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Bonner-Prendie raising money to stay afloat

BACKERS of Monsignor Bonner and Archbishop Prendergast High School have raised more than $500,000 to prove to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia that the Drexel Hill school has enough support to remain open.

BACKERS of Monsignor Bonner and Archbishop Prendergast High School have raised more than $500,000 to prove to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia that the Drexel Hill school has enough support to remain open.

"That's $500,000, not in pledges, but in cash," the Rev. James Olson, the school's president, said at the school yesterday.

About 150 students, parents and alumni had come for an after-school announcement that Bonner-Prendergast on Monday would appeal an Archdiocese plan to close the school. Olson said the school wants to raise another $500,000 by then.

The school wants eventually to raise at least $5 million to guarantee its future, Olson said. "We have 38,000 alumni. I believe we can do it."

On Jan. 6, a commission set up by the Archdiocese recommended Bonner-Prendergast as one of four high schools and 45 elementary schools for closing because of declining enrollments in the five-county region.

Although the school has operated in recent years as one high school with one administration, the traditionally all-girls Prendergast is in one building and the all-boys Bonner in another. The 33-acre campus sits on a hilltop off Lansdowne Avenue at Garrett Road.

Olson said the school plans to bring boys and girls together in the Bonner building.

"We have also issued an invitation to the students of West Catholic to join us," Olson said.

School was not in session yesterday, so the students who showed up for yesterday's announcement did so on a day off. Students had sent text messages and Facebook announcements to return to school at 4:30 p.m. for the announcement. They cheered and applauded when Olson said the school would appeal.

He also said he met and prayed with Archbishop Charles Chaput over how to handle the community's pain at being on the closure list.

"I now feel really at peace" about the decision, he said.

Olson said the school may consider retaining separate all-male and all-female classes in the one building.

Matt Gelbach, 16, a junior, said students are happy about the appeal. "I was overjoyed when I heard about it," Gelbach said. "We can do this.

"This is my third year here, and I don't want it to close. It will be hard to be a senior [next year] at a new school."

Mike Shanahan, 15, a sophomore, said the school is worth fighting for: "It's a good school. My whole family, my aunts and uncles went here."