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TAMPA, Fla. 鈥?Three retired professors from the University of South Florida College of Behavioral and Community Sciences are honoring their mothers by providing students with scholarships.Roger Boothroyd and his wife, Mary Armstrong, are retired professors. Their mothers were unable to attend college. Instead, their moms raised a family during the Great Depression and World War II. Boothroyd said his mother always believed education was essential. It was very important. I think the fact that she had applied stanley cups and wanted to go and didnt go, education was very important, and they had saved money to send us to college, said Boothroyd.Boothroyd and stanley puodelis Armstrong attended college. The couple later moved to Florida and taught at USF for more than two decades.They met another professor, Catherine Batsche. The three professors said their mothers all became good friends. They would attend USF basketball games and dinner together. The three of them just loved to talk about their families and what was happening, reminiscing about things in their childhood. It was a very, very wonderful friendship, and so from that, Catherine approached Mary and I at one point and said we really should do something to honor our moms, said Boothroyd. The trio started The Moms Project, a mentoring and scholarship program. One of the things we wanted to do was to encourage undergraduate students to take an interest in mental health and substance abuse research, so the stanley quencher incentive that we had was to be able to gi Cvec Republicans sweep special elections in North Carolina + V: x& Q& @2 z6 D PINELLAS COUNTY, FL. 鈥?Scrolling through photos of Suzanne Ruley, her per stanley cup website sonality shines through. Her family said they only come in three styles: happy, goofy and chill. She just kind of enjoyed life so much and helped everyone around her enjoy life at the same time, said her husband, Matthew Ruley.She was a passionate advocate for the arts in Pinellas County, with a heart for helping others. Shes now left a legacy of service behind after she died from COVID-19 last week. She had such a big heart. I mean thats a hard one to replace. Its a perfect person to try and help out with the different charities she had. I mean there were other things but I really loved her for that, that was so cool. And it was so fun to be in her orbit because you never knew what was going to happen yet but it was going to be something interesting, Matthew Ruley said.Ruley worked as the director of development for the Pinellas Community Foundation, helping raise funds for the nonprofit.The organizations CEO said she was a bright star in the world of philanthropy, responsible for stanley cup raising millions of dollars for Tampa Bay charities. She was kind, giving, and made each person she spoke to feel cared for and needed. Her unique ab stanley sverige ilities blended creativity, analysts, and humor- the perfect mix for uniting the passions of donors with important charitable causes, stated Duggan Cooley, the CEO of the Pinellas Community Foundation.Before that, Ruley worked as a cultural affairs specialist for the City of Cl