Renowned writer, naturalist Terry Tempest Williams to deliver URI’s 2023 Commencement address

University also announces honorary degrees for 3 distinguished recipients

KINGSTON, R.I. – April 13, 2023 – Writer, naturalist, and freedom-of-speech advocate Terry Tempest Williams will deliver the University of Rhode Island’s 2023 Commencement address at the University-wide ceremony Saturday, May 20, which will begin at 10 a.m. on the Kingston Campus Quadrangle. The main ceremony is part of a full weekend of commencement celebrations that includes the Graduate School ceremony on Friday, May 19, at 5 p.m. at the Ryan Center. The University’s eight-degree granting colleges will hold additional ceremonies May 20 and 21.

Also during the main ceremony, the University will confer honorary degrees on Zaven Khachaturian, Ph.D., widely considered the “father” of modern Alzheimer’s disease research; Wendy Schmidt, president of The Schmidt Family Foundation; and Clint Smith, an interdisciplinary scholar and inspirational social justice educator, poet, author and speaker. 

“We are so pleased to have Terry Tempest Williams deliver this year’s commencement address,” URI President Marc Parlange said. “Not only a prolific writer, Professor Williams is a powerful and moving speaker. Last year she gave a poignant and thought-provoking talk on campus, and we are honored to have her back for this momentous University celebration.

An award-winning author who has shown how environmental issues are social issues that become matters of justice, Williams asks tough and challenging questions, such as “What might a different kind of power look like, feel like, and can power be redistributed equitably even beyond our own species?”

She has testified before Congress on women’s health, been a guest at the White House, camped in the Utah and Alaska wildernesses, and worked as “a barefoot artist” in Rwanda. 

Williams is the author of the environmental literature classics: Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place; An Unspoken Hunger: Stories from the Field; Desert Quartet; Leap;  Red: Passion and Patience in the Desert; The Open Space of Democracy; Finding Beauty in a Broken World; When Women Were Birds; The Hour of Land: A Personal Topography of America’s National Parks; and The Story of My Heart by Richard Jeffries, as rediscovered by Brooke Williams and Terry Tempest Williams. Her most recent books are Erosion — Essays of Undoing and The Moon Is Behind Us with photographer Fazal Sheikh.

Among the honors bestowed on Williams are the 2006 Robert Marshall Award from The Wilderness Society, the Distinguished Achievement Award from the Western American Literature Association, the Wallace Stegner Award given by The Center of the American West, a Lannan Literary Fellowship, and a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in creative nonfiction.

In 2009, Williams was featured in Ken Burns’ PBS series on the national parks. In 2014, on the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act, she received the Sierra Club’s John Muir Award, and in 2017 she was presented the Audubon New York Award for Environmental Writing. In 2019, she was given The Robert Kirsch Award, a lifetime achievement prize given to a writer with a substantial connection to the American West. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Williams is writer-in-residence at the Harvard Divinity School. She divides her time between the red rock desert of Utah and Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Honorary Degree Recipients

Zaven Khachaturian, Ph.D.—Honorary Doctor of Pharmaceutical Sciences

Zaven Khachaturian

Zaven Khachaturian is widely recognized as the “father” of modern Alzheimer’s disease research. His scientific interest in brain mechanism of memory and his academic career in brain research began in the late 1950s at Yale University. In the span of subsequent decades, he has served in high-level positions in academia, private sector and government. During his tenure at the National Institutes of Health (1977-1995), with the dual role of director, Office of Alzheimer’s Disease, NIH, and director, Neuroscience of Aging Program,NIA/NIH, he had responsibilities for strategic planning and decisions regarding government policies for funding-administering major national programs of research on Alzheimer’s disease and brain aging. He was responsible for launching major national research programs. He was also instrumental in making Alzheimer’s disease a top priority of the government and the subsequent unlocking of federal funding for research. Throughout his career he has served as mentor to countless investigators. He had a direct hand in launching the scientific-academic calling careers of many prominent and successful researchers in the field of dementia-Alzheimer syndrome in the U.S. as well as other countries. As the emeritus Founding Editor-in-Chief of Alzheimer’s & Dementia, which is now the top-rated journal for dementia, he continues to serve as a deeply committed mentor to successive generations of scientists.

Wendy Schmidt—Honorary Doctor of Science 

Wendy Schmidt

Wendy Schmidt is a philanthropist and investor who has spent nearly two decades creating innovative non-profit organizations to work with communities around the world for clean, renewable energy, resilient food systems, healthy oceans and the protection of human rights. 

Through her grant-making and investing with the Schmidt Family Foundation, founded in 2006 with her husband Eric, communities from the Navajo Nation in Arizona to the Democratic Republic of the Congo have access to clean solar and micro-hydropower energy and the economic, social and educational opportunities that come with reliable power.

The Envision Resilience Challenge, a project of another organization Schmidt founded, ReMain Nantucket, calls on professionals and students to develop solutions for communities facing sea-level rise. The Challenge began in Nantucket before moving in 2022 to Narragansett Bay, where the six participating universities included URI, Rhode Island School of Design and Roger Williams University.

The first woman and first American to win the world’s largest sailing race, the Barcolana 54 in 2022, Schmidt co-founded 11th Hour Racing to work with the sailing community and maritime industry to advance sustainable solutions and practices. Based in Newport, Rhode Island, 11th Hour has worked to raise awareness of the importance of ocean health.

Schmidt has a master’s degree in journalism from the University of California at Berkeley, and she graduated magna cum laude from Smith College with a bachelor’s degree in sociology and anthropology.

Clint Smith—Honorary Doctor of Education

Clint Smith

Clint Smith is an interdisciplinary scholar and inspirational social justice educator, poet, author, and renowned speaker. Smith earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from Davidson College and a Ph.D. in education from Harvard University. Smith is a staff writer for The Atlantic and author of The No. 1 New York Times bestseller How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America, as well as the poetry collections Counting Descent and Above Ground.  He continues to serve as an educator through his columns in The Atlantic, books, poetry, and YouTube series on Black American history. Smith is a sought-after speaker, giving talks at universities; organizations, such as the Southern Center for Human Rights, National Book Foundation, and Brennan Center for Justice; and scholarly events, such as the National Book Festival, MSRC International Black Writers Festival, and Aspen Ideas Festival. A former high school teacher, Smith continues to educate the public about racial and other forms of injustice. Through powerful prose, Smith’s scholarly works humanize an oppressive world. He uses poetry, novels, articles, and YouTube to ensure that his messages are accessible to broad audiences. Smith provided an inspirational workshop to URI education students after the death of George Floyd on antiracist education in the summer of 2020.