FUTURE FORWARD
With investments in academic facilities and scholarships, and more alumni than ever giving their time and philanthropy, RWU is building a future for our graduates to soar higher.
» 14

LEAVING NO ONE BEHIND » 24
DIVING INTO 50 YEARS OF MARINE BIOLOGY » 20
LEGACY HELPS DESIGN AND PRESERVE THE FUTURE » 14
DREAM BIG, WORK HARD: 20 YEARS OF THE CAFE WAY » 6
NEW LABS INSPIRE INNOVATION AND RESEARCH
RWU has begun a three-year transformation of the older School of Engineering, Computing, and Construction Management building into a hub of innovation and research. To date, the university has opened a STEM-focused E. L. Wiegand Data and Modeling Studio, equipped with virtual reality that allows our Engineering, Computer Science, and Construction Management programs to expand their quantitative teaching and research capacities; an interdisciplinary Forensic Science Lab (pictured here) outfitted with advanced instrumentation for research ranging from fingerprinting to ballistics analysis, blood splatter, and molecular synthesis; and a Food Science Lab, supplied with workstations and cooking equipment for hands-on experiments in the Food Studies and Physics programs.

SPACES

>> Forensic Science Lab in the School of Engineering, Computing, and Construction Management building.

<< E. L. Wiegand Data and Modeling Studio in the School of Engineering, Computing, and Construction Management building.

<< Food Science Lab in the School of Engineering, Computing, and Construction Management building.


<<

MORE INNOVATION IN OUR FUTURE
In other areas of the Bristol campus, RWU also opened an interdisciplinary E. L. Wiegand Design Thinking Studio in the Mario J. Gabelli School of Business, serving as a classroom, production studio, and team project workshop; the Gagliardi Laboratory for Research in the Chemical Sciences, a renovated space in the Marine and Natural Sciences building, featuring state-of-the-art equipment made possible by the Gagliardi family and as part of $1.6 million in federal funding; and a Visual Arts Studio in North Campus Residence Hall, providing dedicated studio for students to create artwork on a larger scale.
WHAT’S NEXT
RWU is in the planning stages of other facilities upgrades that will be wonderful improvements to the academic and student life experience. Here is a quick look at what’s ahead:
Campus Center: We are designing a new Campus Center that will become our community hub in the center of the Bristol campus.
Environmental Labs: A new interdisciplinary Environmental Engineering and Science Lab in the older SECCM building will provide a space, outfitted with state-of-the-art equipment purchased through $1.69 million in federal funding, for faculty and students to research and study environmental pollutants.
Upper Commons: Renovations and reconfiguration to improve traffic flow in the main dining facility.
Cybersecurity Lab: Also inside the older SECCM building, a new Cybersecurity Lab will explore and find solutions to a range of cybersecurity challenges.




DREAM
BIG,
WORK HARD: 20 YEARS
OF
THE
WAY The Center for Advanced Financial Education develops graduates who are shaping the global financial
and organizations that
in
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FROM OUR PRESIDENT
At RWU, we are truly future-forward thinking, continuously planning and building the university’s future on a solid foundation that prepares our graduates for success. That is why we continue to invest in renovations of cutting-edge laboratories, research and learning spaces, buoyed by federal funding and donor support (see previous pages), and we are now planning for a new Campus Center that brings our community together in the heart of our Bristol campus. We recently launched exciting new scholarship programs—the Hayden Scholarships for Trades Education, the Miaoulis Women in Engineering Scholarship, and the Gabelli School of Business Scholars are a few examples—and created new endowed faculty and staff positions at the Gabelli School of Business, an endowed Humanities Professorship, and endowed Head Sailing Coach, thanks to generous donations from our university community and supporters.
Our future mindset also spurs us to launch the first-ever university branding initiative and a rebranding of the RWU Extension School (RWU EXT) that will elevate RWU to a national audience and amplify the value and distinction of a Roger Williams education.
This year, we have also had some incredible accomplishments to celebrate. We welcomed Heather Boujoulian ’97 as our first woman to lead the RWU Board of Trustees as chair. This academic year marks the 50th anniversary of our Marine Biology program (page 20), a beacon of research excellence in fisheries, aquaculture, aquarium science, resource management, and molecular biology; and the 20th anniversary of the Center for Advanced Financial Education (CAFE) (page 6), a program unparalleled in its real-world, industry-focused approach to portfolio management.
Of course, our greatest accomplishments as a university lie in the amazing work of the faculty and staff and the achievements of our alumni and our students. We have many great stories to tell about the real-world skills and impact that comes with a Roger Williams education.

One of this issue’s feature stories demonstrates RWU’s commitment to social justice and our growing leadership in serving justice-impacted communities (page 24). Through a new $5 million, 3-year contract, the RWU Extension School has become an accredited educational provider for degree programs and trades certifications for incarcerated individuals across Rhode Island Department of Correction facilities, expanding the school’s work to provide transformational educational and professional credentials to a greatly underserved community. Meanwhile, the School of Law also expands its offerings of critical legal services to Rhode Island’s justice-involved community through the Civil Legal Clinic and new Prisoners’ Rights Clinic.
Another feature story highlights the Cummings School of Architecture’s unprecedented number of alumni, leaders in architecture, preservation, and real estate, returning to support our students through teaching, mentoring, and expanded internship and career development opportunities (page 14).
As you read through this issue, I hope you see all that we have to celebrate as a community this year and the exciting things we have to look forward to in Roger Williams University’s future. Our community is united by a shared passion and purpose to make a positive social and environmental impact and be the changemakers and leaders the world needs.

Ioannis N. Miaoulis, Ph.D. President
President
Ioannis Miaoulis, Ph.D.
Chief of Staff
Brian Williams
Chief Marketing Officer
Laura Baldwin
Editor-in-Chief
Jill Pais ’05
Design Director
Blair Carroll ’13
Contributing Writers
Triniti Brown ’26, Claire Curry, Benjamin Daniel, Nicholas Gendreau, Matthew Milotakis ’25, Jordan Jeffrey Phelan ’19, Kaylee Pugliese ’19, Mel Thibeault
Contributing Designers
Jim Gibson, Ashley Regan ’15
Contributing Photographers
Michael Cohea, Richard Dionne, James Jones, Jordan Jeffrey Phelan ’19
Please direct questions, comments, letters and other editorial inquiries to: email: jpais@rwu.edu phone: (401) 254-3332
University Marketing and Communications
Roger Williams University 1 Old Ferry Road Bristol, RI 02809
Roger Williams University and RWU are registered with the United States

RWU BOARD OF TRUSTEES ELECTS NEW CHAIR
In October, the RWU Board of Trustees elected Heather Boujoulian ’97 as the new chair and the first woman to serve in this role, affirming the university’s commitment to inclusive leadership. Boujoulian, who is the Managing Director and Head of Development at Berkshire Residential Investments, has served on the Board of Trustees since 2020, as well as past president of the RWU Alumni Association and on the Construction Management Professional Advisory Board, and Real Estate Advisory Board. She holds a B.S. in Construction Management, with minors in Architecture and Historic Preservation, from RWU and a Master’s in Urban Planning from Harvard University. At RWU, the firstgeneration college student served as Student Senate President, Junior Class Vice President, a student ambassador, orientation advisor, and resident assistant, and participated in the Rock Climbing Club and Habitat for Humanity.
RWU BOLD NEW BRAND EXPANDS POWERFUL COMBINATIONS IN EDUCATION
Roger Williams University unveiled a refreshed brand that empowers students to create a personalized, impactful learning experience. The rebranding effort also extends to RWU School of Law and the evolution of University College into RWU's new Extension School. By weaving the new brand into these key areas, RWU demonstrates our commitment to empowering all students—traditional, professional, and lifelong learners alike—through innovative and adaptable educational experiences.
The rebrand includes fresh visual elements as part of the identity along with a refined logo, color palette, and typography that embodies RWU's spirit and dynamic approach to learning. Central to the rebrand is RWU's messaging crafted to unify our diverse academic programs, student experiences, and institutional priorities under a focused narrative. This messaging highlights the university's dedication to fostering powerful combinations—between disciplines and learning experiences, faculty and students, and the university and its surrounding communities. Together, the visual identity and unified messaging communicate the core idea that RWU is a place where students experience a unique, real-world education that prepares them for success.

Left: The Bristol campus main entrance signs were updated with the redesigned RWU logo.
Below: Students and their families posed with the new RWU letters at Homecoming Weekend.

COMMENCEMENT 2024 BY THE NUMBERS


TOTAL GRADUATES
1,249



53% of 2024 undergraduates graduated with a double major or minor POWERFUL COMBINATIONS



TOTAL DEGREES CONFERRED
64 Associate Degrees
872 Bachelor’s Degrees
137 Master’s Degrees
161 Law Degrees
95 UC Certifications
15 Certificates
DREAM BIG, WORK HARD
20 YEARS OF THE CAFE WAY
All year round, Michael Melton, Yeaton Professor of Finance and Director of RWU’s Center for Advanced Financial Education (CAFE), fields calls from companies like the New York Stock Exchange, Morgan Stanley, MJX, Gabelli Funds, Interactive Brokers, BlackRock, and plenty more. What do they have in common? They all want to hire CAFE graduates.

Launched in the fall of 2004, Melton built CAFE for the Mario J. Gabelli School of Business with the aim of creating a distinctive Portfolio Management Program that provides a real-world, industry-oriented education different from any other school in the nation.
“CAFE differentiates itself by having students work not just as analysts and fund managers but also as traders,” said Melton. “After having hired CAFE alumni, numerous national and multinational companies seek to be the first to hire our graduates knowing they are provided real on-the-job training.”
On its 20th anniversary year, CAFE celebrates its history and support for the future with an endowed professorship for Melton, through generous gifts from business school alumnus Tim Yeaton ’80 and his wife, Sue Yeaton, and Mario J. Gabelli, longtime champion of RWU’s Gabelli School.
“One of the flagship programs for the Gabelli School of Business, CAFE has developed generations of successful alumni shaping the global financial industry today,” said GSB Dean Diya Das. “The recent endowed professorship for ‘Doc’ Melton provides dedicated financial support that will help grow this program and take it to the proverbial next level.”
CAFE students manage real-dollar portfolios, in an environment designed to replicate a Wall Street trading pod, empowered to execute trades and reallocate the fund at a moment’s notice with only the approval of the Director—not through a long review process with a remote advisory board. With hours that reflect industry, students become proficient in every aspect of portfolio management, cultivate a strong work ethic and dedication, and unlike other institutions, also graduate with a knowledge of technical analysis, providing a powerful foundation needed to succeed in the financial world.
A signature element of the CAFE program has been to provide students a deep understanding of the mechanisms which drive global markets. Through the support of Hans Christensen, CEO of MJX Asset Management, students have traveled around the globe—Tokyo, Shanghai, Dubai, Frankfurt, and London, are some examples—to visit international stock exchanges and present their portfolio methodology to academic institutions and industry professionals at global institutions. Additionally, with the support of Mario J. Gabelli, students are able to participate in important industry conferences such as the Gabelli Funds Value Investor conference and Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting. Such experiences not only advance student knowledge, but have earned CAFE recognition on a global scale.


CAFE students also benefit from a worldwide alumni network who are passionate about paying it forward to the next generation. Alumni not only financially support the program but return to mentor students in a variety of ways, from serving on the CAFE Advisory Board to sharing career advice and providing connections to job opportunities. Each semester, alumni return to campus to participate in the current Student Fund Managers’ portfolio performance presentation.
All this has contributed to 20 years of CAFE success. The program has captured two national championships and numerous top placings at portfolio competitions (RISE and GAME), not to mention a second-place finish in a national Stock Pitch Competition showcasing the qualitative skills needed in industry today.
Today, CAFE graduates work in leading financial institutions around the world. “When you design a powerful combination of academic excellence and real-world work experience with industry connections and alumni dedication, you get the CAFE way— ‘Dream Big, Work Hard … Stay Humble’—and two decades of successful alumni making an indelible mark on the financial world,” Melton said.
Facing page: Michael “Doc” Melton, Director of CAFE.
Above: Professor Melton challenges his student fund managers to understand every aspect of portfolio management.
Left: Investor and philanthropist Mario J. Gabelli (left) and RWU President Ioannis Miaoulis (right) celebrate Melton being named the Yeaton Professor of Finance and the 20th anniversary of the CAFE program.
ALUMNI FOSTER PROFESSIONAL COMMUNITIES

This fall, Alumni Relations launched the Alumni Networking Series, a new opportunity to create a professional community for alumni in major cities. RWU traveled to New York City in September and Washington, D.C. in November, and will next travel to Boston on Feb. 20, all cities that boast an extensive alumni presence. Each event offers a space for alums to gather and lift each other up and a panel discussion where alums share their experiences at RWU.
The New York event brought together nearly 40 alumni at STK Steakhouse in Midtown. A panelist at the event, Michael Hollander ’08, Head of Uber Eats’ U.S. Regional Enterprise Partnerships—East, helped coordinate the gathering and launch alumni networking opportunities like these.
“This is a great event that brings together so many years of alums,” said Hollander, who received his degree in Communications. “It’s important to make sure that the weight of the amazing education we had at Roger Williams is felt, and people feel like they can go to one another.”
In the nation’s capital, faculty and leaders from the School of Law and the Department of Politics and International Relations led discussions with the alumni community during the November alumni networking event. Sarah Mamula ’12, Head of Government Affairs for the Financial Technology Association, moved to Washington, D.C., a year after graduation and has connected with many alumni. Getting to meet fellow Hawks living and working nearby is invaluable when it comes to networking, she said, which is why the Alumni Networking Series is such a unique opportunity.
“Getting your foot in the door with almost every job down here requires knowing somebody,” said Mamula said, who graduated with degrees in Political Science and Media Communications with a concentration in Journalism and a minor in Spanish. “There’s that automatic link through Roger Williams that makes the connection a bit deeper.”
Join us for the 2025 Hawks Take Flight Alumni Tour. Visit www.rwu.edu/alumni/events for more info.
Hawks gathered at the Washington, D.C. alumni networking event.


UNIVERSITY NEWS

From left: R.I. Rep. Susan Donovan, Erik Smith ’01, Joe Brito P’11, and RWU Professor and R.I. Rep. June Speakman at the 2025 R.I. State of the State Address.
RWU COMMUNITY HONORED FOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO R.I. ECONOMY
Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee honored Erik Smith ’01, RWU Trustee, and Joe Brito P’11, Trustee Emeritus, as special guests at the 2025 State of the State Address, recognizing their commitment to fostering innovation, driving economic growth, and creating opportunities in Rhode Island.
Smith, who holds a B.A. in Political Science from RWU, serves as President and CEO of Saab, Inc., a defense and security company focusing on advanced technologies like autonomous underwater vehicles. In 2022, under his leadership, Saab established its Autonomous and Undersea Systems division in Cranston, R.I., and recently announced a new facility at Unity Park in Bristol, R.I., creating nearly 50 jobs.
Brito, President and CEO of C.B. Utility Co., Inc. & C. Brito Construction Co., is the architect transforming a neglected mill into Bristol’s Unity Park, with an $8.9 million expansion underway, adding 45,000 square feet for blue economy manufacturing, office, and warehouse space.

Shakin Family Endows Head Sailing Coach
With a $500,000 gift from the Shakin Family, RWU has created an endowed sailing head coach position and named longtime coach Amanda Callahan as the inaugural Shakin Family Head Sailing Coach. This endowed coaching position will help support coaching talent for our top nationally-ranked Sailing program, which captured a third national championship title in the 2023-24 sailing competition. The Shakin family has a long history of supporting and engaging RWU. Regina Shakin has served on the RWU Board of Trustees and remains a Trustee Emeritus, and she and her husband, Jim, both served on the Parent and Family Leadership Council. Their daughter, Kelsey Shakin ’19, an RWU Sailing team captain, currently serves on the RWU Board of Advisors.
Gabelli School of Business Recognized for Academic Experience
Forbes Names RWU the Best Online College in R.I.
Forbes Magazine named RWU the 2024 Best Online College in Rhode Island, highlighting the Extension School’s (then University College) commitment to accessible, high-quality education with flexible online programs in fields such as applied psychology, criminal justice, cybersecurity, and public administration.
The Mario J. Gabelli School of Business was named among the top undergraduate business schools in the nation and ranked No. 49 in Academic Experience by Poets & Quants. The 2024 Best Undergraduate Business Programs rankings evaluated academic experience, career outcomes for graduates, and admissions standards.
Miaoulis Women in Engineering Scholarship
President Ioannis Miaoulis established the endowed Miaoulis Women in Engineering Scholarship, supporting students pursuing an engineering degree at RWU. Created in honor of his granddaughters and his commitment to STEM education, the endowed scholarship supports RWU engineering majors who have experiences that reflect a dedication to advocacy for women’s equity and empowerment or have membership in organizations open to all but whose missions seek to advance the needs of women, such as RWU’s chapter of the Society of Women Engineers.

MAKING BEST BUDDIES BETWEEN RWU AND THE COMMUNITY
Student-athlete starts a club to build community with the R.I. Transition Academy
Many of our students make an indelible mark on the university community, and Olivia Santoro ’24 can count herself among those who bring RWU and the greater community closer together. During her sophomore year, she launched the university’s chapter of Best Buddies through a partnership with the Rhode Island Transition Academy (RITA) and served as president to form a community of students supporting individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Above right:
Olivia Santoro ’24 and Benjamin Teves embrace the spirit of connection and gratitude during Best Buddies’ annual Friendsgiving at the Rhode Island Transition Academy in 2022.
Below:
In Fall 2022, the Women’s Basketball team welcomed Best Buddies members onto the court, sharing drills and fostering a sense of community.
The RWU Best Buddies meet on campus to hang out, have lunch or do seasonal activities like Friendsgiving or holiday-cookie decorating, play yard games or hold a line-dancing party, Santoro said. It’s also an opportunity for RITA students to gain college life experience and access to resources they needed as college students.
“It was all about having someone in your corner that you know can support you and help you through something,” said Santoro, who had previously volunteered in Helping Hawks, an RWU club where student-athletes support Rhode Island Special Olympics athletes. While working in an internship at RITA obtained through RWU’s Center for Career and Professional Development, Santoro saw the opportunity to form the Best Buddies partnership with the organization and serve its program participants, 18- to 22-year-olds with individualized education

plans, in another meaningful way. The club’s first year started with about 80 students from RWU involved, and nearly doubled to 120 members by its second year. It’s no wonder with the fun activities they held, and the huge turnout from the Athletics Department. Santoro played on the Women’s Tennis team, and many student-athletes served on the executive board and joined as club members.
A favorite event featured joining basketball practices, where club members were shown drills by Kelly Thompson, the Women’s Basketball Head Coach, and Michelle Spreda, the Women’s Basketball Assistant Coach at the time. Club members get to shoot hoops with the Women’s Basketball team, and then later go to their games to cheer them on. It became a yearly tradition that everyone looked forward to, Santoro said.
“Being an athlete myself, I know it’s more than athletics,” said Santoro, adding that sports should also have an element of service and connecting with the community. Best Buddies “was a great way to bring everyone together.”
Santoro, who graduated with a B.A. in Psychology and minor in American Sign Language, is pursuing a master’s in social work, with a concentration in autism and neurodiverse learners, at the University of Saint Joseph. She said she will continue to build on her experiences and skills she learned through Best Buddies as she aims for a career in transition-age social work or case management, working with young adults.
Creating the club chapter helped her lean into her professional path and it was also rewarding, Santoro said: “Knowing that it does make a difference, and it is fun—it’s just a lot of hard work to get there.”
NATIONAL CHAMPS!
The 2023-24 Sailing team captured the 2024 Open Team Race National Championship, adding a third national title in program history. The other national victories included an open team race championship in 2011 and the singlehanded championship in 2009. The Sailing team also had a commanding performance in the Open Fleet Race Championship, qualifying in the number-one spot in the semi-finals and 11th overall in the finals, as well as an incredible 50-point reversal during the Women’s Dinghy Championship semi-finals to make it to finals. In addition, the entire team racing lineup was named ICSA All-Americans for the 2023-24 season. Through hard work, incredible coaching, and with a unique waterfront training facility, RWU Sailing has become known as a powerhouse team racing squad and for developing sailors at a faster rate than other institutions.

CONGRATS TO THE 2024 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS
Women’s Field Hockey captured their first CNE championship title in program history.
Men’s Basketball made history after winning a conference championship (their last conference title was in 1999) to earn their first NCAA berth.
Men’s Golf won their second straight conference title, sending the team to their first NCAA championship.
The Men's Track & Field team also got a top finish, taking home their second straight conference title.
The Men’s Cross Country team won their fourth straight CNE title and sent two runners to the NCAA championship.
TASSEY SPRINTS PAST THE COMPETITION
RWU Men’s Cross Country member Nathan Tassey has achieved incredible feats of athletics performance and racked up accolades over the last two years. The junior Applied Mathematics major captured fourth place in 5000m at the NCAA Track & Field Championship in May, as well as another fourth-place finish at the NCAA Cross Country Championship in November. Tassey became a two-time All-American in the two sports, earning the first All-American Honors in the RWU Cross Country program history. Among his accolades, he has also run the fastest 8K in program history, earned CNE Runner of the Year honors, and U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Association National Athlete of the Week.

Nathan Tassey made history as the first two-time All-American in cross country and track and field, while capturing two fourth-place finishes at NCAA competitions last year.
FROM THE CLASSROOM TO THE COURTROOM
Former teacher becomes first judge of color, openly LGBTQ judge on Rhode Island’s federal court.
As a high school teacher in Providence public schools for nearly a decade, Melissa DuBose L’04 taught United States history and civics, helping students understand how the law applied to them.
For the last decade, she has worked in the legal field and as an associate judge with the Rhode Island District Court, where she helped the parties that came before her understand the judicial process. Then, in January 2025, she became a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for Rhode Island, serving as the first person of color and the first openly LGBTQ judge in court’s history.
She was launched into her new career path while teaching high school, when a favorite student of hers murdered another young man. From that incident, DuBose realized that, “as close as I was with my students, I didn’t realize what type of real pressure they were facing out in the community.”
Her students asked many questions about the criminal justice system that she could not answer, and DuBose had questions herself: “How do we support our students? How do we help explain how the judicial system works for our students? And I, quite frankly, didn’t have really good answers. And so it was at that moment that I made the decision that for me to be a better advocate for my students, I should pursue a career in law.”
LEARNING TOGETHER
While still teaching high school during the day, DuBose enrolled in the evening division at RWU’s School of Law. Throughout that time, she shared her own legal lessons and experiences in her classroom.
A member of DuBose’s RWU Law study group connected her with the Rhode Island Office of Attorney General, where she went to work after graduation. Her students were surprised—and at first disappointed—when she told them she would be prosecuting juveniles. “Ms. DuBose,” she recalled them telling her, “we thought you were going to be a public defender.” It was an opportunity for her to teach them about the role of prosecutors in providing justice and supporting victims.
After a few years with the attorney general’s office, DuBose took a position as senior legal counsel for Schneider Electric, a global energy management company. She worked there for more than 10 years before she transitioned to the judiciary.

SERVICE ABOVE ALL
The same empathy that led DuBose to law school to better serve her students is evident in her work on the bench. When litigants talk about their experience appearing before her, she said they often remark, “‘I was heard, and I understand exactly why she’s ruling the way that she’s ruling.’ That’s something that has served me well in all of my jobs, but particularly as a judicial officer.”
As she enters the federal judiciary, the former civics and history teacher grasps the importance of the role she will be taking. “Right now, we’re in a phase where there are a lot of people who have lost faith or are feeling a bit skeptical about the court and its impartiality,” DuBose said. “So I think that one of the things that I’m most excited about is to not only work in a way where I hope I can start instilling, and re-instilling, some faith in the institution of the judiciary, but also to look at the legal questions in the context of not only where we are, but what are the traditions that we need to preserve.”
RWU LAW TO AMPLIFY MISSION AND STORY TO NATIONAL AUDIENCE
RWU Law has received a $750,000 gift from the Hassenfeld Family Foundation to expand awareness of the law school’s mission and public service work in Rhode Island and the greater Northeast region. This gift will allow RWU Law to implement a comprehensive three-year marketing and communications plan to position the school as a recognized leader in legal education and public impact. This initiative will amplify RWU Law’s story to a national audience, demonstrating how we are training ethical lawyers and public servants who will be the changemakers leading our communities.



INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION OF ATTORNEYS
At the Mandell-Boisclair Justice Camp, RWU Law introduced students in grades six through nine to the justice system through interactive lessons from law professors and the area’s leading attorneys and judges, a spirited debate competition, tours of the R.I. Superior and Supreme courts, and more hands-on learning opportunities. Twenty young Rhode Islanders participated in the summer camp at RWU’s Providence campus, instilled with a passion to pursue law studies and pathways to careers in the legal field.



LEGACY
Helps Design and Preserve the Future
With nearly 50 years of training leading practitioners, the Cummings School of Architecture is harnessing its alumni to take the school to the next level.
by benjamin daniel
During his studies, Joseph D’Oria was set on his career path by an internship through the architecture school, and now he is paying that back through a growing initiative of distinguished alumni returning to the Cummings School of Architecture to prepare students for careers in the built environment.
“My internship led me to my first job with Sasaki,” said D’Oria ’12, M’12, who graduated with a B.S. and Master of Architecture and now works as Building Information Modeling Director at design firm Morphosis. “It created the kinds of valuable opportunities and helped build the skills I use in my work and with my students.”

Aaron Marcavitch ’99 took graduate students to an active preservation project at Providence’s Thomas Hoppin House, where he demonstrated how historic materials were conserved or replicated, or new materials were being used to restore the building, for a Preservation Building Materials Technology course.
D’Oria and other alumni are part of the Cummings School vision to include its legacy in shaping the school’s present and future. Leaders in the architecture, preservation, and real estate fields, these esteemed practitioners are mentoring the next generation by teaching studios and courses and taking part in critiquing student work and significantly expanded offerings of internships, career fairs, and company visits with leading firms from Boston to New York City.
“Mentorship benefits students and practitioners,” said Stephen White, Dean of the Cummings School of Architecture and member of the American Institute of Architects. “Our alumni are having a global impact, from designing a new building on the RWU campus to supporting environmental mitigation efforts in Rwanda. Now they’re helping our students prepare for what’s next.”
CONSTRUCTING A STRONG FOUNDATION
While there has been a long history of alumni engagement in the architecture school and other RWU schools, this past academic year saw the most ever returning to support CSA students and bring the school to greater heights of excellence. The Fall 2023 and Spring 2024 architecture studios each had more than 50 alumni provide professional reviews of undergraduate and graduate students’ work.
Numerous alumni represented their firms at the Cummings School-Center for Career and Professional Development Job Fair in the spring, and more welcomed students to network with them and meet firm leaders during the now-annual Firm Crawls.
Another 11 alumni—leaders in diverse fields across design, planning, and preservation—taught as Teaching Firms in Residence (starting with Eric Weyant ’00, Jeremy Jamilkowski ’09, and Tom Barker ’14, M’16, all Architecture alumni, of Amenta Emma Architects in Fall 2023), as well as graduate studios and courses throughout the year and continuing this Fall 2024. Such high alumni teaching participation is a testament to the quality and impact that the school has achieved in nearly 50 years of teaching, particularly in architecture and preservation.
“Throughout my time in the field, I’ve been excited about bringing students to the work I’m engaged in,” said Aaron Marcavitch ’99, B.S. in Preservation, Director of Economic and Community Development for the City of Enfield, Conn. Marcavitch, who taught the Preservation Building Materials Technology Workshop and whose adjunct teaching is funded by a grant from the Southerneastern New England Educational and Charitable Foundation (SNEC), described historic
preservation as “a dynamic world that requires lots of different disciplines.” He lauded both the architecture school’s commitment to educating the whole student and the faculty who encourage the adoption of multiple philosophies and disciplines from several fields.
Vital Albuquerque ’01, a Bachelor of Architecture alum, is a Senior Associate at the global firm Perkins&Will Boston office, which serves as one of the school’s Teaching Firms in Residence and was also part of the design team for RWU’s Campus Center project on the Bristol campus. In co-teaching with his Perkins&Will colleagues, Albuquerque delivered an experiential learning experience for students on the Campus Center design and planning process.
“One of the best things about the architecture program is it provides a great, well-rounded education,” Albuquerque said. “Professors push you creatively and impart valuable skills you learn and continue to improve throughout your career.”
“Architecture is a practice-based discipline,” White said. “We celebrate the balance of scholarship and practice that helps create exceptional architects.”
D’Oria and Chris Winkler ’13, M’13, an Architecture program alum and senior associate at the firm Sasaki, co-taught the online graduate course Computer Applications for Pro Practice. Both praised the value of a cross-disciplinary educational experience and how it helped them become better professionals and educators.
“I learned about the value of hard work and discipline as a student at RWU and, because I’ve been here, thought I could share a bit of that with other students,” Winkler said.
SHAPING THE FUTURE
The Cummings School is among a small group of leading universities training the most architects in the northeast, along with practitioners in the preservation and real estate development fields. Starting from day one in their programs, CSA students are invited into “a community that they are part of throughout their studies, internships and in the professions,” White said.
“In 2011, we began inscribing our graduates’ names on plaques in the Alumni Circle,” he said. “They’re permanently part of our history, at the heart of our building.”
Each of the alumni who returned to teach at the school’s invitation continues a tradition and passion to support the institution that set them on their paths.
“We owed it to Roger Williams to come back,” said Chris Hardy ’12, M’16 in Architecture, Design Director for international architecture and design firm MASS Design Group. Hardy, along with wife and colleague Emily Goldenberg ’10, M’12, also an Architecture alum and Design Director for MASS Design Group, taught a section of the Graduate Architecture Design Studio as a Teaching Firm in Spring 2024. “We were able to frame our studio goals based on our experiences at RWU and our work,” Goldenberg said.
Many of the alumni serving as faculty members grow professionally, as much as they give to the students.
Chris Hardy ’12, M’16 (left) and Emily Goldenberg ’10, M’12 (right), both of MASS Design Group, taught a course last year as part of the Cumming School’s Teaching Firm in Residence program.
One of the best things about the architecture program is it provides a great, well-rounded education... Professors push you creatively and impart valuable skills you learn and continue to improve throughout your career.
– Vital Albuquerque ’01

and was part of attracting them back to teach here over this past year.
– Stephen White, Dean of CSA
CAREER SUCCESS
The Cummings School of Architecture boasts a 100% internship placement rate and a 100% job placement rate for graduates within six months of graduation. There is a thriving spirit of community that uplifts our students, faculty, and alumni. This spirit contributes to these and other distinguished alumni doing tremendous work in practice,
“It’s an opportunity to revisit my earlier career with a new, experienced perspective and appreciate what I experienced,” Albuquerque said. “Examining real-world issues with students can lead to creative decision making and help keep my thinking fresh.”
Goldenberg and Hardy, who spent four years in Rwanda on a project that became the Rwanda Institute for Conservation Agriculture, spoke of deepened, substantial connections to other communities and greater pride in the work their RWU educations made possible.
“We recognize the value in giving back, providing connections, and helping students see themselves in us,” Hardy said.

A COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE
Each alumni educator brought their work, professional, and educational experiences with them into the classroom.
“My work on net zero carbon design is directly informed by the principles I learned at RWU,” Albuquerque said.
“The Rwanda project showed us that we each have the opportunity to make a difference,” Goldenberg said. “Architects have a big role in shaping the world,” Hardy added.
As communities continue their journeys toward sustainable living, preservationists like Marcavitch and his students can find themselves leading the charge. “[For] many students…the learning they had in this class will allow them to effectively think about preserving and, where necessary, upgrading historic structures,” he said.
Winkler’s work on sustainable projects in Central and South America highlights the value of a diverse set of skills practitioners can continuously improve through their professional development. “I learned about the value of a sustainable approach to this work as a student and continue to learn as a professional,” he said.
Ultimately, the communities being created and supported continue the tradition of excellence that animates their work, their scholarship, and their commitment to CSA and future students and practitioners.
“There is a thriving spirit of community that uplifts our students, faculty, and alumni,” White said. “This spirit contributes to these and other distinguished alumni doing tremendous work in practice, and was part of attracting them back to teach here over this past year. Their example and their being here encourages current and future students to be interested in careers like theirs, and to imagine their own significant futures.”
Interested in Providing Internships and Employment?
Companies interested in partnering with Roger Williams University on internships and employment opportunities for students and graduates can contact the Center for Career and Professional Development at ccpd@rwu.edu or (401) 254-3224.
Students Network, Tour Leading Firms at Annual Firm Crawl
The Cummings School of Architecture brings its students on an annual firm crawl, visiting leading firms from Providence to Boston and New York City. Students tour multiple firms in one day and hear from company leaders and practitioners across architecture and preservation about their career pathways and current projects.




Annual Firm Crawl

DIVING INTO YEARS 50
OF MARINE BIOLOGY
With state-of-the-art facilities on the shores of Narragansett Bay, expert faculty leading cutting-edge research, and plenty of opportunities for hands-on learning in the classroom and out in the field, the Marine Biology program at Roger Williams University has been making waves since its founding in 1974. For the past five decades, the program has grown from a full-time faculty of four to 18 leading faculty experts, with expanded curricular and research opportunities for undergraduate students. Here, Brian Wysor, Interim Dean of the Feinstein School of Social and Natural Sciences and former longtime Marine Biology chair, discusses the program’s 50-year evolution and what makes it a splashing success.
Q & A
WITH BRIAN WYSOR
How has the Marine Biology program evolved over the past 50 years?
From the start, the program has always emphasized experiential education and project-based learning, getting students out into the field. Over the years, the number of opportunities for research has greatly expanded. Traditionally, Marine Biology students studied just organisms, but as we have evolved the curriculum, we have incorporated topics like fisheries, aquaculture, resource management, and molecular biology, allowing us to address questions about biodiversity, ecology, and environmental contamination. Introducing aquaculture and aquarium science created opportunities to think more about conservation biology, and as we look to solutions related to the Blue Economy, we’ve begun interdisciplinary partnerships with other schools at RWU. We’ve also taken advantage of our waterfront location to expand our operations in quite meaningful ways for both shellfish aquaculture and getting our students out on the water for research.
What opportunities do Marine Biology students have to engage with research?
Our students are introduced to authentic research and data analysis in their first semester. With the amount and variety of research led by our expert faculty, there is ample opportunity for students to be involved—including the summer or a study abroad excursion. We have 20 to 30 students per semester engaged in faculty-mentored research and most get several semesters of experience. Older students have the opportunity to build their expertise by training newer students in the lab; it’s so impressive when a student presents at a conference without their advisor and returns with an award. Our students soar in their fields after RWU because of the training and opportunities they have here.

How does RWU’s strategic oceanfront location contribute to Marine Biology research?
Studying Marine Biology in the Ocean State is a no-brainer. The ocean is our lab. We have state-of-the-art facilities and equipment that allow us to launch research right from our campus. Students have access to the Wet Lab, the Aquatic Diagnostic Laboratory (ADL), the Microbial Biotechnology Laboratory, the Luther H. Blount Shellfish Hatchery, and RWU’s own aquaculture farm on campus, where we grow our own FerryCliffe oysters, quahogs, and more. Our waterfront campus is a field research station, with a Learning Platform right on Narragansett Bay, as well as an experiential learning and research vessel outfitted with advanced marine research equipment. Soon we’ll have a histology lab (microanatomy microscopy) as well. All of these spaces provide transformational real-world learning opportunities that define our program. Students can walk out the door, collect specimens, and bring them back into the lab to study. One of the best responses I hear from my students is that they feel like scientists.
What’s next in store for the Marine Biology program?
We will continue to grow our research capacity and curriculum, with new opportunities for addressing important global issues such as climate change, overfishing, and sustainability. The Center for Economic and Environmental Development (CEED) and the ADL are particularly positioned to make major contributions in the aquaculture industry, specifically in disease mitigation and microbial product development. The program is poised to engage in more interdisciplinary research by partnering with other schools and programs—particularly Business, Engineering, and Food Science—to problem-solve these critical issues. In addition, we are developing new programs in collaboration with The Aquarium Vet to launch a new undergraduate certificate and graduate program in Aquarium Science for the 2025 academic year.

in upwellers on the RWU Learning Platform.
RWU MARINE BIO GRADUATES
UTILIZE THEIR DEGREES ACROSS A WIDE RANGE OF OPPORTUNITIES, INCLUDING:
CAREERS
• Research fisheries biologist at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
• Animal trainer at the New England Aquarium
• Microbiology researcher at Smithsonian Marine Station
• Research technician at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
• Restoration technician at Coral World Ocean and Reef Initiative
• Scientist at Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
• Research technician at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
• President and founder of Sipson Island Trust, Inc.
• Senior research associate at Brown University
• Assistant professor at University of Calgary
GRADUATE AND DOCTORAL PROGRAMS
• Ph.D. in human pathobiology at Brown University
• Ph.D. in coral immunology at Texas State University
• Ph.D. in coral microbiology at Florida Atlantic University
• California Institute of Technology
• Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University
• Georgia Institute of Technology
• University of Maryland
• Sonoma State University

From Astrangia poculata to zooplankton, our Marine Biology faculty are world-class experts in a diversity of areas.
A marine ecologist, Sean Colin studies how the morphology of zooplankton— mostly jellyfish and comb jellies—affects how they function and ultimately how that contributes to their role in the ecosystem.
Robert Holmberg ’12 researches the effects of climate change, including ocean acidification and warming, on larval bivalve survival and physiology. He trains students in shellfish aquaculture and hatchery techniques.
Marcie Marston investigates the ecology, genetics, and evolution of cyanophages—viruses that infect and subsequently kill unicellular photosynthetic cyanobacteria—in Narragansett Bay and explores the mechanisms by which cyanobacteria can become resistant to viral infection.
Studying the temperate coral Astrangia poculata, Koty Sharp explores the response of the coral microbiome to environmental disturbances, the impact of microplastics pollution on animal microbiomes, factors that regulate and organize animal microbiome stability and resilience, and more.
A trained fisheries ecologist, David Taylor studies anthropogenic effects on marine and estuarine ecosystems, investigating the presence and effects of persistent and emerging contaminants in both commercial and recreational fisheries, specifically addressing toxins such as mercury and PFAS.
Paul Webb’s expertise lies in the behavioral and physiological ecology of marine vertebrates, especially marine mammals, including population studies and behavioral observations of local harbor seals.
Brian Wysor’s focus is on the species richness of seaweed in both Panama and Rhode Island, establishing inventories to evaluate whether the distribution of species is changing over time as a result of human disturbances such as global climate change, human-assisted transport, pollution and habitat destruction.


LEAVING NO ONE BEHIND
RWU’s Extension School and School of Law provide critical educational programming and legal services for the justice-impacted community
Meko Lincoln grew up in south Providence in a neighborhood steeped in poverty, drugs, and violence. Just months after he was born, his father was incarcerated for murder and his only contact with him was occasional visits to the prison. His mother struggled to raise four boys on her own, and when Lincoln was 12 years old, he started using drugs. Two years later, he was charged with possession of crack cocaine, landing him in a juvenile correctional facility. By the time he was 21, he began serving the first of 16 prison terms for robbery, assault, and possession—amounting to a total of 17 years behind bars.
BY CLAIRE CURRY

While he was incarcerated, Lincoln recognized that education would be his path to a better life once he was released. He enrolled in the Prison Correspondence Program from Roger William University’s Extension School (formerly University College) and earned a Case Management Certificate—an achievement that later unlocked the door to additional academic accomplishments at RWU, including an Associate of Science and Bachelor’s in General Studies in Social Science. In January 2025, at the age of 52, Lincoln will be awarded a Master of Arts in Community Development from the Extension School (RWU EXT).
“The support that I’m getting is enormous,” Lincoln said about the programs that have made it possible for him to become a first-generation college graduate. “In my early 20s, I didn’t have any direction in life—no goals, no focus, and no one to guide me. Now, I have professors who are teaching me what it means to participate in society. They have given me direction.”
Launched in 2019, the Prison Correspondence Program—a collaboration with the nonprofit Reentry Campus Program—provides technology to justice-involved individuals to complete coursework for professional certificates in case management and criminal justice through RWU EXT. The program is one of several initiatives of the Extension School’s growing leadership in providing access to higher education for the justice-impacted community.
For Lincoln, the experience opened the door to a new career. Today, he is the men’s program director at Amos House, a nonprofit social services agency that provides housing and reentry support for formerly incarcerated individuals and those struggling with substance abuse and mental health issues. He was paroled there himself, and shortly after was hired as a custodian, promoted to case manager, and then promoted again to his current position.
“When I was introduced to the Prison Correspondence Program and later enrolled at Roger Williams University, I thought it was a good
Meko Lincoln has had a transformational experience through education, earning his first credentials while incarcerated for a 17-year sentence through the Extension School's Prison Correspondence Program. He then pursued an associate, bachelor's, and master's degree from RWU EXT, opening the door to a career in helping the justice-impacted community.
idea to embark on this career path and use my lived experience to help other people pull through,” Lincoln said. “Some individuals do not value themselves, and I was one of them. I can identify with what they’re going through, and I help them try to realize their worth.”
In addition to his academic credentials, Lincoln is a State-Certified Peer Recovery Specialist, Certified Community Health Worker, and Licensed Chemical Dependency Professional. In these capacities, he works with individuals, but he is also deeply committed to affecting change more widely, by “breaking down barriers and repairing communities,” as a member of the state of Rhode Island’s Opioid Settlement Advisory Committee and Criminal Justice Policy Board.
DECADES-OLD PARTNERSHIP BRINGS EDUCATION INSIDE THE WALLS
RWU’s history of delivering educational programming to justice-involved individuals in partnership with the Rhode Island Department of Corrections (RIDOC) dates back nearly five decades.
In 1975, Roger Williams College received a grant from the U.S. Office of Education to expand “a successful two-year effort to increase access to continuing education and community services for the Rhode Island offender/ex-offender populations,” stated an article in the campus newspaper, The Quill, in October 1975. “For the past two years, the Special Projects staff has been engaged in constructing effective institutional change within the Adult Correctional Institutions, providing individualized college-level learning activities through which a select group of inmates and ex-offenders could work toward their B.A. degree.”
Today, RWU EXT continues to deliver postsecondary education to the incarcerated community, and the breadth and reach of these programs are significantly expanding courtesy of a $5 million, three-year contract the RIDOC recently awarded the school.
“Roger Williams University has experience in being our partner behind the walls and [in] providing opportunities for the incarcerated population, so they understand our needs,” said RIDOC Director Wayne Salisbury, Jr. ’02, who earned his bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice at RWU. “The folks [who] are involved have taken it on as a life’s mission to make a difference.”
EXPANDING THE PROGRAM’S REACH
RWU EXT’s Prison Education Program brings faculty into three of the RIDOC’s six facilities, which serve a total population of 2,422. Students in the John Moran Medium Security Facility, Maximum Security Facility, and Gloria McDonald Women’s Facility can take courses leading to a Bachelor of Arts in Applied Psychology. This degree program was chosen for its versatility as the foundation for a wide range of careers, from case management, substance abuse counseling, and social work to market research, sales, and more.
This year, RWU EXT received accreditation from the New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE) which approved all six RIDOC facilities as licensed RWU educational facilities. As of the Fall 2024 semester, RWU faculty members are now teaching 12 courses behind the walls, on such topics as psychology, academic writing, criminology, and math.
Selby Conrad, Associate Professor of Psychology at RWU, was one of the first faculty members to participate in the program and has taught Positive Psychology, Counseling Theories and Skills, and Applied Research over the past three semesters. She said that her students take their courses very seriously, are engaged in class discussions, and do their readings diligently. “This is a population that may have had challenging interactions with the education system and now they are choosing to come back to it,” she said. “The openness and willingness to learn is amazing.”
RWU EXT is also aiming to broaden its reach to RIDOC’s other facilities through remote-learning technology.

Associate Professor of Psychology
leads the Applied Psychology degree program that is being taught at the RI Department of Corrections facilities.
Roger Williams University has experience in being our partner behind the walls and [in] providing opportunities for the incarcerated population, so they understand our needs” The folks who are involved have taken it on as a life’s mission to make a difference.
– Wayne Salisbury, Jr. Director of RIDOC
While some students have limited access to technology—including JSTOR, a digital library, and tablets for a coding class—advancing technological capabilities is a priority to Salisbury. “Part of the plan going forward is to… broadcast from one place and have [students in] five different buildings in the same classroom at the same time,” he said. Salisbury added that ultimately, it will prepare incarcerated individuals for life outside of prison by developing the skills to secure employment, including digital literacy.
The Prison Education Program will also roll out additional degree and certificate programs as well as certifications for trades, such as electrical technicians, plumbers, and food service managers later this year.
THE RIPPLE EFFECT
Numerous studies reveal that educational programming in prisons has a powerful impact on changing lives and reducing recidivism.
“It has a significant impact on preparing them to return to society,” Salisbury explained. “It’s important to offer them the opportunities that they may or may not have been given prior to being incarcerated so that we set them up for success.”
Salisbury recalls many individuals who are now leading productive lives. One person received a full scholarship to Harvard University to pursue a Ph.D. Another is working toward his master’s degree. Many others are running successful businesses—trucking, landscaping, and construction companies with multimillion-dollar contracts. “It’s incredible what they’ve been able to do,” he said.
After serving time—sometimes sentences of a decade or two—newly released individuals are thrown into a world that looks very different from the one they knew before. Facilitating that transition can mean the difference in their success in transcending past indiscretions and beginning life anew.
Pivot the Hustle is a 16-week program that prepares incarcerated individuals who will soon be up for parole for life beyond the walls. Since its launch in 2015, 142 students have graduated from the program, which offers a series of life-skills and career-readiness courses.
These educational and reentry initiatives are also influential in breaking cycles that have passed through generations. Since his release, Meko Lincoln married and welcomed two children to his family, which also includes a daughter and three grandchildren. His 3-year-old son, now in preschool, accompanied Lincoln to the podium when he was awarded his associate degree.
“Instead of coming to visit me in prison, I want this to be normal practice for him, contributing to society and being a person of value,” Lincoln said. “This is the precipice upon which the chains are broken. My father was incarcerated, then I found myself incarcerated. The chain had to be broken.”
NAVIGATING LIFE FROM THE INSIDE OUT
In addition to providing educational programming, RWU offers incarcerated individuals pro-bono legal counsel through its School of Law.
Though many need assistance in dealing with divorce, child custody, and public benefits, for example, incarcerated individuals, who have a legal right to counsel for criminal cases, do not have the same right for their civil legal needs.
“There was no access to civil legal assistance for prisoners in Rhode Island until RWU’s law school opened its Civil Legal Clinic” in 2014, explained Suzanne Harrington-Steppen, Co-Director of RWU’s Civil Legal Clinic, Clinical Professor of Law, and Associate Director of Pro Bono Programs.
RWU attorneys and law students have since been providing such services to individuals in ACI facilities. Two to three attorneys and a handful of law students visit the prison biweekly to answer questions, conduct intakes, and assist with a variety of civil legal matters.
“The value to the clients we serve in having someone listen to their issues, treat them respectfully, and try to be helpful cannot be overestimated,” said Eliza Vorenberg, Co-Director of the Civil Rights Clinic, Clinical Professor of Law, and Director of Pro Bono & Community Partnerships. “We believe that the opportunity to be heard and to learn about their rights and how they can enforce those rights is empowering to them.”
To date, the clinic has served approximately 300 individuals and provided 3,000 pro bono hours of legal counsel. More than 50 law students have participated in the clinic.
“This is critically important not only for the communities we serve but for our law students who learn about legal practice and the desperate need for pro bono legal services,” Vorenberg said.

Meko Lincoln celebrates his graduation from the Reentry Campus Program with Brenda Dann-Messier, president of the Reentry Campus Program Board of Directors and former Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education at the U.S. Department of Education.
Right: Members of RWU Law’s Pro Bono Collaborative Civil Legal Clinic (from left to right) Daniella Molina-Mota, Wren Rodrigues, Professor Eliza Vorenberg, Ann Martinez, and Professor Suzy Harrington-Steppen are providing pro bono legal services at the Women’s Adult Correctional Institution during this school year.
There was no access to civil legal assistance for prisoners in Rhode Island until RWU’s law school opened its Civil Legal Clinic in 2014.
– Suzanne Harrington-Steppen, Co-Director of the
Pro Bono Collaborative Civil Legal Clinic

GUARDIANS OF CIVIL RIGHTS
More recently, RWU’s law school opened the Prisoners’ Rights Clinic, the brainchild of Jared Goldstein, Professor of Law, who serves as the clinic’s director.
“I was very excited with the idea that I could turn my interest in working on behalf of incarcerated people into a clinic where students would do the work under my supervision while helping people who really need it,” Goldstein said.
Among the 10 cases the clinic is currently handling is the suit filed on behalf of Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh, a Native American man who is seeking the right to wear a headband as a symbol of religious expression.
The suit was filed in January 2024 by the Prisoners’ Rights Clinic and the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Attorney General’s Office responded almost immediately, agreeing to let Pawochawog-Mequinosh wear a headband while the case was sorted out. “It’s a constitutionally protected right. Even incarcerated people are entitled to practice their religion and the state can only deny it if they have a really compelling reason.”
Goldstein hopes that the case inspires the development of a formalized process through which prisoners can submit requests for consideration of religious items.
I was very excited with the idea that I could turn my interest in working on behalf of incarcerated people into a clinic where students would do the work under my supervision while helping people who really need it.
– Jared Goldstein, Director of the Prisoners' Rights Clinic
Other suits the clinic is currently working on include allegations of excessive force, neglect of medical needs, and denial of mental health treatment.
As the only law school in the state, Goldstein said RWU’s Law school is filling a critical gap for work that “nobody else is doing.”
“There is such a need because there are people who are bringing cases that have real merit and they just don’t have a lawyer,” he said. “Our mission as a law school is to train students while working for social justice. We’re doing both in the clinic— working to make sure that the laws are enforced and that our students are educated by being involved in real-world practice.”

Meko Lincoln (back, center) instills the value of education in his children and grandchildren. He brought his son with him to the podium when he received his associate degree from RWU.
MY CULTURAL COMMUNICATION CREATIONS
Graphic Design students share their designs from a study-abroad experience in Japan
In the cities of Tokyo, Yokosuka, and Shimoda, 10 Graphic Design majors explored the visual culture of Japan and the history of U.S.-Japan relations as part of a course collaboration between the Graphic Design and Education departments that included an experiential global learning opportunity this summer. Upon their return, the young designers created projects to showcase the theme of friendship and international relations between the two countries, which they presented at the Japan-America Society of Rhode Island’s Black Ships Festival in August.

I love to travel but also know that it can be difficult. I wanted to create something that recognizes the excitement and challenges of international travel.
– Hannah Caple, a junior Graphic Design major and Global Communication minor

RWU Graphic Design majors don kimonos as part of an immersive cultural experience in Yokosuka, Japan, exploring how art and design transcend borders.



LEARNING ABROAD
Many RWU students study abroad for a week or a full semester, adding a rich academic learning opportunity and cultural experience while immersed in another country. These photos— all taken by students—illustrate their journey and cherished memories from recent study abroad programs.



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 20232024 fiscal year. We are deeply grateful for the generosity and commitment of our donors. Your contributions play a vital role in advancing our mission to provide a transformative educational experience. This honor roll is a testament to the incredible support we receive from alumni, parents, friends, and partners who believe in the power of education to change lives.
Each name listed here represents a story of dedication and belief in our vision. Your support enables us to offer scholarships, enhance academic programs, and create opportunities that empower our students to achieve their fullest potential. We are proud to recognize and celebrate your generosity, which helps us build a brighter future for our community and beyond.
Thank you for your unwavering support and for being an integral part of the Roger Williams University family.
KEY:
’00 Roger Williams University Alumni
L’ Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a
M’ Master’s Degree
P’ Parent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a
PL’ Parent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a
PM’ Parent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a
INDIVIDUALS
GP’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Alumnus/a
GPL’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University School of Law Alumnus/a
GPM’ Grandparent of a Roger Williams University Master Degree Alumnus/a
HD’ Honorary Degree Recipient
LHD’ Honorary Degree Recipient-RWU School of Law
Support from alumni, parents, and donors ensures that Roger Williams University and School of Law continues to thrive. Gifts of all levels enable us to offer scholarships, enhance academic programs, and create opportunities that empower our students to achieve their fullest potential. The following list recognizes individuals who made contributions including gifts, pledges, payments on prior year pledges, and gifts in-kind.
UNIVERSITY INDIVIDUAL DONORS
$500,000 AND UP
William S. Cummings HD’23 and Joyce M. Cummings HD’23
Mario J. Gabelli HD’92 and Regina Pitaro
Michael G. Tennyson and Eileen Tennyson
Timothy B. Yeaton ’80 and Susan Yeaton
$100,000 TO $499,999
Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11 and Elizabeth Brito P’11
Bradford A. Dean ’73 and Sandra Dean
Alexa Gagliardi
Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07 and Sarah J. Gagliardi
Margaret Gagliardi P’07 and John Gagliardi P’07
John J. Park and Donna L. Park
Anonymous (2)
$25,000 TO $99,999
Diana B. Bergquist P’17 and Lars R. Bergquist P’17
Claudia Calcagno
Louis R. Cappelli and Kylie Cappelli
Maria T. Chigas and Victor J. Chigas
Matthew Egan ’78 and Nancy J. M. Egan ’78
Linn Foster and Steven Freedman
William J. Geraghty ’78 and Kathleen Lynch
Thomas F. Gilbane, Jr. HD’23 and Mary Gilbane
Vincent P. Helfrich ’82 and Jeanne Helfrich
Les Hiscoe and Barbara Hiscoe
Patrick T. Jones Esq. and Mary E. Jones
J Scott Kilpatrick Esq. and Carolyn K. Kilpatrick
Lucas W. Laager ’23
Rudolf J. Laager P’23 and Alix M. Laager P’23
Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09 and Barbara S. Lavine
Mark S. Mandell, Esq. PL’11 and Yvette M. Boisclair, Esq. PL’11
Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11 and Sara Mandell
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
William F. McKeon ’84 and Polly McKeon
Elizabeth Moore HD’24
Stephanie L. Noris ’92 and Jonathan Noris
Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16
Scott W. Pray PL’16 and Carol H. Pray PL’16
Dr. Thomas R. Prohaska ’74
Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ’99 HD’18
Minoo E. Tehrani
Joseph D. Whelan, Esq. and Cathleen Whelan
Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq. and Antonia Zubiago
$10,000 TO $24,999
James R. Andrade ’77 ’79 and Deborah Andrade
Richard B. Bermont P’12 and Anne M. Levy
Troy R. Bilyeu and Kerri Ann Bilyeu
Charles W. Boos A.I.A.
Bethany J. Cavanagh ’96 and Jonathan D. Cavanagh ’97
Julie M. Cole ’99 L’04
Robert A. D’Amico II, Esq. and Renee D’Amico
Candace I. Domos ’80 and Robert Tellier
Robert J. Matthews P’23 and Julie A. Ellstrom P’23
Robert S. Engel, Jr. ’80 P’13 and Colleen E. Engel P’13
Julie I. Englund and Brian Fitzgerald
Eric R. Gheewalla and Kathleen A. Gheewalla
Domenic R. Grieco ’99 and Jaime L. Grieco
Adam Gross FAIA, Ayers Saint Gross Architects & Planners
Peter A. Heard ’80 and Beth H. Heard
Frank ’97 and Elizabeth Hood
David P. Iannuccilli
Katherine L. Ilaria ’11 and Maxwell R. Rivers ’10
Stephen L. Jackson Ph.D. and Sharon G. Jackson
Keith Johnson P’18 and Denise L. Johnson P’18
Elizabeth L. Kelly P’22 and John F. Kelly P’22
Mehdi Khosrovani A.I.A. ’80 and Rosemary Khosrovani
Dr. Babu Krishnamurthy P’22 and Dr. Ram V. Chavali P’22
Alison L. Laboissonniere Boyd L’06 and Bradford A. Boyd, Esq. L’08
Parker E. Lacoste ’08 and Rachel C. Chasse ’09
Barrie D. Lee ’70 and Mary Lee
Mark S. Mandell, Esq. PL’11 and Yvette M. Boisclair, Esq. PL’11
Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11 and Sara Mandell
Anita Manuck P’04 P’04 and William Manuck, Jr. P’04 P’04
Patrick J. Milner ’06 and Jodi L. Milner
Christopher J. Montalbano and Julie Montalbano
Marcia C. Morris, Esq. HD’19 and Arnold S. Hiatt
Andrea Murphy Jackson ’93 and Adrian Jackson
Michael C. O’Brien P’19 and Sharon M. O’Brien P’19
Walter J. Ramos ’83
Leah M. Saccoccio ’11
Amy M. Siemmao
John Silva ’89 P’12 and Debra L. Westgate-Silva ’91 P’12
James C. Smith and Pamela Kushmerick
Arlene Violet, Esq. HD’24
Jennifer Wims Hashway, Esq. L’11 and John P. Barylick, Esq.
Anonymous (4)
$5,000 TO $9,999
V. Anita Bahr
Scott E. Booth ’16
Matthew J. Carroll ’92 and Erika Carroll Kim G. Davis and Judith N. Davis
Amato A. DeLuca, Esq. and Kathleen Deluca
Marc DeSisto, Esq.
Dr. Jonathan ’10 and Hadley ’11 Enright
Zé Figueirinhas ’92 and Laura E. Figueirinhas ’95
Luis F. Gomez ’92
Stephen Hahn ’06 and Erin Hahn
George R. Hemond ’72 and Christine Hemond
Charles A. Henderson P’99 and Judy M. Henderson P’99
Julie K. Hyden P’11 and Kenneth A. Bergman P’11
Ryan Jabs ’12
Dana J. Kenningham P’20 and Dana Kenningham P’20
Rosemary F. Koch ’74 and Kevin Koch
Tracy L. Levey and James K. Levey
David J. Manafort, Sr. and Randi L. Manafort
James McCurdy
Brian P. McGrath ’10 and Kayla M. Morency ’12
Michael L. Mineau, Esq. L’09 and Nicole Mineau
Daniel P. Murphy, Jr. and Anna Whitton
Thomas S. Olsen ’11 and Mary E. Olsen
Young K. Park and Anja Langbein-Park
Todd L. Rechler ’93 and Stacey Oestreich
Mark Saccoccio ’83, P’11
James M. Shyer ’91
Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. ’80 and Barbara Stafford
Debra P. Stokes ’79 and Robert N. Kaplan
Jordan M. Stone and Sarah Lederberg Stone
Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12 and Lisa A. Taranto P’12
Philip B. Tedesco
Curtis ’94 and Heidi Verdi
Judith W. Vigar P’24
James Wrisley, Jr. ’01 and Laura Wrisley
Anonymous
$2,500 TO $4,999
Janet P. Atkins and Tarleton H. Watkins II
Anthony E. Autiello, Jr. ’74 and Deborah Autiello
Brett V. Beaubien L’16
Nicole Benjamin L’06 and Keith J. Benjamin
Gregory W. Bowman and Elizabeth Hamilton
Rodney A. Butler and Dionne L. Butler
Amanda M. Campbell, Esq. L’05
Kyle J. Casserino ’13
Rebecca Collins ’97, Collins Construction Co., Inc.
Barrett W. Costello ’99
Gordon S. Craig III ’94 and Kristen J. Craig
George R. Daubenspeck ’85 P’17 and Judy Favreau
Adam R. Dellemonico ’17
John A. Dorsey, Esq. L’10 and Christina A. Hoefsmit, Esq. L’10
N. Cabot Earle, Jr. L’06 and Christina A. Earle
Robert Egan P’24 and Colleen Egan P’24
Cynthia A. Elder ’87 and Robert Elder
Yvonne Farrell P’22 P’24 and
John W. Farrell P’22 P’24
Ryan A. Fletcher ’11
Stacey B. Foisy ’84 and Mark T. Foisy
Gerald Francese Esq.
Jacob G. Hallgren ’20
Adam G. Harz ’22
Bradford H. Huntley and Erin C. Huntley
Gregory S. Kimmel, Esq. L’97 and Lisa D. Kimmel
Missy Koppelman and Stan Koppelman
Michael A. La Scala ’83
Joseph R. Linnehan, Jr. and Anna M.
Linnehan
Heidi Maes
Sarah R. Mamula ’12
Deborah Marchini and Randall Forsyth
Christine N. McKenney ’92 and Wensley E. McKenney
Shawn McShay
Ioannis N. Miaoulis
Robert W. Page and Myra M. Page
Lisa Raiola and Waterman F. Brown VII
James P. Reardon ’13
Bruce M. Selya J.D. LHD’02 and Cynthia Selya
Kelsey B. Shakin ’19
Ronald J. Simoneau and Karen Simoneau
Michael J. Solomon and Kristin Solomon
Brian P. Stern and Jennifer Stern
Sheri A. Stuart ’86 and James Stuart
Robert L. Weisenreder and Carol Duquette
Michael J. Yelnosky and Laurie A. Barron
Allison R. Yount ’11 and Jacob Yount
Eric N. Zuena ’01
$1,000 TO $2,499
Pamela Abrams-Warnick and Craig A. Warnick
Kyle Adamonis ’82 and John Adamonis
Josephine J. Alves ’80 and David Alves
Kevin Amaral
John Benigni, Jr. and Suzanne Benigni
Mina Bergman G’11 and James Bergman
Laura A. Blackall and Dennis D. Blackall
Laurie Boucher
Michael T. Brady ’82 Traci B. Brady
John S. Brewer and Stephanie Brewer
Irena Briganti
Veronica C. Bulman ’08
Christopher Callagy
Kristen Callagy
Thomas J. Carroll P’86 P’88 P’92 P’93 G’17 and Mary E. Carroll P’86 P’88 P’92 P’93 G’17
Sharon L. Castelli ’86
Matthew J. B. Cate ’10
Andrew C. Cohen and Joyce R. Kulhawik
Diane Cumming P’24 and Herbert Cumming P’24
Robert A. D’Aiello ’73 and Jenny D’Aiello
The Dale Family
Jerry W. Dauterive and Janie W. Dauterive
Donna A. Desmarais and Anthony Demarais
Daniel D. Dewey ’71 and Virginia Dewey
Meghan E. Dockery-Cremins ’05
Michael Donnelly-Boylen
Earl H. Doyle, Jr. ’63 and Roberta Doyle
Diana M. Ducharme
Amy S. Dufrane and Vincent E. Dufrane
Lindsey D. Dunlop ’08
Louise Durfee LHD’09
Brian P. Eisenhower, Esq. L’09
Jillian L. Emmert ’14 and Matthew Emmert
Roseann Evans
Eleanor E. Farwell
Christopher D. Ferace ’89 and Nancy Ferace
Jack A. Ferguson ’14
David J. Ferland ’78
Robert Fetrow
Michael W. Field, Esq. L’97
Andrew C. Firmin ’99 and Leonarda Firmin
George H. Fisher ’87
Maureen C. Flynn P’24 and Sean K. Flynn P’24
Mark Gemma
Brendon Giblin ’00 and Robin H. Giblin ’00
Amy S. Hebb, Esq. L’06
Craig P. Hersh and Marcy B. Hersh
Michael S. Hollander ’08
Kiki Jacobs
Leyland B. Jeffers ’12
Tilo Kalski and Wiebke G. Kalski
Susan Kelley ’96
Matthew J. Kite ’06 M’08 and Kimsan Ngom
William Kollmer ’68 and Marianne Kollmer
Lorraine N. Lalli, Esq. L’01 and Brian M. Lalli
Karen LaMorge
John F. Lanahan and Claudine M. Lanahan
Peter Langan P’24
Alicia Lawless
Kevin M. Lieberman ’12 M’12
Melissa A. Long and James E. Long, Jr.
Kevin Lynch and Denise Lynch
Scott Mackey
Spencer A. Maguire, Esq. L’07 and Cary Maguire
Peter S. Margulies J.D. and Ellen M. Saideman J.D.
Ronald L. Martel ’70 P’22 and Candy Martel P’22
Jason Mastrangelo, Esq. ’98 L’01
Robert J. Mazaika P’12 and Sandra L. Mazaika P’12
Virginia B. McBride ’82
Rachel Mccormack and William D. McCormack
Dawn G. McDonough P’22
Garth V. McDonough ’93 P’22
James F. Mckenna ’77
John J. Michael P’01 and Diane L. Michael P’01
Brian S. Miller and Mary J. Miller
Keith A. Mills ’88 and Christine Gomes Mills ’88
Bobby L. Napier ’71
Jason Pannone
Laurel E. Petracca ’14 and Christopher A. Petracca ’14
Domenic P. Petroniro
Hannah E. Pirez ’12
Robert P. Pompei ’75 and Shirley Pompei
Richard H. Potter and Janice M. Potter
James F. Reardon P’13 and Susan T. Reardon P’13
Richard A. Renwick P’14 and Yvonne Renwick P’14
Lynn Retford P’24
Adam E. Risman ’16
Salvatore Rizzo
Jacqueline Rolleri, Esq. L’11
Christopher G. Roman
Larry J. Rowe P’21 and Nancy E. Rowe P’21
James A. Ruggieri, Esq.
Carolynn Santamaria and Jeffrey S. Shackett
George L. Santopietro, Esq. and Meryl Santopietro
Pauline Santoro
Michael A. Silverstein LHD’16
Robert C. Silvia ’63
Jody K. Smith ’87 and Susan Rampello-Smith
William E. Smith LHD’24 and Christine M. B. Smith
Frederick D. Souza and Sandra J. Souza
Douglas G. Staab ’88 and Elizabeth Staab
Nicholas S. Stael Von Holstein ’89
Andrew Staub L’17
Amy Sullivan Berkeley and Duncan Berkeley
Roger Summons
James Tackach
Thomas Tarolli
Melissa J. Teixeira P’24 and David Teixeira, Jr. P’24
Charles R. Thomas and Jennifer W. Thomas
Daniel Thompson
James Truscinski
Jeffrey S. Turner ’89 and Susan Turner
Mary C. Ward and Mark W. Ward
Adam D. Weilbaecher and Ariane K. Schratter
Thomas Wong
Patrice Wood P’17 HD’17 and Paul A. Pabis ’83 ’97 M’17 P’17
Adam E. Zerman ’22
Amy G. Zerman P’22 and Jared Zerman P’22
$500 TO $999
Christina W. Abisla ’11 M’13
Saad Ahmad, Esq. L’00
Renee G. Alevras
Elizabeth Aubin and Paul A. Aubin
F. Michael Ayles ’91 and Tricia Ayles
Laura Baldwin
David Balise ’16 and Alexandra Balise
Elizabeth A. Ball
Shari Bates
John A. Beyer, Jr. ’91
Katherine A. Black P’22
Danilo A. Borgas, Esq. L’14
Avery E. Boruch ’21
Sarah D. Boucher, Esq. L’20
Christopher T. Bova ’19
James T. Bova P’19 P’19 and Lori S. Bova P’19 P’19
Teresa P. Braga
Casey Brennan ’23
Kate Brezina
Molly E. Brigan
Laura Cabral ’03 and
Matthew P. Cabral ’16 M’19
Dennis Callagy and Susan Callagy
Amanda Callahan
Nancy Campbell
Ann E. Carlson P’15 and Steven P. Carlson P’15
Blair F. Carroll ’13
Denise Cassano
Allison J. Chase Padula and Paul J. Padula
Christopher Codeanne P’24 and Katherine L. Codeanne P’24
Lincoln T. Cohoon ’07 and Arynn Cohoon
Dennis Collinson ’80 and
Patricia A. Collinson
Shea Concrete
Richard J. Connor ’90 and Karen P. Connor
George P. Constas ’80 and Kim Goggin-Constas ’78
Cook Family
Raymond Cordeiro and Oryann Lima
David J. Costa ’90 and Tina Costa
Tyler B. Costello ’04
Stephen M. Cote ’06
Chris Cotoia
Christopher J. Dabek ’00 and Lauren A. Dabek
Doris De Los Santos ’20 and Lucas A. Sano
Fabricio DeSouza ’99
Paul DeVagno ’99
Joseph Di Scipio P’21 and Margaret M. Di Scipio P’21
Matthew L. DiGiacomo ’08
Stephanie Diorio L’19 and Christopher J. Diorio
Johann G. Donall, Esq. L’14
Melissa R. DuBose, Esq. L’04
Brian M. Eakes and Denise H. Eakes
Katherine Earle ’98 and Trevor Earle
Daniel S. Emmert
William Ernst
V. Douglas Errico and Lisa F. Errico
Eduardo T. Espinal and Jocelyn Rodriguez
Jacquelyn M. Farah ’15
Raymond A. Filippone ’72
Gregory V. Fisher and Jo Ann J. Fisher
Sandra D. Fitzgerald and John T. Fitzgerald
Betsy Fortin P’08
Rebecca Franks
James M. Galib and Christine L. Galib
Henry F. Galligan P’24 and Maura A. Galligan P’24
Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 P’24 and Douglas F. Garland P’22 P’24
Ernest Gaudet, Jr. ’70 and Shelah A. Gaudet
Jenna R. Giguere, Esq. L’11 and Vernon Giguere
Mitchell E. Glicksman and Marci Glicksman
Louis Goetting P’08 and Jeanne Goetting P’08
Jennifer Gonzalez, Esq. L’12
Jeanetta M. Griffin ’19
Jay Hambley and Jill Hambley
Laurie Hambley
Harold Horton ’55
Shariff M. Hassan ’94 and Celine Hassan
Anne G. Earle PL’06
Andy Goldberg ’91 and Lisa B. Mainville ’92
Rick Hart
Sheila E. Zipse
Cindy N. Zobian and Eric S. Zobian
Anonymous (3)
Katherine Henry ’04
Daniel J. Herbein ’14
Connor J. Hillemeir ’22
Michael Hirsh
Michael F. Holmes, Sr. and Judith Holmes
Andrew Horwitz and Alexandra K. Callam
Brian M. Hurld ’09
Hailey L. Hurlock ’16
Colin A. Hynes ’92 and Megan C. Hynes
Grant Jackson
Joyce Jamaudie and Karyn Gallivan
Michelle A. Kelly ’00
Martin King
Eric G. Koch ’80 and Elizabeth Koch
Katharine E. Kohm, Esq.
David R. Laflamme ’92
Joseph Land L’09
Mary C. Lenihan
Anthony R. Leone II, Esq. L’97 and Chelsie L. Horne
Joseph R. Loiselle ’98 ’10 ’14
James Loring, Jr. and Kelly A. Loring
Steven G. Malafronte, Jr. ’09
Stephanie P. Manzi
David Marois and Pam Marois
Laura A. Masterson ’19
Michael Matias
Karen M. Mccarthy ’03
Michael J. McGagh, Jr. and Heather Mcgagh
William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89
Kathryn F. Melton ’09 and Michael R. Melton
Eric H. Miller, Esq. L’01
Dr. Peter J. Mogayzel, Jr. and Cyndra R. Mogayzel
Paul J. Morrissey ’71
Jason D. M. Morton ’10
Kevin T. Murphy ’23 ’24
Thomas A. Murphy P’23 P’24 and Patricia Murphy P’23 P’24
Jonathan D. Neal P’21 and Susan M. Neal P’21
J. Scott Needham ’80 and Michelle Needham
Robin Nichols P’23 and Robert A. Nichols, Jr. P’23
Mitch O’Hara, Jr. P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18 P’24
and Lori C. O’Hara P’16 P’17 P’18 P’18 P’24
Douglas T. Ominsky, Esq. L’99 and Tara Ominsky
Garrett K. Paolella ’08
Susan L. Pasquarelli PM’08 P’05
Adam Peakes
Adam L. Peck P’23 and Rhonda S. Goldberg P’23
Claudette L. Peck P’22 and Richard C. Peck P’22
Perri C. Petricca
Randy Petroniro
James K. Porter and Joan Porter
William Railton and Courtney Railton
Daniel A. Ramos and Eileen Fisher
Gabriel Reale ’21
Michael A. Reuter ’03 and Alison A. Reuter
Justin R. Reyher ’93
Deborah Reynolds and Charles W. Reynolds
Michael B. Rich
James M. Richardson and Margaret E. Richardson
Matthew Rienzi
Robert E. Ryan ’76
Carol L. Sacchetti
Daniel R. Saunders P’19 and Elaine M. Saunders P’19
Craig Seminara
Paul M. Shaytin and Abbe G. Shaytin
Jackson N. Siefert ’13
Richard A. Sinapi
Jeffery L. Sitzer and Catherine A. Adlerman
Will H. Snyder and Heather E. Snyder
Joseph S. Sorcinelli ’88
Stephanie J. Soto, Esq. L’07
Eric Stokke
Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09
Paul A. Suttell LHD’11 and Mary W. Suttell
Todd M. Sweet ’91
Robert W. Swift
Anne E. Tait
Michael J. Tartamella ’00 and Bryanne M. Tartamella ’01
Louise Ellen Teitz
The Honorable O. Rogeriee Thompson LHD’10
Angela M. Tiebout ’01 and Anthony R. Tiebout ’02
Catherine Tobin ’09 ’14 P’07 and Robert Tobin P’07
Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05
William B. Trautman
Shawn Tubman and Dana M. Tubman
Michael P. Turner ’92 and Jodilyn T. Turner
Eric J. Valenti ’16
Dharni Vasudevan Ph.D.
Kelli L. Viera
James W. Vigar ’24
Michael A. Voccola, Esq. L’97 and Nancy Voccola
Michael J. Wagner, Esq. L’98
Mason Waring, Esq. L’07
Peter Wells
James G. Whiffen ’76 and Wadad Whiffen
Kelly J. White ’16
Brenden M. Whitten ’21
Joshua D. Wuerthele ’08
Anonymous (2)
$250 TO $499
Bryan Aaron and Erin M. Aaron
Nicole Accardi
Jennifer K. Agell ’19
Alec W. Anderson ’13
Paul M. Angland P’23 and Hazel C. Angland P’23
Jill E. Appel P’20
Joseph W. Arena, Sr. and Lynn Arena
Daniel J. Arket ’16
Collin Bailey J.D. L’08 and Angelyne E. Cooper-Bailey, Esq. L’08
Bre L. Baldino ’16
Stephen S. Ball and Lauren Ball Bandit
Kyle J. Baron ’14 ’16
Roger Bauman, Jr. P’23
Timothy E. ’83 & Brenda J. Baxter
Trevor L. Beard ’02 ’18 ’22
Colin R. Beaudoin ’18
Donald Beaulieu P’23 and Eileen Beaulieu P’23
Jacquelyn M. Beaulieu ’23
Paul Bender, Jr.
Susan T. Benevides ’16 P’19 and Joseph F.
Benevides P’19
Jeffrey Bento and Laura A. Bento
Joan K. Berlin and David P. Coelho
Kevin E. Borbee P’17 and
Sharon P. Borbee P’17
Mary J. Boyle, Esq. L’02
Michael G. Breard ’95
Christopher J. Brindamour ’88 and Lori A. Brindamour
Charles D. Brooks, Jr. and Jessica A. Brooks
Clement W. Brown, Jr. ’73 and Diane Brown
Colleen A. Brown, Esq. and John S. Berg
Alison Buckley and Michael Buckley
Katy Burt and Jonathan Burt
Breanne Buzay
Maribeth Calabro
Jennifer L. Campbell
Dr. Justin T. Camputaro ’99 and Robin Camputaro
Sean M. Carney L’17 and Alison B. Carney L’17
Cory R. Case ’17 and Kylie M. Burst ’16
Matt J. Cashman and Deborah Cashman
Emily Castellano
Keith R. Catanzaro
Keith C. Catone
Linnea K. Cedergren ’82
Cassandra H. Cerasia ’23
Mary R. Chase ’86 and Dean Chase
Wendy Cianci
Jared Cicchelli
Grizzel I. Clemetson
Edward C. Clifton LHD’21 and Audrey A. Clifton
Mark Cobbold and Amanda Cobbold
Justin Cochran ’18
Robert A. Cole P’23 and Jolene F. Hamil-Cole M’13
Jessica Collins
Kimberleah Collins ’97
Elizabeth Colt, Esq. and Kent M. Fields
Ken Coniglio
Paula Connolly
Chris A. Conti and Jane Conti
James A. Cook and Donna G. Cook
Travis P. Cooney ’06
Ryan P. Corry ’16
Fernando Costantini ’87 and Deborah J. Costantini ’85
Marjorie A. Crofts ’82 and David B. Carter
Kevin P. Croke
Joseph R. Cronin ’91
Tracy M. Dacosta ’92
Linda Dallaire and William A. Dallaire
Joseph Daly
Dr. Diya Das
Adam J. L. Davis ’09
Chris Dearborn and Lynne Nolan
Thomas M. Decatur ’85 and
Rhoda A. Decatur
William E. Defeo, Jr. and Michelle L. Defeo
Jason C. Degregorio and Audra K. Degregorio
Raymond S. Deleo II ’78 P’13 and Jane S. DeLeo P’13
Martin J. Dempsey, Jr. ’86
Matthew G. Dempsey and Susan R. Dempsey ’98
Charles A. Denault P’05 P’16 and Katharine C. Denault P’05 P’16
John J. Denio P’12 and Margaret M. Denio P’12
Michael L. Dern
Paul Dias
Suzanne DiCato
Andrew Dillon
Priscilla DiLuzio
Brent Doiglass
Lori Dorsey
William L. Douglas, Jr.
Joshua P. Dunn, Esq. L’12 and Cassandra L. Feeney, Esq.
Jennifer L. Dunseath
Michael L. Durand USA (Ret.) ’73
Stephen Duvel and Miriam E. Duvel
Paul E. Eichin PE ’58
Chris Elcock
David C. Ellison, Esq. L’12
Kate E. Enriquez
Louis N. Eveno ’94
Margaret Everett
Dana A. Exter ’11
Adam F. Famiglietti ’19
Kim Fenlon
Robert E. Ferguson, Jr. ’97
Craig M. Fisher IV and Kathryn M. Fisher
K. Heidi Fishman
Joseph Fitzsimons ’04
Catherine E. Flanagan
Patricia Fletcher
John J. Fogarty, Jr. and Kerry Fogarty
Dennis Folan
Elizabeth Fongemie
Tricia L. Forte, Esq. L’20 and Michael B. Forte, Jr.
Anaruth Franklin
Jerzy S. Fuja and Halina Fuja
Linda J. Gauvin ’96 M’17
Robert Germano, Jr. and Liz Germano
Marianne Geuss
Jason Gibbons
Stuart Gilfillen
Mike Goralski, Sr. and Kristin L. Goralski
Timothy S. Grady ’00
Charles L. Guilmette P’16 and Michele M. Guilmette P’16
Susan A. Guilmette
Bjarki Gunnarsson ’10
Ryan W. Haggerty ’05 and Martina L. Haggerty ’05
Jodi P. Haley and Sean P. Haley
Kerry Hamberger
Helen T. Hedberg P’13 and Brian D. Hedberg P’13
Randall L. Herko ’85 and Nancy Herko
Jeanne R. Hockenson ’96 and Charles W. Hockenson ’88
Claudia L. Hoddersen ’99
Darcie Hoogland P’24 and Steven M. Hoogland P’24
Leonard J. Hope and Stephanie B. Hope
Kara A. Humm, Esq. L’08 and Robert J. Humm, Esq. L’08
Alan R. Hyden
Franco Iannacito ’19 M’20
Rocco Iocco, Jr. ’97
Lauren C. Irons ’17 ’18
Marissa A. Jambor ’13
Elizabeth T. Jellison ’98 and Jeffrey R. Jellison ’98
William Jesmer P’09 and Mary Jo Jesmer P’09
Briana M. Johannesen ’09
Tate G. Johnson, Esq. L’08
John J. Karwashan, Esq. L’15
Meghan E. Kearney ’06 and
Matthew D. Kearney ’07
Eugene Kennedy ’90 and Nancy J. Kennedy ’90
Peter F. Kilmartin, Esq. ’88 L’98 and Kristine Kilmartin
Peter Klay ’92 and Marcy J. Klay ’93
Gus Kreuzkamp III ’92 and Kristen Z. Kreuzkamp
Brian J. Krue ’90 and Nancy Krue
Daniel T. LaBonte ’03 and Gretchen N. Labonte
David Lambert and Diane D. Lambert
Joseph Lanci
Gregory J. Laramie and Laura Laramie
David Lariviere and Sandy Lariviere
Salvatore R. LaScala and Andrea Lascala
Beth L. Lawton ’80
Christopher K. Leach ’08
Timothy D. LeBel ’15
Brandon A. Lehman ’14
Tom C. Leite P’24 and Caroline I. Leite P’24
Robin L. Levesque P’17 P’19 P’21 PL’24 and James W. Griffin, Jr. P’21 PL’24
Gabriel Levitt
Kenneth Lewis
Karin Liiv
Kelly Linares
Andrew K. Lippincott ’06
Lindsay L. Lobao ’02 and Joseph Lobao ’02
Elizabeth C. Longley ’08
John E. Lory and Joanne Friess
Alana K. Lovegren ’07
David R. Lynn ’89 and Darrien Gumkowski
Heather Madigan
Todd Magliato P’20 and Mary Ann Magliato P’20
Amandah K. Magnarelli ’95 and Kevin Magnarelli
Stephen Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23 and Laura K. Maguire P’23
Raymond Maker III ’74 and Nina Tremaglio
Brian N. Marshall P’24 and Susan M. Marshall P’24
Amanda J. Marsili and Gregg M. Marsili
Taryn Martel ’22 M’23
Kathleen A. Massa ’82 ’02 P’05 and Robert J. Massa, Sr. P’05
Jeffrey R. Massotti
David G. Mastovsky and Karen Mastovsky
Peter C. Matthes ’92
Joyce Maynard and David W. Maynard
John F. McCarthy III ’18 M’24
William H. McCarthy P’07 and Alice M. McCarthy P’07
Catherine K. McConnell P’24 P’24 and Timothy P. Bailey P’24 P’24
Robert A. McGinnis, Jr. ’20
Meghan K. McGrath ’08 and Douglas G. Cameron ’08
Ryan P. Mchorney ’10
Jimmy Mckenna
James McLaughlin and James Mclaughlin
Jill R. Mcmanaman ’19
Rick Mcnamara
Charlet Mcternan
Robin M. Meagher and Robert J. Meagher III
Susan J. Membrino P’24 and Kimberly A. Joly P’24
Danielle Mercier
Anthony Mercurio and Joan Campion
Douglas Mercurio, Esq. L’03 and Michelle Mercurio
Andrea L. Merolla-Simister, Esq. L’09
Harold M. Metts ’70 and Dayus L. Metts
Rick L. Michaud ’88 P’23 and Lori Michaud P’23
George R. Milot ’94 and Cheryl C. Milot ’93
Colleen Mooney ’20
Darwina M. L. Mosley ’81 and Kevin Mosley
Kayla L. Mountford ’16
Susan T. Mullen and John G. Mullen
Debra A. Mulligan and David H. Mulligan
Thomas G. Munson, Sr. ’11
Colleen P. Murphy J.D.
Elizabeth Murphy P’16 and Douglas J. Murphy P’16
Eric J. Murphy and Heather Murphy
Keith R. Murray
Christopher R. Nadeau ’10
Cris Navarro
Amy B. Ng P’24 and Thomas T. Ng P’24
Donald O. Nichols III P’21 and Jean M. Nichols P’21
Luke V. Nigro ’17
Katrina H. Norvell Ph.D.
Todd M. Nugai and Jennifer Nugai
Jillian M. O’Malley ’08
Louise O. O’Brien
Matthew T. O’Donnell P’24 and
Jenni O’Donnell P’24
Charles E. O’Hara IV L’08
Alison B. O’Loughlin ’07
Raquel M. Ortiz, Esq. P’23 and Michael D. Micale P’23
Ashley G. O’Shea ’07 and Michael P. O’Shea ’06
John E. Owen ’82
Matthew T. Paige ’13 and Melanie R. Paige ’13
Christian A. Palombo
Kelly A. Palombo ’00
Brandon C. Parrish ’07
Andrew E. J. Paul ’22
Dane A. Pedersen ’19
Judith A. Pegno P’17 and Steven A. Pegno P’17
Gregory Perry
Margaret J. Pickett
Mark F. Pilaro, Esq. L’01
Sonda M. Pimental ’93 and Jeffrey J. Pimental, Jr.
Steven A. Pitassi ’74 and Catherine Pitassi
Andrea M. Powell ’88 and Eric Powell ’89
Stephen R. Qualey and Kelly A. Qualey
Ronald Quicquaro
Christopher R. Quinn
William Quinn and Jill M. Quinn
Laura Raisanen King
Harry Raubens ’70 and Kathleen Raubens
Sarah Reusche and Marco Cross
Thomas M. Rickart P’11
Donald R. Ricklin ’72 ’76 and Leona Ricklin
George R. Riker and Jennifer K. Riker
Amy D. Risman P’16 and Henry S. Risman P’16
Jeremy M. Rix, Esq. L’15
Daniel W. Robbins, Jr. ’05 P’23 and Gena Bianco P’23
Debra S. Robbins P’23 and Scott A. Robbins P’23
Edward W. Robbins, Jr. ’04 and Christen E. Robbins ’06
Christopher G. Rocha ’94
Stephanie Roes
Andrew Rose
Miriam A. Ross, Esq.
John M. Rossi ’88
Kevin P. Rothschild-Shea ’90 and Jennifer R. Rothschild-Shea
Adam T. Royle ’21 M’23
Anthony S. Ruocco and Mary-Patrice Ruocco
Faith Rushnak P’24 and Scott Rushnak P’24
Betsey P’24 and Chris Santarcangelo P’24
Debra Saunders
Robert C. Schnoor
Siv Schultz P’22 and Paul R. Schultz, Jr. P’22
Jonah K. Schwartz ’16
Richard C. Seavey P’17 and
Susan L. Seavey P’17
Andre U. Segatti ’81 and Janet E. Segatti
Robert Senville
Daniel J. Shea, Jr. P’24 and Karen Shea P’24
Lyndon Sickey ’03 and Brandy Sickey
Erick Silva ’19
Ryan Simons
Matthew S. Slater ’94 and Kathleen Slater
Andrew D. Smith and Kara Smith
Joseph A. Smith and Alicia H. Smith
Ondine G. Sniffin, Esq. and Todd E. Sniffin
Joel C. Snodgrass ’85 and Alice Snodgrass
Robert Sobinski ’91 and Denise Sobinski
Kathleen D. Souza ’08 P’13 P’21 and
Edward B. Souza P’13 P’21
Andrew C. Spacone, Esq. and Carla Spacone
June S. Speakman
Nicholas S. Speranzo
Dom Spinola
Robin D. Stone and Melanie Stone
Theresa A. Striffler ’04
Jason V. Strollo ’19
Marc Stroum ’04
Daniel D. Sullivan and Ruth A. Sullivan
Lisa M. Sullivan P’16 and Richard J. Sullivan P’16
Patricia A. Sullivan and Jonathan A. Barnes
Sandra Sullivan P’15 and Vincent Sullivan P’15
Lauren T. Swensen ’13 M’19 and Matt T. Swensen ’13
Trevor R. Sybertz ’14
Alison Tainter P’24
Billy J. Taylor, Sr. and Amanda Peakes-Taylor
Monica Teixeira de Sousa
Matthew C. Terry ’94
Kathryn K. Testa ’15
Jennifer M. Theroux, Esq. L’04
Ann M. Thompson and James Thompson
Brighid S. Thompson ’05 and Kevin T. Thompson, Jr. ’06
Eric D. Thurston ’14
Amy Tiberio and Jason Tiberio ’21
Raymond F. Tiberio ’96
Elizabeth L. Touchette ’13
Theodore Touloukian
Brandon M. Tripodi ’14
Edward Troyano P’23 P’24 and Theresa A. Troyano P’23 P’24
Natalie D. Tuccillo ’20
Scott Turner and Mylissa Turner
Kevin E. Uniacke ’91 and Patricia S. Uniacke
Joseph D. Ustynoski, Esq. L’97 and Jeananne Ustynoski
Sean Varano and Tracy A. Varano
Matthew Vassallo ’99
Michael Vochis and Stella L. Vochis
Andrew B. Votaw ’88 and Kathleen Votaw
Brendan Walsh and Andrea Walsh
Marjorie C. Weinstein-Kowal P’24
Jonathan Wells and Rebecca Burhenn
Ann G. Winfield
Kathleen M. Wood ’88 and Robert C. Wood ’70
Dan A. Woods ’09
Arthur R. Woolverton and Sheri A. Woolverton
Sebastian Wordell, Jr. ’05 M’07
Amy L. Wotring ’05
Matt T. Woznyk ’21
Cecily K. Ziegler
Anonymous (4)
$1 TO $249
Caroline Aaron
Cheryl Aaron
Cody Abby
Lennart Aberg
Larkin V. Abitabilo and James E. Abitabilo
Ziad A. Achkar ’12
Yokaira Acosta
Lisa L. Adamopoulos
Barb Adams
Edgar G. Adams, Jr.
Sarah Adams
Doris Adesuyi L’20
Rich Afifi
Theresa M. Agonia ’13
Sandy Aguiar
Andrew F. Ah Kao P’24 and Colleen Ah Kao P’24
John A. Ah Kao ’24
Kimberly R. Ahern, Esq. L’09 and Jenna Lafayette
Scott Ahlman
Carolyne W. Ainsworth
Ellen Albanese
Virgina S. Albert ’17
Michael J. Alessi, Jr. and Catherine C. Alessi
Peter R. Alfieri
Pious Ali
John E. Alibrio ’71
Kimberly Aliotte L’13 and Phage Aliotte
Elizabeth Alison
Abdulmajed A. Aljabhan M’13
Thomas M. Allan ’74 and Maryanne M. Allan
Glenn D. Allen ’73 and Raylene Allen
Linda Allen
Dennis J. Allsop ’74
Rebekah Altman
Manuel L. Alves IV and Elsie M. Alves
Annie M. Alvord ’10
Bailee E. Amaral ’23
Keith G. Amelotte and Wendy Amelotte
Jake C. Amendola ’21
Tracy Andersen P’23
Christopher B. Anderson ’13
David B. Anderson, Jr. P’24 and Joanne Anderson P’24
Donald B. Anderson ’84
Kirsten Anderson
Martim M. G. Anderson ’18
Rebecca J. Anderson ’18
Richard Anderson
Eric H. Andler ’00
Celina Andrade L’21
Tyler Andrade ’22
William Andrake, Jr. ’78 and Debra Andrake
Mark Andreozzi
Robert C. Andreozzi ’11
Joshua R. Annis and Tina L. Annis
Gregory B. Annus P’24 and Maureen Annus P’24
Robert M. Annus ’24
Mary Anskat
David S. Anthony and Christine B. Anthony
Todd Anthony
Stephen Antoni
Eric J. Appenzeller ’22
Sharon Appleton
William Aquilante
Travis G. Arata ’22
Kevin Arcand ’05
Sofia Arcieri and Jerry A. Arcieri
Michael D. Arel ’24
Joanne E. Arena
Claudia Arguello
Angelica L. Ariola ’16
Jacqueline A. Armillotto ’82 and Ronald F. Armillotto
Alyssa Armstrong
Jim Armstrong
Stephen J. Arrico ’12
Jeannette L. Arrighi ’84
Christina Ash
Deborah J. Ash ’93 and Jeffrey R. Ash
Noah P. Ashe ’20
Robin R. Astor P’20 and G. Todd Astor P’20
James G. Atchison, Esq. L’07
John E. Atchison III
Marci Atkins
Paul Attemann
Lisa Auger
Douglas Austin, Jr. ’89 and Karen Wallace
Jim Austin and Elizabeth Austin
Peter M. Austin, Jr. and Lena A. Holleran-Austin
Carla V. Aveledo L’22
Steve Aveson and Karen Aveson
Samuel Avila ’22
Erica C. Avondoglio, Esq. L’09
Nibal N. Awad ’12 and Patrick M. Byrne ’11
Russell P. Azzarello ’19
Marianne J. Babcock
Kimberly Babuka P’20 and Richard D. Babuka P’20
Sharon Baccaro
Grace Baccay and Francis B. Baccay
Jamie Bachant, Esq. L’12
Charles Bacon and Debbie Bacon
Sarah Bacon
Yamil Y. Baez
Dina M. Bagley P’24 and Daniel R. Bagley P’24
James J. Bagley, Esq. L’12
Reiko Bagsby
Jamie Baker Higgins
Amy G. Baker P’22 and David F. Baker P’22
David F. Baker and Cathyann Baker
Ronald Baker and Allison Baker
Sarah G. Baker ’22
Adam Baker-Siroty ’01
Hannah Baldwin M’23
Deborah Baldyga
Julia Ball
Robert H. Ball
Therese Ballou
Carol Balma
Cindy Balog-Chavez
Michael P. Balsamo
Kristen Banno ’24
Edward P. Bannon ’79
Cece Baptista
Donovan Baptista
Marcus Baptista
Melisa Baptista
Susan Barasch
Nicholas P. Barbaria ’18
David Barber
Valdemar Barboza and Maria Barboza
Robert D. Barge, Esq. LHD’14
Todd M. Bariso P’23 and Jennifer Bariso P’23
Betsy D. Barker P’14 P’16 and Thomas A. Barker P’14 P’16
Kendra E. Barnard ’23
Robert H. Barnes ’73
Samantha Barnes
Tiffany Barney
Jeffrey Barone
Caroline Barrett
H. M. Barrett ’84
Christine M. Barretta ’95 and Frank Barretta
Diane M. Barrette
Jason Barrette
Jake R. Bartlein ’16
Emma W. Bartlett ’21
William E. Bates, Jr. and Shari Bates
Timothy W. Bath ’13
Jose F. Batista, Esq. L’14
Elizabeth J. Battaglia P’20
Gregory A. Battison ’18 ’19 and
Laura S. Battison ’18
Jean E. Bauer ’80 and Richard Bauer
Michael Bauer
David K. Baum ’83 and Jennifer Baum
Avery Bauman
Eric W. Baxter, Jr. M’23
Susan Bayley
Jordan P. Baylis ’23
Janeen Bazarian ’93
Thomas G. Beagan and Bea Beagan
David E. Beattie
Jane Beattie
Nicholas Beaubien
Nicholas D. Beaulieu ’23
Kristina A. Beck
Allison B. Becker ’13
Katharine E. Beery ’98 and William V. Beery
Christina M. Behm L’18 and Cory Behm
Larry Behrman
Joseph Bellitto P’23 and Kathleen Liati P’23
Teagan Bellitto ’23
Morganna C. Beltre and Zeus Beltre
Ines Benadouda
Jeffrey S. Benagh P’24
Gail Benigni
Kyle Bennett
Laurie Bennett
Elaina Benson ’23
Devon Bento ’23
Olivia Bento
Michael G. Bergin, Jr. ’21
Jeffrey Bernard ’02
Michael Bertrand
Caitlynn Berube
Collin Berube
Joan Berube and Louie R. Berube, Sr.
Karen Bessette
Jennifer L. Bessette
Marcela Betancur
Erick J. Bettencourt and
Rebecca A. Bettencourt
Himanshu Bhagat
Richard Bidstrup
Robert Bielawa and Alison Bielawa
Jennifer S. Billard
Karen H. Bilotti and Gary Bilotti
Patricia Bilotti
Charles A. Birbara and Kristin Birbara
Carly E. Birch ’21
Valerie Birmingham
Jean Birrell
Richard L. Bischoff P’05 and Linda E. Bischoff
Barbara Bishop
Kristin Bishop
Meaghan E. Bishop ’17
Kosta Bitsis ’84 P’14 and Shari A. Bitsis P’14
Nick C. Bitsis ’14
Nancy Bixby
Chris Bjerregaard and June Bjerregaard
Maura J. Black, Esq. L’14
Kelly Blackhurst
Christopher P. Blakeslee ’94
Lisa Blanchard
Sheila S. Blanchette ’90
Raymond Bligh
Toni-Ann Bligh
James Blue
Stephen 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
Jeffrey D. Bohlin ’08
Matthew Boissonneault ’04
Shannon Bol
George N. Bolden, Sr. ’74 PM’05 P’98 and Nancy Bolden
Natasha Bolin ’10
Colleen Bolton P’20 and Greg Bolton P’20
Anabela Bonanca P’24
Michael Bonvissuto
Luigi Ilardi & Jean F. Borrelli-Ilardi
Marielle M. Borzello ’19 and Daniel R. Wallace ’19
Erica Borzone
Rachel M. Borzone ’24
Robert W. Borzone P’24 and Sharon Borzone P’24
Sandra Bosco and Mark J. Bosco
Kerrie L. Bosse P’22
Kenneth & Tammy Bouchard
Michelle D. Bouchard and Michael D. Bouchard
Rene & Mary Bouchard, III
Sean Bouchard, Esq. ’12 L’15
Carolyn J. Boucher ’07
Pa Boudreau
Caitlin B. Boufford ’24
Danielle Boufford
Angela M. Boulay
Nicholas Boulay
Brian J. Bourque and Jennifer Bourque
Elizabeth C. Bourquin ’89 and Peter M. Bourquin
Stephanie Boutilier
Didier Bouvet-Marechal ’93
Joseph Bova ’66 and Jann Bova
Jason Bowen ’17
Scott Bowen and Susan J. Bowen
Ellen Bowler
Christine Bowles
Rebecca Bowman
Josh T. Boyce ’12
Cathy Boyd
Connie Boyd
William Bracero, Jr. and Joanne Castano
Christopher E. Bracone ’88
Alana Braley ’19
Stephanie L. Bramante ’18
Rui M. Branco and Maria Branco
Bridget Brannigan
Maeve R. Brannigan
Patrick J. Brannigan and Sherry Brannigan
Daria Brashear
Hans J. Bremer, Esq. L’08
Julie Brennan
Erik Brenner and Susan B. Brenner
Ruth Brenner
Elizabeth Brett
David A. Breyer P’24 and Melissa M. Breyer P’24
Kiera A. Brilla ’99
Sean P. Broderick ’04
Barbara Brodrick and Steven J. Brodrick
Chaeli Brogdon
Ellie Bromberg
Eric Bronson
Joseph R. Brookes
Karl W. Brosky and Kerriann Brosky
Mark B. Brosky ’86
Jasmine E. Brouillard ’18
Aaron A. Brown ’97 and Tracey B. Brown ’97
Amanda Brown
Catherine Brown
Cheryl Brown
Chris Brown
Contessa L. Brown ’06 M’13
Donna Brown
Gillian Brown
Kristine Brown
Lauren Brown
Lisa Brown
Martha Brown
Michael K. Brown
Patricia Brown
Rene G. Brown, Esq. ’98 L’01 P’06
Rodney M. Brown, Jr. and Melissa R. Brown
Stuart Brown
Susan Brown
Kristin Browne and Robert J. Browne
Alicia Brownell
Amber C. Brucato ’92
Margaret Brumsted
Gary Bruno
Sophia Bruno
MacKenzie G. Bryan ’18
Margot Bucci
David B. Buckler ’84 and Daris C. Buckler
Elizabeth Buckley P’24
Al Buddy
Stefanie Buecklers
Jacob Bueno de Mesquita
Scott J. Buhlmann ’16
Diana Bujnowski
Matthew P. Burch and Jennifer Sanborn
Charles F. Burghardt and Lena M. Burghardt
Jerrel A. Burgo ’10 and Danielle L. Burgo ’10
Erin N. Burke ’23
Michelle K. Burke ’92 and Andrew E. Burke ’92
Peter A. Burke and Cheri Burke
Suzanne K. Burke, Esq. L’08
Jeffrey Burnett
Bradford Burnham and Laura Burnham
Elaine Burnham
Henry Burnham
Kelsey Burr
Shannon Burr
Donna Burr-Padula
Ken Burt
Janice M. Bury P’17 and Donald P. Bury P’17
Chris Busby ’16
Gregory K. Busby P’24 Sandra L. Busby P’24
Michelle M. Bush ’99
Guido Bussinelli III and Regina D. Bussinelli
James F. Butler III ’92
Janice L. Butler and Jason A. Butler
Christopher M. Byrnes and Tyler Byrnes
Lisa B. Cabnet ’84
Jonathan L. Cabot, Esq. L’16
Ana I. Cabral P’10 and Manuel F. Cabral P’10
Kimberly Cabral
Theresa M. Cabral P’18 and Jose G. Cabral P’18
Mark Cacciolfi
Tony W. Cacciolfi and Kelly Cacciolfi
Andre B. Caceres ’24
Patricio Caceres
Trish M. Caceres P’24 and Rodolfo P. Caceres P’24
Daniel E. Caciolo ’04
Bryan Cafaldo
Carah Cahill
Raymond W. Cahoon, Jr. ’90
Robert Cahoon P’24 and Daniela Cahoon P’24
Todd Cain
Joe Cairoli ’85 and Lisa M. Cairoli ’86
Luke A. Calabrese ’23
Steven Calantone
Bridget Callagy Symington
Anne B. Callan ’90 ’96
Marshall A. Calman M.B.A. ’80 and Ellen Calman
Deborah R. Calvanese ’03
Francis N. Cam ’21
Nicolas J. Cambi ’11
Thomas Campanella
Gareth Campbell
Alana Campbell
Kristen Campbell
Stephen Campbell, Jr. and Elisabeth B. Campbell
Stephen G. Campbell and Marylou Campbell
Karen Canata Boydston and Robert Canata Boydston
Anthony Canata
Joseph Canata, Jr. and Amy M. Canata
Nancy Canata
Alan S. Canestrari and Nancy L. Canestrari
Lysa Cangialosi
Frank P. Caparco ’78 and Mary Caparco
Richard Capek P’09 and Kathleen Hanrahan P’09
Theresa Capelo ’09
Brigida F. Capicotto 17 M’18
Peter Capodilupo ’77 and Jennifer Capodilupo
Stephen P. Cappabianca and Mary Cappabianca
Richard Cappelluti
Damian Caputo
Francine Carbonneau
John W. Card ’71 and Pauline Card
Carlos A. Cardoso ’05
Jacob Cardozo ’23
Bethany M. Carey M’07
Peter A. Carey ’06
Robert Carey
Christopher J. Carlin and Kara S. Carlin
David Carlson P’22
Kathryn B. Carlson, Esq. ’08 L’11 and Robert W. Carlson ’08
Leonard A. Carlucci ’13
Mary Kate Carneiro ’19 and Evan J. Carneiro ’20
Steven D. Carnevale ’13
John B. Carney and Kimberly Carney
Kelly Carney
Christopher R. Carollo ’91 and Karen Carollo
Jordyn Carpenter L’24
Dr. Shelby E. Carpenter
Andrue C. Carr, Sr. and Sarah L. Carr
Gabriella Carr
Chris Carreira
Shaun Carrillo ’02
Brian Carroll and Kate Carroll
John D. Carroll ’88
Martin Carroll
David B. & Susan H. Carroll
Thomas B. Carroll ’86 P’17 and Cynthia J. Carroll P’17
Carolann M. Carter
Spencer Cartwright
John F. Carvalho, Jr. and John Carvalho
Margaret Case and Paul E. Bender Ph.D.
Dawn Caserta
Gregory M. Casey ’93
Joseph Casey
Linda Casey
Colleen Cashman
Jeannine A. Casselman, Esq. L’09
Jose N. Castillo and Kelly Castillo
Dena M. Castricone, Esq. ’98 L’02
Erica Castro ’12
JoAnn Castro ’78 P’14 and Kenneth J. Castro ’78 P’14
Beverly E. Caswell ’98
Jason M. Catalano ’03
Lauren B. Catalano ’13
Deborah J. Catone and William Catone
Joshua Catone
Valerie J. Cavallaro ’99 and James Cavallaro
Michael Cayton
Bilge G. Çelik Ph.D.
Brooklyn F. Cenatiempo ’22 M’23
Reginald Centracchio ’86 and
Linda A. Centracchio
Anne-Marie P. Cerda and Juan M. Cerda
Raymond J. Cerro, Jr. ’23
Louis G. Cervone, Jr.
Christopher Cesare
Cam H. Chafee ’14
Amanda Chaiyabhat
Xante C. X. Chalwell ’18
Amel Chamberlin
Deidre Chambers-Logan
Stuart Chandler
Chester E. Chandronnet
Anne Marie Chapin
Kurt D. Chapin P’24 and Carrie Chapin P’24
Cynthia M. Chappell P’09 and Eric P. Chappell P’09
Emily Chappell ’09
Carol Chase
Jonathan Chatinover
Tara Chatowsky ’21
Taylor Chatowsky ’21
Matthew J. Chaump ’96
Catherine Chave
George Chave, Sr. P’21 and Pamela Chave P’21
John T. Chave ’21
Beckie Cheng
Ram Cherukuri and Subha Cherukuri
Gregory R. Chiklis P’24 and Fadwah M. Chiklis P’24
Jeffrey Chirnside
Bruce E. Chorney ’74
Andrew Chretien
Denis W. Chretien and Joan Chretien
Paul J. Chretien
Martha Christina ’77
Margaret A. Chung, Esq. L’08
Peter Chung
Benjamin Chwalk
Jessica M. Cigna
Robert Cincotta and Shelley Cincotta
Daniel E. Ciora
Matthew Cipriani ’94
Sarah Claffey
Charles M. Clark and Sharyn Clark
Lillianna Clark
Louis B. Clark ’82
Mary Clark
Sandra Clark
Todd C. Clark and Brenda Clark
Ryan Claudino
PN Clausius Parks
Daniel Clayman
Scott A. Clayton and Caryn Clayton
Honey Cleckner
Michael Cleckner
Steven Clemens
Brenda J. Clement
Rosemarie Clementi
Wendy A. Clifford P’17 and Adam Clifford
Christopher J. Cline ’23
Robert J. & Francesca M. Clines
Kyle T. Clute ’15
Claire Coddington
Reese Codero
Monica Coghlan
William Coghlan
Anna Cohen
Jonathan E. Cohen and Amy L. Cohen
Matthew W. Cohen
Jason W. Coiro and Traci L. Coiro
Amy J. Cola ’19
Anthony P. Colantonio ’81 and Patricia Colantonio
Steven A. Colantuono, Esq. L’03 and Maya Colantuono
Martin Colin
Juliette M. Collins L’23
Kennith S. Collins, Jr. P’24 and Valerie L. Collins P’24
Trenton K. Collins and Kelli Collins
Ian R. Colomer ’15
Jaylene S. Colon ’22
John Comey
Christine Comiskey
Joseph P. Como and Wendy Como
Melissa A. Condidorio ’13
Wendy Cone
Kevin W. & Brooke A. Congdon
Caitlin Conley
Ned Connelly
Sherry L. Connelly ’81 and Michael Connelly
Keith Connery and Amy Connery
Jean M. Connors
James Contacos
Anne Converse
Adeline Cook
Kristen Cook
Kristine Cook
Samantha J. Cooke ’23
Allyson M. Cooper
Jason Cooper
Robert Cooper and Elena B. Cooper
Joseph T. Coppola and Monica Coppola
Scott Corain
Michelle Cordeiro
Mario A. Corina ’13 M’15
Kurtis H. Cormier ’05
Robert A. Cornwell ’87 and Lucia Cornwell
Linda L. Correia ’80
Ann M. Corriveau, Esq. L’01
Joanne Corsetti
Carolyn Coskren
Jennifer Costa
Andrew J. Costanzo and Sara C. Costanzo ’99
Michelle Cote
Sara L. Cotroneo and Joseph Cotroneo III
Michael Cotugno and April J. Cotugno
Ryan Cotugno
Ana Courtney
Timur J. Couture ’22
Winfield S. Cowell III and Elaine R. Wilson
Robert H. Coyle ’82
Danielle M. Crafford ’08
Jessica Craig ’97 and Thomas P. Craig
Alison M. Cranshaw ’08 and David Cranshaw
John J. Creegan III and Kathleen Creegan
Owen Crimmins
Brigette A. Croke ’17
Shannon B. Cronin ’19
Collin C. Crowell ’14
Bradley M. Cruver ’23
Kelly S. J. Csizmadia P’24 and Brian A. Csizmadia P’24
Thomas E. Cullerton ’23
Jill Culora
Brian R. Cumming
Bernard M. Cunniff ’80
Lily J. Cunningham ’23
Elizabeth Curley
Regina A. Curran L’10 and Leon D. Curran
Madison Curtin
Alan C. Cutting and Sandra C. Cutting
Jon Cyr
Perry C. Cyr ’13
Roger J. Czuchra and Tamra Czuchra
Armindo A. Da Silva ’06 ’08 and Dianne Rochette-Da Silva
Meral G. Dabcovich
Flávio A. DaCosta, Esq. ’17 L’20
David M. D’Agostino, Esq. L’99
Heidi A. Dagwan and Raymond M. Dagwan
Jason E. Dahl, Sr. P’24 and Stacy J. Dahl P’24
Jeffrey J. Daigle and Liane M. Daigle
Melissa R. D’Alessandro PA-C ’07
William M. Daley, Esq. L’15
Jill Dallaire P’23 and Justin L. Parker
Michael J. Daly, Esq. L’02 and Kate Daly
Henry D’Antonio and Sarah D’Antonio
Kenneth Daponte P’10 P’12 and Maryelizabeth Daponte P’10 P’12
Toney Darden
Brandon Darelius L’21
Ildo Darosa
Zachary G. Darrow
Graciette Dasilva
Sabrina M. Dasilva ’15
Thomas Daubney, Jr. and Amy McEnaney
Thomas Daubney
Jill Davenport
Maureen Davenport
Andre Davia ’80 and Susan Davia
Lawrence D. Davide
Joshua Davidson
Emily Davis
Ryan Davis
Jordan Day
Kathleen Day
Claudia V. DeAlmeida
Joyce Dean
Cory Debias ’04
Kyle C. Debias ’04 and Patricia L. Debias ’04
Charlotte Decesare
Makayla A. Decesare ’22
Nicholas Dechino
Gianna Decicco
Ronald DeCubellis ’84
Janel A. DeCurtis ’18
Kevin Deeb ’20
Michael S. Defeo
Stephen Defeo P’24 and Michelle Defeo P’24
Maria L. DeFiore ’00 and Christopher D. DeFiore ’00
Brian Defreitas
Amanda DeGrace
Nancy Degroff
Diana deGroof, Esq. L’03 and Joshua A. Stockwell, Esq. L’04
Salvatore A. Degrotta P’24 and Jodi A. Degrotta P’24
John A. Del Sesto ’74 and Regina Del Sesto
Mick Delaney
Katherine T. Delehanty ’07 and John J. Delehanty ’04
Stephen Delena
Alfred J. Della-Posta ’76
James Deluca and Heather A. DeLuca
Kayla L. Deluca ’21
Amanda Demarco
Ava Demarco
Christopher Demarco
Ashley E. Demers ’10
Priscilla M. Demers
Sarah E. Deneault ’16
Nancy Denney
Claudette Dennis and Dave Dennis
Maura B. Dennis
Tina Dennis
Christina F. Denovellis
Gino Denovellis
Joanna E. Denovellis
Samantha Denton ’20
Robert J. Dermody
Linda Desiderio-Bush
James G. Deslandes, Jr. ’11
Kyle J. Desmarais P’21 P’22 and Sandra Desmarais ’93 P’21 P’22
John Desousa
Donald G. Desrochers ’71 and
Debra A. Martin Desrochers ’75
Riverside Details
Connor J. Devers
Mark G. Devine ’94 and Gail Devine
Theresa M. DeVine and George R. Devine
Adelia C. Di Scipio ’21
Kirsten DiChiappari
Cameron Dickson
Jennifer Didonato
Michael D. Diercksen ’13
Christine Dill P’24 and Michael Dill P’24
Maddie Dillion
Michael Dillon
Lisa DiLuzio
Jennifer Dimatteo ’94
Anthony V. Dimeglio ’21
Andrew R. Dimitri, Esq. L’17
Davida R. Dinerman P’23 P’24 and Bradley J. Dinerman P’23 P’24
Maria DiNitto M’19 L’19
Hortensia Dinucci
Christine E. Dion P’11
Maryrose Dipiro ’24
Megan DiSanto, Esq. L’08
Laura Discenza
Christopher J. Disciullo ’10
Tracy A. DiSevo L’14
Sharon M. Divis ’90
Britney J. Dixon ’19
Shaliyah Dixon
Ann Marie E. Dlugos-Iwicki ’98 and Bryan Iwicki
Jose Dobles
Charles Dobson ’75
Lizzy Dobson ’23
Alexandra Dodwell
Amy L. Doherty ’99 and Michael J. Doherty ’97
Margaret M. Doherty ’92 and John Doherty P’24
Michela M. Doherty ’17
Delaney Doidge
Douglas Doidge and Rosemarie C. Doidge
Kristi F. Dolan ’20
Kathleen Dolloff
Paige Dombek
Mark Dombrofski
Amadeo Donatina
Elizabeth Dondero
Morgan Dondero
Daniel Donleavy III ’21
Dennis Donnelly and Meegan Donnelly
John J. Donnelly, Jr. and Jennifer M. Ogozalek
Michael J. Donnelly ’04
Douglas Donovan P’24 and Leslie Donovan P’24
James M. Donovan ’89 and Jane E. Donovan
John Donovan
Mary-Ellen K. Donovan ’87
Kim K. Dooley L’19
Linda Dooney
Michael M. Dore
Mary Dorey
Chang Dorin
Steven C. Dorney ’73
Glenn P. Dorrance ’99
Valdete J. Dos Santos and Rozane A. Guimmaraes
Lisa Doster
Nicole Dotzenrod
David Doucett ’04 and Diane Leith-Doucett ’04
Mary E. Dowd and Christopher J. Dowd
Susan Dowd
Mary Dowling
Joseph D. Downing ’83 and Joanne Downing
David A. Doyle ’89
Polly E. Doyle P’15 and James G. Doyle P’15
Sean P. Doyle ’15
Stewart M. Draheim ’17
Amy Driscoll
Hannah Driscoll ’22
Nora A. Driscoll P’18 and Thomas J. Driscoll P’18
Angela M. Droogan P’15 P’16 and Joseph F. Droogan P’15 P’16
Patricia Dubey
Dale Dubinsky ’11
Duane A. Dubois P’23 P’24 and Loree Dubois P’23 P’24
Stacey L. Dubois ’09 and Todd E. Dubois ’09
Jennifer K. Dubost P’16 and Christian H. Dubost P’16
Kylie Ducharme
Izabella Dudek-Haffner ’93
Kimberly Duffy
Elizabeth Dufrane
Kayleigh Dugan
Ryan Dugan
Matt P. Duggan ’09
Theodore Duguay
Zajdele Dulcine
Michael Dumont P’24 and Kerrie Dumont P’24
Casey M. Dunbar ’23
Paul Dunlap
Mary Jane Dunn P’18 and Robert R. Dunn P’18
Teagan Dunn ’19
Vinson Duong
Mary P. DuPont Gladue ’72
Melissa A. DuPont
Janice Durham
Rachelle N. Durrschmidt ’13 and Christopher Durrschmidt
Lisa A. D’Urso P’12 P’18 and Gerry D’urso P’12 P’18
Ryan M. Duryea ’23
Blair-Victoria Dutra ’08 ’10
Brian Dutton P’23 and Julie Duttom P’23
Julie E. Dutton ’23
Glenn Duzy P’21 and Elizabeth M. Duzy P’21
Mary F. Duzy
Sean M. Dwyer ’23
John Dyer ’76
Nicole P. Dyszlewski, Esq.
Thelma L. Dzialo ’11 P’13 P’17 and Thomas M. Dzialo P’13 P’17
Laura A. Eade and Kenneth M. Eade
Robyn Earley
Brian Easton and Heather Relation
Brenda J. Eathorne
Melanie Ebersold
William L. Ebersold ’20
Kayla E. Ebner ’19
Melinda L. Eckert P’18 and James Eckert P’18
Christopher J. Egan, Jr. ’79 and Patricia M. Egan ’83
Laura Eldredge
Caroline Elie
Rich Ellstrom
Chelsea R. Emery ’12
Susan Emmert
Leonard Engel and Kristina A. Karpinski
Robert Engvall
Bruce E. Epke P’13
Laura M. Erb and John C. Erb
Stacey A. Erickson, Esq.
Steven Esons ’77 P’07
Carmine Esposito
Jean Esposito
John P. Esposito
Karen J. Ethier M’03 and Robert E. Ethier ’11
Edward K. Evans, Jr. P’24 and Dawn A. Evans P’24
Heather L. Evans
Nancy Evjen
Curtis R. Ewing, Sr. and Victoria Ewing
Stacy Exter
Manuel A. Fabio
David P. Fabrizio
John F. Fabrizio and Kathleen Fabrizio
Barrie Facente
Elaine Fahey
Peter Fahey and Darcey Fahey
Lorraine L. Fahy
Jane Falconieri ’82 and A. Joseph Falconieri
Joanne Fall
Blanchard Fam
Beck Family
Madison Fancher ’21
Matthew P. Fanikos ’17
Daniel Farfel
Jeffrey A. Faria P’11 and Brigette B. Faria P’11
John T. Faria ’70 and Betty Faria
Marcia Faria ’89 and Wayne Faria
Michael S. Farkas ’89
James Farrar ’80 and Christine M. Farrar
Kevin C. Farrell
David V. Fasano, Jr. ’18
Melanie J. Fatone P’24
Darren E. Fava ’92
Randi M. Featherstone ’13
Richard Feeny
Joshua A. Fejfar ’17
Tony Fellela
Stephen Fenlon
Gail Fenske and Donald E. Cecich
Julian L. Fernald ’84
Joanne S. Fernandes PM’06 P’02 P’04 and Bruce F. Fernandes PM’06 P’02
Florentino M. Fernandez ’21
Jeffrey J. Fernandez and Tracy L. Fernandez
Victoria Fernandez ’14
Melissa A. Ferrandino and Mark P. Ferrandino
Angela M. Ferrante
Greg Ferraro and Lisa M. Ferraro
Lisa Ferraro
Kaitlyn Ferreira ’14
Glenn A. Ferrie, Sr. and Edith M. Ferrie
Glen P. Ferriter ’71
Samantha Ferry
Mark P. Fesenmeyer ’15
Joseph S. Ficaro ’19
Julia A. Fields ’20
Paul A. Figueiredo and Raquel Figueiredo
Dennis Filiatrault
Milton Finch
Adam Finkesltein ’84 and Patricia Finkelstein
Patti Finlayson
Richard Finlayson
Ashlyn G. Finn ’23
James E. Finn P’08
Jack Finnie ’23
Katrina Fiorita and Gary F. Fiorita
Laura Fisher
Ryan C. Fisher ’08 and Anna S. Fisher
Suzanne E. Fiske ’89 and Barton C. Fiske
Donald A. Fitting, Jr. P’21
Megan P. Fitzgibbons ’24
Joe Fitzpatrick
Cindy Flack
Edward Flaherty
John Flaherty
Katherine Flaherty
Michael Flaherty and Kimberley A. Flaherty
Christine Flanagan, Esq. L’10
Christopher J. Flannery ’85 and Nohemi Flannery
Donna M. Flannery and James J. Flannery, Jr.
Brian R. Flavia ’88 P’20 and Michele B. Flavia P’20
Ellenor G. Fleming ’21
Gabriella E. Fletcher
Suzanne Flinchbaugh
Chanel M. Flores ’14
Steven Flores
Alyssa T. Foerster ’23
Timothy J. Fogarty L’15
Mark H. Ford and Laura B. Ford
Stephen Forlini
Michael A. Forrest
Donald C. Forster ’80
Eddie Fort
Brendan Forte and Noel Forte
Carol J. Forte P’24
Armand Fortier
Emily Forward
Jack E. Forward and Jill Forward
Amanda M. Foster, Esq. L’04 and Richard A. Foster, Esq. L’04
Leandra L. Fox-Teixeira ’13 and Spencer Teixeira ’13
Bryan P. Foye L’17 and Hannah M. Foye L’16
Victor E. Franca P’15 and Maria Franca P’24
Donna Francis
Joshua Francis
Brian Franco
Scott D. Frankel D.C. ’80
Elyssa L. Franklin
Nicolette Fraser
Timothy R. Fraser and Debra A. Fraser
Robert P. Frazee ’01
Kylie D. Freitas ’20 and Preston G. Duclos ’19
Victoria L. Freitas ’23
Melissa A. Freudenberg ’13
Sarah J. Friedman L’21
Richard L. Frigon ’71 and Patricia A. Frigon
Ahni S. Fritton
Peter Joseph Frost ’22
Robert Fudge
Gabby V. Fuja
Charles E. Fulcher
Brad Fuller P’24 and Judy Fuller P’24
Mary Fuller and Peter Fuller
Mary A. Fulton David H. Fulton
Brian Furgal
Barbara Furtado P’07
Jill Fury
Carrie Fusco
Christina Gagliardi
Mark P. Gagliardi, Esq. L’03
Susan Gagne
Jerilyn Gagnon
Thomas Gagnon P’16 and Elizabeth W. Gagnon P’16
Mckalah B. Gaine
Carl D. Galian, Jr. ’24
Jean C. Galib ’91 and Thomas Galib
Mairead Gallagher
Mike J. Gallagher
Robert M. Gallagher and Kristen M. Gallagher
Andrew T. Gallant ’11
Rita Gallant
Lisa Gallant-Stanzione ’05 and Timothy M. Stanzione
Katherine A. Galligan ’24
Tabitha Galvin ’92 ’97
Michael C. Gannaio ’21
Jennifer Gannon
Arlanna B. Garcia and Donald R. Garcia, Jr.
George Garcia
Rafael Garcia
William Gardner, Esq. L’07
David Garland
Natasha Garland
Joe Garlick
Elizabeth Garofalo
Carolyn Garth
Gregory F. Garvin ’06 and
Kristen L. Garvin ’07
Courtney Gates-Graceson
Mandinia Gatos
David A. Gatz P’24 and Jennifer A. Gatz P’24
Jamie M. Gau L’16 and Collin M. Geiselman
William Gaudet
Andrew M. Gaudreau and Shelby F. Gaudreau
Andrew Gaynor
Brian L. Geller ’85
David Generali P’24
Gregory S. Geneus
Christine A. Gentile and Joseph L. Gentile
Donna A. George ’80
Frederick W. George ’88
Mary Gerhard
Lindsey Germano
Raegen Germano
Tracey Getman
Hunter Gholson
Michael Gianfrancesco
Jennifer Giannotti P’22 and
Russell Giannotti, Sr. P’22
Glen Gibbons
Kathleen Gibbs and Leroy Gibbs
Caroline Giers
Emily C. Gildea ’21 M’22
Julie A. Gildea P’21 PM’22 and Kevin J. Gildea P’21 PM’22
Barbara Gilfillen
Renee Gill
Sadie J. Gillett Madison P’24 and Zak Madison
Joann Gillett
Claudette Gillheeney
John Gillis and Lisa M. Gillis
Jamie Gillon M’03
David L. Gioffreda ’81 and Lori A. Gioffreda
Sofia M. Giovannello ’13
David Girioni
Olivia Giuffria
Rob Giuffria
Sophie Giuffria
Gerald J. Giusti ’89
Jordan Gladstone
Thomas Gleason ’12
Marcy Glickman
Jay Glicksman
Brian Glynn
Elyse Glynn ’11
Lisa Gnandt
Gregory M. Gobrecht
Irene Godin
Michelle Godin
Chris Goffredo ’05
Elton W. Gogolin III and Erin Gogolin
Amy Goins, Esq. L’12 and Peter F. Skwirz, Esq. L’12
Karen Golann
Edward H. Goldberg ’62 and Joan Lyon
Mary L. Goldberg
Philip S. Golden III and Ellen Golden
Adam Goldman P’24 and Charmaine Goldman P’24
Brian T. Goldson ’95 and Jennifer M. Goldson ’93
Jared Goldstein, Esq. and Amy Pickworth
Karin Gomes
Fernando D. Goncalves ’99 and Courtney A. Goncalves ’99
Deborah Gonzalez, Esq. ’04 L’07 P’18 and Roberto Gonzalez
Rodrigo Gonzalez
Stephanie Gonzalez L’21 and Jorge O. Elorza, Esq.
Christina M. Goodman
Derrick Goodwin ’07
Hannah E. Goodwin ’22
Cathy Goralski
Katrina E. Goria ’21
Barry Gorman
Michael P. Gorman ’92
Morgan E. Gormley ’11
Adrienne Goss
Robert L. Gould and Jennifer Gould
William H. Gould, Jr. ’65 and Marjorie Yater
Andre Goulet
Colin J. Gourlay and Elizabeth Gourlay
Mahesh Goyal ’90 and Kanta Goyal
Dianne Goyette
Maryann Graca
Kathryn T. Gradowski L’23
Timothy M. Grady P’23 and Elizabeth A. Grady P’23
April L. Graffeo and Michael J. Graffeo
Todd A. Graham ’83
Jason M. Gramitt, Esq. L’96
Papa Grandma
Catherine G. Graney ’85 and Bernie Graney
Pamela Grant
Marina Grasso ’23
Cassandra Graven
Emily Grayson
Haley Grayson
Stephanie Grayson
Katherine A. Grazier ’03
Jerry Grealy
Patrick Grealy
Thomas Grealy
Denise Grebe P’22 and John Grebe P’22
Salvatore Greco ’59
Sara H. Greco ’20
Lindsay Green
Susan E. Green P’21 and Thomas R. Green P’21
David W. Greene ’91
John M. Greene, Esq. L’08 and Summer Greene
Robyn Greenless
Charles Greenslit
Mike Greenwood
Amy E. Greer L’20
Kyle J. Greer ’23
Nancy Greer
Christine Grele
Florence Griffin
Mena Griffiths
Marilou Griswold
Anne E. Grossman ’04
Timothy J. Groves, Esq. L’06
Gregory L. Grunwald ’94
Shannon Grunwell
Mark A. Guarini and Maria Guarini
Russell Guerin
Gwen A. Guilford
Owen W. Guillot ’19
Brenna K. Guilmette ’23
Steven Guilmette P’23 and Margaret A. Guilmette P’23
Monique Gulino
Gregory T. Guy and Kara A. Guy
Chelsea Guzowski
Lindsey K. Gwozdz ’09
Roger O. Hackett ’73
Peter A. Hainley, Esq. L’06
Angeli Hajali
Tracy A. Hali and Todd J. Hali
Kaytlin M. Hall ’09
Lauren L. Hall ’02
Trisha Hall
Campbell E. Haller ’23
Robert Halpin
Alan I. Halsband ’89
Charlie Hamberger
Albert R. Hamel and Catherine Lacoste-Hamel
Karl D. Hampton and Caroline Hampton
Allen S. Hance
Elizabeth A. Hannon P’13
Fred Hannon P’23 and Meredith Noyes P’23
Marcus A. Hanscom
Kayla K. Hansen ’20
Meghan L. Hansen and John P. Hansen, Jr.
Kimberly Hardy
Richard A. Hargreaves and Anne J. Gorczyca
Sara Harkins P’21
Jason E. Harmon and Eleanora Harmon
Rees S. Harold ’21
Erin Harp
Cheryl Harrington
Sue Harrington
Suzanne Harrington-Steppen and Gustavus R. Steppen
Sam Harris
Michael Harrison ’84
Alison Harvey
Nancy N. Harvey
Diana J. Hassel, Esq.
Erin Hastings
Raymond R. Hatch and Megin Hatch
Beth B. Hauck
John C. Haudenshield and Heather Haudenshield
Kerry Hausdorf
Russell J. Hausman
Eric A. Havelock ’83 and Kathy Day
Judith Havelock
Gorden F. Hayes and Tracy Hayes
Tom Haynes
Barbara Hays
Dacia M. Hayslip ’04
Kate Hayward
Tara Healey
Elizabeth Healey
Mark P. Hebert and Kathie Hebert
Sawyer Hebert
Patricia Heelen P’22 and Christian D. Heelen P’22
Philip J. Heelen ’22
Colleen M. Heemeyer ’97 M’23 and Sven Heemeyer
Matthew T. Heffner L’22
Gary L. Helton, Jr. ’05
Eryn Hemmert
Lisa Hemphill
Craig Henault and Nicole Henault
Alison R. Henderson ’23
Jarid L. Henley ’02
Mary Hensel
Rebecca Hensley
Theresa A. Herbein P’14 and David Herbein P’14
Lynn Hermans
Damaris Hernandez L’22
Chris Hess
Velda M. Hess
Melissa Heuston P’09
Susan Heyman, Esq. and Gregory T. Heyman
Carolyn Hibbard
Susan Hibbitt and H. David Hibbitt
Laurie Hicks
Patricia Higgins
George Z. Higham ’23
Mohammad A. Hijazi and Stephanie Hijazi
Allen Hilary
Duke Hilary
Judith A. Hill
Michael B. Hill and Ellyn K. Hill
Leonard K. Hillary ’16
George J. Hillman ’73
Thorstein W. Himle P’23 and Sherri B. Greenstein Himle P’23
John Hindle
Natalie M. Hinton ’22
Marisa Hirsch
Daniel D. Hirseman L’11
Lars E. Hjerpe ’23
Rose L. Hochenberger and Kyle J. Hochenberger
Mark Hoey ’92 and Jennifer Hoey
Valerie R. Hoffman ’80
Mike D. Hoffshire ’09
Caitlin Hogan
Chris Hogan
Judith Hogan
Lidia Hogan P’18 and Peter Hogan P’18
Scott Hogg and Stacey A. Hogg
Lawson A. Hohmann
William J. Hohmann and Jennifer A. Hohmann
Becky Holden
Roseleen A. Holder M’10
Rita J. Holman ’80 and Jos N. Holman ’81
Bri Holsborg
Mary E. Hopkins
Arnold L. Horowitz ’89 and Meri Horowitz
Forrest Horton
Susan Horton
Mark Horvath
Peter M. Horvath P’24 and Lisa Horvath P’24
Chris Howell P’24 and Christine C. Howell P’24
Taylor C. Howell ’24
Michael Huang and Peggy Huang
Andrea B. Hull
Rep. Raymond A. Hull ’93 ’94 P’19 and Maribel Patino-Hull ’94 ’96 P’19
Nancy L. Hulme ’05
Irina G. Hultin and Stanley H. Hultin
Martin Hummel and Rosemarie J. Hummel
Jack M. Hunger ’15
Nina Hunt
Robert Hurd
Daniel J. Hurley and Margaret R. Hurley
Debra L. Hurley P’13
Kelly Hyde
Penny Hynes
Jeremy Hynson
Rachelle Hyson
Joseph T. Iaria P’24 and Monica Iaria P’24
Domenick A. Iengo ’23
Ruthanne C. Igoe P’13 and John Igoe P’13
Joseph A. Ilardi ’14
Randy Illian
Christine Incalcatera ’02
Elizabeth Indomenico
Sal Ingemi
Andrea Ippolito
Joseph Ippolito and Andrea Ippolito ’90
Annika H. Irene ’23
Ovidio Irizarry, Jr. ’81 and Sylvia Irizarry
Nancy Irons
Thomas Irons IV and Lori A. Irons
Paul K. Isbester, Jr. and Marjorie Isbester
Michael Issa
Ina Ivanova ’21
Dale B. Izzo and Daniel A. Izzo
Peter A. Jacavone III
Jason Jacintho
Jennifer Jackson
Megan Jackson L’24
Megan E. Jackson L’08
Donna G. Jacobs P’20 P’21 and Howard Jacobs P’20 P’21
Carole A. James ’96 and Todd James
Mary Jankosky
Nancy M. Jannitto P’16 P’17
Sean E. Janson ’18
Stephanie A. Jaques ’14
Austin H. Jarvis, Sr. ’23
Madeline M. Jarvis ’22
Lisa A. Jaworek ’91
James G. Jaworski ’82 and Pamela Jaworski
Mary Beth Jeans
Michael C. Jefferson ’78 and Kathleen O’Leary
Carl Jenkins
Pamela Jensen
Gabby M. Jerahian ’20
Matthew T. Jerzyk, Esq. L’08 and
Suzanne Da Silva Jerzyk
Kyler R. Jesanis ’14
Edward S. Jeter
Alexander S. Johnson P’24 and Denise J. Fabiano P’24
Alisha Johnson
Bryce Johnson
Jan Johnson
Jenny Johnson
Kevin Johnson ’92
Mark Johnson
Olivia Johnson
Rebecca Johnson
Victoria Johnson
Gavin M. Johnston
Kathleen Johnston
Michael Johnston
Kassandra D. Jolley
Cynthia A. Jones P’12 P’16 and Arthur W. Jones, Jr. P’12 P’16
Judy K. Jones
Matthew N. Jones
William Jones and Patricia A. McCarthy
Gregory V. Josselyn ’11
Jason Joubert
Sean F. Joyce ’18
Phyllis Joyner
Shawanna Joyner
Jason D. Judy and Heidi B. Judy
Brian C. Kacmarsky ’96 and Marie Roberts
Alison Kaczmarek
Sara K. Kalashian ’97 and Kraig Kalashian
Stephen P. Kalber P’24 and Kelly Kalber P’24
Rebecca Kanost
Barry Kaplan ’72 and Pearl Kaplan
Hannah B. Kaplan ’20
Vivian M. Karian, Esq. L’19
Chip Karkos
Donna Karnal
Steven A. Karp ’21
Joe M. Karpiel ’13 M’13
Jacqueline B. Katz ’17
Amanda L. Keane ’15
Joseph W. Kearns and Patricia Kearns
James Keating and Michelle Q. Keating
Kelly Keating ’16
Gerry Keaveney P’08
Andrea Keene
Jeffrey Keeney and Michele G. Keeney
Michael Keeney and Nancy Keeney
Bobbi-Lynn Kekic ’07
Daniel J. Keldsen P’24 and Sandra Z. Keldsen P’24
Gerard Kelleher
Kelly B. Kelleher P’17 and Timothy F. Kelleher III P’17
Timothy F. Kelleher IV ’17
Jean Keller P’20
Christopher P. Kelley ’03
Eileen Kelley and Kevin R. Kelley
Michael A. Kellis and Carolyn Kellis
Austin B. Kelly ’13
James Kelly
Sean E. Kelly ’15
Katie Kenahan
Christopher L. Kennedy and Rebecca L. Kennedy
James E. Kennedy ’17
Laura M. Kennedy ’21
Grace W. Kenningham ’20
Kevin J. Kenny ’98
Paul Kenny
Amanda Kent
Jessica Kerchner
James Kern L’18
Sarah Kern
Brian P. Kester P’24 and Krista Kester P’24
Eric Kester and Elizabeth A. Kester
Dwayne Keys
Hasan-Uddin Khan P’04
Lynda Kiklis-Brown ’89 and F. J. Brown
Gayle M. Kilburn P’24
Ellen Kiley
Cori Kilzi
Elizabeth A. Kilzi ’13 and Corinne O’Kane
Roland Kim
Kathleen M. Kimmel PL’97 and Gene Kimmel PL’97
Daniel P. King
John J. King and Jocelyn L. King
Stephen Kiss and Kathryn M. Kiss
David C. Kitchen ’17
Bruce E. Kittell ’73
Casey R. Klein ’20
Abigail I. Kline ’19
Katherine A. Kline
Emma G. Klis ’17
Heidi Knellinger
Sarah E. Knight ’09
Lisa Knowlton
Robert W. Koar, Jr.
Aubrey Koehler
Francis J. Kolb and Sue Kolb
Mary Kolb
Tracy Kolb
Nannette O. Kolbe ’88 and David J. Kolbe
George Kolitsas ’18
Denice Koljonen P’17
Joshua Koncar
Megan C. Kopf ’12
Lon Kopit ’69
Jenn Koppenal
Steven Koren ’23
Michael J. Korona, Esq. L’13
P. Richard Kotch III
Luke W. Kowalyshyn ’16 M’17
Sarah E. Kozminski ’11
Maxwell J. Kraimer ’18
Roy W. Krause and William H. Krause
Daniel S. Krhla and Sara Krhla
Alan Krinsky
Megan K. Krisowaty ’18
Samantha Krost
Tanja Kubas-Meyer
Niki Kuckes
Jackie Kucskar
Stephen R. Kurz
William M. Kuzmeski and Margarita Kuzmeski
Amy Kvaal
Caroline Kwasniewski
David Kwasniewski
James Kwon
Donna Kydes P’19 and Craig Kydes P’19
Lynn Labbadia
Bryan A. Labell and Stacey Labell
Janice Labell
Nancy Lachance
Roger T. Lacroix and Mary Ann Lacroix
Jenniffer Lafaille ’98
Charles Lafferty
Christine Lafountain
Janna Lafrance and R. Christian Lafrance
Frank E. Lagan ’05
Stephen Laliberte ’07
Layney Lamb
Louise Lamere
Nicolas D. Lamontagne ’23
Tyler J. Lamontagne ’23
Lucille Lamothe
Mary Lamson and Riley E. Lamson, Jr. ’66
Michael Lanahan
Brian Lanci and Michele C. Lanci
Susan Landry
Christopher W. Langlois ’21
Alex M. Lanieri ’13
Peter Lankarge
Amy B. Lanoie ’17 and Donald J. Lanoie
Daryl A. Lansing ’81
Scott Laone and Scott Laone
Armando R. Lara ’20
Samantha Larkin ’19 M’24
Jeffrey N. Larrow ’08
Justine E. Lasala and Vincent Lasala
Anthony Latney
Anthony Lato, Jr. ’73 and Jeannie Lato
Joyce Lauren
Conner P. Lautenschlager ’18
Josh Lavallee
Kelly Lavallee
Larry Lavers
Virginia A. Laverty
Cathryn Lavery
Darcy J. Lavoie ’21
Larry Lawson
Jeremy Lawton ’19 ’21
Sarah Leach
Kevin J. LeClair ’00
Haley R. Ledbetter ’18
Michael Leding
Brian F. Leduc ’10
Henry Lee
Marianne Lee
Robert D. Lee and Carol Lee
Timothy G. Leeber P’05
Lana L. Lee-Brogdon P’24 and David C. Brogdon P’24
Alexander Lefevre
Frederick Lefton
Kimberly Legelis
Erin Legnard
Nancy Leighton
Keira Lennon
Stephen A. Leonardi
Raymond R. Leonardo ’13
Amanda M. Leopizzi ’19
Alex R. Lepage ’23
Bob Lepage
Debra Lesser
Gill G. Letendre ’18 and Cory R. Letendre ’18
Stephen S. Leung L’06
Danielle Levesque P’24
Matthew Lewicki L’23
Pamela Lewis
Frank K. Li ’14
John T. Licciardello
Patricia E. Lichtenstein ’01 and Colin Lichtenstein
Laura J. Lieffers, Esq. ’08
James P. Liguori, Jr. ’90 and Lori Liguori
Xenja S. Lindberg ’17
Henry A. Lindblom
Martha Lindner
Gillian Lindquist
Nathaniel Lindsay ’20
John Lindstrom and Julie Z. Lindstrom
William Lindstrom and Patricia Lindstrom
Robert P. Liptrot ’61 and Priscilla Liptrot
Caterina L. Liseo ’23
Deborah A. Lister
Cecilia Liu
Sean Livingston
Melissa M. Lizotte ’22
Kyle F. Lloyd ’98 and Karen Lloyd
Brendan M. Locke and Christine Locket
Melina Lodge
Ransford A. Lodge and Patricia Calvi
James Logan P’18 and Anne C. Logan P’18
MacKenzie E. Logan ’15
Maura M. Logan
Andrew J. Logie
Kendra Logie
Richard G. Logue ’86 P’17 and Chris-Anne E. Logue ’87 P’17
Nancy Loiselle
Alexandra M. Lombardo ’22
Shari B. Lombardoni P’21 P’22 P’23 and Thomas A. Lombardoni P’21 P’22 P’23
Sandra Lonardo
Lorraine Longden
Lauren Lopes
Natalie Lopes
Timothy J. Lopes and Jennifer Lopes
Kim Lorance
Parker Lorie
Jennifer Lotero ’10
Paul Loughnane
Jeremy B. Love, Esq. L’06
Christopher D. Lowman ’17
Catherine E. Lucas and Lester F. Lucas
Adam Lucia
Orlando Lugo
Stephanie A. Luiz
Michael Luker
Daniel Lundari
Joe Lundari and Kathleen Lundari
Natalie Lundari
David Lundell
James S. Lunig ’79 and Janet Lunig
Nicholaus Lupi ’06
Marie Lupino ’75 and Tony Lupino
Bianca Lusick
Emma E. Lussen
Paul Lussier P’24 and Theresa H. Lussier P’24
Charnele S. Luster ’11
Lisa M. Lutz ’14
Kathryn Lynch
Michael Lynch ’01
Zachary K. Lyons, Esq. ’12 L’17 and Nicole R. Silvia
Joan Mabie
Maria Macaruso
James M. MacAulay ’76 and Mary Jo MacAulay
Amela R. MacDonald ’23
Conor J. MacDonald L’23
David V. MacDonald and Kellie MacDonald
James MacDonald
John Macdonald
Peri J. Macdonald ’23
Thomas P. MacDonald and Susanne Macdonald
Wendy A. MacDonough and Charles S. MacDonough
Richard W. MacDougall and Kathleen Macdougall
Craig Macek
Gary M. Macek
Anna MacGillivray
Charles R. MacLeod ’81 and Janet S. MacLeod
James A. MacMannis ’81
Jason MacPherson and Christine MacPherson
Kevin R. Macy P’24 and Ann Macy P’24
Molly Madden ’24
Amanda Magee ’10
Erin Magliozzi
James Magliozzi and Michelle Magliozzi
Abigail Magni
Kara J. Maguire, Esq.
Kenneth E. Mahler ’74 and Christine Mahler
Ash Maier
Levi Maina
William J. Maisano II
Hodge Makis
Blake Mal
Kate A. Malenczak ’11
Anthony Malfitano ’21
Meg L. Maliga ’16
Caitlin E. Mallahan ’22
Lynne A. Malloy ’18 ’20 P’18 P’21 and Robert J. Malloy P’18 P’21
Peter Maloney
Ronald S. Malvin P’12 and Patricia A. Malvin P’12
Mary Mancari
Sam M. Mancinelli ’21
Peter Mancuso
Katie Mangano
Michael Manjos and Kathleen Manjos
Matthew Mann
Kara H. Manosh
Kevin W. Manuel ’13
Joanne Many
Scott Many
Brian Manzi
Dana J. Marano ’90 and Thomas Marano
Angelina Marazzi
Antonio Marcellino ’96 and Katherine Rodriguez-Marcellino ’97
John J. Marchand and Dawn Marchand
John C. Marchese P’08 and Elizabeth Marchese P’08
Cam Marcus
Gabriel Margolis
Marshall Margolis ’66 and Carol J. Drake
Aaron M. Mariano ’08 and Becky K. Griswold Mariano ’13
Kelly E. Marie ’09
Cindi Marinez P’24 and Jesus Marinez P’24
Katie Marino
Patrick Marino
Shaun A. Mark L’19
Lucas R. Marks ’00 and Sandy Peng
Lynn Marks
Robert W. Marks
Daniel Marolla and Joan M. Marolla
Amanda L. Maron ’08
Jonathan B. Marquardt ’83
Helen Marques ’17
Connor Marshall
Don Marshall
Sue Marshall
Susan A. Marshall
Elizabeth A. Marston ’23
Andrew Martin
Jeffrey D. Martin ’99
Lawrence A. Martin P’24 and Brenda Martin P’24
Marie Martin
Timothy F. Martin ’89
Daysi Martinez Celaya ’23
Nicolino Martins
Gabriella R. Masciarelli ’20 ’21
Paul E. Masi
Steve Masi and Jennifer M. Masi P’22 P’22
Dan C. Massaro ’23
Shawn J. Masse, Esq. ’10 L’13
Aristotle Massos ’22
Elaine M. Massotti
Gregory D. Massotti and Kimbly A. Massotti
Lauren E. Mastandrea ’08
John Masterson
Mark M. Mastin ’92
John A. Mastroianni
Renee Mathai ’84 and Robert Mathai
Robert Matthies and Bonnie Matthies
Susan Maucione
Audrey Maudie
Jill A. Maurao
Laurie R. Maurao
Lucy L. Maurao
Michael Maurao and Brenda E. Maurao
Sarah A. Mawdsley ’20
Tom K. Maybury
Heather Mayo
Cynthia M. Mays ’87
Emma G. Maywalt ’22
Dina Mcarnevale
Richard J. McBride and Alitia M. McBride
Barbara A. McBrien P’18 P’21 and Michael McBrien P’18 P’21
Brendan Mccabe
John J. McCabe ’75 and Mary E. McCabe
Robert McCabe and Karen McCabe
Ian S. Mccallum ’22
Judie McCann
Cam Mccarthy
Daniel Mccarthy ’82 and Helen McCarthy
Kathleen Mccarthy
Leslie J. McCarthy P’14 and Dennis F. McCarthy P’14
Ted F. McCarthy and Mary Mccarthy
Whitney McCarthy
James P. Mcclaren ’23
Margaret L. McClory-Bonefant P’24 and Robert P. Bonefant, Jr. P’24
Sarah McConnell Dubois, Esq.
David W. McConnell and Rita Reddy Mcconnell
Jennifer M. McCormack and Todd R. McCormack
Britt McCoy
Mary M. McCrann ’99
Jean McCutcheom
Jordan Mcdermott
Paul McDermott
Kelsey E. McDonald ’16 L’18
Robert McDonald
Sally P. McDonald, Esq. L’09
Kevin Mcdonnell
Joseph McDonough
Robert J. McDonough ’71
Tom Mcdonough
Jackson McFadyen
Mike Mcgagh
Tom Mcgagh
Ryan McGahern ’21
Richard W. McGee P’24 and Aimee Mcgee P’24
Kathryn McGeehan
Julia Y. X. Mcgettigan ’22 M’23
Patrick J. McGovern, Jr. ’16
William McGowan
Roxanne Mcgrath ’93 and Kevin McGrath
Jessica M. Mcguire ’14
Michael A. McHenry ’71 and Jane McHenry
Diana Mcintosh
Margaret McKeever
Camille A. McKenna, Esq. L’03
Douglas McKenna ’88 and Mary McKenna
Loretta Mckenna
Meaghan Mckenna
Patrick Mckenna
Shannon Mckenna
Tom Mckenna
Eamon R. McKenney ’21
William B. McKenzie and
Johanna W. McKenzie
Michael D. Mckinnon ’99
Juliana McKittrick, Esq. L’13
Katherine Mcknight
Peter McKone P’10 and Patricia McKone P’10
Conor H. McLaughlin ’99 and Cory J. McLaughlin ’98
James Mclaughlin
John J. McManus ’98 and Janice McManus
James M. McMillan and Megan M. McMillan
Jennifer McMonagle
Peter J. McNally, Jr. and Claudia A. McNally
Teresa McNally
Donald McNaughton
Sheila Mcneil
Terry Mcneil
James McPartlan
Kacey Meagher
Gary Mease P’09 and Mary Mease P’09
William F. Mecca, Jr. ’91
Ashley Medeiros
Jessica L. Medeiros ’10
Braxton H. Medlin, Esq. L’19
Anthony G. Medri and Laurie Medri
Mike J. Melahn
Ava Mendence
Paul Mendence, Sr.
Alex J. Menendez ’24
Alexandro A. Menendez P’24 and LeeAnn Menendez P’24
Gourishankar R. Menon P’24
Wendy Ment P’20
Susan Meronek P’24
John P. Meroski ’89
Susan Merriam
Brooke Merriam
Colin Merrick
Amelia Merrow
Frederick Merrow
Joanne Merrow and Karen Merrow
Michael Merrow
Howard A. Merten, Jr., Esq. and Veronica Merten
Lynn Messier
Taylor M. Messier ’16 ’18
Claire C. Metcalfe ’14
Murray R. Metcalfe P’14
Kelly Meyer P’24
Wesley J. Meyer
Julia M. Michaud ’23
Mary Jo Michaud and Michael T. Michaud
Frank A. Migliorelli ’88 and Donna L. Migliorelli
Anthony J. Mignone, Jr. and Karen Miller Mignone
Sandra J. Miklave P’15 P’17 and Matthew T. Miklave P’15 P’17
Mary C. Mikolajczyk
Michael A. Milas L’19
Douglas Miller
James S. Miller ’75 and Donna Miller
Jason Miller and Tammi Miller
John V. Miller ’91 and Lisa A. Miller ’92
Shad M. Miller, Esq. L’11 and Kendra M. Levesque, Esq. L’13
Joyce Milligan
Tricia Millington
Nina Mills
Randy A. Mills ’97
Alan Minard
Anthony N. Minutelli, Jr. L’20
Marlee H. Mirisola ’24
Catherine Misbach
Adam J. Misiuk ’21
Jacqueline T. Misner ’12
Alison Mitchell
Ellyana Mitchell
Frank W. Mitchell, Jr. and Stephanie A. Mitchell
Kelly A. Mitchell ’87 M’10
Mary Mitchell
Ralph Mitchell, Jr.
Lynne Mittel and Fred Mittel, Jr.
Bradley Moe
Talia Moine
George F. Molyneaux ’79 and Kathleen Molyneaux
Ellen M. Monaghan ’88
Elizabeth C. Monahan ’13 and Kristopher W. Carter ’11
Cathleen L. Moniz ’00 M’01
Joseph M. Montesano ’03
Paul A. Monti P’08 PL’15 and Diane M. Monti P’08 PL’15
Tim Moody and Kathleen A. Thomas-Moody
Jennifer L. Moore ’08
Robert M. Moore
Maria Morales
Nancy A. Moran ’87
Christopher J. Moreira
Annette Morello
Ann S. Mores, Esq. L’01 and Frank Mores
Felix Morgan
Thomas Morgan P’04 and Sherry M. Morgan P’04
Triona Morgan
William M. Morgan
Elizabeth B. Morin
Katie M. Morin L’19
William E. Morin, Jr. P’24 and Kim A. Morin P’24
Cat Moroney
Michael P. Moroney
Christina M. Morra ’13 L’22
Rose M. Morra ’86
Marian J. Morrill ’79 and William Edward Fisher
Nicole E. Morris ’99
Sara H. Morris ’11
Cathleen Morrison
Nicholas J. Morrison ’19
Clara J. Moses ’13
John J. Mount, Jr. ’80 and Debra Mount
Robert J. Mount, Esq. L’11
Liam Moylan
Riley Mucha ’20
Thomas E. Mulcahey ’76
Zach J. Mulcahy ’21
Martin J. Mullen and Heather Mullen
Madeline Muller
Miles Murdocca
Eileen Murphy
John F. Murphy ’13
Martin J. Murphy, Esq. L’12
Thomas A. Murphy, Esq. L’09
Timothy J. Murphy and Amy Murphy
David Murray
Richard T. Murray ’74
Sarah E. Murray ’20 ’23
Damian Musello
Cassandra A. Myers ’19
Taylor N. Myers ’23
Cecelia R. Myette
Koren Myette
Yee Yee Myint L’23
Lynne E. Najarian and Kevin B. Najarian
Austin Nappi
Dorothy Nappi
Daniel M. Narahara and Leslie Narahara
Olson Narda
Kenneth R. Nasiff P’24 and Dana Nasiff P’24
Matthew Nassar
Jennifer F. Nasser ’19 ’20
Marianna S. Nava L’23
Amanda Naylor ’22 M’23
Kathleen A. Nee, Esq. L’14 and Carlos D. Zambrano
Jared M. Needelman ’07
Connor R. Needham ’14
Kevin H. Negrotti ’89
Trinda Nehmer
Weayonnoh J. Nelson-Davies, Esq. L’07
Madison Neri ’19
Rita E. Nerney L’16
Peter Neronha, Esq.
Vincent J. Neubert ’20
Carlos C. Neves ’06 and Frances K. Parise ’07
Gregory J. Newman and Renee C. Newman
Mariah L. Nicholas ’18
Nathan R. Nichols ’23 ’24
Joseph Nickson
April Nieters
Joseph J. Nigro, Jr. P’23 and Stephanie N. Nigro P’23
Michael C. Nilsson ’84
Catherine L. Niziak ’23
Hannah P. Noel ’14
Cassie Noonan
Daniel P. Noonan P’23 and Michelle Noonan P’23
Kendall Noonan
Gerry Normandin, Jr. ’08
Amy L. Norris ’06
Christina Norton
Bruce Novis
Chloe W. Noyes ’23
Emma Nugai
Jill Nugai
Courtney A. Nugent ’09
Kathryn M. Nugent ’21
Betsy Nunez
Sarah Nunnery
Rachel A. Nuzzo, Esq.
Brendan G. O’Connell ’18
Richard O’Connell
John O’Connor
Maureen C. O’Connor
Mary E. O’Donnell ’12
Michelle O’Mara
Wendy W. Oakes
Jeffrey J. Oates L’22
Kathleen M. Oberg ’14
Molly O’Brien
Lloyd Ocean
Bryan O’Conner
Joan A. O’Connor
Kayleigh M. O’Connor
Michelle O’Connor
Patrick J. O’Connor L’15
Priscilla S. O’Connor
Ed O’Donnell
Frank O’donnell
Olayiwola O. Oduyingbo, Esq. L’14 and Katie V. Oduyingbo
Patrick H. Ogden ’23
Benjamin J. Ohanesian ’02
Anthony J. Oliver ’70
Jason D. Oliver
John P. Olobri ’74 and Donna Olobri
Clinton S. Olson
Mark J. Olson ’12
Kaitlyn O’Malley
Kathleen M. O’malley
Kenneth O’Mara
Roland O. Omisore ’85 and Beatrice Omisore
Deborah O’Neil
David E. O’Neill and Anne O’Neill
Joshua N. Ongera ’24
Kate Oostendorp
Karen S. Opalka P’22 and Peter A. Opalka, Sr. P’22
Karli E. Opalka ’22
Vivian Y. Oquendo P’18
Kelsi-Mariah Oresman
Mariana E. Ormonde, Esq. L’12
Blair Osborne
Suad Osman
Julie Ostrander and Stephen T. Ostrander
Laura Ostrander and Jerald R. Ostrander, Jr.
Lori A. Oteri ’05
Marvin J. Ott, Jr. ’71 and Corinne Ott
Michael B. Owens ’18
Deryl Pace
John A. Pacheco P’21 and Tammy A. Pacheco P’21
Margaret Pacheco
Stacey M. Pacheco
Alfred A. Pagel ’62 and Mary Pagel
Thomas J. Pagliarini, Esq. L’14
Mark W. Paglierani and Jennifer Paglierani
Samantha L. Painter ’19
Jill Pais ’05
Mike Palangio
Taylor A. Palermo ’21
Christy L. Palma ’93
Sandra F. Palmer and Russell D. Palmer
Monte Palombo
Maria Palumbo P’24
Maxwell T. Palumbo ’06 and Meredith A. Palumbo ’08
Matthew E. Panaccione and Michelle Panaccione
Linda A. Pankovic ’83
Michael Pantano and Christine W. Pantano
Robert J. Paone
Joseph Papa
Antonia K. Papadopoulos ’15
Shane J. Parcel ’14
Tara S. Parkerson ’98 and Jason Parkerson
John E. Parkhurst ’03
Lea M. Parrillo
Nancy Parsons
Vincent D. Parziale P’14 and Bonnie L. Parziale P’14
Amy Pasley
Gabriel J. Pasqualucci ’19
Jenna M. Paternostro ’16
Denise Patrone ’04
John Pearce
Kelsey D. Peck L’19 and John Weber
Timothy W. Peck ’92 and Kelly E. Peck
Isabel Pecora
Margaret A. Pegno ’17
Michael S. Peixoto ’09
Cory R. Pellegren ’12
Jane A. Pellegren ’11
Emmit C. Pelonzi
Richard J. Peneski, Jr.
Taylor Pennell
Rosemarie Pennisi
Crystal Peralta L’20
Timothy Percoski
Armando Pereira
Victoria T. Pereira ’15
Karen Perez
Richard Perez
Patricia Perrault
Stephen M. Perreault ’00
Alan Perry ’73
Anne Perry
Karen A. Perry
Brian D. Pervere and Cheryl A. Pervere
Douglas M. Peterson
Drake Peterson
Jean E. Peterson ’12 M’15
Susie Petitti
Kerry M. Petracone ’13 and Jesse Petracone
Cindy Petrella
Martin Petrie, Jr. P’23 and
Kathleen M. Petrie P’23
Daniel W. Petrovic ’19
Hayden C. Pfeiffer
Patrick Phelan
Olivia A. Philbrook L’21
Lindsay Philippe
John D. Phillips and Courtney F. Phillips
Scott Phillips P’24 and Patricia Phillips P’24
Latsamy Phomsouvandara
Janice C. Picano
David R. Piccirilli and Alexandra M. Piccirilli
Joanne C. Pickford ’70 and Stanley Pickford
Arthur E. Pierce and Robyn J. Pierce
Deborah J. Pierce and Jeffrey C. Pierce
Kayla M. Pierce ’09
Kurt Pierce and Kristen D. Pierce
Keyana L. Pietraszek ’19 ’20
Nicholas A. Pietrini ’22
Lindsey Pike
Rena S. Piller-Thurston ’97 and Jason P. Thurston ’97
Leticia C. Pimentel, Esq. L’14
Christopher Pinault M’08
Kathy C. Pindar and Keenan A. Pindar II
Jeffrey J. Pini ’13
Alexander Pirri ’13
Anthony Piscetello
Jolene Piscetello
Dean M. Piterski ’16
Mary Pittari
Angela Pizzolato
Matthew R. Plain, Esq. L’05
Michael S. Platt ’86
Michael T. Plaziak ’96
Ann M. Plotas P’22 and Phillip J. Plotas P’22
Anna Plume and Stephen K. Plume IV
Jean-Daniel A. Pluss-Bryant P’09 and
Susan E. Pluss-Bryant P’09
Connor Poetsch
Robert Poetsch and Deborah Poetsch
Gayle F. Polcari P’16 and
Edward A. Polcari P’16
The Honorable Samantha R. Polisena, Esq. L’13 and Joseph M. Polisena, Jr. L’15
Eileen C. Pollina ’16 and Brett A. Pollina ’17
Matthew B. Ponko ’90 and Caroline Precourt
Christopher J. Portelli ’95
Darcey Porter
William C. Porter ’92
Dawnmarie Portoff ’90
Bill Potter
Rep. Brandon Potter
Mary M. Potter ’95
Patricia A. Potter P’08 P’12
Sarah A. Potter, Esq. L’05
Linda G. Potts and Tim C. Potts
Christopher Poulin and Margaret Carr
Josie Poulin
Nicole A. Poulin ’21
Nancy R. Poutray ’87
James E. Powell ’79 and Maureen Powell
James E. Powers, Jr. and Karen Powers
Mary Powers
Timothy J. Pramer ’82 and Kathleen Pramer
James R. Pratt ’04
Kimberly A. Pratt
Michael Prescott
Abigail Preston
Gina M. Prestone ’12
Shannon Priddy and Michael D. Priddy
Rodney Prim
Sarah Principe-Medeiros
Christopher W. Pritchard ’24
Dave Pritchard
John Proctor
Joseph M. Proietta, Esq. L’02 and
Mary C. Proietta
Nico F. Prospero ’23
Lindsey P. Proulx ’15
Royal M. Proulx, Jr. ’89 and Maria Proulx
Peter A. Provencal P’21 P’22 and Lorri Provencal P’21 P’22
Christine L. Provost ’84
Taylor Provost ’16
James Pruner ’06
Jeffrey C. Prystowsky L’23
Thomas J. Pulcini ’23
Stanley F. Pupecki, Esq. L’02
Pamela Purcell
Steven Purcell
Giana Pye
Keira Quadros
Michael M. Quadros and Naomi Quadros
Tyler Quadros
Zachary Quadros
Meghan Qualey
Roberta Qualey
Tom Qualey
John A. Quaranta, Jr. ’76
Samuel A. Quaye ’22
Kathleen Quenneville
Molly F. Quilty ’19
Donald Quindley
Susan Quine
Cassidy E. Quinn ’21
Charles S. Quinn III ’93
Eileen Quinn
James M. Quinn P’17 P’19 and Barbara A.
Quinn P’17 P’19
Lisa F. Quinn
Nancy D. Quinn
Taylor Quinn
Nicholas D. Quirini ’22
Michael Quiroga
Abrielle Racine
Allen J. Racine, Jr.
Deanna N. Rackie ’19
R. Scott Racusin ’74
Thomas F. Rafael ’11
Scott L. Raines ’10
Deborah M. Rainey
Vesa Räisänen
Allan P. Ramella ’05 M’21 and Christina Ramella P’24
Nancy L. Ramos ’92 ’94 P’10 and Lawrence Ramos
Matthew J. Ranaghan ’03
Rebecca E. Rand, Esq. ’01 L’04
Tony Ranoldo
Karen Raposa
Grace Raposo and Nuno A. Raposo
Joseph P. Raposo ’05
Helen Ras
John W. Ras
Paul Rasmussen P’24 and Kimberly Rasmussen P’24
Kathryn M. Rattigan L’12 and Chris Rattigan
Mark Ravas P’23 P’24 and Laurie M. Ravas P’23 P’24
Christopher Ray III and Donna D.
Christopher
Brittany Rayburn ’16
Angela M. Raymond ’10
Megan Raymond
Nixie A. Raymond
Gabrielle A. Reardon ’16
Anabela Rebelo
Carole Recchia
Kyle Rector ’21
Kathleen A. Redfield ’99 and Benjamin G. Redfield ’99
Michele Redner
Lauren Reeley
Kaylin M. Reen
Jill T. Reeve
Ashley E. Regan ’16
Jason R. Regan ’22
Kelli Regan P’19 P’22 and Ronald W. Regan, Jr. P’19 P’22
Stephen C. Regnault ’89
Jocelynn M. Rego
Felicia Reid
Erin E. Reilly ’88 and David A. Reilly, Jr. ’89
Lexa Reilly
Robert A. Reino ’24
Susan Reissenweber
Jessie M. Reniere L’19
Kyle Renner
Ariana C. Renwick ’14
Catharine M. Resh P’16 and Franklin E. Resh P’16
Adam J. Resmini, Esq. L’09
Daniel V. Ressler ’16
Victoria Restler
David C. Retford P’24
Louis D. Revak
Patrick J. Revel ’87 and Lisa Revel
Amanda Kate Reyes Celis
Christina Reynolds
Christopher Reynolds ’82 and Laurie Reynolds
Denise Reynolds
Liam J. Reynolds
Linda M. Reynolds
Walter T. Reynolds ’84 and Patricia Reynolds
David E. Rheault ’78
Brian D. Rhodes ’01
James G. Rhodes, Esq. L’12
Gwen B. Rhuda ’23
Elizabeth C. Rice P’17 and
John A. Rice, Jr. P’17
Violet M. Richard and Gregory H. Richard
Sarah Richards
Chloe Richardson
Christian J. Richardson
David Richardson
Jared N. Richardson ’24
Kayla Richardson
Margaret E. Richardson
Nate Richardson
Rachel Richardson
Tessa A. Rickart ’11
Gina M. Rigby P’21
Nicole Riley, Esq. ’87 and Douglas A. Riley
Jeffrey L. Ringuest ’76
Rebecca L. Ritchie ’18 M’19
Matthew E. Ritter and Nancy Ritter
Sheya Rivard L’22
Casey Rivera
Rosa Rivera-McCutchen
Lexi Rivet
Francis L. Riviezzo P’13 and Jeanne F. Riviezzo P’13
Caroline G. Roach
Tammy Roach
Jillian Robalewski
Bianca S. Robbins ’23
Callum Robbins ’23
Dylan D. Robbins
Julia E. Robbins
Gregg Roberts
Joseph Roberts and Laura D. Roberts
Joseph Robicheau
Blair V. Robinson L’23
Lisa Robinson
Daphne B. Robson L’21
Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06 and Kyle A. Rocha, Esq. ’06 L’09
Corinne J. Roche P’20 and John J. Roche P’20
Kevin P. Roche and Erin C. Roche
Jacob R. Rocheleau ’23
Andrew C. Rodgers, Esq. L’14
Glen Rodrigues
Nicole J. Roebuck
Danielle Roes
Lara Roeslindquist
David Rogalski P’09 P’10 and Dawn Rogalski P’09 P’10
Caulin M. Rogers ’20
John C. Rogers ’22
Bianca M. Rom ’13
William Romanowski
Judah H. Rome L’16 and Jessica D. Rome M.D.
David Rood
Robert Rooks
Bella Rosa
Hope K. Rosales ’13
Susan Rosamond
Jacqueline T. Rosiak P’13 and Michael G. Rosiak P’13
Jeffrey J. Rosinski and Alyssa M. Rosinski
Val Rossi
Alexander Roth-Honigfeld ’09
Andrea Rounds
Paul Roy P’10 and Charlotte P. Roy P’10
Paige A. Royce ’12
Craig H. Royle P’21 P’23 and Leslie C. Royle P’21 P’23
Patti J. Ruch ’08 and Joseph R. Ruch ’08
Alexander K. Rudkin ’14
Alexander Ruggeri ’07
John P. Ruggiero, Jr. ’78
Jennifer Ruhle
Robert Rulli
Brent Runyon
Kasey A. Ruo
Patricia Ruo and Frank Ruo
Tayla Ruo
Meg Rush
Henry F. Russell, Jr. ’70
Sara A. Russell ’22
Scott Russell
Lydia Russo
Charles J. Russo L’23
Matthew C. Russo ’17 ’19
Salvatore Russo
Makayla Ruth
Donald Ryan
John Ryan
Lindsay Ryan
Virginia Ryan and Gerald Ryan
Maria E. Sabetta ’08
Mark Sabo
Tanios sader and Rita Sader
Ricky Safir and Kerry P. Safir
Safietou Sagna
Richard Sagnella ’78 and Peggy Sagnella
Cindy E. Salazar, Esq. ’06 M’08 L’10
Angel Salcedo
Megan C. Saldaña ’10
Heather Salerno
Mia G. Salerno ’21
Mark Salley and Kimberly Salley
Mikhail Salnikov ’17
Dr. John A. Saltmarsh P’11 and Gisele M. Grenon P’11
Jennifer Samolyk, Esq. ’92 L’96 and John Romney
Angela Sampson
Afiya A. Samuel ’09
Chris Sand
Elizabeth Sandberg
Cheryl Sanders
Tyler Sandoval
Umberto Santagati and Kristin Santagati
Nicolette F. Santangelo ’24
Malena Santia
Angel G. Santiago ’04 and Alondra V. De Leon ’08
Emilio G. Santiago ’19 L’24
Christopher D. Santilli and Karen Santilli
Michael Santilli
Brian R. Santoro ’19
Mark Santoro P’24 and Ellen M. Santoro P’24
Mary R. Santoro ’20 M’22
Zachary C. Santoro ’20 ’21
Manuel Santos
Manuel P. Santos, Jr. and Katie Santos
Marianne Santos and Kevin Santos
Roxanne D. Santos
Anne Sarazin P’21 P’22 and Roland H. Sarazin, Jr. P’21 P’22
Robert Sargeant P’16 and Jennifer Sargeant P’16
Wensley Sarkar Bynoe
Dina H. Sarris and Thomas D. Sarris
Mark C. Saunders ’92 and Margarida Saunders
Kat B. Savage L’17 and Jeremy B. Savage
Meg Savarese
Buck A. Save and Wendy L. Allen
Heather A. Savino and Christopher M. Savino
Paul Savvas and Jean Savvas
Paul Savvas
Abraham Savvidis P’24 and Kathleen D. Savvidis P’24
Katherine Sayles
Kelly Scafariello ’99
Jessica Y. M. Scalise ’23
Andrew P. Scanlon, Jr. ’90 ’94
Scott A. Scarneo ’15
Mary Schacherbauer
Cathy Schaefer
Etie-Lee Z. Schaub and Steven Schaub
Cynthia Scheinberg
Jenny K. Schermerhorn ’12
Eric Schmigle ’00 M’01
Jane Schneider
John M. Schneider and Melanie Schneider
Mark Schneider
David N. Schremser ’01
Elisabeth Schuler
Victoria Schulz
Louis M. Schwartz P’24 and Cathy-Lynn Locke P’24
Colleen Scialo
Ellen T. Scirrotto ’06 and Stephen J. Scirrotto M’06
Karen Scriven
Olivia A. Scuncio ’23
Todd M. Seaback ’88 and Leslie D. Seaback ’87
Brenda J. Searcy
Steven A. Sears ’94
Cidra Sebastien
Tracy Sebouhian
Kristi Sedlacek and Richard L. Seegel
Rita L. Segel ’05 and Richard M. Segel ’81
Vanessa Segurado
Matt Seminara
Steven D. Seminelli ’09
Brendan Serenson ’23 ’24
Lou Serenson
Norma Serrano
Michael E. Servas ’08
Ben J. Settle III and Amy Settle
Donald J. Sevigny ’11 M’12
Jenna Sevigny
David E. Shamberger and Colleen Shamberger
Carl M. Sharrio P’21 P’22 and Leslie A. Sharrio P’21 P’22
Deborah J. Shaughnessy
Jason Shaughnessy P’24 and Karin D. Shaughnessy P’24
Linda Shaughnessy
Paul Shaughnessy
John Shaw
Kyla Shea
Ryan Shea
Audra Sheehan
Thomas C. Sheehan and Chelynn Sheehan
Sharon Sheinker
R. Douglas Sheldon, Jr. and Michele N. Sheldon
Ronald A. Shems and Maxine J. Grad
Molly Shepherd
Elaine P. Sherlock ’74 and Mark P. Sherlock
Douglas Sherman
Glenn R. Shiebler P’08
Aaron B. Shields, Esq. L’97
Patricia Shimkus and John J. Shimkus
Ellen Shohet
Christine Shope
Charles Shultz
Christopher L. Shultz P’24 and Anna D. Shultz P’24
Cynthia Shultz and Herb Shultz
Maggie Shumar
Rebecca G. Shuster
Gwen C. Sieber ’23
Jonathan R. Siefert P’13 P’16 and Jean A. Siefert P’13 P’16
Jeremy Siegel ’12
John Siegenthaler P’10 and Betty Siegenthaler P’10
Chris Sienko
Cameron F. Signorelli ’15
Tina Silva
Barbara Silvia
Jessica L. Silvia ’99
Loretta V. Silvia ’00
Joseph G. Simeone, Jr.
Jason J. Simoneau ’99 and Jayme Simoneau
Matthew J. Simonelli ’17
Deb Simons
Roger Simons
Jay Sinclair
Jeanine Sisco
Karen K. Slattery, Esq. L’23
Mark S. Slavtcheff CSP ’01 ’02 and Debra Legerski
David S. Slepkow, Esq. L’97
Laura K. Sleys and David P. Sleys
Sarah Slottje ’06 and Spencer C. Slottje ’07
Emily E. Slusarczyk ’21
Ariana Smaldone ’20
Anthony R. Smith and Mette L. Smith
Christopher K. Smith, Esq. L’07
Clinton Smith P’03 and Karen H. Smith P’03
Connor C. Smith ’22 M’23
Isa Smith
James D. Smith and Tamsin Smith
Jason C. Smith and Andrea Smith
John D. Smith and Kathleen Smith
John L. Smith ’81
Laurie Smith
Sandra Smith and Sam Smith
Stephen P. Smith and Sonya A. Smith
Alexandra Smith-Bourget
Judy H. Snyder
Carol Sojka P’17 and Joseph E. Sojka, Jr. P’17
Stephen N. Solarsh
Rose Solomon
Bryan Soltis
Kelly Soltis
Lawrence Soltis
Michele Sommer P’19 and Edmund H. Geschickter, Jr. P’19
Jane Sommers
Renee Soto
Rick Soubliere
Dalton A. Sousa ’22
Isabel Sousa P’23 and Everett J. Sousa, Jr. P’23
Michael Sousa
Mehmet A. Sozer Ph.D. M’05
Carlene A. Spagnola ’11
Lillian Sparfven
Jane Spatola
Aaron M. Spaulding ’99
Thomas E. Spaulding, Jr. P’19 PL’23 and Dr. Valerie J. Franks P’19 PL’23
Holly Spellman
Sara R. Spellman ’14
Nicole Spencer
Lori A. Speranzo P’19 P’20
Nicole A. Speranzo ’19 ’20
Cameron Sperry
Kristina Spillane
Trisha A. Spillane ’04
Edward J. Spinard, Jr. ’94 P’96 P’06 and Emily J. Spinard ’07 P’96 P’06
Susan Spiro
Chris Spitalere
Evan H. Spitzer ’23
Craig Spooner
Michelle Spreda
Robert Spreda
Lorraine St John
David St Vincent
Kyle A. St. Goddard
Allen St. Jean and Alicia St Jean
Penni Stackpole
Cathy Stanilka
Jennifer M. Stanley
Ray Stansel
George W. Stansfield III ’13
Doug Starratt
Greg A. Starratt and Dawn Starratt
Shannon Starratt
Keith A. Stebbins P’24 and Gianna Stebbins P’24
Emily Steffens
Matthew Stein P’16 and Achina P. Stein P’16
Steven Stein
Neil D. Steinberg and Eugenia C. Shao
Susan E. Sternberg
Brian Stevens
Lizzy C. Stevenson ’23
Barbara Stewart
Jim Stewart
Wendy K. Stocke ’15 and Christopher H. Stocke
Luke J. Strand ’23
Bob Stringer
Robert E. Strollo and Mary E. Smith
Marie C. Struck P’17
Truman J. Strug ’23
Joe Strzegowski
Mark Strzegowski and Amy Strzegowski
Sharon Strzegowski
Devon E. Stukas ’13
Charles S. Stults IV ’95
Timothy J. Stump ’05
Jo A. Stumpf
Philip T. Sughrue and Paula Sughrue
Ken Suibielski
Brian J. Sullivan ’06 M’20
Jake Sullivan
Loren D. Sullivan ’19 ’20
Patrick M. Sullivan P’24 and Gail C. Sullivan P’24
Sandra Sullivan
Sean Sullivan and Sandra Sullivan
Sue Sullivan Leo Sullivan
Holly A. Sullo ’78
Charles Sumares
Vanessa D. Surridge ’22
Maxwell S. Sussman ’23 ’24
Richard L. Sussman P’23 P’24 and Marci R. Sussman P’23 P’24
John M. Sutherland III L’98 and Nina R. Sutherland
Bonnie Sutphen
Ray Sutton and Cindi Sutton
Ryan Sutton
Sarah Sutton
Pamela Swain
Gertrude Swann
Sara M. Swanson ’16
Theodore N. Swanson ’12
Aimee Sweeney
Gail Sweeney P’22
Patricia Sweeney ’85
Molly M. Sweet ’21
Cyndi K. Swensen P’13 and Rick C. Swensen P’13
Deborah L. Sylvia ’89 ’96 P’01 P’04 and Ronald N. Sylvia P’01 P’04
Jennifer L. Sylvia, Esq. ’06 L’09 and Richard J. Sylvia
Charlene Szloch
Torren Szuluk P’24
Zeina Tabbaa P’22 and Antwan Hanna P’22
Renee Tall
John M. Tamburro ’71 and Karen Tamburro
Benjamin M. Tapley ’23
Kevin Tara
Blair Tarara P’24
Taryn E. Tarlov ’12 and Benjamin S. Tarlov ’12
Dennis Tarmey
Matthew Tarolli and Jennifer A. Tarolli
Dianne Tarpy
Eric Tarpy and Christina M. Tarpy
Stephen Tartaglino and Lisa M. Tartaglino
Knoxie Tassey
Paul Tassey and Pamela Tassey
Richard Tavares, Jr. ’07 L’22
Emily J. Taylor ’12
Jaquelyn I. Taylor ’15
Robert Taylor
David Tedeschi and Alison Tedeschi
Andrew M. Teitz
Harry A. Templeton ’65 ’72
Katie Terry
Alexandria Testut
Peter Teto ’81
Brett W. Thacher
Janice Theriaque
Amanda J. Theroux ’06
Adriana Thomas
Caroline E. Thomas
Paul J. Thomas
Peter J. Thomas and Melissa Thomas
Ryan Thomas
Angela Thompson
Chris Thompson
Claire D. Thompson PM’16 P’14
Diane Thompson
James Thompson
Jordan Thompson M’23
Kathy M. Thompson P’16 and George M. Thompson, Esq. P’16
Kelly M. Thompson and Kaitlyn M. O’Malley
Peter S. Thompson
Ryan Thompson
Gary J. Thomson and Kerry A. Thomson
Jennifer M. Thorn
Tyler Thorpe
Ronnie Threadgill
Steve Thurston
Dana Tiebout
Mary Tiebout P’02 and Allen R. Tiebout, Jr. P’02
Brooke K. Tierney
Gary A. Tilford ’76
Brian S. Timbrouck, Sr. and Suzanne Timbrouck
Joseph P. Tine ’00
Liane Tinsley
Savanna Titre
Carmel M. Titti
Shelby D. Tobin and Christopher Tobin
Nicole Tomaselli
Lynne Tonna
Marla Tornambe
Matthew B. Toro, Esq. L’97
Yulyana M. Torres L’23
Fredda Tosenberg
Stephen A. Totino P’24 and Mariea L. Totino P’24
Becky Tougas
Bernadette Tout
Lindsay G. Towle ’22
Mary T. Trabulsi and Lawrence N. Trabulsi
Amanda L. Tramonte L’21
Sandra Tranfaglia
Kristen E. Trapalis
Rob Traverse
Ethan Tremblay
Garrett Trombi and Kathleen A. Trombi
Edward J. Troyano ’23 ’24
Vincent J. Truncellito P’06 and Frances B. Truncellito P’06
Amanda J. Tsapatsaris ’09 and Christopher A. Tsapatsaris ’09
Penny A. Tsiounis ’16
David Tubman
Kathy Tubman
Carlton Tucker and Kathleen M. Tucker
Michael Tully
Alison Tumminello
Mark E. Turcotte P’24 and Lisa M. Turcotte P’24
Nicole R. Turner CPA P’24
Richard Turner
Oliver Tutt
Kim Twohig
Elizabeth Tysh
Greg Tysh
Anthony Ucci
Antoinette Uffner
David Unsworth
Isabelle Unsworth
James Unsworth ’08
Michael Unsworth and Gean Unsworth
Hinna Upal, Esq. L’07
Donna Urbanetti
Amy M. Urso ’18
MaryBeth Uryga and David Uryga
Matt Uryga
Bonnie B. Usher
Diane Usher ’98 and Patrick Usher, Jr. ’98
John T. Vachon and Susan E. Vachon
Donna Vail
Karina N. Valencia L’14
Mike Valentine
Amanda Valentino
Will Valinote
Alicia Vallette
Erin Van Dorn, Esq. L’06
Matthew VanDerVelden, Jr. and Debra L. VanDerVelden
Brianne Vanderwoude
Joshua P. Vanvoorhis ’21
Stephen A. Varraso ’94
Natasha N. Varyani
Anna Vasaturo ’20
Lisa Vasaturo P’20 and John Vasaturo P’20
Timothy J. Veillette PE ’84
Beverly Velino
Mike Velino
Margreta Vellucci, Esq. L’07
Nicholas S. Velseboer ’14
Matthew M. Vendetti and Leslie A. Vendetti
Eddy Vera, Jr. and Ruth M. Vera
Nicole M. Verdi, Esq. ’12 L’14 and
Erlin R. Rogel ’12 L’15
Joseph Vergoni
Kyle Vergoni
Kathryn Vernet
Dawn C. Verrelli ’95 and Dino P. Verrelli ’96
Nicholas W. Vetrano ’19
Telesa Via
Jennifer R. Vieira
Kate Vieira, Esq. L’12
Barbara Vietor
Jeffery K. Villani and Kathryn A. Villani
Oriana Villarreal ’12
Samani Villella
Brian Vitek
Nick Vivenzio
Carlton Vogt III and Brenda Vogt
Bjorn von Euler
Eliza Vorenberg and Barnaby Jackson
Adam L. Vorwald ’12
Regina V. Vorwald P’12 and Gary R. Vorwald P’12
Robert P. Vrooman and Kristin K. Vrooman
Jennifer Wade
Anita Wadhwa
Maureen A. Wagner, Esq. L’10
Wiley Wakeman
Brian R. Walendziak
Peter J. Walerysiak ’12
Brian K. Walker ’99
Stephen K. Walker ’86 and Diane M. Fischer
Waller Walker
Andrew D. Wallace P’20 and Margaret H. Gilligan P’20
Richard F. Wallace P’16 and Michelle A. Wallace P’16
Thomas M. Wallace ’21
Wendy A. Wallace P’24
Dan L. Walser ’13
Amanda Walsh
Jennifer Walsh
Michael Walsh
Stephanie L. Walsh ’99
Tara M. Walsh
Gillian Walshe
Laura Walsh-Rogalski
Kara N. Walter ’03
Anna M. Walther ’18
Mary Walther P’18
Rue Walther
John B. Walton ’22
Alexandra Ward
Debbie Ward
Matthew I. Ward and Jennifer Ward
Stacy Wardwell
Benjamin Warren
Laure Warren
Louise Waryas
Steven Waryas
Andrea L. Wasylow
Lawrence Waxman
Erin Weaver
Sophia J. Weaver L’21
Mary Webb
Linda Weber
Kamali A. Webson ’17
Dan L. Weidman ’12 and Kristina Keddie
Jeffrey Weigel and Christine Weigel
Robert C. Weir, Jr. P’24 and Tyler L. Weir P’24
Eliana B. Weissman, Esq. L’07
Terri L. Welch ’93
Elaine F. Wells
Jamie C. Wells
Matthew R. Weltman
Eric S. Went and Catarina G. Went
Deborah J. Wesolowski ’93 P’02 and David J. Wesolowski P’02
Ginette M. Wessel
H. Philip West
Lucinda West L’21
Michele P. West
Jack T. Wetzel ’22
Elizabeth M. Wexler ’22
Allison Weygand P’23
Faith Whalen
Leah M. Whearty ’23
Brittany Wheaton
Joyce Whetstone P’02
Robert Charles Whiffen ’80 and
Melissa Whiffen
David White
John K. White and Yvonne J. Prevost
Michael J. White P’24 and
Mara S. White P’24
John L. Whitmer ’87
Scott E. Whitney ’88
Emily Whitson-Whennen ’03
Elizabeth Wiedmann
Mk Wieler
Patricia Wieler
William E. Wieler and Maureen Wieler
Darren M. Wigley ’99 and
Donna M. Wigley ’99
Allison Wilber ’20
Craig A. Wilcox
Michelle Wilcox
Crystal Wild
Asa Wildermann and Elizabeth Wildermann
KC Williams
Brian Williams
Curtis G. Williams ’73 and Todd Urbonas
Derek Williams
Graham R. Williams
Hailey Williams
Holly Williams and Shawen Williams
Lia M. Williams ’21
Linda Williams
Lynne Williams
Neal Williams P’24 and Sheryl Williams P’24
Roy Williams
Stacey Williams P’22 P’23 and Brent E. Williams P’22 P’23
Thomas W. Williams
Jill Willis
Katherine Wilme
James D. Wilmes P’09 and Deborah Wilmes P’09
Robin Wilson
Sharon Winkler
Patchachote Winyarat ’14
Howard B. Wise P’16 P’18 and Doreen Wise P’16 P’18
Mary T. Wise ’93
Bridgit Witbeck
Carol Witt
David Wojdyl ’94
Thomas F. Wojt and Tracy S. Wojt
Catherine Wolfe
Andrea L. Wolff
Cole D. Wolkner ’23
Valerie Womer
Peter Y. Wong
Anthony R. Wood P’24 and Jill Wood P’24
Jennifer L. Wood
Grace W. Woodcock ’23
Helen Woodhouse
Kristina L. Woodmansee ’12
Brian W. Woods ’09
Michael Woods and Hilaire M. Woods
Stacy Woods P’22 and John F. Woods, Jr. P’22
Kevin Worthley
Christopher R. Wosencroft and Amy Wosencroft
Colin Wraith ’23
Douglas Wraith P’23 and Linda Wraith P’23
Erin Wraith
Bethany M. Wright ’16
Josh Wright P’24
Michael B. Wright
Shayna Wright
Hunter M. Wronski ’20
Mary J. Wu and Min Wu
Julia Wyman
Adam Yablonsky P’13 and Ann F. Yablonsky P’13
Flavia Yanez Albert ’21
Dr. Tyrone L. Yang
Angela Yingling
Nuris P. Ynoa P’24
Matthew Yoder
Mark Yonadi and Dawn Yonadi
Emily Yonych ’22
Noah B. Yost ’23
Jacob R. Young ’24
Lindsey N. Young ’23
Sharon Young
Kaley Youngcourt ’22
Yamche Yu P’24
Michael J. Zabelin, Esq. and Kathryn M. Sabatini, Esq.
Kacy Z. Zaborowski ’10
Melissa Zampello
Lorraine Zanini P’24 and Michael A. Zanini P’24
Brian Zarlenga ’14
Dave Zawilinski
Joseph M. Zeoli
Chelsea A. Zeolla
Arnold Ziesse M’13
Kristin Zink
Andrew S. Zirn and Tania Zirn
Derek Zuckerman
Marc E. Zukovich P’15
Katie M. Zullo ’04 and
Steven B. Zullo ’03 M’03
Jason Zutaut and Nicole E. Zutaut
Anonymous (49)
You Helped Us Soar Past Our Goal
We realized one of our most successful Giving Days in university history in October. The Hawk spirit was proudly on display as our community’s generosity soared past the fundraising goal, raising an incredible $607,211 from 2,582 gifts and unlocking 10 match challenges! Your support makes a powerful impact on our students and supports the programs, initiatives, and facilities that make RWU special.
$607,211
TOTAL RAISED
$2,582 GIFTS
10 MATCH CHALLENGES
INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERSHIPS AND MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES
Roger Williams University and School of Law is grateful for the vital support of corporate, foundation, and institutional donors and sponsors. The following lists recognize organizations that provided gifts, pledges, payments on prior year pledges, and grants or made matching gifts to the university.
INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERSHIPS
$1 MILLION AND UP
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Compass Group
Cummings Foundation
Environmental Protection Agency
National Institutes of Health
Nellie Mae Education Foundation
U.S. Department of Education
USDA
$100,000 TO $999,999
Barr Foundation
Gabelli Foundation
Gagliardi Family Charitable Fund of the Ayco Charitable Fund
Jewish Communal Fund
Manchester Public Schools Connecticut (CT)
National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
National Science Foundation
Rhode Island Foundation
Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors
The Spencer Foundation
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
U.S. Department of Labor
United Way of Rhode Island
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
William T. Morris Foundation
Anonymous
$25,000 TO $99,999
Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities & Hospitals
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rhode Island
Center for Health and Justice Transformation
Chattanooga 2.0
DF Pray General Contractors
The Donald C. McGraw Foundation, Inc.
Ernest E. Stempel Foundation
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Georgia Institute of Technology
Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund
Helfrich Bros. Boiler Works, Inc.
Homarus Strategies, LLC
The Louis R Cappelli Foundation
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Norbella Media
Office of Naval Research
The Retirement Research Foundation
Rhode Island Commerce Corporation
Rhode Island Legal Services, Inc.
Schwab Charitable Fund
Shawmut Design & Construction
SouthCoast Community Foundation
Southeastern New England Educational and Charitable Foundation
U.S. Department of Energy
Anonymous
$10,00 TO $24,999
Abt Associates Inc.
AccessLex Institute
Anova Marine Insurance Services LLC
Ayers Saint Gross Inc
Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund
C. Brito Construction Co., Inc
Chisholm Chisholm & Kilpatrick LTD
Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc.
Fisher Bus Inc.
Idalia Whitcomb Charitable Trust
Jones Kelleher LLP
Kaestle Boos Associates, Inc.
Kelly Family Foundation Inc.
Mandell, Boisclair & Mandell, LTD
Marasco & Nesselbush, LLP
Merrill Lynch and Co., Inc.
Morgan Stanley
Motley Rice LLC
Rhode Island Association of Realtors
Rhode Island Department of Public Safety
Robinson + Cole LLP
Santander
Shellfish Restoration Foundation of Narragansett Bay
The Smith Kushmerick Family Fund
U.S. Department of Defense
UBS Financial Services Inc.
Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program
Washington Trust Charitable Foundation
Young Living Foundation
Anonymous
$5,000 TO $9,999
ACS Industries, Inc.
Adler Pollock & Sheehan P.C.
Bank of America
BankNewport
Barton Gilman LLP
Benevity Community Impact Fund
Cameron & Mittleman LLP
Centreville Bank
Columbia Construction Company
Consigli Construction Company
DeLuca & Associates, Ltd.
DeSisto Law LLC
Empire LaSalle LLC
Fidelity Giving Marketplace
Gardiner & Theobald, Inc.
Gilbane, Inc.
Givinga Foundation, Inc.
Grimshaw-Gudewicz Charitable Foundation
Hinckley Allen LLP
Hofstra University
Law School Admission Council
Pierce Atwood LLP
Promotora Inmobiliaria LFG
PSEG
Public Housing Association of RI
Rhode Island Heavy & Highway
Rob Levine Law
Saccoccio & Assoc. Inc - Architects
Sanofi Ventures
Verdi Construction Management Co.
Weston and Sampson Engineers Inc.
Wider Path Home Foundation
$2,500 TO $4,999
AARP
Albany Law School
Arden Engineering Constructors, LLC
Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
Bentley Companies
The Boeing Company
Bowdoin Apartments Corp.
Caldwell & Johnson
Citizens Bank
City of Providence
Cornish Associates
CUNY School of Law
Customers Bank
Day Pitney LLP
Emma Clyde Hodge Memorial Fund
Enterprise Holdings Foundation
Enterprise Holdings
F & S Electric Inc
Federal Home Loan Bank
Fletcher Development LLC
FM Global
Gonzalez Law Offices, Inc
Guardian Life Insurance Company
Higgins, Cavanagh & Cooney, LLP
Horsley Witten Group, Inc.
Jimmy Stuart Carpet & Upholstery
Cleaners, Inc.
Keches Law Group
Locke Lord LLP
Moritz College of Law
Narragansett Electric Company
National Equity Fund
New York Law School
ODU Law Firm, LLC
Pariseault Builders Inc.
Partridge Snow & Hahn LLP
PNC Institutional Asset Management
Raymond James Financial
Rhode Island Builders Association
Rhode Island Energy
Rhode Island Housing
Richard M. Schultze Family Foundation
Seton Hall University
Sloane & Walsh, LLP
Starkweather & Shepley Insurance
Brokerage Inc.
Turner Construction Company
UC Davis School of Law
United HealthCare Svs Inc.
The University of Georgia Foundation
University of North Carolina
University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law
University of Wisconsin - Madison
Warren German American Club
Widener University Delaware Law School
Williams Companies
ZDS Architecture & Interiors
$1,000 TO $2,499
Anchor Insulation Co.
Associated Schools of Construction
Bally’s Twin River Casino and Hotel
Bartlett Tree Experts
Bay Coast Bank
Baylor University School of Law
Bond Building Construction Inc
Bristol Bagel Works, Ltd.
Bristol County Lodge of Elks #1860
Brown University
California Western School of Law
CBIZ MHM, LLC
Coia & Lepore, Ltd.
CSL Consulting, LLC
Depaul University
Deslandes Construction
Fork, Knife + Spoon Catering
Gil’s Appliances
HarborOne Bank
Hart’s Roofing & Construction
Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.
JLV Consulting LLC
JVT Advisors
Koppelman Family Foundation
Korel Controls, Inc.
Lifespan Office of Research
Mazaika Family Foundation
MD Lieberman Foundation
Michigan State University
National Low Income Housing Coalition
Neighborhood Health Plan of RI
NWN Carousel
Paul Masse Chevrolet
Pepperdine University
Pepsi-Cola Company
RICON Construction
Risman Insurance Agency, Inc.
The Robert J. Avila Foundation
RSM Boston Foundation
Seattle University
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Single Source Disaster Recovery Specialists
Southern University Law Center
Stifel Charitable Inc
STV Group, Inc.
Tara Construction
TD Bank
University of Baltimore School of Law
University of Iowa College of Law
University of Richmond School of Law
Vigilant Brewing Company
Vision 3 Architects
William & Mary
Windover Construction
The Whiting-Turner Contracting Company
$500 TO $999
American Chemical Society
Ameriprise
Amica Companies Foundation
Delphi Construction
Diorio Family Law
Estner Injury Centers
E-Z Pool and Spa Supply
Gartner, Inc.
Heritage Turbines
Housing Network of Rhode Island
Peter R. & Cynthia K. Kellogg Foundation
Providence Fire Fighters IAFF Local 799
Renaissance Charitable Foundation
The Rhode Island Center for Justice
Schimenti Construction
Scott F. Viera Charitable Foundation
Security Mutual Life Insurance Company
Sun Life Financial
Swap, Inc.
Truth Initiative
The Walsh Group
$250 TO $499
Arthur H. Carr Fund
The Associated Construction Company
Atlantic Elevator South Co Inc.
Audette, Audette & Violette
Bank of America Charitable Foundation
Bond Brothers Inc.
Central Falls Housing Authority
Chapman Construction/Design
CIGNA Matching Gifts Program
Citizens Charitable Foundation
Claris Design + Build
Dellbrook | JSK
Dimeo Construction Company
DPR Construction
Ernst & Young
Ferreira Construction
Fox Broadcasting Company
Harrington & Rhodes, Ltd.
Harry Grodsky & Co., Inc.
Hensel Phelps Construction Company
J. Fletcher Creamer & Son, Inc.
J.G. Coffey Co. LLC
J2Construct
KBE Building Corporation
L3harris Technologies Charities
The Law Offices of Jeremy M. Rix
Manafort Brothers Inc.
Middletown Self Storage
NEI General Contracting
New England Construction Co.
O&G Industries, Inc.
Phil’s Propane Company
Procon Inc.
Quality Construction & Roofing
Rhode Island Bar Association
Rhode Island Credit Union
Rubicon Builders
Site Specific
Skanska
Structural Group, Inc.
TRAC Builders, Inc.
United Way of Central Maryland
Wayne J. Griffin Electric
Women’s Development Corp.
$1 TO $249
Avangrid
Bank of America Foundation
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation
C.B. Utility Co., Inc.
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Dare Direct Action for Rights & Equality
Eagle Stainless
East Greenwich Housing Authority
The Economic Development Foundation of Rhode Island
Economic Progress Institute
ECR Rehab Group LLC
General Atlantic
Grow Smart RI
Habitat for Humanity of Greater Providence and East Bay
Hasbro Childrens Hospital
Housing Works RI
Johnson & Johnson Matching Gifts Program
JP Morgan Chase Foundation
Kirk&Company: Real Estate Counselors
Law Offices of Flavio A. DaCosta
Lexis Nexis
TRIBUTE GIFTS
Looking Upwards, Inc.
Mass Mutual
McGunagle Hentz, PC
Michele Sommer and Chet Geschickter
Family Fund
Microsoft Corporation
MLPB
NeighborWorks Blackstone River Valley
New England Board
Pawtucket Central Falls Development
Pawtucket Housing Authority
Providence Housing Authority
Rhode Island Black Business Association
Rhode Island Department of Health
Rhode Island Family Court
Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank
RI Coaltition for Children and Families
Stop & Shop
UKOGF Foundation
Univ Wyoming
Verizon Foundation
The Village Common of Rhode Island
West Warwick Health Equity Zone
MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES
Ameriprise
Amica Companies Foundation
Avangrid
Bank of America Foundation
Benevity Community Impact Fund
The Boeing Company
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation
Charities Aid Foundation of America
Cigna Matching Gifts Program
Citizens Charitable Foundation
Ernst & Young
Fidelity Giving Marketplace
Fidelity Investments
FM Global
Fox Broadcasting Company
Gartner, Inc.
General Atlantic
Givinga Foundation, Inc.
Gilbane Inc.
Guardian Life Insurance Company
Johnson & Johnson Matching Gifts Program
JP Morgan Chase Foundation
Mass Mutual
Microsoft Corporation
PSEG
Sanofi Ventures
Security Mutual Life Insurance Company
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Verizon Foundation
Williams Companies
Tribute gifts are a special way to recognize friends and loved ones while supporting Roger Williams University and School of Law. Individuals who were honored or memorialized with a tribute gift in fiscal year 2024 are listed below.
HONORED
William Bonvissuto
Caitlin B. Boufford
Robert Busby
Amanda Callahan
Victoria C. Chiklis
Evan J. Craig
Jeremy R. Dahl
Alivia J. Degrotta
Sean P. Donovan
Jake R. Dumont
MacKenzie R. Evans
MEMORIALIZED
Gary L. Bahr
William S. Boyd
Scott C. Callagy
Robert Wells Fishel
Mary B. Fitzgerald Doyle
HERITAGE SOCIETY
The Santoro Family
John Franks
Carl D. Galian
Jamie V. Goldman
Jeff A. Goldstein
Sean M. Hickey
Julia F. Keldsen
Timothy F. Kelleher
Jeanna R. Langan
Simon C. Leite
David A. Logan
Joseph D. Fortin
William Grandgeorge
Evan A. Lautz
Raymond W. Maker
Elsa Maker
Heidi Maes
Sarah A. Meronek
Hanna B. Morrissette-Drowne
Cara P. Murphy
Kaitlyn M. Nasiff
Jordyn A. Pugsley
Andrew J. Retford
Christopher Reynolds
Nathalie Rodriguez
Spencer J. Rushnak
Nicolette F. Santangelo
Robert A. Potter
Brian Remy
Anthony J. Santoro
Mark M. Sawoski
Robert A. Staub
Matthew V. Schwartz
Michael A. Silverstein
Alexander V. Skov
Matthew Skwarto
Nicholas Totino
Alyssa M. Turcotte
Madeline A. Wagner
Madelyn E. Weir
Cory D. White
Kirsten L. Winn
John W. Stout
Margaret Tormey
Patrick Usher
Jeremy D. Warnick
The Heritage Society recognizes individuals who have made a life income gift or bequest provision to Roger Williams University and School of Law.
Lois D. Bertini ’81
Julie M. Cole ’99 L’04
Andrea Crump
Seraphin DaPonte, Jr. and Marjorie J. DaPonte
Paul E. Eichin PE ’58
Stacey B. Foisy ’84
William J. Geraghty ’78
George R. Hemond ’72
Marshall Margolis ’66
William L. McQueen and Carla O. Bosch ’89
Paul Moran
Aurelia J. Papitto
David J. Papitto, Esq. ’98 L’08
Lisa Raiola and Waterman F. Brown VII
Judith M. Sharpe
James Tackach
David J. Thomas ’72 & Janet M. Thomas
Professor Gifts Endowed Professorship of the Humanities
Professor Emeritus James Tackach has provided an estate gift to establish the Professor James Tackach Professorship of the Humanities, endowing a new or existing Humanities professorship, as well as the Professor James Tackach Fund for the Humanities, supporting humanities-focused projects and initiatives.
Mel A. Topf, Esq. L’05
Michael A. Voccola, Esq. L’97
James G. Whiffen ’76
Anonymous (2)

ENDOWMENTS AND NAMED SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS
At Roger Williams University and School of Law, endowments and named scholarship funds provide an extraordinary level of financial support for our students, faculty, and programs. The University is extremely grateful to our donors who have established and contributed to the followed endowments and named scholarship funds.
Afghan Women’s Scholarship Fund
Ahlborg Construction Management Professorship
Alan Shawn Feinstein Leadership Scholarships
Alister C. McGregor Scholarship Fund
Alumni Scholarship
Andrade Family Endowed Scholarship
Andrew C. Marsh Scholarship
Anthony J. Montalbano Endowed Scholarship for Legal Studies
API of NH/Delta T Endowed Scholarship Fund
Arlene Violet Public Interest Law Scholarship
Balfour Minority Scholarship
Barnes & Noble Scholarship
Barrie ’70 and Mary Lee
Endowed Schoalrship Fund
Ben Carr Endowed Scholarship
Benjamin and Renee Vogel Family Social Justice Scholarship Fund
Bermont Endowed Fund for Fiction and Nonfiction
Bisbano Scholarship Fund
Bready Minority Scholarship Fund
Brett Bergman ’11 Endowed Memorial Senior Merit Scholarship
Brian Remy Scholarship Fund
Bristol Rotary Scholarship
Cappelli Real Estate Development Scholarships
Carpentry Apprenticeship Scholarship
Ceasar Brito Memorial Scholarship Fund
Clark Prize in Appellate Advocacy
Coca-Cola Scholar Award
Construction Management Endowed Scholarship
Construction Management Professional Advisory Board Endowed Scholarship
D.F. Pray Scholars Program
Daniel Kwasniewski ’93 Scholarship Fund
Darlene Lycke Memorial Scholarship
David & Matilda Kessler Endowed Scholarship
David A. Logan Family Opportunity
Endowed Scholarship Fund
DePoalo Family Scholarship Endowment
Diane Drake Scholarship
Dianne E. Crowell Scholarship Fund
Donald Walton Culp Endowed Scholarship
VOLUNTEERS
Dr. Bruce Thompson Public Health Lecture Series
Dr. George A. Ficorilli Professor Emeritus Endowed Scholarship
Dr. Harold Way Scholarship
E. Diane Davis Scholarship
Earle Family Memorial Endowed Business Law
Scholarship Fund
Elsch Josiah Maisoh, Jr. ’13 Endowed Scholarship
Eric T. Dimmick ’94 Endowed Scholarship in Construction Management Fund
Esther Clark Endowed Scholarship
Ethel Barrymore Colt-Migletta Scholarship
Evan Alexander Lautz Scholarship Fund
Evelyn & Rita Pendergast Memorial Scholarship
Francis Darigan Scholarship
Franklin P. Bailey and Barbara N. Bailey Endowed Scholarship
Gabelli School of Business Presidential Scholars Program
Gagliardi Family Distinguished Seminar Series
Ganteaume & McMullen Lecture Series
Gary L. Bahr Memorial Scholarship Fund
George E. Garvin Memorial Scholarship
George I. Alden Need-Based Scholarship Aid Endowment
Geremia Scholarship Fund
Gilbane Scholars Fund
Grimshaw-Gudewicz Scholarship
Harold Payson Scholarship Fund
Hearst Scholarship for Underserved Students
Hemond Brothers Scholarship
Hon Thomas J. Caldarone, Jr.
Endowed Scholarship
Howard Birss Memorial Book Fund
Idalia Whitcomb Gifted Scholarship
Idalia Whitcomb Scholarship for Freshman Students
Idalia Whitcomb Scholarship Fund
Intercultural Leadership Ambassador
Book Fund
International Association of Insurance Professionals Endowed Scholarship
James Tackach Award
Jeffrey William Manuck ’04 Memorial Endowed Scholarship
Jerrold and Barbara Lavine RWU Scholarship
Joan Montalbano Scholarship
John D. Coyle Scholarship
John W. King Scholarship Fund
Jonathan M. Redler Scholarship Fund
Judge Thomas J. Paolino Scholarship Fund
Justinian Law Society of Rhode Island Scholarship
Kaestle Boos Architecture Scholars Fund
Kathleen Birt Memorial Prize
Kelly Family Endowed Scholarship in Construction Management Fund
Law Alumni Association Scholarship
Library Endowed Book Fund
Lillian and Irving Topf Memorial Fund
Lincoln W.N. Pratt Memorial
Lorraine Dennis Memorial Endowed Scholarship
Lt. Charles A. Henderson USN Fund
Lt. Joseph D. Fortin ’08 Memorial Scholarship
Mandell-Boisclair Justice Scholarship
Margaret Tormey Scholarship Fund
Mark Gould Memorial Scholarship & Research Fund
Mark Sawoski Scholarship Fund
Mary “Happy” White Cultural Center & Lecture Series
Mary Staab Endowed Scholarship Fund
Matthew Wolfe Scholarship Fund
Michael and Nancy Voccola Family Endowed Scholarship
Michael P. McNulty Endowed Scholarship
Michele Cron Yeaton ’80 Memorial Scholarship
Montrone Family Scholarship Fund
Patrick Usher Memorial Scholarship Fund
Patrolman Gregory W. Bolden Memorial Scholarship
Paul L. Arris Memorial Scholarship Fund
Pompei Family Engineering Endowed Scholarship
Pro Bono Collaborative Endowment
Prof. Robert B. Kent ’01 Memorial Scholarship
Professor Geoffrey Clark and Professor Bob McRoberts Endowed Awards in Creative Writing
Professor John Chung Scholarship
Professor Paul Langello Memorial Scholarship Fund
Professor Peter Wright Endowed Scholarship Fund
Prohaska Endowment for Health Equity Policy
Providence Journal Scholarship Fund
Raj Saksena Endowed Memorial Scholarhship Fund
Rebecca Anne Kelton Memorial Scholarship
RI Association for Justice
Joseph R. Weisberger Scholarship
Robert A. Potter, Jr. Endowed Scholarship
Robert D. Eigen Scholarship in memory of Jeannette Altman
Robert F. Stoico/FIRSTFED Scholarship Fund
Robert W. and Virginia B. McBride ’82 Memorial Fund
Santoro Business Law Lecture
Scott Booth ’16 Scholarship Award Fund
Sergeant Michael Jannitto Memorial Scholarship
Sgt. Jim and Julie Cole Peace Officer Scholarship
Shawmut Scholars
Social & Health Services Scholarship Fund
Sol & Lillian Koffler Lecture Series
Sparks Memorial Endowed Scholarship Fund
Stephen M. Kellert Memorial Scholarship in Biology
Steven Ficorilli Memorial Scholarship
Tennyson Scholars Program
The Construction Mgmt Student Competition & Innovation Fund
The Gingerella Family Scholarship
The International Business Scholarship Fund
The Jeremy Warnick Scholarship
The Logan Family Opportunity Scholarship Fund
Thomas E. Fitzgerald Scholarship in Visual Arts Studies
Thurgood Marshall Memorial Scholarship
Walk of Fame Alumni Association Scholarship
Weisberger Professorship
William Randolph Hearst Endow
William T. Morris Foundation Scholarship
Wright Family Scholarship
Yeaton Professor of Finance, Director, CAFE Position
Zachary Shapiro Study Abroad Fund
We would like to recognize the volunteers who have provided leadership and guidance to the university in the 2023-2024 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 HD’23
Mario J. Gabelli HD’92
Alan G. Hassenfeld HD’93
Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09
Elizabeth Moore
Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ’99 HD’18
Angel Taveras
Michael G. Tennyson
Orin S. Wilf ’96
Timothy B. Yeaton ’80
BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND TRUSTEES EMERITI
Trustees of Roger Williams University, in close collaboration with the President and RWU Senior Leadership, develop and advance the mission and goals of the University. United by a strong commitment to support the RWU community, Trustees help identify and achieve the strategic vision that ensures the reputation and health of the institution as well as the faculty, staff, students, alumni, and families of RWU.
Timothy B. Yeaton ’80, Chair
James R. Andrade ’77 ’79
Nicole Benjamin, Esq. L’06
Heather N. Boujoulian ’97
Rodney A. Butler
Doris De Los Santos ’20
Julie I. Englund
Linn Foster Freedman, Esq.
Mario J. Gabelli HD’92
Christopher J. Gagliardi ’07
William J. Geraghty ’78
Peter A. Heard ’80
Les Hiscoe
Frank A. Hood ’97
Michael Integlia, Jr. ’70 P’12
Keith Johnson P’18
Murray D. Karp P’21 P’21
Laurie J. Landeau V.M.D.
Antonio Masone, Jr. ’91
William F. McKeon ’84
Ioannis N. Miaoulis
John J. Park
Scott W. Pray PL’16
Lisa Raiola
Todd L. Rechler ’93
Jacqueline Rolleri, Esq. L’11
Erik D. Smith ’01
Vernon H. Stafford, Jr. ’80
The Honorable Brian P. Stern
Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09
Stephen D. Zubiago, Esq.
Tim Baxter ’83 P’13 HD’15
Richard L. Bready HD’08
Joseph M. Brito, Jr. P’11
Jerrold L. Lavine HD’09
Marcia C. Morris, Esq. HD’19
Frank E. Rainieri, Jr. ’99 HD’18
Regina A. Shakin P’19
Arlene Violet, Esq. HD’24
Joseph D. Whelan, Esq.
PRESIDENT’S 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.
Janet P. Atkins
Anthony E. Autiello, Jr. ’74
Troy R. Bilyeu
Scott R. Blumenfeld ’99
Anthony M. Brahimsha ’10
Kyle J. Casserino ’13
Maria T. Chigas
Rebecca L. Collins ’97
Barrett W. Costello ’99
REAL ESTATE ADVISORY BOARD
Gordon S. Craig III ’94
George R. Daubenspeck ’85 P’17
Bradford A. Dean ’73
Cynthia A. Elder ’87
Yvonne Farrell P’22 PM’24
Ryan A. Fletcher ’11
Stacey B. Foisy ’84
Gerald A. Francese, Esq. ’96
Eric R. Gheewalla
Adam Goldman P’24
Domenic R. Grieco ’99
Adam G. Harz ’22
Vincent P. Helfrich ’82
George R. Hemond ’72
Juan M. Hernandez ’16
Katherine L. Ilaria ’11
Michael A. La Scala ’83
Lucas W. Laager ’23
Sarah R. Mamula ’12
Deborah Marchini P’23
Christine N. McKenney ’92
Elizabeth A. McGraw ’10
Patrick J. Milner ’06
Stephanie L. Noris ’92
Thomas S. Olsen ’11
John A. Puniello ’97
Walter J. Ramos ’83
James P. Reardon ’13
Michael A. Reuter ’03
Adam E. Risman ’16
Leah M. Saccoccio ’11
Mark Saccoccio ’83 P’11
Mark Schiller ’89
Kelsey B. Shakin ’19
Ronald J. Simoneau
Ernest P. Smith P’11
Debra P. Stokes ’79
Judith W. Vigar P’24
Debra L. Westgate-Silva ’91 P’12
Allison R. Yount ’11
Eric N. Zuena ’01 Anonymous
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 University.
Todd L. Rechler ’93, Chair
Heather N. Boujoulian ’97
Robert A. D’Amico II, Esq.
Hadley Enright ’11
Dorothea R. Faxon L’00
Zé Figueirinhas ’92
Luis F. Gomez ’92
Adam A. Gross FAIA
Stephen Hahn ’06
David P. Iannuccilli
PARENT AND FAMILY LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
Ryan Jabs ’12
Jeffrey R. Jellison ’98
Mehdi Khosrovani A.I.A. ’80
Matthew R. Kinell, Esq. L’09
Parker E. Lacoste ’08
James McCurdy
Michael L. Mineau, Esq. L’09
Michael C. O’Brien P’19
Young K. Park
Kathryn L. Pray, Esq. L’16
Joelle C. Rocha, Esq. L’06
Jordan M. Stone
Thomas R. Taranto, Jr. P’12
Curtis A. Verdi ’94
Orin S. Wilf ’96
James Wrisley, Jr. ’01
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.
Renee G. Alevras
Paul M. Angland P’23
Kerri Ann Bilyeu
Troy R. Bilyeu
Dr. Ram Chavali P’22
Amy L. Cohen
Jonathan E. Cohen
Christopher Cook
Julie Cook
Gordon S. Craig III ’94
Kristen J. Craig
Geralyn A. Curcio
Thomas M. Curcio
Joseph Di Scipio P’21
Carl D. Galian, Sr. P’24
Sandra C. Galian P’24
Douglas F. Garland P’22 P’24
Elizabeth D. Garland P’22 P’24
Eric R. Gheewalla
Kathleen A. Gheewalla
Rhonda S. Goldberg P’23
Adam Goldman P’24
Charmaine Goldman P’24
Jill Goldstein P’24
Larry Goldstein P’24
Christian D. Heelen P’22
Patricia Heelen P’22
SCHOOL OF LAW BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The Honorable Brian P. Stern, Chair
Collin Bailey J.D. L’08
Nicole Benjamin, Esq. L’06
Alyssa Boss, Esq. L’97
Gregory W. Bowman
Marek P. Bute, Esq. L’05
Marc DeSisto, Esq.
The Honorable Melissa R. DuBose, Esq. L’04
Stacey A. Erickson, Esq.
J. Scott Kilpatrick, Esq.
Stephen Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23
Zachary M. Mandell, Esq. L’11
Ioannis N. Miaoulis
Michael P. Robinson, Esq. L’00
George L. Santopietro, Esq.
Ondine Galvez Sniffin, Esq.
Katherine A. Sulentic, Esq. L’09
Patricia A. Sullivan
The Honorable Paul A. Suttell LHD’11
The Honorable O. Rogeriee
Thompson LHD’10
Hinna Upal, Esq. L’07
Craig P. Hersh
Marcy B. Hersh
Denise L. Johnson P’18
Keith Johnson P’18
Kassandra D. Jolley
Tilo Kalski
Wiebke G. Kalski
Murray D. Karp P’21 P’21
Stefanie A. Karp P’21 P’21
Dan F. Kelly
Debora O. Kelly
Gregory S. Kimmel, Esq. L’97
Lisa D. Kimmel
Dr. Babu Krishnamurthy P’22
Peter Langan P’24
James K. Levey
Tracy L. Levey
Anna M. Linnehan
Joseph R. Linnehan, Jr.
Laura K. Maguire P’23
Stephen Maguire, Esq. L’96 P’23 P’25
Paul A. Pabis ’83 ’97 M’17 P’17
Donna L. Park
John J. Park
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Charnele S. Luster ’11, Chair
Christina W. Abisla ’11 M’13
Virgina S. Albert ’17
Bre L. Baldino ’16
Xante C. X. Chalwell ’18
Gordon S. Craig III ’94
Kevin Deeb ’20
Sofia M. Giovannello ’13
Stephen Laliberte ’07

Matthew T. Paige ’13
Brittany Rayburn ’16
Patti J. Ruch ’08
Scott A. Scarneo ’15
Dalton A. Sousa ’22
Adam L. Peck P’23
Claudette L. Peck P’22
Richard C. Peck P’22
Judith A. Pegno P’17
Steven A. Pegno P’17
Lynn Retford P’24
Faith Rushnak P’24
Ariane K. Schratter
David Teixeira, Jr. P’24
Melissa J. Teixeira P’24
Dana M. Tubman
Shawn Tubman
Jennifer L. Uriati
Marco Uriati, Esq. L’96
Judith W. Vigar P’24
Adam D. Weilbaecher
Ingrid Winn P’24
Simon Winn P’24
Patrice Wood P’17 HD’17
Josh Wright P’24
Amy G. Zerman P’22
Jared Zerman P’22
LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AND BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Brett V. Beaubien L’16, Chair
Olabisi M. Davies L’16
John A. Dorsey, Esq. L’10
Peter M. Eraca J.D. L’12
Jamie M. Gau L’16
Kelsey D. Peck L’19
Crystal Peralta L’20
Endowed Scholarship Supports Trades Workforce Development
The Hayden Foundation gifted $250,000 to endow a full-scholarship program for trades education at RWU Extension School, helping to fill a critical need in skilled trades workforce development through RWU EXT’s accredited apprenticeship programs featuring industry-aligned credentials.
Posing with a check for the Don P. and Elaine M. Hayden Scholarships for Education in the Trades are Kenneth Barthelemy, Hayden Foundation Board Member; Gena Bianco, Dean of RWU’s Extension School; RWU President Ioannis N. Miaoulis; George Panichas, Executive Director of the Hayden Foundation; and Peter Thomas, EXT Director of Partnerships & Innovation, with Roger, RWU's First Dog.
conversation with BOMBA BEBÉ
RWU junior Daniella Hernandez co-authors new children’s book, sharing her love of Puerto Rican dance

When she was 15 years old, Daniella Hernandez discovered bomba, Puerto Rico’s oldest musical genre. That experience ignited a journey of cultural exploration that has since shaped her identity as a Puerto Rican, said the junior from San Juan, Puerto Rico. She’s now representing her culture in a new children’s book she co-wrote called Bomba Bebé.
“Bomba is more than just a dance,” said Hernandez, a Biology and Public Health double major. “I didn’t only find a safe space to express myself through art and dance, I also found a sense of identity. I learned so much about who we are as Puerto Ricans, our history, and our culture.”
Working with the nonprofit Evolution Forward, Hernandez co-authored and co-illustrated the first book in the organization’s new literature series dedicated to intergenerational antiviolence and child-parent wellbeing. Bomba Bebé, a bilingual book that’s available for purchase on the Evolution Forward website, is a heartwarming introduction to the Afro-Latin dance for young readers.
“It’s a children’s book about a baby, which is based on my character, who was born to dance. The baby just goes to the beat of the drum; she can feel it
everywhere,” said Hernandez, who also teaches bomba in Providence, R.I. “Bomba is all about emotions, feelings, and improvisation. We wanted to create a book that, when you read it, you feel that emotion. The book fosters the welcoming cultural awareness and educational perspective of bomba and the dance.”
This fall Hernandez also had the opportunity to showcase bomba on a global stage, performing as a backup dancer at the 2024 MTV Video Music Awards for Puerto Rican singer and rapper Rauw Alejandro on Sept. 11.
As she continues her education, she aims to pursue a career as a physician assistant while continuing her work in cultural advocacy and nonprofit efforts.
“I’m excited to see where the journey takes me,” she said. “At the end of the day, I want to continue growing and helping others—whether through my career, my dancing, or my writing.”
To read more about Hernandez, visit www.rwu.edu/news.


THOUGHT LEADERSHIP FROM THE RWU COMMUNITY
with Sonya Cates, Associate Professor of Computer Science
I’ve witnessed exciting renovations in my building lately, including the new Data and Modeling Studio. The opening of new classrooms and laboratories brings intriguing technology and appealing spaces for collaboration. But as I reflect on how it might change how I teach computer science and data science, I find that the most important lessons won’t change. The knowledge and skills I most want my students to take away from my classes, and the real strengths of the Computer Science and Data Science programs at RWU, are the ways in which we don’t focus on the latest technology. The best lessons I can teach my students aren’t any specific skill, but rather how to continue to learn and evolve their skills in an ever-changing world and to apply their knowledge to making our world better.
Take artificial intelligence, for example. Among all the warnings of the dangers AI might pose to humanity, I find the most compelling to be from researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky: “By far the greatest danger of Artificial Intelligence is that people conclude too early that they understand it.” The fields of artificial intelligence and data science are full of stories of misused tools that lead to nonsensical and useless—or worse, misleading and dangerous—results because someone produced an output with a tool they didn’t understand. Just as we don’t give elementary school students calculators without teaching them to add without one, it would be a disservice for me to teach my students to use a generative AI tool without an understanding of how and why it works.
But teaching the theory behind these new, powerful tools is also insufficient. Technology changes and evolves, and as it does so must our understanding. None of us are ever finished understanding it, and failing to recognize that fact is dangerous. Teaching my students to continually and critically evaluate their outputs, their use of technology, and their own knowledge helps them use their skills to contribute to society rather than cause harm.
This evolving nature of technology impacts much of my pedagogy. While the concepts and principles I learned in my own college courses have been critical throughout my career, the computer systems, tools, and languages I have used most have all been ones that I taught myself.
That is why I value a hands-on learning environment for my students, providing them situations where they experiment, fail, try something new, and grow. Yes, they do learn the latest machine learning software, but more importantly they learn how to learn on their own, which they will need to be able to do regardless of what industry they enter after graduation.
Computer science and data science are a powerful combination of systems and ideas that are inherently interdisciplinary in their applications, in the problems they can solve for humanity. They are also highly interpersonal when practiced well. The Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest computing society, lists as the first principle in its code of ethics: “Contribute to society and to human wellbeing, acknowledging that all people are stakeholders in computing.” To solve society’s problems requires one to understand them, and that means listening to and engaging with stakeholders. For my students, as they leave RWU and enter the workforce, it means thinking beyond their code, to the people it impacts.
Sonya Cates teaches artificial intelligence, human-computer interaction, and data science at the School of Engineering, Computing, and Construction Management.


