NEW: Miranda Jr. to Receive Honorary Degree at RIC

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NEW: Miranda Jr. to Receive Honorary Degree at RIC

Luis Miranda Jr. PHOTO: RIC
Rhode Island College announced that it will present an honorary degree to Luis Miranda Jr. during the school’s 165th commencement ceremony.

Author Ruby Bridges will serve as the commencement speaker.

“Ms. Bridges and Mr. Miranda were chosen to be part of our commencement because they both represent the values of opportunity and inclusion that are bedrocks of our mission here at Rhode Island College. In their own ways, they have each been tireless advocates for underrepresented communities and their lives stand as powerful testaments to the potential of education as a tool for inclusion and empowerment,” said President Frank Sánchez.

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The ceremony will take place on Saturday, May 11 at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

About Miranda Jr.

He is founding partner of The MirRam Group, a government affairs, lobbying and political consulting firm in New York City, and founding president of the Hispanic Federation.

Miranda has served in three New York City mayoral administrations and is past chair of NYC Health + Hospitals, the largest public health care system in the United States.

A noted advocate for underrepresented communities and patron of the arts, Miranda is board chair of the Latino Victory Fund and the Northern Manhattan Arts Alliance, and serves on the board of New York City’s The Public Theater, The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, NYC & Company and the Amber Charter School Foundation in East Harlem. He also chairs the advisory boards to Broadway League’s Viva Broadway and the Caribbean and Latin American Studies Department at the CUNY Graduate Center.

Miranda and his wife, Luz Towns-Miranda, have been married for 39 years and have two adult children, Luz Miranda-Crespo and Lin-Manuel Miranda.

In 2018, the Miranda family, through its charitable foundation, created the Miranda Family Scholarship at Rhode Island College to support students from underrepresented communities who are pursuing careers in the performing arts.

Commencement Speaker Announced

Bridges will serve as the commencement speaker for the ceremony.

Born in Mississippi in 1954 – the same year the Supreme Court ended school segregation with the Brown v. Board of Education decision – Bridges was only six years old when she boldly went into the forefront of the burgeoning civil rights movement. In 1960, she became one of the first black children to integrate the all-white New Orleans school system. Bridges was greeted by a mob and escorted across the school’s threshold by federal marshals – a safety precaution that continued for her entire first year at William Frantz Elementary School. Artist Norman Rockwell later immortalized her first day in his painting, “The Problem We All Live With.”

After graduating from a desegregated high school, Bridges went on to become a wife, mother and civil rights activist. In the mid-1990s, she reconnected with Barbara Henry, the only teacher at Frantz Elementary who was willing to accept Bridges as a student in her first year, and the pair embarked on a series of speaking engagements. Bridges later wrote two books about her experiences, one of which, “Through My Eyes,” earned the National Council for the Social Studies’ prestigious Carter G. Woodson Award.

In 2001, President Bill Clinton awarded Bridges the Presidential Citizens Medal. In 2006, the Alameda (CA) Unified School District dedicated Ruby Bridges Elementary School. In 2014, a statue of her was unveiled in the courtyard of Frantz Elementary.


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