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athleticperfection1 · 7 months
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Stonehill Field Hockey
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mopsburgfalls · 4 months
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hamdun888 · 2 years
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Tom Dahlborg Delivers Leading with Love in Healthcare Message to Future Healthcare Leaders
Tom Dahlborg Delivers Leading with Love in Healthcare Message to Future Healthcare Leaders
Such a joy to virtually join the Stonehill College Senior Seminar capstone for healthcare management majors and deliver the Leading with Love message, learn and share with these future healthcare leaders, and so much more. So inspiring. As part of our discussion these future healthcare leaders shared their goals and intentions, and they are so spot on relative to the needs in…
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marcorossi · 2 months
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stonehill collect their first newha trophy
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uwuthrad · 1 year
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I feel like the biggest thing preventing me from actually committing to joining the Stormcloaks in-game is that the imperial side just has all the objectively better jarls:
- Imperial-Whiterun gets to keep Jarl Balgruuf, who’s a bro and also gave me a sexual awakening when I was young, so can’t do that to him. His replacement would be Vignar Gray-Mane, who’s an old dude that just sorta hangs out in Jorrvaskr instead of... his house? anywhere else? go get yourself some sun, man - and also he just gives me the willies.
- Imperial-Falkreath keeps Siddgeir, who’s admittedly a useless git, but who has a terrifyingly efficient steward I really wish I could marry. Stormcloak-Falkreath gets Dengeir back, and while he seems marginally less despicable than his nephew, he’s also so fucking paranoid he sees conspiracies everywhere, which uh. Does not fill me with confidence for the future of the people in his care.
- Imperial-Markarth keeps Igmund (who?) whereas Stormcloak-Markarth gets Thongvor Silver-Blood (brother to the guy who threw you in prison for asking too many questions. Never forget, Justice4Eltrys). I’d argue that Igmund at least keeps the Silver-Bloods from entirely taking over the Reach, but literally who gives a shit. Markarth is a death trap full of daedric princes, cannibals, and absolutely no handrails whatsoever. Let it burn for all I care.
- Imperial-Morthal has Idgrod Raven-Crone, and I’m sorry but queen shit, don’t even care what qualities the other guy might have. (I looked it up and it’s some miner lady from Stonehills, so really did they just grab the first person they saw? A travesty.) There’s no universe in which deposing Granny Idgrod is right, not taking any arguments, next.
- Stormcloak-Dawnstar has Skald the Elder, which, eww? Who the fuck put that slimy pig in charge? Imperial-Dawnstar replaces him with Brina Merilis, who actually seems to be in possession of common sense. Love that for her.
- Stormcloak-Riften has Laila Law-Giver, who has three braincells going at any given moment and all of them are fighting for who gets to be first. Literally everyone is playing her and she doesn’t notice. Imperial-Riften replaces her with Maven Black-Briar, who’s admittedly the leader of a crime syndicate and just a bit of a dick besides, but she was tugging the strings of the old Jarl anyway, so really, what difference does it make? Also it’s Riften. Love the city, but if it found someone incorruptible it would get a mental breakdown.
- Stormcloak-Winterhold has Korir, whose guts you’re going to hate if you’re a mage, which sucks, because the mages’ college is quite literally the only reason to lug it up there. He’s a bigot who’s blatantly raising his kid to be a racist little prick, and somehow he thinks rolling up to the other Jarls with a bigass helmet from his paw-paw will make the other jarls think he’s hot shit again. Imperial-Winterhold gets Kraldar, who is a) not a raging asshole and b) willing to hear other perspectives out, which gives me hope that someone might one day think to ask the college if one of their mages couldn’t pop down to check on the structural integrity of the stables.
- Stormcloak-Windhelm gets Ulfric, and like I love you man, you’ve got some good points, but you suck as an administrator (the slums? the argonians outside the city? the bloody serial killer???). Imperial-Eastmarch gets Brunwulf Free-Winter, who re: rare gift of common sense and a modicum of empathy for other people’s suffering. The bar is. so. low.
- I will give the Stormcloaks points for Solitude even though Elisif stays no matter what, because if they take the city I at least can harbor hope someone is going to give this girl some lessons in good government, because uhhh Elisif you’re very pretty and I’d like to touch your hair, but, honey, no.
 tl;dr: you will take my granny and my dilf from my cold, dead hands
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notebooknebula · 10 months
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Meet The $100 Million Underdog, Pamela Bardhi with Jay Conner, The Private Money Authority
Key Takeaways
How Pamela went from having over $100k in debt to achieving a 9-figure real estate career
Discovering why business is 100% a spiritual game
How Pamela drastically transformed her career trajectory through real estate
The life-changing power of private money to kickstart Pamela’s real estate career
Must-hear advice for attracting private money to your life
Taking the steps to map out your dream life
The importance of aligning your mind, body, and spirit
In today’s show of Real Estate Investing with Jay Conner, Pamela Bardhi joins Jay to empower the world through real estate, building different revenue streams, and igniting the Underdog in all of us.
Pamela Bardhi, the Real Estate Underdog, has been named by TIME Magazine as a Trailblazer in the Real Estate Industry. She went from delivering pizzas to a 9-figure real estate career featured in Forbes & Time Magazine by 28 years old.
She is a real estate developer by trade and has transitioned into becoming a real estate and life strategist through coaching, speaking, and building an international real estate team.
She hosts a world-renowned podcast called, Underdog, which is in the top 1.5% of podcasts in the world and streamed in 65+ countries.
She is fully dedicated to encouraging the world and igniting the fire in all of us. Real Stories, Real Hustle, Real Journeys. That is what she is all about.
Pamela has sold, developed, or acquired over $100 Million in Real Estate Assets in the Boston, MA market over the last decade. Her educational background includes Stonehill College, Babson College & Harvard Business School.
Timestamps:
0:01 – Get Ready To Be Plugged Into The Money
0:20 – Today’s guest: Pamela Bardhi
3:28 – Pamela Bardhi’s Start-Up In The Real Estate Business
6:49 – Pamela Bardhi, The Real Estate Underdog – https://www.theunderdogshow.com
9:06 – Business Is A Spiritual Game
15:21 – What Are You Most Passionate About Right Now?
18:07 – Early Struggles & Lessons Learned
20:54 – Best Ways To Raising Private Money
24:45 – Jay’s Free Private Money Guide: https://www.JayConner.com/MoneyGuide
25:58 – How To Maintain Your Drive & Motivation
30:17 – Importance of Having Multiple Streams of Income
31:59 – Connect with Pamela Bardhi – https://www.PamelaBardhi.com email: [email protected]
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Private Money Academy Conference:
https://www.JaysLiveEvent.com
Free Report:
https://www.jayconner.com/MoneyReport
Join the Private Money Academy: 
Have you read Jay’s new book: Where to Get The Money Now?
It is available FREE (all you pay is the shipping and handling) at
https://www.JayConner.com/Book
What is Private Money? Real Estate Investing with Jay Conner
https://www.JayConner.com/MoneyPodcast
Jay Conner is a proven real estate investment leader. He maximizes creative methods to buy and sell properties with profits averaging $67,000 per deal without using his own money or credit.
What is Real Estate Investing? Live Private Money Academy Conference
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The Winners of the 2nd Edition of the BLT Built Design Awards @bltdesignawards have been revealed! Read more: Link in bio! The BLT Built Design Awards judges were impressed by the high level of innovation and creativity of the winning entries that include names enjoying international reputation such as Zaha Hadid Architects, Ateliers Jean Nouvel, Agence d'Architecture A. Bechu & Associés, Sanjay Puri Architects, Stonehill Taylor, Perkins & Will, querkraft architects, Laguarda Low Architects, dwp - design worldwide partnership and more… The second edition winners are as follows: 1- Architectural Design of the Year 2022 BEEAH Headquarters Company: Zaha Hadid Architects Lead Designer: Zaha Hadid Architects Location: Sharjah, UAE Photo by: Hufton+Crow 2- Interior Design of the Year 2022 KAMA-ASA Shop Company: KAMITOPEN Co., Ltd. Lead Designers: Masahiro Yoshida Location: Tokyo, Japan Photo by: Keisuke Miyamoto 3- Construction Product Design of the Year 2022 YiBrick Company: Yi Design Company Limited Lead Designer: Yi Yin Location: Shanghai, China Photo by: Yi Design Company Limited 4- Project Management of the Year 2022 design with FRANK software Company: Design With Frank Lead Designer: Chloe Fan Location: New York, United States 5- Emerging Architect of the Year 2022 URBAN IRRIGATION University: Harvard University Lead Designer: Xudong Zhu Location: Tangshan, China Photo by: Xudong Zhu 6- Emerging Interior Designer of the Year 2022 Ally - A center for Children Psychological Trauma Recovery University: Savannah College of Art and Design Lead Designer: Yue Che Location: Little Rock, USA #competition #architecturecompetition #архитектура www.amazingarchitecture.com ✔ A collection of the best contemporary architecture to inspire you. #design #architecture #amazingarchitecture #architect #arquitectura #luxury #realestate #life #cute #architettura #interiordesign #photooftheday #love #travel #construction #furniture #instagood #fashion #beautiful #archilovers #home #house ‎#amazing #picoftheday #architecturephotography ‎#معماری (at Sharjha UAE) https://www.instagram.com/p/ClO8HU0Ot0o/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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shefancdotcom · 2 days
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Stonehill College Athletic Ladies Water Resistant Stainless Steel Back Watch.
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whavradio · 5 months
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Local Lawyer, U.S. Air Force Veteran Michael A. Dalrymple Dies at 79
Michael A. Dalrymple passed away peacefully on Dec. 13. Dalrymple was born Sept. 25, 1944 in Milford, Mass., to Gordan and Rita Dalrymple. He earned degrees from Stonehill College and Massachusetts School of Law. He worked in banking as a loan officer and practiced law for many years after he passed the bars in Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. He enjoyed being with family and friends,…
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sorchanitua · 8 months
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Stonehill College Assistant Professorship in Sociology
Deadline: Unstated; job starts in August 2024 Length/Track: Tenure track Description: “This cluster hire should be foregrounded in “race, ethnicity, and social justice” in order to address justice broadly during these times of proliferating anti-Black racism; anti-Asian racism; ongoing indigenous dispossession and setter-coloniality; and widespread xenophobia, Islamophobia, ethnonational…
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the1975attheirverybest · 10 months
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i am a psychology major at Boston College! i love it so much ( it’s putting me in a financial crisis). I almost went to Stonehill which is in Easton, but truthfully i’m glad i chose BC. what did u major in pookie? it’s my mom bday today so we’re at this little clam shack in quincy. i did eat my weight in clams, scallops and chicken tenders. -🦚
Awwww HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOUR MOM!
oh I almost went to BC for my PhD actually. The campus is SO FUCKIN GORGEOUS. But the Shakespearean there was so old fashioned when they offered me a spot she seemed to wanna change my whole research hahahaha. Still, wonderful place to go to college. You must be a genius!
I double majored in English and philosophy.
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mitchbeck · 10 months
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HOWLINGS REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
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By: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings HARTFORD, CT - Time once again to empty the Howlings Reporter's Notebook. The New York Rangers have their new head coach Peter Laviolette in place, and the Wolf Pack have Kris Knoblauch in Hartford set for his fifth year. Joining Laviolette's staff is one-time Yale/Sacred Heat University assistant coach Dan Muse, who has been steadily climbing the ladder to this spot. Last year Muse coached the US National Development team in the USHL and worked with the Nashville Predators when Laviolette was head coach as head coach of the Chicago Steele (USHL), where he won the championship. Muse was the head coach of the US's U-18 gold medal-winning team this past spring and played at Stonehill College when they were a Division III program. The Rangers signed defenseman Zac Jones to a two-year, one-way deal at a cap-friendly price tag of $800K / $825K-NHL. Jones is likely being given a shot to make the Rangers' third pair to play with Braden Schneider. He'll compete for that spot with Ben Harpur, who earned the spot and the last available contract last year. The Hershey Bears won the Calder Cup in overtime over the Coachella Valley Firebirds at 16:19, 3-2, in the last North American hockey of the season played in the California desert at the Acriusre Arena. The Jack Butterfield Playoff MVP was Hunter Shepard, who helped knock off the Wolf Pack in the Atlantic Division conference title last month. The Hershey Bears won their 12th title in the 75 years of the franchise. Mark Vecchione scored the first Game 7 overtime winner in the Bears' long, illustrious history overcoming a 2-0 deficit and an early OT PK situation. Henrik Borgstrom didn't play in their opening playoff series against the Charlotte Checkers. He stepped in when Mike Sgarbossa went down with a season-ending injury. He had strong right-wing corner puck possession, won a one-on-one battle with the Firebirds' Ryker Evans, and flipped it out in front. It was the second overtime winner in the last 70 years of the AHL. The Firebirds sought to become the first AHL expansion team since the Texas Stars in 2010 and just the third in league history to do so. Ex-Pack and Hershey team captain, Dylan McIlrath, with his daughter ice-side, getting a kiss from Daddy with the Calder Cup in his hands, won his second Calder Cup title in his career and handed it off to ex-Sound Tiger Aaron Ness. Other CT connections winners for Hershey were former Yale Bulldog Joe Snively and Quinnipiac University Bobcat alum San Anas, who lost in last year's final as a member of the Springfield Thunderbirds. Ex-Pack Stu Bickel, assistant coach for Coachella Valley for a second year in a row, came up short last year in Springfield with Anas. So did ex-Yale John Hayden and QU Brogan Rafferty. Hershey head coach Todd Nelson completed his piece of Calder Cup history as he has now won two titles as a head coach, assistant coach, and player. This summer, he will be strongly considered for an NHL coaching opening. Ex-Pack Steven Kampfer signed a one-year, two-way deal with the Arizona Coyotes, who acquired him at the trade deadline spending it in Tucson. The value is $775K-NHL/$225K-AHL. Mathieu Olivier, the son of former New Haven Knights Simon, signed a two-year, one-way deal with Columbus for $1.1M per year. HARTFORD WOLF PACK HOME Read the full article
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pythagoreancenter · 1 year
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On Immortality
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On Immortality
A Dialogue by George Santayana Set to music by Don Stratton Directed by Dan Barrett with Nancy Ellen Ogle and Gregory Shaw, narrators and the Swingmatism Jazz Ensemble: Jay Bregman, tenor saxophone Dan Barrett, trombone Colin Graebert, piano Bob Roman, bass Bobby Duron, drums
Notes An ancient Greek myth about the after-life turns out to have been true. A stranger who has recently died finds herself on a raft crossing the River Styx, being ferried along with other newly departed souls to the Island of Remembrance by the god Charon.
In this modern version of the myth, Santayana engages the departed soul in conversation with the gaunt ferryman, exploring issues of life and death. In Santayana’s view, truth is simply everything that has actually happened; as such, it is impossible for anyone to live in the present and, at the same time, live in the truth. On realizing this view, the stranger becomes liberated from previous notions about living and dying and is newly able to enjoy the phenomena of existence as they arise.
Don Stratton (1928-2016) was a teacher, composer and trumpet player of national acclaim. In 1976, Don's “The Seasons in Maine” was performed by the Bangor Symphony at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., representing our State in the national bicentennial celebrations.
A Clark Terry protégé, Don was known as a trumpet player influenced by Bix Beiderbecke (as well as modern jazz trumpet players. Notably he blew with Phil Woods, Kenny Clarke), Elliot Lawrence and Claude Thornhill. His American Post-Forty Blues, for orchestra and solo trumpet is a perfect example of Third Stream Music.
As Professor of Music at UMaine, Don created the 20th Century Music Ensemble, in which students enthusiastically performed a wide variety of jazz along with far out experimental works and lyrical compositions. Don's music is archived in a special collection at the Bangor Public Library.
Philosopher George Santayana (1863-1952) wrote in a broad spectrum of genres. His major works include The Life of Reason (5 vols.), The Realms of Being (4 vols.) and a best-selling novel, The Last Puritan. He spent his final years living in Rome, where he wrote “On Immortality,” which was published posthumously.
Emeritus Professor of History, and member of the Board of Directors of the International Society for Neoplatonic Studies, Jay Bregman has taught at UCLA, UC Berkeley and Howard University, as well as at UMaine, where he has taught History of Jazz for over 30 years. He studied Jazz with Lennie Tristano, Yusef Lateef and Don Stratton, and played with Don. For a decade, he and Don taught an Honors Seminar on American Aesthetics and Subcultures, covering such topics as the New England Transcendentalists, Zen, Ives and Monk, Neoplatonism, the Beat Authors and Pythagorean Aesthetics. Tonight’s composition reflects that interdisciplinarity.
UMaine Professor Nancy Ellen Ogle’s work with contemporary composers is available on recordings on Capstone, Cormorant, Woodsum, New Media Productions and Parma labels. In 2014, Nancy was a Grammy nominee in the category of best classical solo vocal recording for a CD of Scott Brickman’s music featuring Ogle singing his Dear Darwin songs (Ravello Recordings). Nancy has premiered several of Don Stratton’s compositions, including A Recital of Birds and Ktaadn.
A fellow of the F.S.A., Gregory J. Shaw is Professor of Religious Studies at Stonehill College (Massachusetts, USA). His research interests include Religions of Late Antiquity, especially Neoplatonism; history of divination with an emphasis on dreams; contemporary religious movements that draw from Hermetic and Platonic sources; Jungian psychology; UFO phenomena.
Dan Barrett teaches trombone, tuba, jazz improvisation, jazz piano and arranging, and runs the jazz combo program at the University of Maine. He has been privileged to perform with many jazz greats including Bob Mintzer, Conrad Herwig, Andy Martin, John Fedchock, Thomas Gansch, Ingrid Jensen, Phil Markowitz, Eric Marienthal and Byron Stripling.
Colin Graebert has been playing jazz piano in Maine for almost twenty years. He is an active member or the Maine music scene as an accompanist, choir director, vocalist, musical theatre director and clinician. He recently graduated from the University of Maine with a Bachelor of Music in Music Education and is looking forward to officially joining the ranks of Maine’s music teachers. He lives in Stockton Springs with his wife, Hilary, and two children, Eric and Ruth.
UMaine graduate and student of Don Stratton, Bob Roman maintains an active performing schedule. In addition to this ensemble, he is also a member of the house band on “The Nite Show with Danny Cashman” and many others.
Bobby Duron has been playing drums professionally for over 40 years. Originally from Dallas, Texas, he now resides in Hampden, Maine, where he is a professor at Husson University and an active freelance musician and clinician in the greater Bangor area.
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notebooknebula · 1 year
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Meet The $100 Million Underdog, Pamela Bardhi with Jay Conner
Private Money Academy Conference:
https://www.JaysLiveEvent.com
Free Report:
https://www.jayconner.com/MoneyReport
Join the Private Money Academy:
https://www.JayConner.com/trial/
In today’s show, Raising Private Money with Jay Conner, let us look back to when Pamela Bardhi joined Jay to empower the world through real estate, building different revenue streams, and igniting the Underdog in all of us.
Pamela Bardhi, the Real Estate Underdog, has been named by TIME Magazine as a Trailblazer in the Real Estate Industry. She went from delivering pizzas to a 9-figure real estate career featured in Forbes & Time Magazine by 28 years old. 
She is a real estate developer by trade and has transitioned into becoming a real estate and life strategist through coaching, speaking, and building an international real estate team. She hosts a world-renowned podcast called, Underdog, which is in the top 1.5% of podcasts in the world and streamed in 65+ countries. 
She is fully dedicated to encouraging the world and igniting the fire in all of us. Real Stories, Real Hustle, Real Journeys. That is what she is all about. 
Pamela has sold, developed, or acquired over $100 Million in Real Estate Assets in the Boston, MA market over the last decade. Her educational background includes Stonehill College, Babson College & Harvard Business School.
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Have you read Jay’s new book: Where to Get The Money Now?
It is available FREE (all you pay is the shipping and handling) at
https://www.JayConner.com/Book
What is Private Money? Real Estate Investing with Jay Conner
https://www.JayConner.com/MoneyPodcast
Jay Conner is a proven real estate investment leader. He maximizes creative methods to buy and sell properties with profits averaging $67,000 per deal without using his own money or credit.
What is Real Estate Investing? Live Private Money Academy Conference
https://youtu.be/QyeBbDOF4wo
YouTube Channel
https://www.youtube.com/c/RealEstateInvestingWithJayConner
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/private-money-academy-real-estate-investing-with-jay/id1377723034
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/jay.conner.marketing
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riilsports · 2 years
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Rhode Island Interscholastic League Announces Hall of Fame Class of 2022
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WARWICK, RI (July 15, 2022) – The following distinguished athletes, coaches, officials and administrators will be inducted into the Rhode Island Interscholastic League High School Athletic Hall of Fame-Class of 2022 on Wednesday, October 26, 2022 at the Crowne Plaza in Warwick. Ticket information will be made available in the coming weeks.
Elizabeth Beisel
Arguably the best female swimmer ever to come out of Rhode Island, Beisel competed in three Olympic Games (2008, 2012 and 2016), winning a silver (400-meter medley) and a bronze (200-meter backstroke) medal at the 2012 Summer Games in London. At the same time, the Saunderstown resident was compiling an amazing high school swimming career at North Kingstown High School, where she won the maximum eight individual RIIL individual titles, setting state high school and URI pool records along the way, while also helping the Skippers capture multiple relay victories. Beisel also starred at the University of Florida and has become a media contributor for NBC and ESPN.
Frank Caparco
A two-time All-State golfer and member of Cranston East’s ice hockey team that won two state titles (1966 & ’67) and a New England championship, Caparco went on to play both sports at the former Rhode Island Junior College and Roger Williams College. He remained connected to hockey by serving as a youth, high school and college hockey official for more than 40 years. A past president of the R.I. Hockey Officials Organization, Caparco refereed numerous championships at every level and officiated more than 140 RIIL playoff games from 1973 to 2015.
Margaret Conaty
Part of the first generation of girls given the opportunity to play interscholastic sports in Rhode Island, Margaret “Bootie” Conaty took full advantage of the opportunity, competing in field hockey, cross country, basketball and outdoor track for Smithfield High School. Named the school’s Most Outstanding Female Athlete in 1972, she led the Sentinels to the first RIIL Girls Basketball State Championship that year, along with back-to-back outdoor state titles. Upon graduating from the University of Rhode Island, where she played field hockey, basketball and lacrosse, Conaty embarked on a successful 41-year career in high school athletic administration in Massachusetts, while also serving on many boards and committees for the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association and National Federation of State High School Associations.
Ed Cooley
Named the 2022 National and Big East Conference Coach of the Year in his 16th season as head coach of the Providence College men’s basketball team, Cooley got his start not far from where he now coaches the Friars, honing his skills at Central High School in the late 1980s. A two-time first-team All-State selection, the 6-foot-3 forward guided the Knights to back-to-back RIIL State Championships in 1987 and ’88. Described by then coach Harold Metts as “the spiritual leader of the team,” Cooley earned tournament MVP honors both times, then went on to produce a hall-of-fame career at Stonehill College before joining the college coaching ranks.
Manny DaSilva
A three-sport star at the former Bristol High School from 1987-1991, DaSilva was a three-time first-team All-State baseball player, first-team All-State football player and All-Division basketball player for the Colts. He received a baseball scholarship to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he starred for three seasons before being drafted by the Oakland Athletics in 1994. When an injury cut short his professional career, DaSilva went into law enforcement, working as a deputy sheriff in North Carolina and then Rhode Island. He has remained connected to baseball through coaching and is a hitting instructor for youth and college players.
Claudia DeFaria
A member of the Central Falls, CCRI, Rhode Island College, New England Basketball and Little East Halls of Fame, DeFaria has left an indelible mark on every basketball program she has ever played for. Graduating from Central Falls High School in 1990 as the Warriors’ all-time leading scorer and rebounder with 1,350 points and more than 1,000 rebounds, the All-Stater went on to star at CCRI (916 points and 214 assists) from 1990-92 and at RIC (1,048 points) from 1993-95. She has had successful stints coaching at Cranston West, CCRI and now at RIC, where she is an assistant coach when she is not working for Adoption Rhode Island.
Kelli Fay-Wolfe
The 1987 Words Unlimited R.I. Schoolgirl Athlete of the Year, Fay-Wolfe starred in both basketball and track and field at Cumberland High School. A two-time All-Stater, 1987 Converse All-American and 1987 Naismith R.I. Player of the Year, she finished with 1,073 career points and helped lead the Clippers to the title game of the Class A Championship in 1985, ‘86 and ‘87. Fay-Wolfe also became the first girl to win four individual titles at the 1987 outdoor state meet and led Cumberland to the State Championship that year. She went on to have an extremely successful track career at the University of Pennsylvania. A high school and college mathematics teacher, Fay-Wolfe has coached high school girls basketball and track and is a track and field official.
Jameson “Jamie” Gresh
Earning the No. 1 singles spot in his freshman year at Barrington High School, Gresh did not lose a match in his sophomore, junior and senior years, winning three-straight RIIL singles state titles in 1996, ’97 and ‘98. During his high school career, the four-time first-team All-Stater also led the Eagles to three Division I State Championships. He earned the No. 1 singles and doubles spots in his junior and senior years at Penn State University and was an All Big Ten Conference selection both seasons. Gresh played professionally for several years after college and served as an assistant coach at Brown for four seasons before moving to Newport Beach, Calif., where he is now a tennis pro and head coach of Corona del Mar High School’s successful boys and girls tennis teams.
William Haberek
A teacher at his alma mater for 31 years before retiring in 2004, Haberek has coached cross country and indoor and outdoor track and field first at Chariho Middle School and then at the High School for nearly five decades. He has earned multiple Coach of the Year honors, while mentoring many All-State, All-Class and All-Division athletes, as well as the 2012 Indoor 4x1 Mile National Champs. Also a member of the Chariho and Rhode Island Track Coaches Association Halls of Fame, Haberek has guided the Chargers to the 2011 Outdoor State Championship and the 2012 Indoor state title.
Kathy Kelley
When Central Falls High School added interscholastic athletics for girls in 1975 during Kelley’s junior year, she jumped at the chance to play. An All-State, All-League and All-Blackstone Valley selection in both cross country and basketball, she received a basketball scholarship to the University of Bridgeport. After playing one season there, Kelley transferred to R.I. College, where she enjoyed a hall-of-fame career, finished with 764 points in three seasons and earned a Division III All-American nomination. She returned to her alma mater and spent more than three decades serving the Central Falls' youth as a mathematics teacher, athletic director and coach of the Warriors’ cross country, volleyball, track, softball and girls basketball teams.
Thomas Mezzanotte
Following a 30-year career within the Providence School System, where he served as a teacher, assistant principal (Mt. Pleasant H.S.), principal (Bridgham M.S. and Classical H.S.) and Executive Director of Student Support Services, Mezzanotte became the RIIL’s Executive Director in 2004. During his 16 years in that role, he expanded the league’s education-based athletics program, worked with Special Olympics RI to implement a unified high school sports program for students with intellectual disabilities, implemented a mandatory certification requirement for coaches and helped develop the R.I. Concussion Law. A standout football and baseball player at La Salle Academy and then Providence College, Mezzanotte also coached football at Johnston High School and girls volleyball at Central High School during his early years of teaching.
Bethany O’Dell Peloquin
O’Dell-Peloquin starred in basketball and field hockey at Lincoln High School in the early 2000s, earning first-team All-State honors twice in both sports. She led the Lions’ field hockey team to two Division I Championship appearances. A two-time tournament MVP and the 2006 Gatorade Rhode Island Basketball Player of the Year, she finished as Lincoln’s all-time leading scorer (2,431 points) and led the Lions to back-to-back Division II Championships (2005 and 2006). O’Dell-Peloquin then received a full Division I basketball scholarship to Holy Cross, finishing with 1,449 career points and earning multiple All-Patriot League honors.
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rkbwrites · 2 years
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[Author Interview] Angelina Singer
[Author Interview] Angelina Singer #riauthors #indieauthors #authorcommunity #writerscommunity #scifi #writerslift
Welcome Angelina Singer! Angelina Singer is a young adult / new adult author with a romantic comedy, “Just Like a Pill”, books 1-3 of a dystopian science fiction trilogy “The Upperworld Series”, and both books of The Rewind Duology available for purchase on Amazon now. In addition to her writing career, Singer graduated Magna Cum Laude from Stonehill College in 2019, where she studied English,…
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