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What's with George Mason? (Walter E. Williams column)
Townhall.com ^ | 4/5/2006 | Walter E. Williams

Posted on 04/05/2006 4:07:15 PM PDT by Born Conservative

George Mason University's basketball team broke into national prominence, going all the way to the NCAA Final Four matchup but losing to the red hot University of Florida Gators. The Patriots' stellar performance this season is emblematic of the entrepreneurship and risk taking that long has been a feature of the University.

In 1980, when I left Temple University to join George Mason University's Economics Department, it was a little known school in northern Virginia. Dr. George Johnson, also from Temple University, was president. In an early meeting, to settle my dispute with one of the deans, I learned that Dr. Johnson was an entrepreneur with a vision. In 1983, Dr. Jim Buchanan, a former mentor during my doctoral student days at UCLA, was enticed to join our economics department, bringing with him several members of the Center for Study of Public Choice that he founded at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. In 1986, Dr. Buchanan won the Nobel Prize in Economics.

In 1986, Henry Manne was offered the deanship at our law school. At the time, the law school was less than nondescript, with most of the faculty having only a tangential academic relationship with the school. Mr. Manne was given complete control over hiring and firing. He hired legal scholars, established the Law & Economics Center and laid the groundwork for GMU Law School to become a first-rate law school.

Today, GMU Law School is in the nation's top tier of law schools. According to the latest U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Graduate Schools 2007," GMU Law School ranks 37th among 193 law schools. One uniqueness of our law school is that its professors revere and respect the U.S. Constitution.

In 1995, my colleagues asked me to become department chairman, and I reluctantly accepted. Our department was under siege by a hostile administration because we all shared characteristics that don't go over well in today's academy; we are libertarian-leaning free market economists. My confrontational stance as chairman didn't endear me to the administration. I decided that the only way to improve our department was to "privatize" it -- go out and raise money. With the help of my colleagues, generous donors and a new dean, we built a first-rate department. In 2001, the last year of my term as chairman, Dr. Vernon Smith and six of his colleagues at the University of Arizona's Economic Science Laboratory joined our department. A year later, Dr. Smith became GMU's second Nobel Prize-winner.

You say, "What's up, Williams? I thought we're talking about GMU basketball!" For GMU's basketball team, knocking off several of the nation's top-ranked teams is in itself a stellar performance. Going from no one's guess to being in the Final Four is indicative of some of George Mason University's entrepreneurship. Coach Jim Larranaga and his staff used what my colleagues, Professors Peter Boettke and Alexander Tabarrok, in their Slate.com article "The Secret of George Mason," called the Moneyball model of recruitment. Larranaga knows that he can't compete for freshmen players with the likes of UCLA, Duke, Wake Forest and other top-ranked teams. Boettke and Tabarrok say he overcame that obstacle by hunting "for the undervalued players -- the ones who everyone else thought were too short, too thin, or too fat -- and then building them into a team. In its astonishing defeat of UConn, GMU's players were giving away 4 inches at nearly every position."

After this season, it's just possible that the GMU Patriots will be able to hold its own against top schools, as does the economics department and law school, in recruiting basketball players. Singer Ray Charles pointed to the problem in his hit song, "Them That's Got," which says, "That old saying them that's got is them that gets is something I can't see. If you got to have something before you can get something, how you get your first is still a mystery to me." George Mason University basketball, as well as law and economics, has solved Ray Charles' mystery. We have something.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: blackbypopulardemand; collegebasketball; georgemason; gmu; marchmadness; walterewilliams

1 posted on 04/05/2006 4:07:19 PM PDT by Born Conservative
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To: Born Conservative

Another testimonial for principles....


2 posted on 04/05/2006 4:10:35 PM PDT by abb (Because News Reporting is too important to be left to the Journalists.)
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To: abb

I'll never forgive them for beating my Huskies ! :(


3 posted on 04/05/2006 4:11:01 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: Born Conservative
We have something

Yes, we do. Walter Williams is brilliant. But he forgot to mention GMU's Volgeneau School of Information Technology and Engineering, one of the best.
4 posted on 04/05/2006 4:24:50 PM PDT by advance_copy (Stand for life, or nothing at all)
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To: Born Conservative

Thanks for this post.

GMU won't stop going places. They have too much "on the ball".


5 posted on 04/05/2006 4:30:56 PM PDT by Spirited
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To: patton

ping for your alma mater :)


6 posted on 04/05/2006 4:39:36 PM PDT by leda (Dream a better dream and work to make it reality!)
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To: Born Conservative

Walter Williams for President! I wonder if we could get him to run?


7 posted on 04/05/2006 4:41:04 PM PDT by Jibaholic (We wouldn't let our enemies have guns, why should we let them have ideas? -- Josef Stalin)
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To: Born Conservative

Thanks for the post! GMU rocked the world, another great piece to send to the totally proud GMU undergrad who is my kid!


8 posted on 04/05/2006 4:48:43 PM PDT by jocon307 (The Silent Majority - silent no longer)
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To: Jibaholic
Walter Williams for President! I wonder if we could get him to run?

I doubt it. He wouldn't have a chance and he knows it -- He's much too direct and much too free market for today's political climate (unfortunately) ...

9 posted on 04/05/2006 4:48:47 PM PDT by Babu
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To: Born Conservative
Several years ago, I wrote a history about our university, the U. of Dayton. In the 1970s, UD had some wonderful basketball teams, including the one that went into triple overtime before losing to a UCLA team that had Walton, Greg Lee, David Meyers, and Keith Wilkes. Anyway, what I found was that in the 1970s and early 1980s, UD recruited almost exclusively from mostly-white, middle-class Catholic communities in four or five cities: New York, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Cleveland, and Philadelphia, and, of course, we got a lot of Ohio talent. But they NEVER "overpaid" for star players. Rather, like GMU, they built teams around guys who were a step slow, or a little short, but who worked as a team.

Once they, like other schools, opened up their recruiting nationally and started to send recruiters to Florida and California . . . the quality of UD's basketball faded.

10 posted on 04/05/2006 4:54:34 PM PDT by LS
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To: leda

The jerk forgot to mention the math department!


11 posted on 04/05/2006 4:55:16 PM PDT by patton (Once you steal a firetruck, there's really not much else you can do except go for a joyride.)
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To: Jibaholic
This column points out how electable he (or James Madison) is in today's world:

Check it out. How many votes do you think a James Madison-type senatorial candidate would get if his campaign theme was something like this: "Elect me to office. I will protect and defend the U.S. Constitution. Because there's no constitutional authority for Congress spending on the objects of benevolence, don't expect for me to vote for prescription drugs for the elderly, handouts to farmers and food stamps for the poor. Instead, I'll fight these and other unconstitutional congressional expenditures"? I'll tell you how many votes he'll get: It will be Williams' vote, and that's it.

12 posted on 04/05/2006 5:04:38 PM PDT by RagingBull (Talent does what it can; genius does what it must)
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To: Born Conservative
The blog of GMU's current Economics Department Chairman.
13 posted on 04/05/2006 7:35:13 PM PDT by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: Born Conservative

funny.. one of our local weather guys is named George Mason.


14 posted on 04/06/2006 2:27:48 AM PDT by Awestruck (All the usual suspects)
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To: LowCountryJoe

Your link doesn't work. Can you repost? Thanks.


15 posted on 04/06/2006 3:36:26 AM PDT by Born Conservative (Chronic Positivity - http://jsher.livejournal.com/)
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To: Born Conservative
My fault; here it is.
16 posted on 04/06/2006 5:17:28 PM PDT by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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