Mawrters Making Their Mark

Newsmakers in fusion energy and place-based design.

Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS), a company associated with MIT that is working to develop commercial fusion energy, recently announced it had achieved a world record magnetic field strength of 20 Tesla. The team accomplished this using magnets made of a new material called high-temperature superconductor (HTS) tape.

Maise Shepard '20, a technician at CFS, is on the team developing these magnets. “Research and development toward getting to net fusion has been an incredibly meaningful use of science that I’m lucky to be a part of,” Shepard says. “The answer to the climate crisis is finding an energy source for the world that is clean and produces more than what we put into it. Natural phenomena like stars tell us that fusion energy is possible, and we’re closer than ever to harnessing that. Recently achieving 20T with our magnet means we’re on the right path toward the type of plasma confinement needed for fusion. I’m working on the superconductors that generate this magnetic field.”

Back on campus, Shepard’s mentor in the Bryn Mawr Plasma Lab, Associate Professor of Physics David Schaffner, was excited to hear the news. “The fact that Maise gets to be involved in such a tremendous achievement is very gratifying,” he says.

Building and Sunset
Anna (Frens) Ives ’03 is featured in international design exhibit.

Work by Anna (Frens) Ives ’03 and Patterhn Ives, the architecture practice she founded, was featured in an exhibition put on in concert with the 2021 Venice Architectural Biennale. “A South Forty: Contemporary Architecture and Design in the American South” showcased the work of nearly 40 design firms practicing in proximity to U.S. Interstate 40.

The exhibit brought together work that reimagines Southern architecture. Patterhn Ives, located in St. Louis (with offices also in West Chester, Pennsylvania), focuses on place-based design in the region it serves—at the physical intersection of north and south, east and west and at a cultural crossroads linking traditional and modern. The installation included the firm’s Ellis Hall School of Music (pictured) and the currently under-construction John Goodman Amphitheatre, both at Missouri State University.

“My partners and I are humbled to be included in this exhibit alongside so many distinguished architects practicing in the American Midwest and South,” says Ives. “A history of place guides each of our projects, beginning with extensive consideration of the local built, environmental, and cultural context.”