RWU Magazine - Fall 2022

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GROWING

RWU’s leadership drives the blue economy in Rhode Island » PAGE 25 The Magazine of Roger Williams University ISSUE #03 | FALL 2022 HISTORIC $20M GIFT CHARTS NEW COURSE FOR RWU » PAGE 13 SAILING TO SUCCESS » PAGE 33 GIVING TO RWU » PAGE 37
THE OYSTER INDUSTRY
TOTAL GRADUATES IN CLASS OF 2022 UNDERGRADUATES GRADUATE STUDENTS WITHGRADUATED A MAJORDOUBLE RWU EMPLOYEES EARNED A DEGREE 4+1 Master of Business Administration, 4+1 Master of Criminal Justice, 4+1 Master of Special Education, and dual degree programs in JD/MBA and JD/Preservation Practices GRADUATES OF LAW STUDENTS

The Magazine of Roger Williams University

© 2022 Roger Williams University

Published by the Department of Marketing

President

Ioannis Miaoulis, Ph.D.

Chief of Staff Brian Williams

Associate Vice President of Marketing and Communications Lynne Mello

Editor-in-Chief

Jill Rodrigues ’05

Design Director Blair Carroll ’13

Contributing Designers

Joshua Grab ’16, Ashley Williams ’16

Contributing Writers

Anna Cohen, Benjamin Daniel, Melanie Thibeault, Janine Weisman

Contributing Photographers

Joshua Grab ’16, Richard Dionne, James Jones, Lexi Pline, Allison Chenard

Please direct questions, comments, letters and other editorial inquiries to:

email: stories@rwu.edu phone: (401) 254-3332

University Marketing

Roger Williams University

One Old Ferry Road Bristol, RI 02809

Roger Williams University and RWU are registered with the United States Patent & Trademark Office.

FROM OUR

PRESIDENT

A HISTORIC YEAR

It has been a remarkable year at Roger Williams University. We celebrated a $20 million gift and partnership with the Cummings Foundation, received U.S. Congressional funding to advance the oyster aquaculture industry, and held our first-ever university-wide Commencement ceremony. On an institutional level, our Strategic Action Plan now lays the foundation for future programs and planning – an Enrollment Plan, an Academic Master Plan, a Campus Master Plan, a Branding Initiative, and the next phase of our Equity Action Plan. All these plans build out our integrated vision, delving deeper into interdisciplinary efforts in the Blue Economy and Sustainable Coastal Strategies, in Real Estate, and more.

The University made history this spring with the largest philanthropic partnership yet, partnering with the prestigious Cummings Foundation and the venerable philanthropists and real estate entrepreneurs Bill and Joyce Cummings. In recognition of their transformative $20 million pledge to Roger, we honored them by naming the Cummings School of Architecture and the newly launched Cummings Institute for Real Estate. Read this story on page 13.

A testament to our continued focus on academic excellence is evident in RWU being awarded $1.6 million in federal funding to advance the oyster aquaculture industry in Rhode Island. RWU has become recognized as the region’s go-to resource for knowledge of shellfish aquaculture science – and with the money secured by Rhode Island’s U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, Roger will support the Ocean State’s rising status as a leading oyster industry in numerous ways. Rhode Island is home to 84 oyster farms – that’s one in every six on the entire East Coast. As the value of our state’s oysters grows, so too does its economy, valuing the aquaculture industry at $7.5 million and employing 222 people in the industry in 2021, according to the Coastal Resources Management Council. You can read about how RWU will expand our work and support across aquaculture science, legal resources for the industry, and chemistry’s role in understanding aquatic ecosystem health on page 25.

Also in this issue, we celebrate just some of our incredible alumni, the success of our Athletics programs, and our commitment to engaged learning and student success. Read about Maria Rivera ’19 who is making history as the first woman mayor of Central Falls and the first Latina mayor in Rhode Island on page 19, then check out double-Hawk Robert Clarke ’14, M’16 who is exploring the Black aesthetic in architectural design on page 15, and don’t miss the inspiring story of Brooklyn Crockton L’22 whose viral TikTok video exposing racial bias in the judicial system made her a national advocate for justice [11]. This year our Athletics programs were on fire: capturing another No. 2 national championship for Team Sailing, our first-ever national championship in Women’s Rugby and a secondconsecutive Coastal Commonwealth Conference Championship for Women’s Lacrosse [33-36].

In reflecting on this historic year, I am grateful for our entire community – alumni, students, faculty, staff and donors – who continue to support and advance our mission. Thank you for your commitment to helping us deliver a world-class education and student experience.

- Ioannis N. Miaoulis, Ph.D., President

RWU

THE OYSTER INDUSTRY

COMEBACK

INSIDE THIS ISSUE
25 19 HISTORIC $20M GIFT CHARTS NEW COURSE FOR RWU Celebrating the dedication and launch of the Cummings School of Architecture and Cummings Institute for Real Estate. 13 SAILING
Hawks sail to third successful runner-up finish in team
at Inter-Collegiate
National
33 37 GIVING
Roger Williams
and the
the individuals and organizations that made gifts and volunteered their
year. The Magazine of Roger Williams University
GROWING
RWU’s leadership drives the blue economy in Rhode Island.
AN UP-AND-COMER LEADS THE
CITY As Central Falls Mayor, Maria Rivera ’19 is bringing a new era of optimism and transformation to her community.
TO SUCCESS
racing
Sailing Association
Championship.
TO RWU
University
School of Law recognize
time during the 2021-22 fiscal
1
VIRTUAL REALITY BRINGS CRIME SCENE
TO RWU’S CLASSROOM
NEXT LEVEL LEARNING:
ANALYSIS

During class last semester, Kali Atkins, a then-firstyear Forensic Science major from Redlands, Calif., donned an Oculus VR headset to collect blood samples and mark evidence while investigating a crime scene in virtual reality, an innovative learning experience offered to Roger Williams University students in Professor Karla-Sue Marriott’s Crime Scene Investigations course.

Marriot, pictured center, director of Forensic Science at RWU, created this cutting-edge program for training undergraduate Forensic Science students on how to process a crime scene – and Roger Williams is one of only two universities in the country providing this unique experiential education.

Atkins said, “It’s a whole new world. It feels like you’re actually on the case. It does feel real (like) there is a body lying there. I am a detective collecting actual evidence.”

The VR program delivers an immersive and realistic experience, allowing students to use virtual tools to collect blood and fingerprints, place evidence markers and to evaluate multiple crime scene scenarios.

Marriott believes that VR creates unique research opportunities for undergraduate Forensic Science students that can lead to limitless career pathways.

“I don’t necessarily expect students to go into careers in law enforcement or at a forensics lab, but for them to have many options,” she said.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 2

A DATA-DRIVEN VIEW OF COVID-19’S ECONOMIC EFFECTS IN RI

Students analyze the business impact of the coronavirus

How did the Covid-19 pandemic affect Rhode Island’s businesses and economy during the year of shutdowns and social distancing in 2020? Students in the Data Analytics Club at the Gabelli School of Business collaborated with the R.I. Department of State to crunch the data and present a detailed picture of the coronavirus’s effects across key industries and its economic impact. These are some of their findings delivered to state officials in a State House presentation.

22% & 31%

Increase in domestic LLC filings in 2020 and 2021, compared to 2019. The students found that while plenty of companies declared bankruptcy or went out of business, R.I. actually ended 2021 with slightly more businesses than before the pandemic hit.

$381 M

Most of R.I.’s industries declined, but real estate and rentals (3 percent) and financing (4 percent) both improved during Covid.

7.7%

Overall hit R.I.’s gross domestic product took from 2019 to 2020.

An increase in info-based companies, mainly startups of YouTube channels and podcasts.

17.4%

Highest spike in the state’s unemployment occurred in April 2020, but has settled back to 4.8 percent by December 2021, just above where it was before Covid.

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REVENUES
TOTAL LOSS IN
ACROSS RI INDUSTRIES $1.6 B
REVENUE DROPS IN THE STATE’S LARGEST INDUSTRIES: Food, Arts and Entertainment, and Recreation 28% ($730 M) Transportation 15% ($137 M) Health Care 8% ($443 M) Manufacturing 3% ($149 M)
3%
Phillip Call (left), Dylan Kovacs ’22 (center) and John Noonan (right) presented their detailed data analysis on the pandemic’s impact on Rhode Island at the State Library.

HELPING FAMILIES NAVIGATE DIVORCE

Family Court

Ruth Nwauche L’22 wishes that when her parents were divorcing, they had had access to more resources to support their family through the challenging process.

“Parents should know that your children should be your priority, and you shouldn’t be arguing in front of them or saying bad things about the other parent to them because it’s not going to be good for them emotionally,” said Nwauche, who shared her personal experience in “Parenting Together: Do It for the Kids,” a video showcasing best parenting practices for families involved in Rhode Island Family Court.

The 20-minute video, appearing on the R.I. judiciary website with versions in English and Spanish, is an interdisciplinary, community-engaged project between RWU’s Legal Studies and Psychology programs, along with added collaboration from a Journalism student.

Funded by a generous grant from the Hassenfeld Family Initiatives, faculty and students worked over several years to research and create the video resource.

Each year, between 3,500 and 3,800 new cases are filed in R.I. Family Court; the majority are divorces, while other cases involve parties who are unmarried but share children. In addition to new cases, the court sees many parties who routinely return for further court guidance, said Lori Giarrusso, director of mediation for R.I.

Family Court and an adjunct professor at RWU Law. That means the video, which is available for anyone to view, will help many more families than just those going through new court proceedings in any given year.

In April, RWU President Ioannis Miaoulis and Michael Forte, chief judge of R.I. Family Court, hosted a premiere of the video at the university’s Providence campus. Featuring interviews with Family Court staff, mental health professionals, and testimonials from children affected by divorce, the video highlighting effective tools for coparenting through divorce will be shown to parents during the court process.

“The video is trying to educate parents on how they can protect their children. It’s something that we know will make a huge difference,” said Tricia Martland L’00, professor of Legal Studies at RWU and a juvenile law expert. “We’re so glad students can be a part of that.”

After Giarrusso expressed a need for this video, Martland, Lisa Newcity, professor of Legal Studies, and Bonita Cade, associate professor of Psychology, enlisted students from across their programs, who spent hours researching how divorce can negatively affect children, how parents can minimize those effects, as well as how

judges make custody decisions.

To ensure they developed a teaching tool that “would speak to a wide variety of parents from different cultures and experiences,” Cade said she and Kirstin Barber ’20, a Legal Studies and Psychology double major, researched the effectiveness of other types of parental trainings to make theirs effective and inclusive.

Morgan Clark ’20, who double majored in Legal Studies and Psychology and is now a second-year law student at UMass Dartmouth, said taking a child psychology course aided in her research for the video. “That was a big help to know different things that children can go through,” she said.

The project also solidified her career path. “I had an interest in it but wasn’t sure if I really wanted to do it,” said Clark, who now aspires to practice family law.

Undergraduates had a unique learning experience and opportunities to network with judges, child advocates, and others, said Martland. “Most students at the courts are law students, so this was awesome for undergrads.” ◊

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 4
An interdisciplinary project creates vital co-parenting tool for Rhode Island
Michael Forte, chief judge of Rhode Island Family Court, celebrates the debut of a co-parenting video resource created by RWU students with members of the judiciary and university. Below, guests watch “Parenting Together” at the film premiere.
Psychology really meshes well with Legal Studies.”
— Morgan Clark ’20
5 RWU Launches First Antiracism Campaign EACH UNIVERSITY MEMBER IS CALLED TO STEP UP AND ENGAGE IN ANTIRACIST PRACTICES
BIANCO, DEAN, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE STUDENT CONDUCT AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION
GENA
SEARCH ADVOCACY COORDINATOR JUSTICE IN ACTION ATHLETIC ALLIANCE (JAAA) RWU SCHOOL OF LAW
KAREN J. ETHIER,
RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 6
HEALTH SERVICES
BROOKLYN CROCKTON, RWU SCHOOL OF LAW ALUMNA RACIAL EQUITY AND JUSTICE INSTITUTE (REJI) PUBLIC SAFETY ADAM CAVANAUGH & JORDAN ST.ONGE, CLASS OF 2023
UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Honoring our diversity and creating greater equity and inclusion at Roger Williams University requires all of our community members to take action.

That’s why RWU commenced our first university-wide antiracism campaign this year: Racism Stops With Me. Through a multidimensional and ongoing initiative, we aim to bring forward the full commitment of our senior leadership, our faculty and staff, and our students in learning and engaging in antiracist practices and showing up with their support for our BIPOC community members across our campuses.

“We listened to our students and heard their desire for an educational antiracism campaign. The university had already been undertaking years of work to develop and implement an Equity Action Plan, so when the students brought their idea to us it was like an aha moment – an antiracism campaign would be a great part of our institutional equity work,” said President Ioannis Miaoulis. “Our initiative embodies Roger Williams University’s collective pledge to stand against racism and create a more equitable and inclusive culture for our BIPOC students, faculty, staff and alumni.”

“All of us must answer the call to address racial injustice and leverage our individual roles in putting an end to it.”

As the initiative mission statement says, “Racism stops with each of us. The journey towards racial justice for all members of the RWU community requires action. RWU commits to do the work to become an antiracist institution and to ensuring that all members feel a sense of belonging and thriving at Roger Williams University.”

“While we have been working to thoroughly embed equity throughout university policies, systems and structures, so that it becomes a natural part of who we are and what we do, the goal of this antiracism campaign is to bring the issues of racial bias and inequity front and center, to be recognized, examined, discussed and dealt with,” said Stephanie Akunvabey, Chief Diversity Officer and Vice President for Equity and Inclusion. “All of us must answer the call to address racial injustice and leverage our individual roles in putting an end to it.”

HOW IT STARTED

The antiracism campaign includes a series of learning opportunities and institutional assessments and serves as a visible sign of our work toward greater equity and transformational change of the university’s culture and systemic operations. Here’s a look at what has happened so far:

• The first phase launched in the spring semester with posters of senior leaders, staff and faculty stating their individual or group commitment to bringing antiracist practices into their roles. Read their pledges on our website at the URL at bottom left.

• President Miaoulis, along with every member of the President’s Cabinet, each Dean and all Board of Trustees members went through a comprehensive bias training. RWU’s RGA (Retain, Grow, Advance) cohort, mid-level managers and supervisors from across the university, also took the training.

• All juniors participated in a bias training.

• During Orientation days, all incoming first-year and transfer undergraduates and all new graduate students took “DEI at RWU” – introducing them to the antiracism campaign and RWU’s commitment to doing diversity, equity and inclusion work through an antiracist lens.

• Students took the Diverse Learning Environments survey, an assessment tool that gauges student perceptions of the campus climate, inclusive practices and student learning outcomes. Survey data, along with information from BIPOC student focus groups, will be shared this fall.

7
FOR MORE ABOUT RWU’S ANTIRACISM CAMPAIGN, VISIT WWW.RWU.EDU/GO/ANTIRACISMCAMPAIGN
PRESIDENT YANNIS MIAOULIS STEPHANIE AKUNVABEY, CHIEF DIVERSITY OFFICER BRIAN

WHAT’S NEXT

Over the Fall 2022 semester, our antiracism campaign will continue to engage the university community in new ways. Those efforts will focus on the following:

• Students are being asked to also pledge to join RWU’s antiracist work. By taking the Roger Pledge, which is inspired by the Birmingham Pledge – a grassroots effort to end racism in America – students are making “a personal, daily commitment to remove prejudice from our own lives and to treat all people with dignity and respect.” View and sign the pledge here: www.rwu.edu/roger-pledge.

• The RWU Diversity, Equity and Inclusion team hired a graduate assistant for the 2022-23 academic year, who will focus on engaging students with the antiracism campaign and understanding equity.

• The next phase of RWU’s Equity Action Plan (EAP) will be written. Serving as a guiding document to bridge the EAP with the institutional Strategic Action Plan, it will align our diversity, equity and inclusion efforts and amplify the university strategic priorities to build a thriving community.

RWU LAW’S “INTEGRATING DOCTRINE AND DIVERSITY” PROGRAM SHAPING LEGAL PEDAGOGY ACROSS AMERICA

Should legal education’s pedagogy become more diverse, equitable, and inclusive? Nicole Dyszlewski, an RWU Law instructor and one of the leads of the school’s “Integrating Doctrine and Diversity” program, says it’s the essential shift that will help law schools shape more well-rounded lawyers and foster a greater sense of belonging among a diverse group of educators and students.

Since launching the program in Fall 2021, Roger Williams University School of Law has seen a groundswell of interest from law schools across America seeking help to make that change. In just over a year, 80 percent of American law schools have had at least one program participant.

School Classroom” – co-authored and led by Dyszlewski and RWU Law Professor Suzanne Harrington-Steppen. Delivered as a series of webinars, it focuses on practical strategies for putting diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging goals into action inside the classroom. The program is co-sponsored by CUNY Law, The Jurist, University of California, Berkley, and George Washington University.

“I want to change legal education,” Dyszlewski said. “Let’s stop whitewashing the practice of law and ‘othering’ nonwhites.”

OUR VALUES

Roger Williams University values diversity and respects all races, ethnicities, genders, identities and abilities. Equity is not just a responsibility and the right thing to do, but a part of who we are as an institution.

The program is based on the book “Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law

Five sessions were held during the 2021-22 academic year, and more are lined up for this year. “Leaning into the discomfort that can result from these conversations might be the best result for the practice of law everywhere,” said Dyszlewski.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 8

F1RST-GENERATION HAWKS SOAR WITH SUPPORT PROGRAM

RWU welcomes largest cohort of students to S.O.A.R. this year

When Maria Tavera ’22, a Dominican Republic native who grew up in Providence, R.I., and the first in her family to attend college, stepped onto RWU’s campus four years ago, she initially felt out of her element and had difficulty adjusting to college life.

What helped her adapt and flourish was S.O.A.R. (Strive, Overcome, Achieve, Rise), a support program for firstgeneration first-year students that helps them feel a sense of belonging and thrive at RWU, which Tavera said helped her find her place on campus.

“S.O.A.R. welcomed me with open arms,” said Tavera, a Legal Studies and Psychology double major who then joined RWU’s Black and Latinx Living Learning Community, Multicultural Student Union, and Africana Student Coalition. “Without S.O.A.R., I wouldn’t have had the foundation I had.”

EMPOWERING STUDENTS TO SUCCEED

Launched in 2018, S.O.A.R. helps first-generation students navigate their first year at RWU and empowers them with the knowledge and tools to succeed, including being paired with a faculty or staff mentor and connecting with peers who share their identities and experiences.

S.O.A.R. students arrive early on campus to meet each other, identify mentors, and “just get comfortable being in a new environment,” said Stephanie Akunvabey, RWU’s Vice President for Equity and Inclusion and Chief Diversity Officer. Throughout the academic year, the group meets monthly for workshops and to talk.

According to the Education Advisory Board, a large percentage of first-generation students nationwide are also low-income or students of color, who typically don’t have access to all the same opportunities that students whose parents attended college have and face additional challenges when they’re trying to pursue a college degree.

First-generation students make up approximately 17 percent of RWU’s undergraduate population and are growing. The fifth cohort starting this fall is the biggest yet. “We started this program to fill in gaps and help them thrive at RWU,” said Akunvabey.

Tavera’s mentor, Paola Prado, professor of Journalism & Digital Media, said S.O.A.R. is critical in helping retain students. As she watched Tavera wrestle with “creating a space and finding her own tribe on campus,” said Prado, such mentorship “speaks to the importance of having diverse faculty on campus, because she was seeing another Latina on the other side of the struggle she was going through.”

That mentorship was integral to her success, agreed Tavera, one of 12 S.O.A.R. students who graduated from the first cohort this past May. “I would go to (Prado) every week and she would listen and give me advice,” she said. “If it wasn’t for her, I wouldn’t have been able to get through my first year.”

S.O.A.R. welcomed me with open arms...Without S.O.A.R., I wouldn’t have had the foundation I had.”

After that first year, they remained in touch. “I saw her thrive and grow throughout the years, become embedded in the community, help diversify the student body by making sure that she herself was mentoring incoming students who were facing the same challenges that she had faced,” Prado said.

CREATING CONNECTIONS BEYOND CAMPUS

As the program continues to grow, the university added new components. Last year’s cohort was the first to have a welcome event for their families to learn more about the program and the college experience.

First-generation alumni have reached out to give back, and Akunvabey said they have plans to work with the RWU Alumni of Color Network to create networking opportunities for S.O.A.R. students. Just as students may be the first in their family to go to college, they may be the first to enter a specific career field and have questions about navigating it.

“Your first-generation-ness sticks with you,” said Akunvabey, who was a first-generation student herself. “One thing I can see in the future is creating spaces for first-generation alumni to intentionally give back to first-generation hopefuls, so those transition points can happen a little more smoothly.” ◊

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Maria Tavera ’22, a first-generation student, celebrates her graduation in May with her family.

BUILDING PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP IN RHODE ISLAND

AND THE NEXT GENERATION

Every time you turn on a faucet to drink clean water, enjoy summer weather without fear of polio, or brush your teeth, you experience public health successes in action. But as we know, public health work is never done, and new issues continually face society. Hello, Covid-19. As part of her work to promote public health in Rhode Island, Professor Kerri Warren, co-founder of RWU’s Public Health program, is taking the reins as President of the Rhode Island Public Health Association (RIPHA) this November.

Here, Warren discusses her new role as RIPHA president, and how she prepares students to be the future of public health leadership.

What is the function of the RIPHA president?

RIPHA works in collaboration with our organizational partners. We have a strong network with our academic institutions. My tie-in to academics comes from Roger Williams, which provides education with a focus on community engagement and well-roundedness. That approach is what we need to address public health challenges. I will bring my natural connection to our students, who are the next generation of public health leaders.

address these issues by responding to the present challenges, but also by working to support the upstream conditions that lead to better health, such as equitable access to quality food, housing, education, opportunity and health care.

position. Students might just keep adding facets to their experience that will make them uniquely set up to do a job that we don’t even know exists yet.

What

the public health challenges and opportunities facing RI?

RI communities face many of the same public health issues that the nation and world face, such as rising cases of chronic and infectious disease, mental illness, substance abuse, overdose, gun violence, severe weather events, and uneven access to health care, behavioral health care and preventative health services. We need to

The Public Health program is an amazing combination of why our students are attracted to Roger Williams: community engagement, activities, hands-on projects, and an interest in making a difference. We have a lot of students who pair a Public Health major or minor with their other interests to prepare themselves for the multidisciplinary field.

We have built two significant fieldwork experiences into our curriculum. Those field experiences help students get out in the community and start contributing. Sometimes they lead to acceptance into a graduate program or directly into a

Public health successes are often in the background of society working to keep people safe. Emerging issues, for example, the new coronavirus, put public health in the spotlight. In the last 150 years of the APHA we’ve made a lot of progress, but the goalposts are constantly moving. When we learn more, we can put in interventions that change the baseline of what is acceptable. Emergent issues make room for conversations about how we got where we are and what the future can look like. We welcome all people interested in public health to get involved and help us work together, collectively with our partners, for public health in the state and in the nation.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 10
RWU’s Public Health program
are
Why has public health become such a vital component of global society’s health and well-being?
How does RWU’s public health major prepare our graduates for the multifaceted work across public health?

JUSTICE a voice for

After her TikTok video went viral, law student finds herself working to change the system

11

Words fail Brooklyn Crockton halfway through her video account about what she had experienced earlier that morning at a Providence courthouse. Then, the third-year Roger Williams University School of Law student quickly regains her composure and calls out a system that unfairly treats people who look like her.

She never expected her TikTok message to go viral and create such a resounding impact.

Participating in an RWU Law experiential legal clinic at the courthouse that day, Crockton describes the moment a white deputy sheriff pulled her out of a line of attorneys entering a courtroom, where she would be representing a client at a pre-trial hearing on a criminal misdemeanor charge. When the sheriff pulled her aside, he asked her if she was a defendant.

“I have never been so embarrassed in my entire life, like I felt like crying in that moment,” Crockton says in the video recorded at the RWU Providence campus Law School lounge a couple hours after the incident. “And the crazy part about it is you hear stories like this all the time with Black attorneys, but when it happens to you, it is so visceral you don’t even know what to say.”

Within a few hours, her smartphone repeatedly buzzed as other Black professionals working in the legal system and in other fields began sharing their experiences with racism in comments on her video. The next thing Crockton knew, her story made ABC’s “Good Morning America” and other news outlets – giving her the

strength and determination to keep using her voice.

She has turned her experience into a teachable moment and raised awareness of a problem that isn’t discussed enough.

“You just don’t hear stories about white lawyers being pulled out of line because people think they’re defendants, but you do hear it with people of color,” said RWU School of Law Dean Gregory W. Bowman. “I have colleagues on the faculty who had that experience.”

RWU Law has been working at the forefront of legal education, advancing changes in curriculum to include a comprehensive exploration of historic racial biases within laws and the legal system. Second-year law students now take a required course – titled “Race & the Foundations of American Law” – to understand how race has shaped the legal system and laws across U.S. history. Introduced as an elective in Spring 2021 and then as a required course later that fall, the law school became among the first nationwide to make this course a part of the core legal curriculum.

It’s also an issue the law school has been working to address in collaboration with the Rhode Island judiciary and bar – and Crockton’s experience renewed those conversations. Bowman said that RWU Law is committed to participating in these ongoing discussions to recognize and better address implicit bias.

“The only way to counter implicit bias effectively is through training and making that implicit bias explicitly understood, so you can take specific steps to counter it,” Bowman said. “That’s what Brooklyn is helping to do through telling her story.”

Before her video had even gone viral, Crockton had already been contacted with support by the law school administration and her professor supervising the clinic. They stayed in regular contact with her throughout her time until graduation – and alumni and people from across the RWU community reached out to her as well.

“I felt a lot of support even on a schoolwide level,” she said. “I was having some of the undergraduate orgs reach out to me as well, which meant a lot.”

Working for Change

The day before she graduated in May, Crockton received a job offer to be a tax litigation attorney with a Houston law firm. She remains active with the National Black Law Student Association, which is creating a reporting system that allows interns, students, paralegals and attorneys who feel they have been subjected to bias to anonymously report misconduct and initiate a sanctioning process.

“The legal profession is not one that has any room for biases, especially the implicit racial ones,” Crockton said. She admits she was initially worried her time in the spotlight might hurt her job hunt. Would she be viewed as a whistleblower? But her viral TikTok never even came up during the interview process for her new job. Crockton plans to continue making more videos to pursue positive social change and is open to becoming more involved in activism and civil rights.

“That is really where my heart lies,” she said, “and that is why I got into this profession in the first place.” ◊

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 12
The legal profession is not one that has any room for biases, especially the implicit racial ones.
– Brooklyn Crockton L’22

HISTORIC $20 MILLION GIFT CHARTS NEW COURSE FOR ARCHITECTURE, PRESERVATION, AND REAL ESTATE

RWU celebrates the dedication and launch of the Cummings School of Architecture and Cummings Institute for Real Estate

donned

(at back) with the words, “Starting Small and Making It Big,” to honor Bill Cummings’ entrepreneur’s memoir by the same title and celebrate the partnership.

With a dedication ceremony of the Cummings School of Architecture and Cummings Institute for Real Estate, Roger Williams University and Cummings Foundation celebrated a $20 million gift and marked the beginning of a historic era for the university.

On a sunny day in June, Roger Williams held a universitywide event formally celebrating the transformative philanthropy – the largest in university history – with Cummings Foundation and honoring Massachusetts philanthropists Bill and Joyce Cummings for their commitment to future generations of RWU graduates who will become leaders in sustainable and equitable design and development at the intersection of the built and natural environments. This partnership comes as RWU marks the 35th anniversary of the accreditation of our Architecture program and 30th anniversary of our distinguished architecture school, which boasts a nationally accredited Master of Architecture and the oldest Historic Preservation program in the United States, as well as the new interdisciplinary Real Estate Institute.

“I am thrilled that RWU and Cummings Foundation will be

working together to shape the best prepared leaders of tomorrow –and I know our graduates will make a difference in the world,” said President Ioannis N. Miaoulis in his remarks at the celebration. “This partnership will set Roger Williams apart from other higher education institutions in the region and will help to solidify our reputation as leaders and innovators in architecture, historic preservation, and real estate. A partnership of this magnitude symbolizes our joint commitment to ensuring current and future students of the Cummings School of Architecture receive a worldclass education and are prepared to become trailblazers in their own right.”

This is one of the largest partnerships with Cummings Foundation – one of the three largest private foundations in New England – outside of Massachusetts, where the Foundation is headquartered, and where the Cummings have primarily focused their philanthropy. It also marks their first university partnership that recognizes Bill Cummings’ distinguished career as a real estate entrepreneur and founder of the North Shore’s leading firm, Cummings Properties.

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Bill Cummings shares remarks at the dedication ceremony. RWU students yellow shirts

“RWU is dedicated to building a thriving workforce across all industries and providing real-world learning opportunities for its students to have community impact throughout their careers. That kind of entrepreneurial spirit is exactly what is needed to be successful in work and life, and it aligns so naturally with our mission at Cummings Foundation to promote and empower the social and economic inclusion of all,” said Bill Cummings. “President Miaoulis has a compelling and powerful vision for RWU and its students, and Cummings Foundation is excited to be a partner in this growth over the years ahead.”

Along with its existing world-class programs in Architecture, Historic Preservation, and Urban and Regional Planning, the new interdisciplinary Real Estate program at the Cummings School will bring together programs and courses from the fields of architecture, business, law, planning, community development, construction management, and engineering, as well as the social and natural sciences, humanities, and justice studies. This year, RWU will launch a Graduate Certificate in Real Estate, with undergraduate and graduate degree programs planned for Fall 2023, led by nationally renowned real estate developer and finance leader Richard Godfrey as the inaugural executive director.

“The real estate industry has seen unprecedented change in the last few years, and only those who are properly trained and equipped to handle such a rapidly changing environment will be successful in the industry. The establishment of the Cummings Institute for Real Estate and the foundation of specialized programming specifically designed to prepare students to be successful leaders, will absolutely transform the way Roger Williams graduates navigate the real estate industry,” said Steve White, Dean of the Cummings School of Architecture.

This partnership will set Roger Williams apart from other higher education institutions in the region and will help to solidify our reputation as leaders and innovators in architecture, historic preservation, and real estate."

— President Ioannis N. Miaoulis

Architecture, preservation, and real estate professionals work in industries that are major national economic drivers for the country. They face a host of challenges that range from public-private partnerships, to navigating tax credits, zoning and regulatory matters, all while addressing climate change, sea level rise and socioeconomic and housing inequalities. Fueled by the power of this historic partnership, the Cummings School of Architecture and Cummings Institute for Real Estate will further accelerate the university’s success in preparing students to be leaders in sustainable and equitable design and development that will advance the development of resilient and sustainable communities with good homes, healthy environments, vibrant economies, and justice for everyone, so that our graduates pursue rewarding careers while helping to create a better world. ◊

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HOW DOES YOUR WORK ACT AS A LENS THROUGH WHICH TO OBSERVE AND COMMENT ON BLACK LIFE?

Historically, global cultures have designed things and places that reflect their customs and traditions. This hasn’t happened in architecture for African Americans. There is no recognizable Black architectural style. I want my work to correct this cultural and artistic omission by investigating how to build Black culture into architectural forms and motifs.

CAN ARCHITECTURE BE A TOOL FOR SOCIAL CHANGE?

While there isn’t a singular Black identity, there are Black American cultural traditions that make up a family of Black identities. This is a valuable lens through which to inform design and, perhaps, some perceptions of the Black aesthetic (which isn’t a monolith). I think it’s possible to develop a Black American aesthetic agenda in architecture, to give meaning to a set of experiences and have them infused into a unique and valuable kind of architectural movement.

IS THERE AN ARCHITECT WITH WHOSE WORK YOU MOST CLOSELY IDENTIFY?

David Adjaye is a British architect (and a knight!) who helped design the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. Diébédo Francis Kéré is a Pritzker Prizewinner, the first Black architect to win. They’ve both incorporated cultural and historical touchstones into their work while also considering social justice as a lens through which to sift design ideas. Additionally, architects Germane Barnes and Olaekan Jeyifous both search for a future and identity in their work that is intrinsically connected to blackness.

HOW HAVE YOUR STUDIES SHAPED YOUR AESTHETIC?

My study and practice feature computational design and the way complex forms can inform new ideas that are directly connected to Black identity. When I led Gensler Architects’ Computational Design group, it offered me an opportunity to investigate digital tools and explore the concepts I began studying at Roger Williams University. My studies and my experiences pushed me to expand my ideas of what was possible. Engaging with other Black architects and theorists revealed what was possible when investigating Black identity in architecture, its complexities, and challenges.

HOW DID YOU DEVELOP THE PEDAGOGICAL LENS THROUGH WHICH YOU SHAPE YOUR LECTURES?

When I was starting to pursue ideas about architecture and blackness as an intellectual project, I was working with my dad during the day and working on architecture competition submissions at night. That work ethic has found its way into my thinking about how we teach architecture. There aren’t neat dividing lines between ourselves and the spaces we inhabit. Education is both external – what are others doing that might provide ideas and inform our work – and internal – how am I thinking about this thing or challenge?

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A private home project with graffiti-inspired design by Robert Clarke.

If you have a treadmill, a bicycle and some PVC pipe, you have a mini wind turbine in the making. A senior engineering team’s capstone project improved upon an open-source wind turbine design that could put wind-energy generation in the hands of the average homeowner.

“Based on our engineering knowledge, we knew there were better ways to make improvements, so we took what we were learning in class to build a better design,” said Hannah Darling ’22, a Lakeville, Mass., resident who specialized in environmental engineering.

It took the team a full year of trial, error and innovation to make their enhanced prototype, but tackling challenges comes with the territory of being an engineer, according to John Walton ’22. “Engineering is basically dealing with problems as they arise and knowing how to find solutions,” said the Grosse Pointe, Mich., resident who specialized in mechanical engineering.

Class of 2022 Engineering graduates (from left to right) John Walton, Daniella Giannotti, Jake Stamos, Hannah Darling, Christopher Michaud, and Jacqueline Collins tested and improved upon a wind turbine design as their senior capstone project.
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THE RIGHT BLADES

Much research went into designing the blades, cut from PVC pipe. Thanks to a Sustainable Energy Engineering Course, Darling and Walton knew how to use MATLAB programming to model performance of blades shapes.

“Then we sanded and shaped the blades to a traditional design for an air foil wind turbine, improving efficiency and aerodynamics,” said Darling.

WITHOUT GEARS, IT’S NOTHING

The real genius in their design improvements came with the addition of two sets of gearing.

“The gearing increases rpms of the motor,” Walton said. “For every time the blades spin, we wanted the motor to spin faster and result in a higher voltage.” The result: five times more power than the original design and enough to reach their goal to charge a 12-volt battery.

MOTORIN’

The blades powered the motor, used in reverse as a generator to produce voltage. Actually, they used two treadmill motors, but the top one just provides a stable, frictionless base for the blades to turn, according to Walton, now in a master’s program in naval architecture and marine engineering at the University of Michigan.

TEAM ADVANTAGE

Of course, if you want to make design modifications, it helps to have an engineering team.

Each team member brought different skillsets and tackled varying parts of the work, said Darling, who translated her interest in turbine-blade technology to a Ph.D. program in mechanical engineering focused on wind energy at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

SCALE YOUR POWER NEEDS

The team designed a “personaluse turbine,” said Darling, capable of powering household lighting and appliances or “for off-the-grid situations.” While they used a treadmill motor, their design can scale bigger and taller with larger generators to reach higher wind speeds and create more power. But – given enough time, Walton said, “a fully charged 12-volt battery can power a lot of things.”

TESTING, TESTING

A lot of prototype experimentation was required in recreating the basic design and then building their advanced model. Luckily for them, they had a campus with a bay breeze as their testing grounds. Affixing wheels to the model base, they rolled it to different spots on campus, among them atop the parking garage, and employed a multimeter to detect the wind power harnessed by their machine.

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AN UP-AND-COMER leads the COMEBACK CITY

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As Central Falls Mayor, Maria Rivera ’19 is bringing a new era of optimism and transformation to her community

Where is Maria Rivera? Everywhere

her community needs her.

On a warm end-of-June evening, easy conversation and laughter hums below the sound of the Black Eyed Peas pumping from a DJ’s speakers at Veterans Memorial Park, the promise of a dazzling fireworks show a few hours away. People line up outside a frozen lemonade truck on Illinois Street, now closed to traffic, for the Central Falls Independence Day celebration.

“Who’s next?” Central Falls’ mayor calls out the truck’s window, pivoting back and forth to dole out free cups of frozen lemonade the truck driver is scooping as fast as he can. There isn’t a lot of room in the rig. The driver mops his brow with a paper towel. But the mayor never even breaks a sweat or spills a drop of slush on her pristine pink blazer, as she lends a hand and greets each community member during the festivities in the neighborhood park, one of many city parks whose revitalization she has spearheaded.

Being a hands-on trailblazer is what Rivera, who graduated from RWU with a B.A. in Public Administration in 2019, is known for. In January 2021, she became the first woman to lead the smallest city in the smallest state after sweeping her first state-office election with 77 percent of the vote. Rivera is also making history as Rhode Island’s first Latina mayor.

There were many issues Rivera sought to address when she took office – increasing affordable housing, rehabilitating community spaces, and adding services for mental health, substance abuse, domestic

violence and homelessness. But most pressing was the Covid-19 pandemic, which was about to reach 500,000 deaths in the U.S. at the start of her term and disproportionately impacting communities of color and densely-populated cities –intersecting with many of the challenges her city was already facing.

“I had many priorities, but I had to put a lot of them on hold because I first needed to figure out how to get my community back to healthy,” Rivera says.

At 1.29 square miles with nearly 20,000 residents, two-thirds of whom identify as Latino or Hispanic, Central Falls is Rhode Island’s most densely populated community with more people per square mile than Boston, Chicago and Washington, D.C. Social distancing during the pandemic was all but impossible. Many residents live as families with multiple generations under one roof and hold jobs that must be done in-person.

As a result, Central Falls had the state’s highest rates of positive Covid-19 cases. When vaccines first became available, state health officials gave priority status to Central Falls residents. Rivera and her team went door-todoor encouraging people to get vaccinated and hosted vaccination clinics seven days a week. Dozens of residents signed up immediately after Rivera got vaccinated publicly at one of the city’s housing authority sites. She created a new Office of Constituent Services and Health to coordinate the intensive vaccination effort, making sure undocumented immigrants were included.

The city’s tactical response proved highly successful and became a model for other communities to emulate. By summer 2022, 91 percent of residents over 18 were fully vaccinated.

“The reason why Central Falls was the hardest hit community was because we were asking people to do something they couldn’t do – isolate – because of the lack of housing in the city,” Rivera says.

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A Trailblazing Leader

Born in New Jersey to parents from Puerto Rico, Rivera grew up in Chicago and moved to Central Falls as an adolescent. After graduating from Central Falls High School in 1995, she worked in retail jobs and completed an associate degree at the Community College of Rhode Island. In 2004, she took a job with the Rhode Island Department of Human Services as an eligibility technician connecting lowincome individuals with social services like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, working in state services until she became mayor.

“I’ve always been the type of person who

Rivera says.

For a trailblazer who has broken multiple glass ceilings these last few years, she had never considered politics. “There were a lot of people in my ear saying, ‘you should run for office’ because I was really active in the community, and I’m a hands-on person,” Rivera says. “Many times, I said it’s not going to happen. I don’t know where to begin. This is not something I’m ready for.”

A nine-month leadership class in 2014 with the Rhode Island Latina Leadership Institute got her thinking about being the voice missing in her diverse community and prepared her to go back to school to learn how to lead a community.

The flexibility of RWU’s online courses and part-time programming through the Providence campus made it possible for Rivera, a full-time working single mother of two teenagers, to earn a bachelor’s degree in public administration at age 42. She began employing her new leadership skills during her studies as she served two terms on the Central Falls City Council and became the first woman council president, transforming into a vocal and pragmatic leader. Weary of meetings that lasted for hours, she enacted a council rule requiring regular council meetings to end at 8 p.m. to keep them to under two hours.

“If you run a meeting correctly, there’s no reason for the meeting going till 10 or 11,” Rivera says.

“You have to set boundaries.”

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wants to work with people and help people,”
Rivera meets with Alberto Rivas-Lugo, director of parks and recreation, in the mayor’s office. A young girl meets Liberty, Rivera’s goldendoodle, at the city’s Independence Day celebration.
I’ve always been the type of person who wants to work with people and help people.
Maria Rivera ʹ19

Collaborating for Change

Marcela Betancur, executive director of the Latino Policy Institute (LPI) at RWU and longtime Central Falls community activist, said yes right away when Rivera’s office called in early 2021 to collaborate on an affordable housing summit and report. She was excited to draft a report built with input from the community first and then experts.

“That’s how I believe good policy is made,” Betancur says.

LPI and Central Falls hosted a United Way-funded housing summit that brought together 200 community members via Zoom and Facebook Live over three days in March 2021. Rivera moderated the event, conducted in English, Spanish and Portuguese. From there, LPI drafted a plan highlighting regulatory restrictions hindering the city’s ability to access funds and identified more than a dozen potential sites to develop housing, including vacant properties on hard-to-develop parcels, idle former industrial lands and underutilized large parking lots.

Central Falls is now on track to complete the development of 80 new housing units. Rivera wants to increase that to 200 in three years. “We have a plan and can get those moving,” Rivera says. “We have so much need here.”

Another priority is El Centro, a new community center being developed in a former Broad Street church that will become the future home of the Office of Constituent Services and Health and services for residents and families challenged by food and housing insecurity, domestic violence and mental and behavioral health issues. The city secured $3 million in federal funding plus additional outside resources for the city’s only community center.

The city is also planning to break ground in the spring of 2023 on a new high school on Higginson Avenue to replace the nearly century-old school on Summer Street.

“Central Falls has the oldest high school in the state,” Rivera says. “It’s in terrible condition. We have these conversations about (how) we continue to fail our kids. How can we help our kids succeed if we don’t give them what they need and a safe space with the tools that they need?”

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In 2013, after five years in bankruptcy, Central Falls emerged from state receivership as the “Comeback City.” Its new tagline, “Diversity That Inspires,” resulted from a collaboration between Rivera’s office and a volunteer committee. The celebration of diversity includes a vibrant restaurant scene, offering Salvadoran, Colombian, Peruvian and Mexican cuisine. Rivera also hired the city’s first Black police chief. The crime rate in 2022 was the lowest since 2004 with violent crime the lowest since 1988.

“Central Falls is not what Central Falls was 10 years ago,” Rivera says. “It’s an upand-coming city. There’s a lot happening here. I want people to come and visit our businesses and visit our restaurants and see that Central Falls has changed.”

But with a $19 million municipal budget, resources are hard to come by in a city where the $34,689 median household income is half the statewide median. The city’s one rescue vehicle was out of commission for eight months last year; the city had to

borrow ambulances from municipalities in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Rivera was unwilling to take no for an answer as she and her team pushed hard to secure federal grant funding to buy a new rescue and refurbish the old one.

“I’ve never, never worked with a mayor more engaged –genuinely engaged –with the community and the people that she serves ultimately,” says Fire Chief Scott Mello, who spent 32 years with the Providence Fire Department before Rivera hired him to lead Central Falls’ 42-person department in March 2021.

had no other options, Mello says.

“I’ve worked with a lot of mayors,” Mello says. “They’ll show up on the scene. Photo opp. The news media sees them. You turn around, they’re gone. She was there the whole time.”

I’ve never, never worked with a mayor more engaged – genuinely engaged – with the community and the people that she serves.

“Rivera gets emotional talking about being at fire scenes. “I’m doing it because as mayor of the city, it’s my responsibility,” she says, her voice breaking. “I stay with every single family until I know that they’re safe because this is a community that has so many different needs.

On a Saturday morning fire last April that displaced three families living on Kendall Street, Rivera was at the scene for three hours making sure residents received gift cards from the Red Cross and had a hotel room if they

“It’s so hard because I don’t have the resources to help everybody,” she adds. One of the families displaced by the fire in April was still living in a hotel in June. “She can’t find an apartment. She wants to stay here. Her kids have been in school here. She had lived in the same apartment for 14 years.”

Rivera pictured with some members of her staff, city workers and community members.

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Central Falls Looks Up

At the Fourth of July festivities, the crowd in Veterans Memorial Park is nearly 800 people by 9 p.m. Central Falls City Council member Robert Ferri, wearing a long coat, waistcoat, and knee breeches, has just read the Declaration of Independence. A thin ribbon of pink extends low on the horizon when it’s Rivera’s turn to take the microphone.

“OK, so now we’re ready, and you have to help me so we’re going to do a countdown,” she announces.

Ten years ago, Rivera never would have pictured this moment. As people join her counting down and erupting into cheers, there’s a sense that doors are opening for her. Pressure too, she says. Before she finished her first year as mayor, people were asking Rivera about her next step. She tells them she needs to focus on her job right now. “I have priorities for the city,” she says. “I need to focus on what I want to accomplish for the city.”

Tonight, Central Falls and its people are looking up. One by one, three white flares shoot up into the night sky. More flares follow. The colors pink, red and white sparkle overhead. Everyone’s phones are out taking photos and videos.

Rivera holds her phone skyward too and captures the magic of her city. ◊

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Many people asked for a photo with the well-loved mayor. At left, a boy enjoys cotton candy at the city’s free festivities.

GROWING OYSTER INDUSTRY

THE

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RWU’s leadership drives the blue economy in Rhode Island.

Jennifer Scappatura didn’t always make a living as an oyster farmer. But when the former style editor, now owner of Quonnie Siren Oyster Company in Charlestown, R.I., wanted to fashion a full-time career out of her love of shellfish and passion to protect the marine environment, she turned to Roger Williams University.

In 2012 Scappatura enrolled in the Applied Shellfish Farming course through RWU’s Center for Economic and Environmental Development (CEED). The course, on the schedule for 2023, was originally taught by Dale Leavitt, now emeritus professor of Marine Biology, and offers an overview of shellfish farming including how to start and sustain a commercial farm.

“RWU and Dale were instrumental in growing our success, and my contacts from RWU remain a vital resource,” Scappatura said, adding that when she visited campus for the first time, she was “blown away by (RWU’s) facility and farm.”

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For the past decade, any time she has a question related to her 5.5-acre oyster farm, she reaches out to CEED, which is housed in the Feinstein School of Social and Natural Sciences and celebrates its 25th anniversary this year.

“We have the expertise. We have the infrastructure. If anyone in the state has aquaculture-related questions, they can come to us,” said Timothy Scott, professor of Biology at RWU. “The idea is to be a research

facility for solving problems that farmers are facing.”

As a leader in aquaculture, RWU has become the region’s resource for established and aspiring shellfish farmers who can take the shellfish farming course as well as connect with university experts on everything from growing an operation, to bivalve diseases, and legal questions on siting, business startup, marketing, and expansion.

Federal Funding Helps Growing Aquaculture Industry

Now, with $1.6 million in federal funding from the fiscal year 2022 federal appropriations, secured by Rhode Island’s U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, RWU will be able to provide even more support for shellfish aquaculture farmers in Rhode Island through aquaculture research, resources, and legal services, with the goal to help responsibly grow the Ocean State’s shellfish aquaculture industry and level the playing field for farmers and small businesses.

“For more than 20 years, Roger Williams has had the leading marine aquaculture science program. We are proud to be writing the next chapter of our leadership work in Rhode Island’s growing shellfish aquaculture industry,” RWU President Ioannis Miaoulis said. “With the right planning and partnering with Senators Reed and Whitehouse and Rhode Island’s shellfish farmers, Roger Williams University will serve as blue innovation leaders that design a progressive, sustainable coastal strategy that will serve as a best-in-class model for other regions to replicate around the country.”

For more than 20 years, Roger Williams has had the leading marine aquaculture science program. We are proud to be writing the next chapter of our leadership work in Rhode Island’s growing shellfish aquaculture industry.

The funding will support CEED’s continued advancements in shellfish aquaculture science and allow scientists to continue sharing their knowledge on R.I.specific issues with shellfish farmers and the public. Funds will also expand RWU’s aquaculture operations by installing three more tanks that will raise and distribute up to four million oyster seeds annually for Rhode Island oyster farmers in a dedicated upweller system on our waterfront learning platform in Mount Hope Bay. These specialized tanks use saltwater from the bay to provide infant oysters with an abundant supply of nutritious food, an integral step in successfully growing oysters.

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Sophie (facing page) and Isabel (this page) Harrington, of Quonnie Siren Oyster Company, which is owned by their mother, Jennifer Scappatura, harvest oysters from Quonochontaug Pond in Charlestown, R.I.

Portions of the federal funding will purchase equipment to establish a histology lab to support research on shellfish disease and pollutant testing. It will also support RWU Law School’s Marine Affairs Institute, home of the Rhode Island Sea Grant Legal Program, to provide legal services and policy resources for the shellfish industry.

Aquaculture is one of the pillars of Rhode Island’s Blue Economy, so it’s fitting that Roger Williams University has become a one-stop shop for current and aspiring aquaculture farmers.

On Aug. 8, Reed and Whitehouse joined Miaoulis for a tour of the university’s oyster farm in Mount Hope Bay, oyster hatchery, aquatic diagnostic lab and aquaculture wet lab in the Marine and Natural Sciences building.

“Shellfish aquaculture is becoming an

Senator Whitehouse

integral part of our coastal ecosystem’s biodiversity, environmental stewardship, food security, and economy. Each year, the shellfish aquaculture community continues to grow, employing hundreds of Rhode Islanders and bringing in millions of dollars in sales,” Reed said. “We want it to grow responsibly and sustainably. We salute the team here at Roger Williams University. CEED offers students and people from the community a world-class education in oyster management – it’s like Oyster Farming 101. From critical research that ensures both human health and coastal health to providing

practical support for launching a new business to technical feedback on what oyster farmers need to succeed, Roger Williams has become a go-to resource for Rhode Islanders.”

Aquaculture is one of the fastest-growing food production sectors in the world, and with more than 80 shellfish farms in Rhode Island, accounting for one in every six oyster aquaculture businesses on the entire East Coast, the state boasts one of the largest and fastest-growing oyster industries in the country. According to a Coastal Resources Management Council report, Rhode Island’s aquaculture industry was valued at $7.5 million and employed 222 people, with more than 10.2 million oysters sold for consumption in 2021.

“Aquaculture is one of the pillars of Rhode Island’s Blue Economy, so it’s fitting that Roger Williams University has

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Shellfish Field Technician Susanna Osinski (left) explains the early-stage oyster-growing process happening in upwellers on RWU’s learning platform to Senator Reed, Senator Whitehouse and President Miaoulis.

become a one-stop shop for current and aspiring aquaculture farmers,” Whitehouse said. “Senator Reed and I were glad to deliver federal funding to support the university’s programs to sustainably grow the industry, create jobs, and ensure that the Ocean State continues to produce the world’s best oysters.”

RWU Bridges the Shellfish Knowledge Gap

As the value of Rhode Island’s oyster rises and businesses face increasing competition, shellfish farmer Matt Griffin, of Saltbox Sea Farm in Portsmouth, R.I., said it’s imperative to produce high-quality products. “That’s where Roger Williams and academia has helped,” he said. “Science is in everything that we do.”

This past summer, RWU’s upwellers came to the rescue when Griffin, who also has a 4.2-acre oyster farm in the West Passage,

north of the Jamestown Bridge, received smaller oyster seeds than he ordered and needed somewhere for them to grow to a size that can be planted on farms, inside bags or cages. Griffin called CEED, and staff told him he could use the upwellers on the RWU campus.

“That’s a service we can offer,” Scott said. “We want to be as helpful as we can.”

“It’s a really nice resource to have. Without RWU, there’s a good chance I could have lost a portion of those seeds,” said Griffin, who worked as a restoration technician and research associate for CEED from 2011 to 2021 and now employs two graduates of RWU’s Marine Biology program at his farm. “Other local farmers have used the upwellers at RWU to grow really small seed.”

There’s a steep learning curve to oyster farming, Griffin said, and there are barriers

with using upwellers, including having somewhere to put the tanks and learning how to use them without killing the seeds. An upweller takes up a full slip in a marina, and “marina space is hard to come by in Rhode Island and is expensive,” he said. “This is where RWU has come in handy,” providing both education to local farmers and space for them to grow seed.

“RWU’s aquaculture and shellfish experts are a valuable resource to the community,” he said.

Among other challenges facing the shellfish industry are diseases that kill crops, climate change’s impacts on farming, a host of legal and policy issues, and ensuring equal access to knowledge and research for farmers.

“It’s really valuable when academia partners with industry,” Griffin said. “As a farmer, you don’t have extra time to perform these small or large experiments to mitigate

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some of these problems. Working with a university like Roger Williams, they can help bridge the knowledge gap.”

One of the biggest issues for oysters up and down the East Coast is disease. As Scott noted, there’s ongoing research to help develop disease-resistant strains. “That’s helped the industry,” he said. “That’s the kind of thing we like to study. There wouldn’t be any farms if we didn’t have the ability to do this line of research.”

RWU’s Aquatic Diagnostic Laboratory, the only one in the state, is an important resource, offering services to the aquaculture industry in the region, with a focus on diseases in finfish and shellfish.

“They provide a great service to farmers,”

Griffin said. “If you have an issue with your crop you can’t explain, it’s easy enough to pick up the phone and call. They can run diagnostics to see if you have a disease problem. That’s a huge bonus to the industry.”

Currently, samples are shipped from RWU to California for testing, but the federal funding will allow the university to start doing the diagnostic work in-house. “We can do our own samples, take in other samples, and also train our students,” Scott said.

RWU will use some funds to acquire new state-of-the-art analytical and histology equipment to enhance the chemistry program’s intersecting work in ocean health.

“We see it as an opportunity for growth,” said Lauren Rossi, professor of Chemistry. “It’s tying in what we’re doing here: building the department and opportunities for students.”

Along with the purchase of new analytical equipment for our organic chemistry lab which will play a central role in education, research and training to promote aquatic ecosystem health, RWU will be able to significantly expand research opportunities for students and faculty work on coastal resilience. “This really updates and builds the capacity of RWU,” she said. “We really see the students being able to contribute to the research and learn from the data.”

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Senator Reed pulls up juvenile oysters being cultivated in RWU’s oyster farm. These oysters serve multiple purposes, used as part of classroom lectures, laboratory experiments, research projects, and to improve aquaculture knowledge and develop disease-resistant strains of the state’s favorite bivalve to consume.

Law School to Aid Farmers with Legal and Policy Concerns

Owning a shellfish farm is a huge investment, so understanding the legal aspects of the industry is important, Scappatura said, especially as more neighboring property owners are fighting against proposals for new farms, saying they don’t want them in their backyards.

“Getting a new farmer land is one of the hardest things right now,” she said.

As part of the federal funds, RWU’s Marine Affairs Institute will hire a part-time research attorney whose responsibilities include determining the current hurdles for individuals and small businesses interested in aquaculture and shellfish harvesting in Rhode Island and identifying if changes are needed to current laws and policies to increase accessibility for both businesses and consumers, according to Julia Wyman, director of the Institute and adjunct professor of Law at RWU.

“When I was starting my business, I was in over my head,” Griffin said. “If there’s a pro bono resource that can guide farmers along this process, that would be extremely helpful.”

A trusted resource for law and policy research in the region and nationally, the Marine Affairs Institute is receiving this funding because “we have proven we have the capability to do this important research in-house,” Wyman said. “This type of project is our bread and butter.”

“We’ve heard that one of the challenges for growing small businesses related to aquaculture and shellfish farming is understanding what the regulations are,” she said. “I expect we’ll look into opportunities for partnerships that could reduce the burden

on individual farmers.”

Law students will also have opportunities to be involved, working with the new research attorney, she added.

In addition to conducting leading research and sharing knowledge and resources with the region, RWU’s mission is to engage undergraduate and law students in research, ensuring that the next generation has the skills and experience to make advancements in the blue economy in Rhode Island and beyond. As part of CEED, students are trained in shellfish hatchery and aquaculture farming methods and techniques.

“Students are involved in projects that are meaningful to the community and economy. They’re solving real problems, working with professors, and when they graduate, they are extraordinarily welltrained and get great jobs,” Scott said. “

Up and down the East Coast, there are many shellfish hatcheries being run by RWU graduates.” ◊

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spawned and studied
Wet
AT A Glance Rhode Island Aquaculture 84 aquaculture sites across Rhode Island. 368 acres under cultivation. 222 employed in the aquaculture industry. $7,542,583 in combined value of aquaculture products for consumption and seed sales. 10,187,262 oysters sold for consumption –the number-one aquaculture product of Rhode Island. Data from 2021 report by Coastal Resources Management Council.
Senator Whitehouse gets a closer look at the Northern Star Coral,
inside RWU’s
Lab.
RWU’s own Ferry Cliffe oysters, grown in our bayside oyster farm, delight Senator Reed and Senator Whitehouse during a celebration of the university’s aquaculture efforts.

SAILING TO SUCCESS

Molly Matthews knew her team should focus on strengthening boating techniques as they headed to the Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association National Championship (ICSA) in May. But there was another essential skill that helped secure the Hawks’ continued reign as number-two national team sailing race champs: communication.

Hawks sail to third successful runner-up finish in team racing at Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association National Championship
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Spencer Cartwright ’22 (left) and now-senior Molly Matthews (right), captains of the RWU Sailing Team, compete in the InterCollegiate Sailing Association National Championship (ICSA) at Tulane University in New Orleans in May.

“I’m really proud of how we pulled together as a team at the event,” said Matthews, now a senior Biology major and Mathematics minor from Grosse Ile, Mich., co-captain and skipper for RWU’s Sailing team. “Midway through the season this year, we had trouble communicating boat to boat. It was one of the biggest challenges we had to overcome.”

With help from a communication specialist, “we learned how to better work as a team, resolve issues, and communicate better,” she said.

For the third time in the last four seasons, RWU has claimed a second-place finish at the ICSA College Sailing Team Race National Championships, coming in as No. 2 in 2018, 2021 and this year at Tulane University in New Orleans May 16-18. (The 2020 competition was canceled due to Covid-19.) Their national runner-up streak in these fierce, multi-day competitions is impressive, ceding the win only to big names like Yale University this year and the U.S. Naval Academy the prior season.

Having four veteran students on the team, who were allowed to compete after losing a year to the pandemic, also helped the Hawks soar in the competition. “To have the same team together for two years in a row, it gave us that time together to really push toward that goal,” Matthews

said. “It’s a huge honor to be out there as a small school competing against big names like Stanford, Georgetown, and Yale.”

Co-captain and skipper Spencer Cartwright ’22, a Civil Engineering major and Mathematics minor from Nassau,

Bahamas, said the team spent less time learning and more on improving their performance this season. “New sails allowed us to be more dynamic with how we sailed the boats,” he said. “We felt faster than ever. We had a lot of confidence all throughout the year.”

By the end of the competition, “we all felt like we had never sailed better together throughout the entire season,” RWU Sailing Head Coach Amanda Callahan said. “The team’s efforts were superhuman. It was amazing to see what they’re capable of.”

“It means a lot,” Cartwright said of placing second. “We sail six days a week and put in countless hours. It was a relief to see all that work we put in meant something. All of us grew a lot throughout our time here.”

The competition, however, wasn’t all smooth sailing. When they arrived in New Orleans, a handful of the team had the flu (they all tested negative for Covid-19), and most weren’t used to the high heat and humidity, Matthews said, noting they worked hard to stay hydrated and recover for competition.

“We knew we would have to pace ourselves to stay focused,” Cartwright said. “We showed up ready to perform. Competing at such a high-level event, everyone was so good.”

ON A STREAK

Posting the best season in program history, the Women’s Lacrosse team captured their second CCC Championship in a row and broke into the national rankings – as No. 25 in the country – heading into the NCAA Division III Tournament, under new head coach (and former RWU Lacrosse player) Amanda Magee ’10. In addition to placing six All-CCC Team members, Mandy Beck became the first player to earn CCC Offensive Player of the Year since Assistant Coach Kaelin Hogan ’18 earned the award in 2018.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 34
IT’S A HUGE HONOR TO BE OUT THERE AS A SMALL SCHOOL COMPETING AGAINST BIG NAMES LIKE STANFORD, GEORGETOWN, AND YALE.

WOMEN’S RUGBY SMASHES NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

What does it take to win the national tournament on the very first time you go for it? Building a team that feels like a close-knit family, according to Women’s Rugby captain Vanessa Surridge ’22.

“Being from such a small school and playing all these big-name schools at nationals got in our heads a little bit, but that’s where the family dynamic stepped in,” said Surridge, a Psychology major and Spanish minor from Hampton, Conn., who graduated in May. “Even though we were in a super unfamiliar place, we all had each other. We beat these teams that probably had never heard of us before. We made a name for ourselves and put Roger Williams on the map.”

The Women’s Rugby team made RWU history when they won the Women’s D1 Club National Championship at the Collegiate Rugby Championship May Madness 7’s – and in the first year they were invited to the competition.

At Airline Stadium in New Orleans, the Hawks went 5-1 overall on Memorial Day

weekend to claim the title. They showed up with two shut outs (29-0 and 27-0), one loss, and pulling ahead in three tough battles that included their victory over University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire in the final match.

To prepare for their win, Stephanie MacLeod ’22 said the team studied rugby games, trained harder and ate healthier – and gave extra credit to their coach Caitlin Mallahan ’21, M’22, of Laconia, N.H.

“I think that everyone was really pushing ourselves and each other. We were already a very close team; we would hang out before and after practice,” said MacLeod, a Business Management major and Psychology minor from Beverly, Mass., who won MVP at the national competition. Striving for the national championship “just brought us even closer

on and off the field.”

The team was ready to play their best at the national contest, coming off a dominating regular season and blasting the competition with a complete shut-out win of the 2022 Beast of the East Collegiate Rugby Tournament – which RWU’s Men’s Rugby team also swept among the men’s teams – the largest collegiate rugby tournament in the U.S., with more than 80 teams represented. Going 6-0 this year, the women’s team has also won the Beast of the East in 2015, 2016, and 2017.

“All the effort the girls put into training over the past year really contributed to their physical ability to be able to pull off a win like that,” said coach Mallahan, who is completing an M.A. in Special Education after earning a B.A. in History/Secondary Education at RWU. “But at the end of the day, it was their heart that made them pull through.”

35
Team comes together to make RWU history sweeping the Beast of the East tournament

MEN’S RUGBY DOMINATES AT BEAST OF THE EAST

Men’s Rugby also closed out a firstplace victory (5-0) at the Beast of the East Tournament, marking the second time in school history that both Hawks teams swept this contest in the same year.

“Everyone stepped up” to the competition and performed well, said captain Joe Depoalo, a now-senior Architecture major and Art and Architectural History minor from Boston, Mass. “It was great seeing our women’s team go out and perform as great as we did and celebrating two amazing wins for RWU.”

HAWKS’ HIGHLIGHTS

Women’s Basketball brought home their first Commonwealth Coast Conference title in school history, following a historic 25-win season and Head Coach Kelly Thompson’s 200th game win.

Men’s Swimming & Diving team won their fifth consecutive, and the Women’s Swimming & Diving team won their second consecutive, New England Intercollegiate Swimming & Diving Association Championships

Riley Williams and Ellie Field from the Swimming & Diving teams earned All-America Honorable Mention honors at the NCAA Championships, while Wrestling sent three athletes to the NCAA Tournaments

Five Women’s Track and Field and eight Men’s Track and Field athletes earned All-CCC selections, including a CCC Field Rookie of the Year honor for Sam Bielawa. Men’s Lacrosse placed six on the All-CCC teams, Baseball added seven and Softball placed two, including a Co-Player of the Year honor for infielder Isabelle Rosado.

Men’s Lacrosse athletes Jared Grier and Tim Mullane each recorded their 200th career points, while Grier set the Hawks’ program record for career goals, scoring 160 in his career.

Baseball saw a program-best start to the season and broke into the national top 25 for the first time in program history.

RWU Athletics finished the year in second place for the Men’s and Women’s CCC AllSports Trophies by capturing CCC titles for the Women’s Basketball and Lacrosse teams and Men’s Cross Country team, along with conference finalists points in Women’s Soccer, Tennis and Volleyball and CCC runner-up in Men’s Tennis.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 36

GIVING

Roger Williams University and School of Law would like to recognize the individuals and organizations that made gifts and volunteered their time to the University during the 2021-2022 fiscal year. Thanks to their commitment, RWU has launched a visionary strategic plan that will strengthen all aspects of the institution.

Key:

’00 Roger Williams University Alumni

L’ Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a M’ Master’s Degree

P’ Parent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a PL’ Parent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a PM’ Parent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a GP’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a GPL’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a GPM’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a HD’ Honorary Degree Recipient

LHD’ Honorary Degree Recipient-RWU School of Law

Individuals

Support from alumni, parents, and donors ensures that Roger Williams University and School of Law continue to thrive. Gifts of all levels help us provide for student scholarships, faculty research initiatives, upgraded facilities, and more. The following list recognizes individuals who made contributions including gifts, pledges, and payments on prior year pledges.

UNIVERSITY INDIVIDUAL DONORS

$25,000 and up

Wendy S. Atterbury P’17 and Harry L. Atterbury P’17

Charles W. Boos A.I.A. and Carol Boos

Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11 and Elizabeth Brito P’11

Julie M. Cole ’99 L’04

Heather N. Culp Boujoulian ’97 and Michael J. Boujoulian

William S. Cummings and Joyce M. Cummings

Linn Foster and Steven Freedman

Mario J. Gabelli HD’92 and Regina Pitaro

William J. Geraghty ’78 and Kathleen Lynch

Vincent P. Helfrich ’82 and Jeanne Helfrich Les Hiscoe and Barbara Hiscoe

Denise L. Johnson P’18 and Keith Johnson P’18

Rudolf J. Laager and Alix M. Laager Barrie D. Lee ’70 and Mary Lee David W. McGraw P’10 and Melissa A. McGraw P’10

Donald C. McGraw III P’05 and Sacha A. McGraw P’05 Elizabeth A. McGraw ’10 and Philip T. Bastianelli

Robin L. McGraw and Elizabeth McGraw

Marcia Morris, Esq. HD’19 and Arnold S. Hiatt Regina A. Shakin P’19 and James H. Shakin P’19

Michael G. Tennyson and Eileen M. Tennyson Joseph D. Whelan, Esq. and Cathleen Whelan

Anonymous

$10,000 to $24,999

James R. Andrade ’77 ’79 and Deborah Andrade

Lauren Arnold

Timothy E. ’83 & Brenda J. Baxter

George N. Bolden, Sr. ’74 PM’05 P’98 and Nancy Bolden

Kyle J. Casserino ’13

Rebecca Collins, Collins Construction Co., Inc., Class ’93

Brian Doherty and Laurie Doherty

Julie I. Englund and Brian Fitzgerald

Dr. Jonathan ’10 and Hadley ’11 Enright

Dory Faxon L’99 & Brad Faxon

Ryan A. Fletcher ’11

Gerald Francese Esq. Larry Goldstein and Jill Goldstein

Adam Gross FAIA, Ayers Saint Gross

Jeffrey M. Grybowski, Esq. Frank Hood ’97 and Elizabeth Hood Julie K. Hyden P’11 and Kenneth A. Bergman P’11

Michael Integlia, Jr. ’70 P’12 and Beth Integlia P’12

Elizabeth L. Kelly P’22 and John F. Kelly P’22 Laurie J. Landeau V.M.D. and Robert J. Maze Anita Manuck P’04 P’04 and William Manuck, Jr. P’04 P’04

William F. McKeon ’84 and Polly McKeon

William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89

Christopher J. Montalbano and Julie Montalbano

Stephanie L. Noris ’92

Michael C. O’Brien P’19 and Sharon M. O’Brien P’19

Thomas S. Olsen ’11 and Mary E. Olsen Lisa J. Raiola and Waterman F. Brown VII Todd L. Rechler ’93

Janine Remy

Mark Schiller ’89 and Kathleen Schiller Amelia Schofield

Siv Schultz P’22 and Paul R. Schultz, Jr. P’22 Timothy B. Yeaton ’80 and Susan Yeaton Anonymous

$5,000 to $9,999

Bethany J. Cavanagh ’96 and Jonathan D. Cavanagh ’97 John A. Crawford III P’21

Rick Daubenspeck ’85 P’17 and Judy Favreau

Gregg Davenport P’22 and Stephanie Davenport P’22

Kim G. Davis and Judith N. Davis

Tim Flanigan

Alexa Gagliardi

Margaret Gagliardi P’07 and John Gagliardi P’07

Luis F. Gomez ’92

Peter A. Heard ’80 and Beth H. Heard George R. Hemond ’72 and Christine Hemond

Charles A. Henderson P’99 and Judy M. Henderson P’99

Ernest J. Jaxtimer P’12 and Marie T. Jaxtimer P’12

Jonathan P. Jaxtimer ’12 and Elizabeth A. Magner-Jaxtimer ’12 Mehdi Khosrovani ’80 and Rosemary Khosrovani Matthew R. Kinell

David B. Lautz

Tracy L. Levey and James K. Levey

Antonio Masone, Jr. ’91 and Jennifer E. Masone ’92

Howard Messing and Colleen Messing Bernardo H. Motta

Jonathan D. Neal P’21 and Susan M. Neal P’21 Robert M. Page ’93

John J. Park and Donna L. Park Young K. Park and Anja Langbein-Park Laurel E. Petracca ’13

Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16

John A. Puniello ’97

Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06 and Kyle A. Rocha, Esq. ’06 L’09 James M. Shyer ’91

Jordan M. Stone and Sarah Lederberg Stone

Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12 and Lisa A. Taranto P’12

Marco P. Uriati, Esq. L’96 and Jennifer L. Uriati Judith W. Vigar

Zaozao Zhang and Huanmin Shen Anonymous

$2,500 to $4,999

Jerauld C. Adams and Sara Adams William R. Ashworth II

Janet P. Atkins and Tarleton H. Watkins II Anthony E. Autiello, Sr. ’74 and Deborah Autiello

Mark A. Barnard and Susan L. Barnard William B. Bryant P’20 and Barbara Preussner-Bryant D.M.D. P’20

Rodney A. Butler and Dionne L. Butler Gordon Craig III ’94 and Kristen J. Craig Bradford A. Dean ’73 and Sandra Dean Martin J. Dempsey, Jr. ’86 Meghan E. Dockery-Cremins ’05 Joseph I. Dziedzic

Charles B. Floyd ’14

Adam Goldman and Charmaine Goldman

Dan F. Kelly and Debora O. Kelly

Peter Langan Ann L. Lautz

Elizabeth D. Lawrence and Bryan H. Lawrence James P. Loring, Jr. and Kelly A. Loring

Deborah Marchini and Randall Forsyth Brian P. McGrath ’10 and Kayla M. Morency ’12

Ioannis N. Miaoulis and Heidi Maes

Robert P. Pompei ’75 and Shirley Pompei James F. Reardon P’13 and Susan T. Reardon P’13

James P. Reardon ’13

Deborah Reynolds and Charles W. Reynolds Adam E. Risman ’16

Nancy E. Rowe P’21 and Larry J. Rowe P’21 Ron Simoneau

Sandra J. Souza and Frederick D. Souza William L. Spruill III ’85 and Deneen M. Spruill

Sheri A. Stuart ’86 and James Stuart Amy Sullivan Berkeley Stephen E. White P’14 and Marion K. White P’14

Anonymous

$1,000 to $2,499

Christina B. Abisla ’13

Pamela Abrams-Warnick and Craig A. Warnick

Kyle Adamonis ’82 and John Adamonis Theresa M. Agonia ’13

Mina Bergman G’11 and James Bergman

Mary J. Bonavita P’22 and John J. Bonavita P’22

Veronica C. Bulman ’08

Alexa M. Califano ’20

Frank J. Califano P’20 and Christine M. Califano P’20

Andrew C. Cohen and Joyce R. Kulhawik

Jonathan E. Cohen and Amy L. Cohen

Travis P. Cooney ’06

Ryan P. Corry ’16

Stephen M. Cote ’06

Michael Cullinan and Donna Cullinan

Robert A. D’Aiello ’73 and Jenny D’Aiello

37

Jerry W. Dauterive and Janie W. Dauterive

Michael Daversa ’85

Susan R. Dempsey ’98 and Matthew G. Dempsey

Ron E. Depoalo and Mara A. Depoalo

Donna Desmarais and Anthony Demarais

Davida R. Dinerman and Bradley J. Dinerman

Michele E. Dolliff

Earl H. Doyle, Jr. ’63 and Roberta Doyle

Brian E. Egan and Gillian E. Egan

Robert Egan and Colleen Egan

Larry S. Eichler, Esq. and Alison Eichler

Jillian L. Emmert ’14 and Matthew A. Emmert

Susan G. Esserman and Andrew H. Marks

Roseann Evans

Michael Fanning and Cynthia Fanning

Dennis Fleischmann P’10

Christopher B. Gove P’11 and Deborah M. Gove P’11

Nancy Grandgeorge P’81

Robert Griffin

Helen T. Hedberg P’13 and Brian D. Hedberg P’13

Robert C. Hibbard and Emily G. Hibbard

Catherine Hibbitt and Timothy E. Rockwell

H. David Hibbitt and Susan Hibbitt

Kristin L. Jacobs

David B. Kallenberg

Susan Kelley ’96

John J. King and Jocelyn L. King

William L. Kollmer ’68 and Marianne Kollmer

Robert A. Langelo ’80 and Dorothea Langelo

William E. Larson ’87 P’16 and Rose G. Larson ’87 P’16

Christine Lee

Kevin M. Lieberman ’12 M’12

Mark T. Lieberman PM’12 P’12 and Deborah S. Lieberman PM’12 P’12

Jeff Lipshires P’13 and Ruthie E. Lipshires P’13

Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 and Laura K. Maguire

Ronald L. Martel ’70 and Candace A. Martel P’22

Robert Martufi

Jason C. Mastrangelo, Esq. ’98 L’01

Robert J. Matthews and Julie A. Ellstrom

Robert J. Mazaika P’12 and

Sandra L. Mazaika P’12

Virginia B. McBride ’82

Rachel L. McCormack and William D. McCormack

David A. McMullen ’01

Susan M. McTiernan

Keith A. Mills ’88 and Christine Gomes Mills ’88

Kelley Mohrmann

Jennifer R. Nolan P’19 and John P. Nolan, Jr. P’19

Paul A. Pabis ’83 ’97 M’17 P’17 and

Patrice Wood P’17 HD’17

Richard H. Potter and Janice M. Potter

Carol H. Pray PL’16 and Scott W. Pray PL’16

Susan E. Predaris

Salvatore Rizzo

Debra S. Robbins and Scott A. Robbins

Daniel J. Rossignol and Colleen Rossignol

Dominick Ruggerio

Craig Seminara

Robert C. Silvia ’63

John Spinney, Jr. and Erin Spinney

Debra P. Stokes ’79 and Robert Kaplan

James Tackach

Michael Tandurella

Charles R. Thomas and Jennifer W. Thomas

Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05

David Welch P’22 and Beth Welch P’22

James G. Whiffen ’76 and Wadad Whiffen

Neal Williams and Sheryl Williams

Thomas Wong

Joshua B. Wright

Amy G. Zerman P’22 and Jared P. Zerman P’22

Cindy Zobian

Anonymous

$1 to $999

Bryan P. Aaron and Erin M. Aaron

Caroline Aaron

Michael D. Aaronson and Roberta H. Aaronson

Drew I. Abbott ’20

Rachel Abell

Alexi Accomando

Curtis Acosta

Jonathon Acosta

Kevin Adamec

Connor M. Adams ’15

Edgar G. Adams, Jr.

Roberta E. Adams

Tate Adams and Tammy Adams

Isau Adebimpe ’80

Catherine A. Adlerman and Jeffery L. Sitzer

David A. Affonseca ’00

Jennifer K. Agell ’19

William M. Agnew ’70

Scott Ahlman

Steven K. Aitken

Ziad Al Achkar ’12

Susan J. Alba ’98 ’05 and Guy Alba

Ellen Albanese

Virgina S. Albert ’17

Stephanie P. Aldana ’21

Diane L. Alexanian

Peter R. Alfieri

Pious Ali

Abdulmajed A. Aljabhan M’13

Thomas M. Allan ’74 and Maryanne M. Allan

Carolyn Allard and Ernie Allard

Jeff Allard

Glenn D. Allen ’73 and Raylene Allen

Dennis J. Allsop ’74

Marjorie L. Almansi

Cristina G. Almeida ’08

Joshua J. Almeida ’17 ’18

Natalie F. Almeida ’19

Darwin Almonte ’12

Josephine J. Alves ’80 and David Alves

Manuel L. Alves IV and Elsie M. Alves

Megan Alves ’91 and David Alves

Ann M. Alvord ’10

Karen Alzate ’19

Carolina Amaral

Donna A. Amaral

Meredith Amaral Todd Amaral

John Amitrano

Danielle M. Anastasia ’22

Dennis Anastasia

Karen M. Anastasia P’22 and Paul D. Anastasia P’22

Leo Anastasia

Tracy Andersen Ken Anderson

Ann Anderson and Jeff Anderson Ann W. Anderson

Christopher B. Anderson ’13

Donald B. Anderson ’84

Marlisa E. Anderson and Robert C. Schnoor Sarah H. Anderson

Eric H. Andler ’00

William Andrake, Jr. ’78 and Debra Andrake

Bob Andreozzi

Mark J. Andreozzi

Carolyn P. Andrews and Onofiro J. Andrews

Geoffrey Andrews

Graham Andrews

Mikey Andrews

Sheila K. Andrews ’88

Angela B. Ankoma

Mary Anskat

Patricia Anton

Stephen Antoni

Paul Aparicio

Marvin L. Appel P’18

Carmel Ann Appenzeller P’22 and Henry T. Appenzeller III P’22

Gerald P. Araneo and Rebecca G. Araneo Kim Arasimowicz

Ron Araujo and Mary Araujo

Sharon H. Araujo

Delia Arellano-Weddleton

Jody Ariola P’16 and Francis L. Ariola P’16

Daniel J. Arket ’16

Ann K. Armater P’15 and Raymond J. Armater P’15

Jacqueline A. Armillotto ’82 and Ronald F. Armillotto

Raymond Armstrong and Carol Armstrong

Stephen J. Arrico ’12

Jeannette L. Arrighi ’84

Deborah J. Ash ’93 and Jeffrey R. Ash Noah P. Ashe ’20

Stephen D. Assumma ’17

Timothy E. Atwood ’09

Lucas S. Aubrey ’15

Jason Audet

Kristen S. Audet ’15

Peter J. Avallone ’07

Scott Avedisian M’11

Steven Avedon

Albert J. Avellar and Diane D. Avellar

Maureen Aveno

Samuel Avila ’22

Nibal N. Awad ’12 and Patrick M. Byrne ’11 Haya E. Awwad ’16

Max W. Axelrod ’17

Tyler Ayers

F. Michael Ayles ’91

Timothy Babineau

Grace L. Baccay Brandon L. Baez ’21

Dina M. Bagley

Thomas M. Bain ’65 and Gerri Bain Edward P. Bajek ’86 and Michele Bajek Amy G. Baker P’22 and David F. Baker P’22

Arianna C. Baker L’17

Ryan Baker

Margaret Balch-Gonzalez

Breanne L. Baldino ’16

Pasquale Balestrieri

George W. Ballantoni ’90 and Laura Ballantoni

James Balzan

Chris Balzano

Richard Balzano

Vincent M. Balzano and Yvonne P. Balzano

Kimberly J. Baptista

Karina Barao ’21

Nicholas P. Barbaria ’18

Scott J. Barbaria P’18 and Catherine R. Barbaria P’18

Michael S. Bardan ’02

Anthony C. Barila P’06 and Maureen Barila P’06

Todd M. Bariso and Jennifer L. Bariso Betsy D. Barker P’14 P’16 and Thomas A. Barker P’14 P’16

Robin Barlow

Kendra E. Barnard

Patricia Barnard

Amanda Barnes

Stuart K. & Jane L. Barnes Kris Barone ’92

Lorelain Barreto

The Barrett Family

Veronica Barrett

Christine M. Barretta ’95 and Frank Barretta

Susan Barros

Ailish M. Barry ’15

Coleen Barry James R. Bartlein ’16

Emma W. Bartlett ’21

Fred Bashara and Mary Bashara Dean R. Bates ’00 M’01 and Laura M. Bates ’02

Elizabeth J. Battaglia P’20

Rachel N. Battista ’16

Jean E. Bauer ’80 and Richard Bauer

Kirsten Baughan

David K. Baum ’83 and Jennifer Baum Carolyn W. Bauman

Roger F. Bauman, Jr. Michael A. Beane

Russell W. Beauchemin

Tracy Beaudoin

Carolyn Beaulieu

Carter Beaulieu

Donald L. Beaulieu and Eileen T. Beaulieu

Douglas Beaulieu

Jacquelyn M. Beaulieu

Nicholas Beaulieu

Laurie T. Becker ’21

Richard J. Belasco ’93 Bridget Belgiovine

Sam Bell

Richard C. Bellavance ’73 and Judith Bellavance Joseph Bellitto and Kathleen Liati Jean Bellucci P’21 and Paul E. Bellucci P’21

Jonathan Beltran ’13

Morganna C. Beltre and Zeus Beltre

Elizabeth A. Benagh

Jeffrey S. Benagh

Paul E. Bender Ph.D. and Margaret Case

Vincent Benevento and Elaine Benevento Susan T. Benevides ’16 P’19 and Joseph F. Benevides P’19

Emily K. Bennett

Kyle Bennett

Susan C. Bennett

Dana Bennis

James H. Benson and Paula Y. Benson

Jillian Benson

John C. Bergeron ’72

Michael G. Bergin, Jr. ’21

Mercedes Bernal

Sylvia Bernal

Jeffrey J. Bernard ’02

Tammy Bernier

Lois Bertini ’81

Jennifer Best ’78

Adam M. Betancourt ’12

Marcela Betancur

Jonathan D. Betts and Kathleen Betts

John A. Beyer, Jr. ’91

Michelle M. Biancardo-Sahi and Vincent K. Sahi Robert C. Bianchi ’84 and Brenda Bianchi

Kelly S. Bidawid

Robert P. Bielawa and Alison N. Bielawa Kelly L. Bigliani P’22 and Thomas R. Bigliani P’22

Pat Bigliani

Patricia Bigliani

Taylor A. Bigliani ’22

Kim Bigonette

John B. Billik ’77 and Beth Billik

Melissa Billings and Richard J. Soedler

Karen H. Bilotti and Gary Bilotti

Joseph H. Bina ’17

Susan M. Bingham ’76 and Robert M. Widmer Erin M. Bird ’12

Daisha M. Bishop ’22

Meredith M. Bishop ’05 and Joshua A. Bishop ’05

Diane Biundo

Kristina A. Biyad ’16

Katherine A. Black P’22

Laura A. Blackall and Dennis D. Blackall

Patricia E. Blackburn ’90 and Robert J. Blackburn

Kelly A. Blackhurst

Mary Blackhurst

Sheila S. Blanchette ’90

Syndi Bleiweis P’22 and Eric Bleiweis P’22

Marjorie J. Bobola ’96 and Gary H. Bobola

Ida Bochner-Brown ’73 and Thomas Brown

John J. Bociek ’75

Dorisa S. Boggs PM’19 P’17 P’20 and William J. Jones PM’19 P’17 P’20

David S. Bogosian and Diane S. Bogosian Sandra Bogosian

James E. Boisvert and Ann M. Boisvert

Michelle Bolduc

Natasha Bolin ’10

Anabela Bonanca

Benedetto J. Bonavita ’22

Mark Bonavita

James M. Bonifazio and Eugenia Bonifazio Nicole Bonitati ’18 ’20

David M. Bono ’95 and Romayne Bono

Frank J. Bonura ’87 and Filomena Bonura

Kimberly A. Boor and Stephen P. Boor

Nicole Booska and Sean Booska

Fred Booth III ’94 ’97 P’15 and Karen Booth P’15

Jillian M. Booth

Scott E. Booth ’16

Kevin E. Borbee P’17 and Sharon P. Borbee P’17

Robert Bordieri

Willie W. Borkai ’14

Allayne P. Boruch P’21 and John J. Boruch, Jr. P’21

Avery E. Boruch ’21

Erica Borzone

Rachel M. Borzone

Robert W. Borzone and Sharon Borzone

Sandra J. Bosco and Mark J. Bosco

Susan M. Bosco P’09 P’17 and Gregory Bosco P’09 P’17

Kerrie L. Bosse P’22

Carol A. Botelho ’84

Kenneth & Tammy Bouchard

Michelle D. Bouchard and Michael D. Bouchard

Rene & Mary Bouchard, III

Sean M. Bouchard, Esq. ’12 L’15

Jason R. Bouchard-Nawrocki ’04

Mark Boucher

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 38

Caitlin M. Boufford

Danielle Boufford

Dawn E. Boufford

Michael D. Boufford

Jeremy Bourg

Michelle Bourgelas

James T. Bova P’19 P’19 and Lori S. Bova P’19 P’19

Kaitlyn M. Bovee ’14

Jason Bowen ’17

Jill E. Bowen

Scott Bowen and Susan J. Bowen

Rebecca Bowman

Crystal Bozigian

Christopher E. Bracone ’88

Teresa P. Braga

Andrew P. Bramson

James M. Braz

Alfred Brazil, Jr.

Maryann Breer

John T. Breglio and Susan C. Breglio

David J. Breit

Martha Breit

Matthew Brennan and Stacey Brennan

Meghan R. Brennan

William Brennan

Katherine Brezina

Molly E. Brigan

Irena Briganti

Kristy Briles

Jenn Brimer

Christopher J. Brindamour ’88 and Lori A. Brindamour

Hans E. Brings and Sarah J. Brings

Christian R. Brinkley ’21

Gretchen Brion-Meisels

Celeste Brochu

Robin Brochu

Brittany E. Brogno-Perry ’17 L’20 and Brendon Perry

Eric F. Bronson

Elzabeth Brookes

Joseph R. Brookes

Charles D. Brooks, Jr. and Jessica A. Brooks

Carroll Brophy

Mark B. Brosky ’86

Elizabeth Brousseau and Normand A. Brouseau

Aaron A. Brown ’97 and Tracey B. Brown ’97

Clement W. Brown, Jr. ’73 and Diane Brown

Colleen A. Brown, Esq. and John S. Berg

David E. Brown

Eileen R. Brown

Kenneth L. Brown ’71

Margaret Brown

Michael K. Brown

Shari L. Brown ’17

Susan E. Brown P’21 P’22

William L. Brown

Anthony M. Brunetti ’76 and Jan Brunetti

MacKenzie G. Bryan ’18

Corey Bryant

Elizabeth B. Bryant

Amber-Leigh A. Brzezinski ’10

Charles Brzezinski

Kristy Brzezinski

Niki Brzoza

Mark Bubeck

Emily Bucci and Ernest Bucci

Margot Bucci

David B. Buckler ’84 and Daris C. Buckler

Liz Buckley

Michael Buckley and Alison Buckley

Dennis Bull

Karlin Bundy

Michele Bundy

Maria Teresa Buontempo

Aaron R. Burdick and Kathy I. Burdick

Alexandria Burdick

Irving Burdick and Cynthia Burdick

Teresa Burgin

Jerrel A. Burgo ’10 and Danielle L. Burgo ’10

Elizabeth Burke Bryant

Barbara Burke

Michelle K. Burke ’92 and Andrew E. Burke ’92

Scott Burke

Tayla E. Burns ’20

Maiken E. Bursig ’11

Janice M. Bury P’17 and Donald P. Bury P’17

Christopher A. Busby ’16

Guido A. Bussinelli III and Regina D. Bussinelli

Bob Butkus

Erik M. Butler ’12

James F. Butler III ’92

Raymond W. Butti ’99 and Danielle Butti ’01

Breanne Buzay

Elizabeth R. Byrne and James J. Byrne

Paige M. Byrne ’18

Zach Clapp

Lisa B. Cabnet ’84

Ana I. Cabral P’10 and Manuel F. Cabral P’10

Fernando M. Cabral P’05 and Laudalina Cabral P’05

Theresa M. Cabral P’18 and Jose G. Cabral P’18

Andre B. Caceres and Patti M. Caceres

Maureen Cadman

Lisa M. Cafferty ’96 and Tristan L. Cafferty ’97

Raymond W. Cahoon, Jr. ’90

Robert Cahoon and Daniela Cahoon

Lilli A. Cain P’22 and Brian A. Cain P’22

Martha Cain

Rebecca P. Cain and Paul W. Cain

Joseph B. Cairoli ’85 and Lisa M. Cairoli ’86

Luke A. Calabrese

Michael Calabrese and Catherine Calabrese

Talia Calabrese

Maribeth Calabro

Christian Caldarone

Valeria Caldwell Gaines

Amanda D. Callahan

Anne B. Callan ’90 ’96

Ivone Maia Camargo Nicolas J. Cambi ’11

Michael Camelo and Jodi L. Camelo

Donald F. Cameron, Jr. ’80 P’22 and Katherine A. Cameron P’22

Thomas Cameron

Jacqueline M. Cammarata ’08

Max D. Cammarota ’17

Elijah T. Camner ’19

Kimberly A. Camosci ’12

Elisabeth Campbell and Stephen Campbell, Jr. Jennifer L. Campbell

Julie M. Campbell ’04 and Benjamin D. Campbell

Steve & Marylou Campbell

Laura Canfield

Erin E. Canning ’19

Jacqueline Canola

Anna M. Cano-Morales and William F. Morales

Monica Canova ’16 M’19

Victor F. Capellan and Diana Capellan Theresa A. Capelo ’09

Maria Caporizzo

John W. Card ’71 and Pauline Card

Elizabeth A. Cardenas, Esq. L’12 and Aaron M. Cardenas, Esq. L’13

Ryan J. Cardoos ’94

Carlos A. Cardoso ’05

Margaret Cardoso

George Cardozo and Molly M. Cardozo

Grant Carey

Peter A. Carey ’06

Ann E. Carlson P’15 and Steven P. Carlson P’15

Kurt A. Carlson and Deirdre A. Carlson

Patrcia A. Carlson-Gollaher and David C. Gollaher

Conner J. Carlton ’14

Leonard A. Carlucci ’13

Evan J. Carneiro ’20

Steven D. Carnevale ’13

Doris Carney

Kimberly A. Carney and John B. Carney

Christopher R. Carollo ’91 and Karen Carollo

Mary E. Caron ’86 and Donald Caron

Jordyn Carpenter

Kris Carpenter

Adam Carr

Kyle Carr

Liam M. Carr ’00

Margaret M. Carr and Christopher E. Poulin

Michelle Carr

Thomas Carrafiello and Sharon Carrafiello

Amy D. Carrasco and Chris Carrasco

Blair F. Carroll ’13

Kathleen S. Carroll and Brian J. Carroll

Matthew J. Carroll ’92 and Erika Carroll

David B. Carroll P’13 and Susan H. Carroll P’13

Carol Carsky

Thomas M. Carta ’16

Jenn Cartee James M. Carter

Nanette S. Cartwright P’22 and

Thalburgh C. Cartwright P’22

Spencer C. Cartwright ’22

Edward P. Carusi M’04

Connor J. Case ’17

Cory R. Case ’17

Joseph Casey

Melissa Casey

Carol Cashman

Sharon L. Castelli ’86

Chris Casterella

Lisa Castlevetro P’22

Erica N. Castro ’12

Jane P. Castro

JoAnn D. Castro ’78 P’14 and Kenneth J. Castro ’78 P’14

Vasco Castro III

Beverly E. Caswell ’98

Jason M. Catalano ’03

Amy E. Catanese ’12

Keith R. Catanzaro

Deborah J. Catone and William Catone

Joshua Catone

Keith C. Catone

Catherine Cavanaugh

Kevin J. Cavanaugh and Kerri L. Cavanaugh

Mary Cavanaugh and Marty Cavanaugh

Kathleen Cedeno

Linnea K. Cedergren ’82

David Ceisler

Rosie J. Ceisler

John Celano and Laura Celano Bilge G. Celik

Frank Celli and Gina Celli

Reginald Centracchio ’86 and Linda A. Centracchio

Anne-Marie P. Cerda and Juan M. Cerda

Mandi Chaiyabhat

Susan Chakmakian

Leonardo Chamorro

Michaela J. Champagne and Kevin G. Champagne

Jimmy Chang

Anne Chapin

Kurtis Chapin and Carrie Chapin

Jennifer Chapman

Paul E. Chapman ’91 and Brandy S. Chapman

Cynthia M. Chappell P’09 and Eric P. Chappell P’09 Emily M. Chappell ’09

Mikaela Charbatji

Fred Charpentier

Allison J. Chase Padula and Paul J. Padula Kristi Chase

Mary R. Chase ’86 and Dean Chase Catherine R. Chasse ’20

Celeste V. Chasse and Daniel B. Chasse

Tara E. Chatowsky ’21

Taylor E. Chatowsky ’21

Prashant A. Chavali ’22

John T. Chave ’21

Beckie Cheng

Jeremy Chiappetta

Tiffany Chila and Steven C. Chila, Jr. W. Scott Child ’91 and Sarah A. Blanchard-Child ’90 Christopher J. Chipchak ’20

Daniel Choffk

Laura B. Choiniere ’81 and Robert M. Choiniere

Bruce E. Chorney ’74

Debra Christensen

Thomas R. Christensen ’78 and Debra Christensen

Martha Christina ’77

Kathleen M. Chrupcala ’21 and Thadeus W. Chrupcala III Rachel E. Chuckran ’13

Kar Hing Chung

Christopher Chutz

Carmen Ciardiello

Leslie J. Ciarleglio P’18 and Eugene A. Ciarleglio P’18 David N. Cicilline

Jessica M. Cigna

Katie Cioe

Francesca A. Cioffi ’22

Bob Cipriani and Carol Cipriani

K. Clark

Louis B. Clark ’82

Mary Clark

Lindsay W. Clarken ’08

Paige Clausius-Parks

Maureen Clavet and Brian L. Clavet

Brenda J. Clement

Wendy A. Clifford P’17

Edward C. Clifton LHD’21 and Audrey Clifton Charles Clinch IV and Sharon Clinch

Robert J. & Francesca M. Clines

Anthony L. Coccarelli ’99

Justin Cochran ’18

Caitlin R. Codding ’07

David C. Codero and Pamela B. Codero

Reese Codero

David P. Coelho and Joan K. Berlin

Humberto Coelho

Paul Coen, Jr. and Debra Coen

Jacqueline T. Cohen ’12

Amy J. Cola ’19

Anthony Colantonio ’81 and Patricia Colantonio Paul J. Colantuoni and Karen E. Colantuoni

Jennifer Colburn

Donna M. Collier

Caitlin M. Collins ’17

Kimberle’ah Collins ’97

Logan Collins

Dennis J. Collinson ’80 and Patricia A. Collinson Ian R. Colomer ’15

Daimar Colon

Nadya A. Comas L’15

Christopher J. Commans PE ’88

John J. Conaty ’73

Danielle Concannon

Joe Concannon

Kevin W. & Brooke A. Congdon

Paige A. Congdon ’12

Christopher Conidi Kim Conidi Caitlin Conley Dylan Conley Serena M. Conley ’71

Penny L. Connolly and Richard J. Connolly Robert Connolly Brady Connor Claire Connors

Philip Connors

Fred Constancia Albino Conte ’65

Abigail E. Cook ’15

Adeline Cook

Christopher P. Cook and Julie F. Cook

James A. Cook and Donna G. Cook

James C. Cook P’15

Ronald C. Cook and Cheryl Cook

John E. Cooke and Kathleen C. Cooke

Bert Cooper

Christine Cooper

Laura Corbett

Michael Cordeiro Michelle Cordeiro Anthony E. Core ’17

Nicole Corey

Robert M. Corey and Kimberly A. Corey

Tom Cormican and Wendy L. Allen

Robert A. Cornwell ’87 and Lucia Cornwell

Arlex A. Correa Ramirez

Lise M. Corriveau P’16 and Jean P. Corriveau P’16

John P. Cortellessa III ’02

John P. Cortellessa, Jr. P’02 and Victoria A. Cortellessa P’02

Lynn Corwin

Allen J. Costa ’91 and Evelina Costa

David J. Costa ’90 and Tina Costa

Todd M. Costa ’00

Fernando Costantini ’87 and Deborah J. Costantini ’85

Jane Costanza

Andrew J. Costanzo and Sara C. Costanzo ’99

Lauren Costanzo

Robert Costanzo and Mary Janet McCarthy

Daniel C. Costello ’94

Steven Cote

Michael J. Courtney and Maria S. Courtney Jennifer V. Couture P’22 and David M. Couture P’22

39

Robert H. Coyle ’82

William E. Coyle III ’73 and Mary Coyle

Danielle M. Crafford ’08

Jessica M. Craig ’97 and Thomas P. Craig

Alison M. Cranshaw ’08 and David Cranshaw

David M. Cravanzola ’00 and Kelly A. Cravanzola

John J. Creegan III and Kathleen Creegan

Patricia Creem and Anthony Creem

Holly D. Cressy P’21

Albert A. Cristante and Florence A. Cristante

Brigette A. Croke ’17

Joseph R. Cronin ’91

Collin C. Crowell ’14

Jessica L. G. Crowell

Kelly A. Csizmadia and Brian A. Csizmadia

Allyson Cubillo

Gonzalo Cuervo

Frank E. Cullerton and Megan M. Cullerton

Diane Cumming and Herbert Cumming

Matthew Cummings

Amy Cunneen

Bernard Cunniff ’80

Melissa J. Cunningham and Robert M. Cunningham

Michaela F. Curcio ’21

Christina B. Curley ’92 and Matthew D. Curley

Elizabeth Curley

Joshua M. Curtis ’02

Dave Cusick

Alan C. Cutting and Sandra C. Cutting

Jonathan Cyr

Perry C. Cyr ’13

Armindo A. Da Silva ’06 ’08 and Dianne Rochette-Da Silva

Suzanne Da Silva

Christopher J. Dabek ’00 and Lauren A. Dabek

Tracy M. DaCosta ’92

Samantha R. Dagle ’22

Heidi A. Dagwan and Raymond M. Dagwan

Jason E. Dahl, Sr. and Stacy J. Dahl

Edward Dale and Megan Littlefield

Mathieu W. Dale

Melissa R. D’Alessandro ’07

Jill Dallaire and Justin L. Parker

Linda J. Dallaire and William A. Dallaire

Joanne Daly

Kim Daly

Ashley E. D’Ambra

Albert J. D’Amelio and Jeannine D’Amelio

Kevin Damon

Kristen J. Dansereau

Thomas Dansereau and Nancy E. Dansereau

Lisa Dantas

Kenneth Daponte P’10 P’12 and Maryelizabeth Daponte P’10 P’12

Margaret E. Daubenspeck ’17

Douglas Dauria

Andre Davia ’80 and Susan Davia

Michelle A. Davignon and Kevin A. Davignon

Ann C. Davis ’12

Billy Davis

Hailey Davis

Michelle L. Davis ’84 and Harcourt Davis III

Peg Davis

Michelle J. Davis-Gridley P’22 and John F. Gridley P’22

Jordan Day

Priscilla De La Cruz

Doris M. De Los Santos ’20 and Lucas A. Sano

Claudia V. DeAlmeida

Debra DeAlmo ’75 and John L. DeAlmo ’74

Shannon M. Dean P’21 P’22

Cory F. DeBias ’04

Kyle C. Debias ’04 and Patricia L. Debias ’04

Suzanne DeBiasa and Raymond J. DeBiasa

Thomas M. Decatur ’85 and Rhoda A. Decatur

Charlotte Decesare

Nick Decibus

Paul E. Deckett ’79

Paul Declement P’22 and

Andrea L. Declement P’22

Paula Declement and Raymond Declement

Mallory B. Decof ’06

Sandra J. DeCotis

Ronald Decubellis ’84

Janel A. DeCurtis ’18

Aida Defeo

Alfonsina Defeo

Antonio Dmitri Defeo

Carmine Defeo

Gaetano Defeo

Grace Antonia Defeo

Guy A. DeFeo and Karlin A. DeFeo

Kylie Defeo

Linda Defeo

Maria L. DeFiore ’00 and Christopher D. DeFiore ’00

Joyce E. Degerolamo

Cate L. Delaney

Gregory K. Delaney and Nissa L. Delaney

Michelle M. Delaney and Jospeh P. Delaney, Jr. Erica L. Delaney-Paul ’12

Margarita M. Delaporta ’19

John J. Delehanty ’04 and Katherine A. Delehanty ’07

Raymond S. DeLeo II ’78 P’13 and Jane S. DeLeo P’13

David Delfino

Alfred J. Della-Posta ’76

James V. DeLuca and Heather A. DeLuca Christine M. Demaio

Hannah R. Denette ’21

John J. Denio P’12 and Margaret M. Denio P’12

Allan M. Dennis and Cara L. Dennis

Grace A. Depalma

Kathleen Derian

Robert J. Dermody

Michael L. Dern

Christina M. Desanti P’22 and Rudolph S. Desanti, Jr. P’22

Andrew Deschenes

Michelle Desiata ’22

Anthony Desimone

Paula Deslauriers ’85

Christopher B. Desmarais

Kyle J. Desmarais P’21 P’22 and Sandra M. Desmarais ’93 P’21 P’22

Patricia M. Desmond P’18 and Michael J. Cardelle P’18

Mr. Donald G. Desrochers ’71 and Ms. Debra A. Martin Derochers ’75

Margaret M. Deston ’01 and Albert Deston III

Richard Devault

Jack Devin

Judith Devine

Joey Diaz

Eliza P. DiBara ’16

Anthony P. Dibartolomeo ’12 Daniel G. DiCamillo

Ana DiChristofaro

Tabitha DiDinato

Cindy DiFrancesca and Terry DiFrancesca

Amanda Difranco

Jennifer O. Dillon

Patrick Dillon

Frank D. DiLorenzo ’10

Jennifer A. Dimatteo ’94

Joy C. Dingle, Esq. L’03

Maria DiNitto M’19 L’19

Janice Dinobile

Christine E. Dion P’11

Riley E. Dion

Todd R. Dion and Kelly E. Dion

Nathan E. Dionne ’20

Bryanna DiPaolo ’22

Kimberly A. DiPietro

David DiSanto and Joyce DiSanto

Britney J. Dixon ’19

Rebecca Dixon P’18 and Peter O. Hilburn P’18

Charles Dobson ’75

Mark T. Dobson and Jill M. Dobson

Sean C. Dobson and Iwona Dobson

Amy L. Doherty ’99 and Michael J. Doherty ’97

Kevin C. Dolan and Julie H. Dolan

Kristi F. Dolan ’20

Mitchell Dominique

Mary Ellen Donahue

Beth Donahue-Smith P’21 P’22 and Christopher S. Smith P’21 P’22

Jennifer Donnelly

Michael J. Donnelly ’04

Kevin B. Donohue and Michele S. Donohue

Bill Donovan

Mary-Ellen K. Donovan ’87 and

Thomas Donovan

Steven C. Dorney ’73

Glenn P. Dorrance ’99

David Dosreis

Peter M. Doucet II ’01

David V. Doucett ’04 and Diane N. Doucett ’04

Keith M. Doucot ’12

Meghan Douglas

Mark Douglass

Cheryl D. Dow Sevrina M. Dow ’22

Rosanna Downey

Angela M. Downing and Kirk T. Downing

David A. Doyle ’89

Deborah Doyle Margaret Doyle

Michael Doyle

Polly E. Doyle P’15 and James G. Doyle P’15

Sean P. Doyle ’15

Timothy L. Doyle

Caitlin E. Doyon

Torin E. Dragsbaek ’88 and Ann M. Dragsbaek Diana Dreher P’22 and Mark C. Dreher P’22

Holly Dreher

Gregory J. Drennan and Karen E. Drennan

Frankie Driscoll

Hannah Driscoll ’22

Jennifer L. Driscoll P’22 and John L. Driscoll P’22 Nora A. Driscoll P’18 and Thomas J. Driscoll P’18

Julian Drix

Angela M. Droogan P’15 P’16 and Joseph F. Droogan P’15 P’16

Tracie L. Drouin and Louis F. Drouin III

Jamie Drucker

Dale J. Dubinsky ’11

Duane A. Dubois and Loree B. Dubois Jennifer K. Dubost P’16 and Christian H. Dubost P’16

Wayne L. Dubreuil ’76

Izabella Dudek-Haffner ’93

Judith Dugan Kayleigh Dugan Patrick Dugan Ryan Dugan

Matthew P. Duggan ’09

Matthew R. Duggan ’14

Megan E. Dumaine ’09 ’14

Richard Duncan

Andrew Duncanson

Peter P. Dunn ’12

Taylor B. Dunn ’08

Jennifer L. Dunseath Mary P. DuPont Gladue ’72 Melissa A. DuPont

Michael L. Durand USA (Ret.) ’73 James S. Durante II ’21

Shelby Durham Wendy Durham

Keith V. Durkin ’99 and Noelle R. Durkin ’00

Christine M. Durnin ’12

Lisa A. D’Urso P’12 P’18 and Gerald S. D’Urso P’12 P’18

Chris M. Duryea and Elise R. Duryea Tony Dussault

Michael J. Dutra and Lori A. Dutra Brian P. Dutton and Julie C. Dutton Hillary Dutton

Stephen Duvel and Miriam E. Duvel Emily R. Dvareckas ’22

Rachel L. Dvareckas ’22

John Dyer ’76

Katherine M. Earle ’98 and Trevor Earle

Sarah D. Eaton and Perry L. Eaton Luke Ebersold

Melinda L. Eckert P’18 and James Eckert P’18

Barbara B. Edward P’12 and David S. Edward P’12

Kathryn E. Edwards ’04

Cheryl Egan and John Egan

Christopher J. Egan, Jr. ’79 and Patricia M. Egan ’83

Jon M. Egan ’05

Kyle Egan

Matthew M. Egan ’78 and Nancy J. M. Egan ’78

Riley S. Eger ’17

Paul E. Eichin PE’58

Cynthia A. Elder ’87 and Robert Elder

Caroline E. Elie

Caitlin Elnitsky ’07

Michael J. Emmer and Anita Lichtenberger Brynn Emmert

Daniel Emmert

Lyla Emmert

Leonard W. Engel and Kristina A. Karpinski

Robert S. Engel, Jr. ’80 P’13 and Colleen E. Engel P’13

Dana N. Englander ’21

Anthony R. Ennis and Virginia Ennis Paul Eno

Heather Epstein

Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12

Kenneth E. Ermann ’12

Shawn E. Errasti ’19

V. Douglas Errico and Lisa F. Errico Steven Esons ’77 P’07

Ken Esposito and Jill M. Esposito ’86 P’18

Tyler Estey

Karen J. Ethier M’03 and Robert E. Ethier ’11 Melissa Evans

Margaret C. Everett

Nancy Evjen

David A. Fabel P’20 and Melissa S. Fabel P’20 Christine S. Fagan P’11 and Stephen G. Fagan P’11

Donna N. Failla and David A. Failla Donald R. Falardeau ’73

Antonieta Falconi

Clare Fallon

Gillian Falvey

John Falvey

Kevin Falvey

Matthew R. Falvey

Patrick Falvey

Paul F. Falvey and Andrea Falvey

Bannister Family

Ann A. Famularo, Jr. and Joseph S. Famularo Madison L. Fancher ’21

Matthew P. Fanikos ’17

Kyle D. Farabaugh ’18

Cassandra E. Faria ’22

John T. Faria ’70 and Betty Faria Derek Farias

Kristen Faro

Nancy J. Farrell P’22 and William J. Farrell, Sr. P’22

Mark Fasano

Pat Fater

Robert W. Faustine ’12 and Marissa A. Faustine ’12

David Fazio

Jenn Feeney

Kaylin K. Fehan

Richard Fehan and Lisa Fehan

Maureen Fehrs P’22 and Eric Lunau Gail Fenske and Donald E. Cecich

Anna Fenton

Christopher D. Ferace ’89 and Nancy Ferace Doris Ferguson P’05

John A. Ferguson ’14

Robert E. Ferguson, Jr. ’97

Albert J. Ferland, Jr. ’70 and Mary A. Ferland Marcella K. Fernandez ’16

Paola Fernandez

Barbara Ferraro

Lisa M. Ferraro and Greg V. Ferraro

David E. Ferreira ’92 and Stacey Ferreira

Susan Ferrin

Wayne B. Ferris

Glen P. Ferriter ’71

Dennis L. Ferro, Jr. ’19

Christian H. Fesenmeyer P’15 and Monique S. Fesenmeyer P’15

Mark P. Fesenmeyer ’15

George R. Fetrow

Francine Figelman

Matthew Figelman

Raymond A. Filippone ’72

Dallas J. Fill ’07

Adam J. Finkelstein ’84 and Patricia Finkelstein

Charlotte Finn

James E. Finn P’08

Edward G. Finnie and Keri Lee Finnie

Stephanie Fiorentino

Craig M. Fisher IV and Kathryn M. Fisher George H. Fisher ’87

Michael L. Fisher ’05

Ryan C. Fisher ’08 and Anna S. Fisher David H. Fitol ’14

Judi L. Fitol P’14 and David A. Fitol P’14 Donald A. Fitting, Jr. P’21

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 40

Sandra D. Fitzgerald and John T. Fitzgerald

Joseph J. Fitzsimons ’04

Catherine E. Flanagan

Donna M. Flannery and James J. Flannery, Jr.

Brian R. Flavia ’88 P’20 and

Michele B. Flavia P’20

Kevin J. Fleming P’21 P’22 and Deirdre M. Fleming P’21 P’22

Sheila S. Fleming P’17 and John J. Fleming P’17

Chris Flor

Steven Flores

Rachel Flum and Josh Flum

Christopher D. Flynn ’21

Christopher R. Flynn P’21 and Kristen P. Flynn P’21

Dan Flynn

Jeanne Flynn

Joan Flynn and Jack Flynn

Joseph Flynn

Mary Flynn

Kerry A. Fogarty and John J. Fogarty, Jr.

Stacey B. Foisy ’84 and Mark T. Foisy

Kristina Folan

Joseph N. Folcarelli P’13 and Ann Marie M. Folcarelli P’13

Aaron G. Foley and Rachel M. Foley

Elizabeth Fongemie

Paola Fonseca-Fernandez

Jason Fontaine ’21

David E. Ford and Nancy M. Stratton

Richard J. Foresteire, Jr. and Kara L. Foresteire

Donald C. Forster ’80

Brendan Forte and Noel L. Forte

Jeanne Fortin Van Vleck

Martin Fortin P’08 and Betsy Fortin P’08

Edward L. Foss ’77

Amanda M. Foster, Esq. L’04 and Richard A. Foster, Esq. L’04

Cole R. Foster ’20

Jennifer M. Fox

Joy Fox

Kristina S. Fox

Rosetta Fraleigh and Scott P. Fraleigh

Sandra I. Franca

Victor E. Franca P’15 and Maria Franca

Cameron N. Francis ’21

Chantal Francois

Scott D. Frankel ’80

Cheryl Franklin

Rebecca G. Franks

Rosalie H. Franks and John Franks

Maryann Frattaroli

Robert P. Frazee ’01

Tanya Frazier

Kristen A. Friezo and Marc J. Friezo

Richard L. Frigon ’71 and Patricia A. Frigon

David J. Frissora P’22 and Kelly W. Frissora P’22

Catherine H. From ’06

Michael Frost

Eric E. Frost-Barnes P’19 and Kate Luhr

Caitlin Frumerie

Bradley J. Fuller and Julie L. Fuller

Barbara P. Furtado P’07

Robert Furtado

Kim Gaboury

Jennifer A. Gaffga P’22 and Jesse J. Gaffga P’22

Kathleen Gaffga

Edwin Gaffney

Paul F. Gaffney P’21 and Sheila M. Gaffney P’21

Richard Gaffney

Christina Gagliardi

Richard Gagne

Brenda Gagnon

Thomas A. Gagnon P’16 and Elizabeth W. Gagnon P’16

James M. Galib and Christine L. Galib

Jean C. Galib ’91 and Thomas Galib

Karen Gallagher P’20 and

Francis J. Gallagher P’20

Michael J. Gallagher

Peter F. Gallagher ’20

Theresa Gallagher and Michael C. Gallagher

Andrew T. Gallant ’11

Trish Gallery

Henry F. Galligan and Maura A. Galligan

Katherine A. Galligan

Matthew Galusi

Charles Galvin P’08 and Janet Galvin P’08

Dan Gambill

Diony Garcia, Esq. L’12

Manuela Garcia

Thomas J. Garcia ’21 and Valerie S. Garcia ’21

Justin P. Garden ’21

Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 and Douglas F. Garland P’22

Joe Garlick

Mary H. Garnett

Tracy Q. Garrett P’22 and Shawn M. Garrett P’22

Devorah E. Gartner P’22 and

Robert S. Gartner P’22

Evynne L. Gartner ’16

Holly Garvey

Gregory F. Garvin ’06

Anthony R. Gatehouse ’04

Ernest Gaudet, Jr. ’70 and Shelah A. Gaudet

Camilo A. Gaviria ’04

Jennifer Gaviria

Lori Gay Manigo

Teral Gay

Kristin M. Gazard and Thomas F. Gazard

Tracie Gelbstein

Stephanie Geller

Patricia Gempp and George E. Gempp, Jr. Gregory S. Geneus

John Gentile and Yvonne Gentile

Donna A. George ’80

Frederick W. George ’88

Richard W. Gerold ’73

Catherine E. Giacalone

Jennifer Giannotti P’22 and Russell Giannotti, Sr. P’22

Kathy Giaquinto

Stacey L. Gibson and Eric W. Gibson

Kathryn B. Gilbert P’22 and P David Gilbert P’22

Julie A. Gildea P’21 P’22 and Kevin J. Gildea P’21 P’22

Camille Giliberti Vito Giliberti

Pamela Gillespie

James Gillis and Brenda Gillis

John F. Gillis and Lisa M. Gillis

Tracy A. Ginna ’89

Susan Ginsberg and Mark Ginsberg

David L. Gioffreda ’81 and Lori A. Gioffreda

Laura E. Giordano ’21

Ralph Giordano and Gerri Giordano

Sofia M. Giovannello ’13

Denis J. Giroux ’05

Dan Giuliani

Claudia A. Giustino

Monika Gizewicz

Donna Glavin

Tabatha L. Glavin ’92 ’97

Thomas R. Gleason ’12

Scott T. Glennon ’85 and Barbara Glennon

Gwynnethe Glickman

Mark Glickman

Scott Gluck

Elyse B. Glynn ’11

Richard Godfrey

Irene Godin

Louis Goetting P’08 and Jeanne Goetting P’08

Kim Goggin-Constas ’78 and George Constas ’80

Victor P. Goglia and Ann Marie Goglia

Erin E. Gogolin and Elton W. Gogolin III

Andrew P. Goldberg ’91 and Lisa B. Mainville ’92

Edward H. Goldberg ’62 and Mary L. Goldberg

Andrew Golden

Megan B. Goldschneider ’22

Donna Goldstein

Robert S. Golembeski and Nancy E. Golembeski

Sergio Gomez

Antonio Goncalves and Kathleen Goncalves

Irene Goncalves

Joaquim N. Goncalves, Sr. and Celeste E. Goncalves, Sr.

Andre Gonthier and Dianne Gonthier

Christopher Gonyea

Stephanie Gonzalez L’21 and Jorge O. Elorza, Esq.

Marilu Gonzalez-Yanez ’12

Gillian Goodrich ’18

Marne Goodrich and Peter Goodrich

Maureen S. Goodrow P’22 and James P. Goodrow II P’22

Derrick E. Goodwin ’07

Jeffery M. Goodwin and Denise J. Dion Goodwin Patricia A. Goodwin P’22 and

Dennis M. Goodwin P’22

Michael T. Goralski, Sr. and Kristin L. Goralski

Anne J. Gorczyca and Richard A. Hargreaves

Valerie Goris

Barry M. Gorman

Deborah Gorman

Michael P. Gorman ’92

Tom Gorr and Tara Gorr

Gerard E. Gosselin

William H. Gould, Jr. ’65 and Marjorie Yater

Jane Govednik

Mahesh Goyal ’90 and Kanta Goyal

Dianne Goyette

Katherine E. Grabowski ’22

John F. Grady III

Timothy M. Grady and Elizabeth A. Grady

Gary L. Graham and Susan N. Graham

Todd A. Graham ’83

Catherine G. Graney ’85 and Bernie Graney

Alyssa N. Grant ’21

William Grater

Kelley Gravell

David Gravino

Colleen A. Gray

Diane Gray

Sarah Gray

James J. Greatorex, Jr. and Michelle A. Greatorex Denise Grebe P’22 and John R. Grebe P’22

Rosa G. Greber

Salvatore Greco ’59

James Greeman and Carol Greeman

Christopher E. Green ’12

Susan E. Green P’21 and Thomas R. Green P’21

David W. Greene ’91

James L. Greenslit

Benjamin J. Greenstein

Amy E. Greer L’20

Nancy Greer

Monique A. Gregg and William F. Gregg Grant A. Gridley ’22

Matthew D. Grieve ’02

Mackenzie Griffin

Jennifer Griffith Mena Griffiths

Edward D. Gross III and Martha E. Gross Rosa Gross

Barbara L. Grota

Denise Gruttadaro

Alexander J. Guedouar ’13

Margarita G. Guerrero

Shirley M. Guertin and Leo E. Guertin, Jr. Marie Guidetti

Virginia M. Guilfoyle

Lisa Guillette

Brenna K. Guilmette

Charles L. Guilmette P’16 and Michele M. Guilmette P’16

Steven P. Guilmette and Margaret A. Guilmette Susan A. Guilmette

Alexa Gulino

Alexander Gulino

Joey Gulino

Monique Gulino

Marilu Gullen and Gregory S. Gullen

Matthew T. Gullo ’09

Daniel M. Gumb ’08

Lindsey K. Gumb ’09

William R. Gumb P’08 and Donna A. Gumb P’08 Mike Gutierrez

Kara A. Guy and Gregory T. Guy

Cameron Habib

Doria Habib

Roger O. Hackett ’73

Ryan W. Haggerty ’05 and Martina L. Haggerty ’05

Kifle W. Hagos and Wunesh W. Bairu

Peter A. Hainley, Esq. L’06

Khalidsohail Hakim

Kenneth Haley P’10 and Bernadette Haley P’10

Lauren L. Hall Barthen ’02

Dawnmarie Hall

Deborah Hall

Jami L. Hall ’16

Margie Hall

Michael L. Hall and Linda G. Hall

Elizabeth Hallenbeck ’73 and Steven E. Lippincott

Melinda Hall-Wood P’22 and Timothy Wood P’22

Alan I. Halsband ’89

Kerry L. Hamberger

Bob Hamel

Stephen J. Hamel ’12

Jolene F. Hamil-Cole M’13 and Robert A. Cole Harold Horton ’55

James J. Hamilton, Jr. ’17

Ryan M. Hammond ’13

Allen S. Hance

Gwendolyn M. Hancock, Esq. L’09 and Robert D. Hancock

Kathleen E. Hanifan

Elizabeth A. Hannon P’13

Marcus A. Hanscom

Meghan L. Hansen and John P. Hansen, Jr. Lois C. Harada

Eileen Harcar

Jerome J. Harcar ’80

Conner R. Harding ’19

Kathleen Hardisty

Kimberly Hardy

Raymond W. Hardy and Kristin M. Hardy Sara Harkins P’21

Robert Harper, Jr. and Linda A. Harper

Luisa Harrington P’21 and James R. Harrington P’21

Morgan E. Harrington ’21

Adrianne M. Harris

Clifford T. Harris

Phil Harris

Gretchen Harrison

Jane F. Harrison and David Harrison

Michael Harrison ’84

Nicholas C. Hart ’21

Peg Hartman and Ted Hartman

Scherrie Hartman and Thomas Hartman, Jr. Thomas Hartman

Thomas Hartman

Zayvier Hartman

Alan J. Hartstein ’69 and Barbara Hartstein

Douglas Harvey and Lisa Harvey

Adam G. Harz ’22

Julia M. Hasbrouck ’90 and Brett Hasbrouck Chris E. Haser ’82

Neda A. Hashemi ’21

Jill Haudenshield

Lianne Haughey P’22

Kerry A. Hausdorf

Eric A. Havelock ’83 and Kathy Day

Judith Havelock

Brooke Havens

Claudia A. Haviland P’21 and David A. Haviland P’21

Catherine A. Hawkes

Patricia Hawkins

Andrew B. Hawley ’09

Eileen M. Hayes

Kimberly Hayes

Mary Ann Hayes

Tammi Hayes

Patricia Haynes

Dacia M. Hayslip ’04

Danielle Hazelton

Ron Hazelton and Lynn Drasin Lee Head and Sandy Head

Jason Heath

Laurel A. Heath P’22

Jake A. Heaton ’19

Lonny Hecker

Patricia E. Heelen P’22 and Christian D. Heelen P’22

Victoria R. Heimer-McGinn Ph.D. and Brendan McGinn

Frank Heitkamp

Gary L. Helton, Jr. ’05

Alexander Henao

Alison R. Henderson

Corinne Henderson

Michele E. Henderson

Talulah Henderson Henderson

Sarah E. Henley Slottje ’06 and Spencer C. Slottje ’07

Katherine Henry ’04

Daniel J. Herbein ’14

Theresa A. Herbein P’14 and David S. Herbein P’14

Randall L. Herko ’85 and Nancy Herko Marcia Hess

Timothy M. Heston ’85 and Julie E. Heston

41

Melissa Heuston P’09

Lisa M. Hewlette P’21

Amy Hiatt

Carolyn Hibbard

Owen Hibbard

Kevin M. Hickey and Regina F. Hickey

Gerald M. Hicks

Colin Higgins

Ian Higgins

George C. Higham and Stephanie A. Higham

Steven Hilger P’22

Judith A. Hill

Micheal B. Hill and Ellyn K. Hill

Zeke Hill

Connor J. Hillemeir

George J. Hillman ’73

Olivia K. Hilton ’13

Cole M. Hinchey

John Hindle

Clarence Hinton

Julia Hinton

Pamela M. Hinton P’22 and Clerance G. Hinton III P’22

Eric Hirsch

Jeffrey Hirsh

Karol Hjerpe and Eric Hjerpe

Kathleen A. Hobin and Thomas E. Hobin, Jr. Ed Hobson

Michaela Hobson

Michele M. Hobson

Daniel Hodge

Brian E. Hoffman ’11

Gregory L. Hoffman

Valerie R. Hoffman ’80

Carol C. Hogan ’82 and Warren R. Hogan

Dan Hogan

Lidia M. Hogan P’18 and Peter Hogan P’18

Michael S. Hollander ’08

Madison J. Hollen ’22

Christian Holman

Rita J. Holman ’80 and Jos N. Holman ’81

Jill V. Holme and Neil Holme

Tanya G. Holstein ’93 and Jeremy Holstein

Ruby C. M. Hope

Stephanie B. Hope and Leonard J. Hope

Kristin A. Hopkins-Clegg ’01 and Graham P. Clegg ’01

Mike Horan

Michael Horn

Rachel E. Horsman, Esq. ’11 L’16

Susan Horton

Peter M. Horvath and Lisa A. Horvath

Adam J. Horwitz

Gary M. Horwitz and Susan E. Figelman

Jessica Horwitz

Matthew B. Houck ’13

William Houck P’13 and Jan Brenner P’13

Peter Houldin and Deb Andrews

Brandon Houle

Jillian R. Houle ’21

Jonathan Howard Samuel Howard

Christopher Howell and Christine C. Howell

Taylor C. Howell

Michael D. Hubley P’11 and Michele D. Hubley P’11

Kelsey Hughes

Nancy L. Hulme ’05

Connor R. Humphries

Jack M. Hunger ’15

Debra L. Hurley P’13

Pamela Hurley

Sharon B. Hurley

Susan Hutson

Kelly J. Hutzell ’96

Alan R. Hyden

Matthew Hynes

Nicole Hynes and Timothy R. Hynes

Noah A. Hysong ’20

Stephanie C. Iacovino P’21 and Ralph M. Iacovino III P’21

Diana Iannuzzi

Joseph T. Iaria and Monica A. Iaria

Veronica Ibarguen ’15

Joseph A. Ilardi ’14

Pompea Imondi

Christine Incalcatera ’02

Harvey Ing P’21 and Stefania M. Ing P’21

Kyle Ingram

Diana Inkova

Anthony S. Intravaia and Diane J. Intravaia

Laura Richard Irving

John Irwin Kohei Ishihara

Lisa M. Iwuc and James S. Iwuc Ryan Jabs ’12

Peter A. Jacavone III

Madeleine Jacks

Brian Jackson ’00

Edward P. Jackson ’21

Jennifer Jackson Tashya Jackson ’22

Jason Jacobi

Donna G. Jacobs P’20 P’21 and

Howard I. Jacobs P’20 P’21

Gailon Jacobs

Marissa A. Jambor ’13

Carole A. James ’96 and Todd James

Sandra A. Janitto and John M. Jannitto

Nancy M. Jannitto P’16 P’17

Joseph Jannittto

Marissa L. Janton, Esq. ’02 L’11 and Lori Janton

Staci Janush and Mark Ralsky

Stephanie A. Jaques ’14

James G. Jaworski ’82 and Pamela Jaworski

Laura Jaworski

Michael C. Jefferson ’78 and Kathleen O’Leary

Glenn Jeffrey

Elizabeth T. Jellison ’98 and Jeffrey R. Jellison ’98

Jake Jempty

Brandon M. Jenkins ’21

Evan Jenkins

Michael E. Jenkins P’21 and Stacey A. Jenkins P’21

Pamela Jennings

Patricia A. Jennings

Pamela Jensen

Gabriela M. Jerahian ’20

Lisa A. Jerahian P’20

Matthew T. Jerzyk, Esq. L’08

Kyler R. Jesanis ’14

William Jesmer P’09 and Mary Jo Jesmer P’09

Jeffrey S. Jezard ’12

Lillian C. Jeznach

Stephanie M. Jimenez ’21

Alexander R. Johnson ’22

Alexander S. Johnson and Denise M. Fabiano

Byron M. Johnson ’12

Dolores Johnson

Donna M. Johnson and Tracy C. Delgrego

Erika F. Johnson ’15

Maryann Johnson

Rita Johnson

Cynthia A. Jones P’12 P’16 and Arthur W. Jones, Jr. P’12 P’16

Darnell Jones

Judy K. Jones

Madison Jones

Matthew N. Jones

Shana Jones

Misloude Joseph

Gregory V. Josselyn ’11

Deborah A. Jost P’21 and Jeffrey J. Jost P’21

Margaret M. Joyce P’22 and David S. Joyce P’22

David Junz

Kathleen A. Jutras

Brian C. Kacmarsky ’96 and Marie Roberts

Deborah L. Kaiser P’22 and Robert W. Kaiser III P’22

Stephen P. Kalber and Kelly L. Kalber

Rosalie Kalisz

Rebecca Kanost

Barry Kaplan ’72 and Pearl Kaplan

Hannah B. Kaplan ’20

Corey Karas

Elaine C. Karpeichik P’18 P’20 and James E. Karpeichik P’18 P’20

Jacqueline B. Katz ’17

Linda Katz, Esq.

Amanda M. Kaufman ’17

Judy Kaye

Amanda L. Keane ’15

Meghan E. Kearney ’06 and Matthew D. Kearney ’07

Sandra Kearney and Gary J. Kearney Christine M. Kearns ’90

Kelly A. Keating ’16

Mary Ellen Kee and Byron S. Kee

Kevin D. Keegan, Sr. and Lisa A. Keegan

David Keeney and Nancy Keeney

Jeffrey D. Keeney and Michele G. Keeney

Todd Keeney

Kelly B. Kelleher P’17 and

Timothy F. Kelleher III P’17

Eileen J. Kelley and Kevin R. Kelley

Eleni D. Kelley ’22

Raymond D. Kelley ’64

Ryan Kelley

Austin B. Kelly ’13

Brendan J. Kelly and Mara E. Kelly

Lori A. Kelly and Thomas J. Kelly

Martin T. Kelly and Wynter Kelly

Seth Kelly

Timothy P. Kelly ’16

David Z. Kendall ’14

Rob Kennan

Eugene Kennedy ’90 and Nancy J. Kennedy ’90

Laura M. Kennedy ’21

Grace W. Kenningham ’20

Kevin J. Kenny ’98

Cory Kent

Susan M. Kenyon and John Kenyon

Elizabeth A. Kester and Eric T. Kester

Lara M. Kester

Dwayne Keys

Hasan-Uddin Khan P’04

Roy R. Kiazim and Karen M. Kiazim

Kenneth E. Kiernan and Tracey Kiernan

Lynda Kiklis-Brown ’89 and F. J. Brown

Chelsey A. Kilfoil ’12 and David J. Kilfoil ’12

Tyler Kilimonis

Susan Killenberg and Chris Killenberg

Elizabeth A. Kilzi ’13 and Corinne O’Kane

Gregory S. Kimmel, Esq. L’97 and Lisa D. Kimmel

Spencer A. King ’20

James Kingston Kinsey Kinsey

James Kintner

Jessica N. Kipphut ’12

Katharine Kirk and Richard S. Kirk III ’03 Madeline E. Kirk ’14

Amanda M. Kirkland Dean P. Kisciras ’19

Rebecca Kislak

Stephen D. Kiss and Kathryn M. Kiss Matthew J. Kite ’06 M’08 and Kimsan Ngom Joseph Klaus

Michael Klaus and Starlene Klaus Tabitha Klaus

Peter A. Klay ’92 and Marcy J. Klay ’93 Carolina Kleiman P’22 and Pablo Choclin P’22

Kenneth S. Kleitz P’11 and Barbara A. Kleitz P’11 Abigail I. Kline ’19

Emma G. Klis ’17

Dana C. Knight P’22 and Scott C. Knight P’22 Margaret Knowlton and Steven Knowlton Rosemary F. Koch ’74 and Kevin Koch Dyana Koelsch

Karl S. Koertje ’81 and Elizabeth Koertje Jordan A. Kogan ’21

Katharine E. Kohm, Esq. Denice M. Koljonen P’17

Patria H. Komiega and Eric J. Komiega Kenneth Kopchik

Erin K. Kopecky and Scott W. Kopecky

Lon Kopit ’69

Holley M. Kowalczyk and Gregory P. Kowalczyk

Christine M. Kowalski and Ronald M. Kowalski

Sarah E. Kozminski ’11

Julia Krasnow

Mark Kravatz

Alan Krinsky

Kaarkuzhali B. Krishnamurthy P’22 and Ram V. Chavali P’22

Sidney M. Krol ’21

Keith Kroll

Kenneth M. Kroll

Kerry Kroll and Danette Kroll

Kevin J. Kroll and Kerry K. Kroll

Brian J. Krue ’90 and Nancy Krue

Anthony Kryl and Marjorie Kryl

Michelle A. Kryl

Jacqueline Kucskar

Rebecca N. Kulak ’17

Sheldon Kulik ’72

Nermin A. Kura

Ann Kurz

Laura L. Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23 and

James G. Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23

Jennifer Kuzbek and Chad D. Kuzbek

Caroline Kwasniewski

Joan Kwiatkowski

Carl Labbe

Daniel T. LaBonte ’03 and Gretchen N. Labonte

Jacqueline S. Lacerra ’22

Andrew R. Lacroix ’08

Christine P. Lacroix and Michael C. Lacroix

Charles Lafferty

Nirva LaFortune

Frank E. Lagan ’05

Ashley E. Lago ’10

Christine Laibinis

Robert J. Lamarre, Jr. ’20

Michelle Lamattina

Carrie Lamb

Ava R. Lambert

David E. Lambert Ph.D. and Diane D. Lambert Alyson Lamothe

Camron Lamothe

Hannah G. Lamothe ’20

Laura Lamothe

Steven Lampert M.D., M.B.A.

Riley E. Lamson, Jr. ’66 and Mary Lamson

Jeff Lancaster

Frank Landino

Jennifer M. Landry and Bruce J. Landry

Matthew P. Lanen ’07

Carol Langeland

Paul Languirand and Denise Languirand

Cristin Langworthy

Alexandria M. Lanieri ’13

Amy B. Lanoie ’17 and Donald J. Lanoie Daryl A. Lansing ’81

Barbara A. Lanzire and Douglas J. Lanzire

Gregory J. Laramie and Laura Laramie Albert Lariviere

David A. Lariviere and Sandra K. Lariviere Jacob Lariviere

Meredith B. Larkin ’11

Kayla M. LaRosa ’20

Jeffrey N. Larrow ’08

Ruth Latham

Anthony Lato, Jr. ’73 and Jeannie Lato

Melissa Latraverse Flaherty Michael T. Lau ’06

John Laughlin

Brett S. Lauterbach

Conor Lavallee

Jason M. Lavallee and Maureen E. Lavallee Lionel And Phyllis Lavallee

Phyllis Lavallee

Scott Lavallee and Elaina Lavallee

Elizabeth M. Lavelle and James M. Lavelle

Shawn Laverty and Kimberly Laverty Michael A. Lavoie ’20

Shane F. Lavoie ’11

Lucy M. Lawlor ’20

Beth L. Lawton ’80

Jeremy A. Lawton ’19 ’21

Isaak Lazarou

Christopher K. Leach ’08

Susan Leahy and Brian Leahy

Elizabeth P. Learned

Jody L. Leary

John L. Leary ’92

Timothy D. LeBel ’15

Alana C. Leblanc ’02 and David J. LeBlanc ’02 Kate Lecardi

Kevin J. LeClair ’00

Ronald G. Ledoux ’75

Brian F. LeDuc ’10

Barbara J. Lee P’16 and Michael J. Redfearn P’16

Timothy G. Leeber P’05

Lana L. Lee-Brogdon and David C. Brogdon

Parker G. Leese ’16

Benjamin W. Lefebvre ’09 and Sarah R. Lefebvre ’09

Carinel J. LeGrand M’15

Brandon A. Lehman ’14

Sally K Lehoux

Amanda J. Leibowitz ’12

Amie L. Leighton ’95 and Eric R. Leighton ’95 Tom C. Leite and Caroline I. Leite

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 42

Betty Lema

Jonathan D. Lemoine ’12

Stephen F. Lemoine P’12 and

Sylvia L. Lemoine P’12

John Lenihan

Heather Leonard

Hillary K. Leonard ’16

Raymond R. Leonardo ’13

Caitlyn E. Leone ’08

Samantha P. Leone ’20

Amanda M. Leopizzi ’19

Brette Lesniak

Arline Lesser

Debra Lesser

David Leveillee

Charles L. Levesque, Jr. P’20 and Lisa A. Levesque P’20

Michael Levesque

Robin L. Levesque P’17 P’19 P’21 and James W. Griffin, Jr. P’21

Devra Levy

Brett E. Lewis ’92

Kenneth Lewis

Melinda Leyden

Patricia E. Lichtenstein ’01 and

Colin Lichtenstein

Laura J. Lieffers, Esq. ’08

James P. Liguori, Jr. ’90 and Lori Liguori

Melissa M. Lima ’22

Jonathan Lincoln ’81

Xenja S. Lindberg ’17

Greg Lindquist

Charles J. Liolios P’15 and Kathleen A. Liolios P’15

Janet H. Lipka

Andrew K. Lippincott ’06

Robert P. Liptrot ’61 and Priscilla Liptrot

Mark A. Liseo and Lisa C. Liseo

Abby Livingston

Kerry Livingston

Sean C. Livingston

Akeem Lloyd

Kyle F. Lloyd ’98 and Karen Lloyd

Neva Lloyd

Lindsay L. Lobao ’02 and Joseph L. Lobao ’02

Margaret Lococo

Domenic J. Loffredo ’20

Christine LoFrese and Raymond M. LoFrese

Maura Logan

Joseph R. Loiselle ’98 ’10 ’14

Kayla M. Lombardi ’20

Mary Ann Lombardi and Don Lombardi

Alexandra M. Lombardo ’22

Katherine M. Lombardo P’22 and F L. Lombardo P’22

Sandra Lonardo

Jen Londregan

Nicholas Long

Emma Longden

Mike Longden and Andrea B. Longden

Christian Longo

Jennifer W. Looney and William G. Looney

Erin Lopez-Gomez

Nathan J. Lopez-Mata

Mary Thames Louis

Rosemary Lounsbury-Kompsi

Owen D. Love ’18

Ronald A. Lucia P’15 and Louise F. Lucia P’15

Barry C. Lucier ’09

Denise Luczak and Scott R. Luczak

Samuel A. Lugo ’19

Stephanie A. Luiz

Matthew Luker and Lauri Luker

Gipsys Luna ’22 and Edward D. Luna

Marie Lupino ’75 and Tony Lupino

Leonard Lussier and Taschi Wilson

Charnele S. Luster ’11

Evan Luther

Tammie Luther

Gregory A. Lutz P’14 and

Carolyn R. Graziano-Lutz P’14

Lisa M. Lutz ’14

Gretchen Lynch

David R. Lynn ’89 and Darrien Gumkowski

Lisa A. Lyons ’13 M’13 PM’15 P’12 PL’17

James M. MacAulay ’76 and Mary Jo MacAulay

Nicholas And Frank Maccheroni

Calvin Macdonald

Deon L. Macdonald P’15 and

Peter R. Macdonald P’15

Peri J. MacDonald

Shannon M. MacDonald

Steve P. MacDonald

William T. Macdonald ’15

Wendy A. MacDonough and Charles S. MacDonough

Judy MacDougall

Katherine MacDougall and Paul B. MacDougall

Kathleen A. MacDougall and Richard W. MacDougall

Sean Macdougall

Cory R. MacEachen ’03

Sarah Macedo

Gary Macek

Rob Roy Macgregor

Scott P. Mackey

Margaret C. MacKinnon ’22

Michael Mackniak

Emma C. MacLean

Lloyd M. MacLean and Margaret A. MacLean

Annette M. MacLellan P’22 and Christopher S. MacLellan P’22

Rebecca A. MacLellan ’22

Charles R. MacLeod ’81 and Janet S. MacLeod

James A. MacMannis ’81

Kevin R. Macy and Ann H. Macy

Francis W. Madigan III and Susan D. Madigan

John M. Madritch

Frances M. Maffei P’22

Walt Magans and Cathy Magans Seth Magaziner

Jessica M. Magliato ’20

Erin C. Magsamen ’22

Aidan B. Maguire Mary Maguire

Kenneth E. Mahler ’74 and Christine Mahler Maureen Maigret

Diane Mailey-Higgins

David J. Majetich ’19

Lauren R. Maker and Arnout H. Bruins Slot

Raymond W. Maker III ’74 and Nina Tremaglio

Anthony Malfitano

Lynne A. Malloy ’18 ’20 P’18 P’21 and Robert J. Malloy P’18 P’21

Nicholas E. Malone ’18

Ronald S. Malvin P’12 and Patricia A. Malvin P’12

Donna M. Mancinelli P’21 P’22 and Mark A. Mancinelli P’21 P’22

Samantha M. Mancinelli ’21

Shauna Mancinelli

Silvio Mancini ’72

Meg Manley and Fred Manley

Jasmine Mann

Mat Mann

Angela Manning ’20

Paul J. Manning III ’91

Stephanie P. Manzi

Ginger Manzo

Raffaelo Manzo

Kathleen Marabello

Frank Maradiaga

Kendra Marasco and Joe Marasco

Patricia H. Marcaccio ’96

Kerrie Marceau

Bruce Marchbanks

Danielle M. Marchbanks

John C. Marchese P’08 and Elizabeth Marchese P’08

Tyler J. Marchioni ’21

Frankie Ann Marcille

Lucille Maregni and Peter Maregni

Gabriel Margolis

Aaron M. Mariano ’08 and Becky K. Griswold Mariano ’13

Catherine R. Marinuzzi ’13

John M. Marion, Jr. L’20

Packy Markham

Abby L. Marnik

Amanda V. Maron ’08

Jonathan B. Marquardt ’83

George T. Marshall

Jordan J. Marshall Nicole Marshall Sue Marshall

Susan A. Marshall

Amanda J. Marsili and Gregg M. Marsili

Taryn E. Martel ’22

Matthew Martin

Thomas A. Martin ’85 and Tiki Martin

Marlene Martinez ’13

Nicolino Martins

Nancy S. Martz and Michael A. Martz

James L. Marzec P’20 P’21 and

Laura C. Marzec P’20 P’21

Dominic Masino

Joe Masino

Michael Masino

Carl Massaro

Carla Massaro

Christine E. Massaro and Cal A. Massaro

Craig Massaro and Lisa Massaro Nicolette Massaro

Sara A. Massaro

Shawn J. Masse, Esq. ’10 L’13

Aaron J. Massey ’21

Aristotle C. Massos ’22

William Massos P’22 and Andrea Massos P’22

Laura A. Masterson ’19

Frank J. Mastrobuono

Joyce Matheson

Michael J. Matias

Sabina Matos

Peter C. Matthes ’92

Nicholas C. Mattia

Cristian Mattoon, Esq. L’02

Audrey Maudie

Joyce A. Maudie and Karyn M. Gallivan

Anne H. Maurer and Timothy P. Maurer

Sarah A. Mawdsley ’20

Tom Maybury

Joyce A. Maynard and David W. Maynard H. Sloane Mayor P’20

Cynthia M. Mays ’87

Julie Maywalt P’22 and James C. Maywalt, Jr. P’22

James P. Maznio ’07

Danielle Mazzella

Sarah K. Mazzochi, Esq. L’10

Marjorie Mcalister Hynes

Deborah McAneny

David M. McArdle

Barbara A. McBrien P’18 P’21 and Michael D. McBrien P’18 P’21

Tracey McCall

Lawrence J. McCarter ’76 and Jo Anne McCarter

Daniel F. McCarthy ’82 and Helen McCarthy

Karen M. McCarthy ’03

Kevin McCarthy and Dianne McCarthy

Maggie Mccarthy

Paul N. McCarthy, Jr. L’07

Sharon McCarthy

Susan McCarthy and Tom McCarthy

William H. McCarthy P’07 and Alice M. McCarthy P’07

Kathleen McCaughey

Jennifer McClaren

Cherèva M. McClellan ’08 M’12

Catherine K. McConnell Sean C. McCormack and Kimberly J. McCormack Darin W. McCormick and Adriana V. McCormick

Kelley J. McCormick and Kim C. McCormick Samantha M. McCormick

John G. McDaid

Jordan Mcdermott

John McDonald

Ciara J. McDonough ’22

Robert J. McDonough ’71

Thomas J. McDonough

Michael McElroy, Esq.

Eric McErlain

Stephen Mcerlain

Troy B. McErlain and Carolyn McErlain

Marlo L. McFadden and Alumren D. McFadden

Stacy Mcgarry

Michelle McGaw

Beatrice McGeoch

Justina A. McGettigan P’22 and John S. McGettigan P’22

James McGinn

Robert A. McGinnis, Jr. ’20

Megan Mcgonigal

Tom Mcgonigal

Patrick J. McGovern, Jr. ’16 William McGowan

Christopher M. McGrath ’07

Alyssa R. McGreevy ’21

Michael A. McHenry ’71 and Jane McHenry

Emily McHugh

Travis McHugh

Peggy McKeever

Brian J. McKenna ’94 and Kimberly A. McKenna

Doughlas McKenna ’88 and Mary McKenna

James F. McKenna ’77

Don McKenney and Marg McKenney

Scot McKenney

William B. McKenzie and Johanna W. McKenzie

Michael D. McKinnon ’99

Peter McKone P’10 and Patricia McKone P’10

Kerri McLaughlin ’20

Jennifer McMahan and Robert McMahan

Steve Mcmahon

Kevin T. McManus ’18

Stephen D. McManus ’17

James M. McMillan and Megan M. McMillan Caitlin R. McNabb ’11

Meghan C. McNally ’22

Elizabeth Mecca

William F. Mecca, Jr. ’91

Christopher B. Mecozzi ’09

Jessica L. Medeiros ’10 Keith Medeiros ’99

Kristen L. Medeiros ’16

Mary E. Medeiros and John P. Medeiros Rita Medeiros

Diane C. Mederos ’94 HD’10

and Anthony Mederos

Laurie J. Medri and Anthony G. Medri James G. Meinecke ’01 and Rebecca McWilliams ’04

Steven M. Melaragno ’90 and Patricia Melaragno Paula M. Melchiorri-Blakeman and Kevin P. Blakeman

Carolyn M. Mello and Pamela Serbst

Humberto M. Mello PL’19 and Donna M. Mello PL’19

Kathy Mello

Lynne K. Mello

Michael P. Mello ’02 and Melissa M. Cordeiro Brian Melo and Lisa Melo

Evan B. Melo

Kathryn F. Melton ’09 and Michael R. Melton

Susan J. Membrino and Kimberly A. Joly Melissa Mendes

Alexandro A. Menendez and Leanne Menendez Leela Mennillo

Hannah L. Ment ’20

Paul C. Menton and Judith T. Menton

Dona Menutole

Susan M. Meronek

John P. Meroski ’89

Delaney A. Meserve

Robert S. Messier P’16 P’18

Francis X. Messina III ’10

Rebecca J. Messler

Claire C. Metcalfe ’14

Murray R. Metcalfe P’14

Harold M. Metts ’70 and Dayus L. Metts

Joseph A. Miceli and Dawn A. Miceli

Mary Jo Michaud and Michael T. Michaud

Richard L. Michaud ’88 and Lori Michaud

Nicholas F. Michienzi ’08

Kristie L. Michon P’22

Joe Middendorf and Wendy Middendorf

Robin Miguel

Adam F. Mihlstin ’90 and Marilyn Corets

Callie Mihok

Kaitlyn Mihovk

Sandra J. Miklave P’15 P’17 and Matthew T. Miklave P’15 P’17

Haven Miles

Sara Miles

Tye Mill

Michael J. Millen, Sr. P’19 and Virginia J. Millen P’19

Douglas Miller

Steve Miller

Kathleen M. Milne P’20 P’21 and Roger W. Milne P’20 P’21

Patrick J. Milner ’06

Michael A. Mirmina, Jr.

Dragan Miseta

Maria Miseta

Robert Miseta

43

Adam J. Misiuk ’21

Ian P. Mitchell ’17

Siobhan M. Mitchell ’21

Jessica L. Mitchell-Tomasso

Kevin L. Moitoso ’01

Steffy Molina

Ellen M. Monaghan ’88

Cathleen L. Moniz ’00 M’01

Anthony Montefusco

Juanita Montes de Oca

Paul A. Monti P’08 PL’15 and

Diane M. Monti P’08 PL’15

Timothy R. Moody and Kathleen A. Thomas-Moody

Colleen Mooney ’20

Adam Moore

Samuel Moore

Stacey Moosbrugger

Heather W. Morale and Marc A. Morale, Jr.

David Morales

Deidre Moran

Stephen E. Moran ’90 and Nella Moran

Christopher J. Moreira

Amanda M. Moreno-Low ’23

Victor Morente

William Morgan

Steven E. Morgenweck and Shane M. Morgenweck

Jack R. Morin

William E. Morin, Jr. and Kim A. Morin

Rose M. Morra ’86

Marian J. Morrill ’79 and William Edward Fisher

Gwyneth Morris

Nicole E. Morris ’99

Sara H. Morris ’11

Sheila A. Morris-Sardinha and David P. Sardinha

Emily Morrissey

Paul J. Morrissey ’71

Lucille Morse

Harry Mosca

Clara J. Moses ’13

Maria Mosher

Ted Moskala

Darwina M. Mosley ’81 and Kevin Mosley

Susan Mosley

Daniel F. Mott and Melissa H. Mott

Michele M. Motta ’91 and Robert Schena

Tracey Moulaison

John J. Mount, Jr. ’80 and Debra Mount

Colleen M. Mucha P’20 and Robert S. Mucha, Jr. P’20

Riley Mucha ’20

Thomas E. Mulcahey ’76

Ronda L. Mullane P’21 P’22 and Neil P. Mullane P’21 P’22

Susan T. Mullen and John G. Mullen

Debra A. Mulligan and David H. Mulligan

Luis D. Muñoz

Kevin M. Murphy ’16

Thomas A. Murphy and Patricia A. Murphy

Robin Murphy-Dow P’22

Patricia Murray

Richard T. Murray ’74

Nada M. Mustafa ’17

Richard A. Myers, Jr. and Lauren J. Myers

Taylor N. Myers

Cece Myette

Kenneth J. Nadeau and Alison Nadeau

Debra Naff

Charlie Naples

Gertrude M. Naples ’21

Nick Naples

William Naples P’21 P’22 and Gertrude J. Naples P’21 P’22

Daniel M. Narahara and Leslie A. Narahara

Kenneth R. Nasiff and Dana M. Nasiff

Sean Nasiff

Jennifer F. Nasser ’19 ’20

Cris Navarro

Amanda P. Naylor ’22

Antonella Naylor P’22 and Douglas Naylor P’22

Janice Naylor

Samantha J. Naylor

Daniel R. Neagle P’14 and Mary-Michele Neagle P’14

Tom Neborsky

Jared M. Needelman ’07

J. Scott Needham ’80 and Michelle Needham Amanda A. Neff ’22

Don Nelson

Maryann Nelson

Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07

Nancy L. Nester

Robyn Neto

Charles W. Nevel and Anne M. Aune

Carlos C. Neves ’06 and Frances K. Parise ’07

Kelly Nevins

Kelly Nevins ’15 and Timothy Nevins

Amy B. Ng and Thomas T. Ng

Xuan N. Nguyen ’15

Mariah L. Nicholas ’18

Robert A. Nichols, Jr. and Robin S. Nichols Paul J. Nickerson ’98

Cortney Nicolato

David Nicolato

Elizabeth S. Niemeyer

John M. Nieroda, Jr. ’21

Madeline E. Nigro

Michael C. Nilsson ’84

Catherine Niziak

James J. Niziak, Jr. and Melissa L. Niziak Lia M. Nocella ’22

Sharon M. Nocella P’22 and David E. Nocella P’22

Kenneth E. Noiseux ’76 and Roberta Noiseux Garrett C. Nolan ’22

Lynne M. Nolan and Chris S. Dearborn

Julie Nora

Kristen A. Norray ’21

Amy L. Norris ’06

Fadra S. Northrup

Tina Norton P’22 and Edward Norton P’22

Katrina H. Norvell Ph.D.

Steven Nostro and Kimberlee K. Nostro

Steven A. Nostro

F. Michael Novick and Catherine T. Novick

Kelsey C. Novy ’18

Chloe W. Noyes

Kaitlin Noyes ’06

Courtney A. Nugent ’09

Paul Nunes Ray Nuñez

Rachel A. Nuzzo, Esq.

Virginia Nyman Donna O’Brien

Charles O’Connell

Joe O’Connor and Joan O’Connor Bernard J. O’Brien V ’18 Tiana Ochoa

Michael J. O’Connor ’85

Brian A. O’Donnell and Sharifah S. O’Donnell Matthew T. O’Donnell and Jennifer L. O’Donnell Daniel P. O’Driscoll

Henry H. Ohanian ’63

Mitch J. O’Hara, Jr. P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18 and Lori C. O’Hara P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18

Gavin T. Okun ’20

Theresa E. O’Leary P’20 and Sean M. O’Leary P’20

Jamie Oliver Jay Oliver

Michael J. Oliveri ’05

John P. Olobri ’74 and Donna Olobri

Daniel O’malley

Jillian M. O’Malley ’08

Kaitlyn O’Malley

Kathleen O’Malley

Kevin O’Malley

Paola O’Malley

Kevin O’Neil

Adam Opalka

Barbara Opalka

Karen S. Opalka P’22 and

Peter A. Opalka, Sr. P’22

Karli E. Opalka ’22

Vivian Y. Oquendo P’18

Siliva J. Orellana P’22

Sharon Orser-Jackson ’91 and Brian Jackson

Stella Orsini

Kristen A. Osborne ’22

Lisa P. Osborne P’22 and

Brian M. Osborne, Sr. P’22

Ashley E. O’Shea ’07 and Michael P. O’Shea ’06

Stephen T. Ostrander

Jill Ott

Marvin J. Ott, Jr. ’71 and Corinne Ott

David D. Ouellette ’21

Joseph R. Ouellette ’87

Michele Ouellette

John A. Pacheco P’21 and

Tammy A. Pacheco P’21

Stacey Pacheco

Sue Pacheco

John M. Padavano and Christine A. Padavano

Connor R. Padovich ’22

Nicholas Pagnotta

Diane G. Pajouh ’92 and Jerry Pajouh

John D. Palana

Sarah Palanques Tost

Alexander L. Palios ’12

Joseph R. Paliseno II and Michele Paliseno

Donald Palmer

Jeffrey N. Palmer ’00

Christian A. Palombo

Kelly A. Palombo ’00

Nicole A. Palombo ’18

Maria V. Palumbo

Raila Pamela

Priniti Panday and Ranjan Panth

Jeronima Panjoj-Nix ’15

Linda A. Pankovic ’83

Michael S. Pantano and Christine W. Pantano

Samuel Pantano and Paula A. Pantano

Joan E. Papandrea P’22 and Robert J. Papandrea P’22

Sydney M. Papandrea ’22

Shane J. Parcel ’14

Randolph C. Parent, Jr. P’18 and Mary Beth Parent P’18

Neil Parikh and Roshni Parikh

Brian H. Parker and Laura A. Parker

Christine C. Parker and Scott M. Parker

Cynthia Parker

Kandy Parker

Sharon A. Parker and Michael F. Parker

John E. Parkhurst ’03

Peter Parles

Linda Parrillo

Susan L. Pasquarelli PM’08 P’05

Adam J. Patsun ’19

Alan Patterson

Scott Paul Adam L. Peck

Claudette L. Peck P’22 and Richard C. Peck P’22

Samuel Peck

Timothy W. Peck ’92 and Kelly E. Peck

Judith A. Pegno P’17 and Steven A. Pegno P’17

Margaret A. Pegno ’17

Jessica Peirce ’21

Michael S. Peixoto ’09

Judith Pelchat

Bret Peloquin

Aubrey Pennell

Donna C. Pereira MacKall P’22 and Daniel J. MacKall P’22

Ashley Pereira

Pamela A. Pereira ’18 and Peter Pereira ’19 Victoria T. Pereira ’15

Josh Perez

Katiuska Perez

Raquél Pérez

Don And Lori Perinace

Jeff Perkins

Carol L. Perley ’78 and David L. Moore ’75

Adrianna Perry

Jean E. Peterson ’12 M’15

Lynn Peterson

Michelle Petets

Mario Petrarca ’87

Marisa Petreccia

Leah Petricca

Patricia J. Petricca

Perri C. Petricca

Daniel W. Petrovic ’19

Milliana Phifer

Paul Phifer and Allison Willette

Dawn A. Phillips P’19 and Michael J. Sweetser P’19

Scott H. Phillips and Patricia M. Phillips

Latsamy Phomsouvandara

Vimala D. Phongsavanh

Eileen Piacente

Susan Piasecki

Katherine W. Pickard ’21

Anne Pignatiello

Rena S. Piller-Thurston ’97 and Jason P. Thurston ’97

Christopher J. Pinault M’08

Kathy Pindar and Keenan A. Pindar II

Nancy Pinkerton

Andy Pires

Patricia Pires

Alejandro M. Pirez

Hannah E. Pirez ’12

Laurie-Marie Pisciotta

Steven Piscopiello

Justin Piskorski

Michael D. Piskorski and Tamara K. Piskorski

Nicole L. Pita ’12

Tullio D. Pitassi ’70 and Antoinette Lautieri-Pitassi

Dean M. Piterski ’16

Mary A. Pittari

Jennifer Pizzarelli

Darcy A. Pizzitola P’22 and Thomas J. Pizzitola P’22

Laini M. Pizzitola ’22

Angela M. Pizzolato

Michael S. Platt ’86

Michael T. Plaziak ’96

Peter B. Pleskunas P’11 and Suzanne E. Pleskunas P’11

Ann M. Plotas P’22 and Phillip J. Plotas P’22 Lucy H. Plovnick, Esq. L’02 and Robert M. Plovnick

Geoffrey Poirier

Craig Poisson

Gregory L. Pomerleau ’20

Matthew B. Ponko ’90 and Caroline Precourt Sonia Pontes

Thomas E. Poole

Rachel Popadic

James Porter

Katherine E. Porter ’22

Dawn Marie Portoff ’90

Linda G. Potts and Tim C. Potts

Michael P. Poulin and Melissa M. Poulin

Tyler T. Poulin ’20

James E. Powell ’79 and Maureen Powell

Jordan Powers

Paola Prado

James R. Pratt ’04

Kimberly A. Pratt

Tracey M. Pratt ’04 ’21 P’09 P’13 and Christopher C. Pratt P’09 P’13

George Predaris

Madeline J. Predaris

Paul C. Predaris

Abigail E. Preston ’15

David Preston

Crystal Price

Shannon J. Priddy and Michael D. Priddy Tom Principe and Sue Principe

Louis J. Procaccini

Edwin Prondecki

Kenneth Proto ’73 and Cecilia Proto Lindsey P. Proulx ’15

Mary Ann Prouty

Peter A. Provencal P’21 P’22 and Lorri A. Provencal P’21 P’22

Sydney N. Provencal ’21

Corry E. Psutka ’21

Richard C. Pugliese, Jr. ’20

Karen M. Pugsley and John R. Pugsley, Jr. Douglas D. Pulak ’99

Colleen L. Puleo ’96 and Steven D. Puleo ’96 John A. Quaranta, Jr. ’76

Charles S. Quinn III ’93

Lisa F. Quinn

Lori Quinn

William J. Rabideau, Jr. ’05

Richard Raczelowski ’75 and Carolyn A. Raczelowski

Mary Raefski

Susan A. Raeside and Scott D. Raeside

Thomas F. Rafael ’11

Matt Raffoul

Betina B. Ragless ’80

William Railton, Jr. and Courtney Railton Deborah M. Rainey

Jacob R. Rainey ’22

Amanda Ramirez

Elisa Ramirez

Daniel A. Ramos and Eileen Fisher

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 44

Nancy L. Ramos ’92 ’94 P’10 and

Lawrence Ramos

Joanne Rampone

Jane G. Ransom and Larry D. Ransom

Grace Raposo and Nuno A. Raposo

Joseph P. Raposo ’05

Manuela A. Raposo PL’15

Marie Raso and Tom Raso

Harry Raubens ’70 and Kathleen Raubens

Mark A. Ravas and Laurie M. Ravas

Angela M. Raymond ’10

Kimberly G. Read P’22 and

Robert R. Read P’22

Daniel Reale III ’19

Kathleen T. Reale P’19 P’21 and

Daniel P. Reale, Jr. P’19 P’21

Shane E. Reardon ’11

Anabela P. Rebelo

Diane Reed

Kaylin M. Reen

Marie T. Reen P’17 P’22 and

James G. Reen, Jr. P’17 P’22

Matthew G. Regan ’16

Jocelynn M. Rego

Daniel K. Reich and Lisa J. Reich

Karen Reilly

Michael Reilly

Richard W. Reimers, Jr. ’21

Seth R. Reiner ’17

Kevin Remson

Sandra K. Remson

Stanley Remson and Susan Remson

Hilary Renner

Ariana C. Renwick ’14

Yvonne P. Renwick P’14 and Richard A. Renwick P’14

Hallie C. Repeta ’19

Catharine M. Resh P’16 and Franklin E. Resh P’16

Joel S. Resnick ’02

Victoria Restler

David C. Retford and Lynn Retford

Sarah M. Reusche and Marco Cross

Michael A. Reuter ’03 and Alison A. Reuter

Patrick J. Revel ’87 and Lisa Revel

Michael Reyes

Christopher Reynolds ’82 and Laurie Reynolds

Walter T. Reynolds ’84 and Patricia Reynolds

Brian D. Rhodes ’01

Katie Ribeiro

John Riccio P’10 and Lynlee Riccio P’10

Troy Riccitelli and Robin Riccitelli

Laura E. Rice ’92 and Kenneth J. Rice

Michael B. Rich

Norma Richards P’22 and Cedric Richards P’22

John G. Richardson ’95

Amy Richter

Loraine Rickard-Martin

Thomas M. Rickart P’11

Jessica Riehl

Gina M. Rigby P’21

Dennis Riley

Nicole M. Riley, Esq. ’87 and Douglas A. Riley

Andrew T. Rimmer ’91 P’21 and

Mary P. Rimmer P’21

Jeffrey L. Ringuest ’76

Tracey Riordan

Elizabeth M. Ritchie ’12

Judy Ritchie

Rebecca L. Ritchie ’18 M’19

Ronald Ritchie

Lisa C. Rivard

Sandra Rivera

Jared A. Rizo ’15

Blanche Roach

Craig S. Roach and Kate M. Nelligan

Megan E. Roach ’18 ’19

Bianca S. Robbins

Daniel W. Robbins, Jr. ’05 and Gena E. Bianco

Edward W. Robbins, Jr. ’04 and

Christen E. Robbins ’06

David Roberts ’15

Joseph W. Roberts and Laura D. Roberts

Deborah Robinson ’79

Gretchen E. Robinson

Kenneth Robinson

Lera Robinson

Corinne J. Roche P’20 P’22 and

John J. Roche P’20 P’22

Matthew W. Rockett ’12

Lisa Roderigues

Jill Rodrigues ’05

Raymond J. Rodrigues P’09 and Adeline C. Rodrigues P’09

Jessica Rodriguez

Joffre X. Rodriguez ’18

Jose Rodriguez

Katya Rodriguez

Pablo Rodriguez M.D. HD’17 and Diane M. Rodriguez

Danielle Roes

Stephanie Roes

David Rogalski P’09 P’10 and Dawn Rogalski P’09 P’10

Katheryn A. Rogalski ’10

Cindy Rogers Glenn Rogers

Roxanne I. Rogers ’22

Carla Rojo

Daniel S. Rokas

Jacqueline S. Rolleri, Esq. L’11

Bianca M. Rom ’13

Mary Roman

Lisa W. Romano

Raymond Romano

Rachael L. Rooklin ’21

Isabelle M. Rosado

Jeffrey T. Rosado and Jessica Rosado

David Roscoe

Charon Rose

Doreen A. Rose ’99 P’13 and Anthony D. Rose P’13

Jamie L. Rosen ’21

Jacquline T. Rosiak P’13 and Michael G. Rosiak P’13

Gillian Ross

John M. Rossi ’88

Lisa Roth Blackman

Alexander Roth-Honigfeld ’09

Philip C. Rowlands and Joy L. Rowlands

Craig H. Royle P’21 and Leslie C. Royle P’21

Sydney E. Rubin

Alexander K. Rudkin ’14

William L. Rudkin, Jr. P’14

Ann M. Ruffhead and Richard B. Ruffhead

Thomas Ruffhead

Henry Ruggiero ’72 and Susan M. Ruggiero

John P. Ruggiero, Jr. ’78

Kelsey Runge

Casie Runksmeier

Anthony S. Ruocco and Mary-Patrice Ruocco

Faith A. Rushnak and Scott Rushnak

Henry F. Russell, Jr. ’70

Jeffrey S. Russell ’90

John Russell

Matthew C. Russo ’17 ’19

Vincent Russo

Liliana K. Rutler ’12

Dawn Ryan

Donald Ryan

Rae J. Ryan

Robert E. Ryan ’76 and Arlene Ryan

Olivia C. Rys ’12 and Bartosz W. Rys ’12

Jason Ryszczyk

Carol L. Sacchetti

Rita Sader and Tanios Sader, Jr.

Kimberly F. Salley and Mark R. Salley

Mike Salnikov

Willow Salon

Jennifer Samaras

Christopher Samih-Rotondo

Jennifer E. Samolyk, Esq. ’92 L’96 and

John Romney

Jordan A. Sampson ’12

Afiya A. Samuel ’09

Paul C. Sanborn ’83 P’11

Tyler Sandoval

Carolynn W. Santamaria

Christine Santangelo

Lisa Santilli

Jean Santoro

Mark S. Santoro and Ellen M. Santoro

Mary R. Santoro ’20

Zachary C. Santoro ’20 ’21

Ramona Santos Torres

Jonathan A. Santos ’21

Josh Santos Rita Santos

Joana Santos-Reis M’13 and Dennis Reis

Melissa L. Sanzaro PM’19 P’18

Anthony J. Sapienza ’22

Ava Sapienza

Dawn M. Sapienza P’22 and Joseph P. Sapienza P’22

Anne H. Sarazin P’21 P’22 and Roland H. Sarazin, Jr. P’21 P’22

Robert S. Sargeant P’16 and Jennifer Sargeant P’16

Olivia Sargent

Amy Sasin

Joseph P. Sassi, Esq. and Cristen D. Sassi Adam Sattler and Jennifer Sattler

Emily Sauls

Elaine M. Saunders P’19 and Daniel R. Saunders P’19

Mark C. Saunders ’92 and Margarida Saunders Mason R. Saunders ’19

Zachary Saunders ’21

Steven Savarese

Jeffrey A. Savastano P’22

Heather A. Savino and Christopher M. Savino Ryan W. Sawicki ’13

Jill Sayenga

Kelly A. Scafariello ’99

Steven T. Scalabrini ’13

Melissa A. Scanlon ’04 and Robert J. Scanlon ’04

Olivia Scarpa

Lori Scatena

John Schaefer

Kimberly F. Schaefer P’22 and Paul J. Schaefer P’22

Stephen Schaefer

Charles E. Schafer

Hans Schattle and Yumcyung Choi

Spencer P. Scheer ’73 and Marti Scheer

Cynthia Scheinberg

Anthony M. Schettino, Jr. and Renee K. Schettino

Andrew Schiff

Brian E. Schiller ’21

Isabelle A. Schnadig P’22 and Eric R. Schnadig P’22

Melanie R. Schneider and John M. Schneider

Noelle Schneider

Tara Schneider

Caylin E. Schnoor

Aidan J. Schreiner

Lois C. Schuyler ’75 and John P. Schuyler

Max G. Schwartz ’20

Joanne Scofield P’15 and Ronald W. Scofield P’15

Elaine Scott and Ira Scott

Ira Scott

Mary E. Scott P’21 and Randy L. Grossman P’21 Madison Scribner

Jacqueline Scully

Jennifer Scully

Jamie E. Scurry P’17

Todd M. Seaback ’88 and Leslie D. Seaback ’87 Richard C. Seavey P’17 and Susan L. Seavey P’17

Vada Seccareccia

Carol Sechio

Lori Sechio

Michael Sechio

Frank G. Sedlak P’22 and Anne Marie Sedlak P’22

Casey S. Sefton ’13 and Polina A. Sefton ’12

Janie Segui ’20

Joshua Segui

Marc J. Seifer

Laura Sejen

Matt Seminara

Adrienne C. Serbaroli L’07

Pamela J. Serbst

Stephen Serbst

Alfonso J. Sgritta and Tiffanie A. Sgritta

Kelsey B. Shakin ’19

Carla Shalaby

Carl M. Sharrio P’21 P’22 and Leslie A. Sharrio P’21 P’22

Matthew C. Sharrio ’21 Jason E. Shaughnessy and

Karin D. Shaughnessy

Corey Shaw Kathryn E. Shaw

Emory Shawver

Marylee Shawver

Daniel J. Shea, Jr. and Karen P. Shea

Lawrence Shea and Dawn Shea

Lynn Shea

Daniel A. Shearholdt ’12

Maria S. Sheehan P’21 and John C. Sheehan P’21

Olivia M. Sheehan ’21

Thomas P. Sheehan ’77 and Pat Sheehan

Jacalyn Shefcyk

Jenna Shefferman

Tamar Sherer

Elaine P. Sherlock ’74 and Mark P. Sherlock Edmund Sherman

Lee Sherman

Leon Sherman

Richard D. Sherman and Sara L. Sherman Rachel M. Sherr ’22

Patricia Shimkus and John J. Shimkus Steve Shostek

Christopher L. Shultz and Anna D. Shultz

Cynthia Shultz

Lyndon Sickey ’03 and Brandy Sickey Gwenyth C. Sieber

Jonathan R. Siefert P’13 P’16 and Jean A. Siefert P’13 P’16

William C. Siefert ’16

Maria Siegel

Mark Siegel and Jean Wilson

John Siegenthaler P’10 and Betty Siegenthaler P’10

Pauline J. Sienkiewicz ’92 Chris Sienko

Cameron F. Signorelli ’15 Michael Sikorski

Kim T. Sikowitz P’15 and David J. Sikowitz P’15

Helena Silva

Joann M. Silva P’04

Joseph Silva

Julie Silva

Sarah Silva

Stacey Silva

Steve Silva and Cheryl Silva

Loretta V. Silvia ’00

Donald E. Simeone, Jr. Joseph G. Simeone, Jr. Jen Simoes

Matthew J. Simonelli ’17

Kathryn Singleton

Marylynn Skarzenski

Jessica A. Skolnikoff and James Runstadler Richard T. Skov and Diane L. Skov Mal Skowron

Matthew S. Slater ’94 and Kathleen Slater Michael Slater

Ariana M. Smaldone ’20

Margaret Small

Clinton Smith P’03 and Karen H. Smith P’03

Gary Smith

John L. Smith ’81

Kathleen J. Smith and John D. Smith

Ryan A. Smith ’22

Susan Smith

Taylor D. Smith ’13

Thomas E. Smith

Walter Smith

Kirsten A. Snape

Louise Snape

Joel C. Snodgrass ’85 and Alice Snodgrass Thomas C. Snow ’90 and Sherry Snow

Will H. Snyder and Heather E. Snyder Patricia Socarras

Shan Soe-Lin

Carol A. Sojka P’17 and Joseph E. Sojka, Jr. P’17

Noah Sokaler

George C. Somers IV ’21

Natasha D. Sopchak ’12

Gabrielle N. Soscia ’20

Kathy Soubliere

Rick Soubliere

Raymond Soucy and Nancy Soucy

Carla S. Sousa P’21 and Paul Sousa P’21

Isabel Sousa and Everett J. Sousa, Jr.

45

Toni Sousa P’22

Cynthia O. Souza

Kathleen D. Souza ’08 P’13 P’21 and

Edward B. Souza P’13 P’21

Lisa M. Sowyrda and Scott Sowyrda

Mehmet A. Sozer Ph.D. M’05

Christopher Spaight ’85 and Anne McDermott

June S. Speakman

Lori A. Speranzo P’19 P’20

Trisha A. Spillane ’04

Edward J. Spinard, Jr. ’94 P’96 P’06 and Emily J. Spinard ’07 P’96 P’06

Francis Spinella

Chris Spitalere

Kelly Spitalere

Laurence M. Spitzer and Toni M. Spitzer

Kimberly Sporbert

Judith Spreda

Michelle F. Spreda

Maria Squatrito

Linda C. St Ours

Richard St. Andre

Allen St. Jean and Alicia St. Jean

Tommy St. John

Maureen A. St. Laurent ’78 and

Victor J. St. Laurent

Michael J. St.Onge and Stephanie A. St.Onge

Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. ’80 and Barbara Stafford

Elizabeth M. Stamos P’22 and Chris J. Stamos P’22

Christopher M. Stanley ’16

Jennifer M. Stanley

Sue Stanley

Jonathan Stapleton and Betsy Stapleton

Brennan K. Starkey and Patricia V. Starkey

William V. Starkey

Owen Stearns

Keith A. Stebbins and Gianna G. Stebbins

Arjen R. Steegstra and Kathryn J. Hollett

Sandra Steen

Katherine Steidinger

Connie Stein

Jason Stein

Nate Stenabaugh

Joseph Stephanides

Erin Stephens

Debbie H. Stevens and Harold W. Stevens

Michelle A. Stevens P’21 and Ryan P. Stevens P’21

Elizabeth C. Stevenson

Molly Stevenson

Sean P. Stevenson and Ann M. Stevenson

Donna M. Stewart ’86 P’18 P’20 and Mark D. Stewart ’85 P’18 P’20

Richard F. Stibolt M’08

Michaela Stone

Robin D. Stone and Melanie Stone

Jimmy Strand and Allison Strand

Maria T. Streaman ’12

Michael J. Strobel ’02 and Sarah E. Knudson Strobel ’02

Shirah M. Strock ’22

Gary Stromberg P’05 and Katherine Stromberg P’05

Maureen R. Stronach and Charles A. Stronach

Kristan E. Strout

Marie C. Struck P’17

Lauren M. Stumper ’15

William Suchomel

John T. Sugrue ’77

John C. Sullivan ’92

Lisa M. Sullivan P’16 and Richard J. Sullivan P’16

Madeline E. Sullivan ’21

Pamela J. Sullivan P’22 and Patrick J. Sullivan P’22

Sandra Sullivan P’15 and Vincent Sullivan P’15

Tarah Sullivan

Aarav Sundaresh

Barbra C. Supsky P’20 and James C. Supsky P’20

Nicholas Surgent

Allison E. Surian ’20

Harold J. Surridge P’22

Linda Surridge

Lenore Susi

John M. Sutherland III L’98 and Nina R. Sutherland

Cindi R. Sutton and Ray H. Sutton

Peter W. Swan and Nan F. Swan

Lana J. Swanson Theodore N. Swanson ’12

Gail M. Sweeney P’22

James Sweeney

Jennifer E. Sweeney P’20 and Daniel R. Sweeney P’20

Patricia A. Sweeney ’85

Timothy E. Sweeney and Erich Haslehurst

Cyndi K. Swensen P’13 and Rick C. Swensen P’13

Lauren T. Swensen ’13 M’19 and Matthew T. Swensen ’13

John W. Swinson, Jr.

Christina J. Swiszcz ’02

Deborah L. Sylvia ’89 ’96 P’01 P’04 and Ronald N. Sylvia P’01 P’04

John F. Sylvia ’20

Michael J. Sylvia P’21 and Mary-Beth Sylvia P’21

Stephen Synott

Francis A. Szamboti ’15

Umesh Tahbildar

Alison V. Tainter

Anne E. Tait

John Tamburro ’71 and Karen Tamburro Timothy M. Tangari and Jennifer Tangari

Hannah Tanguay

Alex M. Taranto ’12

Taryn E. Tarlov ’12 and Benjamin S. Tarlov ’12 Gail Tarolli

Matthew T. Tarolli and Jennifer A. Tarolli Brenda Tartaglia

Catherine A. Tattrie

Bruce A. Tavares ’00 and Chassity Tavares Emily J. Taylor ’12

Ioanna I. Tchobanova ’13

Douglas R. Teague P’13

Elizabeth L. Teague ’13 Susan W. Teece ’75

David Teixeira, Jr. and Melissa J. Teixeira Harry A. Templeton ’65 ’72 and Audrey V. Templeton

Margo Tenney

Robert L. Tenney

Joseph Terino

Kara Terino

Kathryn K. Testa ’15

Peter Teto ’81

Nanette Tgompson

Steve Thacker

Garret Theberge

Caroline Thomas

Emily Thomas

Kathleen Thomas

Paul Thomas

Peter Thomas and Melissa Thomas

Ryan Thomas

Margaret Thombs PM’13 P’09 P’11 and Michael E. Thombs PM’13 P’09 P’11

Brighid S. Thompson ’05 and Kevin T. Thompson, Jr. ’06 Claire D. Thompson PM’16 P’14

Diane Thompson

James W. Thompson

Kelly M. Thompson and Kaitlyn M. O’Malley

Patricia Thompson

Ryan Thompson

Caroline Thorn

Katie Thorworth

William T. Thumm and Giuliana C. Thumm

Alyson Thurber

Margaret Thurber

Eric D. Thurston ’14

Sarah Tibbetts P’16 P’17 and Gary R. Moseman P’16 P’17

Amy B. Tiberio and Jason Tiberio ’21

Raymond F. Tiberio ’96

Gary A. Tilford ’76

Angeli E. Tillett ’20

Ashley Tilliard

Joshua A. Tillis ’22

Elaine Tilly and Paul C. Tilly

Nathan C. Titcomb ’05

Catherine A. Tobin ’09 ’14 P’07 and Robert Tobin P’07

Madison M. Tobin Emil Tomasi Erin Torpey

Marybeth Torpey ’12

Stephen Torti Douglas E. Towers

Jeff Towers and Sue Towers

Cathy A. Towle P’22 and Jonathon P. Towle P’22 Lindsay G. Towle ’22

Alan B. Town

Jody C. Tozier

Charlotte S. Tracy P’92

J. Charles Tracy, Jr. P’92

Heather Traupman

William B. Trautman

Richard Travisono

Michael D. Trayser ’09

Patrick Treanor and Meggin Treanor Tyler A. Tremblay ’06

Marsha L. Tringali and Raymond J. Tringali

Ray Tringali

Garrett J. Trombi and Kathleen A. Trombi Derrik Trombley

Joseph R. Trovato ’72 and Ann Trovato Edward C. Troyano and Theresa A. Troyano Brendan P. Truman

Maureen A. Truman and Christopher J. Truman

Joseph S. Truncellito ’06

Vincent J. Truncellito P’06 and Frances B. Truncellito P’06

Nicholas P. Tsimortos ’12

Lisa B. Tuccinardi P’22 and Paul L. Tuccinardi, Sr. P’22

Bettyann Tudino

Michael S. Tully

Joann Turcotte

Margaret T. Turcotte ’19 P’19 and Ronald A. Turcotte ’80 P’19

Olivia C. Turcotte ’22

Susan Turell

Nancy Turnbach

Thomas M. Turnbach and Erin M. Turnbach

Jeffrey S. Turner ’89 and Susan Turner

Michael P. Turner ’92 and Jodilyn T. Turner

Nicole R. Turner CPA

Thomas J. Turon ’18

Ellen Tuzzolo

Michael Twohig

Glenn M. Tyldesley and Barbara A. Tyldesley

Andrew Tyska and Nicki A. Tyska Stina A. Tyszkowski and Bruce Barros Kevin E. Uniacke ’91 and Patricia S. Uniacke Christopher Urbanski and Elizabeth Urbanski

Anthony Uriati

Aurelia Uriati

Casey Uryga

David S. Uryga and MaryBeth Uryga Bonnie B. Usher

Diane Usher ’98 and Patrick Usher, Jr. ’98 Harvey B. Ussach

Joshua P. Vacca ’05

Anthony Vacchelli Eric J. Valenti ’16

Erin K. Van Dorn, Esq. L’06 Trish Van Note

Katherine E. VanWolput

Sean Varano and Tracy A. Varano

Glenn Vario

Travis L. Varney ’04

Anna L. Vasaturo ’20

Lisa Vasaturo P’20 and John Vasaturo P’20

Matthew J. Vassallo ’99

Jessica Vega ’19

Ana S. Velez

Katie Velez

David Veliz

Nicholas S. Velseboer ’14

Charles M. Vendetti and Leslie A. Vendetti

Vincent R. Venturini ’88 and Deborah Venturini

Nicole M. Verdi, Esq. ’12 L’14 and Erlin R. Rogel ’12 L’15

Nicholas W. Vetrano ’19

Andrew T. Viana ’06

Sandra Victorino

Linda J. Vieira ’96 M’17

Kelli L. Viera

Karla Vigil

Oriana Villarreal ’12

Ann Vitale

Paul Vitale and Sharon

Peter D. Vitale ’06

Dat H. Vo and Thuytien Vo

Michael C. Vochis and Stella L. Vochis

Regina V. Vorwald P’12 and Gary R. Vorwald P’12

Kristin K. Vrooman and Robert P. Vrooman

David R. Wagner P’20

Kimberly Waitt

Denise Waldron

Stephen K. Walker ’86 and Diane M. Fischer

Jonathan B. Wall ’11

Andrew D. Wallace P’20 and Margaret H. Gilligan P’20

Brian Wallace ’97

Ryne L. Wallace ’16

Thomas M. Wallace ’21

Russell Wallis

Daniel L. Walser ’13

Jerome Walsh

John M. Walsh ’98 and Faith Walsh

Anna M. Walther ’18

Rue Walther

Ann M. Walton P’22 and John D. Walton P’22

Emily Walton

John B. Walton ’22

Bailey Wandyg

Dara Wandyg

James Wandyg

Jamie M. Wandzilak ’15

Steven Warnick

Ashley E. Warren ’20

Kerri S. Warren and Andrew M. Staroscik

Craig Warrington

Christa Waryas

Louise Waryas

Steven D. Waryas and Kristin Z. Waryas Scott W. Wassel P’22 and Michelle A. Wassel P’22

Devorah Wasserman

Jennifer Wasson

Lucas C. Watt ’20

David D. Watterson ’83 and Lynn P. Watterson Erin Weaver

Jennifer Webb

Ronald A. Webber

Kamali A. Webson ’13 ’17

Janice I. Weekes P’14 and Walter J. Weekes P’14

Daniel L. Weidmann ’12 and Kristina M. Keddie

Karen Weidner

Jeffrey Weigel and Christine Weigel

Richard A. Weik ’84 and Nancy K. Weik

Marjorie C. Weinstein-Kowal

Katherine C. Weir ’21

Alexandra R. Welch ’21

Terri Welch ’93 and Mark Johnson

Alexander Weller

Caitlin Wells

Jamie Wells

Jonathan D. Wells and Rebecca Wells Lee-Ann Wells ’09 Peter Wells

Rebecca Wells-Giardina

Kurt P. Werner P’21 and Debra Werner P’21

Charles A. Wernquest ’85 and Johanne E. Wernquest

Ginette Wessel

H. Philip West

Katherine West

Jil A. Westcott and John G. Bell

Joseph M. Wetzel P’22 and Margaret M. Wetzel P’22

Elizabeth M. Wexler

Jillian Wexler

Allison Weygand

Leah M. Whearty

Rebecca Whearty

Thomas J. Whearty III and Leah T. Whearty James G. Wheatley ’03

John C. Whidden and Barbara J. Whidden

Robert C. Whiffen ’80 and Melissa Whiffen Sheldon Whitehouse HD’11

John L. Whitmer ’87

Diane Whitmore

Alexandra T. Wiberg

Eric T. Wiberg, Esq. L’04

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 46
L. Vitale

Sean M. Wieck ’20

Maureen T. Wieler and William E. Wieler

Chris Wietecha

Glenn Wiggins

Piper K. Wilber ’19

Michelle Wilcox

Bob Williams and Cheryl Williams

Brian G. Williams

Denise Williams

Holly Williams and Shawen Williams

Linda Williams

Stacey T. Williams P’22 and Brent E. Williams P’22

Tom Williams

Kathi Williamson

James D. Wilmes P’09 and Deborah Wilmes P’09

Andrew Wilson

Arianna Wilson

James A. Wilson, Jr. ’92 and Heather Wilson

Judith L. Wilson P’22 and Edward B. Wilson P’22

Matthew T. Wilson and Karen A. Wilson

Ryan Wilson

Sherri A. Wilson P’14 and Michael F. Wilson P’14

Abby Winey

Ann G. Winfield

Simon Winn and Ingrid Winn

Sandra L. Winslow and Lee A. Winslow

Mary T. Wise ’93

Audrey Witt

Lorilynn Wojciehowski

David G. Wojdyl ’94

Chanda Womack

Peter Y. Wong

Jennifer L. Wood

Kathleen M. Wood ’88 and Robert C. Wood ’70

Nicholas Wood

Kinder W. Woodcock and Karen S. Woodcock

Daniel A. Woods ’09

Stacy E. Woods P’22 and John F. Woods, Jr. P’22

Patricia A. Woodward

Sebastian J. Wordell, Jr. ’05 M’07

Todd D. Wortman and Jamie F. Wortman

Matthew T. Woznyk ’21

Douglas Wraith and Linda A. Wraith Bethany M. Wright ’16

Shayna M. Wright

Karen Wrobel P’22 and Kenneth P. Wrobel, Jr. P’22

Mary J. Wu and Min Wu

Joshua Xavier

Lorraine D. Xavier and Joseph Xavier, Jr. Karen Y

Krista Yablin ’92 and Andrew Yablin

Nancy M. Yaeger P’17 P’18 and Todd L. Yaeger P’17 P’18

Christina L. Yamarik and David E. Yamarik

Andrew J. Yaroshefski ’89 and Mary-Ellen Yaroshefski

Claire Yerardi-Anastasia

Elizabeth Yokell and Steven Yokell

Emily A. Yonych ’22

Sheila Yonych

Brian J. Young ’05

Pamela S. Youngcourt P’22 and Michael J. Youngcourt P’22

Ryan Youngcourt

Yamche Yu

Alex Yuknat

Diane Zaccaro

Joanne R. Zaccaro

Karen Zaccaro

Marc Zadrima

Raazi Zain

Lorraine B. Zanini and Michael A. Zanini

Karen Zemel

Joseph Zeoli

Pat Zeoli

Miao Zhao

Mary Elizabeth Zicari P’22 and Louis P. Zicari, Jr. P’22

Emily A. Zilly ’02

Tammy Ziobro

Jill M. Zufelt McKenna

Katie M. Zullo ’04 and Steven B. Zullo ’03 M’03

Anonymous (76)

SCHOOL OF LAW INDIVIDUAL DONORS

$25,000 and up

Robert V. Chisholm, Esq. and Ellen Polansky

Linn Foster and Steven Freedman

Patrick T. Jones Esq. and Mary E. Jones

Mark S. Mandell, Esq. PL’11 and Yvette M. Boisclair, Esq. PL’11

Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11 and Sara Mandell

Margaret McNulty and John McNulty

Joseph D. Whelan, Esq. and Cathleen Whelan

$10,000 to $24,999

Gregory W. Bowman

Alison L. Laboissonniere Boyd L’06 and Bradford A. Boyd, Esq. L’08

Christopher J. Montalbano and Julie Montalbano

James C. Smith and Pamela Kushmerick

$5,000 to $9,999

Amato Deluca, Esq. Mark Gemma L’97

Jennifer W. Hashway, Esq. L’11 and John P. Barylick, Esq.

Matthew R. Kinell

Howard A. Merten Jr., Esq. and Veronica Merten

Robert M. Page ’93

Lawrence J. Zimmerman, Esq. L’98

$2,500 to $4,999

V. Anita Bahr

Anne G. Earle PL’06

N. Cabot Earle, Jr. L’06 and Christina A. Earle Allison E. Krause L’13

Robert D. Krause PL’13 LHD’14 and Marjorie Krause PL’13

Jiakun Lei L’14

Anonymous - IA

$1,000 to $2,499

Collin E. Bailey J.D. L’08 and Angelyne E. Cooper-Bailey, Esq. L’08

Nicole J. Benjamin, Esq. L’06 and Keith J. Benjamin

Donald Beskind and Wendy Robineau

Danilo A. Borgas, Esq. L’14

Marc Desisto, Esq.

Michael W. Donnelly-Boylen

Louise Durfee LHD’09

Brian P. Eisenhower, Esq. L’09

Jennifer G. Gonzalez, Esq. L’12

Amy S. Hebb, Esq. L’06

Kara A. Humm, Esq. L’08 and Robert J. Humm, Esq. L’08

Chelsea R. Jaensch ’10 ’16

Duane R. Lyons

Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 and Laura K. Maguire

Stephen M. Prignano, Esq. and Cheryl A. Prignano

Ekwan Rhow

Zehra Rizvi

George L. Santopietro, Esq. and Meryl Santopietro

Jeremy B. Savage

Michael A. Silverstein LHD’16

Phyllis J. Silverstein

Brian P. Stern

Patricia A. Sullivan and Jonathan A. Barnes

Arlene Violet, Esq.

Miriam Weizenbaum, Esq.

Gregory Wells

Michael J. Yelnosky and Laurie A. Barron

Nicola S. Yousif, Esq. ’07 L’10

Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq. and Antonia Zubiago Anonymous

$1 to $999

Sasha Abbott

Adrienne R. Abner L’18

Kimberly R. Ahern, Esq. L’09 and Jenna Lafayette

Alexandra N. Aksterowicz ’18 ’20 L’20

Emilyn M. Anderson, Esq. L’11 Celina Andrade L’21

William M. Anthony, Jr. L’22

Stephen J. Antonucci L’19

Amanda J. Argentieri, Esq. L’09

Rosa E. Arias-Perry, Esq. L’09

Ethan M. Armitano L’21

Samantha F. Armstrong L’18

Lauren E. Atsalis, Esq. L’13

Erica C. Avondoglio, Esq. L’09

Aryana P. Badery L’18

James J. Bagley, Esq. L’12

David D. Bagus, Esq. L’96 and Robin Bagus

Nelida S. Barbosa L’18

Kaitlyn C. Barrette, Esq. L’11 and David Barrette

Patrick C. Barry, Esq. and Jennifer A. Barry, Esq. Jose F. Batista L’14

Stephanie J. Baton, Esq. L’09

Michael J. Beagan, Esq. L’12

Brett V. Beaubien L’16

Neville J. Bedford, Esq. ’00 L’03 and Mary E. Bedford

Christina M. Behm L’18

Vicky J. Bejma, Esq. L’01

Trevor T. Bernard L’17

Heather M. Bernier P’21 and Robert R. Bernier, Jr. P’21

Bethany A. Bigos L’21

Christine L. Biscotti-Quitadamo, Esq. L’07

Jacob E. Bissaillon, Esq. L’16

Brian Bix

Alyssa V. Boss, Esq. L’97 and William C. Martin ’72

Sarah D. Boucher L’20

Michael M. Bowden J.D. P’20 and Anna P. Bowden P’20

Jeannie Boyle

Brittany E. Brogno-Perry ’17 L’20 and Brendon Perry

Colleen A. Brown, Esq. and John S. Berg

Rene G. Brown, Esq. ’98 L’01 P’06

Natasha A. Buckler, Esq. L’10 and Jeffrey Buckler

Karen E. Buttenbaum, Esq. L’97

Valdir Cabral

Daniel Calabro, Sr. Alexandra K. Callam

Daria R. Capaldi L’19

Margie M. Caranci and Paul F. Caranci Sarah M. Catino

John W. Chamberlain Jr., Esq. L’96 and Kim Chaplin

Brenna P. Charette L’19

Yul-mi Cho, Esq. L’09

Heather A. Cleary, Esq. L’10

Brenda J. Clement

Grizzel I. Clemetson

Edward C. Clifton LHD’21 and Audrey Clifton Christopher M. Cobleigh, Esq. L’02

Steven A. Colantuono, Esq. L’03 and Maya Colantuono

Jennifer A. Coliflores, Esq. L’11

Mackenzie W. Collins L’19

Robert E. Collins, Esq. ’79

Elizabeth Colt, Esq. and Kent M. Fields

Michaela Conley

Colleen B. Conway L’11

Sheila D. Conway, Esq. L’00

Stephen P. Cooney, Esq. L’02

Kevin M. Corona L’16

Ann M. Corriveau, Esq. L’01

Susannah Cotter

Taylor L. Criscuolo L’20

Brandon J. Cuffy, Esq. L’14

Regina A. Curran L’10 and Kathleen Curran

Michael J. Daly, Esq. L’02 and Kate Daly

Olabisi M. Davies L’16

Esme Devault, Esq. L’06

Joy C. Dingle, Esq. L’03

Maria DiNitto M’19 L’19

Stephanie L. Diorio L’19

Megan DiSanto, Esq. L’08

Jasmine L. Dobosiewicz L’16

John A. Dorsey, Esq. L’10 and

Christina A. Hoefsmit, Esq. L’10

Kalyan Downer Carlson L’21

Derek L. Drizin, Esq. L’10

Melissa R. DuBose L’04

Joshua P. Dunn, Esq. L’12 and

Cassandra L. Feeney, Esq.

Nicole P. Dyszlewski, Esq.

Thomas M. Dzialo P’13 P’17 and

Thelma L. Dzialo ’11 P’13 P’17

Donald J. Epifano, Esq. L’09

Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12

Clark Ervin

Robin J. Escobar L’17

Lynn M. Ewart, Esq. L’05

Stefano V. Famiglietti, Esq. L’16

Nicholas Fede

Rachel E. Feiden L’19

Joanne S. Fernandes PM’06 P’02 P’04 and Bruce F. Fernandes PM’06 P’02

Noel M. Field, Jr.

Brian A. Fielding, Esq. L’10

Natalie A. Fisher L’21

David R. Fitzpatrick L’19

Christine Flanagan, Esq. L’10

Mackenzie C. Flynn, Esq. L’15

Sean W. Fogarty L’21

Timothy J. Fogarty L’15

Caitlyn A. Forrester-Johnson L’20

Selena D. Fortes ’17 L’20

Amanda M. Foster, Esq. L’04 and Richard A. Foster, Esq. L’04

Bryan P. Foye L’17 and Hannah M. Foye L’16

Hala V. Furst, Esq. L’10

Alicia K. Fusaro L’17

Mark P. Gagliardi, Esq. L’03 and Sherri L. Gagliardi

Miguel Garcia

Marta E. Garrett, Esq. L’04

Matthew T. Giardina, Esq. L’12

Jenna R. Giguere, Esq. L’12

Colleen P. Giles ’12 ’15 L’20

Brendan R. Goff L’20

Amy H. Goins, Esq. L’12 and Peter F. Skwirz, Esq. L’12

Jared A. Goldstein, Esq. and Amy Pickworth

Tatiana M. Gomez L’21

Deborah S. Gonzalez, Esq. ’04 L’07 P’18 and Roberto Gonzalez

Kathryn T. Gradowski

Jason M. Gramitt, Esq. L’96

Joseph W. Graskemper ’07 and Alexandra F. Graskemper, Esq. ’07 L’13

Elizabeth Gravelle

John M. Greene, Esq. L’08 and Summer Greene Timothy J. Grimes, Esq. L’12

Jonathan M. Gutoff and Susan L. Wicland Elizabeth A. Hackley L’15

Kevin O. Hagan, Esq. L’01

Jodi P. Haley and Sean P. Haley

Harry J. Hall IV ’17 L’19

Olivia H. Handy ’16 L’21

Meghan L. Hansen and John P. Hansen, Jr. Adam M. Harrington L’21

Alyssa C. Harriston

Ali Hashaum

Diana J. Hassel, Esq.

Abigail B. Hausberg, Esq. L’08

Brittany E. Hayes ’15

Jax Henry

Benjamin C. Heroux L’21

Susan B. Heyman, Esq. and Gregory T. Heyman

Alison B. Hoffman L’17

Gregory N. Hoffman, Esq. L’13 and Alicia D. Hoffman, Esq. L’13

Ashley J. Hornstein, Esq. L’12

Rachel E. Horsman, Esq. ’11 L’16

Andrew Horwitz

Rhiannon S. Huffman, Esq. L’11

Lauren V. Iannelli, Esq. L’11

Koyejo-Isaac N. Idowu L’19

Kiron Ireland

Jillian N. Jagling, Esq. L’09

Katherine James-Bowers, Esq. L’01 and Michael M. Bowers

Judith A. Jamieson, Esq. L’05

Deborah Johnson

Emily Johnson L’17

Thomas C. Johnson IV L’16

Robert Kando, Esq. L’96

Jennifer L. Karr, Esq. L’11

Jason Kent

Xaykham Khamsyvoravong L’20

47

Mary B. Kibble, Esq. L’08

Peter F. Kilmartin, Esq. ’88 L’98 and

Kristine Kilmartin

J Scott Kilpatrick Esq. and

Carolyn K. Kilpatrick

Justin R. Kishbaugh

Dena M. Kist, Esq. ’96 L’01 and Kevin Kist

Niki Kuckes

Shannah Kurland, Esq. L’13

Laura L. Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 and

James G. Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21

Lorraine N. Lalli, Esq. L’01 and Brian M. Lalli

Beth Landes Murray

Troy H. Lange ’17 L’20

Nellie Large

James Lee

Andrew M. Lentz L’18

Anthony R. Leone II, Esq. L’97 and

Chelsie L. Horne

Eleanor Leong

Dadriana A. Lepore, Esq. L’10

Stephen S. Leung L’06

Hilary Levey Friedman

Jennifer Lisi Finkel L’18

David A. Logan, Esq.

Melissa A. Long

Jeremy B. Love, Esq. L’06

Kyle J. Lynch L’20

Kristin E. Lyons L’20

Kathleen MacAndrew

Erin R. Macgowan, Esq.

John J. Madis and Mary A. Madis

Evan B. Magnone L’13

Spencer A. Maguire, Esq. L’07 and Cary Maguire

Lisa A. Mancini

Howard Mandell

Robert B. Mann, Esq. LHD’15

Felicia A. Manni-Paquette, Esq. L’03 and Michael R. Paquette

Kathleen A. Massa ’82 ’02 P’05 and

Robert J. Massa, Sr. P’05

Shawn J. Masse, Esq. ’10 L’13

Cristian Mattoon, Esq. L’02

Alexandra C. McCarty L’18

Daniel J. McCusker, Esq. L’97 and Michelle McCusker

Kelsey E. McDonald ’16 L’18

Sally P. McDonald, Esq. L’09

Kaitlin A. McGuire L’17

Michaela M. McGuirl L’21

Shannon V. McKenna L’20

Jonte’ McKenzie

William B. McKenzie and Johanna W. McKenzie

Juliana McKittrick, Esq. L’13

Courtney E. McNulty L’13

Jinni A. Meacham

John D. Meara, Esq. L’11 and Kelly N. Meara, Esq. L’11

Braxton H. Medlin L’19

Arthur Mercurio

Andrea L. Merolla-Simister, Esq. L’09

Amanda B. Mertens Campbell, Esq. L’05

Joan Milas

Eric H. Miller, Esq. L’01

Olivia C. Milonas J.D. and Benjamin T. Milligan

Michael J. Moloney, Esq. L’09

Michael J. Moniz ’92 ’16 and Karen G. Moniz

Amanda Montgomery

Ann S. Mores, Esq. L’01 and Frank Mores

Andrew R. Morin L’21

Kathrine M. Morin L’19

Robert J. Mount, Esq. L’11

Don P. Moyer, Esq. L’96 and Erin Moyer

Brittani P. Mulholland L’17

Colleen P. Murphy J.D. and

Richard A. Marcotte

Martin J. Murphy, Esq. L’12

Thomas A. Murphy, Esq. L’09

Steven A. Murray, Esq. L’96

Marianna S. Nava

Jim Nellis

Jillian M. Nobis L’19

Arwa Noorali L’16

Jason M. Nystrom, Esq. L’12

Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14 and

Katie V. Oduyingbo Carlos Ortiz L’21

Raquel M. Ortiz, Esq. and Michael D. Micale

Kinzie Owen

Thomas J. Pagliarini, Esq. L’14

Patrick T. Paoletti, Esq. L’09

Veronica D. Paricio and Jorge Paricio

Christine C. Parker and Scott M. Parker

Curtis P. Patalano, Esq. L’05

Payal J. Patel L’09

Logan W. Pearce L’17

Kyla M. Pecchia L’16

Kelsey D. Peck L’19 and John Weber

Crystal D. Peralta L’20

Karen A. Perry

Emma L. Peterson, Esq. L’11

Hannah R. Pfeiffer L’18

Stacey A. Pires-Veroni, Esq.

Kathryn A. Pirraglia, Esq. L’11

Andrew W. Plocica ’11 L’19

Mary B. Poirier L’20

Orla A. Power

Joseph M. Proietta, Esq. L’02 and Mary C. Proietta

Matthew D. Provencher L’15

Stanley F. Pupecki, Esq. L’02

Lisa F. Quinn

Rainer A. Randell L’19

Jessie M. Reniere L’19

Kelley Resendes

Adam J. Resmini, Esq. L’09

R. Jason Resmini, Esq. L’09

John U. Reyes L’13

Alexander L. Ried L’19

Asghar Rizvi

Michael P. Robinson, Esq. L’00

Phillip C. Robinson, Esq. L’09 and Jungho Hong

Allyson L. Roklan, Esq. L’08

Todd J. Romano, Esq. L’03 and Karyn Romano James A. Ruggieri, Esq.

Shandell Ruiz

Jessica Ryan ’17 ’20 L’20

Peter Saba

Cindy E. Salazar, Esq. ’06 M’08 L’10

Jennifer E. Samolyk, Esq. ’92 L’96 and John Romney

Kelvin P. Santos L’20

Solmaz Sarhaddi, Esq. L’10

Katherine B. Savage L’17

Emily A. Savino L’21

Robert A. Savoie, Jr. L’19

Etie-Lee Schaub and Steven Schaub

Rita L. Segel ’05 and Richard M. Segel ’81

Julia Shackleton

Thomas G. Shaffer, Esq. L’98

Tanveer A. Shah L’10

Aaron B. Shields, Esq. L’97

Clay A. Shipp L’20

Esther Shpitalnik

Amit Singh, Esq. ’06 L’09 and Sara N. Burke Singh, Esq. L’09

Justin S. Smith L’18

William E. Smith and Christine M. B. Smith

Patrick J. Smock II L’06 and John J. Roies III

Ondine G. Sniffin, Esq. and Todd E. Sniffin

Andrew C. Spacone, Esq. and Carla Spacone

Zoe M. Sperber L’20

Andrew Staub L’17

Alexis M. Steele

Dana E. Steffens, Esq. L’09

Rebekkah R. Stoeckler

Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09

Brendan P. Sullivan L’16

Darian N. Surratt

Mack C. Tasoulas L’21

Louise E. Teitz

Monica Teixeira de Sousa

Jennifer M. Theroux, Esq. L’04

Stacy L. Thomas L’21

Ann M. Thompson and James Thompson

Kathryn M. Thompson P’16 and

George M. Thompson, Esq. P’16

O. R. Thompson LHD’10

Emily Trieber L’16

Rebecca M. Turner L’20

Hinna Upal, Esq. L’07

Joseph D. Ustynoski, Esq. L’97 and Jeananne Ustynoski

Per Vaage

Andrea M. Van Iten L’14

Cynthia R. Vandermolen

Samantha M. Vasques, Esq. L’14

Arjun Vedmurthy L’19

Nathalie M. Vega Crespo L’20

Margreta Vellucci, Esq. L’07

Nicole M. Verdi, Esq. ’12 L’14 and Erlin R. Rogel ’12 L’15

Antonio M. Viana L’14

Katherine L. Vieira, Esq. L’12

Linda J. Vieira ’96 M’17

Hannah R. Vitello Colone L’19

Michael A. Voccola, Esq. L’97 and Nancy Voccola

Renee G. Vogel, Esq. L’97 PL’98 and Benjamin S. Vogel PL’98

Christina M. Volpe ’14 L’17

Michael J. Wagner, Esq. L’98

Thomas M. Wall

Mason J. Waring, Esq. L’07

Sophia J. Weaver L’21

Eliana B. Weissman, Esq. L’07 Lucinda West L’21

Michael J. Williams, Esq. L’97 and Danielle Williams

Jennifer L. Wood

William K. Wray Jr., Esq. L’13 and Lily A. Wray

Amanda M. Wuoti L’21

Julia B. Wyman

William H. Yost, Esq. L’13

Michael J. Zabelin, Esq. and Kathryn M. Sabatini, Esq.

Jenna Zellmer

Anonymous

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 48

Institutional Partnerships and Matching Gift Companies

Roger Williams University and School of Law is grateful for the vital support of corporate, foundation, and institutional donors and sponsors. The following lists recognize organizations that provided gifts, pledges, payments on prior year pledges, and grants or made matching gifts to the University

UNIVERSITY INSTITUTIONAL DONORS

$25,000 and up

The A.M. Fund

Barnes & Noble

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rhode Island

Centreville Bank

City of Providence Conservation International Foundation

Cummings Foundation

The Donald C. McGraw Foundation, Inc.

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Gabelli Foundation

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Helfrich Bros. Boiler Works, Inc.

Institute of Museum and Library Services

Jewish Communal Fund

Lenox Foundation, Inc.

Morgan Stanley National Institutes of Health

National Public Education Support Fund

National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration

National Science Foundation

Nellie Mae Education Foundation

Norn Group

Office of Naval Research

Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council

Rhode Island Foundation

Rhode Island Science & Technology Advisory Council

Rhode Island Sea Grant

Rhode Island Department of Transportation

Schwab Charitable Fund

Shawmut Design & Construction

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

United Way of Rhode Island

United States Department of Agriculture

United States Department of Education

United States Enviromental Protection Agency

The Whimsie Fund

William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

The William H. Donner Foundation, Inc.

William T. Morris Foundation Anonymous

$10,000 to $24,999

Ambilabs

Ayers Saint Gross Inc

Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund Bank of America BankFive

Benevity Community Impact Fund

Blackbaud Giving Fund

C. Brito Construction Co., Inc

Center for Health and Justice Transformation Collins Construction Co., Inc.

Consigli Construction Company

DF Pray General Contractors

Elms Family Fund

Energy Capital Partners Management, LP

Gagliardi Family Charitable Fund of the Ayco Charitable Fund

Galaxy Development

Idalia Whitcomb Charitable Trust

The Integlia Family Foundation

JP Morgan Chase Foundation

Kaestle Boos Associates, Inc.

Kelly Family Foundation Inc.

Lane Construction Corporation

LPL Financial Services

Michael Integlia & Co.

The Nature Conservancy

Norbella Media

The Patrolman Gregory W. Bolden Memorial Scholarship Fund, Inc.

Rhode Island Department of Labor & Training

Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management

Rhode Island Legal Services Inc.

Saccoccio & Assoc. Inc - Architects

Santander

Shellfish Restoration Foundation of Narragansett Bay

Single Source Disaster Recovery Specialists

System Change Strategies LLC

TIAA-CREF

United States Department of Justice United States Department of Transportation Anonymous

$5,000 to $9,999

Adler Pollock & Sheehan P.C.

Arden Engineering Constructors, LLC

BankNewport

Citizens Bank

Cordtsen Design Architecture

The Davis Family Fund

Davenport’s Bar & Grill

Empire LaSalle LLC Ernst & Young, Int’l F & S Electric Inc

Federal Bureau of Investigations Gas Lamp Grille Gilbane Building Company, Inc.

Grimshaw-Gudewicz Charitable Foundation

Housing Ministries of New England

Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation

n|e|m|d architects, inc.

Promotora Inmobiliaria LFG PSEG

Raymond James Financial Rhode Island Heavy & Highway Starkweather & Shepley T. Rowe Price Fund

Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Verizon Foundation Wurtzel Waterman Brown Giving Fund

$2,500 to $4,999

The Boeing Company Caldwell & Johnson Dean Acquisition, LLC Edwin S. Soforenko Foundation

Federal Home Loan Bank

Fidelity Foundation FM Global HarborOne Bank

Jimmy Stuart Carpet & Upholstery Cleaners, Inc. Lifespan

Merrill Lynch and Co., Inc.

Milwaukee Tool

New England Association of Chiefs of Police, Inc. Pawtucket Credit Union Rhode Island Builders Association

Rhode Island Housing Town of Little Compton Washington Trust Co. YourCause, LLC

$1,000 to $2,499

A-1 Paving, LLC

Allade, Inc. - the Emil Family Charitable Fund

Allworth Communications

Amica Companies Foundation

Anchor Insulation Co.

Bartlett Tree Experts

Beta Beta Beta Biological Honor Society

Bristol County Lodge of Elks #1860 Cali 5 LLC

Crystal Spring Water

Design Build Institute of America Liberty

Northeast Regio East Warren Rod & Gun Club

Emerson Hospital

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc.

Fidelity Investments

Forbes Marketing Group Gartner, Inc.

Gil’s Appliances Gray Matter Marketing LLC Henry P. Kendall Foundation

Hibbitt Family Fund

Koppelman Family Foundation

La Abogada Donna

Local Initiatives Support Corporation

Massasoit Hook & Ladder Co. No. 1 Warren

Mastercard

Mazaika Family Foundation MD Lieberman Foundation

Navigant Credit Union

Neighborhood Health Plan of RI Pariseault Builders Inc. Pierce Atwood LLC PMA Consultants

Risman Insurance Agency, Inc.

The Robert J. Avila Foundation Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors RSM Boston Foundation

RWU Inter-Residence Hall Association Seekonk Supply, Inc. Skyhorse Publishing, Inc. TD Bank

TRAC Builders, Inc. Verizon

The Whiting-Turner Contracting Company Windover Construction

$1 to $999

3B investments 43 Exposition LLC Aldersbridge Allen’s Wine & Spirits AmazonSmile American Express Foundation American Express Ameriprise

Amica Mutual Insurance Company API of NH/Delta T Arise

Atlantic Elevator South Co Inc.

BAE Systems Bank of America Charitable Foundation Bank of America Foundation Blue Planet Environmental, LLC Bristol Bagel Works, Ltd. Bristol Land Conservation Trust Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Brown University Central Falls Housing Authority Central Fire Company No 1 Charities Aid Foundation of America Childhood Lead Action Project Christopher Stone Fund The Cicilline Committee

Citizens Charitable Foundation City of Central Falls, RI City of East Providence City of Pawtucket Colgate-Palmolive Cooney and Kiddoo Donor Advised Fund Crossroads Restaurant Crossroads Rhode Island

Cumberland Firefighter’s Local 2722

Cumberland Professional Firefiters Dental Associates of Walpole DiMartino & Associates, Inc.

Dudek Bowling Lanes

East Bay Dental Associates East Providence Health Equity Zone Eaton Vance Management Eco RI Inc

Economic Progress Institute Eventbrite Frontstream

Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce Grow Smart RI

Heritage Turbines Hog Island Improvement Association Hope Diner

The Housing Authority of Newport Housing Network of Rhode Island Innovations Realty, LLC

J & B Hockey Shop, Inc.

Johnson & Johnson Matching Gifts Program

J-Tech Surface Solutions, LLC

Kinsmen Tavern

KPMG Foundation

L3harris Technologies Charities Lauterbach, Inc.

Law Office of William J. Conley

LeadingAge RI

Lifespan Executive Suite

Little Compton Democratic Town Committee Lockheed Martin

Lovera VIP Inc

Lucy’s Hearth

Mental Health Association of RI

Microsoft

MJE Athletics LLC

Newport Lobster Co. Inc.

Newport Partnership for Families

Old State Road LLC

One Neighborhood Builders

PACE-RI

Pawtucket Central Falls Development

Pawtucket Housing Authority

Paypal

PCF Development

Peace of Mind Nannies

Peter R. & Cynthia K. Kellogg Foundation

Philadelphia Insurance Companies

Pizza Wave

Portuguese Recreative and Cultural Club of Warren

Preferred Auto Providence Housing Authority Providence Preservation Society

Prudential

The Psychology Department at Roger Williams University

Raytheon Company

Red Rooster Solutions

Rhode Island College

RI Coaltition for Children and Families RI Department of State Gorbea RIHousing Rough & Ready Engine Company 5

RWU Women’s Basketball

Scheer Law Group, LLC

Schneider Electric IT USA Inc

Schneider Electric North America Foundation

Scott F. Viera Memorial Fund

Seth PAC

Shell Oil Company Foundation

Skanska USA Building, Inc.

Smith Hill Community Development Corporation

South County Habitat for Humanity Stop & Shop

Stop The Wait RI

Stove Place II

Sully’s Ice Cream Stand

Sun Life Financial

Sunnyside Corp SWAP Inc

Takeda Pharmaceuticals

Touisset Fire Co # 6

Town of Coventry Housing Authority

Town of Middletown Affordable Housing Committee

Trailblaze Marketing

United Way

USA Resurfacing Inc

Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Warren Fire Department

Warren Rescue

Wellington Management, LLP

Westfield Tavern Inc

Whitehouse for Senate

William Gould Architectural Preservation, LLC

William H. Fenton Co. Inc.

WKOC LLC

Women’s Development Corporation

49

SCHOOL OF LAW INSTITUTIONAL DONORS

$10,000 and up

Anova Marine Insurance Services LLC

Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund

Chisholm Chisholm & Kilpatrick LTD

Jones Kelleher LLP

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Science Foundation

Rhode Island Foundation

The Smith Kushmerick Family Fund Whelan Corrente & Flanders LLP

$5,000 to $9,999

ACS Industries, Inc.

Adler Pollock & Sheehan P.C.

Decof, Barry, Mega & Quinn, P.C.

Deluca & Associates LTD

Grimshaw-Gudewicz Charitable Foundation

Hinckley Allen LLP

Mandell, Boisclair & Mandell, LTD

Marasco & Nesselbush, LLP

Motley Rice LLC

Partridge Snow & Hahn LLP Robinson + Cole LLP

$2,500 to $4,999 CDLP Law

Emma Clyde Hodge Memorial Fund

Geoff’s Superlative Sandwiches Higgins, Cavanagh & Cooney, LLP

Krause Family Fund

PNC Institutional Asset Management

Raymond James Financial Rhode Island Association for Justice Savage Law Partners, LLP

$1,000 to $2,499

Barton Gilman LLP

Bowerman Associates Inc

Cameron & Mittleman LLP

Cervenka Green & Ducharme LLC

Charles Schwab & Company Coia & Lepore, Ltd.

Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

Gair, Gair, Conason Gonzalez Law Offices, Inc

Indeglia Lutrario, Attorneys at Law LLC

Joann Denapoli Charitable Foundation

Keches Law Group

Locke Lord LLP

Maggiano, Digirolamo & Lizzi, P.C. Mallory Portraits

Merrill Lynch and Co., Inc. ODU Law Firm, LLC

Pannone Lopes Devereaux & O’Gara LLC

RI Legal Services Inc.

Sloane & Walsh, LLP

Themis Bar Review

United Way of Rhode Island

$1 to $999 1776 Liquors

AccessLex Institute

Charities Aid Foundation of America

Charity on Top Foundation Inc

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. Fitness Together Green Development, LLC IHS Law, LLC

Kaplan

The Law Office Of Cindy Salazar LLC The Law Offices of Jeremy M. Rix

MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES

American Express

Ameriprise

Amica Mutual Insurance Company

Bank of America Charitable Foundation

The Boeing Company

Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation

Charities Aid Foundation of America

Citizens Bank

Tribute Gifts

Colgate-Palmolive Eaton Vance Management

Ernst & Young, Int’l

Fidelity Investments FM Global Frontstream Gartner, Inc. Gilbane Building Company, Inc.

Johnson & Johnson

Lockheed Martin Mastercard

Pew Charitable Trust Prudential PSEG Raytheon Company Schneider Electric IT USA Inc

Leone Law, LLC

Montaup Country Club

New Hampshire Charitable Foundation

Omni Providence Hotel

Peaceable Kingdom

Pew Charitable Trust

Preservation Society of Newport County

Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra & Music School

Sam Adams Brewery

Snookers Bar and Grill

Ursillo, Teitz & Ritch, Ltd.

West Bay Tree Works LLC

Williams Companies

Shell Oil Company

T. Rowe Price

Takeda Pharmaceuticals

Verizon Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Williams Companies

Tribute gifts are a special way to recognize friends and loved ones while supporting Roger Williams University and School of Law. Individuals who were honored or memorialized with a tribute gift in fiscal year 2022 are listed below.

Honored Memorialized

Benjamin N. Carr

John J. Chung

Timothy F. Kelleher

Ioannis N. Miaoulis

Marcia Morris

Thomas Nikundiwe

Bruce M. Selya

Michael A. Silverstein

Heritage Society

Paul L. Arris

Gary L. Bahr

Jeffrey W. Barila

Brett J. Bergman

Dianne E. Crowell

Diane Drake

Thomas E. Fitzgerald

Joseph D. Fortin George E. Garvin

Mark Gould

Charles G. Greenhalgh

Harold Horton

Daniel A. Kwasniewski

Evan A. Lautz

Elsch J. Maisoh

Jeffrey W. Manuck Robert A. Potter Brian Remy

Raj Saksena

Mark M. Sawoski

Zachary P. Shapiro

Phyllis J. Silverstein

Mary Staab

Jeremy D. Warnick Ira Zimmerman

The Heritage Society recognizes individuals who have made a life income gift or bequest provision to Roger Williams University and School of Law

Elaine H. Baker

Lois Bertini ’81

Julie M. Cole ’99 L’04

Andrea Crump

Seraphin DaPonte, Jr.

Paul E. Eichin PE ’58

Stacey B. Foisy ’84 and Mark T. Foisy

William J. Geraghty ’78 and Kathleen Lynch

George R. Hemond ’72 and Christine Hemond

William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89

Paul Moran

Aurelia J. Papitto

David J. Papitto, Esq. ’98 L’08

Tullio D. Pitassi ’70 and Antoinette Lautieri-Pitassi

Judith M. Sharpe

James Tackach

David J. Thomas ’72 & Janet M. Thomas

Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05

Michael A. Voccola, Esq. L’97 and Nancy Voccola James G. Whiffen ’76 and Wadad Whiffen

Anonymous (2)

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 50

Named Financial Aid Funds

Roger Williams University and School of Law pride ourselves on the extraordinary level of financial support provided to our students. The University is extremely grateful to our donors who have established and contributed to the following named financial aid and scholarship funds.

Afghan Women’s Scholarship Fund

Alan Shawn Feinstein Leadership Scholarships

Alister C. McGregor Scholarship Fund

Alumni Scholarship

Andrade Family Endowed Scholarship

Andrew C. Marsh Scholarship

Anthony J. Montalbano Endowed Scholarship for Legal Studies

API of NH/Delta T Endowed Scholarship Fund

Arlene Violet Public Interest Law Scholarship

Balfour Minority Scholarship

Bank5 - Financial Aid

Barnes & Noble Scholarship

Barrie ’70 and Mary Lee Endowed Scholarship Fund

Ben Carr Endowed Scholarship

Bisbano Scholarship Fund

Bready Minority Scholarship Fund

Brett Bergman ’11 Endowed Memorial Senior Merit Scholarship

Brian Remy Scholarship Fund

Bristol Rotary Scholarship

Carpentry Apprenticeship Scholarship

Ceasar Brito Memorial Scholarship Fund

Central Falls Aid Fund

Charles P. Ferro Scholarship

CMPAB Endowed Scholarship

Coca-Cola Scholar Award

Construction Management Endowed Scholarship

Construction Management Merit Scholarship

Daniel Kwasnieski ’93 Scholarship Fund

Darlene Lycke Memorial Scholarship

David & Matilda Kessler Endowed Scholarship

David A. Logan Family Opportunity Endowed Scholarship Fund

Diane Drake Scholarship

Dianne E. Crowell Scholarship Fund

Dr. George A. Ficorilli Professor Emeritus Endowed Scholarship

Dr. Harold Way Scholarship

E. Diane Davis Scholarship

Earle Family Memorial Endowed Business Law Scholarship Fund

Ellen Knowles Harcourt Scholarships

Elsch Josiah Maisoh, Jr. ’13 Endowed Scholarship

Eric T. Dimmick ’94 Endowed Scholarship

in Construction Management Fund

Esther Clark Endowed Scholarship

Ethel Barrymore Colt-Migletta Scholarship

Evan Alexander Lautz Scholarship Fund

Volunteers

Evelyn & Rita Pendergast Memorial Scholarship

Faculty/Staff Emergency Scholarship Fund

Francis Darigan Scholarship

Franklin P. Bailey and Barbara N. Bailey Endowed Scholarship

Gagliardi Family Distinguished Seminar Series

Gary L. Bahr Memorial Scholarship Fund

George E. Garvin Memorial Scholarship

Geremia Scholarship Fund

Gingerella Family Scholarship

Grimshaw-Gudewicz Scholarship

Harold Payson Scholarship Fund

Hearst Scholarship for Underserved Students

Hemond Brothers Scholarship

Hon Thomas J. Caldarone, Jr. Endowed Scholarshi

International Association of Insurance Professionals

Endowed Scholarship Fund

Idalia Whitcomb Scholarship Fund

James Tackach Award

Jeffrey William Manuck ’04 Memorial Endowed Scholarship

Jeremy Warnick Scholarship

Jerrold and Barbara Lavine RWU Scholarship

Joan Montalbano Scholarship

John D. Coyle Scholarship

John E. King Scholarship Fund

Jonathan M. Redler Scholarship Fund

Judge Thomas J. Paolino Scholarship Fund

Justinian Law Society of Rhode Island

Justinian Law Society Scholarship

Kaestle Boos Architecture Scholars Fund

Kelly Family Endowed Scholarship in Construction Management Fund

Law Alumni Association Scholarship

Lillian and Irving Topf Memorial Fund

Lincoln W.N. Pratt Memorial

Lorraine Dennis Memorial Endowed Scholarship

Lt. Charles A. Henderson USN Fund

Lt. Joseph D. Fortin ’08 Memorial Scholarship

Mandell-Boisclair Justice Scholarship

Mark Alokones Scholarship Fund

Mark Gould Memorial Scholarship & Research Fund

Mark Hutchins Memorial Scholarship

Mark Sawoski Scholarship Fund

Mary Staab Endowed Scholarship Fund

Matthew Wolfe Scholarship Fund

Michael P. McNulty Endowed Scholarship

Michele Cron Yeaton ’80 Memorial Scholarship

Minority Life Scholarship

Montrone Family Scholarship Fund

Patrolman Gregory W. Bolden Memorial Scholarship

Paul L. Arris Memorial Scholarship Fund

Pompei Family Engineering Endowed Scholarship

Prof. Robert B. Kent ’01 Memorial Scholarship

Professor Geoffrey Clark and Professor Bob McRoberts Endowed Awards in Creative Writing

Professor John Chung Scholarship

Professor Paul Langello Memorial Scholarship Fund

Professor Peter Wright Endowed Scholarship Fund

Providence Journal Scholarship Fund

Raj Saksena Endowed Memorial Scholarhship Fund

Rebecca Anne Kelton Memorial Scholarship

RI Association for Justice Joseph R. Weisberger Scholarship

Robert A. Potter, Jr. Endowed Scholarship

Robert D. Eigen Scholarship in memory of Jeannette Altman

Robert F. Stoico/FIRSTFED Scholarship Fund

Robert W. and Virginia B. McBride ’82 Memorial Fund

RWU Law Opportunity Scholarship Endowed Scholarship Fund

Sergeant Michael Jannitto Memorial Scholarship

Sgt. Jim and Julie Cole Peace Officer Scholarship

Shawmut Scholars

Social & Health Services Scholarship Fund

Sparks Memorial Endowed Scholarship Fund

Stanley Rodman Scholarship Fund

Stephen M Kellert Memorial Scholarship in Biology

Steven Ficorilli Memorial Scholarship

Stonewall Scholarship

Thomas E. Fitzgerald Scholarship in Visual Arts Studies

Thomas J. Lawton Memorial Scholarship

Thurgood Marshall Memorial Scholarship

Underrepresented Student Scholarship

University College Scholarship

Walk of Fame Alumni Association Scholarship

Weisberger Inn of Court Scholarship

William Randolph Hearst Endow

William T. Morris Foundation Scholarship

Wright Family Scholarship

Zachary Shapiro Study Abroad Fund

We would like to recognize the volunteers who have provided leadership and guidance to the university in the 2021-2022 year.

President’s Circle

The President’s Circle is an advisory group made up of industry thought leaders and imaginative problem solvers who are willing to invest in innovative and entrepreneurial initiatives that will redefine the future of Roger Williams University.

Kristen A. Avansino HD’99

Leon Cooperman HD’97

William S. Cummings

Board of Trustees

Mario J. Gabelli HD’92

Alan G. Hassenfeld HD’93

Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09

Brian W. MacLean

The Honorable Angel Taveras

Michael G. Tennyson

Orin S. Wilf ’96

Trustees of Roger Williams University, in close collaboration with the President and RWU Senior Leadership, develop and advance the mission and goals of the University. United by a strong commitment to support the RWU community, Trustees help identify and achieve the strategic vision that ensures the reputation and health of the institution as well as the faculty, staff, students, alumni, and families of RWU.

Timothy E. Baxter ‘83 P’13 HD’15, Chair

Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11, Vice Chair

Marcia Morris, Esq. HD’19, Vice Chair

Linn Foster Freedman, Esq., Secretary

Jeffrey M. Grybowski, Esq., Treasurer

Jerauld C. Adams

James R. Andrade ‘77 ‘79

Nicole J. Benjamin, Esq. L’06

Rodney A. Butler

Heather N. Culp Boujoulian ‘97

Doris M. De Los Santos ‘20

Larry S. Eichler, Esq.

Julie I. Englund

Mario J. Gabelli HD’92

William J. Geraghty ‘78

Peter A. Heard ‘80

Les Hiscoe

Michael Integlia, Jr. ‘70 P’12

Keith Johnson P’18

Murray D. Karp P’21 P’21

Laurie J. Landeau V.M.D.

Antonio Masone, Jr. ‘91

William F. McKeon ‘84

Howard A. Merten Jr., Esq.

Ioannis N. Miaoulis

Scott W. Pray PL’16

Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ‘99 HD’18

Lisa J. Raiola

Todd L. Rechler ‘93

Daniel J. Rossignol

Regina A. Shakin P’19

The Honorable William E. Smith

Joseph D. Whelan, Esq.

Timothy B. Yeaton ‘80

51

School of Law Board of Directors

The Honorable William E. Smith, Chair

Nicole J. Benjamin, Esq. L’06, Vice Chair

The Honorable Patricia A. Sullivan, Treasurer

Howard A. Merten Jr., Esq., Secretary

Kenneth E. Arnold, Esq.

Collin E. Bailey J.D. L’08

Alyssa V. Boss, Esq. L’97

Gregory W. Bowman, Esq.

Alumni Board of Directors

Nibal N. Awad ’12, Chair

Theresa M. Agonia ’13, Vice Chair

Kelly A. Scafariello ’99, Vice Chair

Christina B. Abisla ’13

Ziad Al Achkar ’12

Virgina S. Albert ’17

Marek P. Bute, Esq. L’05

Marc Desisto, Esq.

The Honorable Melissa R. DuBose L’04

Mark W. Gemma, Esq. L’97

Gregory N. Hoffman, Esq. L’13

Patrick T. Jones, Esq.

J. Scott Kilpatrick, Esq.

Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96

F. Michael Ayles ’91

Carol A. Botelho ’84

Gordon Craig III ’94

Peter P. Dunn ’12

Codie A. Eisenberg ’09 Sofia M. Giovannello ’13

Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11

Ioannis N. Miaoulis

Stacey A. Pires-Veroni, Esq. Stephen M. Prignano, Esq. Michael P. Robinson, Esq. L’00

James A. Ruggieri, Esq.

George L. Santopietro, Esq. Ondine Galvez Sniffin, Esq.

The Honorable Brian P. Stern

Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09

The Honorable Paul A. Suttell LHD’11

The Honorable O. Rogeriee Thompson LHD’10

Hinna Upal, Esq. L’07

Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq.

Law Alumni Board of Directors

Gregory N. Hoffman, Esq. L’13, President

Kelly Rafferty Meara L’11, Vice President

Rachel E. Horsman, Esq. ’11 L’16, Secretary/ Treasurer Brett V. Beaubien L’16

President’s Board of Advisors

Jennifer A. Coliflores, Esq. L’11

Brandon J. Cuffy, Esq. L’14

Olabisi M. Davies L’16

John A. Dorsey, Esq. L’10 Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12

Lindsey K. Gumb ’09

Juan M. Hernandez ’16

James L. Kelley ’16

Peter A. Klay ’92 Brian F. LeDuc ’10 Charnele S. Luster ’11

Jenna R. Giguere, Esq. L’12

Alison L. Laboissonniere Boyd L’06

Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07

Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14

Thomas J. Pagliarini, Esq. L’14

Kevin L. Moitoso ’01

Christopher D. Mordas, Esq. ’94 L’97 Rachel L. Morris ’09

Kelsey D. Peck L’19

Crystal D. Peralta L’20

Nicole M. Verdi, Esq. ’12 L’14

The President’s Board of Advisors is a volunteer leadership body comprised of Roger Williams University alumni and friends who embody the RWU spirit and possess the drive to advance RWU’s mission. Advisors play an active leadership role at RWU by volunteering expertise, advice, and financial support to the University.

William R. Ashworth II

Janet P. Atkins

Anthony E. Autiello, Sr. ’74

Kosta Bitsis ’84 P’14

Anthony M. Brahimsha ’10

Kyle J. Casserino ’13

Rebecca L. Collins ’97

Gordon Craig III ’94

Rick Daubenspeck ’85 P’17

Real Estate Advisory Board

Bradford A. Dean ’73

Charles B. Floyd ’14

Gerald A. Francese, Esq. ’96

Brendon P. Giblin ’00

Adam Goldman

Vincent P. Helfrich ’82

Juan M. Hernandez ’16

Frank A. Hood ’97 Eugene Kennedy ’90

Michael A. La Scala ’83

David S. Llewellyn ’79

William E. MacDonald P’18

Deborah Marchini

Elizabeth A. McGraw ’10

Richard L. Michaud ’88

Stephanie L. Noris ’92 Thomas S. Olsen ’11 John A. Puniello ’97

James P. Reardon ’13

Mark Schiller ’89

Ron Simoneau

Ernest P. Smith P’11

William L. Spruill III ’85 William T. Thumm Judith W. Vigar

The Real Estate Advisory Board provides real world perspectives from industry to RWU senior leadership, faculty and students, specifically as it relates to creating and supporting nationally and internationally recognized Real Estate programs at Roger Williams.

Todd L. Rechler ‘93, Chair

Heather N. Culp Boujoulian ’97

Hadley Enright ’11

Dory R. Faxon L’00

Luis F. Gomez ’92

Parent and Family Leadership Council

Jonathan E. Cohen and Amy L. Cohen

Andrew J. Grace ’94

Adam A. Gross

Mehdi Khosrovani ’80

Matthew R. Kinell, Esq. L’09 Andrea Murphy Jackson ’93

Joseph M. Di Scipio P’21 and Margaret M. Di Scipio P’21

Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 and Douglas F. Garland P’22

Rhonda S. Goldberg

Adam Goldman and Charmaine Goldman

Larry Goldstein and Jill Goldstein

Patricia E. Heelen P’22 and Christian D. Heelen P’22

Denise L. Johnson P’18 and Keith Johnson P’18

Murray D. Karp P’21 P’21 and Stefanie A. Karp P’21 P’21

Dan F. Kelly and Debora O. Kelly

Gregory S. Kimmel, Esq. L’97 and Lisa D. Kimmel

Jason W. Knell and Laurie A. Knell

Michael C. O’Brien P’19

Young K. Park

Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16

Todd L. Rechler ’93

Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06

Kaarkuzhali B. Krishnamurthy P’22 and Ram V. Chavali P’22

Peter Langan

Sarah E. Lavoie P’21 and John F. Lavoie P’21

Tracy L. Levey and James K. Levey

Todd A. Magliato P’20 and Mary Ann Magliato P’20

Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 and Laura K. Maguire

Mitch J. O’Hara, Jr. P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18 and

Lori C. O’Hara P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18

Paul A. Pabis ‘83 ‘97 M’17 P’17 and Patrice Wood P’17 HD’17

John J. Park and Donna L. Park

Adam L. Peck

Judith A. Pegno P’17 and Steven A. Pegno P’17

Amelia Schofield

Jordan M. Stone

Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12

Orin S. Wilf ’96

Faith A. Rushnak and Scott Rushnak

Siv Schultz P’22 and Paul R. Schultz, Jr. P’22

John Spinney, Jr. and Erin Spinney

Marco P. Uriati, Esq. L’96 and Jennifer L. Uriati

Judith W. Vigar

Simon Winn and Ingrid Winn

Joshua B. Wright

Amy G. Zerman P’22 and Jared P. Zerman P’22

Mary Elizabeth Zicari P’22 and Louis P. Zicari, Jr. P’22

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 52

THIS PLASTIC LIFE NERMIN

KURA

At first glance, lurid scarlet floral shapes leap out at the eye, next taking in the softer-hued center that, oddly, appears to contain six tiny babies clutching life preservers and staring ominously while encircled by much-larger lizards.

“It’s colorful and fun, but what is happening in there isn’t fun at all. It’s a beautiful horror story,” according to the creator, Professor of Art & Architecture History Nermin Kura.

“It’s like the children are in a sinking ship. They’re not going to be saved.”

Titled Safe Haven, the artwork is part of a series called Cake Mold Nursery Rhymes, exhibited this year in galleries in Ankara and Istanbul, Turkey. Kura, a prolific ceramist, decided to create a narrative through found-plastic objects traditionally associated with women’s work, sewed together using fishing line.

“Floral silicone cake molds represent the plasticized biosphere of our technological age and provide the stage upon which stories are enacted by baby figurines among oversized acrylic botanical beads and rubber reptiles. The work explores the boundaries between art and craft, ornament and symbol, and ponders the loss of innocence in an age of global warming and social unrest, where danger looms and children are no longer safe,” she explains in her artist statement.

Kura’s series is made entirely of mass-produced plastic sourced from dollar stores, a commentary on the impact of synthetics on traditional arts. Her works are both influenced by and a message about oya, a traditional Anatolian needlework, shifting from cotton to polyester-thread embroidery.

“Oya is how women would tell their stories. Historically, the women’s place was in the house, raising children, embroidering, baking, etcetera. However, they found ways through their embroideries to tell their stories. My work is a contemporary version of women telling their stories and voicing their displeasure,” says Kura.

53

HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS DIVE INTO WORLD OF MARINE BIOLOGY

Every summer since 1989, high school students become field scientists at Roger Williams University. The Marine Biology Field Studies Program puts on a college-level summer camp, where students from around the country come to our Bristol campus and waterfront research facilities to conduct lab experiments, participate in hands-on field trips and learn from faculty experts about everything from coastal ecosystems and productivity of the sea to plants and animals in the coastal zone. Between labs inside RWU’s state-of-the-art Wet Lab and lessons aboard the university’s research vessel, the InVinceble Spirit, generations of high school students have been introduced to the university’s Marine Biology and oceanography curriculum. While they’re here they get the college experience, living in residence halls and eating our highly rated food in the Upper Commons. It’s an experience they won’t forget – and has led many of them to enroll at RWU.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL 2022 54

One

AN UP-AND-COMER LEADS THE COMEBACK

CITY

As Central Falls Mayor, Maria Rivera ’19 is bringing a new era of optimism and transformation to her community.

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