2013 cristo rey network annual report

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INVESTING IN FUTURES2013 Cristo Rey Network Annual Report

The Cristo Rey Network empowers students from

underserved lower-income communities to develop

their minds and become lifelong contributors to

society. By providing students an extraordinary,

Catholic, college preparatory education and a unique,

four-year corporate work study experience, we seek to

“transform urban America one student at a time.”

MISSION

Photos: (cover) Cristo Rey Philadelphia High School, | 3(left) Cristo Rey St. Martin College Prep | 3

From the Chairman of the Board

Dear Friends:

The Cristo Rey Network is on the move.

After a nation-wide search, in April the Cristo

Rey Network found its new President and CEO

in its own backyard in Chicago. Randy Kurtz

joined Cristo Rey with a wealth of experience, a

passion for our mission, and a bundle of energy

and ideas. We are blessed by his arrival.

In June, Fr. Joseph Parkes, S.J., concluded

his service as Chairman of the Network Board.

Fr. Parkes remains a member of the Board

and continues to serve in his primary role as

President of Cristo Rey New York. We are

indebted to Fr. Parkes for his extraordinary

leadership and service to the Network.

At the heart of our mission are the students

we serve. A new Cristo Rey school opened in

Philadelphia in fall 2012 and in Columbus this

school-year. We look forward to new schools

opening next year in Atlanta and San Jose.

The Cristo Rey Network is the largest

network of high schools in the country — and

the only one to offer economically

disadvantaged students the benefit of a

Corporate Work Study Program that covers

most of their education costs. We believe that

combining rigorous academics with experience

in the workplace is the best way to prepare our

students with the knowledge and skills needed

for success. For that reason, we are committed

to opening new schools and growing our existing

ones.

We are grateful to all of you who have invested

in our work.

Sincerely,

Kevin T. Baine

Chairman of the Board

Partner, Williams & Connolly, LLP

4 |

From the President & CEO

Dear Friends:

I feel privileged that the Board of Directors chose

me as the new leader of the Cristo Rey Network.

For me this role is a calling and not a job. I think

of myself as an ambassador for the thousands of

young men and women we currently serve and

will serve in the future.

In 30 years on Wall Street, I learned that when

folks commit their time or their money, they

expect tangible results. There are a lot of “stories”

out there, but investors want serious,

demonstrable outcomes. I want to reflect

for a moment on Cristo Rey’s return on our

investment:

• Currently educating 8,100 economically

disadvantaged students

• 6,800 graduates whose lives have been

transformed

• Growth of the Network from 3 schools ten

years ago to 26 today and more on the way

• 1,800 corporate partners stepping up to

employ our students

• 46 University Partners educating more than

700 graduates

• Graduates completing college at twice

the rate of their low-income peers

In short, our students develop the “grit” and

“social captial” they need to succeed in college

and in life.

You and I have a huge opportunity: to invest in

this unique model of social change. The Cristo

Rey movement is worthy of our time, our enthusiasm, our ideas and our treasure.

To those of you already invested in Cristo Rey, I say thank you. If you are new to

Cristo Rey, I invite you to learn about us and get on board. Together we can do even

greater things.

Sincerely in Cristo Rey,

Randolph R. Kurtz

President and CEO

| 5

From the Chair Emeritus

Dear Friends:

We began the first Cristo Rey school in the Pilsen

neighborhood near downtown Chicago in 1996.

At that time, I planned to return to Peru five

years later. Now seventeen years have passed,

and here we are not only still going strong, but

growing. I only return to Peru to visit old friends!

Cristo Rey continues to excite people and

gather momentum from new partners, which is

the strongest proof that it is not our work. The

Holy Spirit is alive and well across the national

Network.

This school-year, 8,100 urban young people

are receiving a Catholic, college preparatory

education - an opportunity they thought was

completely out of their reach. As in any human

institution, challenges exist in our 26 schools.

Yet, thousands of young men and women

are getting the chance to bring to life all their

wonderful gifts. That was the bottom line when

we began the first Cristo Rey school, and it

continues to be the bottom line today.

Furthermore, the criterion we determined for

every decision, “what is best for the students,”

happily remains the norm.

As you will read herein, Cristo Rey schools

continue to produce fruit. The kingdom really is

coming, and our King is working through us.

Sincerely in Cristo Rey,

John P. Foley, S.J.

Chair Emeritus

6 |

Year in Review

New Member

SCHOOLSO P E N E D

Cristo Rey Philadelphia (2012)& Cristo Rey Columbus (2013)

Five Cristo Rey schools ranked among 41 most

According to Washington Post’s Jay Mathews’s Index Score

L e a d e r s h i p Appo in tments :

President & CEO,R a n d y K u r t z ;Chairman of the Board, Kevin Baine

Immaculate Conception Academy & Cristo Rey Jesuit College Preparatory School of Houston celebrated first graduating classes

NATIONAL WINNER

E D U C AT I O N A L ADVANCEMENT

Coporate Work Study Program 1 of 6 groundbreakingprojects in the world

awardschallenging private schools

C L A S S OF 2013

| 7

2013-2014 Facts & Figures

8,100s t u d e n t s

26Cristo Reyhigh schools

6,800a lumn i

100,000,000operating budget of all schools

$34,000average family income for a household of four

1,800 corporate

work study programjob partners 46 University

P a r t n e r s

Did you k n o w ? 36 Religious Sponsors &

Endorsers assure eachschool is Catholic in identity and mission

8 | Photo: Christ the King Preparatory School

STUDENT ENROLLMENT

School of Origin

Religion Race/Ethnicity

60% Catholic 55% Hispanic

35% Black

6% Other

4% White

40% Non-Catholic

CLASS OF 2017 DEMOGRAPHICS

| 9

43% Public

30% Catholic

23% Charter

4% Other

Cristo Rey Network schools serve only economically disadvantaged youth, inclusive of all faiths and cultures.

Cristo Rey’s Corporate Work Study Program

is unique in American education. Corporate

partners across America are investing in

educational opportunities for urban young

people by employing every Cristo Rey student.

Students work as entry-level staff in professional

settings one full day of every week, earning

wages to support approximately half the cost of

their college preparatory education.

Through their work with Cristo Rey students,

corporate partners mentor our young people,

develop a pipeline of diverse talent, and improve

their corporate culture. In turn, Cristo Rey

students gain valuable social capital and learn

real life lessons. They build the self-confidence

and grit needed to successfully navigate college

and careers.

Partnering with Corporate America

Four longer days a week in the

classroom

One full day a week in the workplace

Lifelong skills and habits of mind for

success

Gizel, a senior at Cristo Rey Jesuit Minneapolis, was a Project Engineer

Intern at Medtronic. She diagnosed a production bottleneck that was

slowing a manufacturing process and helped design a solution that will

save the company approximately $35,000. According to Gizel, “I had such

an amazing experience!”

10 | Photo: Gizel, second from left, and her fellow classmates from Cristo Rey Jesuit Minneapolis in front of Medtronic.

| 11

American Red Cross

Blue Cross Blue Shield

Catholic Charities

Deloitte & Touche, LLP

Ernst & Young, LLP

United Way

Expeditors International

Grant Thornton

JP Morgan Chase

Jones Day LLP

KPMG

Latham & Watkins

PNC Bank

Pricewaterhouse Coopers

Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc.

US Bank

Wells Fargo

YMCA

Corporate partners employing students in five or more cities:

1,800 Corporate Partners include:

12 | Photos: (top) Cristo Rey New York High School, (right) Arrupe Jesuit High School

“The educational quality of the program is

fundamentally different in kind from what anyone

else offers. Math suddenly matters when you have

to help a company figure out its gross margin in a

certain part of the country. Our employees love

working with these students. They come in

articulate, bright, well dressed, and ready to work.

For our part, we have to be good adult influences in

their lives. It lifts everyone’s game.”

Christopher Connor

CEO, Sherwin-Williams

Jobs by Industry

16% Nonprofit

16% Financial Services

13% Law

11% Healthcare

8% Professional Services

7% Education

4% Manufacturing

4% Real Estate

21% Other

Traditional Jobs

Administration

Document Processing

File Management

Mail Room Assistance

Schedule Management

Knowledge Jobs

Engineer Support

PowerPoint Presentations

Science Lab Research

Translation Services

Website Maintenance

What do students do in the workplace?

Revenue Earned by Students

$44mm projected

2012-2013

2013-2014

$40mm

Photo: Cristo Rey New York High School | 13

What do students do in the workplace?

Teach-Learn-Lead

Supported by the generosity of the Louis Calder Foundation, the Caster Family Trust, and John and Diane Patience, Cristo Rey’s work around

teaching and learning integrates three domains essential to high school and college success for every student.

Curriculum & Assessment Teacher Effectiveness Principal Leadership+ +A highly qualified teacher in every

classroom increases student achievement.

Our teacher effectiveness work focuses

on implementation of evidence-based

instructional strategies in all classrooms.

Through our annual Summer Institute,

coupled with professional supports

during the school year, teachers at Cristo

Rey schools continuously develop and

refine their toolkits of strategies. Thus,

teachers’ professional practice is focused

on specific strategies that drive student

learning results. Teacher teams collaborate

to analyze learning data to inform

classroom instruction.

Principals utilize a research-based

framework for instruction to observe

classrooms daily and provide teachers with

regular feedback. Our national cohort of

principals collaborates to analyze

achievement data and to challenge and

support one another other in strategizing

to achieve our shared mission.

Student learning is centered on a

rigorous, standards-based, college-ready

curriculum with annual benchmarks closely

aligned to the Common Core State

Standards and the ACT College and

Career Readiness Standards. A focus on

literacy in all subjects, along with

integration of identified thinking strategies

and lifelong learning behaviors, promotes

college readiness. These same strategies,

integrated into our Corporate Work Study

Program, ensure that our graduates are

college- and career-ready.

“As education of at-risk students

continues to be the focus of our

foundation, Cristo Rey does an

excellent job of leveraging our

philanthropy in accomplishing these

goals.“

John and Diane Patience14 | Photo: San Miguel High School

Cristo Rey graduates are succeeding in

college at twice the rate of their peers.

Nonetheless, critical barriers may prevent our

alumni from successfully enrolling, persisting and

completing college. Cristo Rey’s new partnership

with the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation will be

instrumental in guiding alumni to achieve key

milestones during their path to and through college.

To and Through College

“Cristo Rey’s College Completion Initiative

expands upon the organization’s current

efforts in supporting alumni to and through

college. We are proud to partner with Cristo

Rey to support our common goal to improve

overall graduation rates for low-income, first

generation students.”

Oscar Sweeten-Lopez

Program Director, Dell Scholars

enrolled in college

over the last several

years

90%

89%

college graduation rate

- compared to their

low-income peers2x

of those enrolled at a college

partner institution have graduated

or are on track to graduate

Cristo Rey Network Graduates

Photo: Verbum Dei High School | 17

enrolled at the top 100

national universities and

liberal art colleges

250+

In August 2013, Cristo Rey was awarded a three-year grant to support our

College Completion Program, aimed to further equip Cristo Rey students with

essential knowledge and skills to successfully enroll and graduate from

college with a Bachelor’s degree.

Alumni advisors and college counselors from Cristo Rey Kansas City High

School, Cristo Rey New York High School and Saint Martin de Porres High

School will implement the College Completion Program comprised of three

elements:

1. Senior year and summer transition support

2. Alumni data collection, management, and reporting through the Dell

Scholar Administrative and Alumni portals

3. Alumni outreach, interventions, and mentorship

outer strokes of the shield is reversed so the white is the outer stroke on a dark back ground, as opposed the the normal blue outline used on white

National University Partners

Supporting Partners

Boston College

Creighton University

Connecticut College

Dominican University

Fairfield University

Fordham University

Loras College

Providence College

Regis University

Rockhurst University

Saint Louis University

Saint Peter’s College

Santa Clara University

Seattle University

Stevenson University

Stonehill College

Trinity Washington University

University of Saint Mary

University of San Francisco

University of Scranton

University of St. Francis

Wesleyan University

18 | Photo: Cristo Rey Network Alumni Ambassadors

Supporting Partners

Boston College

Creighton University

Connecticut College

Dominican University

Fairfield University

Fordham University

Loras College

Providence College

Regis University

Rockhurst University

Saint Louis University

Saint Peter’s College

Santa Clara University

Seattle University

Stevenson University

Stonehill College

Trinity Washington University

University of Saint Mary

University of San Francisco

University of Scranton

University of St. Francis

Wesleyan University

The Cristo Rey Network is committed to opening

schools that will be sustainable long-term, both

financially and academically. To do so, the Cristo

Rey School Growth Team supports communities in

each phase of the replication process, starting with

the initial feasibility study through the opening of the

school.

Given the school choice legislation in a number

of states, we are opening even more financially

sound schools supported not only by revenue from

the Corporate Work Study Program, but also by

school vouchers and education tax credits.

Last year, The Walton Family Foundation joined

Cristo Rey as a lead strategic partner in these

efforts, with support from The Lynde and Harry

Bradley Foundation and the Caster Family Trust.

School Growth

20 |

students8,100

Today

students20,000

Goal

avg. studentsper school300

avg. studentsper school400-600

Schools in Development

Cristo Rey Atlanta Jesuit High School (opening in 2014)

Cristo Rey San Jose Jesuit High School (opening in 2014)

Cristo Rey Albuquerque High School

Cristo Rey Baton Rouge High School

Cristo Rey Dallas High School

Cristo Rey Milwaukee High School

Cristo Rey Phoenix High School

Cristo Rey San Antonio High School

Visit www.cristoreynetwork.org for up-to-date progress on each school.

“We are proud to be the latest in a long line of Cristo Rey schools to open. We look forward to providing low-income

students here in Atlanta with a first-class Catholic, private school option.”

Bill Garrett

President, Cristo Rey Atlanta Jesuit High School

| 21

Existing Schools (26)

Target Markets

In Development (8)

To protect the integrity of the Cristo Rey model,

schools adhere to a set of quality criteria – the

Mission Effectiveness Standards.

To assess school performance relative to each

standard, schools undergo regular reviews to

ensure:

Quality: Visiting review teams assure that

schools are taking steps to meet the Mission

Effectiveness Standards for high-performing

schools;

Advancement: The school assessment

process ensures that schools develop and

implement short and long term goals to drive

performance; and

Sharing evidence-based practices: Member schools replicate effective practices.

Mission Effectiveness Standards

Photo: San Miguel High School | 21

As a member of the Cristo Rey Network, a school:

1. Is explicitly Catholic in mission and enjoys Church approval.

2. Serves only economically disadvantaged students. The school is 2. open to students of various faiths and cultures.

3. Is family centered and plays an active role in the local community.

4. Shall prepare all of its students to enter and graduate from college.

5. Requires participation by all students in the work-study program. All students must be 14 years old by September 1st.

6. Seeks to integrate the learning present in its work program, classroom2. and extracurricular experiences for the fullest benefit of its student2. workers.

7. Has an effective administrative and board structure as well as complies with all applicable state and federal laws.

8. Is financially sound and at full enrollment the school is primarily dependent on revenue from the work-study program to meet operating expenses. In addition, the school maintains a 2. comprehensive advancement program to ensure financial stability.

9. Supports its graduates’ efforts to obtain a college degree.

10. Is an active participant in the collaboration, support, and development2. of the Cristo Rey Network.

Tucson, Arizona Sponsored by the San

Francisco District of De La Salle Christian Brothers

Chicago, IllinoisSponsored by the Chicago- Detroit Province of the Society of Jesus

1996 2001 2002

Portland, OregonSponsored by the San Francisco

District of De La Salle Christian Brothers

Denver, ColoradoSponsored by the Missouri

Province of the Society of Jesus

2003

Los Angeles, California Sponsored by the California Province of the Society of Jesus and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles

24 |

School Timeline

Our first investors, BJ & Bebe Cassin, had the

inspiration and vision that started the Cristo

Rey Network and enabled our growth.

The Cristo Rey Network salutes Mr. & Mrs. Cassin,

pictured here, recipients of the 2013 St. Elizabeth

Ann Seton Award from the National Catholic

Educational Association in recognition for their

generous contributions to Catholic education.

Tucson, Arizona Sponsored by the San

Francisco District of De La Salle Christian Brothers

S T . M A R T I N C O L L E G E P R E P

Waukegan, IllinoisEndorsed by the American Province of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, Sinsinawa Dominicans, Clerics of St. Viator

New York, New YorkEndorsed by the New York Province of the Society of Jesus; the American Province of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus; and the Brothers of the Christian Schools - District of Eastern NA

Los Angeles, California Sponsored by the California Province of the Society of Jesus and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles

2004 2006

Boston, MassachusettsSponsored by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston

Lawrence, MassachusettsSponsored by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur

Cleveland, OhioEndorsed by the

Chicago-Detroit Province of the Society of Jesus

and the Sisters of the Humility of Mary

Kansas City, Missouri Sponsored by the Sisters of

Charity of Leavenworth

Sacramento, CaliforniaSponsored by the California Province of the Society of Jesus; Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, West Midwest Community; Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, California Province; Endorsed by the Diocese of Sacramento

| 25

20082007

Washington, D.C. Sponsored by the

Salesians of Don Bosco and the Archdiocese

of Washington

Newark, New Jersey Sponsored by the Archdiocese of Newark; Endorsed by the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth and the Marist Brothers of the Schools

Indianapolis, Indiana Sponsored by the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, IN

Holy Family Cristo Reystudy work achieve succeed

Birmingham, Alabama Sponsored by the Congregation of the Passion - Holy Cross Province;

Endorsed by the New Orleans Province of the Society of Jesus

Brooklyn, New YorkEndorsed by The Passionists and the Vincentians (Congregation of the Mission)

Chicago, Illinois Sponsored by the Chicago-Detroit

Province of the Society of Jesus

26 |

Baltimore, MarylandSponsored by the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus

Minneapolis, MinnesotaSponsored by the Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus

J E S U I T H I G H S C H O O LATLANTA

Brooklyn, New YorkEndorsed by The Passionists and the Vincentians (Congregation of the Mission)

Detroit, Michigan Sponsored by the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and the Basilian Fathers

2009 2011 2012 2013 opening in 2014

San Francisco, CaliforniaSponsored by the Dominican Sisters of Mission San Jose, California

Houston, TexasSponsored by the New Orleans Province of the Society of Jesus

Cincinnati, Ohio Sponsored by the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Sponsored by the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales and the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

Columbus, Ohio Sponsored by the

Archdiocese of Columbus

Atlanta, Georgia Sponsored by the Maryland, New England

and New York Provinces of the Society of Jesus;Endorsed by the Society of Mary

San Jose, California Endorsed by the California Province of the Society of Jesus

S A N J O S E J E S U I T H I G H S C H O O L

| 27

Financial Statements

Comparative Schedule of Revenue and Expenses

Support and Revenue: FY 2013 FY 2012

Fundraising $2,825,000 $2,899,000

School Membership Dues 529,000 415,000

University Partnership Dues 156,000 144,000

Investment Income 1,000 6,000

Total Support and Revenue $3,511,000 $3,464,000

Expenses:Program Services

Funding of Schools* 970,000 590,000

Programming Provided to Schools 2,351,000 2,105,000

Supporting Services

General Administration 300,000 214,000

Development and Communication 404,000 426,000

Total Expenses $4,025,000 $3,335,000

28 | Photos: (top) Immaculate Conception Academy, (bottom) Cristo Rey Brooklyn High School with Gen. Colin Powell in October 2012, (right) Verbum Dei High School

* Pass through grant funding for Cristo Rey schools increased by $380,000.

Kevin Baine (Chairman)Partner | Williams & Connolly, LLP Richard Braddock Private Investor

Stephen D. BumbaughEducation Consultant

Rev. John P. Foley, SJ Chair Emeritus | Cristo Rey Network

Rev. Jim Gartland, SJRector | Blessed Peter Faber Jesuit Community at Boston College

Jane GensterSenior Counselor to the PresidentGeorgetown University

Nicolas HowleyFounder, CEO, and ChairmanTransDigm Group Incorporated

Ann KorologosFormer United States Secretary of Labor

Randy KurtzPresident and CEO | Cristo Rey Network

Board of Directors

Kathleen A. Mahoney, Ph.D.Consultant

John O’SheaManaging Director | Tenaska Capital Management

Rev. Joseph Parkes, SJPresident | Cristo Rey New York High School

Dan Porterfield, Ph.D.President | Franklin & Marshall College

Paul E. PurcellChairman, President, and CEORobert W. Baird & Co.

Joe Rauenhorst President | Encore One of Florida, L.L.C.

John ThompsonFormer General Manager | BestBuy.com

Martha WyrschExecutive Vice President & General Counsel Sempra Energy

Christ our King,

Bless the students, alumni, teachers and

leaders of all Cristo Rey schools across

our country. Help them discover all the

talent you have given to so many young

men and women in our center cities so

that together they may contribute to

making Your Kingdom come and truly

be about “transforming urban America -

one student at a time,” all for your greater

glory. Amen.

Cristo Rey Network Prayer

Champions of Cristo Rey Benefactors contributing gifts $250,000+Louis Calder Foundation Nicholas Howley John and Diane Patience Roger and Susan Stone The Walton Family Foundation

$25,000 - $49,999Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Paul and Patricia Purcell The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation Martha Wyrsch

$10,000 - $24,999Kevin BaineHelen Brach Foundation The Dana Foundation Patrick Foley GHR Foundation National Recreation FoundationStarbucks FoundationQatar Foundation

$5,000 - $9,999 John and Barbara Hazeltine Koret Foundation Rita Rodriguez Richard and Dolores Shantz SPX Foundation Anne and Joseph Wenger

$1,000 - $4,999Jo Anne Abbate AnonymousRobert Becherer Charles and Tiscia Bidwill Dr. Richard BissonPhilip Bornhofen BJ and Bebe Cassin John and Rosemary Croghan W.S. Darley & Co. Jim and Nancy Ewing Pat and Carrie Lee Susan Leverone Sheila Royston Murphy Susan B. Murphy Frank and Lois Noonan Kathy and Dennis O’Keefe Dan Porterfield, Ph. D. Michael and Martha Smith Susan R. and John W. Sullivan Foundation Peter L. Toms Jeffrey and Melissa Underwood Richard and Marilee Wehman

Honor RollThe Honor Roll reflects donations more than $100 to the Cristo Rey Network from July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2013.

$50,000 - $249,999Richard and Susan Braddock Caster Family TrustJ&L Fund Darren and Terry Jackson Mario Family Foundation

$500 - $999Dan Anglim Robert and Sheila Berner, Sr. George Cavanaugh Tami Ciranna Phil and Julie Delaney Emmett and Bridget Doerr John Foster John Glunz Barbara Griesser Keeley Family Foundation Kathleen Mahoney Dan and Sue Real United Way of the Capital Region

$100 - $499Robert and Lois Abele Salvatore Anastasio Richard T. Anderson John and Florence BadgerMary BatchAndrew BlumRev. Michael Boehm Jeffrey Brand Richard and Elaine Brennan William Brown Thomas Carriero James and Maureen ChavoenWilliam and Madeleine Choquette Madeline and William ChoquettePaul Cmil Judy Coates Michael and Gail Coie Jeffrey and Lilliam Collmann Daniel and Maria Teresa Connolly Claire Cook Carol Ann Crawford Michael Davey Agnes Dempsey Marilee Dentzer

John Dodson Michael and Patricia Edwards Gregory and Jeanne EisingerKelly & Matthew Fairweather Anne and Richard Feeney Joanne Feldmeier James Fitzpatrick William & Patricia Fitzpatrick Lois Forte George and Bettina Francis Theodore Fugar J. Patrick and Anne M. Gallagher Art Gardenswartz Travers Garvin Mark McCabe & Kathleen GetzDr. Donald A. Gillespie Raymond and Rosemary Giovannoni Richard Griffith Thomas Haggerty James Hajnosz James Harriman Peter and Barbara Hasbrook Brian Hayes Margaret Heffernan John and Andrea Heinstadt Stephen Holte Bernard and Teresa Hurley Paul & Jane Jaeger Susan Jennings Ed and Linda Kaiel John and Mary Kakolewski Mary Beth Kamp George and Elizabeth Kane Robert Keller Stephen Kern David and Rita Kieras Michael and Tanya Killpack William Klein Rev. William P. Knott Carl and Martha Koestner Edward and Kay Koger Jeffrey and Linda Krol Maria Kurrie Carl and Jutta Leuty Robert Lewandowski Paul and Erica Linthorst Charles and Sandra Lizza

Katy Lough George and Rose Marie Lubienski Mary Lucca Thomas and Alicia Luna Charlotte Mac Donald Mary Jane Macafee Thaddeus and Margaret Mackrell John Manfredi Joe and Margaret Maranto David and Mary Martin Edwin B. McConville Stephen McGeady John McGiff James and Betty Miller KC Minter Frank Molony Michael Moran James Morley Mulcahy Law Firm Lester Munson Joseph and Joan Noonan Thomas and Maureen Noone Daniel Obringer Edmond and Mary Ann O’Connor Jeanne B. Oelerich Kathleen Ojeda Norton & Mary Ann O’Meara G. William Parker John Patrick Penders Mary Peteet Bob and Carol Peters Daniel and Melanie Peterson Barbara Pope Mr. and Mrs. John Power Gary and Judith Rabik Charles and Carole Racansky David and Andrea Rahija Adam and Charis Ralko Philip and Maureen Rassas Charles and Joy Reed Mr. & Mrs. Peter Robinson William and Maren Rosborough Patricia Rowan Edward J. SchaafRichard Schager Thomas and Helen Shantz John and Yanick Shea

Leo and Olive Sheridan Mary Skalkos Francis and Bernadette Skuse Michael and Nancy Smith Michael Lawler Smith Eldon Somers David Speranza T. Michael Sullivan Patricia Sullivan Richard Thesing Donald and Marie Tippman Albert Tobia Lowell and Martha Tompkins Michael Valladao John Vander Vennet Bryan Vincent Pauline Viviano Lambert and Eleanore Von Bank Charles Walsh Robert and Marian Wernicke Alan J. Wilhere Stephen Wilson Richard and Darleen Worth Patricia Wotypka Clifford and Elizabeth Yeary Don Zirkel

If an error has occurred in the compilation of this list, we ask that you call it to our attention.

Photo: Notre Dame Cristo Rey High School | 21

14 East Jackson Boulevard, Suite 1200Chicago, Illinois 60604Phone: (312) 784-7200 www.cristoreynetwork.org