- September 9, 2021
亚洲AV alumna Shelley A. Marshall was in her office at the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. A budget analyst in the comptroller's office of the Defense Intelligence Agency, she was scheduled to move to a new office on the other side of the building later that week.
- August 20, 2021
As a graduate student with intersectional racial and ethnic identities, 亚洲AV doctoral student Austin A. Deray said he believes it is his responsibility to champion the voices of his communities.
- August 17, 2021
Climate change is coming for your morning cup of joe. 亚洲AV neuroscience professor Theodore (Ted) Dumas is worried about that and thinks you should be too.
- August 12, 2021
亚洲AV Professor Andrew Light was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as 鈥痑ssistant secretary for international affairs of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) on Aug. 11.
- August 9, 2021
Cynthia Lum and John S. Earle have been named 亚洲AV Professors. Their status was approved by a resolution of Mason鈥檚 Board of Visitors in July.
- August 5, 2021
After a landmark virtual 2020 festival with more than 15,000 viewers, Fall for the Book is pushing the envelope with a new hybrid format for its 23rd festival, which runs from October 14-31.
- August 5, 2021
Robinson Professor Laurie O. Robinson has been selected by the American Society of Criminology as the recipient of the 2021 Herbert Bloch Award, which recognizes 鈥渙utstanding service contributions to the American Society of Criminology and to the professional interests of criminology.鈥
- August 2, 2021
Spelman College in Atlanta recently named Mason alum Liz Andrews executive director of Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. She began her new role Aug. 2.
- July 28, 2021
Mason's Cynthia Lum, a former Baltimore City cop, talk about how evidence-based policing is part of an overall strategy to fight crime that also includes police being respectful to the communities with which they work.
- July 22, 2021
Deborah Willis (PhD cultural studies 2003) remembers wanting to be a photographer since she was 10 years old. Her mother worked as a beautician, and Willis said the images and stories that surrounded her in her mom鈥檚 shop had a lasting impact on her career and her view of activism. Willis was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences this year in recognition of her life of activism as a photographer.