May 2011
Research I observatory receives new telescope
|Large pieces of a Ritchey–Chrétien telescope were lifted into the Research I observatory this morning. (George Yanez)
Despite unfavorable weather conditions, a new Ritchey–Chrétien telescope was successfully lifted in the Research I observatory this morning.
ESPN's Adam Schefter talks NFL with 'Sportsbreak'
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ESPN's Adam Schefter smiles for the cameras as he works on the floor at the 2011 NFL Draft. He made a guest appearance on WGMU's "Sportsbreak" Wednesday night. (Photo courtesy of Creative Commons, user ryan lejbak).
More dining, UPS slated for University Hall
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University Hall is the newest building set to open on the Fairfax campus. The bottom level of the building includes leasable retail space. (Jake McLernon)
New frozen yogurt shop near campus
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Josie’s Self-Serve Frozen Yogurt opened its doors last month in Mason’s backyard, offering low-calorie, low-sugar yogurt from its location in University Mall, just across the street from Mason’s Fairfax Campus.
HireMason helps students find jobs, internships
|Searching for a summer job in the midst of all nighters, exams, papers and group projects is difficult. Well, it was difficult, until HireMason came along.
Zombies infiltrate Mason
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Zombies invaded George Mason University's Fairfax Campus on Saturday.
The event, Survive Mason: Humans vs Zombies, was hosted by Weekends at Mason (WAM) and involved 150 students participating in the faux-zombie invasion.
C2M's George Yanez was on the scene and captured footage of the onslaught.
Merten reflects on university achievements, struggles
|![](http://connect2mason.com/content/2011 Spring/mertenreflects_story.jpg)
President Alan Merten applauds the men's basketball team during their 2006 NCAA Final Four run in Indianapolis. (Student Media file)
Few things about George Mason University have remained unchanged since 1996. Fifteen years ago, there was not an Aquatic and Fitness Center. There was not a nationally known basketball team. There wasn’t even a Starbucks.
But, 15 years ago, as now, Alan Merten was president.
“Being president of an institution for 15 years is a long time,” Merten admitted in an early April interview with Connect2Mason. “Especially when you take into account the fact that the average tenure for a university president is less than 10 years. I stayed because every three or four years I would look around and realize this [university] had become a very different place.”
Earlier this spring, Merten announced he would retire in the summer of 2012. Since Merten’s term began nearly two decades ago, the student population has nearly doubled and extensive construction has transformed the Fairfax, Prince William and Arlington campuses, and a fourth campus was opened in Loudoun County in 2005.
Mason overtook Virginia Commonwealth University in September 2009 to become the most populous institution of higher learning in Virginia. In 2010 Mason passed another benchmark when the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching classified it as a “primarily residential” campus.
Merten credited the school’s extraordinary growth to long-term strategy—and a little bit of luck.
Hancock given permission to contact other schools, remains undecided
|Thursday morning, rumors emerged via Twitter that junior forward Luke Hancock was "expected to transfer."
Hours later, it became clear that the rumor was not entirely accurate.
The rumor began after Brian Mull, a beat writer for UNCW who also covers CAA basketball, Tweeted, “George Mason guard Luke Hancock is expected to transfer. #caahoops.”
Hancock responded with a Tweet of his own yesterday around 2 p.m., saying "Who is brian mull anyways??"