Skip to main
frog

Prof. Schreifels Hits His Milestone, Runs Scholarship Total to $53,000

When John Schreifels broke through the toilet paper that served as a makeshift finish line for his July 17 run, he put his hands in the air in celebration.

The easy half-mile jaunt through his Warrenton, Va., neighborhood, with his two daughters and four grandkids in tow, gave the George Mason University chemistry professor 24,901 miles as a runner, equal to the circumference of the earth.

“It made for a lot of emotions,” he said.

Not only because he finished a personal challenge that began in 1991, but because of what has gone along with it.

July 17 is the birthday of Schreifel’s younger brother, Tom, who died eight years ago at age 56 of lung cancer. To reach the milestone that day was special.

The endeavor also brought attention to the John A. Schreifels Chemistry Scholarship, given three years running through the College of Science to a student in recognition of academic achievement and leadership.

Schreifels, 67, began endowing the scholarship in 2008 with $3,000 received from George Mason for a Teaching Excellence Award. The endowment is now at about $53,500, he said, including $13,000 raised in the past year after Schreifels’ running received television and newspaper coverage.

“Absolutely amazing,” said senior chemistry major Greg Petruncio, who received $1,000 as this year’s scholarship recipient. “The fact that he did this fun challenge for himself and that people could pour money into this pot for students is awesome.”

Read the full story from the Mason news desk.

* The programs and services offered by George Mason University are open to all who seek them. George Mason does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, ethnic national origin (including shared ancestry and/or ethnic characteristics), sex, disability, military status (including veteran status), sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, marital status, pregnancy status, genetic information, or any other characteristic protected by law. After an initial review of its policies and practices, the university affirms its commitment to meet all federal mandates as articulated in federal law, as well as recent executive orders and federal agency directives.