The Archive of the Magazine for the George Mason University Community

Archive for 2010

Working the Kinks Out of Sustainability

by Mason Spirit contributor on November 1st, 2010

Everyone has heard that you should conserve water by taking short showers and turning off the faucet when you brush your teeth. But did you know that you also conserve energy—electricity—by doing so?

According to Mason engineer Sharon deMonsabert, water usage consumes more energy than all other energy consumers, such as appliances, in the average household. The reason is that the water must first be pumped from the source to a water treatment facility, treated to drinking water standards, and then pumped to a residence or business. Finally, the wastewater must be pumped back to the facility for retreatment. All that pumping and treatment demands a huge amount of electricity.

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Debbie Hersman: Safety First

by Colleen Kearney Rich on November 1st, 2010

From the window of her L’Enfant Plaza office in Washington, D.C., Mason alumna Debbie Hersman, MS Conflict Analysis and Resolution ’00, can see it all: planes taking off and landing at Reagan National Airport, vehicles on the interstate, boats moving along the Potomac River. It’s American transportation in all its glory, and it all comes…

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Patriot Profile: Michael Strobl

by Colleen Kearney Rich on November 1st, 2010

Major: PhD in Economics Hometown: Stafford, Virginia Semper Fi: In 2004, Lt. Col. Michael Strobl volunteered to escort home the remains of PFC Chance Phelps, a Marine killed in the Iraq War. Strobl kept a diary throughout the trip, which took him from Dover, Delaware, to Dubois, Wyoming. Those notes would eventually become the basis…

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Mason Memory: Basketball Back in the Day

by Mason Spirit contributor on November 1st, 2010

The 2006 Final Four was great. I bought tons of Mason stuff celebrating our historic run. I collected magazine articles, newspaper clippings, Internet articles, and such, so that years from now I can relive those glorious moments. Ah, but I also remember the good old days. I entered Mason in fall 1975 as a freshman….

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Letters from Our Readers

by Colleen Kearney Rich on November 1st, 2010

More Grammar Goofs Please do not publish letters like the one from Raoul Drapeau, who took a misguided stand on the who/whom issue. He, and his sixth-grade teacher, represent a shrinking minority who believe those rules recorded by a group of monks in the Middle Ages (at least those who survived the Black [Death]) were…

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Dear Mason Nation

by Mason Spirit contributor on November 1st, 2010

It is indeed a privilege to serve as the new president of the George Mason University Alumni Association. Mason was a wonderful place for me as a student, and I smile when I think about its bright future. The great part of being alumni is that our Mason story continues. During my two years as…

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Crossing Disciplines

by Colleen Kearney Rich on November 1st, 2010

Interdisciplinary work, in the classroom and in the research laboratory, has always been a hallmark of George Mason University. We appreciate interdisciplinary endeavors and believe that breakthroughs most likely will come not from the core of a discipline but at the boundaries between the disciplines. Cutting-edge programs, such as our new degrees in bioengineering, environmental…

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Janine Wedel: Who Is Really in Charge?

by Colleen Kearney Rich on November 1st, 2010

Public policy professor Janine Wedel has been a pioneer in applying anthropological insights to topics that are typically the terrain of political scientists and economists. In her new book, Shadow Elite: How the World’s New Power Brokers Undermine Democracy, Government, and the Free Market (Basic Books, 2010), she details a new system of power and influence…

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Web Site Allows Citizen Scientists to Analyze Galaxy Collisions

by Mason Spirit contributor on November 1st, 2010

Galaxy Zoo Mergers, a new web site developed by researchers at Mason and Oxford University, will give anyone—scientist or not—the chance to contribute to space research. By playing a “cosmic slot machine,” site visitors can compare images of colliding galaxies with millions of simulated images of galactic pileups. These collisions, which astronomers call “galactic mergers,”…

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Novel Personalized Medicine Trial Launched for Colorectal Cancer

by Mason Spirit contributor on November 1st, 2010

Imagine if treatments for disease could be based not on patients’ diagnoses, but rather on the characteristics of their tissues. That’s exactly what researchers at Mason’s Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine (CAPMM) are trying to accomplish. Lance Liotta and Emanuel Petricoin III, codirectors of CAPMM, have launched a clinical trial in partnership with…

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