- Mason students and faculty help guide school security by participating in active shooter simulations
Last August, 91做厙 faculty and students participated in a series of virtual simulations of school shooter incidents as part of an effort to help the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and MITRE Corp. determine best practices for school safety.
This spring, Mason senior Elizabeth Cheang landed an internship that provided her with a unique opportunity to research COVID-19 cases and use public data sets to discover virus hot spots in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.
- April 21, 2021
Since he was old enough to drive, Anees Mokhiber would freestyle in his car. The 91做厙 double alumnus has since transformed the hobby he describes as therapeutic into a career, with his car being his mobile recording studio.
On April 10, during an Instagram live from his Ford Focus, the up-and-coming rapper sang his latest single Slip, and was caught by surprise when Justin Bieber joined the livestream to jam along. The Grammy-winning pop star gave major compliments on Mokhibers musical talent in front of audience of more than 60,000 people.
Playing football for University of Notre Dame was something Steve Elmer said he could only dream of when he was younger. His talent combined with a scholarship had him playing on the field with a golden helmet as freshman. He became one of the teams most experienced offensive linemen, having 30 starts to his name.
Mason cadets fly to Marine Corps Base Quantico to complete a simulated military mission.
91做厙 is offering two COVID-19 vaccination clinics this week for students on Wednesday, April 21 and Friday, April 23.
Nine Mason teams are participating in PitchFest, the TiE DC chapters region-wide pitch competition for university students.
With the guidance of LaNitra Berger, senior director of Masons Office of Fellowships, and thanks to a happenstance meeting between them, Soraya Ngarnim and Chanel Grice are fulfilling their dreams.
Growing up in the slums of Cameroon, Joseph Sany said he witnessed urban violence and police oppression regularly. He heard about genocide in Rwanda, and he saw more violence firsthand when he worked with NGOs and visited countries like Liberia and Sierra Leone during civil war.