
Dean Emerita Rita Carty, John and Nina Toups, Dean P.J. Maddox, and President
Alan Merten at the dedication of the Toups Nursing Laboratories. See story
below.
|
|

Campaign Watch
Alumni Campaign Leadership Initiative Nears June 30 Deadline
By Denise St. Ours
The deadline is fast approaching for alumni to qualify for leadership
recognition in the Alumni Campaign, a special one-year donor initiative
and an integral component of The Campaign for George Mason University.
All gift commitments made by alumni at the President's Circle level—a
gift or pledge of $1,000 or more—between July 1, 2002, and June
30, 2003, will be recognized on a special plaque. The plaque will be displayed
in Alumni Atrium, the proposed name of the atrium in Mason Hall on the
Fairfax Campus. At the top of the plaque, a simple statement will appear:
"At the heart of every great university are its alumni." Below
the statement will be a listing of the qualifying donors' names and class
years by gift level.
The Alumni Campaign Steering Committee, led by Edward J. Newberry,
B.A. Communication '84 and B.S. Business Administration '84, has set an
ambitious goal of 250 alumni campaign leadership donors for the plaque.
A record 190 alumni have already qualified for membership in the President's
Circle during the current fiscal year and listing on the plaque.
At a recent committee meeting, George Mason University Foundation Chair
Lovey L. Hammel, B.S. Business Administration '88, commended
committee members for their participation in The Campaign for George
Mason University, the university's first-ever comprehensive fund-raising
initiative. "This is, indeed, the time to reconnect, to be part of
a historic and important initiative," she said.
In addition to the leadership initiative, the Alumni Campaign seeks to
significantly increase the number of alumni participating at all giving
levels in the broader campaign, which concludes June 2005. The objective,
according to Hammel, is to establish a tradition of giving among the university's
growing number of graduates.
Contributions may be made in various ways, including by check or credit
card, the transfer of stock or real estate, or through a planned or deferred
giving method. Gifts or pledges may be made online at www.gmu.edu/development.
For more information, contact David R. Cooper, director of The Campaign
for George Mason University, or Kira M. Benitz, director of the Annual
Fund, at (703) 993-8850 or [email protected].

Other News
To date, the amount raised for The Campaign for George Mason University
has topped $92 million, which is more than 80 percent of the way to the
goal of raising a minimum of $110 million in private support.
Recent major gifts include a $1 million commitment to the School of Law
from the National Rifle Association Foundation to create the Patrick Henry
Professorship of Constitutional Law and the Second Amendment. Nelson R.
Lund, professor of law at George Mason and a nationally recognized expert
on constitutional law, has been appointed the endowed professorship's
inaugural holder.
"The ability to think critically is the traditional goal of a college
education and has never been more crucial," says University President
Alan G. Merten. "This professorship will stimulate timely debate
on important constitutional issues."
In addition, a leadership commitment from Edward Bersoff, foundation
trustee, and Marilynn Bersoff, M.B.A. '00, is endowing
the Edward H. and Marilynn D. Bersoff Faculty Fellowship in Information
Technology and Engineering. The new fellowship will encourage and reward
faculty who are establishing themselves within higher education and in
association with the professional community.
The School of Information Technology and Engineering (IT&E) also
received major support from Information Management Consultants Inc. and
Howrey Simon Arnold & White LLP to help create a $100,000 graduate
scholarship endowment in memory of Suneeth S. Nayak,
M.S. '94. Nayak, who passed away last year, was named IT&E's Outstanding
Alumnus for Technical Management in 2001.
Finally, a number of nursing alumni celebrated the dedication of the
recently expanded and renovated labs at the College of Nursing and Health
Science. Individual and corporate gifts totaling $1 million funded the
initiative. John M. Toups, university foundation trustee emeritus, and
his wife, Nina, provided major support and helped the university garner
the additional gifts needed to transform the labs into state-of-the-art
showplaces. The new labs have been named the Mr. and Mrs. John M. Toups
Nursing Clinical Simulation Laboratories, and a plaque recognizing all
the donors to the project has been installed outside the dean's office.

Among those attending the dedication of the Toups Nursing Laboratories
at the College of Nursing and Health Science (CNHS) in Robinson Hall were,
above, from left, Deborah Royalty, M.Ed. '88; Chien-Yun
Wu, M.S.N. '82, Ph.D. '92; Louise Turner, B.S.N.
'00, B.A. '03; Diane Chase, M.S.N. '88, CNHS Advisory
Board member; Marlene Cianci, Ph.D. '98, CNHS Alumni
Campaign Committee member; Ellen Dawson, M.S.N. '91,
Ph.D. '00; Pamela Meredith, B.S.N. '78; and Christine
Blasser, B.S.N. '93, M.S.N. '97, Alumni Campaign Steering Committee
member.
|