During the 2022-23 academic year, The All64 Project will highlight one student or alum from each Colorado county. The interactive map with colored pinned county locations shows which profiles are done. The first six counties and students are included in this initial launch.
Engineers and social scientists will study how contaminants migrate in and through homes and how human behavior and the home environment intersect to influence overall health.
A team of Colorado State University researchers will spend the next academic year interviewing 200 students and recent alumni to obtain first-hand accounts of what it was like to be in college during the COVID-19 pandemic.
All three CSU System campuses hit enrollment milestones this fall, with CSU in Fort Collins welcoming its largest entering class in history and CSU Pueblo seeing the largest class of new first-year students in four years.
In the first Fall Address held since 2019, Interim President Rick Miranda reflected on what former Colorado State University President Al Yates said during the aftermath of the Spring Creek Flood that inundated campus in 1997.
Researchers at Colorado State University’s Geospatial Centroid and the Department of Anthropology and Geography will spend the next year mapping the environmental injustices that occur at hundreds of prisons across the United States.
Many people in the U.K. don’t remember what life was like before Queen Elizabeth II took the throne. Peter Harris, an associate professor of political science at CSU, discussed what her death will mean for international relations and what’s next for the British monarchy.
The committee heading up the search for the next president of Colorado State University is hosting a series of public listening sessions to hear from stakeholders about what qualities they want to see a new leader bring to the Fort Collins campus.
Like many students who double major, Henry Ives chose one program out of passion – music – and the other out of practicality – computer science. With time, however, those lines blurred.
Stephan Weiler, a professor of economics at CSU, said although the U.S. GDP has shrank for two quarters in a row, think before using the term “recession.”