NYU Prism Luncheon To Honor Xerox Executive Ursula Burns
January 8, 2013Sponsored by the Master of Arts in Graphic Communications Management and Technology program at NYU-SCPS, the 2013 Prism Award will be presented to Burns during the 27th Annual Prism Award Luncheon at Gotham Hall on Thursday, June 13.
Previous NYU Prism Award recipients include: Steve Forbes, chairman and editor-in-chief of Forbes Media LLC; Thomas J. Quinlan III, president and CEO of RR Donnelley; Vyomesh (VJ) Joshi, executive vice president, HP’s Imaging and Printing Group; Cathleen Black, president of Hearst Magazines; Antonio M. Perez, president and CEO of Eastman Kodak; Anne M. Mulcahy, former chairman of Xerox; and Janet L. Robinson, president of The New York Times.
The net proceeds of the Prism Award Luncheon help to fund student scholarships, as well as student and program support for the NYU-SCPS Graphic Communications Management and Technology (GCMT) graduate program, which prepares the next generation of media communications industry leaders. Since its inception, the Prism Award Luncheon has raised millions of dollars for scholarships for students in the GCMT program.
“I am grateful for the honor. This award reminds me of our obligation to the next generation of graphic communications professionals, and I share the enthusiasm for an industry that has seen much change, and for the possibilities yet to come,” said Burns. Burns is a graduate of Polytechnic Institute of NYU.
Burns selected EFI (Nasdaq: EFII) CEO Guy Gecht as her Prism Luncheon Chair. Gecht commented: “Like Xerox, EFI is 100 percent committed to this remarkable media communications program that is internationally known for producing tomorrow’s managers.”
“Over the years, hundreds of students have been assisted with Prism scholarship funds that have totaled several millions of dollars,” said Advisory Board Co-Chairs Martin Maloney, chairman of Broadford & Maloney Inc., and Kathy Presto, vice president, strategic sourcing, of Williams Lea North America. “It is very gratifying to see students obtain their master’s degrees and move into positions of growing managerial responsibility in the media communications field.”



