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Sixcia Devine 99 to share ideas for meaningful action in biannual Risica Lecture at URI – URI Today

Sixcia Devine ’99 KINGSTON, R.I. – March 12, 2021 – On Three Kings Day in 2010, Sixcia Devine, her mother and 4-year-old son delivered toys, clothes, medical supplies and food to Moncion in the Dominican Republic kicking off a nonprofit endeavor that has blossomed over the past decade. “The experience was so life-changing we continued to help communities every year,” says Devine, who graduated from the University of Rhode Island in 1999 with bachelor’s degrees in communication studies and Spanish and a minor in international development. “We held fundraisers, annual events, and professional networking groups to collect donations.” Today, the Rhode Island-based Caritas Smile reaches out to those in need on a much wider level, including service trips that send participants to several developing countries and a Spanish tutoring program.

Global Greeting Cards Market Report 2020-2027: COVID-19, the Grinch That Stole the Holiday Cheer From the Greeting Cards Market

Global Greeting Cards Market Report 2020-2027: COVID-19, the Grinch That Stole the Holiday Cheer From the Greeting Cards Market
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Commentary: Alvarez s culinary flare touched San Antonio s Hispanics

Commentary: Alvarez s culinary flair touched San Antonio s Hispanics Jaime Vazquez, For the Express-News March 5, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 1of2 To establish credible legitimacy with his clientele, Leonel Alvarez traveled to Puerto Rico and spent several weeks totally immersed in the island’s unique culture. He died at 50 last month of COVID-19. In this 2010 photo, employees serve up traditional Puerto Rican food.JENNIFER WHITNEY /special to the Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less 2of2 Leonel Alvarez was owner and chef of the iconic La Marginal Restaurant on Nacogdoches Road, as well as a central figure in San Antonio’s Puerto Rican community.CourtesyShow MoreShow Less San Antonio, and most especially the Latino community of this city, has lost an indisputable unsung hero. Leonel Alvarez, owner and chef of the iconic La Marginal Restaurant on Nacogdoches Road, fell victim in February to the novel coronavirus afflicting the world. He was 50.

Miguel Cardona is a conciliatory tone-setter

Known as a unifier who earned his chops in a rapid rise through the education ranks – from fourth-grade teacher, to principal, assistant superintendent, and Connecticut education commissioner – Miguel Cardona was expected to be confirmed March 1 as the U.S. Secretary of Education. The Biden administration choice of Dr. Cardona as a conciliatory tone-setter was a smart move, says Jonathan Zimmerman, a historian at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education. A teachers union leader or someone aligned with the pro-charter Democrats for Education Reform, he says, “would have been a sort of prima facie statement that we’re going with one [ideological] side or the other.”

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