Rhode Island
Rhode Island College is interviewing for its next president. Here are the candidates
A new president is expected to be announced in January 2024. But it could be a familiar face.
The search for Rhode Island College’s next president is heating up, with interviews underway this week. The Rhode Island Office of the Postsecondary Commissioner confirmed that three candidates are in the running, with interviews set to wrap on Friday.
Who are the applicants, and what might they bring to the table? Here’s a primer.
Jack Warner, interim president, Rhode Island College
Jack Warner was appointed interim president at RIC in July 2022, having previously served in various education roles. That list includes teaching higher education at Johnson and Wales University, advising for a consulting firm called the Education Strategy Group, leading the South Dakota Board of Regents and heading up the Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education.
The April 2022 vote to make Warner the interim president was unanimous. Since then, Warner has had to keep the school on solid financial footing amid a decline in enrollment – as The Providence Journal reported last year – and he has also weighed cutting staff.
But Warner has presented a vision for RIC’s future as an economic engine for the Ocean State, looking to attract applicants that may already have some college under their belt. (In Rhode Island, that’s more than 100,000 people.)
Warner will be interviewed on Friday.
More: A familiar face chosen as interim president of Rhode Island College
Dean Libutti, associate vice president for enrollment management and student success, University of Rhode Island
Dean Libutti, who joined the University of Rhode Island in 1999, was named associate vice president for enrollment management and student success in 2021. According to the university, that entails “leadership in enrollment planning, recruitment, and retention through collaboration and partnership with faculty and staff.”
In 2023, Libutti led a “re-enrollment” initiative at the university for students who paused their education during the pandemic, and hadn’t yet returned.
In an announcement of the program, URI said Libutti launched the effort after seeing how many K-12 students in the state stopped going to school.
Libutti also earned himself coverage from The Chronicle of Higher Education in 2019 when URI’s first-year retention rate crept past 85%, a record at the time. (Since then it has fallen again slightly. As of 2022, URI reported the rate at around 84%.)
Libutti was interviewed on Wednesday.
Jeffrey Osborn, former provost and vice president for academic affairs, The College of New Jersey
Jeffrey Osborn was The College of New Jersey’s provost and vice president for academic affairs for four years, leaving his role this year. Before that, he was the longtime dean of the college’s School of Science where he taught biology.
When Osborn decided to step down, The Signal, the college’s newspaper, reported that he would take a yearlong sabbatical then return to the college as a tenured biology professor.
According to the paper, Osborn “worked extensively on community college partnerships, including reviewing 3,500 community college courses and updating credit equivalency,” drastically increasing the number of transferrable credits for students.
Similarly, RIC has articulation agreements with Bristol Community College, the Community College of Rhode Island and Quinebaug Valley Community College, emphasizing on its website that it can help students avoid retaking courses.
Osborn was interviewed on Monday.
Rhode Island
Providence College’s Sam Montalto Earns His Third BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll Recognition – Providence College Athletics
Montalto scored the equalizing goal in Saturday’s 3-2 win over DePaul. The Friars found themselves behind, 2-1, in the second half when Montalto connected on a header on a pass from Pearse O’Brien (West Hartford, Conn.). The goal resulted in momentum that carried forward and resulted in the Friars earning a penalty kick which Bruno Rosa (Cascais, Portugal) converted to give the Friars the lead for the first time in the game. Montalto also registered two shots in the contest.
UP NEXT…
The Friars return home for senior night to take on No. 16 Georgetown on Nov. 7.Kickoff is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. and the game will be streamed on ESPN+.
For more updates on the Providence men’s soccer program, follow the team on Twitter @PCFriarsMSoccer.
-GO FRIARS!-
Rhode Island
Hundreds of people found fighting in the street in Providence on Halloween, police say
Police responding to a report of a large disturbance in Providence, Rhode Island on Halloween night found hundreds of people in the middle of the street fighting.
Providence police said they responded around 12:11 a.m. on Saturday to the area of Easton Street and Radcliffe Avenue, where hundreds of people had gathered, according to WJAR. They said an overwhelming number of people were fighting.
The officers who responded initially called for backup before engaging with the crowd. Units from multiple districts responded and were eventually able to disperse the crowd, a process they said took about two hours.
At least one person was injured in the incident, suffering a laceration to the head, and was taken to Rhode Island Hospital.
Police said several of the calls they received about the incident had reported shots fired, but officers were unable to find any shell casings at the scene.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island FC earns shootout victory against Charleston Battery
Takeaways
Charleston Battery: The Battery’s hopes of a third consecutive trip to the Eastern Conference Final were dashed by their visitors as the highest-scoring team in the regular season was unable to find a decisive moment across 120 minutes of action, with the shootout defeat bringing back memories of its loss in the 2023 USL Championship Final.
Rhode Island FC: Having suffered notable shootout defeats to rival Hartford Athletic in the group stage and Sacramento Republic FC in the Semifinals of the 2025 USL Jägermeister Cup, Rhode Island came through from the spot on this occasion, taking five strong penalty kicks to earn its place in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.
Key moment
Rhode Island FC’s Hugo Bacharach followed the miss by the Battery to open the fourth round of the shootout with a goal, cementing his side’s advantage on the way to victory.
Key stat
Rhode Island recorded 163 passes in the final third as the visitors held more possession in the attacking half than the Battery, with 32.4 percent of the game played in Charleston’s defensive third.
USLChampionship.com Player of the Match
Koke Vegas, Rhode Island FC – Vegas recorded a four-save shutout, making key saves twice on Cal Jennings, and commanded his penalty area impressively throughout the contest.
Scoring Summary
No Scoring
Penalty Shootout
Charleston Battery – Aaron Molloy, scored; Rubio Rubín, scored; Arturo Rodriguez, missed; MD Myers, scored
Rhode Island FC – JJ Williams, scored; Hamady Diop, scored; Maxi Rodriguez, scored; Hugo Bacharach, scored; Aimé Mabika, scored
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