2018
PRESIDENT’S REPORT
INSIDE 3
Letter from the 2016-18 Board Chair
5
Letter from the President
6
Living Our Catholic and Jesuit Mission
10
Enhancing Academic Excellence
14
Strengthening an Environment of Involvement, Respect, and Connection
18
Sustaining the Prep Mission through Enhanced Revenue Strategies
22
Financials
24
President’s Leadership Club Gifts
DEAR PREP ALUMNI, PARENTS, COLLEAGUES, AND FRIENDS,
T
his past June, I completed my term as Chair of the St. Joseph’s Prep Board of Trustees. It was a privilege to serve my alma mater in this way and will always be considered one of the greatest honors of my professional career.
In my time as a Trustee, several substantial changes took place at the school. Most notably, the hiring of Rev. John W. Swope, SJ ’72 as our President in 2015 was significant. Working closely with Fr. Swope in his first few years at the helm
solidified my opinion that we chose the right person at the right time to lead our beloved institution into the future. Our new strategic plan, Many Parts, One Prep, stands as yet another way we ensure a bright future for the Prep. In my 43-year career, I have worked on several strategic plans. In my opinion this one ranks at the top. The process by which we engaged our community impressed me; colleagues, alumni, parents, students, trustees, and friends took part in the plan’s formulation and greatly influenced the final product. Board leadership is now in the extremely capable hands of Ms. M. Shawn Bort. A highly accomplished professional, as well as an alumni mother who loves the Prep, Shawn will lead the Trustees in providing the governance needed to ensure effective plan implementation. This President’s Report highlights key parts of the strategic plan. I think you will be impressed by the plan’s initiatives and the progress already made under Fr. Swope’s leadership in delivering our unique brand of Jesuit education to the fine young men drawn to our school. In gratitude,
James J. Mergiotti ’71 St. Joseph’s Prep Board of Trustees Chair 2016-18
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 3
DEAR PREP COMMUNITY,
I
n the Prep video we show to prospective families, I lovingly talk about 17th & Girard and how important this place was to my parents when they chose to send me here from Drexel Hill in 1968. Today, after three full years as President
of St. Joseph’s Prep, my dedication remains strong and continues to grow, and its importance stands paramount in my life. I am continually amazed by the young men
who walk these halls, surpassed only by my awe at the dedicated, knowledgeable women and men who guide these young men every day. As President, I am fortunate to spend time with many of our alumni, who continually mention their gratitude for the education they received at the Prep. They, like our colleagues, want to ensure that our legacy continues and that our school remains a beacon of Jesuit education, with a keen eye on the mission of developing young men who will make significant and inspiring differences in our world. Last year, we launched a strategic plan, Many Parts, One Prep. We have embarked on this journey together, as “Citizens of Prep Nation,” to better secure our school and enable its mission to carry on for generations to come. I am pleased to say this vision is underway each day at the Prep. As you read this report, you’ll see examples of our Ignatian identity in action throughout our community and the world. The Trustees and the leadership are thrilled to bring our strategic plan to life, and I am honored to share with you just a glimpse of our inspirational goals in action as we move forward collectively through each of our strategic areas of focus, highlighted here in this report. Already, so much good is happening for our wonderful young men here at the Prep... just think what’s to come in the years ahead! As God has inspired the Prep community to imagine Future Prep, I am confident that God’s grace will provide all of us the strength and commitment to make this vision for the Prep a reality for the Greater Glory of God. With gratitude to the Prep community,
Rev. John W. Swope, SJ ’72 President
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 5
“ The root of education is ‘to lead out.’ The experience that our students have in the community will enable this process and put the knowledge of justice and charity into practice.” — JOHN FACENDA ’57, P’86, ’87, ’93
Mr. Facenda and his wife Emma have created the Facenda Family Community Service Endowed Fund in support of the Mission and Ministry efforts at the school.
Living our Catholic and Jesuit Mission
A
ll that is St. Joseph’s Prep finds its roots in the Catholic faith, our Jesuit charism, and a pervasive Ignatian identity we share throughout our urban Philadelphia community. This defines who we are and why we are, and follows a torch lit by St. Ignatius fueled by the experiential nature of creating and receiving “encounters” with God. It is through
this lens of “experiential spiritual fire” that we strive to create for our students an environment focused on fostering, engaging, and living our Catholic, Jesuit identity so that succeeding generations not only comprehend our mission, but embrace it. By creating a stronger culture of engagement, reimagining the spirituality programs for our students, and establishing opportunities for all in our community to foster personal growth in Ignatian pedagogy, we infuse the Prep experience with vision and vitality—a sense of “more,” the Jesuit magis—and the energy worthy of the hundreds of young men in our care each day. The fruits of this labor surround us daily: service experiences, food drives, volunteer days, tutoring programs, civic engagements, museum trips, Kairos, class retreats, even simply in conversation between two friends at lunch—all of these are moments of God’s grace and our Prep mission in action. It is through these building blocks, and the sharing of our God-given gifts, that our school will continue to thrive and our students become inspired to “go forth and set the world on fire!”
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 7
NEW SERVICE TRIP HAS JESUIT TIES
“B
e the hands and feet of Christ in
Each evening, Fr. Frederico and Mr. Dushel
our world.” Rev. Chuck Frederico,
led reflections, asking students how the
SJ, Senior Director of Mission and
morning Gospel passage had come alive
Ministry, often uses those words when
in their midst that day, and how they had
describing the mission of his department.
met Jesus in their interactions with the
So, when video hit of the devastation
people. These reflections helped connect
that impacted Puerto Rico after last fall’s
the daily service with the students’
hurricanes, Fr. Frederico, in collaboration
Catholic identity.
with the Jesuit High School and Parish in San Juan, developed a new service trip for two weeks in June, designed to enable Prep students to go help people in that community rebuild.
“This service project was one that captured the Jesuit values of prayer, service, and community,” noted Fr. Frederico. “Our young men truly went ‘on mission.’ It was
an opportunity to infuse them with a real
“Our group followed up on the work
experience of ‘encounter’ with the Lord,
being done on a house already begun by
and to aid them in bringing back, into our
students from Houston’s Strake Jesuit
own community, the lessons learned, the
High School,” says Fr. Frederico, who led
faith lived, and the love necessary to create
the trip with Mr. Mark Dushel, Associate
change. My hope is that each of the young
Campus Minister at the Prep. “Families
men who participated will came back
from Collegio San Ignacio hosted us,
and give more of themselves to the local
and for two weeks, it was a tremendous
community as a reciprocal experience.”
way for our young men to see the Jesuit network in action—by laboring together.”
8 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
“ St. Joseph’s Prep teaches us that we have an obligation when we wear the identity of ‘Catholic.’ This title does not simply extend to a one-hour service on a Sunday morning or a financial donation to the Archdiocese, but rather, it is a continuous challenge to live our lives according to Jesus’ message.” — ALEXANDER CABULONG ’19
2017-18 Hurtado Food Pantry Stats Donated to the Nutritional Development Services to support needy children: • 12 jump ropes • 43 board games • 108 boxes of crayons • 48 flying discs • 27 art jars • 14 hula hoops • 114 sets of markers • 75 paint sets • 24 playground balls Donated to the Bethesda Project to support homeless men and women: • 78 pairs of socks • 48 pairs of underwear • 90 razors • 37 backpacks • 69 deodorants
2017 Thanksgiving Food Drive Stats • 400 turkeys donated • 350 baskets distributed to neighborhood families to ensure that each family Above, left: Fr. Frederico and Mr. Dushel
can make a nutritious
with Prep students on the inaugural
meal for the holiday
Puerto Rico Service Trip
• $38,000+ collected for the
Above: Working during the Puerto Rico
cause from Prep families,
Service Trip
faculty, staff, and alumni
Left: Delivering food baskets to our North Philadelphia neighbors at Thanksgiving
“ My wife Jennifer and I are drawn to give to the Prep because of its academic excellence and the base that it provides students in preparing them for college and beyond. For me, the Prep drove me to be the best I could be in everything I did, and to create my own opportunities. I want to give a new generation that same benefit.”
— SEAN MURRAY ’90
Last year, in memory of Sean’s grandfather, Sean and Jennifer Murray initiated the James J. Murray ’25 Scholarship.
Enhancing Academic Excellence
A
cademic excellence remains our backbone at St. Joseph’s Prep. It is the means by which we form young minds, inspire dreams, and humbly influence the world into which our graduates enter. It is our reputation and our obligation, and we take this responsibility seriously, invoking the talent of top faculty in their fields to ensure the St. Joseph’s Prep legacy of academic excellence not only survives, but thrives. Keenly aware of and grounded in our Jesuit, liberal arts roots, we keep an ever vigilant eye toward innovation, both in curriculum and instruction, in order to most aptly serve the changing needs of students coming our way. We do this with excitement and candor, for to embark on meeting young men where they are means being open to change and improvement, not in abandonment of traditional methods, but in addition to them, incorporating new and creative, inventive ways. It is time to take stock of our classroom environments at the Prep—
to review our curriculum and how we go about teaching it, to evaluate our space and what it’s designed to do, and to discern a powerful way forward that benefits all our students and the world they will engage upon Commencement. Things like collaborative grade-level reviews, new instructional methods, and new service learning courses designed to combine academic learning with service and real-life community experiences—all these and more rest on the horizon, and the Prep stands poised to accept the challenge of integrating new ideas into its traditional model, to continue instilling knowledge, critical thinking skills, and a visceral love of learning in all our students.
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 11
NEW SERVICE LEARNING COURSE RAISES THE BAR
S
t. Joseph’s Prep strongly encourages
Philadelphia Mayor and Prep alumnus
its students to utilize their talents to
Jim Kenney ’76.
help others in the community. One
unique way to accomplish this is through service learning courses that combine high-level academic work with tailored service experiences and other immersive opportunities. This summer, the Prep offered its first Summer Service Learning Course: Seminar in Urban Studies. Sixteen Prep students, under the direction of History Teacher Bethany Weed, examined food insecurity, which is a fact of life for thousands of men, women, and children
“The primary objective was to merge academics and service,” says Ms. Weed. “I think it is easy for students to engage in service in order to complete their service hours without developing an intellectual understanding of various issues at play. Similarly, students can focus on doing well in their coursework without necessarily seeing real-life connections to their surroundings. This class was designed to combine both.”
in Philadelphia, many of whom live within
“This course corresponded with so many
just a few blocks of St. Joseph’s Prep.
of the Ignatian teachings that the Prep
The new course engaged students through an intensive combination of service or field-based study and academic instruction and research. On the final day, the students presented their findings at City Hall, earning praise from City Council members Bobby Henon P ’20, Helen Gym, and David Oh, who were in attendance along with the legislative aids of several other members, as well as top aides of 12 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
holds dear and has done a magnificent job of combining different aspects of academics, service, and spirituality into one all-encompassing educational experience,” says Riley Needham ’21, a class participant. “I feel that, as a student, it has taught me the importance not only of learning through research, but also of learning through experience.”
#CollegeStartsHere 2018 Grad Stats While the Prep proudly stands by its tagline “College Starts Here,” the school pairs academic preparation with the formation of social-emotional knowledge that makes our graduates adaptable to a variety of situations. Above, left: Members of City Council
Here are some examples:
with Fr. Swope, Ms. Weed, and the
• Dawson DeIuliis took his love
Service Learning students in Council Chambers
of mathematics, sociology, and engineering to Princeton
Above: Students volunteering at an
University’s Operations
urban farm in Philadelphia
Research and Financial
Right: Boxing food for needy families
Engineering (ORFE) PROGRAM • Brandon Burghardt, who enjoys experimenting with batteries of all voltages, embarked on a journey to the University of Pennsylvania’s Vagelos Integrated Program in Energy Research (VIPER) • Two students deferred college:
“ Looking back, the simple truth is that I fell in love in the classrooms at 17th & Girard. My teachers became mentors
Thoreau Witherspoon chose to immerse himself in China to deepen his understanding
and friends, equally interested in what I was doing that night
of the language, history, and
at rehearsal, or just how I was doing, as they were in my
travel to Africa where he will
everyday classroom performance. No surprise, then, that I’m headed to a Jesuit college with hopes of becoming a teacher
culture, and Ty Black chose to coach hockey in a place where the sport is not popular • Carson Butler, a Civil War
one day, but even if that falls to the wayside, I know the skills
reenactor in his spare time,
I gained at the Prep are a toolkit for success in whatever
a history degree and was
context I choose to use them.” — MATTHEW PHILLIPS ’18 ATTENDING GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, ACCEPTED TO UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, BOSTON COLLEGE, FORDHAM UNIVERSITY
went to Gettysburg to pursue awarded a $10,000 scholarship • Mark Farrell was selected to be a part of Penn State’s prestigious PGA Management Program
“ This summer, I studied abroad in Rabat, Morocco, through a scholarship from the State Department’s National Security Language Initiative for Youth (NSLI-Y). NSLI-Y not only offered me the chance to study Arabic abroad, but also gave me the opportunity to volunteer in Morocco and serve as a cultural ambassador. The Prep helped to pique my interest in the Middle East and prepare me for this challenging experience by giving me the chance to study and learn about diverse cultures both in the classroom and through extracurricular activities such as Model UN.”
— AIDAN MCGAHEY ’20
Strengthening an Environment of Involvement, Respect, and Connection
T
he Prep will become an institution focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion…” So reads the new St. Joseph’s Prep Strategic Plan—but have we not always been keenly aware of diversity in our community and adept at educating young men appreciative of the differences among us? Certainly. But amidst the ever changing world from which our students come to us, a renewed focus on cultural, socioeconomic, racial, and geographic diversity is not only demanded of us at the Prep, it is our responsibility as Jesuit educators to maintain that focus as the highest priority—and we are driven to do so.
The world-class education offered to boys at St. Joseph’s Prep extends far beyond the classroom into the realm of social responsibility and global citizenship, and our school will continually rise to that occasion and provide leadership, programming, and financial support aimed toward that goal. Already, exciting work is being done: needs assessments, crosssectional diversity committees, educational programming, and new support systems are underway—all in an effort to increase awareness and engage faculty, staff, students, and others in our community in conversation about diversity, inclusion, bias, and cultural awareness.
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 15
FRESH FOCUS ON DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION AT THE PREP
W
hen Ebony Porter arrived at
participating in a variety of academic
St. Joseph’s Prep last summer
and social sessions. The program also
as the new Director of
has a STEM focus as Prep Science Teacher
Diversity and Inclusion, she saw a major
Mrs. Kristen Ashcom offers weekly
opportunity: the school’s Black and Latino
science lessons.
Culture Club (BLCC). It was already well established with students engaged, but Porter partnered with co-moderator Dr. Chris Rupertus to take the club to new heights. Utilizing the new Community Hour, Porter and Rupertus began meeting with the group twice per week; they organized a trip to Washington, DC, to visit the Museum of African American History; and, most importantly, they started a mentorship program with the Gesu School whereby BLCC members offered support to the fifth grade boys next door.
At the end of the year, BLCC also hosted its annual Bakari Awards when students of color are honored for various accomplishments and academic achievements. This year, BLCC members served in various roles such as co-hosting the event and nominating a student from each class for the Rising Star Award. Many alumni of color were on hand for the event, along with the students’ families and Prep faculty, staff, and administrators to celebrate. That night, students also received their Kentai Cloths, which are worn with dignity and honor at
“The mentoring program at the Gesu is an
graduation and represent the graduates’
opportunity to offer young boys a glimpse
pride in their African heritage and in
of what it’s like to be a Prep student while
their accomplishment of graduating.
receiving support from an older student
More than 40 students wore the stole at
who has been where they are,” explains
Commencement.
Porter. The fifth graders attend weekly,
16 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
“ When I first entered the Prep I was a little bit nervous, coming from a grade school that was a majority Hispanic/Latino and now in the minority. In the first few days, in talking to kids at BLCC, it didn’t matter what our differences were, we found similarity sharing our experiences as students of color, how our daily lives at the Prep were going, and also issues inside the Prep and outside. That was extraordinary. It showed the characteristics of the Jesuits and the Prep.” — ANDRES ADAMES ’18, NOW A FRESHMAN AT FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY
Diversity and Inclusion Stats • 94 multicultural students had a GPA of 3.0 or higher during the 2017-18 school year • 21 students mentored in Gesu Mentoring Program • BLCC President Carl Whittington III participated in Chilean Exchange Program • Thurgood Marshall movie and panel event held • More Than A Word movie about Native Americans and the Washington Redskins football team viewed and discussed • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Service Project as well as events to celebrate Black History Month and Women’s History Month facilitated
Left: BLCC students receiving academic achievement certificates at the annual Bakari Awards
“ Having a coach who is at the Prep full-time was invaluable for me. Having someone here who I could talk to any time about my college decision was extremely helpful. His door was always open, and he was available at any time. When you are talking to college coaches, it can be hard to know what they mean. He knows all of the coaches and was able to help me understand what was happening. To have a mentor who went to the Prep and was a recruited athlete was helpful to me and, I am sure, to other seniors as well.” — CHARLES MCNAMARA ’18, ROWING AT THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
Thanks to the Rev. J. Vincent Taggart, SJ Fund, the crew coach position has been endowed.
Sustaining the Prep Mission through Enhanced Revenue Strategies
T
he Prep holds its legacy dear, and more so, remains adamant that its mission continues for generations of students to come. To that end, we strive to create a culture of philanthropy worthy of the Prep tradition and unwavering mission—one that not only helps provide financial support for students in need in the here and now, but also works to secure an endowment robust and reliable enough to safeguard the future of our school. This past year, we created meaningful engagement opportunities for alumni and parents to connect with leadership at the Prep and to share a vision of the future. We’ve also seen many in our community rise to the
call as “Citizens of Prep Nation” to become leadership donors to the Prep, serving as an inspiration and generosity model for others looking to join in the culture of giving arising at the Prep. Leadership councils, enhanced stewardship, and a campaign readiness survey with subsequent strategic campaign planning were all hallmarks of a year infused with hard work and hope, graced with generosity overflowing from so many who love the Prep. From recalibrated staff and strategies, to new, endowed coaching positions, to the sheer excitement of imagining the classroom of the future for the success of our students, philanthropy has never looked brighter at the Prep.
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 19
REIMAGINING THE PREP CLASSROOM
B
uilt in 1968 after a fire had destroyed
“Traditional, teacher-centered learning is
two-thirds of the school’s campus,
still necessary and valuable,” adds English
the “new” Prep building erected
Teacher Leslie McKinley. “However, we
stood as a statement of our values: to
need classrooms in which we can merge
remain in an urban environment, within
traditional learning spaces with modern
reach of diverse communities, especially
approaches. In a convertible classroom,
the disadvantaged among us to whom
our students can more efficiently learn
we can minister and with whom we can
from their teachers, and perhaps more
share our Ignatian spirituality. At the time,
importantly, from each other.”
the student experience received top priority in the new facility, with the chapel, library, and theatre comprising
So exactly what does the classroom of tomorrow look like at the Prep?
the centerpiece of what is currently
As the very nature of our teachers’
Villiger Hall.
workload requires flexibility, so, too,
This building has served us well for more than 50 years, but now, more growth confronts us.
does our classroom environment; the same room often hosts different subjects or class levels back to back, requiring various setups. “Low barrier flexibility,”
To honor the outstanding work being
“I want walking tech!,” and “I want to
performed in our classrooms every day by
easily move the room around,” were
faculty and students alike, we must create a
all comments received in recent focus
high-caliber learning environment reflective
groups held by administration with Prep
of that standard—one that not only enables
faculty surrounding what the ideal future
such excellence, but inspires it!
classroom looks like at the Prep.
“We need to forget about preconceived
Add to that a myriad of technology—
notions of what a classroom is and look
both basic and “dream” requests—and a
forward to what it can be and what our
picture of the new learning environment
students’ needs will be 20 years in the
at the Prep begins to emerge. In fact,
future,” contends Science Teacher Joe
plans are already underway to make this
Hendrzak, one of the many energetic,
vision a reality through a future
creative teachers at the Prep. “I need a
fundraising campaign—all designed to
flexible, dynamic classroom that can keep
continue educating learners and leaders
up with my teaching style and the needs
at 17th & Girard.
of 21st Century learners, whatever we can imagine those to be.”
20 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
“ For a school like St. Joseph’s Prep, with its goals and dreams of incredible proportions, securing a strong endowment is imperative to ensuring our future. The mission of the Prep is too important to our community, to our city, and in the lives of each of our students, to have it jeopardized in any way. A robust endowment provides security and the confidence for us to move forward boldly with our vision for ‘Future Prep.’” — M. SHAWN BORT P ’10 ST. JOSEPH’S PREP BOARD OF TRUSTEES CHAIR 2018-19
FINANCIALS
TUITION (GROSS AND NET) AND COST PER STUDENT GAP between crimson line and light grey line is the challenge for the Prep and the reason that philanthropic support from alumni, parents, and friends is so important
28,000
23,500
19,000
14,500
10,000 FY 2013
FY 2014
FY 2015
FY 2016
FY 2017
FY 2018
COST: Total cost incurred by the institution GROSS TUITION: Sticker price per student NET TUITION: Gross tuition less all discounts, scholarships, and financial aid
ENDOWMENT ASSETS AND DRAW Increasing the endowment is a priority for the Prep to continue its mission ENDOWMENT ASSETS
ANNUAL DRAW 20,682,2000
21,000,000
900,000
18,458,700
15,750,000
15,153,200
15,607,200
15,928,100
675,000
10,500,000
450,000
5,250,000
225,000
0
0 FY 2014 INVESTMENT ASSETS DRAW ON ENDOWMENT
22 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
FY 2015
FY 2016
FY 2017
FY 2018
3-YEAR TOTAL FUNDRAISING RESULTS
3-YEAR PREP FUND GROWTH
Includes Prep Fund, endowment, and capital donations
Includes all annual operating donations
6,000,000
2,400,000
4,500,000
1,800,000
3,000,000
1,200,000
1,500,000
600,000
0
0 FY 2016
FY 2017
FY 2018
FY 2016
FY 2018
FY 2017
OPERATING REVENUE
OPERATING EXPENSES
Based on an annual budget of $21 million
Based on an annual budget of $21 million
1% 3%
3% 3% 4%
5% 6%
9%
7% 8% 82%
69%
NET TUITION REVENUE
PEOPLE COST
DEVELOPMENT REVENUE
BUILDING AND GROUNDS
ENDOWMENT DRAW
ATHLETICS
SUMMER PROGRAMS
ADMINISTRATION
INTEREST, DIVIDENDS,
I NSTRUCTIONAL
AND COMMISSIONS
ACTIVITIES D EVELOPMENT
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 23
PRESIDENT’S LEADERSHIP CLUB GIFTS
S
t. Joseph’s Prep is grateful to the alumni, parents, and friends who contribute each year to support the Jesuit educational mission of our school. Below is a list of those who have supported the Prep at a leadership level ($2,500 and up) with gifts made
between July 1, 2017 and June 30, 2018. Thank you for all that you do for the students, faculty, and staff of the Prep!
Ignatian Circle
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Mitkus ’97 P
$250,000 and up
Mrs. Mary Murphy Ms. Denise Foderaro and
Estate of Olga L. McBride and
Mr. Frank P. Quattrone ’73
Thomas J. McBride ’41
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Robinson ’50
Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey T. McKernan ’78
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Shea ’89
Estate of Pauline and Joseph Selberlich ’43
Dr. and Mrs. Michael K. Taylor ’91
St. Joseph’s Circle
UNICO National - Greater Philadelphia Chapter
$100,000 to $249,999
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zacney
Estate of Louis J. Cissone ’52
Jesuit Circle
Mr. William Davison IV
$25,000 to $49,999
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Ewell Mr. and Mrs. James E. Ksansnak ’58
Mrs. Patricia and Mr. James H. = Agger ’54
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Maguire
Kyle Ambrogi Foundation
Ms. Megan Maguire-Nicoletti
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Arizin
The Maguire Foundation
Mr. Jeffrey Barker ’75 P
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. McCullen, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah J. Buckley, Jr. ’78
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Murphy ’91
Calconix, Inc.
The Family of John A. and Mary E. Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Dunn ’65
Mr. and Mrs. James Rowen
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Hagan V
Estate of Quentin C. Sturm Sr. and
Ms. D. Daniele Hager
Kathleen W. Sturm
Mr. George V. Hager, Jr.
Pedro Arrupe Circle $50,000 to $99,999 AJO LP Mr. and Mrs. John T. Facenda, Jr. ’57 Mr. and Mrs. Columbus R. Gangemi, Jr. ’65 Mr. Vincent P. = and Mrs. Mary Harris ’45 Mr. and Mrs. W. Nicholas Howley ’70 Howley Family Foundation Mr. Richard J. Maccarone ’57 Mr. and Mrs. William T. McKernan ’87
Hager Family Foundation Healthcare Services Group, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Henkels Mrs. Stefani C. Hoffner Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Kelley ’59 Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Kelly, Jr. ’66 Paul E. Kelly Foundation Mr. Walter P. Kulp ’87 P Mr. David W. Lacey Ms. Amanda Baker and John R. Leekley, Esq. ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Lewis ’81
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 25
Mrs. Karen = and
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Comly, Jr. ’99
Dr. Charles W. Lockyer, Jr. ’62 P
The Conestoga Road Foundation
Maguire Enterprises, L.P.
Mr. and Mrs. Terence J. Connors ’72
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. McElhenney III ’95
Mr. Lorenzo Cuoci
Mr. James P. McHugh ’89 P
Mr. John J. Curtin ’62
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. McKeon, Sr. ’47
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan P. Dever ’89 N
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Menold P
DNB First
The Ernest D. Menold Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Dougherty ’78
Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Moran ’74
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Dugan ’78
Mr. Matthew R. Morano ’97
Mr. and Mrs. John Figge V
Mr. and Mrs. Keith T. Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Fitzmyer ’43
Mr. Thomas J. Murphy ’95
Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Gayda, Esq. ’72
Mr. Daniel J. Murray ’73
The Gayda Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Sean S. Murray ’90
Ms. Geraldine J. Geckle
Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark O’Donoghue
Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Green ’59
Mr. and Mrs. Stefan R. Politz ’91
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Grugan, Esq. ’88 V
Mrs. Charlotte Rodgers
Hagan Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Schwenger
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Haines
Mr. and Mrs. John F.X. Sigmund ’54
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Halfpenny, Jr. ’62
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Sosnowski ’58
Halfpenny Management Company
Mr. and Mrs. William K. Stewart, Jr. ’66
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Haughey ’62
Mr. John W. Swope
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Hayden ’95
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Thompson ’59
Mr. and Mrs. J. Anthony = Hayden ’62
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Wachter III ’00
Hayden Real Estate Investments, LLC
Mr. and Mrs. David P. Wilson, Jr. ’84 P
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hieb Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hill, Jr. ’66
Loyola Circle
I.B.E.W. Local Union 98
$10,000 to $24,999
Mr. Raymond Infante Mr. and Mrs. David Ix V
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Jaskot, Esq. ’86
Mr. Gregory C. Ambrogi ’04
Mr. and Mrs. Brendan P. Johnson ’88
Ms. Donna Ambrogi
Johnson & Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Battaglini ’76
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Kane ’80 P
Dr. Henry V. Bender ’63
Mr. and Mrs. Sean B. Lamb ’92
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Bennett ’81 P
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Lange ’72
Mr. James M. Bennett ’82
Mr. Douglas Lantier
Mr. Edward Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Louka ’93
Robert J. Borghese, Esq. ’81
Mr. Robert P. Madden ’64
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bort
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Mancano, Esq. ’72
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Brennan ’87 V
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P. McGill ’87
Mr. and Mrs. J. Brian Carden
Mr. and Mrs. William A. McKenna
Mr.and Mrs. Michael L. Cellucci ’94
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick S. Moeller V
Mr. and Mrs. David D. Clark V
Morgan Stanley Global Impact
Mrs. Mary C. Clayton
Funding Trust
26 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Morris ’83
Crimson & Grey Circle
Mr. Paul G. Morrissey
$5,000 to $9,999
Neutronics, Inc. NSM Insurance Group
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Oakes III ’60
Archdiocese of Philadelphia
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. O’Brien
Mrs. Joanne E. Boylan P
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. O’Brien ’89
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Branka, Sr. ’55
Ms. Cynthia Weldon and
Christopher J. Brill, Esq. ’69
James L. O'Hara, Esq. ’84
Mr. Earl F. Caffrey, Jr. ’47
Mr. and Ms. John W. O’Leary ’53
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley B. Candy ’92 P
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Olley ’81
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Carroll ’49
Mrs. Judith and Mr. John T. = Paul ’66
Mr. and Mrs. Randy C. Chen P
Thomas J. Paul Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian D. Chinappi ’90
Mr. and Mrs. James K. Paul ’72
Citizens Bank
Mr. and Mrs. Alvaro Pereira-Lopez
CKC Foundation
The Pine Hill Group
Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore J. Cocivera ’86 V
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Plourde
Commonwealth Agency, Inc.
Mr. Kerry J. Quinn ’06 N
Conner Strong & Buckelew
Mr. Martin F. Quinn, Jr. ’02
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Coogan Jr. V
Dr. and Mrs. Mark C. Reed ’92
Mrs. Kathleen M. Cote
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent F. Reilly ’76
The Craig Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Robak ’86
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence R. Cusack ’81
Saint Joseph’s University
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. D’Anjolell, Jr. ’80
Mr. Christopher P. Smith ’89
D’Anjolell Memorial Homes
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smith ’57
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin P. Dougher ’99
Mr. and Mrs. William Smith
Ecco/Gregory Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sponseller V
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Einspanier
Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Fallon III ’02 N
Suburban Wholesale Lighting, Inc.
T. Forrest Fisher, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J.P. Sweeney ’56
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel K. Fitzpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Sweeney III ’87
Mr. Marc A. Franzoni ’92
TechTelligent LLP
Ms. Charlotte Keating and
The Bryn Mawr Trust Company
Mr. Mark R. Gannon ’09
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Tomasco III ’88 V
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Geraghty
Ms. JoAnn Trainer
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory M.
Christopher M. Tretta, Esq. ’71
Giangiordano, Esq. ’84
UHS of Pennsylvania, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Gleason ’83 V
Mr. John P. Votta ’08
The Graham Company
Mr. Richard T. White, Jr. ’91
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Gregory ’73 Mrs. Eileen Guest Haverford Trust Company Mr. Patrick M. Heenan ’97 P Mr. Adam J. Hepp ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Adam J. Hepp
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 27
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hill ’53
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Rosser V
Hirtle, Callaghan & Company
Dr. and Mrs. Sean V. Ryan ’87
Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Hofmann, Jr. ’63
S2B Partners
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Horstmann ’64
Sage Dining
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Jaskiewicz ’78 P
Mr. and Mrs. Guillermo Salas III ’93
Mr. J. Michael Jensen ’66
Dr. and Mrs. Kimon H. Sargeant
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Johnson ’53
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schanne
Mr. and Mrs. Brian P. Kenney ’72
Mr. John Bruce Schmitt ’59
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Killeen
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Schreder V
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard E. Kueny III ’79
Mr. Jeffrey P. Smith ’92
Lima Company
Standard Digital Imaging, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike F. Maloney ’04 Y
Mr. and Mrs. George J. Sucher IV ’87
Samuel P. Mandell Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Swope ’75
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Marsden, Jr. ’87
John Templeton Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Massanova ’96
Donation Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. McCloskey IV ’59
Mr. W. Michael Tiagwad
McCloskey Financial Group LLC
Mrs. Laurie Tribuiani
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. McCollum ’79
Lou Tribuiani Memorial Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. McElwee III ’73
Dr. Regina Turner and
McGillin Architecture Inc.
Mr. Mark A. Turner ’81
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. McNamara
Mr. and Mrs. George Van Kula
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Mergiotti ’71
Dr. and Mrs. Edward Villanueva ’83
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Milani ’52
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew C. von Eschenbach ’59
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Monaghan
Mr. Christian Waechter
Patrick F. Monaghan Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Winkowski ’87
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Morinigo ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Morris
AMDG
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Nederostek
$2,500 to $4,999
Mr. Brendan J. O’Neill ’80 Mr. John R. O’Rourke ’03
Anonymous
John and Lauren O’Rourke
28 Club Inc.
Charitable Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher F. Arizin
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Osinski, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Barker
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent A. Panetta III ’59
Mr. Peter A. Battisto ’67
Philadelphia Insurance Companies
Berwind Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Phillips ’76 V
Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Bevilacqua ’79
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Raucci, Jr. ’54
Mr. Kevin L. Boylan ’98
Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Rauch ’65
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Bryce Jr. V
Razor Technology, LLC
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Byrne III ’60
Reilly, Janiczek, McDevitt, Henrich
Mr. Thomas R. Byrnes
& Cholden P.C.
Capital Group Companies
Republic Bank
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas M. Centrella ’84
Ms. Sheri Lambert and
Mr. Gregory M. Chatzinoff ’11 Y
Mr. Sean A. Rooney ’80
Dr. and Mrs. Albert S. Chinappi, Jr. ’59
28 | PRESIDENT’S REPORT
Mr. Peter G. Clearkin ’80
Mr. and Mrs. James C. King ’81 V
Columbia Thread Needle Investments
Mr. and Mrs. John Kuzy V
Conicelli Auto Group
Mr. and Mrs. Preston J. Leisenring
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Conwell, Jr. ’61
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Linquata V
Gordon E. Conwell Associates, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Franz Loeber ’86
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Coppinger III ’87
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Lyons II ’60
Mrs. Alma T. Coppinger
Donald Manchel, Esq.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Courtney P
Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. Mankowski ’52
Mr. Colin J. Curtin ’05
Marchiano’s Bakery, LLC
Datum Restoration, Inc.
Ms. Beth Solomon and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Davis ’63
Mr. John J. Matthews ’80
John P. DeCarlo, M.D. ’70
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Matthews ’88
Mr. and Mrs. Armand J. Della Porta, Jr., Esq. ’73
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. McCabe ’81 P
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent DiGiesi, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John H. McCarthy ’63
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Doyle IV ’04 N
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. McCloskey ’88
Mr. James W. Duffy, Jr. ’44
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. McCreesh III ’92
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Falcone
Mr. and Mrs. James B. McGovern III ’89 V
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan P. Flynn ’97 P
Mr. Mark McGovern ’82
Dr. and Mrs. Alfred L. Garfall III ’98
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. McHugh, Jr. ’75 V
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Gayhardt, Jr.
Hon. and Mrs. Gerald A. McHugh, Jr. ’72
Mr. D. Tom Genuardi
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. McKeever ’81
Dominic and Janet Genuardi
Mr. Patrick S. McKelvey ’03
Family Foundation
Ms. Peggy Gorman and
Gesu School
Mr. Edwin M. McKeon ’79
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Giblin
Mr. Thomas W. McKernan ’51
Brendan J. Giblin Scholarship Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. McParland ’52
Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Gilbert ’99
The MCS Group, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Keenan St. L. Goggin ’93
Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. McTear, Jr. ’66
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Goldner ’84
Merck Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. J. Craig Hadden ’75
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Miller V
Mr. and Mrs. Bernie S. Halfpenny V
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Morris
Ms. Bobbi S. Asper and
Mr. Robert E. Morris ’68
Mr. Robert T. Healey ’01 P
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Mullen V
Mr. Daniel S. Heenan ’89 B
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Murphy ’66
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Heuisler ’59
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Nardi III
Mr. and Mrs. Neil S. Hughes V
Mr. John T. Nugent ’76
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Iannacone ’70
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Oberlies
IRUS Advisory
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. O’Donnell ’60
Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Johnson Sr. V
Mr. Matthew C. O’Donoghue ’10 Y
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Kane III ’73
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Owens
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Kay ’63
Mr. Augustus Pasquarella, Esq.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Kelley ’69
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Pedicino ’99
Kelly’s Sports, Ltd.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Pooler Jr. V
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Kettinger
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Porreca, Jr. ’56
PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 29
ReedSmith, LLP
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Fox ’06 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Martin W. Rodgers ’84
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Funk III ’04 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Rowello ’91 V
Mr. Daniel P. Gordon ’04 Y
Sancoa Foundation
Mr. Ryan P. Kirlin ’05 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Sauter
Mr. Michael J. Leithead ’09 N
Mr. and Mrs. Craig J. Scheuerle V
Mr. Louis J. Lombardi ’11 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Schoener ’85
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Maloney ’04 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Schrieber
Mr. Joseph L. McElwee ’04 N
Dr. Thomas Sergi and Dr. Lynne Sergi V
Mr. Ryan M. McGinn ’08 N
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Sharp, Jr. ’77
Mr. Patrick S. McKelvey ’03
Mr. Lionel Simmons
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Murphy ’06 Y
SJP - Men for Others
Mr. Matthew C. O’Donoghue ’10 Y
Richard G. Smith, M.D. ’66
Mr. Stephen J. O’Hara ’10 Y
Mr. John Jess Sodaski ’94 N
Mr. John R. O’Rourke ’03 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Francesco A. Spezzano ’67
Mr. Ryan P. Pierce ’08 Y
St. John the Baptist Church/Friends
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Protesto IV ’04 Y
of St. John the Baptist
Ms. Meaghan McGrath and
Mr. John J. Stock ’53
Mr. Michael J. Robinson ’04 Y
Mr. Joseph J. Sweeney
Mr. Daniel P. Rowley ’08 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy E. Sweeney ’78
John H. Shindle Jr., Esq. ’04 Y
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Taran ’67
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Stefanski ’03 Y
Tompkins Trust Company Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Trainor ’85 P Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Vacha V Mr. and Mrs. Donald I. Wall ’80 V Mr. and Mrs. David R. West Mr. and Mrs. William D. Winters ’85 Mr. and Mrs. G. Paul Wood ’98 N Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Young ’84 Maj. and Mrs. Paul F. Zerkow ’67 Mr. and Mrs. William M. Zsembik Jr. ’85 V
P President’s Advisory Council V Villiger Executive Parent Council Y Young Alumni Leadership Council N New York Alumni Leadership Council
= Deceased PLEASE NOTE: This President’s Report is a publication for alumni, parents, and friends of St. Joseph’s Prep. Great care has been taken
17th & Girard Young Alumni Circle
to ensure the accuracy of this report. If an
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omission or error has occurred, please contact Mr. Joe Boyle ’09, Manager of the Prep Fund,
Mr. Christopher F. Cannataro ’11 Y Mr. Gregory M. Chatzinoff ’11 Y Mr. Brendan Courtney ’10 N Mr. Kevin J. Courtney ’08 Y Mr. Robert J. Della Polla ’09 Y Mr. and Mrs. John A. Doyle IV ’04 N
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2018-19 Board of Trustees
2018-19 Board of Fellows
Ms. M. Shawn Bort P ’10, Chair
Rev. George W. Bur, SJ ’59
Dr. Mark C. Reed ’92, Vice Chair
Rev. William J. Byron, SJ ’45
Mr. Jeremiah J. Buckley ’78 Mr. Terence J. Connors ’72 Michael D. Gayda, Esq. ’72 Mr. Bernie Halfpenny ’62 Mr. Anthony J. Hayden ’95 Mrs. Joan Hilferty P ’14, ’16 Paul J. Jaskot, Esq. ’86 Mr. Brendan P. Johnson ’88 Rev. Daniel K. Lahart, SJ Joseph D. Mancano, Esq. ’72 Rev. Richard S. McCouch, SJ Mr. William T. McKernan ’87 Rev. Thomas A. Pesci, SJ ’67 Mr. Derek Redcross ’81 Mrs. Audrey Schwenger P ’16 Mr. John J. Swanick P ’07, ’12 Rev. John W. Swope, SJ ’72 Christopher M. Tretta, Esq. ’71 Rev. Kevin Wm. Wildes, SJ
Mr. Leo J. Carlin, Jr. ’81 Mr. Armand J. Della Porta, Jr., Esq. ’73 Mr. Paul D. Geraghty Mr. Anthony Hayden ’62 = Mrs. Kathleen Heist Mr. T. Roderick Henkels ’82 Mr. Anthony J. Iannacone ’70 Mr. John A. Johnson ’53 Mr. James W. Kane III ’73 Mr. Paul E. Kelly, Jr. ’66 Mr. Matthew H. McCloskey IV ’59 Mr. Joseph F. McElwee III ’73 Mr. Thomas J. McParland ’52 Mr. Wadell Ridley, Jr. ’77 Mrs. Charlene Roberts Mr. Sean A. Rooney ’80 Mr. Joseph A. Ruggieri ’69 Mrs. Ann Sweeney Mrs. Milissa M. Tadeo Joseph C. Vignola, Esq. ’67
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