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1
STEP-UPNEW YORKGALA
CSS CITYAND
THE
CELE
BR
AT IN
G 1
7 0 YE
AR
S
David Boies, ESQ.ChairmanBoies, Schiller & Flexner LLP
Maurice R. GreenbergChairmanThe Starr FoundationChairman and CEOStarr Companies
Richie Perez Spirit of ServiceAward Recipient
Danny GloverActor, Film Director, Producer, and Social Activist
H O N O R I N G
IntroductIon and Welcome
davId dIaz
PresIdent’s remarks
davId r. Jones
PresentatIon of the rIchIe Perez
sPIrIt of servIce aWard to
danny Glover
Honorable David N. Dinkins
dInner
PresentatIon of the Blanchette rockefeller
leader In PhIlanthroPy aWard to
maurIce r. GreenBerG
James Wolfensohn
PresentatIon of the JosePhIne shaW loWell
leader In socIal JustIce aWard to
davId BoIes
Vice President Joseph R. Biden
(Pre-recorded video)
dessert and lIve Band
www.bsfllp.com
Proudly Supports the
Community ServiCe SoCiety
and all it does to eradicate poverty.
Congratulations 2013 honorees,
our Chairman, DaviD BoieS and our
client and friend, mauriCe GreenBerG.
CSS ANDTHECITY
STEP-UP NEW YORK GALA
CELEBRATING 170 YEARS
32
For 170 years, the Community Service Society (CSS) has been New York City’s leading anti-poverty
organization. By crafting innovative policies and solutions to problems faced by low-income com-
munities, CSS has made New York a better place to live for all New Yorkers.
Our tradition of enabling, empowering, and promoting opportunities for poor families and individuals
to develop their full potential to contribute to society dates back to the 1840s.
We coordinate the state’s health care ombuds program, Community Heath Advocates (CHA), guiding
New Yorkers through the health insurance maze of enrolling and using coverage. Our Retired &
Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP)—the largest in the country—mobilized over 4,000 trained
volunteers last year— older adults—who provided over 1 million hours of service throughout
the city. Our voter registration drives empower people to participate in the civic life of the city
by voting. We bring legal challenges to protect the rights of the poor. Our Benefits Plus Learning
Center provides training and technical assistance to both professionals and the public.
We have a legacy of achievements. In 1862, we launched the drive for pure milk laws as well
as organizing the Society for the Ruptured and Crippled, now the Hospital for Special Surgery.
We organized the New York School of Social Work in 1898—now the Columbia University School
of Social Work. We set up the prototype for the national free school-lunch program in 1913 and laid
the groundwork for the state’s Old Age Assistance Act in 1930—the forerunner of Social Security.
We conduct rigorous research on critical issues affecting low-income New Yorkers and use our
research to drive advocacy and policy change. In the last decade, our credibility in putting “numbers
on the problem” has put issues on the map ranging from the crisis in black male joblessness to
disconnected youth. Our research tracking rent burdens and the loss of affordable housing are
widely relied on by the housing field. And, more recently, we drew first page press coverage for
our work uncovering the declining opportunities for black and Latino public high school graduates
at the top-tier senior colleges in our city’s public university system.
We provided $5 million of financial assistance to help New Yorkers who lost jobs and family members
as result of the World Trade Center disaster.
In 2002, we initiated The Unheard Third, an annual survey of New Yorkers, the only regular polling
of low-income opinion in the United States.
CSS launched the New York Reentry Roundtable in 2005, a monthly forum for reentry advocates,
representing more than 50 stakeholder organizations, focusing on legislative reform to address
obstacles faced by formerly incarcerated individuals. As an outgrowth of the Roundtable, CSS estab-
lished the annual Advocacy Day, which enables stakeholders to meet in Albany with key legislators
and staff. Advocacy Day participants educate legislators about the Roundtable’s legislative agenda,
which includes bills focused on eradicating barriers to reentry and on easing some of the challenges
faced by people who are currently incarcerated.
A MESSAGE FROM THE LEADERSHIP
david r. Jones, esq. PReSIDeNT AND CeO
Joseph r. harbert, Ph.d. BOARD CHAIRPeRSON
54
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Joseph R. HarbertCHAIRPeRSON
Deborah M. SaleVICe CHAIRPeRSON
Ralph da Costa Nunez, Ph.D.TReASUReR
Donald W. Savelson, esq.SeCReTARY
Steven A. Brown
Judy Chambers
Melissa C. Curtin, esq.
Sydney W. de Jongh
Sylvia e. Di Pietro, esq.
Florence H. Frucher
Betsy Gotbaum
Nicholas A. Gravante Jr., esq.
Joseph J. Haslip
Michael Horodniceanu, Ph.D.
Magda Jimenez Train, esq.
Matthew Klein
Micah C. Lasher
Kelly O’Neill Levy, esq.
Mark e. Lieberman
Leisle Lin
Riché T. McKnight, esq.
Joyce L. Miller
Carol L. O’Neale
David Pollak
Margarita Rosa, esq.
Marlene Sanders
Carol R. Sherman, esq.
Marla eisland Sprie
Ken Sunshine
Barbara Nevins Taylor
Jeffery J. Weaver
Michelle Webb
Abby M. Wenzel, esq.
Mark A. Willis
honorary life trusteesStephen R. Aiello, Ph.D.
Honorable David N. Dinkins
Marian S. Heiskell
Douglas Williams
leadershipDavid R. Jones PReSIDeNT AND CeO
Steven L. Krause exeCUTIVe VICe PReSIDeNT
AND COO
BENEFIT COMMITTEE
dinner chairs Judy Chambers
Nicholas A. Gravante, Jr., esq.
Joseph R. Harbert
vice chairsStephen R. Aiello, Ph.D.
Christopher Boies
Florence Davis
Willis DeLaCour, Jr.
Honorable David N. Dinkins
Donald L. Flexner, esq.
Florence H. Frucher
Betsy Gotbaum
Joseph J. Haslip
Bruce A. Hubbard, esq.
William Lynch, Jr.
Deborah M. Sale
Jonathan D. Schiller, esq.
Ken Sunshine
Jeffrey J. Weaver
170th anniversary committeeJuan Cartagena
ernest J. Collazo
Mark edmiston
Mark e. Lieberman
Honorable Charles B. Rangel
Magda Jimenez Train, esq.
elinor R. Tatum
And just last month, CSS was instrumental in the successful agreement on paid sick leave legisla-
tion by the City Council, providing this crucial benefit for the first time for over 1 million New Yorkers,
many of them low-wage workers.
CSS utilizes a combination of research, advocacy, court challenges, direct support, and community
involvement to effect fundamental changes that improve the lives of low-income families, school
children, health care patients, immigrants, and poor people throughout our history.
As we look to the future, we still see 1 in 5 New Yorkers living in poverty, a public school system
that shortchanges children of color, a battle—hopefully being won—for access to affordable health
care, and the continuing loss of affordable housing in the city.
There is much to be done. And, as we have for 170 years, we at the Community Service Society
intend to make our presence felt in the ongoing struggle for a fairer and better New York City.
david r. Jones, esq. President and CeO
Joseph r. harbert, Ph.d. Board Chairperson
76
Judy chamBers was elected to the CSS
Board of Trustees in June 2008. Ms. Chambers is
a Managing Director and member of the board
at Pension Consulting Alliance, an independent,
full-service investment firm where she focuses
on the private equity and infrastructure asset
classes. Ms. Chambers holds a Bachelor of Arts
from Duke University and a Masters of Busi-
ness Administration from the Kellogg School
of Management at Northwestern University.
She is on the Advisory Committee of the Jazz
Foundation of America and is a member of The
Links, Incorporated.
nIcholas Gravante, Jr. was elected to the
CSS Board of Trustees in June 2003. He is a
partner at Boies Schiller & Flexner LLP, where
he serves as the Administrative Partner of the
firm’s New York City office and as the firm’s
General Counsel. Mr. Gravante has consis-
tently been honored as one of the country’s
top litigators, including by Lawdragon’s 500
Leading Lawyers in America and New York’s
Best Lawyers. In addition to his work for CSS
over the last 10 years, Mr. Gravante serves as
Vice-Chair of the Brooklyn Public Library and
as a member of the boards of trustees for the
Poly Prep Country Day School and eSS Shelter-
ing Arms.
JosePh r. harBert, Ph.d. was elected to
the CSS Board of Trustees in June 1999. He
brings to the Board knowledge of manage-
ment systems and educational policy issues.
He is currently President of the eastern Region
for Colliers International, the third largest
commercial real estate firm in the world. Mr.
Harbert spearheads management initiatives
and integration for all of the firm’s services
lines, overseeing all operations across the
eastern Region.
PROGRAM HOST DINNER CHAIRS
davId dIaz is currently a Distinguished
Lecturer in Media and Politics at the City
College of New York.
He is a former correspondent and anchor at
both News Four NY and CBS 2 News and has
been honored for his television news work
with 5 emmys and multiple other awards from
various press organizations. He has covered
the administrations of four mayors and such
major stories as the presidential recount of
2000, the attack on the World Trade Center,
the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma
City, the murder trial of O.J. Simpson and the
trials of the first trade center terrorists.
He is a graduate of the Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism and emigrated
to New York from Puerto Rico as a child with
his parents.
98
JOSEPHINE SHAw LOwELL LEADER IN SOCIAL JUSTICE AwARD
Honors individuals who have demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to promoting and protecting
the civil and human rights of marginalized communities through their work and philosophies
In 1882, American social activist and Progressive reform leader Josephine Shaw Lowell founded
the Charity Organization Society (COS), one of two prominent social welfare agencies that combined
forces in 1939 and adopted the new name: The Community Service Society of New York. Born
into a wealthy family, Josephine Shaw Lowell volunteered with and founded numerous charities,
dedicating her life to improving the lives of the poor. Both her brother Colonel Robert Gould Shaw,
who commanded the all-black 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, and husband Charles Russell
Lowell, a general in the Union Army, were fatally wounded during the American Civil War. A pioneer
in the field of social work, Josephine extended her efforts beyond direct service, producing compel-
ling investigative reports, speeches, and correspondence that effectively lobbied for reform affecting
the unemployed, almshouses, prison conditions, and labor practices. A tireless and passionate
advocate for social justice, Josephine Shaw Lowell never stopped working to prevent and eliminate
the consequences of poverty—building a better future for generations of New Yorkers.
david Boies
Since 1997 Mr. Boies has been the Chairman of
Boies, Schiller and Flexner LLP, a law firm with
offices in New York, Washington D.C., California,
Florida, Nevada, and New Hampshire. Prior to 1997
Mr. Boies was a partner at Cravath Swaine & Moore.
Mr. Boies has been selected as one of the 100
Most Influential People in the World by Time
Magazine (2010). He is the recipient of Honorary
Doctor of Laws from the University of Redlands
(2000) and New York Law School (2007) and
an Honorary Doctor of Letters from the Chicago
Theological Seminary (2011). His awards include
the Award of Merit from the Yale Law School, the
ABA Medal from the American Bar Association,
the Vanderbilt Medal from New York Univer-
sity Law School, the Pinnacle Award from the
International Dyslexia Association, the William
Brennan Award from the University of Virginia, the
Role Model Award from equality Forum, the Lead
by example Award from the National Association
of Women Lawyers, the Torch of Learning Award
from the American Friends of Hebrew Univer-
sity, the eisendrath Bearer of Light Award from
the Union for Reform Judaism, and a Lifetime
Achievement Award from the Mississippi Center
for Justice.
Mr. Boies has been named the Litigator of the
Year by the American Lawyer; the Lawyer of the
Year by the National Law Journal; runner-up Per-
son of the Year by Time Magazine; the Antitrust
Lawyer of the Year by the New York Bar Associa-
tion; Best Lawyers in America from 1987–2012,
LawDragon 500; the Global Commercial Litigator
of the Year by Who’s Who International an
unprecedented six times; and a Star Individual by
Chambers USA.
Mr. Boies served as Chief Counsel and Staff
Director of the United States Senate Antitrust
Subcommittee in 1978 and Chief Counsel and
Staff Director of the United States Senate Judi-
ciary Committee in 1979.
In 1986, representing the Democratic National
Committee, he won a permanent injunction pro-
hibiting the Republican National Committee from
targeting minority districts with efforts to chal-
lenge voter qualifications. In 1991–1993,
Mr. Boies was counsel to the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, recovering $1.2 bil-
lion from companies who sold junk bonds to
failed savings and loan associations.
In 1998–2000, he served as Special Trial
Counsel for the United States Department of
Justice in its antitrust suit against Microsoft.
Mr. Boies also served as the lead counsel for
former Vice President Al Gore in connection
with litigation relating to the 2000 election
Florida vote count. As co-lead counsel for
the plaintiffs in Perry v. Brown, he won
judgments establishing the constitutional
right to marry for gay and lesbian citizens in
California in the federal district (2010) and
appellate (2011 and 2012) courts.
Representative clients include Altria, Ameri-
can express, Barclays, Barnes & Noble,
DuPont, NASCAR, New York Yankees, Oracle,
Oxbow Carbon, Sony, Starr International,
and The Weinstein Company.
Mr. Boies was born in Sycamore, Illinois, on
March 11, 1941. He attended the University
of Redlands (1960–62), and received a B.S.
from Northwestern University (1964), an
LL.B., magna cum laude from Yale Univer-
sity (1966), and an LL.M. from New York
University (1967).
Mr. Boies is a member of Phi Beta Kappa,
a Fellow of the American College of Trial
Lawyers and the International Academy of
Trial Lawyers; and a Trustee of the National
Constitution Center, Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory, New York University Law School
Foundation, and St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospi-
tal Center. Mr. Boies is the author of numer-
ous publications including Courting Justice,
published by Miramax in 2004 and Public
Control of Business (with Paul Verkuil),
published by Little Brown in 1977. He has
taught courses at New York University Law
School and Cardozo Law School.
1110
BLANCHETTE ROCkEFELLER LEADER IN PHILANTHROPy AwARD
Honors individuals who have demonstrated exemplary leadership through charitable giving that
leads to lasting, impactful change
At age 24, Blanchette Ferry Hooker Rockefeller began her involvement in New York City’s charitable
and civic activities, joining the Central Council of the Community Service Society. Blanchette’s phil-
anthropic interests emerged while she was a student at Vassar College where she wrote a paper in
which she argued, “Going further into the nature of liberty, there are certain essential features that
are found inherently necessary to it. First, man must be economically secure… second, he must
be trained to make use of his freedom to the extent that he may enjoy what he has…” Although
she came from one of the wealthiest families in the country, she believed that freedom required
financial security in a way that most of her contemporaries did not. Appropriately enough, in 1933
she became the first female director of the Community Service Society. A lifelong philanthropist,
Blanchette Rockefeller was one of New York City’s most prominent and generous donors, helping to
attract financial support and volunteers for causes ranging from community service to education to
the arts—establishing a legacy of giving that continues to benefit all New Yorkers.
maurice r. Greenberg
Mr. Maurice R. Greenberg is Chairman and CeO
of C. V. Starr and Co., Inc. He joined C.V. Starr
& Co., Inc., , a worldwide insurance and invest-
ment company, as Vice President in 1960.
Mr. Greenberg retired as Chairman and CeO
of American International Group, Inc. (AIG) in
March 2005, after serving as Chief executive
Officer from 1967 until March 2005. Under his
leadership AIG became the largest insurance
company in the world and generated unprec-
edented value for AIG shareholders. During the
nearly 40 years of his leadership, AIG’s market
value grew from $300 million to $l80 billion.
AIG was created by C.V. Starr & Co., Inc.
Mr. Greenberg is Chairman of The Starr Founda-
tion, one of the largest private foundations in the
United States. He oversees the disbursements of
major financial support to institutions worldwide,
in the areas of education (including scholarship
assistance), medical research and healthcare,
human needs, culture and public policy (includ-
ing international relations and the environment).
He serves on the President’s Council on
International Activities of Yale University. He is
the founding Chairman of the U.S.-Philippine
Business Committee. Mr. Greenberg is
Honorary Vice Chairman and Director of the
Council on Foreign Relations; former Chairman
and current member of U.S.-Korea Business
Council; Vice Chairman of the Board of Direc-
tors and member of the executive Committee
of the National Committee on United States-
China Relations; and serves on the Board of
Directors of the U.S.-China Business Council
and the Business Roundtable. He is Honorary
Co-Chairman of the Board of the United States-
Philippines Society, Inc. and is Chairman of the
Center for the National Interest. Mr. Greenberg
has served on the Board of Directors of the
New York Stock exchange and the President’s
Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Nego-
tiations. He is also the past Chairman, Deputy
Chairman, and Director of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York.
Mr. Greenberg is Board Member and Chairman
emeritus of New York-Presbyterian Hospi-
tal and the New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Foundation, Inc. He serves as a member of the
Board of Overseers of the Weill Medical School
of Cornell University; is a Trustee emeritus
of The Rockefeller University; a Life Trustee
of New York University; and a Trustee of The
Manhattan Institute. He is on the Board of
Overseers of the International Rescue Commit-
tee and is active in a number of other civic and
charitable organizations.
In 1990, Mr. Greenberg was appointed by Mr.
Zhu Rongji, then Mayor of Shanghai, to be the
first Chairman of the International Business
Leaders’ Advisory Council for the Mayor of
Shanghai. In 1994, Mr. Greenberg was ap-
pointed Senior economic Advisor to the Beijing
Municipal Government. He was awarded
“Honorary Citizen of Shanghai” in 1997. He is a
member of the Advisory Board of the Tsinghua
School of economics and Management, as
well as a member of the International Advisory
Council of the China Development Research
Foundation and China Development Bank.
Mr. Greenberg received his pre-law certificate
from the University of Miami and an LL.B from
New York Law School in 1950. He was admit-
ted to the New York Bar in 1953. He has been
granted honorary degrees from a number of
institutions, including New York Law School,
Brown University, Middlebury College, and The
Rockefeller University.
Mr. Greenberg served in the U. S. Army in
europe during World War II and in the Korean
conflict, rising to the rank of Captain. He is a
recipient of the Bronze Star.
Mr. Greenberg is married and has four children.
1312
RICHIE PEREz SPIRIT OF SERvICE AwARD
Honors the achievements of individuals whose strength, leadership, and activism move us toward
the realization of a more just and inclusive society
As director of political development, Richie Perez spent the last 21 years of his remarkable life
working at the Community Service Society where he played an integral role in shaping CSS’s urban
agenda on issues aimed at abolishing stop-and-frisk, police brutality, racial profiling, and felon
disenfranchisement. At CSS, Richie also designed and led one of the largest nonpartisan voter
registration drives in New York City’s history—registering more than 250,000 new, low-income
voters. A longtime activist and leader in the struggle for global human rights, Richie Perez was a
leading advocate for social justice and political participation. A former member of the Young Lords
Party and co-founder of the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights, Richie brought his unique
blend of passion, integrity, and unity to the diverse ethnic and racial communities of New York City
and beyond.
danny Glover
Actor, producer and humanitarian Danny
Glover has been a commanding presence on
screen, stage and television for more than 25
years. As an actor, his film credits range from
the blockbuster Lethal Weapon franchise to
smaller independent features, some of which
Glover also produced. In recent years he has
starred in an array of motion pictures, including
the critically-acclaimed Dreamgirls directed
by Bill Condon and in the futuristic 2012 for
director Roland emmerich. In addition to his
film work, Glover is highly sought after as a
public speaker, delivering inspiring addresses
and moving performances in such diverse
venues as college campuses, union rallies and
business conventions.
Glover has gained respect for his wide-
reaching community activism and philanthropic
efforts, with a particular emphasis on advocacy
for economic justice and access to health care
and education programs in the United States
and Africa. For these efforts Glover received a
2006 DGA Honor and was honored with a 2011
“Pioneer Award” from the National Civil Rights
Museum. Internationally, Glover has served as
a Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations
Development Program from 1998–2004,
focusing on issues of poverty, disease, and
economic development in Africa, Latin America,
and the Caribbean. Glover was presented in
2011 with the prestigious Medaille des Arts
et des Letters from the French Ministry of
Culture and was honored with a Tribute at the
Deauville International Film Festival. Currently
Glover serves as UNICeF Ambassador.
In 2005 Glover co-founded New York-based
Louverture Films with writer/producer Joslyn
Barnes. The company is dedicated to the de-
velopment and production of films of historical
relevance, social purpose, commercial value
and artistic integrity. Among the films Glover
has executive produced at Louverture are the
César-nominated Bamako; Sundance Grand
Jury Prize and Oscar and emmy nominated
Trouble The Water; the award winning The
Black Power Mixtape 1967–1975; and the
2012 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner The
House I Live In. He has also associate pro-
duced elia Suleiman’s The Time That Remains
and the 2010 Cannes Palme d’Or winner Uncle
Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.
A native of San Francisco, Glover trained at
the Black Actors’ Workshop of the American
Conservatory Theatre. It was his Broadway
debut in Fugard’s Master Harold…and the
Boys that brought him to national recognition
and led director Robert Benton to cast him in
his first leading role in 1984’s Academy Award-
nominated Best Picture, Places in the Heart.
The following year Glover starred in two more
Best Picture nominated films: Peter Weir’s
Witness and Steven Spielberg’s The Color
Purple. In 1987 Glover partnered with Mel
Gibson in the first Lethal Weapon film and went
on the star in three hugely successful Lethal
Weapon sequels. Glover has also invested his
talents in more personal projects including
the award-winning To Sleep With Anger which
he executive produced and for which he won
and Independent Spirit Award for Best Actor;
Bopha!, Manderlay, Missing in America; and the
film version of Athol Fugard’s play Boseman
and Lena. He also starred in The Royal Tenen-
baums, Saw, Shooter, and Death at a Funeral.
On the small screen, Glover won an Image
Award, a Cable ACe Award, and earned an
emmy nomination for his performance in the
title role of the HBO movie Mandela. He has
also received emmy nominations for his work
in the acclaimed miniseries Lonesome Dove,
the telefilm Freedom Song, and as a direc-
tor he earned a Daytime emmy nomination
for Showtime’s Just a Dream. Most recently,
Glover was a co-star on the popular television
series Touch.
1514
16
AND CONGRATULATES THIS YEAR’S HONOREES
COMMUNITY SERVICE SOCIETY STEP-UP NEW YORK GALA
IS PROUD TO SUPPORT
MAURICE R. GREENBERGand
DAVID BOIES, ESQ.
RICHIE PEREZ SPIRIT OF SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENT
DANNY GLOVERActor, Film Director, Producer and Social Activist
CONGRATULATIONSTO THE HONOREES
Katherine Farleyand
Jerry Speyer
19
Skaddenproudly supports the
Community Service Societyand joins it in honoring
Maurice R. Greenberg, David Boies, Esq. and
Danny Glover
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
David,
Congratulations on this
much deserved award.
Elaine & Ken Langone
~ Founded and led by former Wall Street labor and employment law partners ~ Exclusively representing Employers in labor relations and employment law & litigation ERNEST J. COLLAZO and
COLLAZO FLORENTINO KEIL LLP 747 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 www.cfk-law.com
ARE PLEASED AND HONORED TO CONGRATULATE
THE COMMUNITY SERVICE SOCIETY OF NEW YORK (OUR CLIENT FOR THE PAST 36 YEARS)
AS IT CELEBRATES ITS 170TH ANNIVERSARY
As well as Honorees David Boies, Esq. Maurice Greenberg Danny Glover
For Their Significant Contributions to the Fight Against Poverty.
A Worklaw®network affiliate –The international network of management labor and employment law firms – www.worklaw.com Attorney Advertising
&
underwriter ($100,000 +)Boies, Schiller & Flexner, LLP
The Starr Foundation
leader ($50,000–$75,000)DeLaCour Family Foundation
Anonymous
Jerry Speyer
Benefactor ($25,000–$49,999)American express Company
Collazo, Florentino & Keil LLP
Regional News Network
Patron ($15,000)elaine and Ken Langone
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
advocate ($10,000)Aon Corporation
Judy Chambers
The Chubb Corporation
Cornerstone Advisors Asset Management, Inc.
Hospital for Special Surgery
Ironshore, Inc.
Sonia & Paul T. Jones
Gregory P. Joseph Law Offices LLC
Milliman
NASCAR
Nielsen
Cozen O’Connor
Sunshine Sachs
Verizon Fios
Dr. Sue Ann Weinberg
Winston & Strawn LLP
friend ($1,000–$9,999)Aetna
Santo M. Azzolino
BNY Mellon Asset Management
Sherry and John Bauman
Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation
Asher Bernstein & enid Hamelin
Assemblyman James F. Brennan
Meredith Rose Burak
The Children’s Aid Society
Davidoff Hutcher Citron LLP
James B. emden
Dr. Martin L. Fisher
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Betsy Gotbaum, Former Public Advocate of NYC
Richard Grasso
Mr. and Mrs. Khaled Haram
The Hebrew Home at Riverdale
Mr. and Mrs. edward Jaffe
The Joelson Foundation
Micah Lasher & elizabeth Mann
Local 32BJ SeIU
Lockton Companies
Loeb & Troper LLP
Jay and Cathe Morrow
Nextera energy, Inc.
Northeastern engineers Federal Credit Union
Carol O’Neale
RLM Finsbury
Ralph da Costa Nunez
Marlene Sanders
The Scherman Foundation
Richard A. Schneider
Sandra Schubert
Marla eisland Sprie
TransRe
United Way of New York City
John C. Whitehead
Kelly Williams and Andrew Forsyth
YeS Network
Mortimer B. Zuckerman
donorM. David and Rosalie Baker
Juan Cartagena
Diane M. Coffey
Marie A. and James F. Connolly
Patricia Geoghegan
Julie Kaplan & Ted Shapiro
Gertrude G. Michelson
David W. Weigel, CFP
EvENT DONORS
20
The Starr Foundation
congratulates
Maurice R. GreenbergAnd
David Boies, Esq.
ABOUT CSS
CSS is a 170-year-old nonprofit organization dedicated to fighting poverty and strengthening our city. We pioneer innovative programs and encourage policy reforms that promote self-sufficiency and create a stronger, more inclusive democ-racy. Our rich legacy of achieve-ment demonstrates a concerted focus on underserved populations and a commitment to addressing economic and racial disparities, toward the overarching goal of ensuring opportunity and access for all New Yorkers.
105 East 22nd Street New York, NY 10010
www.cssny.org