Faculty & Staff Accomplishments
We are excited to share recent accomplishments from faculty and staff members at our campuses around the world.
Accomplishments are listed by date of achievement in reverse chronological order, with the most recent first.
Jonathan Goldman
College of Arts & Sciences EnglishJonathan Goldman, Ph.D., associate professor of English, created the script for the 38th annual at Symphony Space in New York City, a celebration of James Joyce's Ulysses. The script, an adaptation of Ulysses billed as a "whirlwind tour" of the novel, was performed by a cast of professional actors including Malachy McCourt and John Douglas Thompson in front of a packed house on June 16, 2019.
Jonathan Goldman
College of Arts & Sciences EnglishJonathan Goldman, Ph.D., associate professor of English, presented a paper as part of a panel, that he organized for the 2019 North American James Joyce Symposium, in Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico, on June 15, 2019. The paper, "Ulysses as Gift in Popular Narratives," analyzed works of narrative fiction that portray characters giving Joyce's novel Ulysses as a gift.
Terese Coe
NYIT English Dept, Manhattan campusTerese Coe, M.A., adjunct instructor of English, had her poem, “Identity Crisis” published in Maintenant 13, a magazine of Dada and surreal poems. The launch party for the magazine took place at Le Poisson Rouge in New York City on June 13, 2019.
\nJonathan Goldman
College of Arts & Sciences EnglishJonathan Goldman, Ph.D., associate professor of English, published of Robert Spoo's Modernism and the Law, (Bloomsbury, 2018) in The Review of English Studies (Oxford UP), on June 10, 2019.
Radomir Mihajlovic
College of Engineering & Computing Sciences Computer ScienceRadomir Mihajlovic, Ph.D., adjunct associate professor of computer science, was featured in an interview in a leading Serbian weekly, , or Time Stamp, on June 6, 2019. Mihajlovic has presented some open source data analysis results related to the Western Balkan economic and political situation. Based on his three dimensional model of the cyberspace conflict, he has correlated all semantic dimension findings with the U.S. interests in the region.
\n\n\nTerese Coe
College of Arts & Sciences EnglishTerese Coe M.A.,, adjunct instructor of English, read her poems at Le Poisson Rouge in Greenwich Village with a number of other poets. This is the first NYC launch of Maintenant 13, an annual journal of Dada writing and art from around the globe. This is the same space formerly occupied by the Village Gate.
Susana Case
College of Arts & Sciences Behavioral SciencesSusana Case, Ph.D., professor of behavioral sciences, discussed her book, in a mutual interview, with Lynn McGee (Tracks on the North of Oxford website. In the article, the two authors share a conversation about their recent books, their approaches to writing, and the ways in which femme content informs their work and their lives.
Azhar Ilyas
College of Engineering & Computing Sciences Electrical & Computer EngineeringAzhar Ilyas, Ph.D., assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and computer science, published his research article entitled in the high-impact Journal of Biomedical Nanotechnology on June 1, 2019.
Anthony Dimatteo
College of Arts and SciencesAnthony DiMatteo, Ph.D., professor of English, had four poems published in on May 30, 2019. The poems are from his book in-progress, Fishing for Family.
Pablo Lorenzo-Eiroa
School of Architecture & Design ArchitecturePablo Lorenzo-Eiroa, M.Arch., associate professor of architecture, presented his essay “Form Follows Information: 'Project and Site Specific Machinic Construction System'” at the International Conference Arquitectonics Networks: Mind, Land & Society on May 30, 2019 in Barcelona, Spain.