RWU Magazine - Fall/Winter 2023

Page 1

FALL/WINTER 2023 ISSUE #4 |

The Magazine of Roger Williams University

A JUSTICE-CENTERED MISSION

On the 30th anniversary, RWU Law launches Institute for Race and the Law

» PAGE 21

KIDWIND POWER » PAGE 7

TODAY’S TRADES WORKERS, TOMORROW’S TEACHERS » PAGE 17

SAILING LAUNCHES NEW FLEET » PAGE 27


10

SASH TURNS

Want to learn how RWU’s buildings can become greener through more sustainable practices? Interested in addressing racial disparities within the national juvenile justice system? Our students explore these serious issues and more, often with a lens on social and environmental justice, through courses and community-engaged work. Then at the end of each academic year, undergraduate and graduate students share their ideas, solutions and creative works with the university community at the annual Student Academic Showcase and Honors (SASH) event. In April, RWU celebrated the 10th anniversary of SASH, an opportunity for students to engage in scholarly discourse with fellow students, faculty and staff in a collegiate academic conference and artistic showcase.

SASH is a wonderful moment to celebrate research and creativity across all of our programs. This year, the breadth of projects, the poise of our students in presenting their work, and the evidence of faculty mentorship really blew me away. - Margaret Everett, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs 2


Jared Richardson ’24, a Political Science major and Sustainability Studies minor from Winchester, Mass., talks about research related to sustainability knowledge and culture at RWU during the Student Academic Showcase and Honors.

At SASH, Meriel McGovern ’23, a Marine Biology major and Mathematics minor from Long Valley, N.J., presented her Honors Capstone project related to local coral Astrangia poculata.

Architecture majors and Sustainability Studies minors, left to right: Andrew Hall ’23, of Middletown, Conn., Matt Carlson ’23, of Glocester, R.I., and Joe Bucci ’23, of East Islip, N.Y., proposed ideas to make RWU’s buildings more sustainable.

Left to right: Psychology majors Matthew Hallet ’23, of Grafton, Mass., Matt Glynn ’23, of Walpole, Mass., Bree Clarke ’23, of Berlin, Conn., and Imani Hall ’23, of Providence, R.I., researched stress reduction through gratitude journaling.

Left to right: Jackson Lower ’23, an Economics and Political Science double major from Medway, Mass., Matt Falvey ’23, an Economics major from Walpole, Mass., and Phillip Call ’24, an Economics and Finance double major from Medfield, Mass., developed policy recommendations for the Federal Reserve.

Leah Pinkes ’23, a Marketing major from Holden, Mass., left, and Madison Rodriques ’24, a Criminal Justice major from Bristol, R.I., conducted research on juvenile justice in Rhode Island. RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

3


RWU The Magazine of Roger Williams University

FROM OUR

PRESIDENT

© 2023 Roger Williams University Published by University Marketing and Communications President Ioannis Miaoulis, Ph.D. Chief of Staff Brian Williams, D.M. Chief Marketing Officer Laura Baldwin, MBA Editor-in-Chief Jill Pais ’05 Design Director Blair Carroll ’13 Contributing Writers Grace Boland Jordan Jeffrey Phelan ’19 Helga Melgar Mel Thibeault Contributing Designers Ashley Regan ’16 Jenn Ferri Contributing Photographers Lucero Blanco Matthew Cohen ’03 Richard Dionne Joshua Grab ’16 iStock.com/Cavan Images James Jones Please direct questions, comments, letters and other editorial inquiries to: email: stories@rwu.edu phone: (401) 254-3332 University Marketing and Communications Roger Williams University One Old Ferry Road Bristol, RI 02809 Roger Williams University and RWU are registered with the United States Patent & Trademark Office.

4

The stories shared in this issue provide a continuing reminder of why I love to serve as President of Roger Williams University. Now in my fifth year as president, I have seen countless examples of what makes Roger Williams a truly special community, united by a shared passion and purpose to make a positive social and environmental impact and be the changemakers and leaders the world needs. There are too many stories for one magazine to celebrate the many ways our faculty, staff and students dive into hands-on learning that tackles real issues, like our School of Justice Studies’ innovative Dead Man Walking course [page 13], where Criminal Justice students examine capital punishment and the death penalty, getting a firsthand look at the Louisiana State Penitentiary system and interviewing inmates on death row. Professor of Communication Studies Kamille Gentles-Peart [page 11] is researching the body politics surrounding voluptuous Black women’s bodies on a Fulbright Scholarship in Trinidad and Tobago – antiracist work that she has brought to the university community in RWU’s Hidden Truths lecture series and in class discussions. RWU students continue to build powerful combinations of academic degrees and professional credentials, becoming critical thinkers and team collaborators, with well-rounded and enhanced skillsets that make them more career-ready and prepared to lead fulfilling lives. Take for example, the first graduates of our new Real Estate Graduate Certificate program [page 5] at the Cummings School of Architecture, who were able to easily add the certificate coursework to their Architecture and Preservation Studies programs and opened greater career opportunities in their fields. And the incredible work of our Education and Engineering students [page 7] teaming up to teach more than 200 local fourth graders each year about wind energy and how to design and build their own wind turbines, bringing them to our campus for a day of engineering activities and inspiring scores of young students to pursue a STEM education. This year, we are also celebrating a historic milestone and the future of the School of Law. Throughout the year, RWU Law will celebrate the 30th anniversary of its founding and the launch of the Institute for Race and the Law. This new Institute represents the continued commitment of the law school’s justice-driven mission and leadership in legal education. It will support student scholarships, teaching, and research on issues of race and the law, as well as lecture series, symposia and programs exploring racial justice featuring external scholars and in collaboration with schools and colleges across the university.   I came to RWU because of stories like these: stories of our students and alumni who transformed themselves and discovered their passion; stories of our faculty and staff doing great work in service to our students and to the world. Together, we are developing new knowledge, finding solutions, and lifting up the people and communities around us. We should all take pride in these accomplishments. This is why it’s always a great day to be a Hawk! Ioannis N. Miaoulis, Ph.D. President


The Magazine of Roger Williams University

INSIDE THIS ISSUE 21

A JUSTICE-CENTERED MISSION On the 30th anniversary, RWU Law launches Institute for Race and the Law

27 13 CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN LOUISIANA

Criminal Justice students examine capital punishment and experience firsthand a more punitive criminal justice system

SAILING LAUNCHES NEW FLEET

Gifts replace aging boats and help keep the RWU Sailing program on top

41

GIVING TO RWU

Roger Williams University and the School of Law recognize the individuals and organizations that made gifts and volunteered their time during the 2022-23 fiscal year


The FUTURE OF

New dean to lead the Gabelli School of Business into its next chapter Diya Das, a business school administrator, educator and expert in human resource management, organizational behavior, and international business, became dean of the Mario J. Gabelli School of Business (GSB) in June. With a continued focus on GSB’s academic excellence and real-world learning, she is guiding the expansion of the business school’s leadership into blue economy innovation, real estate and entrepreneurship. Hear from Dean Das on where GSB is heading next.

1


BUSINESS ED What is your emerging vision for GSB as the new dean? The business world is in flux with major shifts caused by AI and new technologies, and environmental and social shifts that are creating new challenges to the existing way of doing things. My emerging vision for the Gabelli School is that it be at the forefront of innovative and interdisciplinary business education that creates the leaders the world needs next. The capabilities we have with our faculty expertise, our small class sizes and the immense talent across campus that we can tap into work together to provide us with a unique niche in the world of business schools. I hope we can harness this huge potential in a way that focuses on specific areas of excellence, such as the world of the blue economy that the university has a strong focus on. The university’s interdisciplinary capabilities will allow us to create muchneeded graduate and undergraduate programs that develop strong business knowledge along with a balanced portfolio of skills that are both humanistic and technical.

How has the Gabelli School modeled RWU’s mission of providing a real-world education and powerful combination of studies, and where do you see that heading in the next few years? The Gabelli School has always been a leader of real-world experiential education, with examples like the Center for Advanced Financial Education (CAFE) program and the National Advertising Competition program. Most of our students graduate with powerful combinations of dual majors and minors which have helped get great internships and jobs. Every day I learn about how our alums are successful not just in securing their first jobs, but also in rising up within their fields. I am so inspired by their careers and so excited when I hear them share how their Gabelli education prepared them for their professions from day one. In a few years, we hope to add more signature learning opportunities and grow our graduate programs, to provide interdisciplinary learning opportunities that enable our students and alums to continue a lifelong learning journey, to increase opportunities for alums to serve as mentors to current students, and to become their preferred institution to serve their educational needs through the twists and turns of their careers.

How do you see the focus and role of a business school aligning with the university’s overall academic priorities? The university has a fantastic vision statement that outlines the core values of our education being transformative, engaged, experiential, inclusive and innovative. These are also the key areas of excellence for the Gabelli School and I don’t have space to provide an exhaustive listing of how we’re living those values. As examples of hands-on learning, our CAFE students manage multimillion-dollar investment portfolios in real time, and economics majors participate in the national collegiate Fed Challenge. Part of GSB’s commitment to inclusivity includes creating women business leaders through our annual Ignite: Accelerating Women’s Success at Work conference and a thriving Women in Business Student Organization. The university is also committed to expanding graduate programs, and GSB can play an important role in developing new graduate business and interdisciplinary programs.

Your expertise is in complex identity negotiations in the workplace under globalization. What was your most memorable global work experience and how did it shape you professionally and personally? As an international student and an immigrant in the United States, I have been blessed with a fantastic cross-cultural experience that has shaped the person that I am today. The great diversity in this country allows us to experience multiculturalism in a way that is hard to find anywhere else in the world. In addition, I have served as a Visiting Faculty member at Aalto University in Finland where I worked with undergraduate students from European and Asian countries. I love traveling and meeting people from around the world – this is not only my field of study, but my passion as well. I love the diversity in perspectives and experiences that I have seen in teaching students from all over the world. However, what amazes me every time is the immense similarities that young people share despite huge differences in their backgrounds! Some of it is probably more recent and fueled by connectivity of the internet, but it is a powerful reminder of how we are all fundamentally similar and connected as a species, and that we need to think of the whole planet when we are making decisions regarding the biggest challenges of our times. RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023 2


a summer at

nickelodeon By Mel Thibeault

Lucero Blanco adores animated shows. The native Spanish speaker even credits “SpongeBob SquarePants” with helping her learn English as a child. A first-generation student, Blanco worried that working in animation would never be more than a dream. That all changed this past summer when the now-senior at Roger Williams University walked through the studio where Stephen Hillenburg, the late “SpongeBob” creator, once walked, as part of her 10-week internship with Nickelodeon Animation in Burbank, Calif. “I learned all about the animation industry and saw how kind and supportive everybody is. I met people from ‘SpongeBob SquarePants,’ ‘Big Nate,’ and ‘Baby Shark.’ It was so cool to meet people in the studio and help out.” Blanco, a Creative Writing and Graphic Design Communication double major and Marine Biology minor from Norwich, Conn., worked alongside the Nickelodeon Community Efforts (NiCE) team. She assisted staff with drawing, storyboarding, and puppetry workshops for children and teenagers; led studio tours; designed graphics; and maintained databases all while learning from the teams behind some of Nick’s biggest animated shows. “These 10 weeks have been some of the most joy filled.” 3


At Roger, Blanco created a graphic novel, “Ten Rules,” in a scriptwriting class, writing and illustrating more than 135 pages. After presenting her work during the Student Academic Showcase and Honors on campus in April, she published it as a webcomic. “When the hiring manager at Nickelodeon asked me to send a portfolio, I shared this project. She told me there’s something in me that could really go far in animation. That was at the time when I didn’t know if I was going to get the internship or not.” While 6,000 people applied for a Nickelodeon internship, Blanco was one of only 22 selected. Interning at Nickelodeon was a huge deal for this first-generation Latino student. “I’m pursuing a career that no one in my family has ever pursued. It was emotional at first, but eventually I realized I deserve to be here. I’ve worked so hard. I’ve put so much blood, sweat, and tears into my education and projects. I’m excited and proud to represent my family.” From scriptwriting to graphic design, skills Blanco learned at Roger prepared her for Nickelodeon. “Ted Delaney, my Creative Writing professor, has experience in the industry and taught us about scriptwriting and how to make a pitch bible. Graphic Design Professor Nikki Juen was one of my biggest motivators. There were techniques I took with me from Roger and applied to my projects at Nickelodeon to make graphics and posters.” Meeting artists and animators helped her learn more about the industry. “I sat in on storyboarding and background illustration classes and communicated with people who do this day to day. I’ve learned so much, including what helps a portfolio stand out. It’s tips like these that helped me gain a better understanding of how this industry works.”

In the future, Blanco wants to lead her own show. “I aspire to be a showrunner-directorproducer for an animated series. In the next five to 10 years, I want to help other people tell their stories – as a storyboard artist, a storyboard revisionist, an animatic editor, or a scriptwriter. I find animation to be such a creative storytelling method.” A ceremonial sliming concluded her internship. Per the classic Nickelodeon gag, Blanco had a bucket of bright green slime dumped on her head. “It felt like Nickelodeon has left its mark on me. Literally. Also, it was freezing.”

In the next five to 10 years, I want to help other people tell their stories – as a storyboard artist, a storyboard revisionist, an animatic editor, or a scriptwriter.

Growing up, “SpongeBob SquarePants” was one of Blanco’s favorite shows. “My siblings and I, our first language was Spanish, so ‘SpongeBob’ helped us learn proper English. Being able to meet people on the crew and see the show’s archival materials – it was amazing.” Blanco is busy at RWU, serving as president of the Marine Science Club and marketing chair for the Sexuality and Gender Alliance. She’s also involved with the Design Club, Scuba Club, Feminists United, the Hispanic and Latinx Student Association, and the Women of Color Club. She’s excited to finish her senior year strong. “I am so close to graduating and breaking that generational barrier. There are so many people I want to thank.” RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

4


STACKING CREDENTIALS

ON

By Grace Boland

STUDENTS CHOOSE TO LAYER REAL ESTATE GRADUATE CERTIFICATE INTO THEIR DEGREES When RWU launched a Real Estate Graduate Certificate program last year, Avery Corcoran ’23 saw it as an opportunity to broaden her skillset and open new professional pathways while completing her graduate studies in Preservation Practices. It was a powerful combination of academic degrees and credentials she knew would give her a leg up when she started her career search. “Having a great academic background is one thing, but if you have an interdisciplinary understanding of different industries, it helps you make projects more successful and bring in all the right people who work in those different fields,” said Corcoran, who received a B.S. in Preservation Studies and M.S. in Preservation Practices from RWU. And the best part was how easy it was to add it to her course load, since the real estate certificate program matches many requirements for a preservation

or architecture degree at RWU. An interdisciplinary program – with courses spanning the Cummings School of Architecture, Mario J. Gabelli School of Business, School of Engineering,

- Avery Corcoran ’23 Computing and Construction Management, and the School of Law – the Real Estate program is designed to enable course selection customization for all fields intersecting the real estate industry. “The Cummings School makes it very accessible to get a Real Estate Graduate

Certificate by choosing class options that will coincide with your degree and adding a few more,” said the Attleboro, Mass., resident. “For me, I only needed to add three additional courses, and I had really wanted to take those financial planning and finance preservation courses.” This spring, the Cummings School of Architecture graduated its first cohort of Real Estate Graduate Certificate participants. One year after receiving the generous gift of $20 million from Cummings Foundation, the Cummings Institute for Real Estate – named in honor of Bill and Joyce Cummings – launched the graduate certificate and held the inaugural Real Estate Symposium. At this symposium, students in the certificate program had the opportunity to present their research and network with industry-leading professionals from across the real estate industries. Xuanzi Li ’23, from Zibo, Shandong, was part of the first cohort, graduating with an M.S. in Preservation Practices and

Xuanzi Li ‘23 said she appreciated the opportunity to network and learn from industry leaders at RWU’s Real Estate Symposium. 5


RWU LAUNCHES MASTER OF SCIENCE IN REAL ESTATE

Avery Corcoran ‘23 presents her project to reimagine Bonniecrest at the symposium.

Real Estate Graduate Certificate. She presented her project on creating accessible housing on Bellevue Avenue in Newport, R.I. Li had the opportunity to meet Jim Trudeau, the Chief Design Officer for Cummings Properties, who offered advice based on industry insights to improve her project. “The symposium offered me a new perspective to look at the industry of real estate as a whole, not how it looks from the outside,” said Li. In Corcoran’s real estate program project, she teamed up with Architecture graduate students to imagine how to restore a Newport, R.I. gilded-age mansion, Bonniecrest, to get it placed back on the National Register of Historic Places. “We had to work across disciplines, housing, architecture, preservation, real estate, and development. I was the only Preservation major on the team and to learn how architects think about projects was an eye-opening experience that will help me in my future career,” she said. After graduating from RWU, Corcoran spent a month in Italy, in a San Gemini Preservation Studies program, before returning home and applying for jobs where she can work on adaptive reuse of buildings or repurposing craftmanship-quality materials. “This program opened my eyes to greater possibilities of jobs. I didn’t go into the final year of grad school thinking that I would work in real estate or affordable housing. It helped me see how all these fields intersect and to branch out into other opportunities such as real estate development firms,” she said.

The Master of Science in Real Estate is a multidisciplinary program designed to develop professionals who understand the varied aspects of the real estate profession, including design, finance, management, construction, regulatory affairs, environmental concerns, social policy, and property law. Launched this fall through the Cummings School of Architecture and in collaboration with the business school, law school, and construction management program, the program leverages the university’s expertise in areas such as project development and finance, design, urban and regional planning, and historic preservation. With a variety of elective coursework to choose from, students can customize their educational pathway to focus on one area or develop a combination of skills. It is offered full-time and part-time, with rolling enrollment that allows students to begin in the fall or spring semester.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

6


By Melanie Thibeault

C

reating a model of a wind turbine may not sound like a breeze. But after working with Roger Williams University students to create tiny turbines last spring, fourth graders in the Bristol-Warren Regional School District (BWRSD) were blown away by how fun engineering can be. In April, the fourth graders packed a room inside RWU’s Campus Recreation Center to watch as their turbines each had a

7

turn in a “wind test tunnel” to test their electrical output. Their energy was off the charts – the students’ energy, that is. As the blades began spinning, their cheers could be heard all the way down the hall. The collaboration is all part of KidWind, a unique experiential learning opportunity in which RWU Engineering and Education students team up to teach fourth graders about engineering design


By Mel Thibeault

and wind energy. A partnership between RWU and BWRSD, KidWind was started in 2019 by RWU Assistant Professor of Engineering Maija Benitz and Associate Professor of Science Education Li-Ling Yang as a way to help fill a gap in the local school district and offer RWU’s expertise in STEM education and engineering with a focus on the blue economy. Each year, around 200 fourth graders from Bristol and Warren get

a hands-on lesson in wind energy and engineering. The fourth graders aren’t the only ones to benefit from this powerful experience. Read on to hear from an Engineering major and an Education student about the lessons they’ve learned from KidWind.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

8


BIANCA PINO ’23 MAJOR: Mechanical Engineering MINOR: Mathematics HOMETOWN: Hoboken, N.J.

“KidWind was very inspiring and got me interested in working in sustainable energy. Teaching fourth graders about wind turbines and seeing their interest increased my own interest. I changed routes; I wanted to pursue the aerospace field, but now I want to work in sustainable energy. “I definitely learned a lot from the Education majors. It was challenging at first. Before this experience, I never really had to explain what I was doing to anyone in non-engineering terms. With KidWind, I was using a thesaurus to come up with synonyms for more complicated words. A really important skill I gained is how to talk to people who don’t have the same background as me. Once I’m working, I’m going to talk to a lot of people who may not have an engineering background, so it’s good to be able to speak in lay terms. I also learned how to keep others engaged in the subject. “It was a learning curve for the Education students as well since they didn’t know anything about wind turbines. We (Engineering students) would teach them mini lessons on whatever topic we were supposed to teach the fourth graders that week. Later, when the kids had questions, the Education majors were able to answer them because of our meetings. “There were definitely some points during KidWind when I thought I should become a teacher. I really enjoyed teaching the fourth graders and seeing when they understood the lessons. Maybe when I’m older, I’ll go back to school for an education degree and teach science.”

9


STEPHANIE RIOUX ’23 “Participating in KidWind as a sophomore and teaching wind energy lessons made me realize I really like science education and wanted to pursue that as my career. As a junior, Li-Ling Yang invited me back to KidWind as a research assistant where I was able to do behind-thescenes work, looking at and analyzing data on how KidWind impacts Education majors’ confidence in teaching Engineering. “My research was accepted this year at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research. It was really inspiring. There were people from all over the country and from all different majors at this year’s conference. Getting to present my findings and hear about other education-related research inspired me to want to continue researching and publish my work in a science education journal. “I also worked really closely with this past year's Elementary Education major participants, meeting with each of the teams to go through their lessons, which gave me experience in revising lesson plans. My interest in science teaching was also part of what helped me secure my job teaching fifth grade at Webster Avenue Elementary School in Providence, R.I. The principal was excited that I will be able to teach the students science and prepare them for standardized tests. “My first year of KidWind, having the Engineering students in my group felt like having a safety system. This is the first time Elementary Education students are planning and teaching lessons to children, so having people who are experts in the field and who can explain the concepts made it feel a lot more attainable. KidWind helps the Engineering majors, too. It’s great practice for them to communicate the complex information they know. They come out the other side better communicators.”

MAJOR: Elementary Education MINORS: Dance, Physics, and STEAM Education HOMETOWN: Bedford, N.H.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

10


5

5

Questions on Black Body Politics By Jill Pais ’05

Kamille Gentles-Peart, Professor of Communication Studies at RWU, has traveled to Trinidad and Tobago on a Fulbright Scholarship to research Black body politics. 11


I

n “postcolonial” countries like Barbados and Jamaica, and in the Afro-Caribbean diaspora in the United States, Black women find themselves navigating conflicting body politics around voluptuous Black bodies, according to Kamille GentlesPeart, Professor of Communication Studies. On a Fulbright Scholarship, Gentles-Peart has traveled to Trinidad and Tobago to continue research on how Black women from workingclass to corporate executive, young adults to married women, experience and survive this “dialectic of the thick body.”

What are the cultural attitudes surrounding Black women’s bodies that developed during colonial times?

From Transatlantic slavery to contemporary times, the main narrative promoted by white supremacy is that a thick Black woman is not attractive or feminine. Their bodies can take physical and sexual brutality and don’t need to be treated with care or nurtured. Then there are other narratives cultivated within Afro-Caribbean societies that celebrate curvy Black female bodies as ideal Black femininity. These two narratives often coexist in Caribbean societies, creating complicated and contradictory experiences for Black women. For example, in Jamaican folklore, there is the story of Queen Nanny of the Maroons, a leader in the resistance against slavery. Legend says that she had a prominent bottom, which she used to catch bullets from the British colonizers and save her community. Here you see Black women’s thick bodies associated with strength, independence and anti-colonialism. At the same time, women in Jamaica who look like Queen Nanny struggle to be employed in lucrative jobs and corporate spaces and rarely see themselves portrayed in mainstream media.

Why did you describe Caribbean women living in the U.S. as having a “romance with voluptuousness” in your book on this subject?

If you don’t have that kind of body, you want to attain it. If you have it, you want to keep it. At the same time, I highlight this as the unrequited romance because even though you desire and are expected to have this kind of body, there are consequences that are not romantic at all. There are spaces where that body is celebrated, such as in

dance hall and soca. However, the social capital from having these bodies isn’t fully realized, because there are existing white supremacy narratives and practices around those bodies that keep them marginalized. For example, something as simple as finding clothes to fit a voluptuous body: in the U.S., you’re either a “normal” size or plus size. Many of the women I speak to don’t fit in either category and struggle to find clothes, especially those suitable for corporate settings. Women with voluptuous bodies are also susceptible to being groped and sexually assaulted, because their bodies are seen as being available.

What got you interested in this line of research?

As a Black Caribbean woman from Jamaica and living in the U.S., I have experienced first-hand and witnessed how thick Black women’s bodies are treated in the Caribbean and the U.S. - largely because of ideologies that shape how they are perceived. This treatment has real-life implications for romantic relationships, how we raise Black girls, how we move around in public, what we wear, where we are employed, and how violence against us is classified. Yet, I still don’t see these life stories in the literature on body politics in Western scholarship. I want to help change that.

What is driving these changes in cultural attitude to reconsider and celebrate Black women’s bodies?

It’s what has driven Black people for centuries – the desire to not just exist, but to thrive, to resist, to not accept invisibility or oppression. Wanting to celebrate Black women’s bodies and not capitulate to what white supremacy says about their bodies come from the same desire that Black people’s ancestors had to resist slavery, to resist segregation, and to resist the idea that Black people are inferior. It’s the same desire to “make life,” meaning claiming personhood and making their own way in the face of forces that want to eliminate them.

Why do you want to bring these stories to academia?

The integrity of scholarship depends on us breaking away from research that study only certain white Western people and their experiences. Academia has always seen Black people, cultures and bodies as unworthy subjects. If we in academia are interested in knowing the world, but we exclude certain people from the world, then our knowledge will not only be incomplete, but it will be racist, and we will pass on that oppressive knowledge to our students. I want to amplify these stories in academia because it is a racial justice imperative to make sure the voices of Black women become part of the knowledge we are producing – or we will perpetuate the cycle that reinforces colonial-white-supremacist-patriarchal knowledge. This is reparative justice; this is epistemic justice.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

12


CURRENTLY, 27 STATES HAVE THE DEATH PENALTY WHILE 23 STATES OUTLAWED IT

Students in Professor Eric Bronson’s Dead Man Walking course explore issues around capital punishment and experience firsthand the South’s more punitive criminal justice system. By Mel Thibeault

13


W

travel challenges. “I’m not trying to hen Tabitha Klaus stepped into the change their minds. I leave it completely execution chamber at the Louisiana open to them and their experiences – State Penitentiary, she first saw whether they support it or don’t or are on the lethal injection station – an the fence. A lot of them aren’t sure. The operating table covered in restraints. As she goal is to give them more questions than and her classmates from Roger Williams answers and let them explore.” University piled into the room, she found herself standing behind the table, looking INSIDE THE at the window to the viewing room, where PRISON SYSTEM people gather to watch an execution. Next, Capital punishment is a hotly contested she noticed the position of the table – the topic in the United States, where the death headrest is situated so the inmate doesn’t face penalty has existed since colonial times. the window but, instead, a blank wall. As she Currently, 27 states have the death penalty processed the layout of the space, she while 23 states outlawed it (including felt unsettled. most of the Northeast), according to the “It was an eerie feeling. People have died nonprofit Death Penalty Information there,” said Klaus, a junior Criminal Justice Center. For the past eight years, major and Psychology there have been fewer than 30 and American Sign “It was an eerie executions per year, including 18 Language double feeling. People in 2022 and 11 in 2021. minor from Chicopee, have died there.” One well-known opponent Mass. “Putting in a - Tabitha Klaus ’25 of the death penalty is Sister viewing room boggled Helen Prejean, who students my mind. I can’t wrap met in New Orleans. Bronson’s course my head around the idea that people want to is titled after Prejean’s best-selling book, watch an execution and watch a person die.” which was turned into a popular movie Klaus and 25 other RWU students visited starring Sean Penn and Susan Sarandon the Louisiana State Penitentiary last March in 1995. Prejean is a Catholic religious as part of Dead Man Walking, a Criminal Justice course created and taught by Professor sister who has been a long-time advocate for abolishing the death penalty and has Eric Bronson, which explores the issues written about her experiences serving as a surrounding the use of capital punishment in the U.S. and includes a weeklong experiential spiritual advisor for convicts on death row. “We had a great conversation with learning curriculum in New Orleans over Sister Helen,” said Michael Arel, a spring break. In class, students examine senior Criminal Justice and Political the arguments of the death penalty debate Science double major from Portsmouth, including the legal and social history of R.I. “She’s very knowledgeable about capital punishment; the brutalization effect the capital punishment system, of executions and how they are used as a discrimination, and deterrent; racial “One of the biggest policing. Everything discrimination in she talks about – it’s the legal processing lessons I hope students take away is the not just coming from of death cases; difference in the punitive her religion. She has the economic knowledge of how the nature of the criminal costs and appeals criminal justice system process of longjustice system and the operates.” term incarceration severity between the Another focal point and execution; Northeast and South.” of the trip was a the varied - Eric Bronson stop at the Louisiana public opinion; State Penitentiary, and scholarly a maximum-security prison, located examinations of the death penalty as just approximately two hours northwest deserts versus cruel and unusual punishment. of New Orleans and operated by the “The course is an opportunity for students Louisiana Department of Public Safety to investigate the death penalty,” said & Corrections. Covering 18,000 acres Bronson, Professor of Criminal Justice and (that’s bigger than Manhattan), it’s the former Dean of the School of Justice Studies, world’s largest prison, Bronson said, who has been offering the popular course and according to staff there, it houses since 2018; this year was the second time he more than 5,000 inmates – 94 percent was able to bring students to experience the of who have life sentences without the Louisiana penal system due to prior Covid

possibility of parole. In Louisiana, 28 people have been executed since 1976, with the last execution taking place in 2010, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. While attempts to eliminate the death penalty have been blocked by state lawmakers over the years, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards has been leading an effort to abolish executions before his term-limited departure from office in January, including attempts to fulfill the requests of 56 of the 57 people on death row to commute their sentences to life without parole, according to PBS News Hour. “One of the biggest lessons I hope students take away is the difference in the punitive nature of the criminal justice system and the severity between the Northeast and South,” Bronson said. The site of a former slave plantation, the Louisiana State Penitentiary forces students to confront the history of slavery and racial injustice, he said. “Students are in shock when they see inmates working in fields and carrying farm tools. It’s a stark illustration of what slavery looked like.” This course opened Arel’s eyes to capital punishment’s deep roots in racism. “This can be seen in places like the Louisiana State Penitentiary, which historically was a plantation prison and still has fields where (prisoners) work,” he said. “Executions are primarily aimed at certain demographics, those being largely African Americans.”

The Louisiana State Penitentiary

BY THE NUMBERS 18,000 ACRES

(which is a size larger than Manhattan)

5,000 INMATES 94% are serving a life sentence

28

people executed since 1976 RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

14


A DIFFERENT LENS ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE One of the most impactful experiences came when students interviewed two inmates, who shared their stories of the prison’s work and rehabilitation programs, including how they’ve found some purpose while incarcerated. Arel called it a humanizing encounter. “It clicked that this is a regular individual, not some supervillain you might see on TV,” he said. Students also toured the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, one of 13 federal appellate courts, where they learned how cases made it to the court and how they might advance to the U.S. Supreme Court. “Even a well-versed Criminal Justice student learns a lot when they tour the courts,” Bronson said. “Having that hands-on experience helps them understand that there are local, state, and federal court systems and how to get from one to the next.” While in New Orleans, Bronson peppered in cultural activities including a Cajun cooking class, a ghost tour, and a Jazz tour. “This is a great opportunity for students who haven’t traveled outside of the Northeast to see that there are many other cultures throughout the U.S.,” he said. “Students talk about how this trip, much like a study abroad program, changes their lives because it gives them a different perspective.” For Klaus, who hopes to work in counterterrorism, the course left her with more opinions about capital punishment but no conclusive stance. “The class was a deep dive into a topic that I hadn’t really thought about, but I became very interested in,” she said. “Going into the class, I was torn (on my stance). I wanted to hear other people’s opinions and the law enforcement side.” The program was life-changing for Arel, who said it solidified his dream to work in Homeland Security. “Being able to go to Louisiana and explore not just the prison but the court systems and speak with advocates such as Sister Helen was very helpful in understanding that the criminal justice system involves many factors and that I can impact the system in many different ways,” he said. “The trip helped clarify a lot of things I want to do – one of them being I will never work in a prison.”

“It clicked that this is a regular individual, not some supervillain you might see on TV.” - Michael Arel ’24

15


COMMITTED TO SUSTAINABLE FUTURES Sustainability is a core value driving the mission of Roger Williams University, where we center social and environmental justice in our education, research, and the work we do within our communities. For our commitment to creating a sustainable future, RWU received a STARS Bronze rating in recognition of our sustainability achievements from the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE) this year. As the first year we participated in the widely recognized international reporting on sustainability performance in higher education, we will continue to grow our efforts and build on this foundation to strive for even greater sustainability going forward. Here are a few ways that RWU is committed to sustainable futures for our university community and our world.

292

SUSTAINABILITY-RELATED COURSES offered at RWU.

12

STUDENT CLUBS AND ORGS with sustainability central to their mission.

>500

More than half of our yearly graduates earn a degree that provides sustainability learning outcomes – and RWU received special recognition for excellence for our B.A./B.S. in Environmental Science and M.S. in Preservation and immersive learning experiences.

2

1st

SUSTAINABILITY-FOCUSED PROGRAMS LAUNCHED FALL 2023: a new Sustainability Studies major and a new sustainability specialization track in the Construction Management major.

80

%

RWU will invest up to 80% of our total energy usage in net metering credits from solar farms in Portsmouth, R.I., by 2025.

4

Our STARS award earned us a spot on The Princeton Review’s 2023 Guide to Green Schools for the first time ever.

3

EV-CHARGING STATIONS on our Bristol campus. RWU further commits to transitioning to a more sustainable fleet, by switching to electric and hybrid vehicles when replacements are needed. PARTNERSHIPS WITH SUSTAINABILITY-FOCUSED ORGANIZATIONS, including serving as home to the Narragansett Bay Estuary Program, and ongoing initiatives with New England Aquarium, Save The Bay, and Audubon Society of Rhode Island.

1,063,246 kg

Carbon emission reduction through recent efficient-lighting upgrades made across our Bristol campus, saving a total of 1.5 MWH in electricity usage.

2

COMMUNITY GARDENS on the Bristol campus tended by students, faculty and staff that are growing toward a larger campus garden initiative led by Professor Jennifer Pearce. One garden is open to all university members to grow their own food with support from Sustainability Studies faculty, and the other garden is used by Professor Pearce’s Food Science course, supplying produce and herbs for a monthly garden club and foodie workshops for the community.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

16


TODAY’S TRADES WORKERS,

TOMORROW’S TEACHERS UC’s CTE Teacher Certification program prepares professionals for Rhode Island classrooms

By Jordan Jeffrey Phelan ’19

17


T

om Heatherton is used to responding to calls of need. During his five years as maintenance electrician for the East Providence School District, he handled everything from big to small service requests that came his way, even if it was just getting up on a desk to change a light bulb. That was the case several years ago when Heatherton proposed adding an electrical technology program in a passing conversation with the director of the East Providence High School Career and Technical Center. As a graduate of the New England Institute of Technology with nearly 30 years of experience as an electrician, Heatherton’s concern was not with the buildings themselves, but the young minds that learn inside them. “I wanted to improve the quality of workmanship,” he said. “I think people have changed a little bit and they’ve gotten a little lackadaisical, like it’s good enough. I wanted to turn that around.” In 2019, the high school launched the electrical technology program – and that was when Heatherton experienced a personal call to action. He wanted to be an educator in that program. There was just one issue: Heatherton lacked the necessary accreditation to teach. For many working professionals with the skills and experience to impart their

knowledge to the next-generation workforce, there may be barriers to entry. Most states require that certified educators hold a bachelor’s or associate’s degree, which comes with a substantial time commitment that often doesn’t align with the work and personal responsibilities of a professional’s life. This only perpetuates the current skilledtrades teacher shortage. In the 2021-22 school year, 33 states reported a lack of career and technical educators, according to the U.S. Department of Education. That’s why RWU’s University College answered the Rhode Island Department

of Education’s call for a teacher-training solution and created its Career and Technical Educator (CTE) Teacher Certification Program. Designed with working adults in mind, the yearlong RIDE-accredited program helps meet the state’s need to train more high school career and technical educators with a flexible initiative that aligns with a professional’s schedule and takes into consideration prior work experience and industry expertise. A hybrid of in-person and online training, it features an embedded practicum that allows the CTE students to apply what are they learning, often directly

At left, Kenneth Lowell, an automotive technology teacher at Providence Career & Technical Academy who graduated from UC’s CTE Teacher Certification program in 2023, with his students and CTE Teacher Certification candidates in the PCTA auto classroom. In photos above this year’s CTE Teacher Certification students toured the East Providence High School Career and Technical Center. RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

18


“I tell my students all the time, ‘I’d rather see sparks.’ If the sparks are flying, or you make a mistake, this is the place for that. So when you are out there in the field and there are sparks flying, you don’t panic,” he said. “That’s what teaching is, and it’s getting better every year, so I can only imagine where we’ll be in a couple years from now.” Top left: Nestor Puello, a 2021 graduate of the CTE Teacher Certification program started the firefighter program at Central High School in Providence. Puello currently serves as Assistant Principal at Newcomer Academy in Providence, which provides CTE education to multilingual learners. Bottom left: Current CTE Teacher Certification students Danielle Ricci (left) and Duane Maranda (right), both teach medical pathways at high schools in Rhode Island, stand in the Health Occupations classroom at East Providence High School.

in a high school classroom they have just started working in. For CTE Teacher Certification Program Director Lynne Bedard, its exceptionality lies in its distinct instructional model that gives professionals more control over how they learn, a feature not available with the typical college degree track. “Prior to this program, someone coming out of some industries would have to get a bachelor’s or associate’s degree and meet all sorts of requirements, which made it difficult to get people to want to become a teacher,” Bedard said. “It became a question of, ‘Did you really need that bachelor’s degree and all those requirements?’ Or could you find the essence of teaching, the pedagogy piece, and make that a much more relevant part of it?” That is precisely what drew in Rebecca Paniccia, a current student in the dental assistant track of the program. “It would take me forever to get a bachelor’s degree because I could only do it at night, one class at a time,” she said. “[And] I think hands-on experiences are more important.”

19

Now in its fourth year, the program boasts a graduate rate of 95 percent, with no signs of slowing down. “It is heartening to see more secondary students considering CTE,” Bedard said. “I remember when parents would say, ‘No, you’re not going there,’ and now I have parents saying, ‘Please let my child in.’ They get the fact that you can go onto college or a trade school. It’s such a varied spectrum of opportunities and I think people are realizing that now and that’s pretty awesome.” And graduates agree. “To get someone so experienced to teach them is beneficial to the students,” Paniccia said. “If you look at the country right now, we need trades, trades, trades. And what better person to teach these kids than someone who is actually doing the job?” In 2020, Heatherton graduated from the program. Now behind the desk at East Providence High School as the Electrical Technology teacher, Heatherton’s days are filled with teaching a project-based curricula to transform his students of today into the electricians of tomorrow.


95

%

GRADUATION RATE FROM THE UC CTE TEACHER CERTIFICATION PROGRAM Top right: Kenneth Lowell, automotive technology teacher at Providence Career & Technical Academy, graduated from UC’s CTE Teacher Certification program in 2023. Bottom right: Tom Heatherton, electrical technology teacher for East Providence High School’s Career and Technical Center, graduated from UC’s CTE Teacher Certification program in 2020.

IT’S GETTING BETTER EVERY YEAR, SO I CAN ONLY IMAGINE WHERE WE’LL BE IN A COUPLE YEARS FROM NOW. - Tom Heatherton RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

20


FOR 30 YEARS: A JUSTICE-CENTERED MISSION

21


T On the 30th anniversary, RWU Law launches Institute for Race and the Law By Helga Melgar

his fall, RWU Law Dean Gregory W. Bowman held a far-ranging conversation with law school leaders to reflect on this milestone year, the school’s history and commitment to advancing social justice in legal education, and a bright future that includes the launch of The Institute for Race and the Law as the next step in its leadership on racial justice legal education. The following pages provide excerpts of his conversation with Associate Director of Pro Bono Programs Suzanne Harrington-Steppen and Director of The Institute for Race and the Law Bernard Freamon.

GREGORY BOWMAN: As the School of Law celebrates our 30th anniversary, I wanted to get your thoughts about where the law school has been and where we are heading. Both of you lead work that sits at the heart of our mission: experiential education with a focus on social justice and our nationally recognized work on racial justice legal education. These two areas really reflect our law school’s history and our future. Suzy, you have been at RWU Law for 15 years in our Feinstein Center for Pro Bono & Experiential Education. Alan Shawn Feinstein’s financial gift – which established our requirement that all law students complete pro bono legal service before graduation – really shaped our law school’s DNA in meaningful ways from the very beginning. How has that gift, and our focus on pro bono experience, made an RWU Law education distinctive and evolved into the launching of our innovative Pro Bono Collaborative?

SUZY HARRINGTON-STEPPEN: Mr. Feinstein’s generous gift established the law school’s 20-hour pro bono requirement which later expanded to a 50-hour requirement. This, combined with Associate Dean Andrew Horwitz’s leadership in our experiential education programs and Professor Laurie Barron’s leadership in public interest programming, was foundational A university is really in creating the RWU Law not worth its salt if it brand of legal doesn’t do things that education help to bring about excellence – one that change in society. challenges students to —Freamon understand RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

22


the relationship between law and social inequality, and to integrate the professional responsibility all lawyers have to improve access to justice and the quality of our justice systems. From there, the School of Law launched the Pro Bono Collaborative (PBC), under the direction of Professor Eliza Vorenberg, where we have created legal services from the ground up, in areas of the law and in communities where there was no free legal service. The PBC, with our incredible alumni network and the generous support of Mark Mandell,

projects. This is a very unique commitment the law school has made to our state and clearly demonstrates to our law students our law school’s values. Nearly 70% of our law students participate in a pro bono experience through the PBC or our Alternative Spring Break program. In doing so, they are provided with scaffolding to think critically about the root causes of poverty and injustice, as well as their professional responsibility to increase access to justice and improve the quality of our justice systems.

BERNARD FREAMON:

BOWMAN:

It’s also striking in the context of our location here in Rhode Island.

Bernard, you joined us last year to help lead our newest required course, Race and

I thought the decision the faculty took in response to the call for curricular change around race was a courageous response and I wanted to be a part of it. Some law schools offer a menu of courses to law students or they’ll offer a one-credit course, but very few law schools have taken judgment that there should be a mandatory three-credit course on the relationship between race and the law.

BOWMAN:

FREAMON: It’s very important from a historical point of view that the law school is located in Bristol, Rhode Island, a commercial center of the slave trade. And so, for this particular law school in this particular location, it is important that our students understand how this legacy impacts us today.

BOWMAN: I started here in summer 2020, right after the murder of George Floyd, and my very first meeting was with our Black Law Student Association, the student group that advocated for, among other things, establishing a required course on race and law. I know all law schools faced that same moment of national reckoning on matters of race, but RWU’s response went further than most. Suzy, could you share your perspective on our law school’s response and any changes you’ve seen?

Bernard Freamon Professor of Law

HARRINGTON-STEPPEN:

literally creates new sources of free legal services and expands existing services – from criminal record expungements to family preparedness planning for immigrants, and most recently our work launching the Eviction Help Desk project, just a few of our dozens of 23

the Foundations of American Law, and are helping to guide our expanding leadership in teaching about law and racial justice. You have led a distinguished career teaching at many prestigious law schools. What drew you to Roger Williams University?

In the years leading up to the summer of 2020, under then-Dean Michael Yelnosky’s leadership, the law school created a strategic plan for diversity and inclusion and changed its mission statement to make clear that the law school is committed to promoting social justice, to teaching about the relationship between law and social inequality, and to creating an inclusive community that welcomes and celebrates people from diverse backgrounds, especially those historically underrepresented in the legal profession. RWU Law has had a strong commitment to racial justice and to recruiting and


building a diverse student body; but our curriculum neither reflected the diversity of our students, nor did it account for the long and complicated history of our legal systems and how these systems have legitimized and maintained racist laws, policies, and structures. That shifted in June 2020 when our Black Law Student Association presented the administration and faculty with a list of demands, including a mandatory course on race and the law. The faculty unanimously voted to add a required three-credit course on this subject. With that vote, and your leadership, our law school initiated a monumental shift in educating and training anti-racist lawyers.

school board members, nonprofit board members, zoning board members, etcetera. How we educate our law students matters and the Race and Foundations of American Law course is an important step in the right direction.

important positions. And so their understanding of both legal doctrine and how it is impacted by race is very significant. The course also helps

FREAMON: As Suzy noted, our graduates practice law all over the country in all kinds of

BOWMAN: I was there for that meeting. I hadn’t even started here yet and it was amazing seeing the RWU community step up in such a meaningful way. How do you think our Race and the Foundations of American Law course prepares our graduates for their careers in all areas of the law?

HARRINGTON-STEPPEN: If we want our profession and our legal systems to be equitable, every lawyer, regardless of practice area, must be prepared to use their influence and power to improve our legal system and dismantle white supremacy. Our graduates are tomorrow’s judges, law firm partners, general counsels, elected officials,

If we want our profession and our legal systems to be equitable, every lawyer, regardless of practice area, must be prepared to use their influence and power to improve our legal system and dismantle white supremacy. Our graduates are tomorrow’s judges, law firm partners, general counsels, elected officials, school board members, nonprofit board members, zoning board members, etcetera.

Suzy Harrington-Steppen

Clinical Professor of Law

—Harrington-Steppen

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

24


them better understand their own professional identity and to see themselves as lawyers in a new light. Hopefully, this will generate different approaches to client and witness interviews, relationships with judges – all the things that make the legal system work. in a new light. Hopefully, this will generate different approaches to client and witness interviews, relationships with judges – all the things that make the legal system work.

HARRINGTON-STEPPEN: Back in 2017 – before the race and law course – Professor Nicole Dyszlewski asked me a question one afternoon: “Why isn’t there a book to help faculty members incorporate critical perspectives on diversity and

equity into their teaching?” From there, the “Integrating Doctrine and Diversity” book series was born. I have been fortunate to co-edit the book series with Nicole and three other colleagues from other institutions. Our first book, geared toward the 1L curriculum, was published in the spring of 2021. Our second book, for faculty teaching upper-level classes, is due out any day. This was Nicole’s simple yet profound idea: let’s get teachers to share what they’re doing around DEI and build support for this work. With the launch of the course and the attention the first book received, Nicole launched a wildly popular speaker series that is now co-sponsored by CUNY Law, Jurist, GW Law, and Berkeley Law.

RWU Law is a place where we should be experimenting and making law school actually look and feel different. I want the law school to take this momentum and run. —Harrington-Steppen

Gregory Bowman Dean, School of Law

25

BOWMAN: In fact, 90% of US law schools have sent at least one person to Nicole’s

Integrating Doctrine & Diversity speaker series. As a result of this work, the American Association of Law Schools invited us to present a half-day seminar at their annual meeting in San Diego this year on integrating racial issues into both the classroom and the courtroom. And next spring, RWU will be hosting law school diversity and inclusion professionals from across the country for their annual conference. There really is something palpable going on here.

HARRINGTON-STEPPEN: While all of this attention is fantastic, we are still very much a work in progress. This work doesn’t end, nor is there a clear right or wrong way to do the work, but we are doing it.

BOWMAN: Which leads me to my final topic and the exciting next chapter of our social justice work. Bernard, this year you are leading the launch of our new Institute for Race and the Law and the fundraising to support the Institute and its work. How will it be both a catalyst for change and a place for change?


FREAMON: One of our goals with the Institute is to establish a Teaching Fellowship Program, where lawyers at the beginning of their careers come to Roger Williams and teach in our Race and the Foundations of American Law course and help us broaden our curricular offerings. We hope that after their fellowships they join faculties elsewhere and focus their academic research, teaching, and practical work on issues of race and the law. The Institute will also encourage practical work that makes a difference in the community, while also offering programming that is relevant to both college students and secondary-school students. Engaging with other universities and secondary educational schools will make a difference in changing the society. A university is really not worth its salt if it doesn’t do things that help to bring about change in society.

BOWMAN: Let’s look forward to the next 30 years. How do you think we will evolve?

FREAMON: This is the only law school in Rhode Island and 30 years from now, I would still like that to be the case. I hope we will play a central role in how Rhode Island makes its legal policy judgments, because there is a lot of work to do in terms of social justice, and I hope that Roger Williams University would be at the center of that work.

HARRINGTON-STEPPEN: I hope when we look back, we see that the Foundations of Race and American Law class was a catalyst. RWU Law is a place where we should be experimenting and making law school actually look and feel different. I want the law school to take this momentum and run.

BOWMAN: That’s a great place to close and to thank you both. We all really appreciate what you do and the fact that you’re helping us lead the way.

THE INSTITUTE FOR RACE AND THE LAW AT RWU At Roger Williams University, we are leading a movement to reform legal education and justice systems. The Institute for Race and the Law, housed in the School of Law, will aim to modernize legal education and the legal system in order to increase access to justice for all. RWU Law will achieve this through teaching and research, scholarships, and programming around our priorities.

The Institute has three foundational pillars: LEGAL EDUCATION: Providing law students, law schools, and practicing lawyers with critically needed legal curriculum on race. JUSTICE REFORM: Legal research and policy work to address

racial inequity in legislation and the administration of justice.

LEGAL SERVICES: Providing counsel and representation in the areas of law most significant to Rhode Island’s racial inequality such as housing discrimination, economic opportunity and access, and prisoners’ rights.

By 2027, the Institute aspires to: •

Train 500 lawyers and legal educators about systemic oppression in the law and contemporary manifestations of white supremacy in legal spaces.

Advise 50 U.S. law schools seeking to incorporate issues of race into their curriculum.

Engage 500 non-legal professionals in training, discussions, and partnership to address systemic racism and American law.

Lead justice reform in the Northeast through actionable research, advocacy, and policy.

LEARN MORE ABOUT THE INSTITUTE FOR RACE AND THE LAW AT RWU LAW AND JOIN US IN LAUNCHING THIS IMPORTANT WORK: LAW.RWU.EDU/GO/GIVE RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

26


SAILING LAUNCHES NEW FLEET O

n a late August afternoon, before classes or the first official practice of the fall semester began, the Sailing team huddled in anticipation on the RWU waterfront, preparing to launch the program’s new fleet of Flying Juniors (FJs) out into Mount Hope Bay. They climbed aboard the 13-foot race boats, rigged sails, dropped rudder and centerboard, then pushed off, cutting straight out to the center of the channel.

Tacking into the wind until nearly horizontal, or jibing to heel and accelerate past each other, they tested the new boats’ handling and performance. Carly Kiss, a co-captain and junior Marketing major with minors in Psychology and Business Analytics from Pewaukee, Wis., pulled up alongside a teammate and shouted: “How are you tacking? Do you feel anything different in these boats?” “Yeah, I’m rolling and flattening more aggressively,” said Claire Buckley, a cocaptain and junior Accounting major with minors in Finance and Professional Writing, 27

from Bridgewater, Conn. Kiss nodded thanks and shot off to try it herself. Through hard work and a tenacious competitiveness, the RWU Sailing program has become a sailing powerhouse. The program has won a singlehanded championship in 2009, a team racing national championship in 2011, and recently finished as No. 2 at the Team Race National Championship in 2018, 2021, and 2022, with strong showings in fleet racing, competing against major programs like Yale, Harvard, and the U.S. Navy. Support from alumni and families over the

years has buoyed the program, funding the construction of a world-class Sailing Center and improvements to the dock, enabling RWU to host U.S. Sailing national championships and connect the team and university with the international sailing world. This year, the program got help replacing their aging boats. With a $200,000 gift from the Donald C. McGraw Foundation, and donations from the Matthews family, the Todd Rechler ’93 family, and Bruce Lebens and Hunt Lawrence, the Sailing program purchased a new fleet of 18 FJs and six 420s


GIFTS REPLACE AGING BOATS AND HELP KEEP THE RWU SAILING PROGRAM ON TOP By Jill Pais ’05

that will allow them to remain competitive for years to come. Designed and built right in Bristol, R.I., Zim Sailing makes the top-ofthe-line collegiate racing boats used by the best national sailing programs. “Thanks to these generous gifts from the McGraw Foundation and our alumni and families, the Sailing program has the equipment we need to continue to compete at the highest levels of college sailing,” said Head Coach Amanda Callahan. “The new boats have been an excellent addition to our program. We’re able to have more productive practices, not having to stop

every time parts break down,” Buckley said. “We can focus on honing our team racing skills and strong boat handling. We have really great potential to be the top college sailing team in the U.S. and we’re excited to continue working towards being the best.” Last season they finished one race shy of placing on the podium at the Team Race Nationals, tying with Yale and Dartmouth for fourth place but ultimately losing the tiebreaker. This year, the team is increasing their fitness and strategy sessions, while cultivating a stronger team culture and communication, according to co-captain Hank Bailey, a senior

Computer Science major and Math minor from Chatham, Mass. Once again, they’re aiming for the podium. “What I’ve always liked about the Roger Williams Sailing team is that we work really hard for it and Coach Callahan is the best there is,” said Bailey. “We have the talent and the drive to do well. We prepare and practice every day like it’s a regatta, and having that high level of intensity will hopefully make the difference at the end of the year.”

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

28


HOW TO

BUILD A BOAT WITH ZIM SAILING

Think of it as a pay-it-forward moment. The McGraw Foundation, alumni and families chose to support our excellent Sailing program with the gift of new boats. In turn, Roger Williams University decided to invest those dollars into our local economy, selecting Zim Sailing in Bristol, R.I., to construct a whole fleet of collegiate sailboats. Of course, when you have a world-class boat-building industry in your backyard, why would you turn anywhere else? Bob Adam, Director of Institutional Sales at Zim Sailing, Bristol, R.I., shares the key moments in the process of building their celebrated Collegiate FJ. 29


STEP 1 HULL AND DECK TAKE SHAPE

Utilizing an open-molding technique, the team applies a wax so the raw materials can take shape inside but won’t adhere to the mold. A worker then sprays on the gel coat, the first layer of the hull and deck, checking with a gauge to see how evenly the application turned out. After a minimum of four hours to cure, the next painstaking step is to layer on resin-soaked fiberglass cloth strips, pre-cut and laid in precisely designed patterns that are exactly the same for each boat. Both the gel coat and fiberglass cloths are weighed ahead of time to ensure the same weight of materials are used across a boat class. The reason? “We want the boats to ultimately weigh the same,” Adam says. “Across RWU’s 18 FJs, from the lightest to the heaviest boat, should not be more than an eight- to 10-pounds’ difference.”

STEP 2 ZIM SECRET

Along with the fiberglass layers adding strength to the deck, the team then applies a series of fiberglass structural supports – laid out in a proprietary manner – to promote hull rigidity and to prevent the deck from flexing while sailing through the water.

STEP 3 A BOND IS FORMED

When the hull and deck are ready to be joined, two workers lay the deck into the hull mold. The pieces are bonded together with a strong yet pliable adhesive, at the edges and floor of the boat. Then the hull and deck are compressed together with clamps and bars and allowed to harden overnight or about 24 hours.

STEP 4 THE BOND IS BROKEN

Breaking open the molds is a bit like popping open a soda bottle, Adam says. An overhead crane attaches to the deck at multiple points, then the workers insert wooden wedges between the molds and unfasten the clamps, as the crane cranks and lifts the boat from the mold. The boat is placed on a dolly and ushered into the trimming and finishing area, where any patching, sanding and buffing of imperfections are tended to.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

30


STEP 5 RAISING THE MAST

The Zim team drills a precise line through the length of the mast extrusion, a one-piece aluminum mold purchased from a manufacturer in Connecticut, and assembles the hardware to attach the sails and boom.

STEP 6 FINAL FITTINGS

At the same time as the mast work, another team is attaching the rudder and tiller – machined locally and assembled by Zim – and fitting the hardware onto the deck and hull. With all the pieces in place, the Zim Collegiate FJ comes off the line ready to be shipped to its destination.

31


PERSONAL DELIVERY Adam tries to accompany as many deliveries as possible, because he gets so much joy from watching the college sailing teams assemble and test the new boats. When RWU’s boats arrived in the summer, he was there: “They are like kids in a candy store – the smiles on people’s faces when they see their new boats is just epic.”

Bob Adam, Director of Institutional Sales at Zim Sailing, Bristol, R.I.

EXPERIENCE MAKES A DIFFERENCE Inside their 40,000-square-foot facility on Broadcommon Road, Zim Sailing employs over 50 people. Their team of 12 boat-builders produce on average seven boats per week. “What sets us apart from other builders of these boats is that we do everything in house and we are entirely focused on building boats and the components that go with the boats,” Adam says. “We’ve got a tremendous team and everyone has a minimum of five years, and upwards of 30 years, of experience.”

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

32


RWU BOARD WELCOMES NEW TRUSTEES, MORE ALUMNI SERVING THAN EVER By Jill Pais ’05

President Ioannis N. Miaoulis

Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq.

Judge Brian P. Stern

John J. Park P’25

Jacqueline S. Rolleri, Esq. L’11

Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07

Not Pictured: Frank Hood ’97, Erik D. Smith ’01, Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. ’80 , Katherine Sulentic, Esq. L’09 33


We are at an exciting inflection point in RWU’s history and I am thrilled to have so many alumni and accomplished professionals serving on and leading our board. President Ioannis N. Miaoulis

In order to realize the university strategic plan and further build our academic excellence, research and innovation leadership, President Ioannis Miaoulis brings together the right people to move at an institutional level from ideas to action.

W

ith the newest additions to the Board of Trustees, Roger Williams University has augmented a strong leadership team dedicated to the university’s continued excellence with many of our own successful alumni. For the first time ever, the RWU Board of Trustees chair, three vice-chairs and treasurer are all alumni. Named chair of the Board of Trustees in October, Tim Yeaton ’80 is a former president and CEO of multinational software and technology management companies. He has served on the board since 2010, previously on the RWU President’s Advisory Board, and as past president of the RWU Alumni Association. Also at the October board meeting, alumni Heather Boujoulian ’97, Bill McKeon ’84, Todd Rechler ’93, and Tony Masone ’91, were appointed as the new board leadership team. Linn F. Freedman, Esq., a longtime RWU champion and a faculty member in the law school, was also elected to the leadership team. “As a very active alum and a leader across global technology and software industries, Tim Yeaton will continue to bring excellent leadership and experience to the Board of Trustees,” President Ioannis N. Miaoulis says. “We are at an exciting inflection point in RWU’s history and I am thrilled to have so many alumni and accomplished professionals serving on and leading our board. Their personal ties inform our continued development of academic excellence, experiential learning and research, and student success as we build a world-class university in which we learn, live and work.” Yeaton, a first-generation student from New Hampshire, received a Bachelor of Science, summa cum laude, in Management from RWU, and an MBA from Babson College. At RWU, he was a member of the Honors Society, captain of the men’s soccer team, a resident advisor, and later was honored as Distinguished Alumnus of the Year in 2001. Over the next years, Yeaton looks forward to working with university leadership, faculty, staff and alumni to advance RWU’s Strategic Action Plan. “The vision of RWU’s Strategic Plan is incredibly compelling and takes advantage of all the unique things that Roger Williams brings to the table,” Yeaton says. “The university has developed strong leadership roles that drive the blue economy and coastal resiliency for our region and beyond. It is forging an innovative role in real estate that harnesses the university’s strengths across architecture, preservation, regional and urban planning, business, construction management, and law. And it is going further with its work in the humanities, social sciences and history to give us a deeper sense of our place, our people and how our history has shaped us.” Read on to learn more about the new board of trustees cohort. RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

34


MEET THE NEW BOARD OF TRUSTEES COHORT: Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07

Jacqueline S. Rolleri, Esq. L’11

Judge Brian P. Stern

Chris Gagliardi is Principal of Sanofi Ventures, the venture capital arm of Sanofi Pharmaceuticals, where he focuses on building and investing in early-stage biotech and digital health companies. He earned his B.S. in Chemistry and Biology at RWU, a Ph.D. in Inorganic Chemistry from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and completed a post-doctoral fellowship at Harvard University.

Jacqueline “Jackie” S. Rolleri, Esq. is the Deputy Chief for the Oceans and Coasts Section within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Office of General Counsel. At RWU Law, she is a member of the Marine Affairs Institute Advisory Board, a past member of the Law Alumni Association Board and Law School’s 20th Anniversary Committee, and received the 2020 Alumni Service Award. She holds a B.A. in Biology and Environmental Science from Colby College, a J.D. from RWU School of Law, and a Master’s of Marine Affairs from URI.

The Honorable Brian P. Stern has been an Associate Justice of the Rhode Island Superior Court since 2009, where he presides over the State Business Calendar and civil and criminal jury trials. Judge Stern is also a director of the American College of Business Court Judges. He received a B.A. in Government from Clark University in 1988 and a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School in 1991. He has also served on the RWU School of Law Board of Directors since 2020 and was elected chairperson in February 2023.

Frank Hood ’97 Frank Hood is President and CEO of Kingsdown Inc., a manufacturer of luxury mattresses, headquartered in North Carolina, where he has overseen marketing efforts and previously served as chief information officer and president of the Sleep to Live Institute. He served on the RWU Board of Advisors from 2021-2023. He received a B.S. in Industrial Technology through Roger Williams’ Open Program.

John J. Park P’25 John J. Park is Partner & CFO with Cardinal Partners, an early-stage healthcarefocused venture capital firm, where he is responsible for investment due diligence, financial reporting, investor relations, and administrative support for Cardinal. He holds an MBA from the University of Michigan and a B.S. in Finance from Villanova University. John and his wife, Donna, joined the RWU Parent & Family Leadership Council in October 2021. Their son, Nicolas, is studying history at RWU.

35

Erik D. Smith ’01 Erik Smith is the President and CEO of Saab, Inc. From its business divisions in five states, Saab delivers advanced sensors, training and simulation, aerospace technology, signature management solutions and services, and air traffic management safety and efficiency solutions to the U.S. Armed Forces and other government agencies. He holds a B.A. in Political Science from RWU and an MBA from Syracuse University’s Walter J. Whitman School of Management.

Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. ’80 Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. is a Senior Executive Vice President and the Chief Audit Executive at First Horizon Corporation, where he is responsible for corporate internal audit and credit risk assurance. First Horizon is a Memphis, Tenn.-based regional bank holding company for First Horizon Bank, FHN Financial and First Horizon Advisors. He received a bachelor’s degree in Accounting from Roger Williams College and the 2022 Distinguished Alumnus of the Year Award.

Katherine Sulentic, Esq. L’09 Kathy Sulentic, Esq. serves as an Associate Director of Enforcement at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), where she conducts NCAA investigations, processes violations of NCAA legislation, and provides subject matter expertise; as well as an adjunct professor of Kinesiology at the University of Indianapolis. She has a B.A. from the University of Northern Iowa, an M.A. from the University of NebraskaLincoln, and J.D. from RWU School of Law. She has been a member of the Board of Directors for the RWU School of Law since 2020.

Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq. Stephen Zubiago is CEO and Managing Partner of Nixon Peabody LLP, a national law firm where he leads 1,250 colleagues, including 600 attorneys, in 15 offices across the U.S. and worldwide. He earned a B.A. in Political Science from Brown University and a J.D. from Marquette University Law School. He has been a member of the Board of Directors at RWU School of Law since 2020 and he is a founding member of the Rhode Island CEO Council.


SCORING BIG, HAWKS! With their gift of $100,000 toward the Rugby programs – the single largest gift to a club sport in RWU history – the DePoalo family is helping to build a new culture of philanthropy at Roger Williams. The funds allowed the university to install a new scoreboard, purchase new equipment, and improve the rugby field. In addition, the DePoalo family pledged another $25,000 matching campaign to encourage alumni and families to give to a Rugby Club discretionary fund. The gifts were made in honor of their son, Joseph DePoalo ’23 (B.S. in Architecture), who is playing on the Men’s Rugby team for his third season while working toward a Master of Architecture this year. “The fund will help give Head Coach Christian Palombo ’99, P’26 the proper tools he needs to enhance the future of the Men’s Rugby program,” said John King, Vice President for Student Life.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

36


OFF THE FIELD AND INTO THE GARDEN Student-athletes help build a community garden for Bristol Community Engagement Marketing When the Roger Williams University team to junior Architecture major Ariana Men’s Soccer team arrived at Benjamin Chandarpal designing the architectural Church Manor, they put on their rendering of the garden and several gardening gloves and began laying mulch, athletics teams pitching in. planting colorful fruits and veggies, and Through the CPC, Caceres, a Marketing constructing garden boxes, including two major, gained hands-on experience directly that are accessible for all to use. They were related to his academics by designing there as part of a project to build a new flyers that helped raise awareness of the community garden and outdoor sitting community project and drive fundraising area for elderly residents. for garden supplies. He then saw an Senior Andre Caceres was among the opportunity to get more of his fellow student-athletes getting his hands dirty in teammates to give back to the community. the garden that day last spring. Through As a captain and defender for the RWU his role as a Marketing Assistant for Men’s Soccer team, Caceres reached out RWU’s Community Partnerships Center to his head coach and asked if he could (CPC), he learned about the plan to create encourage his team to get involved. The Friends of Tom’s Grove, a community “A light bulb went off in my head, and I garden located behind the elderly housing talked to my coach one day after practice. residence in Bristol, Rhode Island. He loved the idea,” said Caceres, a resident Bristol resident Linda Heroux dreamt up the idea for the garden in October of Ossining, N.Y. of 2021, wanting to get her Of course, they were all on fellow Benjamin Church board. But the effort would need Manor neighbors outside more than just them. Mia Brum, WE WERE SO and moving. After applying CPC Project Coordinator, saw GLAD WHEN THE for and receiving a Town of the amount of work that was STUDENTS CAME Bristol-RWU Fund for Civic needed to build the garden Activities grant to get the and also issued an invitation to IN WITH THEIR project underway, Heroux was BURST OF ENERGY the RWU Men’s and Women’s connected with the university’s Swim teams. All total that CPC team to help make the vision a spring, nearly 60 student-athletes turned reality. Students collaborated on the work out over a few weekends eager and ready through the CPC in a variety of ways, to help. The Swim team arrived first to from the students working on the CPC clear the land and create compost, so by 37

the time the Men’s Soccer team got there the site was ready for planting a garden. “We were so glad when the students came in with their burst of energy,” said Heroux, who has been leading the community effort with Bristol resident Richard Hunter. Caceres is proud of his work and said he hopes to continue contributing to the community in a meaningful way, both academically and in service. The CPC has continued to partner with Heroux and Benjamin Church Manor, with faculty and students helping tend the garden as well as teaching the residents about composting. “Working in the CPC has been such a rewarding experience, and I hope that more students continue to take advantage of all the opportunities to give back to the community,” Caceres said. “From creating the poster that got the word out to bringing my team together to help build this community garden, this is something that I will never forget.” – GB


HAWKS’ HIGHLIGHTS 2022-23 RWU Women’s Rugby took home the National Collegiate Rugby 7s National Championship for a second year in a row.

RWU Men’s Cross Country, Men’s Track and Field, Men’s Soccer, Women’s Basketball, and Women’s Lacrosse each took home Commonwealth Coast Conference Championships.

RWU Sailing ranked as high as No. 2 in the national rankings for Open Team Race Sailing, closing out the year fifth at the national championships.

Men’s Soccer, Women’s Basketball, Women’s Lacrosse, Men’s Swimming and Diving, Sailing and Equestrian each saw a representative at their respective national championships.

Nine RWU programs received recognition for their work in the classroom, receiving team recognition for their GPAs.

RWU placed 164 student-athletes on the CCC Academic All-Conference Team.

REC CENTER ENHANCEMENTS Over the summer, RWU made a number of improvements to the Campus Rec Center that benefit student-athletes as well as the entire RWU community. A new Wrestling practice room was constructed on the second floor, replacing the area above the underutilized racquetball courts, and transforming the existing space below into additional fitness and stretching area inside the Fitness Center. The dedicated practice space has the added benefit of opening up Fieldhouse access through the winter for spring sports preseason training for Lacrosse, Softball, Baseball, and Track and Field. The upgrades were made possible through RWU capital project improvement funds, $250,000 in ongoing Wrestling team fundraising, and with pro-bono design contributions from Spencer McCombe ’97, founder and principal of Cordtsen Design, Newport, R.I., and former Wrestling team captain.

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

38


Coast-to-Coast By Grace Boland

With the highest attendance to date at this year’s Alumni & Reunion Weekend, Hawks caught up with old friends and met new ones while playing a round in the Ray Cordeiro Alumni Golf Classic, paddling kayaks out on the bay, or over a pint at the new Hawk Family BBQ Buffet and Beer Garden. Feeling FOMO yet? This year, RWU’s alumni relations team has launched new initiatives and built on beloved traditions that resonate with our graduates and have seen them coming back to reconnect at their alma mater or at new events held around the country. These efforts are being led by Assistant Vice President for Alumni Relations Kelly Scafariello ’99, who understands the importance of meaningful alumni engagement. “Talking to fellow alumni takes me back to my own time on campus. Having this personal connection is key to bringing alumni back and strengthening the Roger Williams University community,” Scafariello said. To help alumni plan their attendance to our annual reunion, Alumni & Reunion Weekend will now always be held on the weekend following Memorial Day – so set your calendars for May 31 to June 2, 2024. With many families welcomed to the

Torch and Crown Brew

ery, New York, NY

39

event this year, we will be adding more family-friendly activities and designating a residence hall wing for families choosing to stay on campus for the weekend. The inaugural Hawks Take Flight tour kicked off in April and has become a new favorite among alumni. Scafariello’s team has been hosting gatherings that bring the Roger Williams spirit to where our alumni are now, from New England to New York, and —KELLY SCAFARIELLO ’99 Washington, D.C. to California. For alumni who can’t make it back to campus or want to forge connections with other alums local to their area, it is a great opportunity to meet at local venues, share stories, and take home RWU swag. By the end of 2024, Scafariello said they are going to surpass 15 events, reaching even more alumni across the country. The Alumni Spotlight Speaker Series was revived recently, highlighting the achievements and experiences of Roger Williams University alumni working in various fields. This is a four-part series during the 2023-2024 academic year, with two each semester covering topics, such as Entrepreneurship, Construction Management, Architecture, and Law and Society. Alumni panels are created to inspire students and foster connections between alumni to alumni and alumni to current Hawks. The best part of these events, according to Scafariello, is the kinship and sense of family that is felt among our alumni regardless of graduation years. At the Hawks Take Flight event in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, alumni from both 1970 and 2019 were discovering common ground and sharing similar memories of favorite spots and life on campus.

TALKING TO FELLOW ALUMNI TAKES ME BACK TO MY OWN TIME ON CAMPUS. HAVING THIS PERSONAL CONNECTION IS KEY TO BRINGING ALUMNI BACK AND STRENGTHENING THE ROGER WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY.”


READY TO RECONNECT WITH YOUR FELLOW ALUM? HERE’S HOW.

kend

Alumni & Reunion Wee

REGISTRATION OPENS SOON FOR 2024 ALUMNI & REUNION WEEKEND Registration for the 2024 Alumni & Reunion Weekend will officially open on February 2, 2024. We will alert our alumni through mail, email and social media. Make sure to update your contact info at rwu.edu/go/connected.

CALLING FOR ROGER REUNION CLASS AMBASSADORS Night Shift Brewery,

Everett, MA

kend

Alumni & Reunion Wee

For those in their reunion years (ending in 4 and 9), we are personally inviting you to become a Roger Reunion Class Ambassador. As we prepare for the weekend, Roger Reunion Ambassadors will give input on the weekend’s events and reach out to your classmates, encouraging attendance at the weekend and support the reunion campaign to an area of RWU most meaningful to you. If you are interested in becoming a Roger Reunion Ambassador, contact the Office of Alumni Relations at alumni@rwu.edu. RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

40


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 2022-2023 fiscal year. Thanks to their commitment, RWU has begun implementing key aspects of our visionary strategic plan that will strengthen all aspects of the institution. Key: ’00 L’ M’ P’ PL’ PM’ GP’ GPL’ GPM’ HD’ LHD’

Roger Williams University Alumni Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a Master’s Degree Parent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a Parent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a Parent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a Grandparent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a Honorary Degree Recipient Honorary Degree Recipient-RWU School of Law

Individuals

Support from alumni, parents, and donors ensures that Roger Williams University and School of Law continues 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 $1,000,000 and above

William S. Cummings and Joyce M. Cummings Mario J. Gabelli HD’92 and Regina Pitaro Michael G. Tennyson and Eileen M. Tennyson

$100,000 to $999,999

Hans L. Christensen & Farrah S. Bokhari Ron E. DePoalo P’23 and Mara A. DePoalo P’23 Brian W. MacLean and Kathleen MacLean David W. McGraw P’10 and Melissa A. McGraw P’10 Donald C. McGraw III P’05 and Sacha A. McGraw P’05 Robin L. McGraw and Elizabeth McGraw John J. Park and Donna L. Park Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16 Scott W. Pray PL’16 and Carol H. Pray PL’16 Dr. Thomas R. Prohaska ’74 Todd L. Rechler ’93 Anonymous

$25,000 to $99,999

Franklin P. Bailey ’76 and Barbara N. Bailey Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11 and Elizabeth Brito P’11 Heather N. Culp Boujoulian ’97 and Michael J. Boujoulian Linn Foster and Steven Freedman Alexa Gagliardi Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07 and Sarah J. McMahon Margaret Gagliardi P’07 and John Gagliardi P’07 Keith Johnson P’18 and Denise L. Johnson P’18 Lucas W. Laager ’23 Rudolf J. Laager P’23 and Alix M. Laager P’23 Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09 and Barbara S. Lavine Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ’99 HD’18 Regina A. Shakin P’19 and James H. Shakin P’19 Timothy B. Yeaton ’80 and Susan Yeaton Anonymous

41

$10,000 to $24,999

James R. Andrade ’77 ’79 and Deborah Andrade Wendy S. Atterbury P’17 and Harry L. Atterbury P’17 Blumenfeld Family George N. Bolden, Sr. ’74 PM’05 P’98 and Nancy Bolden Charles W. Boos A.I.A. Bethany J. Cavanagh ’96 and Jonathan D. Cavanagh ’97 Maria T. Chigas and Victor J. Chigas Julie M. Cole ’99 L’04 Barrett W. Costello ’99 Cynthia A. Elder ’87 and Robert Elder Julie I. Englund and Brian Fitzgerald Yvonne Farrell P’22 and John W. Farrell P’22 Jose M. Figueirinhas ’92 and Laura E. Figueirinhas ’95 Charles B. Floyd ’14 Stacey B. Foisy ’84 and Mark T. Foisy Domenic R. Grieco ’99 and Jaime L. Grieco Stephen Hahn ’06 Peter A. Heard ’80 and Beth H. Heard Vincent P. Helfrich ’82 and Jeanne Helfrich Michael Integlia, Jr. ’70 P’12 and Beth Integlia P’12 Ryan Jabs ’12 Stephen L. Jackson Ph.D. and Sharon G. Jackson Ernest J. Jaxtimer P’12 and Marie T. Jaxtimer P’12 Elizabeth L. Kelly P’22 and John F. Kelly P’22 Anita Manuck P’04 P’04 and William Manuck, Jr. P’04 P’04 Robert J. Matthews P’23 and Julie A. Ellstrom P’23 James McCurdy Christine N. McKenney ’92 and Wensley E. McKenney Michael L. Mineau, Esq. L’09 and Nicole Mineau Christopher J. Montalbano and Julie Montalbano Marcia Morris, Esq. HD’19 and Arnold S. Hiatt James P. Reardon ’13 Curtis and Heidi Verdi James Wrisley ’01 Allison R. Yount ’11 Eric N. Zuena ’01 Anonymous (2)

$5,000 to $9,999

Kyle J. Casserino ’13 Rick Daubenspeck ‘85 P’17 and Judy Favreau Julia Emby Dr. Jonathan ’10 and Hadley ’11 Enright Dory and Brad Faxon Ryan A. Fletcher ’11 Charles A. Henderson P’99 and Judy M. Henderson P’99 Les Hiscoe and Barbara Hiscoe Julie K. Hyden P’11 and Kenneth A. Bergman P’11 Jonathan P. Jaxtimer ’12 and Elizabeth A. Magner-Jaxtimer ’12 Matthew R. Kinell Bryan H. Lawrence and Elizabeth D. Lawrence Bruce P. Lebens P’19 Barrie D. Lee ’70 and Mary Lee Tracy L. Levey and James K. Levey Spencer C. McCombe ’97 and Michelle T. McCombe Brian P. McGrath ’10 and Kayla M. Morency ’12 Michael C. O’Brien P’19 and Sharon M. O’Brien P’19 Judith A. Pegno P’17 and Steven A. Pegno P’17 Lisa J. Raiola and Waterman F. Brown VII Betsey and Chris Santarcangelo Mark Schiller ’89 James M. Shyer ’91 Debra P. Stokes ’79 and Robert Kaplan Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12 and Lisa A. Taranto P’12 Judith W. Vigar Sean M. Wieck ’20 Anonymous

$2,500 to $4,999

Janet P. Atkins and Tarleton H. Watkins II Anthony E. Autiello, Jr. ’74 and Deborah Autiello Walter H. Barlow, Jr. ’88 and Brooke A. McGregor Rebecca Collins, Collins Construction Co., Inc., Class ’93 Gordon S. Craig ’94 and Kristen J. Craig Gerald Francese, Esq. ’96 Adam Goldman and Charmaine Goldman George R. Hemond ’72 and Christine Hemond Frank and Elizabeth Hood Kiki Jacobs

Eric G. Koch ’80 and Elizabeth Koch Michael A. La Scala ’83 Deborah Marchini and Randall Forsyth Howard Messing and Colleen Messing Ioannis N. Miaoulis and Heidi Maes Bernardo H. Motta Anne Nicole Stephanie L. Noris ’92 Shohei Okubo ’06 and Jennifer A. Dill Okubo ’07 Thomas S. Olsen ’11 and Mary E. Olsen Lina Serpico Amy Sullivan Berkeley and Duncan Berkeley Orin S. Wilf ’96

$1,000 to $2,499

Pamela Abrams-Warnick and Craig A. Warnick Donald L. Beaulieu P’23 and Eileen T. Beaulieu P’23 William B. Bryant P’20 and Barbara Preussner-Bryant D.M.D. P’20 Sharon L. Castelli ’86 Jonathan H. Chatinover Andrew C. Cohen and Joyce R. Kulhawik Jonathan E. Cohen and Amy L. Cohen Christopher F. & Kathleen T. Crowell Geralyn A. Curcio and Thomas M. Curcio Edward Dale and Megan Littlefield Jerry W. Dauterive and Janie W. Dauterive Michael Daversa ’85 Susan R. Dempsey ’98 and Matthew G. Dempsey Elizabeth A. Devlin P’14 and Thomas S. Thurston P’14 Daniel D. Dewey ’71 and Virginia Dewey Earl H. Doyle, Jr. ’63 and Roberta Doyle William L. Ebersold ’20 Matthew Egan ’78 and Nancy J. M. Egan ’78 Roseann Evans Jack A. Ferguson ’14 William J. Geraghty ’78 and Kathleen Lynch Andy Goldberg ’91 and Lisa B. Mainville ’92 Nancy Grandgeorge P’81 Matthew Gullo ’09 Katie J. Hauser ’04 and Paul M. Hauser ’06 M’06 Craig P. Hersh and Marcy B. Hersh Susan Kelley ’96 Greg S. Kimmel L’97 and Lisa D. Kimmel John J. King and Jocelyn L. King William Kollmer ’68 and Marianne Kollmer


Stan and Missy Koppelman Dr. Kaarkuzhali B. Krishnamurthy Chavali P’22 and Ram V. Chavali P’22 Ryan A. Lambert ’17 Peter Langan Ann L. Lautz Kevin M. Lieberman ’12 M’12 Mark T. Lieberman PM’12 P’12 and Deborah S. Lieberman PM’12 P’12 James Loring and Kelly Loring Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23 and Laura K. Maguire P’23 Ronald L. Martel ’70 P’22 and Candy Martel P’22 Robert J. Mazaika P’12 and Sandra L. Mazaika P’12 Virginia B. McBride ’82 Rachel L. McCormack and William D. McCormack James F. McKenna ’77 William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89 Keith A. Mills ’88 and Christine Gomes Mills ’88 Paul A. Pabis ’83 ’97 M’17 P’17 and Patrice Wood P’17 HD’17 Joseph R. Paolino, Jr. ’78 and Lianne Paolino Brandon C. Parrish ’07 Stephen Parthum Robert P. Pompei ’75 and Shirley Pompei Richard H. Potter and Janice M. Potter William Railton and Courtney Railton Richard A. Renwick P’14 and Yvonne Renwick P’14 Lynn Retford Salvatore Rizzo Christopher G. Roman Larry J. Rowe P’21 and Nancy E. Rowe P’21 Elaine M. Saunders P’19 and Daniel R. Saunders P’19 Jody K. Smith ’87 and Susan Rampello-Smith Lauren T. Swensen ’13 M’19 and Matt T. Swensen ’13 James Tackach Charles R. Thomas and Jennifer W. Thomas Catherine Tobin ’09 ’14 P’07 and Robert Tobin P’07 Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05 Garrett J. Trombi and Kathleen A. Trombi Marco Uriati L’96 and Jennifer L. Uriati Arlene Violet, Esq. James Wallace Robert L. Weisenreder and Carol Duquette James G. Whiffen ’76 and Wadad Whiffen Stephen E. White P’14 and Marion K. White P’14 Neal Williams and Sheryl Williams Joshua B. Wright Anonymous (6)

Thomas E. Cullerton ’23 Tracy M. Dacosta ’92 James F. Dahill ’09 Karl M. Daubmann ’95 Thomas M. Decatur ’85 and Rhoda A. Decatur Raymond S. DeLeo II ’78 P’13 and Jane S. DeLeo P’13 Mark DeStefano and Linda E. Destefano Theresa M. DeVine and George R. Devine Joe DiScipio P’21 and Margaret M. DiScipio P’21 Meghan E. Dockery-Cremins ’05 Pam Duane Denise H. Eakes and Brian M. Eakes V. Douglas Errico and Lisa F. Errico Christopher D. Ferace ’89 and Nancy Ferace Florentino M. Fernandez ’21 George H. Fisher ’87 Sandra D. Fitzgerald and John T. Fitzgerald Dennis Fleischmann P’10 Rachel Flum and Josh Flum Kenneth Fontaine Mark H. Ford and Laura B. Ford Rebecca Franks Brad Fuller and Julie Fuller James M. Galib and Christine L. Galib Robert M. Gallagher and Kristen M. Gallagher Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 and Douglas F. Garland P’22 Louis Goetting P’08 and Jeanne Goetting P’08 Matt Goetting Kim Goggin-Constas ’78 and George P. Constas ’80 Mike Goralski and Kristin L. Goralski Jay J. Gunzy and Margaret Gunzy Harold Horton ’55 Jim Hanewich and Cynthia E. Hanewich Carl T. Hogsten III ’19 Pierre Joubert Stephen D. Kiss and Kathryn M. Kiss Matthew James Kite ’06 M’08 and Kimsan Ngom Andrew R. Lacroix ’08 Christine P. Lacroix P’22 P’23 and Mike LaCroix P’22 P’23 Sean Lamontagne Joseph R. Loiselle ’98 ’10 ’14 Elizabeth C. Longley ’08 Matthew Luker P’23 and Lauri Luker P’23 Stephanie P. Manzi Laura A. Masterson ’19 Michael Matias Karen M. McCarthy ’03 Catherine K. McConnell and Timothy P. Bailey Franklin D. McCool and Jacqueline McCool Olivia K. McDonald ’13 Susan M. McTiernan Kathy Mello Caleb S. Messier ’98 Yiannis Monovoukas and Jamie Monovoukas $500 to $999 Jason D. M. Morton ’10 Christina W. Abisla ’13 Timothy R. Mullane ’21 Josephine J. Alves ’80 and David Alves Susan T. Mullen and John G. Mullen Ann W. Anderson and Kenneth W. Anderson Thomas A. Murphy P’23 and Karen Anginoli Paul M. Angland P’23 and Hazel C. Angland P’23 Patricia Murphy P’23 Jonathan D. Neal P’21 and Susan M. Neal P’21 Karl Augenstein J. Scott Needham ’80 and Michelle Needham Brandon L. Baez ’21 Susan L. Pasquarelli PM’08 P’05 Kim Baptista Adam L. Peck P’23 and Rhonda S. Goldberg P’23 Russell W. Beauchemin Claudette L. Peck P’22 and Richard C. Peck P’22 Jeffrey J. Bernard ’02 Patrick Percella John A. Beyer, Jr. ’91 Gregory Perry Katherine A. Black P’22 Susan Predaris Laura A. Blackall and Dennis D. Blackall Daniel A. Ramos and Eileen Fisher Teresa P. Braga Deborah Reynolds and Charles W. Reynolds Kate Brezina Charles Rhuda P’23 and Eric F. Bronson Susan P. Triggs-Rhuda P’23 Joe Cairoli ’85 and Lisa M. Cairoli ’86 Michael B. Rich Caroline Campagna Julie M. Campbell ’04 and Benjamin D. Campbell Deb Robbins P’23 and Scott A. Robbins P’23 Richard Roberts Ralph E. Caprio, Jr. and Angela L. Caprio Faith Rushnak and Scott Rushnak Francine Carbonneau Ann E. Carlson P’15 and Steven P. Carlson P’15 Robert E. Ryan ’76 and Arlene Ryan Carolynn W. Santamaria and Jeffrey S. Shackett Denise Cassano Amy M. Santoro P’20 P’22 and Cynthia M. Chappell P’09 and Perry M. Santoro P’20 P’22 Eric P. Chappell P’09 Courtney Schmidt Allison J. Chase Padula and Paul J. Padula Jessica Schmidt P’19 and Dennis R. Ferro P’19 Paul Coen, Jr. and Debra Coen Joseph S. Sorcinelli ’88 Christopher P. Cook and Julie F. Cook Carla S. Sousa P’21 and Paul Sousa P’21 David J. Costa ’90 and Tina Costa Eric Stokke Stephen M. Cote ’06 Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09 Chris Cotoia and Mary C. Lenihan

Erik Swanson and Kristen Swanson Deborah L. Sylvia ’89 ’96 P’01 P’04 and Ronald N. Sylvia P’01 P’04 Anne E. Tait Michael J. Tartamella ’00 and Bryanne M. Tartamella ’01 William Trombly, Jr. Edward C. Troyano P’23 and Theresa A. Troyano P’23 Michael Tully Jeffrey S. Turner ’89 and Susan Turner Michael P. Turner ’92 and Jodilyn T. Turner Debra Waggoner Peter C. Wells Brenden M. Whitten ’21 Anna Whitton Amy G. Zerman P’22 and Jared Zerman P’22 Cindy Zobian Anonymous (3)

$250 to $499

Bryan P. Aaron and Erin M. Aaron Tate Adams P’23 and Tammy Adams P’23 Danica S. Andersen Christopher B. Anderson ’13 Albert J. Avellar and Diane Avellar Michael A. Ayles P’09 and Lori A. Ayles P’09 Diane Barrette Shari Bates Shari A. Bates and William E. Bates Jr. Timothy E. ’83 & Brenda J. Baxter Morganna C. Beltre and Zeus Beltre Jeffrey S. Benagh Susan T. Benevides ’16 P’19 and Joseph F. Benevides P’19 David Bogosian and Diane S. Bogosian James E. Boisvert P’23 and Ann Boisvert P’23 Vincent J. Bono, Jr. and Suzanne Bono Charles D. Brooks, Jr. and Jessica A. Brooks Gian Brosco Colleen A. Brown, Esq. and John S. Berg Thomas Bryan Elizabeth B. Bryant Katy Burt and Jon Burt Guido Bussinelli and Regina D. Bussinelli Breanne Buzay Paul W. Cain and Rebecca P. Cain Jennifer L. Campbell Grace Caprio Linnea K. Cedergren ’82 Frank Celli and Gina Celli Raymond J. Cerro, Sr. P’23 and Patricia Cerro P’23 Laura B. Choiniere ’81 and Robert M. Choiniere Kevin Clark Brenda J. Clement Anthony L. Coccarelli ’99 Justin Cochran ’18 Kimberle’ah Collins ’97 Abigail E. Cook ’15 James C. Cook P’15 Richard Cooney Travis P. Cooney ’06 Anthony E. Core, Esq. P’17 and Gina Core P’17 Linda L. Correia ’80 Fernando Costantini ’87 and Deborah J. Costantini ’85 Peter Cotoia David A. CoWallis, Jr. ’98 and Nicole K. Pulaski-Cowallis ’00 Joseph R. Cronin ’91 Diane Cumming and Herbert Cumming Michael Cunningham Heidi A. Dagwan and Raymond M. Dagwan Barbara Daily Raymond J. DeBiasa and Suzanne DeBiasa Charles A. Denault P’05 P’16 and Katharine C. Denault P’05 P’16 Gary M. Dennis ’88 and Cara R. Dennis Alyda V. Dewhirst and Joseph R. Dewhirst Paul A. Dias Annie Mae, Tim & Oleg Dier Andrew Dillon Rebecca Dixon P’18 and Peter O. Hilburn P’18 Peter M. Doucet II ’01 David V. Doucett ’04 and Diane N. Doucett ’04 Kevin F. Dunbar, Sr. P’23 and Patricia M. Dunbar P’23 Jennifer Dunseath

Michael L. Durand USA (Ret.) ’73 Lisa A. D’Urso P’12 P’18 and Gerald S. D’Urso P’12 P’18 Glenn Duzy P’21 and Elizabeth M. Duzy P’21 Gladys Echeverria P’17 P’19 and Jose Almandoz P’17 P’19 Christopher J. Egan, Jr. ’79 and Patricia M. Egan ’83 Jon M. Egan ’05 Paul E. Eichin PE ’58 William Ernst, Jr. Eduardo Espinal and Jocelyn Rodriguez Margaret Everett Dana A. Exter ’11 Robert E. Ferguson, Jr. ’97 Raymond A. Filippone ’72 Craig M. Fisher IV and Kathryn M. Fisher Joseph J. Fitzsimons ’04 Catherine E. Flanagan Joseph Flynn Kerry Fogarty and John J. Fogarty, Jr. Elizabeth Fongemie Peter Forsberg Donald C. Forster ’80 Dana Fowler and Michael T. Fowler Chris Gabrielli Henry F. Galligan and Maura A. Galligan Ernest Gaudet, Jr. ’70 and Shelah A. Gaudet Linda J. Gauvin ’96 M’17 Teral M. Gay P’23 Robert Germano and Liz Germano Sofia M. Giovannello ’13 Andrew J. Grace ’94 and Greg Abel Timothy S. Grady ’00 Lisa Guillette Susan A. Guilmette Monique Gulino William R. Gumb P’08 and Donna A. Gumb P’08 Peter A. Hainley, Esq. L’06 Kerry Hamberger Marcus A. Hanscom Conner R. Harding ’19 Glynn Hawley Dan Herbein ’14 Ty Z. Herzog ’17 Carolyn Hibbard George C. Higham P’23 and Stephanie A. Higham P’23 Michael F. Holmes, Sr. and Judith Holmes Alexandra L. Isham ’13 Grant Jackson Matthew T. Jerzyk, Esq. L’08 William Jesmer P’09 and Mary Jo Jesmer P’09 James H. Jessup ’97 William D. Jones and Patricia A. McCarthy Deborah L. Kaiser P’22 and Robert W. Kaiser III P’22 Kathleen Karpus Jeanne L. Kehoe ’78 and Timothy Kehoe Dan F. Kelly and Debora O. Kelly Terry Kelly Eugene Kennedy ’90 and Nancy J. Kennedy ’90 James Kingston Dean P. Kisciras ’19 Peter Klay ’92 and Marcy J. Klay ’93 Laura Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23 and James Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23 Riley E. Lamson, Jr. ’66 and Mary Lamson Gregory J. Laramie and Laura Laramie Jeffrey N. Larrow ’08 Beth L. Lawton ’80 Elizabeth P. Learned Chelsie A. Leffelman Robin L. Levesque P’17 P’19 P’21 and James W. Griffin, Jr. P’21 Brett E. Lewis ’92 Andrew K. Lippincott ’06 Walter F. Lippmann II ’98 David R. Lynn ’89 and Darrien Gumkowski Scott Mackey Todd A. Magliato P’20 and Mary Ann Magliato P’20 Kenneth E. Mahler ’74 and Christine Mahler JoAnne Many Peter S. Margulies J.D. and Ellen M. Saideman J.D. Amanda J. Marsili and Gregg M. Marsili

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

42


Karen M. Mastovsky and David G. Mastovsky Peter C. Matthes ’92 Joyce A. Maynard and David W. Maynard William H. McCarthy P’07 and Alice M. McCarthy P’07 Meghan K. McGrath ’08 and Douglas G. Cameron ’08 William B. McKenzie and Johanna W. McKenzie Barbara McLlarky ’78 and Leslie M. McLlarky ’81 Elizabeth Mecca William F. Mecca, Jr. ’91 Harold M. Metts ’70 and Dayus L. Metts Rick L. Michaud ’88 P’23 and Lori Michaud P’23 Michael J. Millen, Sr. P’19 and Virginia J. Millen P’19 George R. Milot ’94 and Cheryl C. Milot ’93 Joseph S. Mogavero and Cheryl A. Mogavero Kevin L. Moitoso ’01 Marc J. Monsko ’88 and Tracey Monsko Clara J. Moses ’13 Vernon Mouw Debra A. Mulligan and David H. Mulligan Thomson Munson P’11 and Robin G. Munson P’11 Nancy Nester Charles W. Nevel and Anne M. Aune Amy B. Ng and Thomas T. Ng Robert A. Nichols, Jr. P’23 and Robin Nichols P’23 Anthony Nicolicchia ’08 Stephanie M. Niman ’15 Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14 and Katie V. Oduyingbo Alison B. O’Loughlin ’07 Catherine J. Oppenheim ’21 Sharon J. Orser-Jackson ’91 and Brian Jackson Ashley G. O’Shea ’07 and Michael P. O’Shea ’06 Jennifer C. Paglierani and Mark W. Paglierani Matthew T. Paige ’13 and Melanie A. Reagan ’13 Christian A. Palombo Albert W. Patenaude, Jr. and Maureen T. Patenaude James S. Patterson ’08 Tom Penney ’94 Jennifer Pereira Patricia Petricca Perri C. Petricca Scott Phillips and Patricia M. Phillips Dean M. Piterski ’16 Angela Pizzolato Lindsey P. Proulx ’15 Gerald L. Queen Melanie J. Ras and David M. Ras Harry Raubens ’70 and Kathleen Raubens Christopher Ray and Donna D. Christopher Kyle Rector ’21 Michael A. Reuter ’03 and Alison A. Reuter Lisa Rivard Edward W. Robbins, Jr. ’04 and Christen E. Robbins ’06 Daniel S. Rokas Jeffrey T. Rosado P’23 and Jessica Rosado P’23 John M. Rossi ’88 Alexander K. Rudkin ’14 Anthony S. Ruocco and Mary-Patrice Ruocco Jacqueline Santos John M. Schneider and Melanie Schneider Craig Seminara Jason E. Shaughnessy and Karin D. Shaughnessy Daniel J. Shea, Jr. and Karen Shea Thomas P. Sheehan ’77 and Pat Sheehan Adrian Shulman Lyndon Sickey ’03 and Brandy Sickey Richard T. Skov and Diane L. Skov Joel C. Snodgrass ’85 and Alice Snodgrass Heather E. Snyder and Will H. Snyder Kathleen D. Souza ’08 P’13 P’21 and Edward B. Souza P’13 P’21 Lori Speranzo P’19 P’20 Arjen Steegstra and Kathryn J. Hollett Robin D. Stone and Melanie Stone Lisa M. Sullivan P’16 and Richard J. Sullivan P’16 Sandra Sullivan P’15 and Vincent Sullivan P’15 Farah Taveras and Angel Taveras Brighid S. Thompson ’05 and Kevin T. Thompson, Jr. ’06 Eric D. Thurston ’14 Amy B. Tiberio and Jason Tiberio ’21

43

Charlotte S. Tracy P’92 Kevin E. Uniacke ’91 and Patricia S. Uniacke Michael Unsworth and Nancy Keeney Michael T. Unsworth and Gean G. Unsworth Sean Varano and Tracy A. Varano Nicole M. Verdi, Esq. ’12 L’14 and Erlin R. Rogel ’12 L’15 Carlton Vogt and Brenda M. Vogt Brian K. Walker ’99 Mary C. Ward Marjorie C. Weinstein-Kowal John L. Whitmer ’87 Karl G. Wildman ’82 and Joy Wildman Holly Williams and Shawen Williams Lesley Williams Linda Williams Ann G. Winfield Cameron F. Wood ’22 M’23 Kinder W. Woodcock P’23 and Karen S. Woodcock P’23 Daniel A. Woods ’09 Matt T. Woznyk ’21 Andrew J. Yaroshefski ’89 and Mary-Ellen Yaroshefski Brian J. Young ’05 Raazi Zain Anonymous

Up to $249

Cheryl Aaron Katy Aaron Shaun Abbott Larkin V. Abitabilo and James E. Abitabilo Dina Abou-Hatoum ’10 Richard I. Abrams, Esq. and Joan C. Abrams Laurie Abruzzi Alexis Accomando Ziad A. Achkar ’12 Andrew Adams Edgar G. Adams, Jr. Tyler Adams Catherine A. Adlerman and Jeffery L. Sitzer Matthew J. Affrunti ’21 Jennifer K. Agell ’19 Theresa M. Agonia ’13 Lily M. Agosta Andrew F. Ah Kao and Colleen Ah Kao John A. Ah Kao Scott Ahlman Violet Aitken Ramon Aja and Jeanine M. Lewis Ellen Albanese Rick F. Alderman Diane Alexanian Peter R. Alfieri Pious Ali John E. Alibrio ’71 Abdulmajed Aljabhan Thomas M. Allan ’74 and Maryanne M. Allan Jeanmarie Allar Marybeth Allen Dennis J. Allsop ’74 Natalie F. Almeida ’19 Denise Altobelli Dana M. Altobello ’98 and Rachel Altobello Megan Alves ’91 and David Alves Raffaela A. Alvigi Ann M. Alvord ’10 Karen Alzate ’19 David Anderson David B. Anderson, Jr. and Joanne Anderson Donald B. Anderson ’84 Martim M. G. Anderson ’18 Eric H. Andler ’00 Tyler R. Andrade ’22 William Andrake, Jr. ’78 and Debra Andrake Mark Andreozzi Nancy L. Andrews Mary Anskat Stephen Antoni Christian Antonie Health AP Treasury AP Sharon Appleton William Aquilante Gerald P. Araneo P’23 and Rebecca G. Araneo P’23 Sophia M. Araneo ’23

Delia Arellano-Weddleton Ann K. Armater P’15 and Raymond J. Armater P’15 Jacqueline A. Armillotto ’82 and Ronald F. Armillotto Delvin H. Arnold and Ana T. Arnold Stephen J. Arrico ’12 Jeannette L. Arrighi ’84 Joseph T. Arruda, Jr. ’86 Deborah J. Ash ’93 and Jeffrey R. Ash Remy P. Ash ’93 and Ann Ash Stephen Assumma Nicole Atchue Marci R. Atkins A. Tucker Atterbury ’17 Timothy E. Atwood ’09 Kate Aubin Maudie Audrey Jim Austin and Elizabeth Austin Nick Autiello Vernon Ave Juan C. Aviles and Michele S. Aviles Josef J. Ayala ’09 F. Michael Ayles ’91 Tami Azouri P’20 P’21 and Alan Azouri P’20 P’21 Fadi R. Baaklini ’08 Jessica Babbitt Jessica L. Babbitt John R. Babuka ’20 Grace Baccay and Francis B. Baccay Dina Bagley Reiko Bagsby Christopher M. Bailey ’22 Amy G. Baker P’22 and David F. Baker P’22 Sarah G. Baker ’22 Adam L. Baker-Siroty ’01 Rolanda Balaga George Ballantoni ’90 and Laura Ballantoni Carol Balma Thomas Baluk Chris Balzano Shawn Balzano Vincent M. Balzano and Yvonne Balzano Zeena Barbarita David Barber Anne F. Barclay ’88 and Richard C. Barclay George Bariso Todd M. Bariso P’23 and Jennifer L. Bariso P’23 Thomas A. Barker ’14 ’16 Kendra E. Barnard ’23 Mark Barnard P’23 and Susan Barnard P’23 Patricia Barnard Jane L. Barnes Jeanna Barnes Kris Barone ’92 H. M. Barrett ’84 Veronica M. Barrett James R. Bartlein ’16 Emma W. Bartlett ’21 Dean R. Bates ’00 M’01 and Laura M. Bates ’02 Elizabeth J. Battaglia P’20 Jean E. Bauer ’80 and Richard Bauer David K. Baum ’83 and Jennifer Baum Peter J. Baum ’70 and Barbara J. Baum Carolyn W. Bauman Roger Bauman Sheridan Bauman Eric W. Baxter ’96 P’23 and Paula S. Baxter ’95 P’23 Denae L. Bayer and Stephen Ovren Janeen M. Bazarian ’93 Casie Beauchemin Cody T. Beaudette ’23 Carolyn L. Beaulieu Carter Beaulieu Donald Beaulieu Douglas Beaulieu Gordon Beaulieu Jacquelyn M. Beaulieu ’23 Madeline Beaulieu Lindsay Bedard Jeffrey R. Beir and Sarah Beir Elizabeth Beisel Carolyn Belisle Karen Bellacosa P’13 P’20 PL’18 Joseph Bellitto P’23 and Kathleen Liati P’23 Teagan Bellitto ’23

Michael A. Bender ’87 and Carolyn Bender Lia Benevides Gail Benigni John Benigni and Suzanne Benigni Trenton Benner Emily K. Bennett ’23 Nicole M. Bennett Sue Bennett Mya Bennis Elaina H. Benson ’23 Thomas W. Bentley ’04 Lois D. Bertini ’81 Andrew T. Berube Cheyenne M. Besser ’23 Jennifer Bessette Jennifer Best ’78 Marcela Betancur Andrea Bettencourt Kate Biagiotti and Aldo P. Biagiotti, Jr. Robert C. Bianchi ’84 and Brenda Bianchi Christina Bianco Kelly Bidawid and Wesley J. Meyer Robert Bielawa and Alison N. Bielawa Karen H. Bilotti and Gary Bilotti Autumn Bishop Meaghan E. Bishop ’17 Kimberly Bitto Patricia E. Blackburn ’90 and Robert J. Blackburn Kelly Blackhurst Deborah Blaisdell and Adam C. Blaisdell Donna M. Blanchette ’78 and Joseph A. Blanchette Sheila S. Blanchette ’90 Mindee Blanco Raymond Bligh Kevin Blum Stephen A. Blum 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 Sandra Bogosian Shannon Bol Sherri Boldt and Brian Boldt Sharon Bolduc Kimberly Bolk ’17 Anabela Bonanca Benedetto J. Bonavita ’22 Margie Bonefant Sean R. Bonefant Kelsey Bonnett Frank J. Bonura ’87 and Filomena Bonura Mark Bonvissuto and Patricia Bonvissuto Michael Bonvissuto Cathleen Boorse Fred Booth III ’94 ’97 P’15 and Karen Booth P’15 Jillian Booth ’22 Sara Booth Kevin E. Borbee P’17 and Sharon P. Borbee P’17 Edith S. Borden ’96 and David Borden ’71 Luigi Ilardi & Jean F. Borrelli-Ilardi Avery E. Boruch ’21 Rachel M. Borzone Robert W. Borzone and Sharon Borzone Sandra Bosco and Mark J. Bosco Susan M. Bosco P’09 P’17 and Gregory Bosco P’09 P’17 Robert A. Boscoe ’82 and Sandra Robert Kerrie L. Bosse P’22 Kenneth & Tammy Bouchard Rene & Mary Bouchard, III Claudine Boucher Caitlin B. Boufford Dawn Boufford Kathryn Boufford Michael Boufford Barton & Donna Bovee Kerrie Bowater Aidan F. Bowen Jason Bowen ’17 Scott Bowen and Susan J. Bowen Cris Bowes Charlotte Bowler Rebecca Bowman Valerie J. Bowman ’88 and Aaron Bowman Lucy M. Boyden ’22 Crystal Bozigian


Christopher E. Bracone ’88 Linda M. Brady ’88 and James Brady Shannon Bralley Stephanie L. Bramante ’18 Patricia D. Brandt Connor E. Branon Hailey M. Brasseur Beth Brazil Hannah Brazil Ashley Bregel John T. Breglio and Susan Breglio Alex M. Brennan Julie B. Brennan Allison C. Briere ’08 Molly E. Brigan Nora A. Brigham ’21 Kristy Briles Jennifer Brimer Katie Brinker Christian R. Brinkley ’21 Claire V. Brisson-Banks ’03 and Les J. Gimson Banks Celeste Brochu Casey Brodersen Carisa L. Brogdon Carroll Brophy Mark B. Brosky ’86 Dillon Brout Aaron A. Brown ’97 and Tracey B. Brown ’97 Amanda Brown Clement W. Brown, Jr. ’73 and Diane Brown Mark S. Brown and Katheryn Brown Meredith C. Brown ’05 Michael K. Brown Patricia Brown Rene G. Brown, Esq. ’98 L’01 P’06 Steven Brown Kelly Broyles Brittany Bryan and Tyler F. Bryan Christina Bshara Margot Bucci Andrew L. Buckler ’86 P’12 David B. Buckler ’84 and Daris C. Buckler Lisa E. Buckley P’18 and Paul Buckley P’18 Daniel Buddie Valarie Bullington Karlin Bundy Francesca R. Buono Matthew P. Burch and Jennifer Sanborn Aaron R. Burdick and Kathy Burdick Alexandria Burdick Irving Burdick and Cynthia Burdick Tim C. Burfc Erin N. Burke ’23 Michelle K. Burke ’92 and Andrew E. Burke ’92 Debi I. Burkowsky and Lawrence R. Burkowsky Henry Burnham Mark J. Burns and Rosemary A. Burns Emma Burr Kelsey L. Burr Shannon Burr Donna Burr-Padula Janice M. Bury P’17 and Donald P. Bury P’17 Chris Busby ’16 Rachel C. Busch James F. Butler III ’92 Chris Byrnes and Christopher M. Byrnes Ana I. Cabral P’10 and Manuel F. Cabral P’10 Laura Cabral ’03 and Matthew P. Cabral ’16 M’19 Monica Cabral Theresa M. Cabral P’18 and Jose G. Cabral P’18 Patti M. Caceres and Andre B. Caceres Leah Cadwallader The Cahills Family Robert Cahoon and Daniela Cahoon Joan Cain Sue Cain Todd Cain Tyler F. Cain ’22 Luke A. Calabrese ’23 Michael Calabrese P’23 and Catherine Calabrese P’23 Talia Calabrese Maribeth Calabro Tara Calixto Amanda Callahan Karin Callahan P’20 and Mark A. Callahan P’20 Eric Camara

Bethany Camarota Nicolas J. Cambi ’11 Jacqueline M. Cammarata ’08 Michele Campana Duncan Campbell Elisabeth B. Campbell and Stephen Campbell, Jr. Stephen Campbell and Marylou Campbell Sara Campion-Egan Joseph W. Canata, Jr. and Amy M. Canata Kallie J. Candelaria Kimberly Candelaria Lysa Cang Cannataro Sandra C. Cano Anna M. Cano-Morales and William F. Morales Richard Capek P’09 and Kathleen Hanrahan P’09 Victor F. Capellan and Diana Capellan Theresa A. Capelo ’09 Capozzi Family Robert J. Carbone P’23 and Francine B. Carbone P’23 John W. Card ’71 and Pauline Card Anthony Cardone Peter A. Carey ’06 Haley L. Carignan ’16 Ted J. Carlson P’23 and Lauren M. Carlson P’23 Conner J. Carlton ’14 Steve D. Carnevale ’13 Kimberly Carney and John B. Carney Sara Carney Christopher R. Carollo ’91 and Karen Carollo Mary E. Caron ’86 and Donald Caron Guthrie K. Carpenter ’15 Jeff Carpenter Jordyn Carpenter Jordyn Carpenter ’91 Kris Carpenter Andrue Carr Andrue C. Carr, Sr. and Sarah Lynn Carr Gabriella F. Carr Kasey Carr Margaret Carr and Christopher E. Poulin Michelle Carr Stefanie Carr Sharon M. Carrafiello and Thomas Carrafiello Amy D. Carrasco and Chris Carrasco Charlotte V. Carrington-Farmer and John M. Farmer Blair Carroll ’13 Brian Carroll and Kate Carroll Daniel Carroll Jonathan Carroll Luke Carroll Maggie Carroll Mary E. Carroll P’86 P’88 P’92 P’93 G’17 and Thomas J. Carroll P’86 P’88 P’92 P’93 G’17 Paula M. Carroll ’23 Sara Carroll David B. & Susan H. Carroll William Carroll Dianne M. Carter and Anthony Carter Jennifer Carter Kristen Cartwright Spencer C. Cartwright ’22 Margaret Case and Paul E. Bender Ph.D. Gregory M. Casey ’93 Matt J. Cashman and Debb Cashman Dena M. Castricone, Esq. ’98 L’02 Erica Castro ’12 Beverly E. Caswell ’98 Jason M. Catalano ’03 McKenzie Cataldo M’23 Christine Catanese and Christopher J. Catanese Deborah J. Catone and William Catone Joshua Catone Keith C. Catone Rochelle Cauvin Ryleigh E. Cavanaugh ’23 John Celano P’23 and Laura Celano P’23 Bilge G. Celik Brooklyn F. Cenatiempo ’22 M’23 Reginald Centracchio ’86 and Linda A. Centracchio Cassandra H. Cerasia ’23 Michael Cerbone Anne-Marie P. Cerda and Juan M. Cerda Amanda Chaiyabhat Whit Chaiyabhat

Emily A. Chamberlain ’20 Deidre Chambers-Logan Leonardo Chamorro Kurt Chapin and Carrie Chapin Jennifer Chapman Stacey L. Charlton Mary R. Chase ’86 and Dean Chase Catherine R. Chasse ’20 Christine M. Chasse ’23 Tara E. Chatowsky ’21 Taylor Chatowsky ’21 T/E Chez Bruce E. Chorney ’74 Season Chowdhury Brown J. Chris Debra Christensen Thomas R. Christensen ’78 and Debra Christensen Adam Christina Martha Christina ’77 Hannah Chubbuck Kar Hing Chung Tom Cieslewski Matthew Cipriani ’94 Amelia Cirella Isabella Cirignano ’23 Jeanann I. Clark Louis B. Clark ’82 Mary Clark Scott T. Clark Brianna M. Clarke ’23 Lindsay W. Clarken ’08 Paige Clausius-Parks Eileen M. Cleckner Michael L. Cleckner Rosemarie Clementi Melissa Cliett Grant Cline James A. Cline Jim Cline Susan M. Cline Robert J. & Francesca M. Clines Laura Cloherty Mark Cobbold and Amanda Cobbold Nicholas B. Coburn ’10 Caitlin R. Codding ’07 Pam Codero and David C. Codero Reese Codero David P. Coelho and Joan K. Berlin Ari Cohen Jay Cohen and Betty Cohen John Coletti Martin Colin Diane L. Collins and Rowland R. Collins, Jr. Julie Collins Kelli A. Collins and Trenton K. Collins Susan Collins Christopher J. Commans PE ’88 John J. Conaty ’73 Christopher Conidi Caitlin Conley Dylan Conley Brady Connor Bev Cook Bryan Cook ’00 Hennessey Cook James A. Cook and Donna G. Cook Kristen Cook Ron Cook and Cheryl Cook Tasha Cook-Pye Bertrand Cooper Lori Coppinger ’21 Jaden Coppola Joseph T. Coppola and Monica Coppola Silvia Coppola Michelle Cordeiro Nicole Corey Robert Corey and Kimberly A. Corey Maureen A. Corkery ’82 and Neil Corkery Tom Cormican and Wendy L. Allen Zoey Cormican Christopher J. Cornwell ’16 Alan Corvi Ellen Corvi Lynn Corwin Andrew J. Costanzo and Sara C. Costanzo ’99 Lauren Costanzo Barbara Cote

Dave Cote Todd J. Cote Trevor Cote Joseph Cotroneo III and Sara L. Cotroneo Lisa Cotsonas Robert M. Cotting and Megan Cotting Michael Cotugno and April J. Cotugno Michael J. Courtney P’23 and Maria Courtney P’23 Jennifer Couture P’22 and David M. Couture P’22 Timur J. Couture ’22 Cox Family Robert H. Coyle ’82 William E. Coyle III ’73 and Mary Coyle Danielle M. Crafford ’08 John Craft Iain R. Crawford and Rachael E. Crawford John A. Crawford III P’21 P’23 John J. Creegan III and Kathleen Creegan Gloria C. Crist Christine A. Crocker ’93 ’94 Kristen Cronin Michael A. Crooks P’23 and Judith M. Crooks P’23 Stephanie Croughwell Collin C. Crowell ’14 Jessica L. G. Crowell Carol Cruz Christian Cruz P’23 and Paola Guzman P’23 Mia A. Cruz ’23 Brandon T. Csizmadia Kelly S. Csizmadia and Brian A. Csizmadia Nicholas J. Cuccinello Brittany M. Cuevas ’17 Brian R. Cumming Diane Cumming MaryAnn Cumming Jerome Cummiskey Gabrielle Cunha Kerri A. Cunney and Brendan Cunney Bernard M. Cunniff ’80 Lily J. Cunningham ’23 Melissa J. Cunningham P’23 P’23 and Rob Cunningham P’23 P’23 Elizabeth Curley Madison Curtin ’19 John A. Curtis ’08 Katrina Cushman Alan C. Cutting and Sandra C. Cutting Jonathan Cyr Perry C. Cyr ’13 Steve D’Elena Christopher J. Dabek ’00 and Lauren A. Dabek Charles Daddona, Jr. and Maura Daddona Melissa R. D’Alessandro PA-C ’07 Linda J. Dallaire and William A. Dallaire Kenneth Daponte P’10 P’12 and Maryelizabeth Daponte P’10 P’12 Anthony Darin and Lisa Darin Levi daSilva Kyle P. Davenport ’22 Andre Davia ’80 and Susan Davia Frank Davide Lawrence D. Davide Anissa Davis Jackie Davis Michelle L. Davis ’84 and Harcourt Davis III Nancy Davis Steph Davis Jordan Day Raphaël de Lassus Sally Deal Claudia V. DeAlmeida Carmine DeAngelis Chris Dearborn and Lynne M. Nolan Cory F. DeBias ’04 Nick DeChino Gianna Decicco Colby C. Decker ’20 Jonathan B. Decker ’13 Paul E. Deckett ’79 Ronald DeCubellis ’84 Janel A. DeCurtis ’18 Dawn Defelice Guy DeFeo and Karlin A. DeFeo Olivia Del Guidice Edward J. Delaney

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

44


Margarita Delaporta ’19 Sylvia Della Bella Alfred J. Della-Posta ’76 Adam R. Dellemonico ’17 Ruth Delmonico James DeLuca and Heather A. DeLuca Marylou Demaio Derek Denard Evan Denard Sarah E. Deneault ’16 John J. Denio P’12 and Margaret M. Denio P’12 Claudette Dennis and Dave Dennis Dylan Dennis Maura Dennis Michael Dennis and Carolyn Dennis Justin P. Depietri ’20 Nancy DErrico Olivia DeSabella Sandra Desmarais ’93 P’21 P’22 and Kyle J. Desmarais P’21 P’22 Patricia M. Desmond P’18 and Michael J. Cardelle P’18 John Desousa Donald G. Desrochers ’71 and Debra A. Martin Desrochers ’75 Jack Devin Ava E. Devine Thomas Devine and Susan Devine Charles M. Dewitt P’13 and Chloe Lions P’13 Susan M. DeWitt ’13 Ryan D. DeWolfe ’09 David Diaz Daniel G. DiCamillo Enrico T. Didino and Nicole M. Didino Jenna DiDonato Tabitha DiDonato Michael D. Diercksen ’13 Cindy DiFrancesca and Terry DiFrancesca Susan E. DiFranco Devin Digiovanni Jennifer O. Dillon Patrick Dillon Davida R. Dinerman P’23 and Bradley J. Dinerman P’23 Christine E. Dion P’11 Maddie Dion Todd R. Dion and Kelly Dion Dina Dionizio Matthew T. DiPlacido ’13 Jacqueline P. Diplacido-Robison ’93 and Jeff Robison Jose Dobles Charles Dobson ’75 Sarah Dobson Sean Dobson and Iwona Dobson Michela M. Doherty ’17 Kristi F. Dolan ’20 Paige Dombek Matthew Donato Rich Donofrio John P. Donohue ’22 Bryan P. Donovan and Heather M. Donovan Mary-Ellen K. Donovan ’87 and Thomas Donovan David E. Dooks ’89 and Julie Dooks Mary Dorey Steven C. Dorney ’73 Sydney Dorval Rosanna Downey James E. Downing and Ellen Downing David A. Doyle ’89 Margaret E. Doyle Polly E. Doyle P’15 and James G. Doyle P’15 Sean P. Doyle ’15 Stewart M. Draheim ’17 Diana Dreher P’22 and Mark C. Dreher P’22 Lindsey A. Dreher ’22 Gregory J. Drennan and Karen E. Drennan Amy L. Driscoll Hannah Driscoll ’22 Angela M. Droogan P’15 P’16 and Joseph F. Droogan P’15 P’16 Charlene L. Drougas Duane Drouin Richard A. Drucker and Hilary Drucker Stella T. Drummond and Dr. Gilmore N. O’Neill Stephen Dube Dale Dubinsky ’11

45

Jennifer K. Dubost P’16 and Christian H. Dubost P’16 Wayne L. Dubreuil ’76 Izabella Dudek-Haffner ’93 Cameron J. Duffy Campbell Duffy Kimberly Duffy Kayleigh Dugan The Dugans Family Matthew P. Duggan ’09 Theodore Duguay Abens Dulcine and Heather Dulcine Peter Dunn ’12 Shawn Dunn Teagan Dunn ’18 Mary P. DuPont Gladue ’72 Melissa A. DuPont Elizabeth A. Duquette Clayton A. Durant ’16 Mary A. Durant ’10 James S. Durante II ’21 Rachelle N. Durrschmidt ’13 Chris M. Duryea P’23 and Elise Duryea P’23 Sharlene T. Dusoe-Swainamer ’88 and Mark Swainamer Blair-Victoria Dutra ’08 ’10 Michael J. Dutra P’23 and Lori Dutra P’23 Brian Dutton P’23 and Julie Dutton P’23 Hillary Dutton Hillary S. Dutton ’14 Lindsay Duvall Stephen Duvel and Miriam E. Duvel Charles A. Duzy Sarah L. Dwyer ’07 John Dyer ’76 Nicole P. Dyszlewski, Esq. Gerard Eagleston Helen Eagleston Kim Eagleston Wil Eagleston Katherine K. Earle ’98 and Trevor Earle Eileen Echevarria Melinda L. Eckert P’18 and James Eckert P’18 Barbara B. Edward P’12 and David S. Edward P’12 Connor C. Edwards ’21 Carly M. Egan ’20 Cheryl Egan and John Egan Gillian Egan and Brian E. Egan Kyle Egan Riley S. Eger ’17 Caroline E. Elie Georges Elizee Nelson Elliott Joanna E. Ellsberry ’07 Caitlin Elnitsky ’07 Jenna Elsner Daniel Emmert Jillian Emmert Should be Matthew Emmert and Jillian L. Emmert ’14 Leonard W. Engel and Kristina A. Karpinski Caitlin V. Engle ’03 Sam Ennis Paul Eno Kate E. Enriquez Philip A. Ernst ’13 Travis Escobar David Espinal Carmine Esposito James V. Esposito John Esposito Michael Esposito Paul Esposito Jo A. Estevez Karen J. Ethier M’03 and Robert E. Ethier ’11 Margaret H. Everett ’20 Nancy Evjen Barrie Facente Elaine Fahey Megan Fahey Peter Fahey and Darcey Fahey Cornelius N. Fahy ’97 Michael J. Faiella ’09 Richard Falcone Antonieta Falconi Jane Falconieri ’82 and A. Joseph Falconieri The R. Falvey’s ’23

Henderson Family P’23 Kline Family Osbeck Family Paoli Family Redner Family Rooks Family Ann A. Famularo, Jr. and Joseph S. Famularo Madison L. Fancher ’21 Kyle D. Farabaugh ’18 Dawn M. Faria and William J. Faria John T. Faria ’70 and Betty Faria Maia Farish Darren E. Fava ’92 M. Temple Fawcett Randi M. Featherstone ’13 Kaylin Fehan ’23 Richard Fehan P’23 and Lisa Fehan P’23 Walter S. Felag, Jr. and Elaine Felag Doris Ferguson P’05 Albert J. Ferland, Jr. ’70 and Mary A. Ferland John Fernandes Kristin Fernandes Debra Fernandez P’22 and Chris Fernandez Jeffrey J. Fernandez and Fernandez Family Mark P. Ferrandino and Melissa A. Ferrandino Greg Ferraro and Lisa M. Ferraro Carly L. Ferreira Kaitlyn Ferreira ’14 James Ferriero Ellie F. Field ’22 Jim Field Julia A. Fields ’20 Diana L. Figueroa ’18 Wood S. Finest Salvatore G. Fini and Christine S. Fini Jacquelyn K. Fink ’03 Patti Finlayson Richard N. Finlayson James E. Finn P’08 Edward G. Finnie P’23 and Keri Finnie P’23 Ryan C. Fisher ’08 and Anna S. Fisher Suzanne E. Fiske ’89 and Barton C. Fiske Donald A. Fitting, Jr. P’21 Thomas J. FitzGerald ’76 Carla M. Fitzpatrick Amanda Flachsbart Katherine M. Flaherty Kaylin Flaherty Michael Flaherty and Kimberley A. Flaherty Pauline Flaherty Kiley R. Flammia ’17 Christopher J. Flannery ’85 and Nohemi Flannery Donna M. Flannery and James J. Flannery, Jr. Carolyn Flathers Debbie Flatley Brian R. Flavia ’88 P’20 and Michele B. Flavia P’20 Ellenor G. Fleming ’21 Chris Flor Kerry Flores Steven Flores Dan Flynn Milka Fong Jake Fontaine Sherri K. Fontaine and Kenneth A. Fontaine Michael S. Forlenza, Jr. ’14 Brendan Forte and Noel L. Forte Janice Foscaldo Cassie Fosher Kalvin Fosher Kennedy Fosher Cole R. Foster ’20 James Fox and Megan Fox Jocelyn Foye and Jeff Foye Rosetta Fraleigh and Scott P. Fraleigh Sandra I. Franca Victor E. Franca P’15 and Maria Franca Scott D. Frankel D.C. ’80 Hannah R. Franklin ’23 Alexandra J. Fraser ’09 Marjorie A. Fraser ’88 Nicolette Fraser Timothy R. Fraser and Debra A. Fraser Robert P. Frazee ’01 David E. Fredlund ’10 Brittany Freeman Constance Freeman

Nancy Freire and Joseph Freire Alicia Freitag Cass M. Friedman ’15 Anna Friend Barbara Friend Carolyn Friend Faith Friend Jane Friend Joseph Friend Lisa Friend Loring Friend Max Friend Raphael Friend Rebecca Friend Peter J. Frost ’22 Eric Frost-Barnes P’19 and Kate Luhr Caitlin Frumerie Stephanie Fry Nicholas A. Fuglestad ’93 Charles E. Fulcher Hu Furong Barbara Furtado P’07 Kimberly Gaboury Christina Gagliardi Mckalah Gaine Carol A. Galasso Aidan Gallagher Bob Gallagher Maeve Gallagher Mairead E. Gallagher Michael J. Gallagher Peter F. Gallagher ’20 Robert Gallagher Marissa A. Gallant ’08 Rita Gallant Lisa Gallant-Stanzione ’05 and Timothy M. Stanzione Steven Gallerani P’23 and Stacie Gallerani P’23 Timothy M. Gallerani ’23 Katie Galligan Michael T. Galusha ’92 and Ron Olsen Michael C. Gannaio ’21 Thomas J. Garcia ’21 and Valerie S. Garcia ’21 Katherine L. Gardiner John P. Garlasco ’11 Joe Garlick Michael Garr Evynne L. Gartner ’16 Gregory F. Garvin ’06 Artesa Gashi Anthony R. Gatehouse ’04 Telly Gatos Linda J. Gauvin Jennifer Gaviria Frances A. Gaynor Brian L. Geller ’85 Stephanie Geller Trey W. Generali Gregory S. Geneus Loring Geniefer Donna A. George ’80 Frederick W. George ’88 Stephanie R. George ’18 Jennifer Georges Mary Gerhard Laura Germano Lindsey Germano Raegen G. Germano Arianna A. Gerrior ’20 Mindy C. Gersten-Isaacs ’75 and Michael B. Isaacs Gary H. Gerstenzang ’89 Edmund H. Geschickter ’19 Meagan Giarratano Glen Gibbons Kathleen J. Gibbs and Roy Gibbs Devon E. Giblin ’13 Caroline Giers Skylar Gifford Chris J. Giglietti Jacklyn Gil Ketty Gil Rebecca S. Gilbert ’06 Stuart Gilfillen Andrew T. Gillie ’18 Anthony Gioffre David L. Gioffreda ’81 and Lori A. Gioffreda Christopher M. Giorgi, Sr. and Liz Giorgi


Claudia A. Giustino The Hobsons Cameron Habib Dana L. Gladstone and Jason P. Gladstone Rose L. Hochenberger and Kyle J. Hochenberger Roger O. Hackett ’73 Robert Glaser ’82 Jeanne R. Hockenson ’96 and Ryan W. Haggerty ’05 and Thomas R. Gleason ’12 Charles W. Hockenson ’88 Martina L. Haggerty ’05 Mark Glickman Sarah Hodnett Annika Hagley Marci A. Glicksman and Mitchell E. Glicksman Mark Hoey ’92 and Jennifer Hoey Dawnmarie Hall Elyse B. Glynn ’11 Valerie R. Hoffman ’80 Campbell E. Haller ’23 Richard Godfrey Dr. Michael D. Hoffshire Ph.D. ’09 Ula Haller Joan B. Goembel Katherine Hogan Brian M. Halpin and Gina Halpin Sean Gogolin Lidia Hogan P’18 and Peter Hogan P’18 Alan I. Halsband ’89 Edward H. Goldberg ’62 and Mary L. Goldberg Meghan E. Hogan ’08 Jolene F. Hamil-Cole M’13 and Emily N. Goldenberg ’10 M’12 Ella Hohmann Robert A. Cole P’23 Lisa Goldsmith Jennifer Hohmann James J. Hamilton, Jr. ’17 Robert S. Golembeski P’23 and Roseleen A. Holder M’10 Ryan M. Hammond ’13 Nancy E. Golembeski P’23 James E. N. Holm ’21 Allen S. Hance Ryan Gomes Rita J. Holman ’80 and Jos N. Holman ’81 Gwendolyn M. Hancock, Esq. L’09 and Andre L. Gonthier P’23 and Maureen Holmes and Michael J. Holmes Robert D. Hancock Dianne Gonthier P’23 David Holwitt William A. Hanger and Laura Hanger Renee Gonthier ’23 Soo Hong Elizabeth A. Hannon P’13 David Gonzales Sally Hooey Fred Hannon P’23 and Meredith Noyes P’23 Catherine Gonzalez Darcie Hoogland Conner R. Harding ’19 Emily Gonzalez Leonard J. Hope and Stephanie B. Hope Christopher A. Hardy ’12 M’16 Marilu Gonzalez ’12 Gabi Hopkins Guerra Kimberly Hardy Stephanie Gonzalez L’21 and Jorge O. Elorza, Esq. Raymond W. Hardy, Sr. and Kristin M. Hardy Valerie Hopkins Morgan K. Goodman ’04 and Michael Goodman Matthew T. Harkins ’20 Michael Horn Derrick Goodwin ’07 Susan Horton Robert Harper and Linda A. Harper Hannah E. Goodwin ’22 Peter M. Horvath and Peter H. Horvath Todd R. Harrington ’97 Jeffery M. Goodwin and Denise J. Dion Goodwin Adrianne Harris Gary M. Horwitz and Susan Figelman Patricia A. Goodwin P’22 and McKenzie Houseman Eli J. Harris ’23 Dennis Goodwin P’22 David A. Howe ’88 Phil Harris Anne Gorczyca and Richard A. Hargreaves Kevin R. Howe P’23 and Marci B. Howe P’23 Michael Harrison ’84 Cynthia Gordon da Cruz Chris Howell and Christine C. Howell Nicholas C. Hart ’21 Christine Gordon Liam Howell Peg Hartman and Ted Hartman Valerie Goris Taylor Howell Thomas Hartman Zayvier Hartman Barry Gorman Marshall Huggins ’92 and Martha T. Huggins Lewis Hassell Deborah K. Gorman Jennifer L. Hughes and Stephen D. Hughes Michael Hassell and Kathy L. Hassell Darlene Gormly Maureen Hulbert and Luke J. Hulbert Daphne Hatsopolous Adrienne Goss Nancy L. Hulme ’05 Beth B. Hauck Taryn Gould Irina G. Hultin and Stanley H. Hultin Jill Haudenshield William H. Gould, Jr. ’65 and Marjorie Yater Linda Hunter John C. Haudenshield and Heather Haudenshield Robert Hurd Jason Gourdine and Kimberly Gourdine Kerry Hausdorf Vinukonda Govindaiah Debra L. Hurley P’13 Russell Hausman Mahesh Goyal ’90 and Kanta Goyal Martin Hutchinson Eric Havelock ’83 and Kathy Day Dianne Goyette Kelly J. Hutzell ’96 Judith Havelock Michael Gozzo Penny Hynes Catherine A. Hawkes Timothy M. Grady P’23 and Allegra A. Iacovino ’21 Aidan Hawley Elizabeth A. Grady P’23 Dorene Iannacci Connor P. Hayden ’21 Jami L. Graham ’16 Joseph T. Iaria and Monica Iaria Susan M. Haydock P’13 Catherine G. Graney ’85 and Bernie Graney Veronica Ibarguen ’15 Dacia M. Hayslip ’04 Andria S. Grant ’18 Pompea Imondi Maggi Healy Craig Grant Frank Impagliazzo ’09 Kathie Hebert and Mark P. Hebert Mallory C. Infante Jacob C. Grant ’21 Patricia E. Heelen P’22 and Ronald R. Grant Harvey Ing P’21 and Stefania M. Ing P’21 Christian D. Heelen P’22 Judith M. Ingemi Samantha C. Grantham and Patricia J. Libby Gary L. Helton, Jr. ’05 Riley Intrator William L. Grapentine II ’08 ’18 Alison R. Henderson ’23 Anthony Intravaia and Diane Intravaia Anthony Grato Karl Henke Mike A. Intravaia Karol Grato Theresa A. Herbein P’14 and Frank Inzirillo Julie M. Gray and Ben E. Gray David S. Herbein P’14 Brooke Irons James J. Greatorex, Jr. P’23 and Randall L. Herko ’85 and Nancy Herko Jared Irons Michelle A. Greatorex P’23 Corina Hermann Thomas Irons and Lori A. Irons Denise Grebe P’22 and John R. Grebe P’22 Lamar Hermanns John W. Irwin Salvatore Greco ’59 Susan Hersch Alison J. Issler James Greeman and Carol Greeman Colin J. Herschlag ’21 Richard H. Iuliano ’73 Susan E. Green P’21 and Thomas R. Green P’21 Noah Hester Peter A. Jacavone III David W. Greene ’91 Robert F. Hester and Karyn Hester Brian Jackson ’00 Lori Greene Melissa Heuston P’09 Jennifer Jackson Donna Greenhalgh Rob Hibbard and Emily Hibbard Marilyn Jackson Chuck Greenslit Christo Hickey Donna G. Jacobs P’20 P’21 and Laura Greenslit Kevin M. Hickey and Regina F. Hickey Howard I. Jacobs P’20 P’21 Nancy Greer Jaime Higgins and Jason E. Higgins Shirley Jacobsen Samantha M. Gregory ’23 Ty Higgins Michael D. Jacobson and Christine Jacobson Jeanetta M. Griffin ’19 Steve Hilger P’22 Phillip N. Jacques ’13 Edward D. Gross III P’23 and David Hill Marissa A. Jambor ’13 Martha E. Gross P’23 Grace James Diane T. Hill P’21 and Gerry Hanley P’21 Mikaela N. Grosso ’17 Jennifer J. James and Christopher R. James Judith A. Hill Barbara L. Grota Katherine E. James ’93 Michael Hill and Ellyn K. Hill Galin Gruttadaro Nichols James Steven J. Hill Taylor F. Guenard ’16 Judith A. Jamieson, Esq. L’05 George J. Hillman ’73 Robert H. Guerra Mary Jankosky Thorstein W. Himle P’23 and Brenna K. Guilmette ’23 Nancy M. Jannitto P’16 P’17 Sherri B. Greenstein Himle P’23 Charles L. Guilmette P’16 and Sean E. Janson ’18 John Hindle Michele M. Guilmette P’16 Allison R. Boucher-Jarvis and Edward Jarvis Natalie Hinton Steven Guilmette P’23 and Lisa A. Jaworek ’91 Pamela M. Hinton P’22 and Margaret A. Guilmette P’23 James G. Jaworski ’82 and Pamela Jaworski Clerance G. Hinton III P’22 Sebastian Guinassi Emma Jay Rose Marie Hipolito Alexa Gulino Michael C. Jefferson ’78 and Kathleen O’Leary Karol Hjerpe P’23 and Karol Hjerpe P’23 Risa Guttman-Kornwitz Brandon M. Jenkins ’21 Ed Hobson Lindsey K. Gwozdz ’09

Christopher R. Jennings ’88 and Sally A. Jennings ’88 Pamela Jensen Gabby M. Jerahian ’20 Carsten Jerrild ’83 Ankur Jhunjhunwala Alexander S. Johnson and Denise Fabiano Alisha Johnson Bryce Johnson Devin A. Johnson Donna Johnson Donna M. Johnson and Tracy DelGrego Emily Johnson Jennifer Johnson Jesse Johnson Karen Johnson Ashley Jones Cynthia A. Jones P’12 P’16 and Arthur W. Jones, Jr. P’12 P’16 Eric Jones and Kathleen O. Jones Judy K. Jones Kelly L. Jones ’14 Liam Jones Matthew N. Jones William Jones Eileen Jopski Deborah S. Jordan ’03 Harriet L. Jordan-Carroll ’72 Becca Jorgensen-Duffy Gregory V. Josselyn ’11 JP Joubert Lisa Juliano Brian C. Kacmarsky ’96 and Marie Roberts Mariah C. Kaiser ’16 Alex P. Kalber Stephen P. Kalber and Kelly L. Kalber Barry Kaplan ’72 and Pearl Kaplan Hannah B. Kaplan ’20 Steven A. Karp M.B.A. ’21 Elaine C. Karpeichik P’18 P’20 and James E. Karpeichik P’18 P’20 Jozef M. Karpiel ’13 M’13 Carol L. Karvosky and Thomas J. Karvosky Jacqueline B. Katz ’17 Karen Kavanaugh Mack Kavanaugh M O. Kayleigh Tracey Kazura Amanda L. Keane ’15 Erica F. Keane ’93 P’23 and Frank J. Keane P’23 James F. Keane, Jr. and Cynthia C. Keane Jay Keane Meghan E. Kearney ’06 and Matthew D. Kearney ’07 Kelly A. Keating ’16 Judy Kechejian ’88 Justin Keeling J. Craig Keenan Jeffrey D. Keeney and Michele G. Keeney Todd Keeney Nancy Keeny Bobbi-Lynn Kekic ’07 Daniel J. Keldsen and Sandra Z. Keldsen Annie Keller ’20 Eileen J. Kelley and Kevin R. Kelley Jacqueline G. Kelley Alison Kelly Austin B. Kelly ’13 Briana Kelly James E. Kennedy ’17 Kathleen Kennedy and John D. Kennedy, Jr. Shannon Kennedy Kevin J. Kenny ’98 Elizabeth A. Keough and Steven M. Keough Andrew Kerble ’22 Jessica Kerchner Brian P. Kester and Krista Kester Eric Kester and Elizabeth A. Kester Lara M. Kester Dwayne Keys Hasan-Uddin Khan P’04 Eben T. Kiesow ’22 Lynda Kiklis-Brown ’89 and F. J. Brown Corinne Kilzi Elizabeth A. Kilzi ’13 and Corinne O’Kane

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

46


Kathleen M. Kimmel PL’97 and Gene Kimmel PL’97 David King and Kimberley King Teri King Dirk Kinney James M. Kintner Jarred Kirk Richard S. Kirk III ’03 and Katharine Kirk Judith M. Kissane P’08 P’13 Wendelyn Kistler and J. P. Kistler David C. Kitchen ’17 Joe Kitson Tabitha Klaus Casey R. Klein ’20 Katie Kline Heidi Knellinger Brian A. Knowles M’15 Rosemary F. Koch ’74 and Kevin Koch Jordan Kogan ’21 Andrew M. Kohout ’04 George Kolitsas ’18 Denice Koljonen P’17 Seth Kolker Patria H. Komiega and Eric J. Komiega John A. Koolis, Jr. ’78 and Andrea F. Koolis Jenn Koppenal Sandra Kosman Holley M. Kowalczyk and Gregory P. Kowalczyk Sarah E. Kozminski ’11 Kenneth Kramer Mark P. Kraus ’07 Kris Krause Kerri Krawczyk Carol L. Krech George D. Krech Alan Krinsky Megan K. Krisowaty ’18 Janice A. Kryl Marge Kryl and Marjorie Kryl Jackie Kucskar Ann Kurz Kim Kuszlyk Taylor Kutsaftis ’21 Trevor J. Kutsaftis ’13 M’17 Isabella R. Kuzbek Jenny Kuzbek and Chad D. Kuzbek Margarita Kuzmeski and William M. Kuzmeski Sierra Kuzmeski Lynn Labbadia Nathan Labbe Eli Labell Marty Labell Stacey Labell and Bryan A. Labell Daniel T. LaBonte ’03 and Gretchen N. Labonte Brig. General Joseph G. Labrie USA (Ret.) ’86 Jordan Lach ’21 Parker E. Lacoste ’08 Charles Lafferty Frank E. Lagan ’05 Benjamin L. Lagman ’17 Ash Lago ’10 Christina Lake Mason Lake Nicolas D. Lamontagne ’23 Frank Landino Daniel R. Landry William P. Lang Troy H. Lange ’17 L’20 Alexandria M. Lanieri ’13 Amy B. Lanoie ’17 and Donald J. Lanoie Daryl A. Lansing ’81 Scott Laone and Sue Laone Kenneth S. Lapeters, Sr. and Catherine M. Lapeters Rebecca A. Lapierre ’11 Heather Lapolt Armando R. Lara ’20 Lucas Lariviere Sandy Lariviere and David A. Lariviere Wayne W. Lasalle, Jr. ’93 and Christy Lasalle Ruth A. Latham Harrison J. Latimer Anthony Lato, Jr. ’73 and Jeannie Lato Conner P. Lautenschlager ’18 Brett Lauterbach Kylie Lauterbach Olivia Lauterbach Jason Lavallee and Maureen E. Lavallee

47

Kathleen Lynch Maureen Lavallee Robert J. Lynch and Staci Lynch Phyllis Lavallee Manning Lynn Zevon Lawrence ’90 and Jennifer Zevon Anna Lyons Christopher K. Leach ’08 Champ Lyons Timothy D. LeBel ’15 John Lyons Camille R. Lebron ’23 John S. Lyons, Jr. and Katie Lyons Kevin J. LeClair ’00 Estelle Macaruso Walker Ledier James M. MacAulay ’76 and Mary Jo MacAulay Ronald G. Ledoux ’75 Alexandra K. MacDonald Brian F. LeDuc ’10 David V. MacDonald and Kellie MacDonald Katie M. Lee Lisa MacDonald Peter D. Lee and Patricia Lee Michael P. MacDonald and Tina M. MacDonald Rochelle Lee Steve MacDonald P’23 Timothy G. Leeber P’05 Will MacDonald Lana Lee-Brogdon and David C. Brogdon William G. Leese P’16 and Maureen E. Leese P’16 Wendy A. MacDonough and Charles S. MacDonough Benjamin Lefkowitz Gary Macek Frederick Lefton Thomas J. MacGregor James Legnard and Danielle Legnard Mary Kate MacHardy ’08 Brandon A. Lehman ’14 Justin A. MacIntyre ’18 Albert E. Leiggi ’02 and Annamarie Leiggi Emma C. MacLean ’23 Amie L. Leighton ’95 and Eric R. Leighton ’95 Lloyd M. MacLean P’23 and Gary C. Lemery ’72 and Kathleen Lemery Margaret A. MacLean P’23 Grace C. Lemoine Michael Maclean Jonathan D. Lemoine ’12 Stephanie A. MacLeod ’22 Gillian G. Lentendre ’18 and Jason MacPherson and Christine MacPherson Cory R. Letendre ’18 Kevin R. Macy and Ann Macy Heather Leonard Molly Madden Hillary K. Leonard ’16 Frances Maffei P’22 Michael Leonard Alison Magee Stephen A. Leonardi Amanda Magee Raymond R. Leonardo ’13 Jessica M. Magliato ’20 Jacob S. Leprevost ’17 Erin C. Magsamen ’22 Debra lesser Scott Mahan Torrie A. Lewine ’15 Diane Mailey-Higgins Lori P. Lewis Raymond W. Maker III ’74 and Nina Tremaglio Bryant Liana James Maldonado Patricia E. Lichtenstein ’01 and Kate Malenczak Colin Lichtenstein Caitlin E. Mallahan ’22 Timothy T. Lifrak ’73 Carolyn Mallahans P’21 and James P. Liguori, Jr. ’90 and Lori Liguori Mark D. Mallahan P’21 Karin Liiv Hannah Limanek Gwyneth L. Mallinder Jesse Limanek and Arlene Limanek Lynne A. Malloy ’18 ’20 P’18 P’21 and Janet Lincoln Robert J. Malloy P’18 P’21 Kaia Lindberg ’19 Joseph Mallozzi Greg Lindquist Ronald S. Malvin P’12 and Charles J. Liolios P’15 and Patricia A. Malvin P’12 Kathleen A. Liolios P’15 Mary Mancari Robert P. Liptrot ’61 and Priscilla Liptrot Sam M. Mancinelli ’21 Carlie S. Liseo Kathleen Manjos and Michael Manjos Carynn A. Liseo Matthew Mann Caterina L. Liseo ’23 David C. Mantilia ’98 Mark Liseo P’23 and Lisa Liseo P’23 Kevin W. Manuel ’13 Kerry Livingston Pierre Manzo Sean C. Livingston Raffaelo Manzo Steven Lizotte Kendra Marasco and Joe Marasco Kyle F. Lloyd ’98 and Karen Lloyd Patricia H. Marcaccio ’96 Lindsay L. Lobao ’02 and Joe Lobao ’02 Aaron A. Marcavitch ’99 and Andrea Marcavitch Carol J. Lochiatto ’88 and James A. Lochiatto John C. Marchese P’08 and Melina Lodge Elizabeth Marchese P’08 Kyle Logan Paul S. Marchese ’18 Maura M. Logan Tyler J. Marchioni ’21 Greg R. Logue ’17 Peter Maregni Lara Loiacono ’20 Aaron M. Mariano ’08 and Nicole L. Lombardi ’08 Becky K. Griswold Mariano ’13 Sandra Lonardo Nick Markovic Sarah Looney Dennis Marlo Nathan Lopes Katharine E. Marlow ’18 Timothy J. Lopes and Jennifer Lopes Gerald J. Marmat, Jr. P’23 and Joshua M. Lopez ’13 Nancy P. Andert-Marmat P’23 Gen Loring Jill E. Marocchini P’20 Orlando Lugo Amanda L. Maron ’08 Kenna B. Luguri ’08 Jonathan B. Marquardt ’83 Stephanie A. Luiz Helen Marques ’17 Jimmy Lundari Kayla Marsac Joe Lundari and Kathleen Lundari George T. Marshall Katherine M. Lundari Maddy L. Marshall Natalie Lundari Sue Marshall Susan A. Marshall Marie Lupino ’75 and Tony Lupino Nicholas B. Marsili Bianca Lusick Molly Marston Gregory A. Lutz P’14 and Jeffrey B. Martin P’11 and Carolyn R. Graziano-Lutz P’14 Barbara G. Martin P’11 Lisa M. Lutz ’14 Katharine Martin Maddy Lutz Lawrence A. Martin and Brenda Martin Mary Lyda Lee M. Martin and Joyce D. Martin Agnes Lyden Luz Martin Jack R. Lynch

Melissa R. Martin ’18 Pete Martin Rosita Martin Daysi Martinez Celaya ’23 Brenda Martinez Elizabeth Martinez M’07 Marlene Martinez ’13 Patricia Martinez Nicolino Martins James L. Marzec P’20 P’21 and Laura C. Marzec P’20 P’21 Joe Masino Michael Masino Pamela Mason Carla Massaro Craig Massaro and Lisa Massaro Dan C. Massaro ’23 Sara A. Massaro Shawn J. Masse, Esq. ’10 L’13 Aristotle Massos ’22 Lauren E. Mastandrea ’08 Andrea W. Masterman Ph.D. and James Masterman Jason Mastrangelo ’98 L’01 Katharine Mastrantonio and Robert Mastrantonio Savannah Mathews Robert Matthies and Bonnie Matthies Janet Mattiucci Judy Mattiucci David Maudie Joyce Maudie and Karyn Gallivan Sarah A. Mawdsley ’20 Stacey Mayer Cynthia M. Mays ’87 Emma G. Maywalt ’22 Lynn A. Mazick P’14 and Brian S. Mazick P’14 Madison L. McAdoo, Jr. ’82 James C. McAuliffe ’07 Connor Mccabe John J. McCabe ’75 and Mary E. McCabe Kady E. McCain ’23 MJ McCarthy Costanzo Daniel F. McCarthy ’82 and Helen McCarthy John F. McCarthy ’18 Kevin McCarthy and Dianne McCarthy Jen McClaren P’23 Joseph Mcclory Jamie McCoy ’04 Takara D. McDermott ’21 Robert J. McDonough ’71 Thomas Mcdonough Kelly A. McDowell Heather J. McGagh and Michael J. McGagh, Jr. Ryan A. McGahern ’21 Kimberley McGann Jaime L. McGavin ’13 M’13 Stephen McGettrick and Sheryl A. McGettrick Samantha A. McGilvray ’13 James McGinn Erin C. McGinty ’13 Roxanne L. McGrath ’93 and Kevin McGrath Kelly McGuiness Edward McGuinness and Peggy McGuinness Jessica M. McGuire ’14 Joseph M. McHarris ’92 and Kathy McHarris Michael A. McHenry ’71 and Jane McHenry Emily McHugh Mark McHugh Jon McInnes Susan McKee Doug McKenna ’88 and Mary McKenna Eamon R. McKenney ’21 Michael D. McKinnon ’99 Peter McKone P’10 and Patricia McKone P’10 Kerri McLaughlin ’20 William Mcleod Jennifer McMahan P’23 and Rob McMahan P’23 James M. McMillan and Megan M. McMillan Michael McNamara ’94 Michael I. McNamara ’08 Gail McRae John Mcternan Christopher R. Meachen ’89 Kimberly A. Meachen ’88 Tracy Mead Vinny Medeiros Jennifer Medina


James G. Meinecke ’01 and Rebecca McWilliams ’04 Victoria P. Melanson ’22 Paula M. Melchiorri-Blakeman and Kevin P. Blakeman Humberto M. Mello PL’19 and Donna M. Mello PL’19 Lynne Mello LeeAnn Menendez Ray Menendez Hannah L. Ment ’20 Alana N. Mercurio ’15 John P. Meroski ’89 Colin Merrick Robert Messier P’16 P’18 Francis X. Messina III ’10 Murray R. Metcalfe P’14 Megan Methven Katrina Miaoulis Marina Miaoulis Joseph A. Miceli P’23 and Dawn Miceli P’23 Mary Jo Michaud and Michael T. Michaud Kimberly Middlemiss Adam F. Mihlstin ’90 and Marilyn Corets Denise Mikalonis Steve Mildener Sheila Milioto Brian J. Miller ’70 Cameron S. Miller ’21 Douglas K. Miller James S. Miller ’75 and Donna Miller John V. Miller ’91 and Lisa A. Miller ’92 Lori A. Miller and Scott F. Miller Natasha Miller Katherine Mills Kathleen M. Milne P’20 P’21 and Roger W. Milne P’20 P’21 Rogerio Minha and Regina M. Minha Ryan Minihan Cat Misbach Dragan Miseta Maria Miseta Allen D. Mitchell ’72 and Margaret S. Mitchell Andrew J. Mitchell ’13 and Michelle M. C. Mitchell ’13 Ellyana Mitchell Frank W. Mitchell, Jr. and Stephanie A. Mitchell Mary L. Mitchell Rhonda Mitchell Siobhan M. Mitchell ’21 Lynne Mittel and Fred Mittel Frederic Moine and Anna moine Talia Moine Gail Mollila Ellen M. Monaghan ’88 Amelia Monahan Kyle Monahan Michael J. Monahan and Lydea N. Monahan Cathleen L. Moniz ’00 M’01 Stephen D. Montagna ’91 Juanita Montes de Oca Paul A. Monti P’08 PL’15 and Diane M. Monti P’08 PL’15 Tim Moody and Kathleen A. Thomas-Moody Colleen Mooney ’20 Ross Mooney Nicho G. Moore Eric P. Moosbrugger Ariel Morales Jeanette Morales Christian Moran ’15 Nancy A. Moran ’87 Stephen E. Moran ’90 and Nella Moran Pamela Moran-Roys Christopher J. Moreira Renee Morgan Thomas Morgan P’04 and Sherry Morgan P’04 William M. Morgan Jack R. Morin William E. Morin and Kim A. Morin Rose M. Morra ’86 Marian J. Morrill ’79 and William Edward Fisher Sofie Morris Nicole E. Morris ’99 Sara H. Morris ’11 Joshua R. Morrison Deutsch ’23 Cathleen Morrison

Marilyn Morrison Samantha Morton Harry P. Mosca and Mindy S. Mosca Darwina M. L. Mosley ’81 and Kevin Mosley Dee Mosley Daniel F. Mott P’23 and Melissa Mott P’23 Heather Mullen and Martin J. Mullen Nathan Mullen John A. Mungovan Frederick Munk, Jr. Zyke Munk Alexandra C. Murphy ’10 Diane Murphy Linda M. Murphy and Shawn M. Murphy Timothy J. Murphy and Amy Murphy Angela Murray Erica Murray Richard T. Murray ’74 Sarah E. Murray ’20 ’23 Bryan R. Myers ’91 Jessica Myers Richard A. Myers, Jr. P’23 and Lauren Myers P’23 Rick Myers Taylor N. Myers ’23 Cecelia R. Myette Kenneth J. Nadeau and Alison Nadeau Warren J. Nadeau, Jr. Darlene Nagle Ryan Nagle Divya Nair Bistra Nankova P’13 and Ivan H. Tchobanov P’13 Leslie Narahara and Daniel M. Narahara Kenneth R. Nasiff and Dana Nasiff Louise Nasiff Jennifer F. Nasser ’19 ’20 Jacob Natalizia Yvette Navarro Amanda Naylor ’22 M’23 Daniel R. Neagle P’14 and Mary-Michele Neagle P’14 Jane R. Nedder and Michael T. Nedder Jared M. Needelman ’07 Emily Neily Troy A. Neily Don Nelson Karen Nelson Maryann Nelson Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07 Madison Neri ’19 Madeline N. Neuberger ’20 Christine Newcomb Gregory J. Newman and Renee C. Newman Sallie A. Newton ’80 and Scott Newton Donald O. Nichols III P’21 and Jean M. Nichols P’21 D B. Nick Paul Nickerson ’98 Cortney Nicolato Elizabeth S. Niemeyer John M. Nieroda, Jr. ’21 Heidi Nigro Michael C. Nilsson ’84 Stephen Niziol Teresa Niziol Kenneth E. Noiseux ’76 and Roberta Noiseux Hannah M. Nolte ’18 Amy L. Norris ’06 Kathleen Northrop Roxanne Norton Katrina H. Norvell Steven Nostro and Kimberlee K. Nostro Steven A. Nostro Aaron T. Noyes ’21 Kevin W. Noyes ’23 Richard Noyes Richard K. Noyes P’14 and Ruth S. Noyes P’14 Ray Nuñez Sarah Nunnery Virginia Nyman John F. O’Connor Mary E. O’Donnell ’12 Jillian M. O’Malley ’08 Michael O’Malley Wendy Oakes Bernard J. O’Brien V ’18 John O’Brien Kevin C. O’Brien and Siobhan M. O’Brien Carolyn OConnell

Kevin O’Connor Michelle C. OConnor Nancy O’Connor Cindy O’Donnell Matthew T. O’Donnell and Jennifer L. O’Donnell Timothy O’Hara Gavin T. Okun ’20 Theresa E. O’Leary P’20 and Sean M. O’Leary P’20 Jennifer Olenn Michael Oliveira Anthony J. Oliver ’70 I G. Olivia Cheryl A. Olivier and Matthew M. Olivier Patricia Olsen Kaitlyn O’Malley Kathleen O’Malley Michelle OMara Roland O. Omisore ’85 and Beatrice Omisore Rebecca Oneil and Donald Oneil Tami L. O’Neil Sharon Onga Nana L’17 Linsey Onishuk Karen S. Opalka P’22 and Peter A. Opalka, Sr. P’22 Karli E. Opalla ’22 Vivian Oquendo P’18 Coleen O’reilly Allison C. Orlofski Drew J. Orlofski Jeanne Orlofski and Anthony J. Orlofski, Jr. Stella Orsini Michael Oshaughnessy Hannah K. Osthoff ’12 Stephen T. Ostrander Hayley O’Toole Stephen O’Toole Marvin J. Ott, Jr. ’71 and Corinne Ott Veronica M. Ouellette ’23 Lori A. Overlock Oteri ’05 Dianne P John A. Pacheco P’21 and Tammy A. Pacheco P’21 Stacey Pacheco John M. Padavano and Christine Padavano Kristen Page Sarah Page Nicholas W. Paine, Esq. L’12 Jill Pais ’05 Cate M. Palaia Taylor A. Palermo ’21 Jeffrey N. Palmer ’00 Ed Paluch Linda A. Pankovic ’83 Antonia K. Papadopoulos ’15 Haris Papamichael Janna Papio Hubert J. Paquette ’96 and Gail Paquette Shane J. Parcel ’14 Erin Parchinski Randolph C. Parent, Jr. P’18 and Mary Beth Parent P’18 Noele Parente P’21 and Thomas G. Parente P’21 Hayden R. Parkes John E. Parkhurst ’03 Aaron Partnow Gabe J. Pasqualucci ’19 Nikul M. Patel ’12 M’12 Rory Paterniti Daniel J. Patterson and Melanie J. Patterson Andrew E. J. Paul ’22 Gloria M. C. Paz Samuel Peck John V. Pecora Margaret A. Pegno ’17 Michael S. Peixoto ’09 Cory R. Pellegren ’12 Jane A. Pellegren ’11 Karen A. Pellegrino P’21 and Bernard A. Pellegrino P’21 Brett Pelletier Chris A. Pena ’13 Theresa Pennise Janine Pennisi Alan Peoples Alana L. Peoples ’15 Crystal D. Peralta L’20 Pamela A. Pereira ’18 and Peter Pereira ’19

Victoria T. Pereira ’15 Cesar O. Perez ’10 Paula Perini-Miller Cathy S. Perry P’16 Gina Perry John Perry David R. Petrarca, Jr., Esq. ’06 L’09 and Amanda M. Lachance Adam Petricca Leah Petricca Henry Petrofsky ’75 Daniel W. Petrovic ’19 Candice L. Petruzzelli and Anthony C. Petruzzelli Milliana Phifer Paul Phifer and Addison P. Phifer Benjamin Phillips Patti Phillips Latsamy Phomsouvandara Vimala D. Phongsavanh Joan Piantedosi Karine Picchietti and Patrick Picchietti Joanne C. Pickford ’70 and Stanley Pickford Jeffrey L. Pierson ’97 and Sandra E. Pierson Scott G. Pilate P’23 and Denise L. Pilate P’23 Rena S. Piller-Thurston ’97 and Jason P. Thurston ’97 Keenan A. Pindar II and Kathy C. Pindar Nancy Pinkerton Henry I. Pinson Diana R. Piper and Geogre S. Piper Andy Pires Avery Pirez Hannah E. Pirez ’12 Kennedy Pirez Tullio D. Pitassi Ph.D. ’70 and Antoinette Lautieri-Pitassi Mary Pittari Jennifer Pizzarelli Renee B. Place P’21 and David J. Place P’21 Michael T. Plaziak ’96 Ann M. Plotas P’22 and Phillip J. Plotas P’22 Maryelizabeth Polacco Natalye Polack Matthew B. Ponko ’90 and Caroline Precourt Sophia V. Ponomarenko and Alexander Ponomarenko Julia Poole Thomas E. Poole Victoria A. Porrino ’21 M’23 Christopher J. Portelli ’95 James K. Porter and Joan Porter Marcus L. Porter ’19 Dawn Marie Portoff ’90 Barbara Potter Bill Potter Brian K. Potter ’93 Laura Potter William Potter Linda G. Potts and Tim C. Potts Nancy R. Poutray ’87 James E. Powell ’79 and Maureen Powell Christopher F. Power P’23 and Noreen C. Power P’23 Linda Power Paola Prado Timothy J. Pramer ’82 and Kathleen Pramer James R. Pratt ’04 Kimberly A. Pratt Tracey M. Pratt ’04 ’21 P’09 P’13 and Christopher C. Pratt P’09 P’13 Izzy Predaris Maddie J. Predaris Nate Predaris Paul Predaris Maria Prezioso Shannon Priddy and Michael D. Priddy John Proctor Joyve Proctor Student L. Programa Catherine Proia Peter A. Provencal P’21 P’22 and Lorri Provencal P’21 P’22 Sydney N. Provencal ’21 Taylor Provost ’16 Karen M. Pugsley and John R. Pugsley, Jr. Douglas D. Pulak ’99 Pamela E. Purcell Steven Purcell

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

48


Kenneth R. Quabeck ’91 and Jill S. Quabeck John A. Quaranta, Jr. ’76 Colleen Quartararo Erin Quinlan Charles S. Quinn III ’93 Daniel Quinn Eric M. Quinn P’18 Lisa F. Quinn Nancy D. Quinn Nick D. Quirini ’22 Jesahias E. Quiroa ’23 Thomas F. Rafael ’11 Betina B. Ragless ’80 Caitlin Ragone Vincent Ragonese and Karen W. Ragonese Brett Raimondo Deborah M. Rainey Emily Raizen William C. Raley and Lesley Raley Nancy L. Ramos ’92 ’94 P’10 and Lawrence Ramos Walter J. Ramos ’83 Brian Ranney Grace Raposo and Nuno A. Raposo Helen E. Ras Paul Rasmussen and Kimberly Rasmussen Mark Ravas P’23 and Laurie M. Ravas P’23 Angela M. Raymond ’10 Ethan Rayner Keri Rayner Riley A. Read ’22 Anabela Rebelo Carole A. Recchia Kathryn Reed Kaylin M. Reen Jana Reeve Jill T. Reeve Jason R. Regan ’22 Stephen C. Regnault ’89 Jocelynn M. Rego Jay Reilly ’14 and Jenn Reilly Eric Reissenweber Lynn Reissenweber Susan Reissenweber Jack P. Reiter Sandra K. Remson ’23 Stanley Remson P’23 and Sue Remson P’23 Katherine R. Renaud O’Brien Ariana C. Renwick ’14 Catharine M. Resh P’16 and Franklin E. Resh P’16 Sarah Reusche and Marco Cross L. D. Revak Patrick J. Revel ’87 and Lisa Revel Michael Reyes Christina Reynolds Christopher Reynolds ’82 and Laurie Reynolds David M. Reynolds and Carla M. Reynolds Debbie Reynolds Walter T. Reynolds ’84 and Patricia Reynolds Brian D. Rhodes ’01 Bryce Riccitelli Troy Riccitelli and Robin Riccitelli Jenna L. Rice ’09 Sarah Richards Keighan O. Richardson L’21 Thomas M. Rickart P’11 Ryan Riddle Gina M. Rigby P’21 Deborah Riley Erin Riley Nicole M. Riley ’87 and Douglas A. Riley Jeffrey L. Ringuest ’76 Tim Riordan Becca Ritchie Jose M. Rivera and Zoretha Rivera Lisa Rivera Michelle Rivera Kate Roach and Craig S. Roach Megan E. Roach ’18 ’19 Bianca S. Robbins ’23 Brandon T. Robbins Daniel W. Robbins, Jr. ’05 P’23 and Gena E. Bianco P’23 Joseph W. Roberts and Laura D. Roberts Colleen Robillard Christina Robinson Jonatan Rodriguez

49

Danielle Roes Stephanie Roes David Rogalski P’09 P’10 and Dawn Rogalski P’09 P’10 Katheryn A. Rogalski ’10 Caulin M. Rogers ’20 Chris Rogers and Cathy Rogers Harold J. Rogers P’20 and Linda Rogers P’20 John C. Rogers ’22 Nickolas B. Rogers ’08 Rebecca R. Rokicki ’14 Laura Rolston Bianca M. Rom ’13 Theresa Romano Virginia Romano William Romanowski Susan Rood Robert Rooks Anderson R. Rosa and Rosa Ana Isabelle M. Rosado ’23 Michael Rosado Hope K. Rosales ’13 Alex Rosario Charon Rose Kayla L. Rosengren ’21 Jacquline T. Rosiak P’13 and Michael G. Rosiak P’13 Heidi Ross Kevin Ross Maria Rosselli Lauren L. Rossi and Christopher M. Rossi Christopher Rotella Alexander Roth-Honigfeld ’09 Christine Rothman Paige A. Royce ’12 Adam T. Royle ’21 M’23 Patti J. Ruch ’08 Joseph R. Ruch ’08 Debora Rudzik Ann Ruffhead and Richard B. Ruffhead John P. Ruggiero, Jr. ’78 Sadie Runia Kasey A. Ruo Patricia Ruo and Frank Ruo Henry F. Russell ’70 Kelly Russell Salvatore Russo Liliana K. Rutler ’12 Lauren N. Ryan ’23 Mark Ryan Padraig Ryan and Michele D. Ryan Niki Rybko Brady Ryll Dina Sabo Mark Sabo Zachary Sabo Martin R. Sabounjian ’13 Carol Sacchetti Elena Sada Louis Sader Tanios Sader and Rita Sader Sharon Safford Richard Sagnella ’78 and Peggy Sagnella Mark Salley and Kimberly F. Salley Mikhail Salnikov ’17 Christopher Samih-Rotondo Jennifer E. Samolyk, Esq. ’92 L’96 and John Romney Jennifer L. Sampson and William W. Sampson Afiya A. Samuel ’09 Nick Sanchez Tyler Sandoval Angel G. Santiago ’04 and Alondra V. De Leon ’08 Christopher D. Santilli and Karen Santilli Brian R. Santoro ’19 Jean Santoro Mark S. Santoro and Ellen M. Santoro Zachary C. Santoro ’20 ’21 Joana Santos-Reis M’13 and Dennis Reis Anne Sarazin P’21 P’22 and Roland H. Sarazin, Jr. P’21 P’22 Devon H. Sarazin ’21 Tucker Sargent Sarkis M. Sarkisian II ’86 and Kim Stevens-Sarkisian ’87 Amy Sasin Thomas J. Sasso III ’93 Douglas Sayles

Kelly Scafariello ’99 Joey A. Scalora Kim Scalora Bryan Scanlon Kristie Scanlon and Dennis Scanlon Sheri L. Schaefer and Robert A. Schaefer II Leann Schaejbe Robert W. Schapp ’13 Hanna M. Scheffler ’23 Cynthia Scheinberg Taylor Schembri Thomas Scherrie Anthony M. Schettino, Jr. and Renee K. Schettino Laura Schiffer and Matthew Schiffer Michael Schindler Collin D. Schmitt ’12 Caylin E. Schnoor Eric Schoenfeld and Suzanne Williams Kirk H. Schultz ’22 Susan A. Schwarz Ellen T. Scirrotto ’06 and Stephen J. Scirrotto M’06 Courtney E. Scola ’13 Elizabeth Scott and David P. Gonzales Elizabeth Scotti Abbey K. Scro ’15 Jennifer Scully Ryan G. Scully ’22 Todd M. Seaback ’88 and Leslie D. Seaback ’87 Brenda Searcy Kate Seery Joshua Segui Anne Selby Reina H. Selby ’90 ’15 Shawn Selleck Matt Seminara Michele Serrano Michael E. Servas ’08 Victoria Setzer Cooper Sever Taylor Sever Victoria Sever and Michael Sever Alfonso J. Sgritta P’23 and Tiffanie A. Sgritta P’23 Erin E. Shafer ’20 Stacy J. Shafer P’20 and Paul Shafer P’20 Kelsey B. Shakin ’19 Carla Shalaby Rosemary Shamenek Valerie Shanley Carl M. Sharrio P’21 P’22 and Leslie A. Sharrio P’21 P’22 Debi Shaughnessy Audra Sheehan Benjamin Sheehan Olivia M. Sheehan ’21 John C. Shelhart ’99 Elan Shems Elaine P. Sherlock ’74 and Mark P. Sherlock Maureen K. Shields ’93 and James P. Shields Emma Shinney Justin E. Shrair ’13 Chris Shultz and Anna D. Shultz Larry R. Sickels, Jr. ’03 and Sarah E. Sickels ’03 Steven Sidmore and Malaika Sidmore Gwen C. Sieber ’23 Susan Sieber P’23 Jonathan R. Siefert P’13 P’16 and Jean A. Siefert P’13 P’16 Sascha D. Siegel John Siegenthaler P’10 and Betty Siegenthaler P’10 Chris Sienko Lance D. Sigersmith, Sr. and Hillary Sigersmith Antone P. Silva ’71 Elizabeth M. Silva ’09 Morgan T. Silva ’19 Samuel P. Silva ’93 Loretta V. Silvia ’00 Shawn A. Simmons ’09 ’14 Matt J. Simonelli ’17 Jeanine Sisco Jackson Siv Janet L. Skahill ’88 and Edward Skahill MaryLynn Skarzenski Matthew S. Slater ’94 and Kathleen Slater Zofia Slowik

Emily E. Slusarczyk ’21 Ariana M. Smaldone ’20 Margaret Small Carol Smillie Amanda Smith Clinton Smith P’03 and Karen H. Smith P’03 Jason Smith Jason Smith John D. Smith and Kathleen Smith John L. Smith ’81 Kathleen Smith Lorrie Smith Mary Ellen Smith and Robert E. Strollo Meghan A. Smith ’18 Tamsin Smith and James D. Smith Stephen Solarsh Bryan Soltis Kelly Soltis Ben Somera and Nancy T. Somera Vanessa A. Song Rick Soubliere Nikole Soubliere-Brzoza Antonio E. Sousa ’14 Isabel Sousa P’23 and Everett J. Sousa, Jr. P’23 Sabrina M. Sousa ’21 Matthew Sousamma Jennifer Souza Carlene A. Spagnola ’11 Brenda Sparks Gladys Spaulding ’20 Jason E. Spazzarini ’15 June S. Speakman Nicole A. Speranzo ’19 ’20 Tara A. Sperrazza and Charles E. Sperrazza Yvonne Spicer Trisha A. Spillane ’04 Edward J. Spinard, Jr. ’94 P’96 P’06 and Emily J. Spinard ’07 P’96 P’06 Evan H. Spitzer ’23 Deb Sprague and Richard J. Sprague, Jr. Judith T. Spreda Michelle Spreda Robert Spreda Becky L. Spritz and Mark C. Dumas Alicia St Jean and Allen St. Jean Richard St. Andre Maureen A. St. Laurent ’78 and Victor J. St. Laurent Adam C. Stanley ’14 Jennifer M. Stanley Owen Stearns Stephanie A. Steenvoorden and Lawrence J. Steenvoorden Stephanie C. Steffens Connie Stein Corey S. Stein ’11 Kimberly Stein Neil Steinberg Stephen C. Steir and Mary Jo Steir Mason Stelmach Nate Stenabaugh Erin Stephens Susan E. Sternberg Brian Stevens Ryan Stevens P’21 and Ryan P. Stevens P’21 Trevor M. Stevens ’23 Elizabeth C. Stevenson ’23 Sean Stevenson P’23 and Ann M. Stevenson P’23 Barbara Stewart Richard F. Stibolt M’08 Elaine B. Stiles William T. Stone, Jr. P’12 and Lori A. Baker-Stone P’12 Mary Stone-Murphy ’18 Kilee Stortz LeAnna Stortz Emmett C. Stottlemyer ’21 Jennifer Stowe Jimmy Strand P’23 and Allison Strand P’23 Anthony J. Strano P’23 and Angela Strano P’23 Joseph Strano ’23 Matthew Straub Shelly H. Stream P’14 and Jeffrey T. Stream P’14 Marie C. Struck P’17 William Suchomel Napoleon Suderman


Paul Sughrue and Paula R. Sughrue John T. Sugrue ’77 Ken Suibielski Nathan Suida Callie E. Sullivan ’22 Cheryl Sullivan Emma Sullivan Gabrielle Sullivan Jake Sullivan John Sullivan ’92 Justine M. Sullivan ’13 Loren D. Sullivan ’19 ’20 Margaret S. Sullivan ’14 Maverick Sullivan Sean S. Sullivan and Sandra L. Sullivan Tarah Sullivan Holly A. Sullo ’78 Charles Sumares Aarav Sundaresh Richard L. Sussman P’23 and Marci R. Sussman P’23 Nilanda Sutoummalee Ray Sutton and Cindi Sutton Sarah Sutton Darlene Svirsky Debra A. Swanson P’18 and Kevin R. Swanson, Sr. P’18 Sara M. Swanson ’16 Theodore N. Swanson ’12 Gail M. Sweeney P’22 James Sweeney Patricia A. Sweeney ’85 Todd M. Sweet ’91 Cyndi K. Swensen P’13 and Rick C. Swensen P’13 Christina Swiszcz ’02 Steven E. Sylven ’71 Umesh Tahbildar Alison Tainter John M. Tamburro ’71 and Karen Tamburro Arax Tanelian Brian Tarolli Eva G. Tarolli Matthew T. Tarolli and Jennifer A. Tarolli Tommy Tarolli Nathan P. Tassey Paul S. Tassey and Pamela Tassey Luis M. Tavares Bogaert P’12 and Maria R. Tavares Bogaert P’12 Niki Tchobanov Ioanna I. Tchobanova ’13 David Tedeschi and Alison Tedeschi Justin T. Tedeschi Susan W. Teece ’75 David Teixeira, Jr. and Melissa J. Teixeira Pamela Tempe-Gaffey Harry A. Templeton ’65 ’72 Kate M. Tenney ’23 Kevin Tenney P’23 and Teresa Tenney P’23 Dan Terino Emma R. Terino Kara Terino Karianne Terino and Michael J. Terino Peter Teto ’81 Nanette Tgompson Garret Theberge Maria Theilgard Amanda J. Theroux ’06 Spencer R. Thibodeau ’20 Caroline E. Thomas Melissa Thomas Peter Thomas and Melissa A. Thomas Peter J. Thomas Carrie Thompson Claire D. Thompson PM’16 P’14 Diane Thompson Jim Thompson Kathryn Thompson Kelly M. Thompson and Kaitlyn M. O’Malley Kenneth Thompson Lauren Thompson Ryan Thompson Jennifer M. Thorn Ronnie Threadgill Sarah Tibbetts P’16 P’17 and Gary R. Moseman P’16 P’17 Raymond F. Tiberio ’96 Anthony R. Tiebout ’02 and

Angela M. Tiebout ’01 Gary A. Tilford ’76 Brian S. Timbrouck, Sr. and Suzanne Timbrouck Hannah S. Timbrouck Daniel Tocco ’22 Nora K. Tom Abbie Tonello Sean M. Tonnesen ’22 Talia Tony ’20 Keri A. Topshe ’13 Nolan E. Tornay ’22 Luis Torres Stephen Totino and Mariea L. Totino Jon Towle P’22 and Jonathon P. Towle P’22 Lindsay G. Towle ’22 Michael D. Trayser ’09 Paul Tringale and Maria Tringale Diane Tripp Garrett Trombi and Kathleen A. Trombi Paula Trombi Kyle Trottier Robert J. Troy ’13 Brendan P. Truman ’23 Colleen Truman Maureen A. Truman P’23 and Chris J. Truman P’23 Vincent J. Truncellito P’06 and Frances B. Truncellito P’06 Robert R. Tuccelli and Elaine C. Tuccelli Lisa B. Tuccinardi P’22 and Paul L. Tuccinardi, Sr. P’22 Ashlee S. Tucker ’14 Sean Tucker Bettyann Tudino Dhana Tulloch-Reid Alison Tumminello Susan Turell Nancy Turnbach Tom Turnbach and Erin Turnbach Nicole R. Turner CPA Kim Twohig Glenn M. Tyldesley P’23 and Barbara A. Tyldesley P’23 Antoinette C. Uffner David Unsworth Isabelle Unsworth Donna Urbanetti Christopher Urbanski and Elizabeth Urbanski Kate Urman Casey Uryga Dolores Uryga MaryBeth Uryga and David Uryga Matt Uryga Diane Usher ’98 and Patrick Usher, Jr. ’98 Stephanie Vaglica Zoie K. Vail Daniel J. Van Buren ’10 Erica A. Van Deusen and William R. Van Deusen Donia T. Vance ’87 Sara Vandeventer Anna Vasaturo ’20 Lisa Vasaturo P’20 and John Vasaturo P’20 Paula Vaz Timothy J. Veillette PE ’84 Ana Cristina Velez Ana S. Velez Katie Velez Matthew C. Vendetti and Leslie A. Vendetti Rachel Verrill Dina M. Vicente P’21 and Jose M. Vicente P’21 Sandra Victorino Sophia Videll James W. Vigar Jennifer Vinnitti Dat H. Vo and Thuytien Vo Michael C. Vochis and Stella L. Vochis Rebecca Volpe Adam L. Vorwald ’12 Regina V. Vorwald P’12 and Gary R. Vorwald P’12 Elizabeth M. Wagner and Mark D. Wagner Zachary D. Wagner ’20 Denise Waldron Stephen K. Walker ’86 and Diane M. Fischer Tehani Walker

Daniel L. Walser ’13 Amanda C. Walsh Brendan Walsh and Andrea Walsh Milva Walsh and James D. Walsh, Jr. Kara N. Walter ’03 Anna M. Walther ’18 Chris Walther John L. Walther Mary Walther P’18 John B. Walton ’22 Mike Walton Bailey Wandyg Brad Wangelin Debbie Ward Jennifer A. Ward and Matthew I. Ward Mark W. Ward Spencer P. Wardell Chris Wargo James Warren Ella R. Waryas Louise E. Waryas Steven D. Waryas and Kristin Z. Waryas Andrew Wasik Jennifer Wasson Lucas C. Watt ’20 David D. Watterson ’83 and Lynn P. Watterson Hans-Peter Weber P’15 and Cheryl Weber P’15 Diane Wegner Mireille Wehbe Dan L. Weidman ’12 and Kristina Keddie William Weidmann Christine Weigel and Jeffrey Weigel Adam Weinstock Eliana B. Weissman, Esq. L’07 Ashley Welch ’08 Jamie Wells Jonathan D. Wells and Rebecca Wells Kurt P. Werner P’21 and Debra Werner P’21 Deborah J. Wesolowski ’93 P’02 and David J. Wesolowski P’02 H. Philip West Katherine West Michele P. West Lisabeth Westcott Jack T. Wetzel ’22 Elizabeth M. Wexler ’22 Robert A. Weygand Leah M. Whearty ’23 Thomas J. Whearty III P’23 and Leah T. Whearty P’23 Joseph D. Whelan, Esq. and Cathleen Whelan Robert Charles Whiffen ’80 and Melissa Whiffen John K. White and Yvonne J. Prevost Vonne H. Whittleton and Christopher J. Whittleton Maureen Wieler and William E. Wieler Craig Wilcox Asa Wildermann and Elizabeth Wildermann Eileen Wildermann Kristin Wildermann Dana E. Wilfahrt ’13 Brian G. Williams Graham Williams John J. Williams Leona Williams Riley T. Williams Sheryl Williams Stacey Williams P’22 P’23 and Brent E. Williams P’22 P’23 Tamatha Williams Tom Williams Michael J. Williamson and Margaret F. Williamson James D. Wilmes P’09 and Deborah Wilmes P’09 Ryan Wilson Theresa Wilson Stephanie Wing Marlene Winsten and David K. Winsten Jeff Winters Marie Wise Mary T. Wise ’93 Carol Witt David Wojdyl ’94 Lexia R. Wolak ’23 Amanda L. Wolfe ’12 M’13

Evan Wolkner Thomas Wolkner Chanda Womack Gregory T. Wong ’05 Peter Y. Wong Jennifer L. Wood Kathleen M. Wood ’88 and Robert C. Wood ’70 Kevin Wood and Alisa Wood Kristina L. Woodmansee ’12 Haley M. Woods ’22 Stacy Woods P’22 and John F. Woods, Jr. P’22 Patricia Woodward Sebastian J. Wordell, Jr. ’05 M’07 Jennifer Worsman Bethany M. Wright ’16 Christine Wright Heather R. Wrigley ’19 Hunter M. Wronski ’20 Mary J. Wu and Min Wu Alana Wyzanski Krista Yablin ’92 and Andrew Yablin Peter G. Yacovone P’19 and Teresa M. Yacovone P’19 Nancy Yaeger P’17 P’18 and Todd L. Yaeger P’17 P’18 Elizabeth Yokell and Steven Yokell Lauren Yokell Riley Yokell Mark Yonadi and Dawn M. Yonadi Emily Yonych ’22 Simone Youkel Lindsey N. Young ’23 Kaley Youngcourt ’22 Pamela Youngcourt P’22 and Michael J. Youngcourt P’22 Erin Yount Yamche Yu John Yun Kacy R. Zaborowski ’10 Brian Zaccagnini and Krista F. Zaccagnini Peter Zacchilli Ronald Zanders, Jr. ’93 and Kristen J. Zanders ’93 Lorraine B. Zanini and Michael A. Zanini Michael Zator Amy Zemp Joseph M. Zeoli Pat Zeoli Emily A. Zilly ’02 Andrew S. Zirn and Tania Zirn Elizabeth Zmarlicki Jonathan Zuchowski Marc E. Zukovich P’15 Katie M. Zullo ’04 and Steven B. Zullo ’03 M’03 Sheri Zumbruski Anonymous (63)

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

50


SCHOOL OF LAW INDIVIDUAL DONORS $25,000 and above

Robert V. Chisholm, Esq. and Ellen Polansky J. Scott Kilpatrick Esq. and Carolyn K. Kilpatrick Mark S. Mandell, Esq. PL’11 and Yvette M. Boisclair, Esq. PL’11 Renee G. Vogel, Esq. L’97 PL’98 and Benjamin S. Vogel PL’98

$10,000 to $24,999

Nicole Benjamin L’06 and Keith J. Benjamin Linn Foster and Steven Freedman

$5,000 to $9,999

V. Anita Bahr Patrick T. Jones, Esq. and Mary E. Jones Margaret McNulty and John McNulty Christopher J. Montalbano and Julie Montalbano

$2,500 to $4,999

Kaitlyn C. Barrette, Esq. L’11 and David Barrette Brett V. Beaubien L’16 Marc DeSisto, Esq. Anne G. Earle PL’06 N. Cabot Earle, Jr. L’06 and Christina A. Earle Jennifer W. Hashway, Esq. L’11 and John P. Barylick, Esq. Marcia Morris, Esq. HD’19 and Arnold S. Hiatt Miriam Weizenbaum, Esq. Michael J. Yelnosky and Laurie A. Barron

$1,000 to $2,499

Collin E. Bailey J.D. L’08 and Angelyne E. Cooper-Bailey, Esq. L’08 Alyssa Boss, Esq. L’97 and William C. Martin ’72 Sarah D. Boucher, Esq. L’20 Amanda M. Campbell, Esq. L’05 Edward C. Clifton LHD’21 and Audrey Clifton Michael W. Donnelly-Boylen Louise Durfee LHD’09 Brian P. Eisenhower, Esq. L’09 Stephen M. Estner P’21 and Elizabeth Estner P’21 Eunice R. Fazzi L’17 Michael W. Field, Esq. L’97 Jennifer Gonzalez, Esq. L’12 Amy S. Hebb, Esq. L’06 Constance A. Howes and R K. Sheridan, Esq. Kara A. Humm, Esq. L’08 and Robert J. Humm, Esq. L’08 William J. Kent L’20 Katherine N. Kishfy, Esq. L’12 Spencer A. Maguire, Esq. L’07 and Cary Maguire Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23 and Laura K. Maguire P’23 Patrick McBurney John J. McConnell, Jr. LHD’22 and Sara S. McConnell Howard A. Merten, Jr., Esq. and Veronica Merten Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16 Stephen M. Prignano, Esq. and Cheryl A. Prignano Michael P. Robinson, Esq. L’00 James A. Ruggieri, Esq. Michael A. Silverstein LHD’16 Brian P. Stern and Jennifer Stern Patricia A. Sullivan and Jonathan A. Barnes Arlene Violet, Esq. Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq. and Antonia Zubiago Anonymous

Up to $999

Sasha Abbott L’23 Akin A. Adepoju L’07 Theresa M. Agonia ’13 Kimberly R. Ahern, Esq. L’09 and Jenna Lafayette Andrew L. Alberino, Esq. L’96 Virgina S. Albert ’17 Jennifer R. Alleman

51

Rui P. Alves, Esq. L’05 Geovanny Amaya Celina Andrade L’21 Nana Amma Ankrah Carla V. Aveledo L’22 Erica C. Avondoglio, Esq. L’09 Marly Ayala Jamie J. Bachant, Esq. L’12 James J. Bagley, Esq. L’12 Cindy Balog-Chavez Ashely Barge Sydney Barletta Samantha Barnes Amy Bath Jacob R. Beale L’15 Kelly A. Bennett, Esq. L’11 and Mark Bennett Emilie A. Benoit Isaac Berlau Kamaljyot Bhalla Tyler J. Bischoff L’18 Grace Blythe Aidan Boisvert Sean M. Bouchard, Esq. ’12 L’15 Michael Bowden J.D. P’20 and Anna P. Bowden P’20 Connie Boyd Christina Brilhante Colleen A. Brown, Esq. and John S. Berg Karen E. Buttenbaum, Esq. L’97 Brandon R. Calton L’23 Ian T. Canterbury, Esq. L’09 Vito Capuano Margie M. Caranci and Paul F. Caranci Elizabeth P. Cardenas, Esq. L’12 and Aaron M. Cardenas, Esq. L’13 Jordan Carvalho Savanaugh M. A. Casey ’18 Rushil Chandra Lindsay Cheshire Daniel E. Ciora Brian E. Clark and Katherine S. Clark Grizzel I. Clemetson Wendy A. Clifford P’17 Braxton H. Medlin L’19 Christopher M. Cobleigh, Esq. L’02 Morgan Cody Steven A. Colantuono, Esq. L’03 and Maya Colantuono Juliette M. Collins L’23 Elizabeth Colt, Esq. and Kent M. Fields Thomas E. Connell, Esq. L’00 and Cicilline L. Connell Francis Connor III Ann M. Corriveau, Esq. L’01 Joseph B. Cox, Jr. ’99 and Lucinda D. Harrison-Cox Ryan C. Coyne L’22 Amy L. Crane, Esq. L’08 and Michael D. Crane, Esq. L’07 Leon D. Curran Regina A. Curran L’10 and Leon Dietrich David M. D’Agostino, Esq. L’99 Meredith Daigle Kennedy C. Dalton L’21 Michael J. Daly, Esq. L’02 and Kate Daly Alexandra Danella Brandon Darelius L’21 Lisa M. Darelius PL’21 and Joel M. Darelius PL’21 Debra DeAlmo ’75 and John L. DeAlmo ’74 James M. DeVecchi Ruth DiGiovanni Andrew R. Dimitri, Esq. L’17 Joy C. Dingle, Esq. L’03 Maria DiNitto M’19 L’19 Stephanie Diorio L’19 Megan DiSanto, Esq. L’08 The Honorable Melissa R. DuBose L’04 Tyra A. Dubose L’23 Benjamin Dugan L’21 Rachel Dunham L’21 Vinson Duong Nicole P. Dyszlewski, Esq. Thomas M. Dzialo P’13 P’17 and Thelma L. Dzialo ’11 P’13 P’17 Mark R. Eaton Nick G. Elias L’23 Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12

Jesse Erickson Robert E. Falvey, Esq. L’98 Sarah A. Farrell L’20 Bilal Faruqi Anika Fenton Joanne S. Fernandes PM’06 P’02 P’04 and Bruce F. Fernandes PM’06 P’02 Brian A. Fielding, Esq. L’10 Samuel Filiaggi Christine Flanagan, Esq. L’10 Timothy J. Fogarty L’15 Daryl Ford Selena D. Fortes ’17 L’20 Bernard Freamon Sarah J. Friedman L’21 Mark P. Gagliardi, Esq. L’03 and Sherri L. Gagliardi Philip W. Gasbarro, Esq. L’17 Jamie M. Gau L’16 Linda J. Gauvin ’96 M’17 Collin M. Geiselman Mark Gemma Gina George Ryan Ghanem Austin Gibilisco Jenna R. Giguere, Esq. L’11 Amy H. Goins, Esq. L’12 and Peter F. Skwirz, Esq. L’12 Deborah S. Gonzalez, Esq. ’04 L’07 P’18 and Roberto Gonzalez Kathryn T. Gradowski L’23 Mitchell E. Graham L’23 Elizabeth Gravelle L’23 John M. Greene, Esq. L’08 and Summer Greene Cassie Griglock Timothy J. Grimes, Esq. L’12 Christine Guzzardo L’00 Kevin O. Hagan, Esq. L’01 Suzanne Harrington-Steppen and Gustavus R. Steppen Diana J. Hassel, Esq. Morgan Hedly L’23 Mark B. Heffner, Esq. and Mary P. Heffner Arash Heidarian Gary L. Helton, Jr. ’05 Amiah A. Henry M’23 L’23 Patricia M. Hessler, Esq. L’03 Gregory N. Hoffman, Esq. L’13 and Alicia D. Hoffman, Esq. L’13 Briana Holley Brendan Horan L’22 Nicholas M. Horton Andrew Horwitz and Alexandra K. Callam Connor B. Howe L’23 Kristina Hultman, Esq. L’09 Ronald Ing P’15 PL’19 and Tracey M. Ing P’15 PL’19 Kiron Ireland L’23 Mike Jackson Jillian N. Jagling, Esq. L’09 Jenea James Matthew T. Jerzyk, Esq. L’08 Robert Kando, Esq. L’96 John J. Karwashan, Esq. L’15 Alan Kashdan and Davida Kashdan Layla Kassem Dena M. Kist, Esq. ’96 L’01 and Kevin Kist Alyssa M. Knappins L’21 Judd W. Krasher Carl Krueger Niki Kuckes Julianne Kukawa Laura Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23 P’23 and James Kutsaftis PM’17 P’13 P’20 P’21 P’23 P’23 Brad Labine Lorraine N. Lalli, Esq. L’01 and Brian M. Lalli Stephen Lapatin Samantha Larkin ’19 Ricky Larson Tristen Larson Jiakun Lei L’14 Maddison Leite Benjamin Lemcke, Esq. L’09 Austin Lentz Matthew J. Leonard, Esq. L’00 and Natalie M. Leonard Anthony R. Leone II, Esq. L’97 and

Chelsie L. Horne Dadriana A. Lepore, Esq. L’10 Stephen S. Leung L’06 Hilary Levey Friedman Jennifer Lisi Finkel L’18 Miguel Lluesma Wayne A. Logan Melissa A. Long Jeremy B. Love, Esq. L’06 Charnele S. Luster ’11 Zachary K. Lyons, Esq. ’12 L’17 and Nicole R. Silvia Kathleen MacAndrew Conor MacDonald Maya Maldonado-Weinstein Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11 and Sara Mandell Jesse B. Manning Walter J. Manning, Esq. L’00 and Lynn K. Manning Peter S. Margulies J.D. and Ellen M. Saideman J.D. Kimberly J. Markelewicz, Esq. L’08 and Robert J. Markelewicz, Jr. Christopher B. Maselli, Esq. L’99 and Joy Maselli Kathleen A. Massa ’82 ’02 P’05 and Robert J. Massa, Sr. P’05 Shawn J. Masse, Esq. ’10 L’13 Jeffrey Mathew Cristian Mattoon, Esq. L’02 Jordan Mazer Paul N. McCarthy, Jr. L’07 Sarah E. McConnell Dubois, Esq. Shawn J. McCurley ’15 Thomas H. McHugh, Jr., Esq. ’12 L’14 William B. McKenzie and Johanna W. McKenzie John D. Meara, Esq. L’11 and Kelly Meara, Esq. L’11 Laurie Medri and Anthony G. Medri Chase Mercer Dawn Mercer Laura M. Mernoff Andrea L. Merolla-Simister, Esq. L’09 Mayra J. Meza L’21 Emily Migliaccio Eric H. Miller, Esq. L’01 G. Eben Milne, Esq. L’96 Olivia Milonas J.D. and Benjamin T. Milligan Steven A. Minicucci, Esq. and Tina Minicucci Michael J. Moloney, Esq. L’09 Michael J. Moniz ’92 ’16 and Karen G. Moniz Grant Mooney Ann S. Mores, Esq. L’01 and Frank Mores Don P. Moyer, Esq. L’96 and Erin Moyer Dr. Paige A. Munro-Delotto L’14 Colleen P. Murphy J.D. and Richard A. Marcotte Martin J. Murphy, Esq. L’12 Yee Yee Myint L’23 Stacey Nakasian Austin Nappi Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07 Ana Nimaja Ippi L’23 Ryan V. Nobile L’19 Candace Oaks Jeffrey J. Oates L’22 Patrick J. O’Connor L’15 Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14 and Katie V. Oduyingbo Raquel M. Ortiz, Esq. P’23 and Michael D. Micale P’23 Kinzie Owen Thomas J. Pagliarini, Esq. L’14 Viki Panteleakis Jorge Paricio Veronica D. Paricio Curtis P. Patalano, Esq. L’05 Nicole Patano Nicoleta A. Pennacchia L’22 Crystal D. Peralta L’20 Karen A. Perry Shenita Perry Benjamin Peters


David R. Petrarca, Jr., Esq. ’06 L’09 and Amanda M. Lachance Keith E. Phillis, Esq. L’15 Jessica Pill L’22 Kathryn A. Pirraglia, Esq. L’11 Angela Pizzolato Matthew R. Plain, Esq. L’05 Michael Pluhowski Carolan C. Porter, Esq. L’13 Rep. Brandon Potter Orla A. Power L’23 Susan J. Principe Joseph M. Proietta, Esq. L’02 and Mary C. Proietta Jeffrey C. Prystowsky L’23 Stanley F. Pupecki, Esq. L’02 Candace Quinn L’23 Lisa J. Raiola and Waterman F. Brown VII Allan P. Ramella ’05 and Christina Ramella Adam M. Ramos, Esq. L’06 Kenneth R. Rampino, Esq. L’08 Kathryn M. Rattigan L’12 and Chris Rattigan Sean D. Reichert, Esq. L’13 Kyle Renner Sarah Reusche and Marco Cross David M. Revens L’17 Brenda V. Reyes Tatis L’20 Samantha Rhodes Jeremy M. Rix, Esq. L’15 Zackary Robert Blair Robinson Shampagne Robinson L’18 Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06 and Kyle A. Rocha, Esq. ’06 L’09 Andrew C. Rodgers, Esq. L’14 Rafael Rodriguez Nicole E. Rohr L’19 Judah H. Rome L’16 Jennafer Rose Gregory C. Rosenfeld L’11 Sharlene M. Rossi, Esq. L’14 Riley Runk Leticia Salgado Emilio G. Santiago ’19 Elijah Santos Kat B. Savage L’17 and Jeremy B. Savage Robert A. Savoie, Jr. L’19 Etie-Lee Schaub and Steven Schaub Rita L. Segel ’05 and Richard M. Segel ’81 Bruce M. Selya J.D. LHD’02 and Cynthia Selya Thomas G. Shaffer, Esq. L’98 Aaron B. Shields, Esq. L’97 Maggie Shumar Amit Singh, Esq. ’06 L’09 and Sara N. Burke Singh, Esq. L’09 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 Noelle Soares L’23 Stephanie J. Soto, Esq. L’07 Jennings Souza Jeffrey D. Sowa, Esq. L’97 and Jennifer A. Sowa, Esq. L’01 Shirley Staskiewicz Alexis M. Steele L’23 Rebekkah R. Stoeckler L’22 Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09 Barbra C. Supsky P’20 and James C. Supsky P’20 John M. Sutherland III L’98 and Nina R. Sutherland Paul A. Suttell LHD’11 and Mary W. Suttell David Sylvester Mack C. Tasoulas L’21 Robert Taylor Louise E. Teitz Monica T. Teixeira de Sousa Alexandria Testut Jennifer M. Theroux, Esq. L’04 Ann Marie Thompson and James Thompson Kathy M. Thompson P’16 and George M. Thompson, Esq. P’16 The Honorable O. Rogeriee Thompson LHD’10 Jonathan Tonico Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05 Matthew Tortolani Nicholas Touch Nikola Trahan

Amanda L. Tramonte L’21 Ryan Tremblatt Nathaniel Trinidad Hinna Upal, Esq. L’07 Joseph D. Ustynoski, Esq. L’97 and Jeananne Ustynoski Erin Van Dorn, Esq. L’06 Jason B. Van Volkenburgh, Esq. L’07 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 Katherine L. Vieira, Esq. L’12 Michael A. Voccola, Esq. L’97 and Nancy Voccola The Honorable Netti C. Vogel Eliza Vorenberg and Barnaby Jackson Michael J. Wagner, Esq. L’98 Kyle Walters Mason J. Waring, Esq. L’07 Jakia Warren Sophia J. Weaver L’21 Erica Whaley Hadley Whitsell Kristen M. Whittle, Esq. Alexandra T. Wiberg Eric T. Wiberg, Esq. L’04 Jesse Williams Nasama Winters William K. Wray, Jr., Esq. L’13 and Lily A. Wray Joshua Xavier, Esq. L’14 Michael J. Zabelin, Esq. and Kathryn M. Sabatini, Esq. Anonymous (6)

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

52


Institutional Partnerships, Matching Gift Companies and In-Kind Donors

Roger Williams University and School of Law is grateful for the vital support of in-kind, corporate, foundation, and institutional donors and sponsors. The following lists recognize organizations that provided gifts, pledges, payments on prior year pledges, grants, matching gifts and donations of goods and services to the University and School of Law. UNIVERSITY INSTITUTIONAL DONORS $1,000,000 and above

$5,000 to $9,999

$1,000 to $2,499

Up to $999

Compass Group Cummings Foundation Gabelli Foundation Nellie Mae Education Foundation

Centreville Bank Fidelity Foundation Matching Gifts to Education Program Fletcher Development LLC Galaxy Development Grimshaw-Gudewicz Charitable Foundation H20 Innovation Lane Construction Corporation The Nature Conservancy Rhode Island Heavy & Highway Turner Construction Company University of Rhode Island Research Foundation Verdi Construction Management Co. Wider Path Home Foundation Women’s Fund of Rhode Island

A-1 Paving, LLC AARP Allade, Inc. Associated Schools of Construction Bond Building Construction Inc CBIZ MHM, LLC Design Build Institute of America Liberty Northeast Regio Eco RI Inc Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. Florida Health Group, Inc d/b/a Compass Health Gilbane Building Company, Inc. Gil’s Appliances Heritage Turbines Koppelman Family Foundation MD Lieberman Foundation National Equity Fund Pariseault Builders Inc. Pasquazzi Bros Inc Pierce Atwood LLC The Robert J. Avila Foundation SeeChange LLC Shell Companies Foundation Single Source Disaster Recovery Specialists Solutions Journalism Network TRAC Builders, Inc. Vernacular Architecture Forum Warren Fire Department Windover Construction

Acoustic Finishes AmazonSmile American Express Foundation American Express Amica Companies Foundation Atlantic Elevator South Co Inc. Avangrid, Inc. Bank of America Charitable Foundation Barbara Sokoloff & Associates Bob’s Service LLC Bonterra Bristol Billing Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Brown University C.E. Flanagan Charitable Fund Citizens Charitable Foundation City of Central Falls, RI City of Providence Delta Dental of Rhode Island East Greenwich Housing Authority Economic Progress Institute Elder Family Charitiable Fund Elite Diamond Performance G & B Family Living Trust General Electric Foundation Gooding Realty Corp. Housing Authority of the City of Pawtucket, RI Johnson & Johnson Jonnycake Center for Hope Kahn, Litwin, Renza & Co., Ltd. Klein Hornig LLP L3harris Technologies Charities Lincoln School Mastercard Navigant Credit Union One Rhode Consulting Papitto Opportunity Connection Pawtucket Central Falls Development Paypal Peter R. & Cynthia K. Kellogg Foundation Pitney Bowes Inc. Protect Our Healthcare RI Providence Preservation Society Providence Revolving Fund Publishing Concept PCI Rhode Island Coalition for Children and Families Scott F. Viera Memorial Fund Site Specific SJS Studios Inc Society of Professional Journalists Stop & Shop Sully’s Ice Cream Stand Sun Life Financial SWAP, Inc Tall Union Studio US Bank Foundation Verisk Analytics Verizon Webcor Construction, LP

$100,000 to $999,999 Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rhode Island DF Pray General Contractors The Donald C. McGraw Foundation, Inc. E. L. Wiegand Foundation Environmental Protection Agency Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund National Institutes of Health Rhode Island Foundation Spencer Foundation William and Flora Hewlett Foundation William T. Morris Foundation Anonymous

$25,000 to $99,999 C. Brito Construction Co., Inc Ernest E. Stempel Foundation Funder’s Collaborative on Youth Organizing Gagliardi Family Charitable Fund of the Ayco Charitable Fund Housing Network of Rhode Island Idalia Whitcomb Charitable Trust Jewish Communal Fund Lenox Foundation, Inc. Manchester Public Schools Connecticut National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration The Retirement Research Foundation Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc.

$10,000 to $24,999 Bank of America Columbia Construction Company Energy Capital Partners Management, LP Gardiner & Theobald, Inc. Hazen Foundation Helfrich Bros. Boiler Works, Inc. Kaestle Boos Associates, Inc. Kelly Family Foundation Inc. Morgan Stanley The Patrolman Gregory W. Bolden Memorial Scholarship Fund PSEG Rhode Island Housing Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors Sanofi Ventures Santander Shellfish Restoration Foundation of Narragansett Bay SouthCoast Wind Southeastern New England Educational and Charitable Foundat TCEQ Texas Commission of Environmental Quality Truth Initiative UBS Financial Services, Inc. United Way of Rhode Island University of Massachusetts Amherst The Whimsie Fund ZDS Architecture & Interiors

53

$2,500 to $4,999 Alister C. McGregor Memorial Foundation Arden Engineering Constructors, LLC Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund BankFive Center for Health and Justice Transformation Citizens Bank Collins Construction Co., Inc. Enterprise Holdings Foundation Enterprise Holdings Federal Home Loan Bank Fidelity Foundation Guardian Life Insurance Company Hensel Phelps Construction Company Housing Ministries of New England J2Construct Jimmy Stuart Carpet & Upholstery Cleaners, Inc. Local Initiatives Support Corporation Mega Disposal Neighborhood Health Plan of RI New England Association of Chiefs of Police, Inc. Norbella Media NWN Carousel P.J. Dionne Company, Inc. The Penates Foundation Preservation of Affordable Housing, Inc. Rhode Island Association of Realtors Rhode Island Builders Association Saccoccio & Assoc. Inc - Architects Shawmut Design & Construction Starkweather & Shepley Insurance Brokerage Inc. TD Bank UBS Financial Services Inc. University of Rhode Island Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Warren German American Club


SCHOOL OF LAW INSTITUTIONAL DONORS $25,000 and above

$2,500 to $4,999

Rhode Island Foundation

CDLP Law Emma Clyde Hodge Memorial Fund Higgins, Cavanagh & Cooney, LLP Keches Law Group New Hampshire Charitable Foundation PNC Institutional Asset Management Rhode Island Association for Justice Savage Law Partners, LLP

$10,000 to $24,999 Chisholm Chisholm & Kilpatrick LTD Nixon Peabody LLP United Way of Rhode Island

$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 Marasco & Nesselbush, LLP Rob Levine & Associates, Ltd. Robinson + Cole LLP

$1,000 to $2,499 Barton Gilman LLP Bremer Law & Associates, LLC Cervenka Green & Ducharme LLC Coia & Lepore, Ltd. Estner Injury Centers Gunning & Lafazia, Inc.

Hinckley Allen LLP Joann Denapoli Charitable Foundation Jones Kelleher LLP Locke Lord LLP Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky & Popeo ODU Law Firm, LLC Partridge Snow & Hahn LLP Renaissance Charitable Foundation Sloane & Walsh, LLP Tricera Capital Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program

Up to $999 Cameron & Mittleman LLP Charities Aid Foundation of America Crossroads Rhode Island Ferrucci Russo Dorsey PC

Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Housing Works RI Law Office of Brett V. Beaubien, LLC Law Office of Gerard M. DeCelles Law Offices of Amit Singh Littler Mandell, Boisclair & Mandell, LTD Merrill Lynch and Co., Inc. Orson and Brusini Ltd. Pew Charitable Trust Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc. Sinapi Law Associates The Law Offices of Jeremy M. Rix The Rhode Island Center for Justice VM Parkway LLC

MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES American Express and American Express Foundation Amica Companies Foundation Avangrid, Inc. Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Citizens Charitable Foundation

Delta Dental of Rhode Island Fidelity Foundation General Electric Foundation Guardian Life Insurance Company Johnson & Johnson Kahn, Litwin, Renza & Co., Ltd.

Mastercard Pew Charitable Trust Pitney Bowes Inc. PSEG The Retirement Research Foundation Sanofi Ventures

Shell Companies Foundation US Bank Foundation Verizon

JFK Presidential Library and Museum Kaplan Justin R. Kishbaugh Lorraine N. Lalli, Esq. L’01 and Brian M. Lalli Mallory Portraits The Marine Affairs Intitute Staff Sarah E. McConnell Dubois, Esq. Montaup Country Club Colleen P. Murphy J.D.

New Bedford Whaling Museum New Repertory Theatre Omni Providence Hotel Raquel M. Ortiz, Esq. P’23 Portsmouth Publick House Preservation Society of Newport County Providence Performing Arts Center Adam M. Ramos, Esq. L’06 Kelvin P. Santos L’20

Seastreak Staff of the RWU Law Library Monica T. Teixeira de Sousa Themis Bar Review Amanda L. Tramonte L’21 Wachusett Mountain Assoc. Michael J. Yelnosky and Laurie A. Barron

IN-KIND DONORS Gregory W. Bowman Charles Coleman Kas R. DeCarvalho, Esq. Michael W. Donnelly-Boylen Jared A. Goldstein, Esq. Greenvale Vineyards Jennifer W. Hashway, Esq. L’11 and John P. Barylick, Esq. Diana J. Hassel, Esq.

Tribute Gifts

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 Douglas E. Brout John J. Chung Joseph A. Ilardi Jessica Jacobs Anthony R. Leone David A. Logan Heidi Maes Patrick and Norma Maguire Jane A. Pellegren Judith Platania

Memorialized Christopher Reynolds Margaret Ann Seiple Michael A. Silverstein Edward C. Strong

Paul L. Arris Gary L. Bahr William C. Clifton Dianne E. Crowell Raymond V. DeBiasa Gus D’Ercole Alice Jessup Evan A. Lautz Elsch J. Maisoh Jeffrey W. Manuck

Michael J. Moruzzi Robert A. Potter Brian Remy Rosalie Roberts Mark M. Sawoski Laura Sears-Moniz Jeremy D. Warnick Vera Wooden-Carr Peter G. Wright

Heritage Society

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 D. 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 Marshall Margolis ’66 and Carol J. Drake William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89 Paul Moran Aurelia J. Papitto David J. Papitto, Esq. ’98 L’08 Tullio D. Pitassi Ph.D. ’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/WINTER 2023

54


Named Financial Aid Funds

Roger Williams University and School of Law prides itself 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 Alan Shawn Feinstein Leadership Scholarships Alister C. McGregor Scholarship 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 Arlene Violet, Esq. Public Interest Law Scholarship Balfour Minority Scholarship Bank5 Scholarship Barnes & Noble Scholarship Barrie ’70 and Mary Lee Endowed Scholarship Ben Carr Endowed Scholarship Benjamin and Renee Vogel Family Social Justice Scholarship Bisbano Scholarship Bready Minority Scholarship Brett Bergman ’11 Endowed Memorial Senior Merit Scholarship Brian Remy Scholarship Bristol Rotary Scholarship Carpentry Apprenticeship Scholarship Ceasar Brito Memorial Scholarship Central Falls Aid Clark Prize in Appellate Advocacy Construction Management Professional Advisory Board Endowed Scholarship Coca-Cola Scholar Award Construction Management Endowed Scholarship Scholarship D.F. Pray Scholars Program Daniel Kwasnieski ’93 Scholarship Darlene Lycke Memorial Scholarship David & Matilda Kessler Endowed Scholarship David A. Logan Family Opportunity Endowed Scholarship DePoalo Family Scholarship Endowment Diane Drake Scholarship Dianne E. Crowell Scholarship Donald Walton Culp Endowed Scholarship Dr. George A. Ficorilli Professor Emeritus Endowed Scholarship Dr. Harold Way Scholarship E. Diane Davis Scholarship Earle Family Memorial Endowed Business Law Scholarship Elsch Josiah Maisoh, Jr. ’13 Endowed Scholarship Eric T. Dimmick ’94 Endowed Scholarship in Construction Management

Esther Clark Endowed Scholarship Ethel Barrymore Colt-Migletta Scholarship Evan Alexander Lautz Scholarship Evelyn & Rita Pendergast Mem. Scholarship Francis Darigan Scholarship Franklin P. Bailey and Barbara N. Bailey Endowed Scholarship Gabelli School of Business Scholars Program Gary L. Bahr Memorial Scholarship George E. Garvin Memorial Scholarship George I. Alden Need-Based Scholarship Aid Endowment Geremia Scholarship The Gingerella Family Scholarship Grimshaw-Gudewicz Scholarship Harold Payson Scholarship Hearst Scholarship for Underserved Students Hemond Brothers Scholarship Hon Thomas J. Caldarone, Jr. Endowed Scholarshi International Association of Insurance Professionals Endowed Scholarship Idalia Whitcomb Gifted Scholarship Idalia Whitcomb Scholarship for Freshman Students Idalia Whitcomb Scholarship James Tackach Award Jeffrey William Manuck ’04 Memorial Endowed Scholarship The Jeremy Warnick Scholarship Jerrold and Barbara Lavine RWU Scholarship Joan Montalbano Scholarship John D. Coyle Scholarship John E. King Scholarship Jonathan M. Redler Scholarship Judge Thomas J. Paolino Scholarship Justinian Law Society of Rhode Island Scholarship Kaestle Boos Architecture Scholars Kathleen Birt Memorial Prize Kelly Family Endowed Scholarship in Construction Management Law Alumni Association Scholarship Lillian and Irving Topf Memorial Lincoln W.N. Pratt Memorial Lorraine Dennis Memorial Endowed Scholarship Lt. Charles A. Henderson USN Lt. Joseph D. Fortin ’08 Memorial Scholarship Mandell-Boisclair Justice Scholarship Mark Gould Memorial Scholarship & Research Mark Hutchins Memorial Scholarship

Mark Sawoski Scholarship Mary Staab Endowed Scholarship Matthew Wolfe Scholarship Michael and Nancy Voccola Family Endowed Scholarship Michael P. McNulty Endowed Scholarship Michele Cron Yeaton ’80 Memorial Scholarship Montrone Family Scholarship Patrolman Gregory W. Bolden Memorial Scholarship Paul L. Arris Memorial Scholarship Pompei Family Engineering Endowed Scholarship Professor 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 Professor Peter Wright Endowed Scholarship Providence Journal Scholarship Raj Saksena Endowed Memorial Scholarhship Rebecca Anne Kelton Memorial Scholarship Rhode Island 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 Robert W. and Virginia B. McBride ’82 Memorial Sergeant Michael Jannitto Memorial Scholarship Sgt. Jim and Julie Cole Peace Officer Scholarship Shawmut Scholars Social & Health Services Scholarship Sparks Memorial Endowed Scholarship Stephen M Kellert Memorial Scholarship in Biology Steven Ficorilli Memorial Scholarship Tennyson Scholars Program Textron Diversity Scholarship Thomas E. Fitzgerald Scholarship in Visual Arts Studies Thurgood Marshall Memorial Scholarship Walk of Fame Alumni Association Scholarship William Randolph Hearst Endowed Scholarship William T. Morris Foundation Scholarship Wright Family Scholarship Zachary Shapiro Study Abroad

Volunteers

We would like to recognize the volunteers who have provided leadership and guidance to the university in the 2022-2023 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. Calgary Avansino Leon Cooperman HD’97 William S. Cummings

Mario J. Gabelli HD’92 Alan G. Hassenfeld HD’93 Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09

Brian W. MacLean Elizabeth Moore The Honorable Angel Taveras

Michael G. Tennyson Orin S. Wilf ’96

Board of Trustees Trustees of Roger Williams University, in close collaboration with 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 B. Yeaton ’80, Chair Heather N. Culp Boujoulian ’97, Vice Chair William F. McKeon ’84, Vice Chair Todd L. Rechler ’93, Vice Chair Antonio Masone, Jr. ’91, Treasurer Linn Foster Freedman, Esq., Secretary Jerauld C. Adams James R. Andrade ’77 ’79 Timothy E. Baxter ’83 P’13 HD’15 Nicole Benjamin L’06 Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11 Rodney A. Butler

55

Doris M. De Los Santos ’20 Julie I. Englund, Ed.D. Mario J. Gabelli HD’92 Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07 William J. Geraghty ’78 Jeffrey M. Grybowski, Esq. 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.

Howard A. Merten, Jr., Esq. Ioannis N. Miaoulis Marcia Morris, Esq. HD’19 Scott W. Pray PL’16 Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ’99 HD’18 Lisa J. Raiola Regina A. Shakin P’19 The Honorable William E. Smith The Honorable Brian P. Stern Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09 Joseph D. Whelan, Esq.

Trustees Emeriti Richard L. Bready HD’08 Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09 Arlene Violet, Esq.


School of Law Board of Directors The Honorable Brian P. Stern, Chair Nicole Benjamin, Esq. L’06, Vice Chair The Honorable Patricia A. Sullivan, Treasurer Hinna Mirza Upal, Esq. L’07, Secretary Kenneth E. Arnold, Esq. Collin E. Bailey J.D. L’08 Brett V. Beaubien L’16 Alyssa Boss, Esq. L’97

Gregory W. Bowman Marek P. Bute, Esq. L’05 Marc DeSisto, Esq. The Honorable Melissa R. DuBose L’04 Mark W. Gemma, Esq. L’97 Patrick T. Jones, Esq. J. Scott Kilpatrick, Esq. Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23

Alumni Association Board of Directors Charnele S. Luster ’11, Chair Theresa M. Agonia ’13, Vice Chair Christina W. Abisla ’13 Ziad A. Achkar ’12 Virgina S. Albert ’17

Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11 Howard A. Merten, Jr., Esq. 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.

The Honorable William E. Smith Ondine Galvez Sniffin, Esq. Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09 The Honorable Paul A. Suttell LHD’11 The Honorable O. Rogeriee Thompson LHD’10 Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq.

Law Alumni Association Board of Directors Gordon S. (Chip) Craig III ’94 Peter Dunn ’12 Sofia M. Giovannello ’13 Juan M. Hernandez ’16 Kevin L. Moitoso ’01

Brett V. Beaubien L’16, Chair Kelly Rafferty Meara, Esq. L’11 Olabisi M. Davies L’16 John A. Dorsey, Esq. L’10 Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12

Jenna R. Giguere, Esq. L’11 Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07 Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14 Kelsey D. Peck L’19 Crystal D. Peralta L’20

Board of Advisors 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, Jr. ’74 Kosta Bitsis ’84 P’14 Scott R. Blumenfeld ’01 Anthony M. Brahimsha ’10 Kyle J. Casserino ’13 Maria T. Chigas P’26 Rebecca L. Collins ’97 Barrett W. Costello ’99 Gordon S. (Chip) Craig III ’94 Rick Daubenspeck ’85 P’17

Bradford A. Dean ’73 Cynthia A. Elder ’87 Yvonne Farrell P’22, PM’23 Ryan A. Fletcher ’11 Charles B. Floyd ’14 Stacey B. Foisy ’84 Gerald A. Francese, Esq. ’96 Adam Goldman P’24 Domenic R. Grieco ’99 Adam G. Harz ’22 Vincent P. Helfrich ’82 George R. Hemond ’72

Juan M. Hernandez ’16 Frank A. Hood ’97 Eugene Kennedy ’90 Michael A. La Scala ’83 Lucas W. Laager ’23 Sarah R. Mamula ’12 Deborah Marchini P’23 Elizabeth A. McGraw ’10 Christine N. McKenney ’92 Stephanie L. Noris ’92 Thomas S. Olsen ’11 John A. Puniello ’97

James P. Reardon ’13 Adam E. Risman ’16 Mark Saccoccio ’83 P’12 Mark Schiller ’89 Ron Simoneau Ernest P. Smith P’11 William L. Spruill III ’85 Debra P. Stokes ’79 Judith W. Vigar Allison R. Yount ’11 Eric N. Zuena ’01

Real Estate Advisory Board 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 Dorothea R. Faxon L’00 Zé M. Figueirinhas ’92 Luis F. Gomez ’92 Andrew J. Grace ’94

Adam A. Gross Stephen Hahn ’06 Ryan Jabs ’12 Jeffrey R. Jellison ’98 Mehdi Khosrovani A.I.A. ’80 Matthew R. Kinell, Esq. L’09 James McCurdy

Michael L. Mineau, Esq. L’09 Andrea Murphy Jackson ’93 Michael C. O’Brien P’19 Young K. Park Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16 Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06 Amelia Schofield

Jordan M. Stone Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12 Curtis A. Verdi ’94 Orin S. Wilf ’96 James Wrisley ’01

Parent and Family Leadership Council The Roger Williams University Parent & Family Leadership Council (PFLC) and the Parent & Family Association are a group of engaged volunteers who participate in a variety of activities in support of the University’s mission and its students. The Parent & Family Leadership Council members represent the Parent & Family Association and work with the administration to provide leadership, support, and feedback in these vital areas. Paul M. Angland P’23 and Hazel C. Angland P’23 Jonathan E. Cohen and Amy L. Cohen Christopher P. Cook and Julie F. Cook Gordon S. (Chip) Craig III ‘94 and Kristen J. Craig Thomas M. Curcio and Geralyn A. Curcio Joe DiScipio P’21 and Margaret M. DiScipio P’21 Sandra C. Galian and Carl D. Galian, Sr. Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 and Douglas F. Garland P’22 Adam Goldman and Charmaine Goldman Larry Goldstein and Jill Goldstein Patricia E. Heelen P’22 and Christian D. Heelen P’22 Craig P. Hersh and Marcy B. Hersh

Keith Johnson P’18 and Denise L. 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 Greg S. Kimmel L’97 and Lisa D. Kimmel Dr. Kaarkuzhali B. Krishnamurthy Chavali P’22 and Mr. Ram V. Chavali P’22 Peter Langan Tracy L. Levey and James K. Levey Todd A. Magliato P’20 and Mary Ann Magliato P’20 Stephen P. Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23 and Laura K. Maguire P’23 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 P’23 and Rhonda S. Goldberg P’23 Judith A. Pegno P’17 and Steven A. Pegno P’17 Lynn Retford Faith Rushnak and Scott Rushnak John Spinney, Jr. and Erin Spinney David Teixeira, Jr. and Melissa J. Teixeira Marco Uriati L’96 and Jennifer L. Uriati Judith W. Vigar Simon Winn and Ingrid Winn Joshua B. Wright Amy G. Zerman P’22 and Jared Zerman P’22

RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

56


THE

GIFT OF HIGHER EDUCATION The Bailey family donates toward scholarships at RWU

F

community through a multitude of ranklin Bailey ’76 was working initiatives. His greatest source of pride as a teller at Citizens Bank stems from his efforts to support in Providence when his wife individuals of color in their journey Barbara, a teacher for Providence of business ownership and education. Public Schools, inspired him to go As part of that effort, Bailey created a to college. After spending his days at scholarship fund for elementary and the bank, he attended Roger Williams middle school College students to three to four receive savings nights a week, bonds for graduating in their academic 1976 with a We want to give more achievements. Bachelor of “I want to Arts in Social students the same empower our Science. Bailey, opportunity we had next generation who now lives to have access in Luthervilleand inspire them. to resources to Timonium, be successful,” Md., rose Bailey said. through the Barbara, who passed away in July ranks at Citizens, in part due to 2022, spent her career as a music gaining a higher education, eventually teacher at Dr. Martin Luther King retiring as Assistant Vice President, Jr. Elementary School in Providence. where he managed the main office. She received a bachelor’s degree from While serving at Citizens, Bailey Syracuse University and a master’s harnessed his role to empower the

57

from Rhode Island College. The Baileys, who were married for 66 years, knew the value of higher education, which is why they established the Franklin P. Bailey and Barbara N. Bailey Endowed Scholarship at Roger Williams University – to provide greater access to an excellent education for more students. “I know through experience how difficult it is for someone who looks like Barbara and me to have career opportunities,” said 90-year-old Bailey, who still actively supports Roger Williams’s scholarship programs. “We want to give more students the same opportunity we had and inspire them.” The Bailey Scholarship was endowed in 2017 by Franklin Bailey and his wife Barbara.


SKILLS IN

SERVICE THE FINDINGS

THE STUDENTS Aidan Bennett ’23 (Civil Engineering), Daniel Dejnak ’23 (Electrical Engineering), Cameron Dutra ’23 (Civil Engineering), and David Sales ’23 (Civil Engineering)

After conducting a structural assessment of the Lodge, the students concluded that the majority is currently up to code, but some areas require safety-related updates. To address bowing on the first floor, they recommend reinforcing joists or adding column supports to prevent structural damage. To support the roof during inclement weather, the students suggest installing hurricane clips on the third-floor roof rafters. They also identified structural deficiencies in joists and columns in the basement, cracks on the interior wall surfaces, and signs of water damage on the third-floor ceiling. To make their assessment, they first created floor plans, took measurements, and used national standards to mathematically determine the current load for each of the four floors and the structural components’ capabilities.

THE BIG QUESTION Is the Newport Elks Lodge, a historic Victorian home on the corner of Pelham Street and Bellevue Avenue, structurally sound and able to support new types of uses, or are there areas of the building that need repairs? RWU MAGAZINE | FALL/WINTER 2023

58


One Old Ferry Road Bristol, Rhode Island 02809-2921 (401) 253-1040 • (800) 458-7144 toll free Change Service Requested

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN LOUISIANA

Criminal Justice students examine capital punishment and experience firsthand a more punitive criminal justice system

» PAGE 13

59

NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID PROVIDENCE, R.I. PERMIT NO. 795


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.