Rhode Island
2026 Springfield College vs Rhode Island College – Women’s – News – FloGymnastics

Event Info
Here’s how to watch the 2026 Springfield College vs Rhode Island College – Women’s broadcast on FloGymnastics. The 2026 Springfield College vs Rhode Island College – Women’s broadcast starts on Feb 14, 2026. Stream or cast from your desktop, mobile or TV. Now available on Roku, Fire TV, Chromecast and Apple TV. Don’t forget to download the FloSports app on iOS or Android! If you can’t watch live, catch up with the replays! Video footage from the event will be archived and stored in a video library for FloGymnastics subscribers to watch for the duration of their subscription.

Rhode Island
Swift fans think they’ve cracked her wedding date and venue
Rhode Island
SNAP to run out of money two weeks, affecting 144,000 Rhode Islanders | ABC6

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WLNE) — 42 million Americans facing food insecurity could lose access to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) in the coming weeks as the government shutdown drags on.
This includes 144,200 Rhode Island residents who utilized the program in the 2024 federal fiscal year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
1,113,700 Massachusetts residents utilized the program in that time.
According to US Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, the SNAP program, also known as food stamps, will run out of money in two weeks.
“So you’re talking about millions and millions of vulnerable families, of hungry families that are not going to have access to these programs because of this shutdown,” said Rollins, accusing Congressional Democrats in the shutdown.
Democrats are still holding out for a deal that extends expiring enhanced Obamacare premium subsidies.
One out of eight Americans utilize the SNAP program for assistance with their groceries.
SNAP has a contingency fund of approximately $6 billion, but total November benefits are expected to be about $8 billion.
Rhode Island
The Galileo Project

Works by Doug Bosch and Richard Whitten, Book Design by Nancy Bockbrader, Essays by Victoria Gao and Natasha Seaman. Exhibition on view November 6-December 5, 2025.
In The Galileo Project, Nancy Bockbrader, Doug Bosch, and Richard Whitten have created a dialogue across media, time, and imagination—one that links contemporary art to centuries-old scientific inquiry. Drawing from the history and the visual language of the scientific instruments housed in the Museo Galileo, each artist interprets and reimagines these objects through the lens of their own practice. Bosch’s sculptures, tactile and purposefully imperfect, suggest objects suspended between function and fiction. Whitten’s intricate paintings create a catalogue of invented devices, each that inhabits a specific if unidentifiable place. Bockbrader’s hand-bound catalogue, with essays by curator Dr. Victoria Gao and Dr. Natasha Seaman, provides a satisfyingly unique companion for the exhibition. Together, their works blur the boundaries between art, science, and history.
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