Fall/Winter 2021
FOR THE MOREAU CATHOLIC COMMUNITY
OUR MISSION Moreau Catholic High School is dedicated to the legacy and values of the Congregation of Holy Cross and its founder Blessed Basil Moreau. We are a college-preparatory school committed to outstanding achievement. As a community of faith, we prepare our students through academic, social and spiritual learning experiences that form and transform them as they become responsible citizens of our global community.
13 ANNUAL REPORT
FEATURES
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WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY A FAMILY TRADITION
MARINER FILMMAKERS
The International Student Program is crossing borders, introducing new perspectives, and inspiring Mariners to go big.
Andrew Rose, ’06, Kate Tsang ’03 (above), and David Duque-Estrada ’00 are Mariner filmmakers who have found success in a notoriously cutthroat industry on their own terms.
Chris Valle ’90 on the teacher who made a difference, the many Mariners in his family and why he gives back to Moreau Catholic.
COVER ART
THE MANY FACES OF MOREAU By Sabrina Vallejo ’22, A.P. Art
Inside Cover: Francesca Garcia ’25, Watercolor & Ink Back Cover: Janelle Leuterio ’23, Layered Drawing
EDITOR Elizabeth (Morales) Zepeda ’03 DESIGN Matthew Tominaga FOR THE MOREAU CATHOLIC COMMUNITY
MOREAUCATHOLIC.ORG Comments or suggestions for The Vector are welcome. Email us at communications@ moreaucatholic.org
CONTRIBUTORS Adrianne Ford PHOTOGRAPHY Dominic Earney ’22 Matthew Tominaga
THE VECTOR is published two times a year by Moreau Catholic High School | 27170 Mission Boulevard | Hayward, CA 94544 510.881.4300
FROM THE PRESIDENT Dear Mariner Family, Our brave and beloved students are shining here on campus, and we applaud our alumni who are forging success on their own terms. We have so much to celebrate! We opened the new school year with a strong and safe full return to campus, high parent and student satisfaction, strong faculty and staff retention, exemplary new leadership, outstanding student achievement, continuous facility improvements and continued work with supporting students’ social and emotional wellness. We also continue to strengthen our work as Holy Cross antiracist educators who empower our next generation of leaders. We are honored to shape the hearts and minds of the amazing young people entrusted to our care, and we continue to be inspired by their courage and light! With grateful hearts, we honor the people and Holy Cross values that shape and sustain us. We give special thanks in this Vector to all of our generous family members who have chosen to invest in our programs and our students. Just like our students, you are going above and beyond to connect and make a difference. We value your support and we are thrilled to partner with you to continue to provide a world-class, transformational education to students from the Bay Area and beyond who are making the most of their Moreau Catholic experience. Thank you for reading this Vector, and thank you for your continued engagement and support of Moreau Catholic High School. While our alumni are illuminating the world with their artistry and talent, we are keeping the lights on for you here at home on Mission Boulevard. See you soon. Go Mariners! With gratitude and hope,
Dr. Liz Guneratne President
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This page, clockwise from left: Shumo Wang ’23, APART Victoria Landeros ’22, Ink Jennifer Tran ’24, Charcoal Opposite page, left: Kaia Hopkins ’24, Wrapped
Use this QR code to visit our virtual art gallery to see more student pieces from all levels of visual arts classes.
moreaucatholic.org
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WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY The International Student Program is crossing borders, introducing new perspectives, and inspiring Mariners to go big. Written by Adrianne Ford
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rave and bold.” That’s how AJ Lee describes the international students at Moreau Catholic High School.
“They come here, to a new country, without their parents, at just 14 years old, to learn in a language that is not their native tongue,” he says. As Moreau’s Associate Director of Admissions, Lee is advisor and counselor to these students who leave family, friends, and familiar surroundings to pursue an education in the United States. “They get immersed in our community and really blossom,” he says. “It’s been a privilege to watch them grow.” The 28 international students enrolled at Moreau this school year hail from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Russia. Hosted by nearby families (many with ties to Moreau), each started school with the support of a Link Leader, an upper-class student available to answer any questions about Moreau and American culture, as well as introductory classes designed to help them build their English skills.
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With this strong support system, students like Jeffrey Chen ’24, from Taoyuan, Taiwan, participate in a wide range of activities and programs. He competes on Moreau’s baseball and crosscountry teams and is also a member of the Table Tennis Club, the Universal Peace Club, and the Taiwanese Club. “I came to the United States because my dream is to become a physical therapist or athletic trainer, and I know a lot of universities in the United States have strong science departments,” says Chen, who is challenging himself with honors classes at Moreau.
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He’s been enjoying the comradery of athletics most of all. “Sports brings a lot of people from different grades together,” he explains, “it’s a good place to improve myself physically and mentally, but also a place for socializing.”
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Tsz Chun (Stallone) Yip ’22, from Hong Kong, has also enjoyed the opportunity to get to know students across the entire Mariner community. “Students here are supportive of each other and friendly,” says Yip, a member of Student Government, the football team, and the International Student Program Council. “Not only can I learn from their culture, they can also learn from mine, so the local students and I are both growing at the same time.” Both Chen and Yip say they appreciate the freedom at Moreau to select courses that mirror their interests and support their future academic plans. Yip wants to work in the field of computer science. “So being able to take two years of computer science during my high school years in America can really prepare me to start ahead,” he says. Other students like Shumo Wang ’23 came to Moreau in search of a more well-rounded education. As he explains, the test-based curriculum in Beijing, China, did not match his learning style. “I was always bad at memorizing. It was a way of teaching that didn’t work for me, and my grades were very bad.” Today Moreau has provided the junior with a second chance. “Now with projects and all the other different kinds of work here,” he says, “I’ve started to enjoy studying.” Leila Khairetdinova ’24 was drawn to Moreau’s athletics program. In her native Ufa, Russia, she competed in track at the state/provincial level. At Moreau, Khairetdinova has continued in track, winning races as a frosh, and has also added cross country to her repertoire. She says she was excited to discover fun American events like football games and spirit week as well as new ways that she can support the local community. Khairetdinova joined the Red Cross Club to help organize blood drives and is contemplating future studies of biology or medicine.
It was Ms. Karen Thomas, he says, describing Moreau’s Visual and Performing Arts Department Chair as “my Obi-Wan.”
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“I would say she ruined my original life plan in a good way,” Zhang says. “She did an excellent job at encouraging kids to do more, think more, and try more.”
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The Moreau alumnus has nothing but praise for his alma mater’s international student program as well as some advice for prospective students.
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“If you are confused about your future or too afraid to take the first step, be brave,” he says. “Moreau will definitely help you find your passion.”
For more information about international student admissions or becoming a host family, visit https://moreaucatholic.org/admissions/international-students/
MOREAU INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE “Teachers at Moreau are very supportive and are always willing to help with any questions,” the sophomore says. “I am receiving a good education and working hard, which makes me feel more confident about my future.” In pre-Covid years, the international program welcomed as many as 60 students at a time to Moreau, nearly twice as many as it serves today. But with travel restrictions lifted and access to vaccines on the rise, Lee is hopeful that enrollment will bounce back—for the benefit of the school and the community beyond campus. “Many of our international students are not Catholic,” Lee says, “but they learn the historical view of Catholicism, its values and morals, and how they can be applied to make a better world.”
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Wenjing (Jocelyn) Yang ’23, a student from Kunming in Yunnan province, China, is among the students seeking to use their gifts for the greater good. “I initiated a student-led organization with my friends both in the U.S. and China, and we hope to make our world a more peaceful place,” she says. “This year we are organizing activities against Asian hate and racial discrimination.” For many, Moreau is just the start of their educational journey in the United States. Tyler Zhang ’21 just finished his first midterms in the Game Arts program at New York’s Pratt Institute. The future game developer or artist (he’s not sure yet) credits the VAPA program with helping him discover his creative side. “It encourages students to try different things, by letting them believe they might be good at something,” he says. “Just, you know, at least give it a try.” Zhang had never drawn or created anything artistic before his first Visual Arts class at Moreau.
Number of graduates since the program began in 2013
3.96
Average GPA of last graduating class
100%
Participation in extracurricular activities
But it wasn’t the class alone that inspired his artistic endeavors. moreaucatholic.org
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A FAMILY TRADITION Chris Valle ’90 on the teacher who made a difference, the many Mariners in his family and why he gives back to Moreau Catholic. Written by Adrianne Ford
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hirty-five years ago, Ms. Annmarie Cota (pictured below) posed a question to each student in Chris Valle’s freshmen English class at Moreau Catholic High School, and he still remembers it vividly. What do you want out of life? “If someone’s answer was ‘to get a job,’ she asked you to think about what else you might be on Earth for,” he recalls. “She was inspiring. I loved her class and her toughness as a teacher.” Valle has taken time to speak to The Vector by phone after a busy day at Google, where he works as industry director of Consumer Electronics. Looking back to that day in Miss Cota’s classroom, he remembers, “She made me and other students think bigger, out of the box, challenged that we can go after more than we typically expected of ourselves and beyond the material things,” Valle says. He remembers how his teacher spoke of living a good life with family and faith at the core—something the father of three says he has strived to do ever since. At Google, Valle manages a $1 billion business with a more than
40-person team that helps some of the nation’s biggest brands navigate the digital marketing landscape. Work-life balance is understandably tricky, but ruthless planning, wisdom passed down from his parents and those values he learned at Moreau, Valle says, help him find “the time to pause, reflect and have fun with my family.” It’s a family that has a long history with Moreau. Valle’s oldest brother, David ’79, was the first to graduate from Moreau followed by his brothers Joseph ’83, Richard ’86, and their sister, Joelle ’88. This explains why Valle can recall rooting for the Mariners long before he became one. Just like Richard, Valle took up wrestling when he arrived on campus, but he’s quick to point out that he is not the athlete in the family. “That’s Joelle,” he says, praising his sister for making the softball Hall of Fame her freshman year. Still, athletics taught him a lot about teamwork, Valle says. It’s one of many experiences at Moreau that prepared him for his career ahead. Valle praises the passionate Mr. Marek Breiger, with his Einsteinesque hair, who introduced him to classics, from Steinbeck’s Cannery Row to Capote’s In Cold Blood, and sparked his interest in storytelling. Religions of the World “was a really good class that helped me develop a more diverse worldview,” he recalls. Moreau was also the place where Valle made lifelong friendships with students like Sam Schmidt ’90 and Stan Snow ’90. The two fellow grads stood beside him as his groomsmen on Valle’s wedding day. Valle was also developing a strong work ethic and a sense of hustle that would serve him well throughout his career. In his early Mariner days, Valle rose well before dawn and hopped on his 1974 BMX racing bike (still with him, now fully restored) to deliver The Daily Review to his neighbors. After school, he clocked in at his retail job at the first Target (“before it was Tar-jay,” he quips), where he discovered that he loved customer service. Valle’s interest in gadgets, digital devices, and music attracted him to the store’s electronics department. He became its manager at only 18 years old, the youngest department manager in the entire Bay Area. The job was his first stepping stone to the work he does today. Valle graduated in 1990 and went on to San Jose State University to earn a degree in marketing and advertising. The most important lesson he carried with him? The ability to stand up in front of people and confidently tell a story as he did in
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Miss Cota’s class, he says. That practice helped him earn a marketing award during his senior year of college. Degree in hand, Valle found his first jobs in advertising agencies in Southern California. As both a team and account manager, he helped clients like Petco, the City of Long Beach, and DirectTV build their first web experiences. “It was the early days of digital, Web-based marketing,” he says, a time of speed, creativity, and constant innovation. “I fell in love with it.” His first sales and marketing role, with America Online in 1998 (the era of AOL install discs arriving in our daily mail), brought him back to the Bay Area. The dot-com boom was in full swing. “It was exhilarating to be in marketing, sales, and advertising during this period in my twenties,” he says. “I knew the world and the way we all would consume information was changing. I had no idea how that early experience would lead to spending the next 25 years working at AOL, Yahoo, and Google, some of the big names we all grew up with.” Valle stayed with AOL for five years, serving as the principal liaison for marketing partnerships between the company and leading e-commerce clients, including Amazon (back when it only sold books). “I recognized early on that I had a passion for leading teams,” he says. After a stint as Yahoo’s advertising solutions manager, he became a Googler in 2005, starting as a senior manager for Tech B2B Vertical and moving up to head of industry for many different departments before he took over Consumer Electronics.
who quietly leads by example. She’s very coachable, positive, and doesn’t back down from competition,” he says. “And Coach Alva, with her experience from her personal running career, has been a great addition to our coaching team. The athletes respond really well to her. She steps in without question to help in any way she can.” Valle’s late father John would no doubt be proud to see the family’s coaching tradition continue. From the 1950s to his passing in 1997, John was well-known at Our Lady of the Rosary (OLR) parish in Union City. He was the Catholic Youth Organization (CYO) athletic director for more than 40 years and coached all five of the Valle children in OLR Basketball and Union City Little League, several of whom went on to compete or coach at the collegiate level. Like his father, Valle does plenty of coaching to help others in his field make the most of their God-given talents. He’s also made it a priority to give back to Moreau through Annual Gifts that are helping the next generation of students. “My dad and my mom [Marie Valle, who passed away in 2014] were our role models to give back to your community and help others who need it,” he says. “And I think giving back is part of what we learned as students at Moreau, whether it’s volunteering, tutoring a student, being a good friend, or donating to a good cause—it just seems like the right thing to do.”
Moreau helped him build a strong foundation for a successful career, and he’s grateful to his parents for connecting him to the school. “My parents were very appreciative of the values that the Catholic school system brought. The morals, the wellrounded education, the importance of having goals—that’s what led them to send their children to Moreau,” he says. Today, both his wife, Alva (pictured right), and their oldest daughter, Eliana ’24 (pictured above), have made their own journeys to the same campus. Alva, who ran for Stanford’s club team, is now the assistant cross-country coach at Moreau and Eliana is on the team.
It was a pretty surreal feeling to watch his daughter walk inside Moreau for the first time, passing those pillars that have come to mean so much to him. Valle’s been excited to watch her set out on her own educational journey. “Moreau is an environment where kids really want to learn and want to be the best. There’s such a strong community where faith, family, and love are the focus and everyone is in it together,” he says. “It’s just an awesome place.”
Coach Enrique Henriquez feels blessed to have them both at Moreau. “Eliana is a very focused, goal-driven student-athlete moreaucatholic.org
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KATE Tsang ’03
ANDREW Rose ’04
MARINER FILMMAKERS Whether through writing and directing independent films about less seen characters like Kate Tsang ’03, managing the many elements of finance, schedule, and people on multi-million dollar productions like David Duque-Estrada ’00, or by being a one-person creative/production/marketing team elevating the work of other artists like Andrew Rose ’06, these Mariner filmmakers have found success in a notoriously cutthroat industry on their own terms. Written by Elizabeth (Morales) Zepeda ’03
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verything that everyone told you that you thought you had to do for Hollywood, to get in there, or to make a project, we said, No, we don’t have to do that. We can always do it another way. I think one of the things that I learned in high school was there was always another way to do things,” says Andrew Rose ’06. And do it another way they all have. An early member of MCTV, Rose is “always trying to figure out how to make a mark on something.” After a disappointing experience in college—where his film studies were more theoretical than practical, and his professors were discouraging and burnt out from careers in Hollywood—Rose decided that he would be the exception to the rule. HE would make it in Hollywood when others couldn’t. What he did instead was create his own version of success, working closely with comedians, brands, and music artists like Tori Kelly, Jordan Fisher, Pharrell Williams, Ed Sheeran, Nick Jonas, to name a few. Spending years “farting around” (his words) was just what David Duque-Estrada ’00 needed to find his calling in the film industry. He attended community college after Moreau then did some bartending before deciding it was time to go back to school. In his late 20s, he attended the Academy of Art University where he dabbled in many aspects of filmmaking but was drawn most to producing. Answering an ad on Craigslist for an unpaid Production Assistant proved to be a life-changing decision. The project ended up being an early Safdie Brothers film called Heaven Knows What (2014) and began a long working relationship between Duque-Estrada and the Safdies. The Safdies would go on to make movies like Good Time (2017) starring Robert Pattinson and Uncut Gems (2019) starring Adam Sandler, but Duque-Estrada’s first encounter with them was his “in” to Hollywood and eventually on to the set of the six-time Academy Award-nominated film, The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020). A short stint as a pre-med student working toward a career as a mortician made Kate Tsang ’03 realize, “Oh, I don’t want to be Dana Scully. I actually want to make The X-Files.” In 2019, Tsang won the AT&T Untold Stories competition, a one million dollar prize that allowed Tsang and her team to develop, film, and edit Tsang’s feature-length film debut Marvelous and the Black Hole, a “coming of age comedy that’s about a teenage delinquent who befriends a children’s party magician who helps her navigate her dysfunctional family and inner demons with the help of sleight of hand magic.” Untold Stories partners with Tribeca Film Festival at which Marvelous was set to debut in 2020 as an Official Selection, but had to be postponed. The film premiered to its first live audience at Sundance Film Festival this year and was later, finally, screened at Tribeca. STORIES ABOUND “For a long time, I didn’t get to see myself, my friends, or my family represented on screen. So I tell stories that I wish I had when I was younger and need now. Stories about angry teens, Asian
Americans, outsiders, people who are monsters, and the folks who love them. I want to create spaces where characters like me are thriving and have limitless options to be whatever they want to be,” Tsang says about why she makes the films she does. Tsang’s inspiration for Marvelous draws heavily from her own lived experience. Splitting her time as a child between divorced parents in Hong Kong and the Bay Area left Tsang feeling isolated and lonely. In middle school, her grandfather came from Hong Kong to take care of her. “He could tell I was struggling and going through it, but he didn’t judge me,” she shares. “He just validated me and became the best friend I needed at that time. And the core relationship of [Marvelous]... is very much rooted in this relationship. And it’s something I wanted to honor.” Storytelling is the connective tissue that drives all three of these Mariners to their work. Having learned the value of good storytelling through the MCHS Theatre program, Duque-Estrada shares, “I credit the program, namely Arlene Hood, Terry Lee, and Amy Armstrong for teaching me the value of creative expression. At MCHS I was taught the importance of reading something on paper and translating those words into actual human emotions. Putting myself in someone else’s shoes...The arts was my introduction to the importance of compassion.” He adds that theatre and choir taught him to look beyond the words on the paper to find the story and the human connection. Duque-Estrada describes his job as working for the director to help their vision come to fruition. Part of what he enjoys about his work is seeing how the director, actors, and other production elements bring a story to life. While working on Chicago 7, Duque-Estrada observed how Aaron Sorkin brought a clear direction for his team, then trusted them to go there. “It’s great when you have a good director that walks in and knows what they want, and not all of them do. But Aaron Sorkin was very good about that. When he walked in, he knew what he wanted. He let [the actors] do it and was like, Okay, cool. Great. Moving on.” Trust and strong leadership allow for good storytelling, as evidenced by Chicago 7’s Oscar nomination for Best Picture. Even in making shorter content like music and dance videos, Rose also understands the importance of a strong narrative. He says, “The idea of having a story was always the something that I wanted to incorporate in things that I did. So regardless if it was a music video, or a dance piece, or a documentary, story was always going to be the main thing I wanted to portray...I moved to LA and I wanted to make movies, I wanted to go to Warner Brothers. It wasn’t for me at the time, but the idea of storytelling never left.” Upon arriving in LA, Rose noticed a market for refining and upgrading the self-recorded videos that dancers and dance companies were making and putting on YouTube. He entered moreaucatholic.org
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the world of social media content creation before it was at everyone’s fingertips with TikTok and Instagram. He’s proud of being part of the beginnings of content creation and “changing something,” he shares. From there he moved into the music industry, teaming up with singer-songwriter Tori Kelly early in her career, making most of her music videos since 2009. Rose continues to tell stories in his filmmaking: “I’ve been fortunate to be on a bunch of world tours, filming 33 shows around the country over the course of two months, living on a tour bus, telling the story of what it’s like to be on the road. And I would have never had those opportunities if I didn’t take a chance on an alternate way to get there.” MOREAU AS THE MAIN CHARACTER Rose, Tsang, and Duque-Estrada all credit Moreau Catholic with instilling them with the skills and values they needed to carve out the path to their respective careers. Leadership is just one skill that Duque-Estrada learned while at Moreau. “The roots of where I am today professionally grow from my time as a member of the concert choir, theatre club, and performing in the plays and musicals every year at MCHS. The theatre taught me how to work with others. It taught me how to be a leader. It taught me the importance of confidence. It helped me find my way. When people ask me how I ended up in film making I always credit my time at MCHS,” he says. Rose adds, “I loved my high school experience because I feel like...I was allowed to make my own high school experience and in so I graduated in this very great place feeling very confident on the things that I wanted to do moving forward. And it was awesome!” That confidence has allowed Rose to write his own rules and be his own boss. He controls 100% of his time, giving him the freedom that many aspire to have, but few actually do. This is not to say the road to such freedom is easy, especially in an industry as fickle as the arts. Still, Duque-Estrada encourages everyone to participate in the arts on some level: “To engage and/or participate directly with the arts, whether it be at your local museum, watching your favorite episode of a show, going to a big Broadway musical, reading a novel, or taking in some Shakespeare in the park reminds us of the shared human experience through centuries.” For those brave enough to enter this experience as a career, Tsang shares advice she’d give to her 14-year-old self and to all current Mariners: “When it comes to pursuing a career in the arts, you’re going to get rejected. A lot. It’s going to hurt, but nurse those wounds and keep going because it only takes one thing working out to open doors for you. Having said that, don’t base your entire self-worth on your work or output. You’re more than that. Also, there’s some good advice in Baz Lurman’s song ‘Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen).’” Patience, as they say, is a virtue because waiting for that one thing to work out could be a while. Tsang’s “one thing” came when she got her second gig as a writer on the animated series Adventure Time: Distant Lands. She was in her mid-30s and to her this job meant her success “wasn’t a fluke.” Duque-Estrada didn’t even enter the movie business until well into his thirties when he answered that fateful Craigslist ad. So don’t despair, Mariners! As we know, there is always hope, so we leave you with these words from Duque-Estrada: “[T]he past few years have been a very trying time for our country and the world. Out of these dark times will come great and thought-provoking art. I am excited to see what the current generation of Moreau graduates creates out of these tumultuous times. I will, without a doubt, be someone who will read their novels and articles, see them perform in my favorite plays, visit their work in museums as a way for me to continue to expand my view of the world.”
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2020-2021 VECTOR ANNUAL REPORT For more than 50 years, Moreau Catholic High School has been providing a compassionate college-preparatory education to the greater East Bay community. We are committed to the ideas and philosophy set forth by Blessed Basil Moreau and the Congregation of Holy Cross. This commitment includes being steadfast in teaching the four pillars of Bringing Hope, Building Respect, Being Family, and Educating Hearts and Minds. It is through the kindness and generosity of our alumni, parents, and the broader community that we are able to be faithful to our four pillars and deliver on the promise of a high-quality, college preparatory educational experience for our deserving students. At Moreau Catholic High School, we feel blessed by our partnership with you to educate our students, and we thank you for your generosity. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, mistakes do happen. Please let us know if there is an instance where information is inaccurately reported so that we can correct the mistake. Thank You.
In the spirit of gratitude for all that we have, we are deeply thankful for all the alumni, parents, friends, and students who supported Moreau Catholic High School during the 2020-2021 Fiscal Year. Your gifts, whether in time or treasure, to Moreau Catholic make it possible in providing a top-quality college-preparatory education to the East Bay community and beyond. Over the last year and a half, together we have experienced one of the most challenging times in human history. However, the Mariner Family’s unwavering support of our students and assisting Moreau Catholic in its quest to fulfill Blessed Basil Moreau’s mission of “Educating the Hearts and Minds” has never ceased. We could not have done it without all of you. We thank you for your investment in our students. The transformational experience of being a Mariner scholar is priceless and can not be accomplished without your partnership. Being at a school that values academic excellence and rigorous academics, providing an environment that fosters artistic creativity and athletic excellence, and offering a wide variety of co-curricular options depends on your partnership. Please continue to invest in our students, our school, our teachers, and our mission!
Douglas Hupke Director of Advancement
Thank you and Happy Holidays.
Fr. Moreau Guild - ($10,000.00+) American Endowment Foundation Avila Encore Management LLC Benevity Community Impact Fund Breeding-Task Trust ESponsor Now, Inc. Fremont Bank Koch Foundation Paypal Charitable Giving Fund Raskob Foundation for Catholic Activities, The Robert Stewart Odell and Helen Pfeiffer Odell Fund Silicon Valley Foundation The Anjulicia Foundation The Carl Gellert and Celia Berta Gellert Foundation The Joseph and Mercedes McMicking Foundation
Holy Cross Circle - ($5,000.00+) Barbara and Richard Ratto Samudra and Conrad Sathianathen Sheri Task and Caroline Breeding The Olympic Club Foundation Vanguard Charitable Anthony Varni
Cross & Anchors Circle - ($1,000.00+) A & D Rubber Products Company, Inc. Anonymous (3)
Cynthia and John Bader Evelyn and Keith Balasuriya Voltaire and Andrea Baltazar Maria and John Barr S M and Wayne Beasley Shivashankar Beesanahalli and Keerthi Hulliyappa Thomas Bottorff ’71 Edna Brooks-Henley and David Henley Kathleen (Ferenz) Cande ’77 Robert Caruso and Faye Clements Amy and Stephen Cassidy Christine (Juanima) Chan ’94 Julia Luk and Philip Chan Jason Chen and San San Ong Kelly Chen and William Fong Congregation of Holy Cross, Moreau Province Michael Costa Geraldine Cruz Michael and Jaleh Dale Jennifer Sprinkles and Jeanine DeBacker Concepcion Juarez-Diroll and Robert Diroll Edgardo and Marie Evangelista Katrina Dyrby and Bijan Farhangui Kwame and Mekia Fields John Friedrichsen ’69 Patricia and Andrew Galligan Colleen Galloway ’77 Michael Garcia and Marimel Maullon Jenny and Noel Gonsalves Debra and Joseph Guenley ’69 Elizabeth Guneratne, Ed.D.
Vikas Gupta and Anjali Atal-Gupta Hayward Rotary Club Foundation Barbara and William Hemenez Samantha Hernandez and Ruben Alvarez Hymowitz Family Foundation Maritza and Tim Ilario Cynthia and Satoshi Imura and Rajaganesh Kamalnathan Kulwinder Kaur and Gurnam Singh Winchell and Daniel Kuttner Jovita Lai Aaron Lan ’09 Wenschel Lan ’02 Miriam Rhew and Brian Lee Terry Lee Fernando and Maria Lens Diane L’Heureux Matthew Lojo Marin Commuity Foundation Walter and Estella Matthews Dr. Dotty McCrea Michael McGrath ’81 Rowena and Rainier Mendiola Metro Develpment Group, LLC Janet and Stephen Miller Munayco Law Firm, P.C. Pawan Nachnani and Geeta Mutreja Li Heung and Ping Ching Ng Joseph and Michele Niemann Susana and Jaime Onate Sharvari and Vikram Pamarthi Reena and Mehul Patel
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Lucia and Gustavo Pena PG&E Corporation Foundation Philadelphia Financial Management of San Francisco, LLC Sally and William Philbin Frances and Ruben Quilalang Elvia Quiroga Juana and Ignacio Ramirez Janice and Dominador Real Dianne and Arthur Reardon Shobna and Munesh Reddy Reilly Financial Advisors Gabriel Riopel ’93 Adela and Hector Rodarte Amit Saxena and Pallavi Otawkar Schwab Charitable Fund Amy and Jason Schwartz Christopher and Noreen Senner Maria Riza and Rolen Sese Tom Shih ’85 Brian and Jacqueline Simon Anindya Sinha and Pragna Datta Pramod and Archana Sirur Karen and Dan Smith Richard and Janet Smith Frances Stone Jeffrey Stone Quang Trinh ’88 David Turner ’01 UBS Financial Services INC. Maris (Erwin) ’73 and. Douglas Uchikura ’71 Chris ’90 and Alva Valle Frank Vargas ’71 Charuhasa Venkataraman and Ramanan Gandhi Davinderpal and Navneet Wander Catherine Wickboldt Rene (Moresi) ’74 and Randal Willet ’75 Wilma’s Collision Repair
Voyager Club - ($500.00+) Anonymous (2) Jay Austin ’86 Kim and Vincent Capurro ’77 Henny Chen Ira Cook, Jr. ’74 Most Rev. John S. Cummins Diana (Straggas) DeFrance ’76 DeLuca Homes, LP Kristin (Knox) Esche ’92 Stacey (Raimondi) ’86 and Michael Ferreira Maribel Gonzalez and Miguel Aguirre In Memory of Scott Sanborn ’78 Kristin (Graham) Hannon ’02 Elena and Douglas Hupke Suzanne and Larry Johnson Rochelle and Steven Klein ’78 Christine and Michael Krisman ’72 Ian Land ’86 Joan and Allen Lopez Brian and Jodi Lozano Dorothy Lubin Nichole McGowan Susan and Dn. John Mignano Angela and Jaime Mira Michael Moran ’74 Mr. Glenn Noga ’77 and Mrs. Heidi Noga PaceSupply Rajesh Panda and Madhumita Mohanty Robert Parker Scott Rea Mary and Kevin Rossi ’75 Edwin Round and Melody McHan-Round Margaret Stevens ’84 George and Betty Straggas Ann Tabora
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Michelle (Raimondi) ’85 and Jim Thompson Samantha Wainwright Eric Wilson Linda and Edward Wuelfing ’86
Mariner Club - ($250.00+) Anonymous (2) Chijioke and Tolu Anyanwu Jessica Avery ’99 Caitlin Baczuk ’95 Beth and David Baptist ’85 Patricia and Vince Bevilacqua ’82 Michael Calegari ’75 Theresa and Coellen Camat Lisa and Michael Carroll ’83 Annie Lin and Eric Chen Chevron U.S.A., Inc. Jessica Chun Elaine Clancy ’85 Elaine and Robert Clark Dr. Joseph Connell Deborah (Deem) Farrell ’73 Foxworthy Enterprises Franklin Templeton Group Emily (Mamaril) Gamboa ’86 Edward Geiger ’71 Luis Gonzales Christina and Jose Govea Janet Capurro-Graham Maria and Allen Heath Theresa (Galloway) ’75 and Terry Hirstein Pius and Christel Kampfen Nancy and William Katen Douglas Kitani ’89 AJ Lee LMEPAC Charity Program Custodial Account Laura Lopez Christine (Orlina) Macasieb ’01 Julie and Joseph Maroun Kaye McCann Geraldine McGrath Raymond Montes ’72 North Berkeley Properties Gregory Palin ’71 Justin Paras ’98 Todd Perras ’83 Marleen and David Prisk Bernadine and Gilbert Puccini Jan and Christine Richard Kaia Richards ’99 Caitlin Riley Telly and Benjamin Sacramento Maria Santos Hutoxi and Jamshed Sopariwalla James Souza ’70 Karen Strawn Stephanie and Alan Torrey Jennifer and Mario Toscano Jonathan Varni ’88 Oscar Vasquez Marisa and Larry Vierra Wells Fargo – Matching Gift Center Ann (Friedrichsen) Wolford ’76 Patty and Mark Wurzel ’ 72 Wei Yang and Ying Xue Elizabeth (Morales) Zepeda ’03
Green & Gold Club - ($1+) Anonymous (26) Chris (Raasch) Gardiner ’88 Jerico Abanico Paulo Acoba ’05 Ms. Adcock Rubie and Daniel Aguilar Matt Aguilar
Jana and Peter Aloo Susanne Altermann ’84 Ms. Debra (Meilink) Andrade ’73 and Mr. Terrence Andrade Dennis Medeiros and Sarah Aquino ’90 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Austin Elease Ayala ’05 Lt. James Ayala ’71 Marlowe Banatao ’07 Dean Barnes ’92 Kristopher and Alicia Bass Madeline Bender Louisa Bevilacqua ’15 Carolyn Bogues ’03 Julie and Robert Breuil Claudia Briones Broderick Brown ’99 Lisa (Puccini) Brown ’85 Margaret Bryant Michael Bungarz ’75 and Judith (Truax) Bungarz ’75 Ms. Denise R. Bunger ’92
Kevin Cacabelos Eliecer Cadena and Anyela Perez Araceli Catalan Fr. Bruce Cecil, CSC Li Chang 20 Tim Chaparro Jesse and Michelle Charles Nan Chen ’20 Shuyi Chen Zixi Chen ’20 Michael Chin ’88 Minnie Chan and Roy Choi Ken Chu and Haijing Hu Maribel and Alex Co Evangeline Co Brodie Cobb Eugene F. Connolly Jr. Lisa and Troy Cote CyberGrants on behalf of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Qichong Dai ’21 Elisabeth and Daniel Danielsen ’72
Hazel and Lorenz de Leon Mildred and Floyd De Sousa Jennifer DeFrance ’02 Delia DeLeon Angela Demmel David and Theresa Dias Marlene Dietrich Jessica Dietz ’97 Sandra Donahue Theresa (Young) Doty ’78 Kevin Dowling ’80 Juli Rodriguez-Dunhams and George Dunhams Wendy Endress Xuhong Fang ’20 Chanseng Feng ’21 Fidelity Charitable Tony and Martha Figueiredo Christina and Gregory Fisher ’89 Julie Vasilyeva and Alexei Fomitchev Justin Frantz Mark Freschi ’76 Frontstream James and Anne Fuentes Colleen Arnold and Gregory Galati Vardan Gill ’22 Marie Go Paula Gogin Michelle and Gary Gongwer Anthony Gonzalez and Huilian Wang Preston Good ’00 Willynnda Gordon Ellie St. Andre Gould ’77 Ann Graves Kameelah Green Feliza Gregorio Alfredo Grulich ’94 Daniel Guerra ’82 David Guerra ’78 Sonia Guina Theresa (Bell) ’00 and James Hannon ’02 Mary Ellen Harmeyer ’83 Stephen Harris Marina and David Hazelwood ’75 William Heinlein Brian Hickel ’11 Clara Ho-Frawley ’98 Lynn Hogan ’75 Arlene Hood Marie Wang and Tony Hsu Norma and Oscar Ibaceta IBM Corporation Matching Kaiping Ran and Ping Jiang Brissa Jimenez Carolyn Johnson Kenneth Johnson Gwen Kagaoan ’93 Colleen Kelly Charlene and Richard Kibanoff Jane F. Kilzer ’73 Randall and Sharon Kinkade Jana Kleczek Richard Klee Carol LaFleur Jennifer and Patrick Landeza Leonardo and Sandra Lansang Rondy Lazaro ’04 Sarah Ledford Henry Levy Terrence Lewis ’78 Fong-Ling Liau Meimei Liu ’20 Grace and Arneil Luna Dhiraj Madahar ’03 Carolina and Marino Mamoulelis Serena Maniscalco Karen and Felix Martinez Patricia and Jose Martinez
Felicia McDuffie ’83 Timothy McGuire ’82 Mary McInerney Paul McKenna ’83 Jamar McMahan Michael Medeiros Kathy and Gary Miranda ’85 Darnel (Tureaud) ’85 and Daniel Moresi Helene Nepomuceno ’10 Huang Nga Nghiem and Canh Nguyen Br. William Nick, CSC Jim Nondorf ’69 Alda and Michael O’Neill ’69 Robert Ontiveros Johanna (De Leon) Ota ’02 Imelda and Stuart Pace Yvonne Lin and Thomas Pacheco Pamela Passanisi ’75 James Patterson Maricar and Arnold Penaroyo Karen Peralta Huyen Pham Hang Phan Yolanda and Fernando Pineda Howard Puccini ’72 Diana Pulido Pedro and Evangelina Quinonez Humboldt Ramirez ’96 Andrea (Varni) Ramiza ’84 Maria and Louis Ramos Gabe Rangel ’05 Austin Reaker Patrick Reed Magdalena Garcia and Charles Reichel Michael Reichling Barbara and Timothy Retallick Risk Management Solutions Darien Rivera ’13 Antonio Rodriguez Sandra ( Hickson) Ross ’75 Linda and Carlos Salinas Patt Slovik Saso ’73 Katherine (Laster) Schipper ’79 Audrey Schroeder Rujia Shi Christine and Roy Shiba Ria and Joseph Simmons Virginia (St. Andre) Sire ’74 Durell Smith and Stephanie Ting Patrick Soares ’83 Dennis and Silvia Socher Connie and Michael Stanton Robert Stelzner and Trisha Healy Barbara Stewart ’74 Angela Stredic David Suzuki Dominique and Michael Taylor Anieleine Tobias Christine (DeFrance) Todd ’05 Beverley Goede and James Torrence Monique Torres ’87 Michael Tsan Maria Cruz Vera and Saul Ulloa United Way of the Bay Area Denise and Edward Varga David Viens ’72 Stephen Vierra ’76 Sharon Villarreal ’84 Dana (King) Wark ’76 Richard Wearne Josephine Weber Beth (Johnson) Weger ’87 Wells Fargo Community Support Matthew Wilhite ’02 Kevin Williams ’72 Francisco and Elizabeth Zermeno Haoze Zhu ’20
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ALUMNI GIVING BY CLASS YEAR The Moreau Catholic Alumni Association continues to build on our efforts to educate alumni on the various funding initiatives of the school. Many are surprised to learn that tuition does not cover the full cost to educate a student throughout the school year. More and more alumni “come back to Moreau Catholic” by answering the call for support for the Annual Fund to benefit the students. We cannot thank our alumni enough for staying involved through their support of the Annual Fund.
1969
1973
John D. Friedrichsen Joseph M. Guenley James M. Nondorf Michael T. O’Neill
Debra (Meilink) Andrade Deborah (Deem) Farrell Jane F. Kilzer Patricia (Slovik) Saso
1970
1974
James R. Souza
Ira O. Cook, Jr. Michael Moran Ginger (St. Andre) Sire Barbara C. Stewart
1971 James E. Ayala Thomas E. Bottorff Edward W. Geiger Gregory B. Palin Douglas Uchikura and Maris (Erwin) Uchikura ’73 Frank C. Vargas, Jr.
1972 Daniel J. Danielsen Raymond A. Montes Howard G. Puccini Dave W. Viens Kevin D. Williams Mark S. Wurzel
1975 Judith (Truax) Bungarz Michael Calegari David Hazelwood ’75 and Marina Hazelwood Theresa (Galloway) Hirstein ’75 and Terry Hirstein Lynn P. Hogan Ms. Pamela E. Passanisi Ms. Sandra (Hickson) Ross Kevin Rossi Randal Willet ’75 and Rene (Moresi) Willet ’74
1976 Diana (Straggas) DeFrance Mark Freschi Stephen Vierra Dana (King) Wark Ann (Friedrichsen) Wolford
1977 Kathleen Cande Vincent Capurro ’77 and Kim Capurro Colleen E. Galloway Eleanor (St. Andre) Gould Glenn A. Noga
1978 Theresa (Young) Doty Ted D. Griggs David R. Guerra Steven Klein ’78 and Rochelle Klein Terrence M. Lewis
1979 Katherine (Laster) Schipper
1980 Kevin J. Dowling
1981 Michael F. McGrath Larry E. Vierra
1982 Vince E. Bevilacqua ’82 and Tricia Bevilacqua Daniel J. Guerra Timothy McGuire
1983 Michael Carroll ’83 and Lisa Carroll Mary Ellen Harmeyer Felicia D. McDuffie Paul McKenna Todd Perras Patrick J. Soares
1984 Susanne Altermann Andrea (Varni) Ramiza Margaret P. Stevens Sharon Villarreal
1985 David R. Baptist Lisa (Puccini) Brown Elaine J. Clancy Brian Lozano Gary Miranda ’85 and Kathy Miranda Darnel (Tureaud) Moresi Tom Shih Michelle Thompson ’85 and Jim Thompson
1986 Jay A. Austin Stacey (Raimondi) Ferreira ’86 and Michael Ferreira Emily (Mamaril) Gamboa Ian Land Edward C. Wuelfing, Jr.
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1987
2003
2020
Monique (McMearn) Torres Beth (Johnson) Weger
Carolyn Bogues Dhiraj D. Madahar Elizabeth (Morales) Zepeda
Li Chang Nan Chen Zixi Chen Xuhong Fang Meimei Liu Haoze Zhu
1988 Christine ( Raasch ) Gardiner Michael Chin Jonathan C. Varni
1989
2005 Paulo Acoba Elease K. Ayala Gabe W. Rangel Chrissy De France
Sean Duffy Gregory Fisher ’89 and Christina Fisher Douglas Kitani
2007
1990
2009
Sarah Aquino ’90 and Dennis Medeiros Chris Valle
Aaron D. Lan
1992 Dean E. Barnes Denise R. Bunger Kristin (Knox) Esche
1993 Gwen C. Kagaoan Gabriel J. Riopel
1994 Christine J. (Juanima) Chan Alfredo A. Grulich
2021 Qichong Dai Chanseng Feng
Marlowe M. Banatao
2010 Helene L. Nepomuceno
2011 Brian G. Hickel
2013 Darien Rivera
2015 Louisa Bevilacqua
1995 Caitlin R. Baczuk
1996 Humboldt J. Ramirez, II
1997 Jessica C. Dietz
1998 Clara M. Ho-Frawley Justin D. Paras
1999 Broderick H. Brown Kaia E. Richards Jessica L. Wong
2000 Preston Good
2001 Christine F. Macasieb David B. Turner
2002 Jennifer A. DeFrance Kristin A. Hannon James Hannon and Theresa (Bell) Hannon ’00 Wenschel D. Lan Matthew D. Wilhite
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ENDOWMENT AND SCHOLARSHIPS Moreau Catholic High School offers both merit-based and need-based scholarships to students so that they may attain a Holy Cross, college-preparatory education. Given the increasing costs of education, mere money alone should not stand in the way of our students in achieving their goals and dreams.
$3.4 M
ENDOWMENT GROWTH $2.6 M $2.4 M $2.04 M
2017 Terry Lee Endowment Jana and Peter Aloo American Endowment Foundation AVT Productions Breeding-Task Trust Kathleen (Ferenz) Cande ’77 Amy and Stephen Cassidy Annie Lin and Eric Chen Dr. Joseph Connell Patricia and Andrew Galligan Colleen Galloway ’77 Paula Gogin Luis Gonzales Preston Good ’00 Elizabeth Guneratne, Ed.D. Enrique Henriquez Elena and Douglas Hupke Maritza and Maritza Ilario Maritza and Maritza Ilario Terry Lee Marin Commuity Foundation Kathy and Gary Miranda ’85 Br. William Nick, CSC Johanna (De Leon) Ota ’02 Elvia Quiroga Austin Reaker Adela and Hector Rodarte Karen and Dan Smith Jeffrey Stone Vanguard Charitable Catherine Wickboldt Wilma’s Collision Repair
Brother Gary Stone, C.S.C. Memorial Scholarship Kim and Vincent Capurro ’77 Deborah (Deem) Farrell ’73 Fremont Bank Colleen Arnold and Gregory Galati Colleen Galloway ’77 Kaye McCann Michael Moran ’74 Virginia (St. Andre) Sire ’74 Kevin Williams ’72
Faculty & Staff Scholarship Henny Chen Diana (Straggas) DeFrance ’76 Colleen Galloway ’77 Luis Gonzales Christine and Michael Krisman ’72 Terry Lee
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$2.7 M
2018
2019
2020
Paul McKenna ’83 Ann Tabora
Shih-Yang Deng Band and Orchestra Scholarship
The Hannon Scholarship
Aaron Lan ’09 Wenschel Lan ’02
Kristin (Graham) ’02 and Kendall Hannon ’02
L’Heureux Family Scholarship Diane L’Heureux
Kevin McCarty Memorial Scholarship Susanne Altermann ’84 Caitlin Baczuk ’95 Kristin (Graham) Hannon ’02 Jennifer and Mario Toscano
Maria Mignano Memorial Scholarship Susan and Dn. John Mignano
The Janet Pessagno and Lopez Family Scholarship Anjulicia Foundation Avila Encore Management LLC Brodie Cobb Eugene F. Connolly Jr. DeLuca Homes, LP Hymowitz Family Foundation Pius and Christel Kampfen Paypal Charitable Giving Fund Philadelphia Financial Management of San Francisco, LLC Frances Stone Oscar Vasquez
The Quilalang Scholarship Frances and Ruben Quilalang
The Charlene and John Raimondi Scholarship Sandra Donahue Stacey (Raimondi) ’86 and Michael Ferreira Janet and Stephen Miller Michael Reichling Michelle (Raimondi) ’85 and Jim Thompson
Laura and Diane Ratto Scholarship Barbara and Richard Ratto
2021
Spirit of Curiosity Scholarship Samudra and Conrad Sathianathen
In Memory of Mike Fowler Virginia (St. Andre) Sire ’74
In Memory of Gina Franco Daniel Guerra
In Honor of Kathy Joseph Kevin Dowling ’80
In Honor of Josh Kinkade Randall Kinkade
In Honor of Elvira Quiroga Henry Levy
In Memory of Mary Siefert Beth Weger
In Memory of Br. Gary Stone Kaye McCann
In Memory of Velia Vargas Frank Vargas
In Memory of Carroll P. Weber Josephine Weber
In Memory of Thomas Woefffer Ann Graves
$338,801
FOUNDATION GRANTS Grants from Private and Public Foundations provide Moreau Catholic High School valuable resources to financially support important projects and/or services, like tuition assistance, we might not otherwise be able to fund. With gratitude, we thank all of the Foundations who have partnered with Moreau Catholic over the years.
$79,665
$94,450
$104,075
2017
2018
2019
Volunteers for the 2020 Virtual Funding Hopes and Dreams Even though COVID-19 pandemic was consuming our world, our committee members and volunteers were incredibly generous and made the event a night to remember – securing much needed financial support to our Mariner families during these trying times. Thank you to our committee members and volunteers.
$147,909
2020
2021
Volunteers for 2021 Moreau Golf Classic The golf tournament took place at the beautiful Lake Merced Golf Club on Monday, June 28. The course was filled with Mariner alumni and family members – the camaraderie was amazing. Student recipients of the Brother Gary Stone, C.S.C. Memorial Scholarship were appreciative of all the generosity of players and donors. Thank you to all our committee members and volunteers.
Virtual Funding Hopes and Dreams Committee
Golf Committee
Tournament Volunteers
Gina Antonini ’83 Diana (Straggas) DeFrance ’76 Sidney Griffin Jeanitra Hector Norma Ibaceta Sharlene Mansfield Daniella Marinai Elvia Quiroga
Rick Hansen, Chair Gina Antonini ’83 Carlos Briones ’12 Larry Castillo Sanjay Govan Maritza Ilario Tim Ilario Bill Katen Buck Kleckner ’77 Sharlene Mansfield Danielle Marinai Giuliana Marinai ’23 Jim Thompson Doug Uchikura ’71 Julie Zhu
Brandon Cote ’22 Danielle Ferreira ’21 Daniela Hupke ’20 Waileia Lee ’23 Danielle Marinai Giuliana Marinai ’23 Jordan Mansfield ’17 Sharlene Mansfield Dominik Reichel ’15 Alexis Thompson ’19 Brianna Thompson ’17 Michelle (Raimondi) Thompson ’85 Sophia Thompson ’23 Niko Terrel ’23
Virtual Event Volunteers AVT Productions Mylene Dupaya ’92 Justin Fimeza ’20 Patrick Landeza Shalene Mansfield Paul McKenna ’83 Eric Ross
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TRIUMPHANT RETURN Mariners return to campus full time without missing a beat.
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THE VECTOR
This page, clockwise from top: Family and friends attended A Winter’s Hearth (Winter Choral Concert) at St. Clement Church. The South Asian Student Association hosted a Diwali celebration complete with music, food, and henna artist Harveen Kaur ’21. The Finessed Frosh dressed in ’90s fashion and showed off their fly moves in their Spirit Week performance. Mariner football returned with the usual passion and pride. Opposite, clockwise from top: Mireya Nevel ’22 as Agnes in MCHS Theatre Program’s She Kills Monsters. Principal Colleen Galloway ’77 received the Eucharist from Fr. Bruce, C.S.C. at the Opening of School Mass—the first in-person Mass in 546 days. Students in Honors Chemistry performed flame tests to identify metal ions by the color of the flame. Taliyah Harvey ’23 and Bryce Thomas ‘23 were Homecoming Royalty.
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Mariner Waves ’80
Kevin Dowling
was elected to the Santa Clara University Alumni Board of Trustees.
’94
Sara Harvey
became the Costume Shop manager for the Nashville Ballet in August 2021! She just finished Peter Pan and is gearing up for the Nutcracker!
IN LOVING MEMORY Valentin Avila, Sr. Father of Valentin Avila, Jr., Staff Betty Straggas Mother of Richard ’74, Diana ’76, and George ’78 Edward Horvath Alumni parent
Please contact DeeDee, Jackie, and Lisa if you are interested in attending your 40th/41st Class Reunion in 2022.
Alfredo Ruiz-Bandini Father of Ana Patterson, Faculty
DeeDee Howard ’81 deev63@hotmail.com
Charleston Lucas Cousin of Jerico Abanico, Faculty
Jackie Jacoby ’81 kikijmj212@gmail.com
Shelley Morris Mother of Leonard ’19 and Dolores ’22 Turner
Clockwise from left: Twesha Ghosh ’22, AP Art Ivy Guo ’22, AP Art Emily Le ’23, Rats
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ATTENTION CLASS OF 1981!
Lisa Crossett ’81 lcrossett63@gmail.com
Mariners, We Would Love to
HEAR FROM YOU!
Detach this form and mail to: Moreau Catholic High School Alumni Office, Diana (Straggas) DeFrance ’76 27170 Mission Blvd. Hayward, California 94544
Your fellow Mariners are interested in reading about what you are doing. Please use this form to keep your classmates and other Moreau Catholic friends up-to-date on the activities in your life. Send us news about career moves, publications, additions to your family, awards, etc. We especially welcome wedding, baby, and group gathering photos. You can also email your news to: Diana (Straggas) DeFrance ’76 at ddefrance@moreaucatholic.org. or update your information online at www.moreaucatholic.org/AlumniKeepInTouch
Full Name ________________________ Maiden Name __________________________ Zip________________ Class Year __________ Occupation ____________________Employer _________________________________ Street Address _____________________________________________________________________________ City ______________________ State ________________________ Zip ________________________________ Home Phone _______________________ Email __________________________________________________ News _____________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________________ moreaucatholic.org |
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27170 Mission Boulevard Hayward, CA 94544-4194 Change Service Requested
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