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Matthew Schure (May 26, 1948 - February 1, 2023) was an American educational psychologist, professor, and college president. Schure served as the second president of New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) from 1982 until 2000, [1] succeeding his father, Alexander Schure, NYIT's founder. [2]
Provisional charter was granted by the New York State Board of Regents to New York Institute of Technology in 1955. [2] The founders of New York Institute of Technology, and in particular Dr. Alexander Schure, Ph.D., [3] started the current university as a career-oriented school that offered engineering-related training and applications-oriented research opportunities. [4]
In 1974, the New York Institute of Technology Computer Graphics Lab was established and attracted the likes of: Pixar Animation Studios president Edwin Catmull and co-founder Alvy Ray Smith; Walt Disney Feature Animation Chief Scientist Lance Williams; DreamWorks animator Hank Grebe; and Netscape and Silicon Graphics founder James H. Clark. [29]
Closing arguments began on Monday in the trial of a tech consultant in the 2023 stabbing death of Cash App founder Bob Lee in San Francisco, an event that shocked the broader tech community whose ...
Iman Mutlaq, founder and president of Sigma Investments Group. Saifullah Paracha, a business manager; Jerry Romano, chairman, New York Emmy Awards. [130] Chen Ningning, founder and president of Pioneer Metals Holdings Co., Ltd. She is a self-made billionaire, her net worth is $1.8 billion as of 2011.
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, 50, was shot and killed Wednesday morning outside the Hilton in midtown Manhattan, where he was set to address investors. A manhunt is now underway for the ...
An off-duty Detroit police officer was shot and killed Monday after he opened fire and injured two of his colleagues who had responded to a suicide in progress call.
New York Institute of Technology faculty and researcher Dr. Claude E. Gagna in his office at NYIT. In 2005, Gagna and NYIT earned a U.S. and Japanese patent for the “next generation” of DNA and RNA microarrays—including the ability to immobilize not only single strands, but also intact, naturally occurring DNA segments.