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RIT to award honorary degrees to four innovators May 9

Rochester Institute of Technology will confer honorary degrees to four outstanding individuals at its 2025 commencement ceremony on Friday, May 9. The honorees will be recognized alongside more than 5,000 graduates, including those from RIT’s international campuses.

Earning honorary degrees are:

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Astro Teller

Astro Teller, a renowned entrepreneur, engineer, scientist, and “Captain of Moonshots” at X Google’s Factory and innovation lab, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Science. In addition to receiving an honorary degree, Teller will also deliver the keynote address for the university’s Academic Convocation ceremony starting at 10 a.m. on Friday, May 9, in the Gordon Field House and Activities Center.

Teller, who is widely recognized for his leadership in technological innovation, oversees X, Alphabet’s Moonshot Factory designed to help tackle the world’s most difficult problems with bold solutions. Some of X’s best known moonshot technologies include Waymo autonomous cars, Verily life sciences, Google Brain, and Wing delivery drones.

Before joining Google/Alphabet, Teller was the co-founding CEO of several companies including Cerebellum Capital Inc., an investment management firm whose investments are continuously designed, executed, and improved by a software system based on techniques from statistical machine learning; BodyMedia Inc., a wearable body monitoring company; and SANDbOX Advanced Development, an advanced development technology incubator.

Through his work as a scientist, inventor, and entrepreneur, Teller holds many U.S. and international patents related to hardware and software technology. Teller is also a novelist and screenwriter.

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Gregory L. Robinson

Gregory L. Robinson, engineer and former director of the James Webb Space Telescope, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Science. Robinson will also deliver the keynote address at the doctoral hooding ceremony on May 9, starting at 1:30 p.m., in the Gene Polisseni Center.

A distinguished figure in the field of space exploration and engineering, Robinson is renowned for his contributions to NASA’s groundbreaking missions and his expertise in astrophysics. After joining NASA in 1989, he became a manager at the Goddard Space Flight Center. As the John H. Glenn Research Center’s deputy director, Robinson oversaw 114 missions and helped guide research initiatives, collaborations, and partnerships with industry, academia, and other NASA centers.

As director of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), he was pivotal in bringing the project back on track. Under his leadership, the JWST successfully launched in 2021, reaching its destination in space and fulfilling the vision of a cutting-edge space observatory capable of capturing unprecedented images of distant galaxies, stars, and planets. These contributions have cemented his legacy as a leader who played an instrumental role in the success of one of the most ambitious scientific missions of the 21st century.

Robinson has earned accolades including the 2022 Federal Employee of the Year Medal and the NASA Presidential Rank Distinguished Executive award. He also was named as one of Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2022 and to the Ebony 2022 Power 100 list.

He has a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Virginia Union University, a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Howard University, and an MBA from Averett College. He is also an adjunct professor at Columbia University.

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Nadine Strossen

Nadine Strossen, former president of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), will receive an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters.

A prominent legal scholar, civil liberties advocate, and author, Strossen has dedicated her career to championing freedom of speech, civil rights, and social justice.

Strossen received a bachelor’s degree from Harvard College and a law degree from Harvard Law School in 1975 before joining the faculty of New York Law School. As the John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law Emerita at New York Law School and Senior Fellow with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, Strossen imparts her knowledge of constitutional law and civil liberties, fostering a deep appreciation for democratic values among audience members for her 200 annual public presentations.

Strossen served as the host and project consultant for Free to Speak, a three-part public TV series that first aired in 2023. In 2018, she published her book HATE: Why We Should Resist It with Free Speech and, in 2023, published Free Speech, What Everyone Needs to Know®.

Strossen has twice been named one of America’s “100 Most Influential Lawyers” by the National Law Journal. In 2023, the National Coalition Against Censorship honored her with its Judy Blume Lifetime Achievement Award for Free Speech. She serves on the advisory boards of the ACLU, Academic Freedom Alliance, Heterodox Academy, National Coalition Against Censorship, and University of Austin.

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Govindasamy Viswanathan

Govindasamy Viswanathan, founder and chancellor of Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT), will receive an Honorary Doctor of Pedagogy.

With over 40 years of experience in educational administration, Viswanathan has transformed Indian higher education by creating the leading STEM-focused, private foundation university in India. Established in 1984, VIT enrolls more than 100,000 students across six campuses.

Born in a remote village in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Viswanathan served in parliament, in the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly, and as Minister for Food, Co-operation, and Dairy Development. He earned a master’s degree in economics from Loyola College, Chennai, a law degree from Madras University, and completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School. He received an honorary doctorate from West Virginia University in 2009 in recognition of his exemplary contributions to the fields of politics, education, and societal development.

Viswanathan is the past president and chief patron of the Education Promotion Society for India, and he has received numerous national and international awards. His societal initiatives have had a profound impact on underserved communities. These initiatives include The Centre for Sustainable Rural Development and Research Studies; Skill Development Programmes; Support the Advancement of Rural Students; and G.V. School Development Programme.

In 2012, Viswanathan established the Universal Higher Education Trust to help underprivileged students of Vellore District to pursue higher education, benefitting as many as 9,400 students so far. In addition to his contributions to STEM education, he has made numerous contributions to the expansion of Tamil, a South Indian language, through his philanthropy and scholarship.

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