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Mason Celebrates Three Decades as an Independent Institution
By Daniel Walsch
- From 4,166 students to 24,900
- From 14 buildings to 67 on three separate campuses
- From fewer than 3,000 graduates to more than 85,000
- From an up and coming to an innovative leader
These hallmarks are among those experienced by George Mason University since
1972, the year when the institution was officially designated an independent member
of the commonwealths system of colleges and universities.
This year represents a milestone in the universitys evolution; a celebration
of its past achievements as well as a recognition of the challenges that lie ahead
in what President Alan G. Merten calls our second chapter. No longer,
he notes, is the university beginning.
The universitys beginning occurred on April 7, 1972, when Gov. Linwood
Holton signed legislation that formally completed George Masons separation
from the University of Virginia. This independence followed 15 years of serving
as a two-year branch campus of the University of Virginia. It was during those
years that George Mason opened its campus in Fairfax, was given the name George
Mason College, and began conferring undergraduate and graduate degrees.
Despite these milestones, George Mason Universitys road to independence
was much like the one its namesake witnessed nearly two centuries before: bumpy
and uncertain and not without its share of roadblocks.
George W. Johnson, who served as the universitys president from 1978
until his retirement in 1996, recalls some members of the General Assembly being
quite blunt in their opposition to the establishment of any kind of quality institution
of higher learning in Northern Virginia. Much of the establishment did not
want a top-tier institution or even a second-tier institution in Northern Virginia,
Johnson says. In fact, the chairman of the Houses Capital Outlay Committee
even told me that if he had had his way, we would have remained strictly an undergraduate
school.
Yet, Northern Virginia, he adds, was a very sophisticated frontierone
that possessed all the elements for an explosion of change. Between 1972 and 1982,
Northern Virginia witnessed a great deal of growth, both on the part of the region
and on the part of this new university. This connection, which was due in large
measure to the efforts of Johnson and former Board of Visitors rector John Til
Hazel, captured the attention of educators throughout the country.
By 1979, George Mason had received the authority to grant doctoral degrees
and began offering programs at this level. That same year, it also enhanced its
scope and size even more by acquiring a law school, which formed the beginning
of the Arlington Campus. Other highlights of the universitys first 10 years
include the presidential tenures of Vergil Dykstra (19731977) and Robert
Krug (19771978); the opening of Student Union Building I (1974); the dedication
of Robinson Hall, named after Clarence Robinson (1975); being elevated to doctoral
status (1979); and the beginning of construction of what later became the Patriot
Center (1982).
In a September 1981 speech, Johnson said, George Mason, we like to think,
is different, different because it neednt worry about survival because it
is growing, because people here are enthusiastic, and because its character is
not yet really formed.
As the universitys first decade came to an end, change remained very
much in the air. Looming on the horizon was the arrival of a certain professor
of economics who would change the universitys landscape forever.
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