The majority (maybe all) of people who will be offered an interview will receive these messages.