
 | SUPPORTING EDUCATION: URI student Micheline Larrey (center) receives a $5,000 scholarship from Fidelity Investments. From left are Fidelity Chief of Administration David C. Weinstein; Governor Lincoln Almond; URI President Robert L. Carothers; President of Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Company Inc. Kevin J. Kelly.
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Fidelity invests in URI studentURI student Micheline Larrey studies business institutions at URI's Feinstein College of Continuing Education. One business institution is actually helping the student pay for her lessons.
Fidelity Investments, the nation's largest mutual fund company and a leading provider of financial services, recently awarded Larrey a $5,000 scholarship. She is one of only five students statewide to receive the scholarship.
"Receiving the Fidelity scholarship has truly been an exciting point in my academic career. I have always tried to do my best, which I'm sure all students do as well. To have been chosen as a recipient has left me quite speechless," Larrey said.
As an adult student, the 38-year-old Larrey has learned to balance a full-time job, marriage, financial obligations and academic demands. Because of her academic standing during the fall of 1996, she was invited to participate in a current events seminar hosted by the Naval War College in Newport.
She is confident the knowledge she has gained from her studies at URI will help her family-operated business of more than 40 years, LaForge Cottage Bed and Breakfast, thrive into the new millennium. "Today, a well-founded business understanding is required to survive in the increasingly competitive B&B industry," she said.
The Fidelity scholarships are part of the company's ongoing commitment to and support for education in Rhode Island. The scholarships were awarded during a groundbreaking ceremony in September marking the start of construction on a new building at Fidelity's Smithfield location. When that building becomes fully staffed, Fidelity expect to employ 2,500 in Rhode Island.
By Jan Sawyer
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