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Colorado State University

Colorado State University (Colorado State or CSU) is a public land-grant research university in Fort Collins, Colorado. It is the flagship university of the Colorado State University System. Colorado State University is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[6] It was founded in 1870 as Colorado Agricultural College and assumed its current name in 1957.[7]

Colorado State University
Former names
Colorado Agricultural College (1870–1935)
Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (1935–1950)
Colorado Agricultural and Mechanical College (1950–1957)
Motto"Education, Service, Research, Extension"
TypePublic land-grant research university
Established1870; 154 years ago (1870)
Parent institution
Colorado State University System
AccreditationHLC
Academic affiliations
Endowment$558 million (2021)[1]
ChancellorAnthony A. Frank
PresidentAmy Parsons[2]
Academic staff
1,468
Administrative staff
4,379
Students27,956 (fall 2022)[3]
Undergraduates26,559 (fall 2019)
Postgraduates7,607 (fall 2019)
Location, ,
United States

40°34′34″N 105°04′51″W / 40.5762°N 105.0808°W / 40.5762; -105.0808
CampusMidsize city[4], 4,773 acres (19.32 km2)
Other campuses
NewspaperRocky Mountain Collegian
ColorsGreen and gold[5]
   
NicknameRams
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division I FBSMountain West
MascotCAM the Ram
Websitecolostate.edu

In 2018, enrollment was approximately 34,166 students, including resident and non-resident instruction students.[8] The university has approximately 2,000 faculty in 8 colleges and 55 academic departments. Bachelor's degrees are offered in 65 fields of study and master's degrees are offered in 55 fields. Colorado State confers doctoral degrees in 40 fields of study, in addition to a professional degree in veterinary medicine.[9] CSU's campus includes the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory (EECL),[10] the University Center for the Arts, which houses the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising and the Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, the James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital, and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA). In fiscal year 2021, CSU spent $447.2 million on research and development [11]

The Colorado State Rams compete in the NCAA Division I Mountain West Conference. Swimmer and six-time Olympic gold medalist Amy Van Dyken is one of CSU's most notable athletes. Other CSU alumni are Pulitzer Prize winners, astronauts, CEOs, and two former governors of Colorado.

History edit

Early years edit

It was founded first as the Colorado Agricultural College. Arising from the Morrill Act of 1862, the act to create the university was signed by the Colorado Territory governor Edward M. McCook in 1870. While a board of 12 trustees was formed to "purchase and manage property, erect buildings, establish basic rules for governing the institutions and employ buildings," the near complete lack of funding by the territorial legislature for this mission severely hampered progress.

The first 30-acre (12 ha) parcel of land for the campus was deeded in 1871 by Robert Dazell. In 1872, the Larimer County Land Improvement Company contributed a second 80-acre (32 ha) parcel. The first $1000 to erect buildings was finally allocated by the territorial legislature in 1874. The funds were not, however, and trustees were required to find a matching amount, which they eventually obtained from local citizens and businesses.

 
Colorado Agricultural College Campus, 1920 with the Oval, Physics Building, and Guggenheim Hall showing

Among the institutions which donated matching funds was the local Grange, which was heavily involved in the early establishment of the university. As part of this effort, in the spring of 1874, Grange No. 6 held a picnic and planting event at the corner of College Avenue and West Laurel Street, and later plowed and seeded 20 acres (80,000 m2) of wheat on a nearby field. Within several months, the university's first building, a 16-foot (4.9 m)-by-24-foot red brick building nicknamed the "Claim Shanty" was finished, providing the first tangible presence of the institution in Fort Collins.[12]

After Colorado achieved statehood in 1876, the territorial law establishing the college was required to be reauthorized. In 1877, the state legislature created the eight-member State Board of Agriculture to govern the school. Early in the 21st century, the governing board was renamed the Board of Governors of the Colorado State University System. The legislature also authorized a railroad right-of-way across the campus and a mill levy to raise money for construction of the campus' first main building, Old Main, which was completed in December 1878. Despite wall cracks and other structural problems suffered during its first year, the building was opened in time for the welcoming of the first five students on September 1, 1879, by university president Elijah Evan Edwards. Enrollment grew to 25 by 1880.[13]

During the first term at Colorado Agricultural College in fall 1879, the school functioned more as a college-prep school than a college because of the lack of trained students. Consequently, the first course offerings were arithmetic, English, U.S. history, natural philosophy, horticulture and farm economy. Students also labored on the college farm and attended daily chapel services. The spring term provided the first true college-level instruction. Despite his accomplishments, Edwards resigned in spring 1882 because of conflicts with the State Board of Agriculture, a young faculty member, and with students.[14] The board's next appointee as president was Charles Ingersoll, a graduate and former faculty member at Michigan State Agricultural College, who began his nine years of service at CAC with just two full-time faculty members and 67 students, 24 of whom were women.

 
The Oval today, leading towards the Administration Building

President Charles Ingersoll edit

Agricultural research would grow rapidly under Ingersoll. The Hatch Act of 1887 provided federal funds to establish and maintain experiment stations at land-grant colleges. Ainsworth Blount, CAC's first professor of practical agriculture and manager of the College Farm, had become known as a "one man experiment station", and the Hatch Act expanded his original station to five Colorado locations.[15] The curriculum expanded as well, introducing coursework in engineering, animal science, and liberal arts. New faculty members brought expertise in botany, horticulture, entomology, and irrigation engineering. CAC made its first attempts at animal science during 1883–84, when it hired veterinary surgeon George Faville. Faville conducted free weekly clinics for student instruction and treatment of local citizen's diseased or injured animals.[16] Veterinary science at the college languished for many years following Faville's departure in 1886.

President Ingersoll believed the school neglected special programs for women. Despite the reluctance of the institution's governing board, CAC began opening the door to liberal arts in 1885, and by Ingersoll's last year at CAC the college had instituted a "Ladies Course" that offered junior and senior women classes in drawing, stenography and typewriting, foreign languages, landscape gardening and psychology.[17] Ingersoll's belief in liberal yet practical education conflicted with the narrower focus of the State Board of Agriculture, and a final clash in April 1891 led to his resignation. In 1884, CAC would celebrate the commencement of its first three graduates.

Professor Louis G. Carpenter edit

One of the early notable professors was Louis George Carpenter (March 28, 1861 – September 12, 1935) who was happy to be called "Professor Carp." He was a college professor and later the Dean of Engineering & Physics at Colorado State University formerly known as the Colorado Agricultural College.[18] He was also an Engineer, Mathematician and an Irrigation and Consulting Engineer.[19][20]

Carpenter began teaching mathematics at Michigan State Agricultural College and did so from 1883 to 1888.[20][21]

Carpenter was recruited by President Charles Ingersoll and accepted the chair of the Engineering & Physics Department of the then Colorado Agricultural College.[19] It was there where he began the first organized and systematic college program for irrigation engineering. Those completing such instruction were awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in Irrigation Engineering. In addition, Carpenter was a strong advocate to expand education opportunities to minorities and women. He helped promote and organize newly accredited degree programs despite opposition from those unwilling to change.[22][23][24]

Carpenter declined the Presidency of that college (later university) in 1891 and several times during his tenure.[22] Despite difficulty to enact change, he was significant in being able to help transform the farm focused college into a university of higher learning.[19][20]

In 1889, he became the director of the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station.[20][22][23]

Carpenter was one of the foremost leading experts on irrigation systems. During his life he investigated irrigation systems not only in North America but also in Canada and Europe. This led to his engineering consulting and water law. He became Colorado's State Engineer which he held for several years while still teaching.[24]

In 1911, Carpenter left academics and established an engineering consulting firm in Denver, Colorado. This covered not only included Irrigation Engineering but consulting on hydraulic construction projects and the problems associated with such projects.[24][25] He did this traveling around Canada, the United States and Western Europe with his brother running the office until his retirement in 1922. He left many papers to the university and was given an honorary doctorate before his death in 1935.[24][25]

Turn of the 20th century edit

 
Colorado Agricultural College advertisement

Alston Ellis encountered limited funding and decided rapidly in 1895 to reduce the number of Experiment Stations. Female students grew in number from 44 in 1892 to 112 in 1896, and by fall 1895, the college's new domestic-economy program was in place.[26] Football had a one-year stint at CAC in 1893, but Ellis was not a supporter of extracurricular activities and was especially hostile towards football.

Barton Aylesworth became the school's fourth president in 1899, and the combination of his non-confrontational style with the presence of the vocal Colorado Cattle and Horse Growers Association on the governing board allowed ranching and farming interests to take the college's agricultural programs to new heights, greatly influencing the development of the entire school. Initially, the influence of ranching interests brought tremendous progress to CAC's agricultural programs. Enrollment quadrupled, studies in veterinary medicine were re-established, and CAC's Experiment Station benefited from lobbying that finally secured state appropriations. Eventually, conflicts with agricultural interests may have prompted Aylesworth to begin promoting a more balanced curriculum at CAC, which he then fought hard to defend. The conflict also led him to tire and negotiate his resignation.[27]

Aylesworth was a big supporter of extracurricular activities. Football returned to the college in fall 1899, but baseball was the school's most popular sport. In 1903, the women's basketball team won CAC's first unofficial athletic championship, culminating with a victory over the University of Colorado.[28] New clubs, fraternities, and sororities also emerged. By 1905, the school had a fledgling music department, which two years later became the Conservatory of Music.

President Charles Lory edit

Taking office in 1909, CAC President Charles Lory oversaw the school's maturation and reconciled longstanding conflicts between supporters of a broad or specialized curriculum.[29] He embarked on a demanding schedule of personal appearances to make Colorado Agricultural College known as an institution that served the state's needs. Another of Lory's notable achievements was putting the school on solid fiscal ground, meeting rising construction costs and freeing the institution of debt.[30]

The onset of World War I influenced all aspects of CAC, but nowhere was the impact more apparent than in the institution's programs for farmers. World War I created demands for American agricultural products, and CAC established new food production committees, information services and cultivation projects to help improve food production and conservation in Colorado. World War I also drew men from campus to Europe's battlefields. In June 1916, the National Defense Act created the Reserve Officers Training Corps. A few months later CAC applied to establish an ROTC unit in Fort Collins and resurrected a defunct National Guard unit on campus.[citation needed]

During the early 1930s, CAC's community-wide activities were greatly influenced by the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. The Extension Service organized relief programs for inhabitants of Eastern Colorado, of whom a survey found 20,000 to be urgently in need of food and helped sustain cropland threatened by pests and drought.[31] President Lory sought to help Colorado farmers by pushing for major tax reforms to relieve them of high tax burdens and played a significant role in a 1930s project that supplied irrigation water for agricultural development in Eastern Colorado.

Lory and the State Board had challenges of their own back on campus. In response to claims that the university was falling behind national standards, the board retired or demoted several senior professors and administrators deemed past the peak of their proficiency and hired new doctorate-holding personnel while consolidating sections of lecture courses.[32] A student petition led to the governing-board to change the college's name to more accurately reflect the diversity of its academic programs, and in 1935 the school became the Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, or Colorado A&M for short. After 31 years of leadership, President Lory announced his retirement in 1938.

From World War II into the modern era edit

Soon after Pearl Harbor, Colorado A&M began to look like a military post, with the college serving as many as 1,500 servicemen.[33] New President Roy Green tried to prepare for the sudden departure of students and arrival of servicemen by improving ROTC facilities and introducing military-training programs. Although servicemen filed onto campus, student enrollment at Colorado A&M, 1,637 in fall 1942, dropped to 701 by fall 1943, and female students outnumbered their male counterparts for the first time.[34] When the war ceased in 1945, soldiers returning from Europe and the Pacific filled U.S. higher-education institutions. Nearly 1,040 students attended the college in fall 1946, and about 1,600 students enrolled by spring 1946. Close to 80 former "Aggies" died in World War II including football talent Lewis "Dude" Dent.[35]

Colorado A&M becomes a university under Bill Morgan edit

Colorado A&M shed its image as a narrow technical college and became a university in appearance and title during the 1950s under President Bill Morgan. Providing adequate student housing for an increasing number of youth approaching college age and improving cramped instructional facilities were among the first tests of Morgan's leadership. He responded, and five new residence halls were completed between 1953 and 1957.[36]

Academic offerings grew to include advanced degrees. The State Board of Agriculture approved a doctoral degree in civil engineering in 1951, and three years later allowed other qualified departments to offer doctorates. Morgan believed students earning this advanced degree should hold it from a university, and so began a campaign to upgrade Colorado A&M to university status. In 1957, the Colorado General Assembly approved the new name of Colorado State University.[37]

1960s: Student activism edit

Colorado State became a scene of intense student activism during the 1960s and early 1970s. The reduction of strict campus regulations for women was among the early targets of student activists, coming to the forefront in 1964 when a 21-year-old female student moved into unapproved off-campus housing to accommodate her late hours as editor of the student newspaper.[38]

The civil-rights movement on campus also picked up momentum and visibility. In spring 1969, shortly before Morgan's retirement, Mexican American and African American student organizations presented a list of demands to university officials primarily urging increased recruitment of minority students and employees. The demonstrators' occupation of the Administration Building continued to the front lawn of Morgan's home. Students and university representatives took their concerns to state officials, but Colorado legislators rejected a subsequent university request for funds to support minority recruitment.[39]

Anti-military protest took place in dramatic form at Colorado State from 1968 to 1970. On March 5, 1968, several hundred students and faculty with anti-war sentiments marched to Fort Collins' downtown War Memorial and wiped blood on a placard tied to the memorial. Hecklers and blockaders created such a disturbance that police had to disperse the non-marchers. In May 1970, as campus peace activists held the second day of a student strike in the gymnasium in response to the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and the student deaths at Kent State University, one or more arsonists set Old Main ablaze, destroying the 92-year-old cornerstone of Colorado State.[40]

2000s: CSU under President Penley edit

In his welcoming address for the fall 2007 semester, former CSU President Larry Edward Penley called for CSU to set the standard for the 21st century public land-grant research university.[41] He identified as the heart of this ideal the contribution to the prosperity and quality of life of the local and international community, in part through fostering relationships and collaborations with federal research partners, the business community and key industries.[42] A part of this approach was Colorado State's Supercluster research model, designed to utilize interdisciplinary, issue-based research on pressing global issues in which the university has particular expertise and connect research results to the marketplace. Initial Superclusters in infectious disease and in cancer research were launched. As well, new residence halls were constructed according to national green building standards,[43] and a sustainability advisory committee was charged to coordinate green activities at Colorado State.[44]

While maintaining historic ties to local agriculture, administration officials also emphasized the desire to better connect with the local community.[45] As such, CSU became party to UniverCity, a multi-organization initiative that links the school with city government, community and business associations to expand and synchronize working relationships.[46] Another goal set by the university was to improve undergraduate education. Penley stated that essential tasks were access and graduation rates, particularly for qualified low-income and minority students, and an education international in scope suited to a global economy.[47]

Penley resigned in 2008.[48]

Later 2000s: After President Penley edit

While a statistics professor at CSU, Mary Meyer declared that a study of salaries by CSU created salary goals for women faculty that were "substantially smaller than for men".[49][50] This led CSU to start studying pay equity in 2015, which in turn led later that year to a quarter of female full professors receiving higher pay.[51]

Joyce E. McConnell became the first female president of CSU in 2019.[52][53] On June 9, 2022, the CSU Board of Governors and President McConnell announced she would be leaving her position as of June 30, 2022.[54] Former Provost Rick Miranda was chosen to serve in an interim role while a new president is identified.[55] In December 2022, the CSU Board announced the appointment of Amy Parsons, once its vice president of operations, then executive vice chancellor, as its 16th president effective Feb. 1, 2023.[56][57][58]

Campus edit

 
The Lagoon, Rec Center, and Intramural Fields

Colorado State University is located in Fort Collins, Colorado, a mid-size city of approximately 142,000 residents at the base of the Front Range of the southern Rocky Mountains. The university's 583-acre (2.4 km2) main campus is located in central Fort Collins and includes a 101-acre (0.41 km2) veterinary teaching hospital. CSU is also home to a 1,438-acre (5.8 km2) Foothills Campus, a 1,575-acre (6.4 km2) agricultural campus, and the 1,177-acre (4.8 km2) Pingree Park mountain campus. CSU uses 4,043 acres (16.4 km2) for research centers and Colorado State Forest Service stations outside of Larimer County.[9]

Main campus edit

At the heart of the CSU campus lies the Oval, an expansive green area 2,065 feet (629 m) around, lined with 65 American Elm trees.[59] Designed in 1909, the Oval remains a center of activity and a major landmark at CSU. The Administration Building, constructed in 1924, faces the Oval from the south end, while several academic and administrative buildings occupy its perimeter. The Music Building, once the university library, currently houses the Institute for Learning and Teaching, which provides academic and career counseling as well as other student-focused programs. The music department moved to the University Center for the Arts upon its opening in 2008.

 
The Oval, at the heart of the CSU campus

At the northwest corner of the Oval is Ammons Hall, formerly the women's recreational center and now home to the University Welcome Center. Just to the east of Ammons stands Guggenheim Hall, which currently houses the Department of Manufacturing Technology and Construction Management. The building was constructed in 1910 as a gift from U.S. Senator Simon Guggenheim to promote the study of home economics,[60] and was recently renovated according to green building standards. Rounding out the Oval are the Weber Building, the Statistics Building, the Occupational Therapy Building, and Laurel Hall.[61] Another campus focal point is the main plaza, around which can be found Lory Student Center and Morgan Library, as well as several academic buildings. The Lory Student Center, named for former CSU President Charles Lory, houses Student Media, numerous organization offices, Student Government, and spaces to eat, drink and study. The Morgan Library was originally constructed in 1965 and named for former CSU President William E. Morgan. Following the flood of '97, this facility went through an extensive improvement project that included an addition to the main building and a renovation of the existing structure, with works completed in 1998. Current holdings include more than 2 million books, bound journals, and government documents.[9] Morgan Library also contains a 13,000 sq ft (1,200 m2) addition called the Study Cube that seats 80 additional patrons. With a university issued ID card, students and staff are able to access the Cube 24 hours a day, including during finals week. To accommodate, the Loan and Reserve desk checks out laptops and other accessories overnight if checked out less than six hours prior to closing.[62]

 
CSU Plaza overlooking from the top balcony of Natural Resource Building
 
Spruce Hall, CSU's oldest existing building

Colorado State University's oldest existing building is Spruce Hall, constructed in 1881.[63] Originally a dormitory that played a vital role in the early growth of the school's student enrollment, Spruce now houses the Division of Continuing Education and the Office of Admissions. The newest academic building on campus is the Behavioral Science building, which was completed in summer 2010. Other recent projects include the 2006 Transit Center addition to the north end of Lory Student Center (certified LEED Gold), an expansion of the Student Recreation Center, and the new Computer Science Building, completed in 2008.[64]

 
Colorado State has converted the historic Fort Collins High School building into its University Center for the Arts.

In 2008, CSU also opened its University Center for the Arts, located in the old Fort Collins High School. CSU purchased this historic building in 1995 and has since converted it into a new home for its programs in music, dance, theatre and the visual arts. The three-phase building project included a 318-seat University Theatre, a 100-seat Studio Theatre, and the 24,000 sq ft (2,200 m2) Runyan Music Hall, an adaptable rehearsal and performance space created out of the old high school gymnasium. The center also houses the University Art Museum, the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising, a 285-seat organ recital hall, and the 200-seat University Dance Theatre.[65]

The campus is served by Transfort bus service, including the MAX Bus Rapid Transit route that opened in 2014.[66]

 
Looking west from Lory Student Center, one can see the athletic fields, the new Student Recreation Center, and the roof of Moby Arena.

Veterinary hospital edit

The James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital was constructed in 1979 and houses 28 specialties under one roof, ranging from emergency to oncology.[67] Located in the Veterinary Health Complex south of the main campus in Fort Collins, the hospital has 79 veterinarians on clinics, educating 280 third- and fourth-year veterinary students on clinical rotations. In fiscal 2019, the hospital logged nearly 47,000 cases.

Foothills Campus edit

The 1,705-acre (6.9 km2) Foothills Campus, located on northwest edge of Fort Collins, is home to the department of atmospheric sciences, as well as several research and outreach centers. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Engineering Research Center, B.W. Pickett Equine Center, Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA), the Colorado Division of Wildlife, and the Animal Reproduction Biotechnology Lab can all be found at the Foothills Campus.[68]

Organization edit

Administration edit

Colorado State University is a public land-grant institution. Its 13-member board of governors presides over the Colorado State University System, including the flagship campus in Fort Collins together with Colorado State University–Pueblo and the CSU–Global Campus.[69] The board consists of nine voting members appointed by the Governor of Colorado and confirmed by the Colorado State Senate and four elected non-voting members.[70] Voting members are community leaders from many fields, including agriculture, business, and public service.[71] The student body president as well as a faculty representative from each university act as non-voting board members. Amy Parsons currently serves as the 16th president of Colorado State University.[72]

At its December 2008 public meeting, the Board of Governors of the CSU System decided it was in the best interest of all CSU System campuses to separate what had previously been a conjoined position of CSU System Chancellor and CSU Fort Collins President. On June 1, 2015, President Emeritus Anthony "Tony" Frank, the 14th President of CSU, was named the finalist for the chancellor position.[73]

Academics edit

Colorado State offers 150 programs of study across 8 colleges and 55 departments. In addition to its notable programs in biomedical sciences, engineering, environmental science, agriculture, and human health and nutrition, CSU offers professional programs in disciplines including business, journalism, and construction management as well as in the liberal and performing arts, humanities, and social sciences. CSU also offers bachelor's degrees, graduate degrees, certificates, and badges online.

Fall Freshman Statistics[74][75][76]

  2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008
Applicants 17,970 17,929 16,559 14,680 15,253 12,494
Admits 13,914 13,394 12,564 11,822 11,013 10,688
% Admitted 77.4 74.7 75.8 80.5 72.2 85.5
Enrolled 4,443 4,587 4,504 4,533 4,322 4,404
Avg GPA 3.61 3.57 3.59 3.56 3.57 3.53
Avg ACT 24.7 24.8 24.7 24.5 24.6 24.1
Avg SAT Composite* 1140 1143 1142 1134 1131 1120
*(out of 1600)

The university employs a total of 1,540 faculty members, with 1,000 on tenure-track appointments. The student-faculty ratio is 17:1.[77] CSU awarded 6,090 degrees in 2009–2010, including 4,336 bachelor's degrees, 1,420 master's degrees, 203 doctoral degrees, and 131 Doctor in Veterinary Medicine degrees.[9]

Institutes and centers edit

  • Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA)
  • Information Science & Technology Center at Colorado State University (ISTeC)
  • Energy Institute
  • Public Lands History Center – In 2007, a group of CSU History and Anthropology faculty and research associates created the Center for Public History and Archaeology with the dual goal of providing practical and meaningful work experiences for graduate students and helpful collaborative projects for public agencies such as the National Park Service. In 2010, the name was changed to Public Lands History Center to better describe its focus and collaborative mission. The center's mission is to "foster the production of historical knowledge through collaborative engagement with institutions responsible for the sustainable stewardship of protected areas, water, and other critical resources."[78] The center's Director is one of its founders, CSU Professor of History and noted environmental historian Mark Fiege.[79]

Rankings edit

Princeton Review named CSU's MBA program as one of the 10 best administered programs nationwide in 2007 and 2012–2015.[91][92][93][94] Business Week included CSU's undergraduate business program among the best in the country in 2011, ranked at No. 89.[95] In 2014, the College of Business moved up in the ranks to be ranked 73rd (an increase of 16 places from the previous year) in Bloomberg Business Week's Undergraduate rankings.[96]

Notable areas of research edit

A 1961 feasibility study at CSU was crucial for the establishment of the Peace Corps.[97]

Research in the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory has created a technological solution to limit pollutants from single-stroke engines, and is now in widespread use in the Philippines. The Center for Disaster and Risk Analysis is dedicated to reducing the harm and losses caused by natural, technological, and human-caused disasters. Projects have looked at Muslim-Americans after September 11,[98] Hurricane Katrina, the 2010 BP Oil Spill,[99] and childcare disaster planning.[100]

Outlying campuses cater to a range of research activities including crops research, animal reproduction, public health and watershed management. The Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station (CAES) was established in 1888 in accordance with provisions of the Hatch Act of 1887, calling for experiment stations at land-grant universities.[101] State and federal funds support CAES research programs. In 2007, research activities included pest management, food safety and nutrition, environmental quality, plant and animal production systems, and community and rural development. The NSF Engineering Research Center for Extreme Ultra Violet Science and Technology, funded by the National Science Foundation, partners industry with Colorado State University, CU-Boulder, and the University of California-Berkeley.[102] The Colorado Center for Biorefining and Biofuels (C2B2) is the first research center created under the umbrella of the new Colorado Renewable Energy Collaboratory, involving CSU, CU, Colorado School of Mines, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.[103] The center develops biofuels and bio-refining technologies. Colorado State's research Supercluster model brings together researchers across disciplines to work on topics of global concern in which CSU has a demonstrated expertise. Research results are connected to the marketplace through transfer, patenting and licensing activities carried out by experts with a focus on each research area.

CSU also has a well established research program in infectious disease. The Regional Biocontainment Laboratory, funded by the National Institutes of Health, is home to scientists developing vaccines and drugs for some world's most devastating diseases. The Biocontainment Laboratory also houses one of 10 US Regional Centers of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases, funded by a $40 million grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.[104] Much of the Cancer Supercluster, which involves the collaboration of five colleges, is based around the work of the university's Animal Cancer Center, the largest center of its kind in the world.[105]

International programs edit

Approximately 950 students per year participate in educational programs abroad, and nearly 1,300 foreign students and scholars from more than 85 countries are engaged in academic work and research on campus.[9] The initial pilot studies for the Peace Corps were conducted by Colorado State faculty, and the university is consistently one of the top-ranking institutions in the nation for the recruitment of Peace Corps volunteers.[106] Since 1988, CSU and the Peace Corps have participated in four cooperative master's degree programs in English, Food Science and Human Nutrition, Natural Resources, and Agriculture. The program involves at least 2 semesters of course work at CSU combined with time abroad as a Peace Corps volunteer.[107] Colorado State offers various programs on campus for students interested in international issues. Regional specializations with core courses and electives are available in Asian Studies, Middle East/North Africa Studies, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, or Russian, Eastern and Central Europe Studies. The Global Village Living Learning Community is a housing option for students with international interests.

Honors Program edit

The Honors Program provides challenging and enriching programs for high achieving students in all majors through two academic tracks. One track is designed for students aiming to complete their general education requirements within the Honors Program, and a second is composed of upper division courses, usually appropriate for currently enrolled or transfer students. The Academic Village, which opened in fall 2007, offers 180 Honor students the opportunity to live in the Honors Living Learning Community.[108] 1,126 students participated in the Honors Program in fall 2007.[109]

Athletics edit

Colorado State University competes in 17 sponsored intercollegiate sports, including 11 for women (cross country, indoor track, outdoor track, volleyball, basketball, golf, tennis, swimming, softball, soccer and water polo) and six for men (football, cross country, indoor track, outdoor track, basketball, and golf). Colorado State's athletic teams compete along with 8 other institutions in the Mountain West Conference (MW), which is an NCAA Division I conference and sponsors Division I FBS football. The Conference was formed in 1999, splitting from the former 16-member Western Athletic Conference.[110] CSU has won 9 MW tournament championships and won or shared 11 regular season titles. Rams football teams won or shared the Mountain West title in 1999, 2000 and 2002.[111]

On December 13, 2011, Jim McElwain was introduced as the head football coach at Colorado State. McElwain had worked as the Alabama offensive coordinator from 2008 to 2011.[112] On December 4, 2014, Jim McElwain accepted the head coach position at the University of Florida. This was the first time a Colorado State Rams head coach left the team for another program.[113]

 
Canvas Stadium Panorama

On December 5, 2014, the Colorado State University System Board of Governors gave approval to build Colorado State Stadium, a multi-use stadium on campus to replace Hughes Stadium, built several miles from campus in the 1960s.[114]

Mascots edit

Over the years Colorado State University has displayed several mascots. An unknown black bear cub, often seen wearing sweaters, appeared at football games from 1909 to 1919. Purchased by a student in 1912, a bulldog named Peanuts would roam around campus. He served as a secondary mascot and was fed peanuts by the student body. On April 28, 1918, Peanuts was found poisoned.[115] This was alleged to have been done by students of the University of Colorado Boulder, but has not been proven. After Peanuts' death, Glenn Morris, an alum of Colorado State University donated another bulldog named Gallant Defender to the university. The first ram to become the mascot of Colorado State University was Buck, introduced in 1946. Colorado State University's mascot remains the ram to this day. It was during a basketball game half time contest that CAM the Ram became the name of the beloved mascot.[116]

Student life edit

Undergraduate demographics as of Fall 2020
Race and ethnicity[117] Total
White 70% 70
 
Hispanic 16% 16
 
Other[a] 6% 6
 
Asian 3% 3
 
Foreign national 3% 3
 
Black 2% 2
 
Native American 1% 1
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 21% 21
 
Affluent[c] 79% 79
 
 
Looking west towards the Intramural Fields on CSU Campus

Fort Collins is located 65 miles (105 km) north of Denver, an approximately two-hour drive from major ski resorts and a 45-minute drive from Rocky Mountain National Park. There are opportunities for students to be active, with bike trails and hiking nearby. In 2006, Money ranked Fort Collins as the "Best Place to Live" in the United States.[118]

Clubs and activities edit

There are over 450 student organizations including 34 honor societies at CSU. 60% of undergraduates participate in intramural sports while 10% join one of 19 fraternities and 14 sororities.[119] There are 30 sport clubs, including cycling, baseball, water polo, triathlon, wrestling, and rugby. 300 music, theatre and dance performances, exhibitions, and other arts events take place on campus each year. The student government is the Associated Students of Colorado State University. CSU's daily newspaper is the Rocky Mountain Collegian. CSU also has a student-run campus television station and a student radio station, KCSU FM.

Sport clubs edit

Sport Clubs at Colorado State University were established in 1978. They are run and funded by student fees and team fundraisers and compete with other colleges and universities but not at the NCAA level. There are currently 30 Sport Club[120] teams. Every year the clubs take a combined 150 trips. There are over 1,000 students associated with the program. Last year 23 of these teams competed at regional and national championships. The programs have enjoyed a significant amount of recent success with National Championships in: Men's Ice Hockey (1995) Women's Lacrosse (2008, 2010, 2011, 2013);[120] Baseball (2004–2010);[120] Men's Lacrosse (1999, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2012).[120]

The sports for which there are clubs at Colorado State University include: Alpine Skiing, Baseball, Bowling, Crew, Cycling, Field Hockey, Horse Polo (Men's and Women's), Ice Hockey (Men's and Women's), In-Line Hockey, Lacrosse (Men's and Women's), Logging Sports, Rodeo (Men's and Women's), Rugby (Men's and Women's), Shotgun Sports (Men's and Women's), Snowboard, Soccer (Men's and Women's), Swimming, Synchronized Ice Skating, Triathlon (Coed), Ultimate Frisbee Summer League, Ultimate Frisbee (Men's and Women's), Volleyball, Water Polo (Men's and Women's), and Wrestling (Men's and Women's)[120]

Student media edit

The Rocky Mountain Collegian is CSU's student-run daily newspaper. The paper has a fully functional website and a mobile application, and students have complete control over editorial decisions. The paper was founded in 1891, and was a weekly publication by the 1930s. During the 1940s and 1950s, the paper earned disrepute in the local community for its unpopular support of women's rights and anti-racism stance.[121] By the 1970s, the Collegian was consistently publishing daily. Editorial quality and financial support have varied over the years, at times rising among elite college newspapers and at others struggling to publish. During the 1990s, the paper was twice selected as one of the top 12 daily student papers in the country.[122] In late 2007, the Collegian published a staff article that incited national debate about free speech.[123] The article read, in its entirety, "Taser This...Fuck Bush." This event, as well as President Penley's considerations of "partnering" out the Collegian by Gannett in January 2008,[124] lead to proposals in making CSU's student media, including the Rocky Mountain Collegian, a not-for-profit organization independent from the university.[125] This resulted in the entirety of CSU Student Media separating from the university to operate under an independent company, the Rocky Mountain Student Media Corporation.

KCSU is Colorado State's student-run station, with a format focusing on alternative and college rock music, including indie rock, punk, hip-hop, and electronic music. News, sports, and weather updates along with talk programs and specialty shows round out the programming schedule. Broadcasting at 10,000 watts, KCSU is among the larger college stations in the country, reaching approximately 250,000 listeners.[126] KCSU first began broadcasting in 1964 as a station owned, operated, and financed by students. Following a long period as a professional station, KCSU again became student-run in 1995, at which time the current format was adopted. As with the Collegian and CTV, KCSU was hit hard by the 1997 flood, and for a time was forced to broadcast from remote locations. Now back in its original Lory Student Center location, KCSU has benefited from revamped production facilities and updated equipment.

CTV is CSU's student-run television station, that allows students to hone their media skills- reporting, writing, producing, shooting, editing- in an educational environment. The station is a winner of fourteen Rocky Mountain Collegiate Media Association awards and a Student Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Heartland Chapter.[127] Content includes news shows on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, a sports show on Mondays, and an entertainment show Thursdays. CTV was founded in 1989,[128] and currently broadcasts weeknights on the university cable station (Comcast channel 11) at 8 pm, with reruns at 9 am and noon the next day.

Student-run magazine College Avenue was founded in 2005 with the goal, as put forth by its founding editors, of giving students a new forum to address controversial issues affecting the campus community from their vantage point.[129] Since its first issue in the fall 2005, the magazine is released quarterly.

Greek life edit

Greek life at Colorado State began in the fall of 1915. Currently, 10% of undergraduates join one of CSUs 19 fraternities and 14 sororities.[119] The CSU Inter-Fraternity Council acts as the governing body for the 19 fraternities, each with a delegate representative. Similarly, the CSU Panhellenic Council governs the sororities. CSU Greek organizations are involved in several philanthropic activities around campus, among them CSUnity, Cans around the Oval, Habitat for Humanity, and RamRide. The governing bodies recently raised $25,000 towards the sponsorship of a Habitat for Humanity home.[130][131]

From 1932[132] until 1949, Colorado State University was home to the Eta chapter of Phrateres, a philanthropic-social organization for female college students. Eta was the seventh chapter installed and Phrateres eventually had over 20 chapters in Canada and the United States. (The chapter name "Eta" was reused for the chapter installed at Arizona State University in 1958.)[133]

Residence halls edit

13 residence halls provide on-campus living for over 5,000 students. First-year students are required to live in one of the halls on campus, and upperclassman and graduate living are offered in the university-owned Aggie Village, which has space for 973 individuals.[134] The halls also have several Living-Learning communities that directly link the on-campus living environment with a specific academic focus in Honors, engineering, natural sciences, health and wellness, equine sciences, leadership development, or pre-veterinary medicine. The Key Academic and Key Service Communities create an academically focused residential community for freshmen who share a desire for academic achievement, active involvement in classes, community service, campus activities, and appreciation of diversity. Residents share classes and take advantage of yearlong service opportunities with a close-knit group of 19 other students.

CSU Honors Program participants have the opportunity to live in the Honors Living Community. Academic Village, which opened in the fall 2007, houses Living Learning Communities for 180 Honors and 240 Engineering students.[135] Students in the College of Natural Sciences can choose to live in Laurel Village, which opened in fall 2014.[136]

University apartments edit

Students, faculty, and staff may choose to live in the university apartments. Colorado State University University Housing oversees University Village, International House, Aggie Village Family, and Aggie Village. Known as a "global community" Apartment Life's mission to diversity shows in the fact that approximately 60 percent of residents and staff are from 80 different nations. Residents of CSU and Fort Collins community members enjoy a diverse amount of enrichment programs offered through the University Housing staff.[137][138]

Student demographics edit

In fall 2007, CSU opened its doors to 24,983 students, among them 20,765 undergraduates, 2,332 master's students, 1,347 doctoral students, and 539 professional students in the College of Biomedical and Veterinary Medicine.[139] 80% of undergraduates are Colorado residents, and within the student population 50 states and 79 countries are represented. 52% of undergraduates are women, 13.2% of undergraduates are ethnic minorities (excluding international students), and 3% of undergraduates are 30 and over.[140] Of minority students, 48% are Hispanic, 24% Asian American, 16% African American, and 12% Native American.[141] Over the past ten years, minority enrollment has increased 35%, from 2,361 to 3,178, an increase from 10.9% to 13.2% of the student population.[142] Though progress has been made, increasing minority enrollment at CSU has been a challenge for school administrators, one made yet more difficult by high dropout rates in many Colorado high schools with concentrated minority populations.[143]

Notable alumni and faculty edit

See the List of Colorado State University people.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Hansen II, J. E. (1977). Democracy's College in the Centennial State: A History of Colorado State University. Salt Lake City, Utah: Publisher's Press.
  • Hansen II, J. E. (2007). Democracy's University: A History of Colorado State University, 1970–2003. Canada.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Colorado State Athletics website
  • "Colorado State Agricultural College" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.
  • "Hunter's Danforth Chapel at CSU". solarhousehistory.com. April 2, 2014.

colorado, state, university, colorado, state, redirects, here, state, colorado, school, once, known, colorado, state, college, university, northern, colorado, colorado, state, public, land, grant, research, university, fort, collins, colorado, flagship, univer. Colorado State redirects here For the U S state see Colorado For the school once known as Colorado State College see University of Northern Colorado Colorado State University Colorado State or CSU is a public land grant research university in Fort Collins Colorado It is the flagship university of the Colorado State University System Colorado State University is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity 6 It was founded in 1870 as Colorado Agricultural College and assumed its current name in 1957 7 Colorado State UniversityFormer namesColorado Agricultural College 1870 1935 Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts 1935 1950 Colorado Agricultural and Mechanical College 1950 1957 Motto Education Service Research Extension TypePublic land grant research universityEstablished1870 154 years ago 1870 Parent institutionColorado State University SystemAccreditationHLCAcademic affiliationsORAUURASpace grantEndowment 558 million 2021 1 ChancellorAnthony A FrankPresidentAmy Parsons 2 Academic staff1 468Administrative staff4 379Students27 956 fall 2022 3 Undergraduates26 559 fall 2019 Postgraduates7 607 fall 2019 LocationFort Collins Colorado United States40 34 34 N 105 04 51 W 40 5762 N 105 0808 W 40 5762 105 0808CampusMidsize city 4 4 773 acres 19 32 km2 Other campusesCastle RockDenverNewspaperRocky Mountain CollegianColorsGreen and gold 5 NicknameRamsSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I FBS Mountain WestMascotCAM the RamWebsitecolostate edu In 2018 enrollment was approximately 34 166 students including resident and non resident instruction students 8 The university has approximately 2 000 faculty in 8 colleges and 55 academic departments Bachelor s degrees are offered in 65 fields of study and master s degrees are offered in 55 fields Colorado State confers doctoral degrees in 40 fields of study in addition to a professional degree in veterinary medicine 9 CSU s campus includes the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory EECL 10 the University Center for the Arts which houses the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising and the Gregory Allicar Museum of Art the James L Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere CIRA In fiscal year 2021 CSU spent 447 2 million on research and development 11 The Colorado State Rams compete in the NCAA Division I Mountain West Conference Swimmer and six time Olympic gold medalist Amy Van Dyken is one of CSU s most notable athletes Other CSU alumni are Pulitzer Prize winners astronauts CEOs and two former governors of Colorado Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 1 1 President Charles Ingersoll 1 1 2 Professor Louis G Carpenter 1 2 Turn of the 20th century 1 2 1 President Charles Lory 1 3 From World War II into the modern era 1 3 1 Colorado A amp M becomes a university under Bill Morgan 1 3 2 1960s Student activism 1 3 3 2000s CSU under President Penley 1 3 4 Later 2000s After President Penley 2 Campus 2 1 Main campus 2 2 Veterinary hospital 2 3 Foothills Campus 3 Organization 3 1 Administration 4 Academics 4 1 Institutes and centers 4 2 Rankings 4 3 Notable areas of research 4 4 International programs 4 5 Honors Program 5 Athletics 5 1 Mascots 6 Student life 6 1 Clubs and activities 6 1 1 Sport clubs 6 1 2 Student media 6 1 3 Greek life 6 2 Residence halls 6 3 University apartments 6 4 Student demographics 7 Notable alumni and faculty 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editEarly years edit It was founded first as the Colorado Agricultural College Arising from the Morrill Act of 1862 the act to create the university was signed by the Colorado Territory governor Edward M McCook in 1870 While a board of 12 trustees was formed to purchase and manage property erect buildings establish basic rules for governing the institutions and employ buildings the near complete lack of funding by the territorial legislature for this mission severely hampered progress The first 30 acre 12 ha parcel of land for the campus was deeded in 1871 by Robert Dazell In 1872 the Larimer County Land Improvement Company contributed a second 80 acre 32 ha parcel The first 1000 to erect buildings was finally allocated by the territorial legislature in 1874 The funds were not however and trustees were required to find a matching amount which they eventually obtained from local citizens and businesses nbsp Colorado Agricultural College Campus 1920 with the Oval Physics Building and Guggenheim Hall showing Among the institutions which donated matching funds was the local Grange which was heavily involved in the early establishment of the university As part of this effort in the spring of 1874 Grange No 6 held a picnic and planting event at the corner of College Avenue and West Laurel Street and later plowed and seeded 20 acres 80 000 m2 of wheat on a nearby field Within several months the university s first building a 16 foot 4 9 m by 24 foot red brick building nicknamed the Claim Shanty was finished providing the first tangible presence of the institution in Fort Collins 12 After Colorado achieved statehood in 1876 the territorial law establishing the college was required to be reauthorized In 1877 the state legislature created the eight member State Board of Agriculture to govern the school Early in the 21st century the governing board was renamed the Board of Governors of the Colorado State University System The legislature also authorized a railroad right of way across the campus and a mill levy to raise money for construction of the campus first main building Old Main which was completed in December 1878 Despite wall cracks and other structural problems suffered during its first year the building was opened in time for the welcoming of the first five students on September 1 1879 by university president Elijah Evan Edwards Enrollment grew to 25 by 1880 13 During the first term at Colorado Agricultural College in fall 1879 the school functioned more as a college prep school than a college because of the lack of trained students Consequently the first course offerings were arithmetic English U S history natural philosophy horticulture and farm economy Students also labored on the college farm and attended daily chapel services The spring term provided the first true college level instruction Despite his accomplishments Edwards resigned in spring 1882 because of conflicts with the State Board of Agriculture a young faculty member and with students 14 The board s next appointee as president was Charles Ingersoll a graduate and former faculty member at Michigan State Agricultural College who began his nine years of service at CAC with just two full time faculty members and 67 students 24 of whom were women nbsp The Oval today leading towards the Administration Building President Charles Ingersoll edit Agricultural research would grow rapidly under Ingersoll The Hatch Act of 1887 provided federal funds to establish and maintain experiment stations at land grant colleges Ainsworth Blount CAC s first professor of practical agriculture and manager of the College Farm had become known as a one man experiment station and the Hatch Act expanded his original station to five Colorado locations 15 The curriculum expanded as well introducing coursework in engineering animal science and liberal arts New faculty members brought expertise in botany horticulture entomology and irrigation engineering CAC made its first attempts at animal science during 1883 84 when it hired veterinary surgeon George Faville Faville conducted free weekly clinics for student instruction and treatment of local citizen s diseased or injured animals 16 Veterinary science at the college languished for many years following Faville s departure in 1886 President Ingersoll believed the school neglected special programs for women Despite the reluctance of the institution s governing board CAC began opening the door to liberal arts in 1885 and by Ingersoll s last year at CAC the college had instituted a Ladies Course that offered junior and senior women classes in drawing stenography and typewriting foreign languages landscape gardening and psychology 17 Ingersoll s belief in liberal yet practical education conflicted with the narrower focus of the State Board of Agriculture and a final clash in April 1891 led to his resignation In 1884 CAC would celebrate the commencement of its first three graduates Professor Louis G Carpenter edit Main article Louis George Carpenter One of the early notable professors was Louis George Carpenter March 28 1861 September 12 1935 who was happy to be called Professor Carp He was a college professor and later the Dean of Engineering amp Physics at Colorado State University formerly known as the Colorado Agricultural College 18 He was also an Engineer Mathematician and an Irrigation and Consulting Engineer 19 20 Carpenter began teaching mathematics at Michigan State Agricultural College and did so from 1883 to 1888 20 21 Carpenter was recruited by President Charles Ingersoll and accepted the chair of the Engineering amp Physics Department of the then Colorado Agricultural College 19 It was there where he began the first organized and systematic college program for irrigation engineering Those completing such instruction were awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in Irrigation Engineering In addition Carpenter was a strong advocate to expand education opportunities to minorities and women He helped promote and organize newly accredited degree programs despite opposition from those unwilling to change 22 23 24 Carpenter declined the Presidency of that college later university in 1891 and several times during his tenure 22 Despite difficulty to enact change he was significant in being able to help transform the farm focused college into a university of higher learning 19 20 In 1889 he became the director of the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station 20 22 23 Carpenter was one of the foremost leading experts on irrigation systems During his life he investigated irrigation systems not only in North America but also in Canada and Europe This led to his engineering consulting and water law He became Colorado s State Engineer which he held for several years while still teaching 24 In 1911 Carpenter left academics and established an engineering consulting firm in Denver Colorado This covered not only included Irrigation Engineering but consulting on hydraulic construction projects and the problems associated with such projects 24 25 He did this traveling around Canada the United States and Western Europe with his brother running the office until his retirement in 1922 He left many papers to the university and was given an honorary doctorate before his death in 1935 24 25 Turn of the 20th century edit nbsp Colorado Agricultural College advertisement Alston Ellis encountered limited funding and decided rapidly in 1895 to reduce the number of Experiment Stations Female students grew in number from 44 in 1892 to 112 in 1896 and by fall 1895 the college s new domestic economy program was in place 26 Football had a one year stint at CAC in 1893 but Ellis was not a supporter of extracurricular activities and was especially hostile towards football Barton Aylesworth became the school s fourth president in 1899 and the combination of his non confrontational style with the presence of the vocal Colorado Cattle and Horse Growers Association on the governing board allowed ranching and farming interests to take the college s agricultural programs to new heights greatly influencing the development of the entire school Initially the influence of ranching interests brought tremendous progress to CAC s agricultural programs Enrollment quadrupled studies in veterinary medicine were re established and CAC s Experiment Station benefited from lobbying that finally secured state appropriations Eventually conflicts with agricultural interests may have prompted Aylesworth to begin promoting a more balanced curriculum at CAC which he then fought hard to defend The conflict also led him to tire and negotiate his resignation 27 Aylesworth was a big supporter of extracurricular activities Football returned to the college in fall 1899 but baseball was the school s most popular sport In 1903 the women s basketball team won CAC s first unofficial athletic championship culminating with a victory over the University of Colorado 28 New clubs fraternities and sororities also emerged By 1905 the school had a fledgling music department which two years later became the Conservatory of Music President Charles Lory edit Taking office in 1909 CAC President Charles Lory oversaw the school s maturation and reconciled longstanding conflicts between supporters of a broad or specialized curriculum 29 He embarked on a demanding schedule of personal appearances to make Colorado Agricultural College known as an institution that served the state s needs Another of Lory s notable achievements was putting the school on solid fiscal ground meeting rising construction costs and freeing the institution of debt 30 The onset of World War I influenced all aspects of CAC but nowhere was the impact more apparent than in the institution s programs for farmers World War I created demands for American agricultural products and CAC established new food production committees information services and cultivation projects to help improve food production and conservation in Colorado World War I also drew men from campus to Europe s battlefields In June 1916 the National Defense Act created the Reserve Officers Training Corps A few months later CAC applied to establish an ROTC unit in Fort Collins and resurrected a defunct National Guard unit on campus citation needed During the early 1930s CAC s community wide activities were greatly influenced by the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl The Extension Service organized relief programs for inhabitants of Eastern Colorado of whom a survey found 20 000 to be urgently in need of food and helped sustain cropland threatened by pests and drought 31 President Lory sought to help Colorado farmers by pushing for major tax reforms to relieve them of high tax burdens and played a significant role in a 1930s project that supplied irrigation water for agricultural development in Eastern Colorado Lory and the State Board had challenges of their own back on campus In response to claims that the university was falling behind national standards the board retired or demoted several senior professors and administrators deemed past the peak of their proficiency and hired new doctorate holding personnel while consolidating sections of lecture courses 32 A student petition led to the governing board to change the college s name to more accurately reflect the diversity of its academic programs and in 1935 the school became the Colorado State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts or Colorado A amp M for short After 31 years of leadership President Lory announced his retirement in 1938 From World War II into the modern era edit Soon after Pearl Harbor Colorado A amp M began to look like a military post with the college serving as many as 1 500 servicemen 33 New President Roy Green tried to prepare for the sudden departure of students and arrival of servicemen by improving ROTC facilities and introducing military training programs Although servicemen filed onto campus student enrollment at Colorado A amp M 1 637 in fall 1942 dropped to 701 by fall 1943 and female students outnumbered their male counterparts for the first time 34 When the war ceased in 1945 soldiers returning from Europe and the Pacific filled U S higher education institutions Nearly 1 040 students attended the college in fall 1946 and about 1 600 students enrolled by spring 1946 Close to 80 former Aggies died in World War II including football talent Lewis Dude Dent 35 Colorado A amp M becomes a university under Bill Morgan edit Colorado A amp M shed its image as a narrow technical college and became a university in appearance and title during the 1950s under President Bill Morgan Providing adequate student housing for an increasing number of youth approaching college age and improving cramped instructional facilities were among the first tests of Morgan s leadership He responded and five new residence halls were completed between 1953 and 1957 36 Academic offerings grew to include advanced degrees The State Board of Agriculture approved a doctoral degree in civil engineering in 1951 and three years later allowed other qualified departments to offer doctorates Morgan believed students earning this advanced degree should hold it from a university and so began a campaign to upgrade Colorado A amp M to university status In 1957 the Colorado General Assembly approved the new name of Colorado State University 37 1960s Student activism edit Colorado State became a scene of intense student activism during the 1960s and early 1970s The reduction of strict campus regulations for women was among the early targets of student activists coming to the forefront in 1964 when a 21 year old female student moved into unapproved off campus housing to accommodate her late hours as editor of the student newspaper 38 The civil rights movement on campus also picked up momentum and visibility In spring 1969 shortly before Morgan s retirement Mexican American and African American student organizations presented a list of demands to university officials primarily urging increased recruitment of minority students and employees The demonstrators occupation of the Administration Building continued to the front lawn of Morgan s home Students and university representatives took their concerns to state officials but Colorado legislators rejected a subsequent university request for funds to support minority recruitment 39 Anti military protest took place in dramatic form at Colorado State from 1968 to 1970 On March 5 1968 several hundred students and faculty with anti war sentiments marched to Fort Collins downtown War Memorial and wiped blood on a placard tied to the memorial Hecklers and blockaders created such a disturbance that police had to disperse the non marchers In May 1970 as campus peace activists held the second day of a student strike in the gymnasium in response to the U S invasion of Cambodia and the student deaths at Kent State University one or more arsonists set Old Main ablaze destroying the 92 year old cornerstone of Colorado State 40 2000s CSU under President Penley edit In his welcoming address for the fall 2007 semester former CSU President Larry Edward Penley called for CSU to set the standard for the 21st century public land grant research university 41 He identified as the heart of this ideal the contribution to the prosperity and quality of life of the local and international community in part through fostering relationships and collaborations with federal research partners the business community and key industries 42 A part of this approach was Colorado State s Supercluster research model designed to utilize interdisciplinary issue based research on pressing global issues in which the university has particular expertise and connect research results to the marketplace Initial Superclusters in infectious disease and in cancer research were launched As well new residence halls were constructed according to national green building standards 43 and a sustainability advisory committee was charged to coordinate green activities at Colorado State 44 While maintaining historic ties to local agriculture administration officials also emphasized the desire to better connect with the local community 45 As such CSU became party to UniverCity a multi organization initiative that links the school with city government community and business associations to expand and synchronize working relationships 46 Another goal set by the university was to improve undergraduate education Penley stated that essential tasks were access and graduation rates particularly for qualified low income and minority students and an education international in scope suited to a global economy 47 Penley resigned in 2008 48 Later 2000s After President Penley edit While a statistics professor at CSU Mary Meyer declared that a study of salaries by CSU created salary goals for women faculty that were substantially smaller than for men 49 50 This led CSU to start studying pay equity in 2015 which in turn led later that year to a quarter of female full professors receiving higher pay 51 Joyce E McConnell became the first female president of CSU in 2019 52 53 On June 9 2022 the CSU Board of Governors and President McConnell announced she would be leaving her position as of June 30 2022 54 Former Provost Rick Miranda was chosen to serve in an interim role while a new president is identified 55 In December 2022 the CSU Board announced the appointment of Amy Parsons once its vice president of operations then executive vice chancellor as its 16th president effective Feb 1 2023 56 57 58 Campus edit nbsp The Lagoon Rec Center and Intramural Fields Colorado State University is located in Fort Collins Colorado a mid size city of approximately 142 000 residents at the base of the Front Range of the southern Rocky Mountains The university s 583 acre 2 4 km2 main campus is located in central Fort Collins and includes a 101 acre 0 41 km2 veterinary teaching hospital CSU is also home to a 1 438 acre 5 8 km2 Foothills Campus a 1 575 acre 6 4 km2 agricultural campus and the 1 177 acre 4 8 km2 Pingree Park mountain campus CSU uses 4 043 acres 16 4 km2 for research centers and Colorado State Forest Service stations outside of Larimer County 9 Main campus editAt the heart of the CSU campus lies the Oval an expansive green area 2 065 feet 629 m around lined with 65 American Elm trees 59 Designed in 1909 the Oval remains a center of activity and a major landmark at CSU The Administration Building constructed in 1924 faces the Oval from the south end while several academic and administrative buildings occupy its perimeter The Music Building once the university library currently houses the Institute for Learning and Teaching which provides academic and career counseling as well as other student focused programs The music department moved to the University Center for the Arts upon its opening in 2008 nbsp The Oval at the heart of the CSU campusAt the northwest corner of the Oval is Ammons Hall formerly the women s recreational center and now home to the University Welcome Center Just to the east of Ammons stands Guggenheim Hall which currently houses the Department of Manufacturing Technology and Construction Management The building was constructed in 1910 as a gift from U S Senator Simon Guggenheim to promote the study of home economics 60 and was recently renovated according to green building standards Rounding out the Oval are the Weber Building the Statistics Building the Occupational Therapy Building and Laurel Hall 61 Another campus focal point is the main plaza around which can be found Lory Student Center and Morgan Library as well as several academic buildings The Lory Student Center named for former CSU President Charles Lory houses Student Media numerous organization offices Student Government and spaces to eat drink and study The Morgan Library was originally constructed in 1965 and named for former CSU President William E Morgan Following the flood of 97 this facility went through an extensive improvement project that included an addition to the main building and a renovation of the existing structure with works completed in 1998 Current holdings include more than 2 million books bound journals and government documents 9 Morgan Library also contains a 13 000 sq ft 1 200 m2 addition called the Study Cube that seats 80 additional patrons With a university issued ID card students and staff are able to access the Cube 24 hours a day including during finals week To accommodate the Loan and Reserve desk checks out laptops and other accessories overnight if checked out less than six hours prior to closing 62 nbsp CSU Plaza overlooking from the top balcony of Natural Resource Building nbsp Spruce Hall CSU s oldest existing buildingColorado State University s oldest existing building is Spruce Hall constructed in 1881 63 Originally a dormitory that played a vital role in the early growth of the school s student enrollment Spruce now houses the Division of Continuing Education and the Office of Admissions The newest academic building on campus is the Behavioral Science building which was completed in summer 2010 Other recent projects include the 2006 Transit Center addition to the north end of Lory Student Center certified LEED Gold an expansion of the Student Recreation Center and the new Computer Science Building completed in 2008 64 nbsp Colorado State has converted the historic Fort Collins High School building into its University Center for the Arts In 2008 CSU also opened its University Center for the Arts located in the old Fort Collins High School CSU purchased this historic building in 1995 and has since converted it into a new home for its programs in music dance theatre and the visual arts The three phase building project included a 318 seat University Theatre a 100 seat Studio Theatre and the 24 000 sq ft 2 200 m2 Runyan Music Hall an adaptable rehearsal and performance space created out of the old high school gymnasium The center also houses the University Art Museum the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising a 285 seat organ recital hall and the 200 seat University Dance Theatre 65 The campus is served by Transfort bus service including the MAX Bus Rapid Transit route that opened in 2014 66 nbsp Looking west from Lory Student Center one can see the athletic fields the new Student Recreation Center and the roof of Moby Arena Veterinary hospital edit The James L Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital was constructed in 1979 and houses 28 specialties under one roof ranging from emergency to oncology 67 Located in the Veterinary Health Complex south of the main campus in Fort Collins the hospital has 79 veterinarians on clinics educating 280 third and fourth year veterinary students on clinical rotations In fiscal 2019 the hospital logged nearly 47 000 cases Foothills Campus edit The 1 705 acre 6 9 km2 Foothills Campus located on northwest edge of Fort Collins is home to the department of atmospheric sciences as well as several research and outreach centers The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Engineering Research Center B W Pickett Equine Center Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere CIRA the Colorado Division of Wildlife and the Animal Reproduction Biotechnology Lab can all be found at the Foothills Campus 68 Organization editAdministration edit Colorado State University is a public land grant institution Its 13 member board of governors presides over the Colorado State University System including the flagship campus in Fort Collins together with Colorado State University Pueblo and the CSU Global Campus 69 The board consists of nine voting members appointed by the Governor of Colorado and confirmed by the Colorado State Senate and four elected non voting members 70 Voting members are community leaders from many fields including agriculture business and public service 71 The student body president as well as a faculty representative from each university act as non voting board members Amy Parsons currently serves as the 16th president of Colorado State University 72 At its December 2008 public meeting the Board of Governors of the CSU System decided it was in the best interest of all CSU System campuses to separate what had previously been a conjoined position of CSU System Chancellor and CSU Fort Collins President On June 1 2015 President Emeritus Anthony Tony Frank the 14th President of CSU was named the finalist for the chancellor position 73 Academics editColorado State offers 150 programs of study across 8 colleges and 55 departments In addition to its notable programs in biomedical sciences engineering environmental science agriculture and human health and nutrition CSU offers professional programs in disciplines including business journalism and construction management as well as in the liberal and performing arts humanities and social sciences CSU also offers bachelor s degrees graduate degrees certificates and badges online Fall Freshman Statistics 74 75 76 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 Applicants 17 970 17 929 16 559 14 680 15 253 12 494 Admits 13 914 13 394 12 564 11 822 11 013 10 688 Admitted 77 4 74 7 75 8 80 5 72 2 85 5 Enrolled 4 443 4 587 4 504 4 533 4 322 4 404 Avg GPA 3 61 3 57 3 59 3 56 3 57 3 53 Avg ACT 24 7 24 8 24 7 24 5 24 6 24 1 Avg SAT Composite 1140 1143 1142 1134 1131 1120 out of 1600 The university employs a total of 1 540 faculty members with 1 000 on tenure track appointments The student faculty ratio is 17 1 77 CSU awarded 6 090 degrees in 2009 2010 including 4 336 bachelor s degrees 1 420 master s degrees 203 doctoral degrees and 131 Doctor in Veterinary Medicine degrees 9 Institutes and centers edit Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere CIRA Information Science amp Technology Center at Colorado State University ISTeC Energy Institute Public Lands History Center In 2007 a group of CSU History and Anthropology faculty and research associates created the Center for Public History and Archaeology with the dual goal of providing practical and meaningful work experiences for graduate students and helpful collaborative projects for public agencies such as the National Park Service In 2010 the name was changed to Public Lands History Center to better describe its focus and collaborative mission The center s mission is to foster the production of historical knowledge through collaborative engagement with institutions responsible for the sustainable stewardship of protected areas water and other critical resources 78 The center s Director is one of its founders CSU Professor of History and noted environmental historian Mark Fiege 79 Rankings edit Academic rankingsNationalARWU 80 63 85Forbes 81 227U S News amp World Report 82 153Washington Monthly 83 125WSJ College Pulse 84 291GlobalARWU 85 201 300QS 86 408THE 87 401 500U S News amp World Report 88 266 National Program Rankings 89 Program Ranking Biological Sciences 62 Chemistry 51 Computer Science 83 Earth Sciences 54 Education 123 Engineering 55 Environmental Engineering 34 Civil Engineering 36 Chemical Engineering 66 Industrial Engineering 68 Computer Engineering 71 Mechanical Engineering 71 Material Engineering 75 Electrical Engineering 76 Biological Engineering 79 Fine Arts 99 Mathematics 86 Occupational Therapy 7 Physics 78 Political Science 96 Psychology 90 Social Work 51 Sociology 96 Statistics 44 Veterinary Medicine 2 Global Program Rankings 90 Program Ranking Agricultural Sciences 55 Biology amp Biochemistry 208 Chemistry 317 Economics amp Business 247 Engineering 493 Environment Ecology 40 Geosciences 54 Microbiology 133 Mathematics 240 Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences 34 Water Resources 100 Physics 331 Plant amp Animal Science 85 Social Sciences amp Public Health 238 Princeton Review named CSU s MBA program as one of the 10 best administered programs nationwide in 2007 and 2012 2015 91 92 93 94 Business Week included CSU s undergraduate business program among the best in the country in 2011 ranked at No 89 95 In 2014 the College of Business moved up in the ranks to be ranked 73rd an increase of 16 places from the previous year in Bloomberg Business Week s Undergraduate rankings 96 Notable areas of research edit A 1961 feasibility study at CSU was crucial for the establishment of the Peace Corps 97 Research in the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory has created a technological solution to limit pollutants from single stroke engines and is now in widespread use in the Philippines The Center for Disaster and Risk Analysis is dedicated to reducing the harm and losses caused by natural technological and human caused disasters Projects have looked at Muslim Americans after September 11 98 Hurricane Katrina the 2010 BP Oil Spill 99 and childcare disaster planning 100 Outlying campuses cater to a range of research activities including crops research animal reproduction public health and watershed management The Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station CAES was established in 1888 in accordance with provisions of the Hatch Act of 1887 calling for experiment stations at land grant universities 101 State and federal funds support CAES research programs In 2007 research activities included pest management food safety and nutrition environmental quality plant and animal production systems and community and rural development The NSF Engineering Research Center for Extreme Ultra Violet Science and Technology funded by the National Science Foundation partners industry with Colorado State University CU Boulder and the University of California Berkeley 102 The Colorado Center for Biorefining and Biofuels C2B2 is the first research center created under the umbrella of the new Colorado Renewable Energy Collaboratory involving CSU CU Colorado School of Mines and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory 103 The center develops biofuels and bio refining technologies Colorado State s research Supercluster model brings together researchers across disciplines to work on topics of global concern in which CSU has a demonstrated expertise Research results are connected to the marketplace through transfer patenting and licensing activities carried out by experts with a focus on each research area CSU also has a well established research program in infectious disease The Regional Biocontainment Laboratory funded by the National Institutes of Health is home to scientists developing vaccines and drugs for some world s most devastating diseases The Biocontainment Laboratory also houses one of 10 US Regional Centers of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases funded by a 40 million grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases 104 Much of the Cancer Supercluster which involves the collaboration of five colleges is based around the work of the university s Animal Cancer Center the largest center of its kind in the world 105 International programs edit Approximately 950 students per year participate in educational programs abroad and nearly 1 300 foreign students and scholars from more than 85 countries are engaged in academic work and research on campus 9 The initial pilot studies for the Peace Corps were conducted by Colorado State faculty and the university is consistently one of the top ranking institutions in the nation for the recruitment of Peace Corps volunteers 106 Since 1988 CSU and the Peace Corps have participated in four cooperative master s degree programs in English Food Science and Human Nutrition Natural Resources and Agriculture The program involves at least 2 semesters of course work at CSU combined with time abroad as a Peace Corps volunteer 107 Colorado State offers various programs on campus for students interested in international issues Regional specializations with core courses and electives are available in Asian Studies Middle East North Africa Studies Latin American and Caribbean Studies or Russian Eastern and Central Europe Studies The Global Village Living Learning Community is a housing option for students with international interests Honors Program edit The Honors Program provides challenging and enriching programs for high achieving students in all majors through two academic tracks One track is designed for students aiming to complete their general education requirements within the Honors Program and a second is composed of upper division courses usually appropriate for currently enrolled or transfer students The Academic Village which opened in fall 2007 offers 180 Honor students the opportunity to live in the Honors Living Learning Community 108 1 126 students participated in the Honors Program in fall 2007 109 Athletics editMain article Colorado State Rams Colorado State University competes in 17 sponsored intercollegiate sports including 11 for women cross country indoor track outdoor track volleyball basketball golf tennis swimming softball soccer and water polo and six for men football cross country indoor track outdoor track basketball and golf Colorado State s athletic teams compete along with 8 other institutions in the Mountain West Conference MW which is an NCAA Division I conference and sponsors Division I FBS football The Conference was formed in 1999 splitting from the former 16 member Western Athletic Conference 110 CSU has won 9 MW tournament championships and won or shared 11 regular season titles Rams football teams won or shared the Mountain West title in 1999 2000 and 2002 111 On December 13 2011 Jim McElwain was introduced as the head football coach at Colorado State McElwain had worked as the Alabama offensive coordinator from 2008 to 2011 112 On December 4 2014 Jim McElwain accepted the head coach position at the University of Florida This was the first time a Colorado State Rams head coach left the team for another program 113 nbsp Canvas Stadium PanoramaOn December 5 2014 the Colorado State University System Board of Governors gave approval to build Colorado State Stadium a multi use stadium on campus to replace Hughes Stadium built several miles from campus in the 1960s 114 Mascots edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Over the years Colorado State University has displayed several mascots An unknown black bear cub often seen wearing sweaters appeared at football games from 1909 to 1919 Purchased by a student in 1912 a bulldog named Peanuts would roam around campus He served as a secondary mascot and was fed peanuts by the student body On April 28 1918 Peanuts was found poisoned 115 This was alleged to have been done by students of the University of Colorado Boulder but has not been proven After Peanuts death Glenn Morris an alum of Colorado State University donated another bulldog named Gallant Defender to the university The first ram to become the mascot of Colorado State University was Buck introduced in 1946 Colorado State University s mascot remains the ram to this day It was during a basketball game half time contest that CAM the Ram became the name of the beloved mascot 116 Student life editUndergraduate demographics as of Fall 2020 Race and ethnicity 117 Total White 70 70 Hispanic 16 16 Other a 6 6 Asian 3 3 Foreign national 3 3 Black 2 2 Native American 1 1 Economic diversity Low income b 21 21 Affluent c 79 79 nbsp Looking west towards the Intramural Fields on CSU Campus Fort Collins is located 65 miles 105 km north of Denver an approximately two hour drive from major ski resorts and a 45 minute drive from Rocky Mountain National Park There are opportunities for students to be active with bike trails and hiking nearby In 2006 Money ranked Fort Collins as the Best Place to Live in the United States 118 Clubs and activities edit There are over 450 student organizations including 34 honor societies at CSU 60 of undergraduates participate in intramural sports while 10 join one of 19 fraternities and 14 sororities 119 There are 30 sport clubs including cycling baseball water polo triathlon wrestling and rugby 300 music theatre and dance performances exhibitions and other arts events take place on campus each year The student government is the Associated Students of Colorado State University CSU s daily newspaper is the Rocky Mountain Collegian CSU also has a student run campus television station and a student radio station KCSU FM Sport clubs edit Sport Clubs at Colorado State University were established in 1978 They are run and funded by student fees and team fundraisers and compete with other colleges and universities but not at the NCAA level There are currently 30 Sport Club 120 teams Every year the clubs take a combined 150 trips There are over 1 000 students associated with the program Last year 23 of these teams competed at regional and national championships The programs have enjoyed a significant amount of recent success with National Championships in Men s Ice Hockey 1995 Women s Lacrosse 2008 2010 2011 2013 120 Baseball 2004 2010 120 Men s Lacrosse 1999 2001 2003 2006 2012 120 The sports for which there are clubs at Colorado State University include Alpine Skiing Baseball Bowling Crew Cycling Field Hockey Horse Polo Men s and Women s Ice Hockey Men s and Women s In Line Hockey Lacrosse Men s and Women s Logging Sports Rodeo Men s and Women s Rugby Men s and Women s Shotgun Sports Men s and Women s Snowboard Soccer Men s and Women s Swimming Synchronized Ice Skating Triathlon Coed Ultimate Frisbee Summer League Ultimate Frisbee Men s and Women s Volleyball Water Polo Men s and Women s and Wrestling Men s and Women s 120 Student media edit The Rocky Mountain Collegian is CSU s student run daily newspaper The paper has a fully functional website and a mobile application and students have complete control over editorial decisions The paper was founded in 1891 and was a weekly publication by the 1930s During the 1940s and 1950s the paper earned disrepute in the local community for its unpopular support of women s rights and anti racism stance 121 By the 1970s the Collegian was consistently publishing daily Editorial quality and financial support have varied over the years at times rising among elite college newspapers and at others struggling to publish During the 1990s the paper was twice selected as one of the top 12 daily student papers in the country 122 In late 2007 the Collegian published a staff article that incited national debate about free speech 123 The article read in its entirety Taser This Fuck Bush This event as well as President Penley s considerations of partnering out the Collegian by Gannett in January 2008 124 lead to proposals in making CSU s student media including the Rocky Mountain Collegian a not for profit organization independent from the university 125 This resulted in the entirety of CSU Student Media separating from the university to operate under an independent company the Rocky Mountain Student Media Corporation KCSU is Colorado State s student run station with a format focusing on alternative and college rock music including indie rock punk hip hop and electronic music News sports and weather updates along with talk programs and specialty shows round out the programming schedule Broadcasting at 10 000 watts KCSU is among the larger college stations in the country reaching approximately 250 000 listeners 126 KCSU first began broadcasting in 1964 as a station owned operated and financed by students Following a long period as a professional station KCSU again became student run in 1995 at which time the current format was adopted As with the Collegian and CTV KCSU was hit hard by the 1997 flood and for a time was forced to broadcast from remote locations Now back in its original Lory Student Center location KCSU has benefited from revamped production facilities and updated equipment CTV is CSU s student run television station that allows students to hone their media skills reporting writing producing shooting editing in an educational environment The station is a winner of fourteen Rocky Mountain Collegiate Media Association awards and a Student Emmy Award from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Heartland Chapter 127 Content includes news shows on Tuesdays and Wednesdays a sports show on Mondays and an entertainment show Thursdays CTV was founded in 1989 128 and currently broadcasts weeknights on the university cable station Comcast channel 11 at 8 pm with reruns at 9 am and noon the next day Student run magazine College Avenue was founded in 2005 with the goal as put forth by its founding editors of giving students a new forum to address controversial issues affecting the campus community from their vantage point 129 Since its first issue in the fall 2005 the magazine is released quarterly Greek life edit Greek life at Colorado State began in the fall of 1915 Currently 10 of undergraduates join one of CSUs 19 fraternities and 14 sororities 119 The CSU Inter Fraternity Council acts as the governing body for the 19 fraternities each with a delegate representative Similarly the CSU Panhellenic Council governs the sororities CSU Greek organizations are involved in several philanthropic activities around campus among them CSUnity Cans around the Oval Habitat for Humanity and RamRide The governing bodies recently raised 25 000 towards the sponsorship of a Habitat for Humanity home 130 131 From 1932 132 until 1949 Colorado State University was home to the Eta chapter of Phrateres a philanthropic social organization for female college students Eta was the seventh chapter installed and Phrateres eventually had over 20 chapters in Canada and the United States The chapter name Eta was reused for the chapter installed at Arizona State University in 1958 133 Residence halls edit 13 residence halls provide on campus living for over 5 000 students First year students are required to live in one of the halls on campus and upperclassman and graduate living are offered in the university owned Aggie Village which has space for 973 individuals 134 The halls also have several Living Learning communities that directly link the on campus living environment with a specific academic focus in Honors engineering natural sciences health and wellness equine sciences leadership development or pre veterinary medicine The Key Academic and Key Service Communities create an academically focused residential community for freshmen who share a desire for academic achievement active involvement in classes community service campus activities and appreciation of diversity Residents share classes and take advantage of yearlong service opportunities with a close knit group of 19 other students CSU Honors Program participants have the opportunity to live in the Honors Living Community Academic Village which opened in the fall 2007 houses Living Learning Communities for 180 Honors and 240 Engineering students 135 Students in the College of Natural Sciences can choose to live in Laurel Village which opened in fall 2014 136 University apartments edit Students faculty and staff may choose to live in the university apartments Colorado State University University Housing oversees University Village International House Aggie Village Family and Aggie Village Known as a global community Apartment Life s mission to diversity shows in the fact that approximately 60 percent of residents and staff are from 80 different nations Residents of CSU and Fort Collins community members enjoy a diverse amount of enrichment programs offered through the University Housing staff 137 138 Student demographics edit In fall 2007 CSU opened its doors to 24 983 students among them 20 765 undergraduates 2 332 master s students 1 347 doctoral students and 539 professional students in the College of Biomedical and Veterinary Medicine 139 80 of undergraduates are Colorado residents and within the student population 50 states and 79 countries are represented 52 of undergraduates are women 13 2 of undergraduates are ethnic minorities excluding international students and 3 of undergraduates are 30 and over 140 Of minority students 48 are Hispanic 24 Asian American 16 African American and 12 Native American 141 Over the past ten years minority enrollment has increased 35 from 2 361 to 3 178 an increase from 10 9 to 13 2 of the student population 142 Though progress has been made increasing minority enrollment at CSU has been a challenge for school administrators one made yet more difficult by high dropout rates in many Colorado high schools with concentrated minority populations 143 Notable alumni and faculty editSee the List of Colorado State University people See also edit nbsp Education portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Colorado portal Colorado State University Pueblo List of colleges and universities in Colorado List of forestry universities and colleges Bibliography of Colorado Geography of Colorado History of Colorado Index of Colorado related articles List of Colorado related lists Outline of ColoradoNotes edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References edit as of end of 2021 Investment Performance and Impact Report Archived from the original on March 5 2022 Retrieved March 5 2022 Rick Miranda named Interim President of Colorado State University Board of Governors announces launch of national search SOURCE June 10 2022 Archived from the original on June 12 2022 Retrieved June 11 2022 CSU campuses hit enrollment milestones while focusing on student success ColoState October 6 2022 Retrieved March 10 2023 Department of Education College Navigator Archived from the original on November 21 2017 Retrieved January 8 2009 Colorado State Brand Standards PDF August 11 2021 Retrieved November 14 2022 Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup carnegieclassifications iu edu Center for Postsecondary Education Archived from the original on May 19 2021 Retrieved July 18 2020 Colorado A amp M becomes CSU CSU Homecoming amp Family Weekend Colorado State University Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Retrieved September 4 2022 Enrollment reaches new records throughout CSU System October 4 2019 Archived from the original on March 3 2021 Retrieved December 17 2020 a b c d e Colorado State University Fact Book 2010 2011 Archived from the original on September 30 2011 Retrieved August 4 2011 otm September 27 2011 Engines and Energy Conversion Lab Tremendous Asset Fort Collins Area Chamber of Commerce Retrieved October 12 2022 CSU research expenditures hit 447 2 million shatter records November 30 2021 Archived from the original on February 23 2022 Retrieved February 18 2022 Jim Hansen Democracy s College in the Centennial State Colorado State University Fort Collins Co 1977 25 Thomas Grace Powers 1898 Where to educate 1898 1899 A guide to the best private schools higher institutions of learning etc in the United States Boston Brown and Company p 23 Retrieved August 17 2012 Hansen James E Democracy s College in the Centennial State A History of Colorado State University Colorado State University Fort Collins 1977 pg 51 Hansen Democracy s College 85 Hansen Democracy s College 77 Hansen Democracy s College 80 Patricia Rettig Guide to the Papers of Louis G Carpenter Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 a b c James H Lamb Company 1900 Lamb s Biographical Dictionary of the United States Vol 1 Ed John Howard Brown Boston Massachusetts The Cyclopedia Publishing Company pp 575 Retrieved from Google Books Archived September 14 2015 at the Wayback Machine on June 24 2015 Digitized on February 2 2008 a b c d Carpenter Louis George educator The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans Volume 2 of The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans by Rossiter Johnson John Howard Brown published by the Biographical Society 1904 Archived from the original on August 17 2021 Retrieved June 24 2015 Carpenter Louis George mathematician Herringshaw s Encyclopedia of American Biography of the Nineteenth Century Accurate and Succinct Biographies of Famous Men and Women in All Walks of Life who are Or Have Been the Acknowledged Leaders of Life and Thought of the United States Since Its Formation by Thomas William Herringshaw published by the American Publishers Association 1904 Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b c De Puy William Harrison 1908 Carpenter Louis George engineer The World wide Encyclopedia and Gazetteer Compiled and Revised to Date from the Leading Encyclopedias of the World A Dictionary of Arts Sciences and Literature to which is Added Biographies of Living Subjects One Hundred Colored Maps and Numerous Illustrations William Harrison De Puy Volume 9 Page 720 published by The Christian Herald Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b Carpenter Louis George engineer New American Supplement to the New Werner Twentieth Century Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Illustrated with Hundreds of Portraits and Other Engravings Volume 2 New American Supplement to the New Werner Twentieth Century Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Illustrated with Hundreds of Portraits and Other Engravings published by the Werner Company 1905 Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b c d Papers of Louis G Carpenter 1892 1910 Carpenter L G Louis George 1861 1935 Colorado State University 1935 Archived from the original on June 27 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b Guide to the Papers of Louis G Carpenter Prepared by Holley R Lange updated by Patricia J Rettig Colorado State University Water Resources Archive A joint effort of the University Libraries and the Colorado Water Institute 2013 Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 Hansen Democracy s College 110 Hanses James E Colorado State University Campus Ringing Grooves of Change 1870 1973 Colorado State University Fort Collins 1973 Pg 16 Hansen Democracy s College 143 Hansen Colorado State University Campus 16 Hansen Democracy s College 202 Hansen Democracy s College 211 Hansen Democracy s College 313 Hansen Democracy s College 348 Hansen Democracy s College 349 Hansen Democracy s College 350 Hansen Colorado State University Campus 37 Hansen Colorado State University Campus 32 Hansen Democracy s College 447 Hansen Democracy s College 462 Hansen Democracy s College 469 President Penley s Fall 2007 Address Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine Fort Collins Colorado September 6 2007 Setting the Standard for the 21st century Strategic Directions Strategic Plan 2006 2015 Office of the President Colorado State University February 2006 pg 2 Hughes Trevor CSU Trying to Conserve Amid Building Boom Fort Collins Coloradoan Comment Quarterly Colorado State University Fall 2007 Issue 2 Volume 1 pg 11 Setting the Standard for the 21st century Strategic Directions Strategic Plan 2006 2015 Office of the President Colorado State University February 2006 pg 10 Comment Querterly pg 12 Setting the Standard for the 21st Century pg 4 CSU president Penley resigns November 5 2008 Archived from the original on May 25 2022 Retrieved May 25 2022 Coltrain Nick Professor CSU study based pay goals on gender The Coloradoan Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved May 25 2022 Coltrain Nick November 19 2017 CSU reports it s closing gender pay gap The Coloradoan archived from the original on September 4 2022 retrieved May 25 2022 Coltrain Nick CSU reports it s closing gender pay gap The Coloradoan Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved May 25 2022 Executive Leadership Team Office of the President Colorado State University Archived from the original on October 24 2019 Retrieved October 24 2019 Celebrate inauguration of President Joyce McConnell with watch parties on Nov 14 November 6 2019 Archived from the original on November 5 2019 Retrieved May 25 2022 Bohannon Molly CSU President Joyce McConnell part ways in 1 5 million separation agreement Fort Collins Coloradoan Archived from the original on September 4 2022 Retrieved June 11 2022 Rick Miranda named Interim President of Colorado State University Board of Governors announces launch of national search SOURCE June 10 2022 Archived from the original on June 12 2022 Retrieved June 11 2022 Parsons to start Feb 1 as 16th CSU president Greeley Tribune December 30 2022 Retrieved January 10 2023 POLITICS COLORADO December 28 2022 Amy Parsons is new president of Colorado State University Colorado Politics Retrieved January 10 2023 Staff CSU MarComm December 16 2022 Amy Parsons named 16th president of Colorado State University SOURCE Retrieved January 10 2023 Campus Tour The Oval Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine Colorado State University website Retrieved November 8 2010 yongli December 19 2016 Guggenheim Hall coloradoencyclopedia org Retrieved October 13 2022 Colorado State University Campus Character Archived from the original on March 31 2012 Retrieved August 3 2011 Lori Oling May 21 2012 Study Cube Archived from the original on August 27 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 Hansen Colorado State University Main Campus pg 9 Facilities Management Full Projects Listing Archived from the original on March 8 2011 Retrieved August 4 2011 University Center for the Arts Grand Opening Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved August 4 2011 Getting Around Fort Collins Colorado State University Archived from the original on June 4 2016 Retrieved May 6 2016 CSU Veterinary Hospital named Practice of the Year CVMBS Communications February 9 2018 Archived from the original on November 14 2019 Retrieved November 14 2019 CSU Campus Maps Archived from the original on September 17 2011 Retrieved September 15 2011 Colorado State University System CSUS Archived from the original on July 25 2014 Retrieved July 23 2014 Colorado State University Administration About the Board of Governors Archived April 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine Accessed March 4 2008 Members of Board of Governors of the Colorado State University System Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine Accessed March 4 2008 https president colostate edu biography https www coloradoan com story news 2019 06 28 tony frank wraps up 25 years working colorado state university campus 1595424001 Common Data Set Institutional Research Planning and Effectiveness Colorado State University Archived from the original on July 23 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 28 2013 Retrieved December 27 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 28 2013 Retrieved December 27 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 pg 5 Public Lands History Center home page Public Lands History Center Archived from the original on October 28 2014 Retrieved August 1 2014 Mark Fiege CSU College of Liberal Arts Faculty and Staff Pages Archived from the original on August 8 2014 Retrieved August 1 2014 ShanghaiRanking s 2023 Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved February 10 2024 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2023 Forbes Retrieved September 22 2023 2023 2024 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 22 2023 2023 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved February 10 2024 2024 Best Colleges in the U S The Wall Street Journal College Pulse Retrieved January 27 2024 ShanghaiRanking s 2023 Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved February 10 2024 QS World University Rankings 2024 Top global universities Quacquarelli Symonds Retrieved June 27 2023 World University Rankings 2024 Times Higher Education Retrieved September 27 2023 2022 23 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 25 2023 Colorado State University Rankings U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on May 8 2020 Retrieved October 6 2020 Colorado State University U S News Best Global University Rankings U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on May 9 2020 Retrieved October 6 2020 History the College of Business through time Colorado State University College of Business Colorado State University Archived from the original on July 6 2015 Retrieved December 11 2014 CSU Business School Ranked 9th Denver Business Journal October 11 2007 Dimas Jennifer September 9 2014 CSU climbs U S News and World Report Colorado State University Source Colorado State University Archived from the original on December 4 2014 Retrieved December 11 2014 Bustos Kelsey October 17 2014 College of Business ranked among the nation s best Colorado State University Source Colorado State University Archived from the original on March 30 2015 Retrieved December 11 2014 Business Week Business School Rankings Archived September 16 2013 at the Wayback Machine Accessed July 12 2011 Rankings amp Profiles Undergraduate Business School Bloomberg Business Week Archived from the original on December 13 2014 Retrieved December 11 2014 Colorado State University History Page Archived July 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 18 2008 Zaffos Joshua June 14 2017 A Spotlight on the 9 11 Anti Muslim Backlash Pacific Standard Archived from the original on April 4 2018 Retrieved April 4 2018 Adam Warren Today Colorado State Archived from the original on July 26 2014 Retrieved July 22 2015 Child Care Disaster Planning Under Study By CSU August 27 2012 Archived from the original on July 23 2015 Retrieved July 22 2015 About the Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station Archived April 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine Accessed February 18 2008 NSF Research Center for Extreme Ultraviolet Science and Technology Archived October 1 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed February 18 2008 Colorado Center for Biorefining and Biofuels Archived December 22 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed February 16 2008 Colorado State University Hosts Open Houses at New Regional Biocontainment Laboratory Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU Press Release 12 4 07 Retrieved February 17 2008 Colorado State University s Internationally Renowned College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Celebrates 100 Years Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU Press Release 2 19 07 Retrieved February 18 2008 Colorado State University Ranks Near the Top in the Nation for Most Peace Corps Volunteers amp Information Colorado State University Newsinfo colostate edu March 12 2002 Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved October 26 2011 Colorado State University Office of International Programs Archived February 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved February 11 2008 Colorado State University Will Open New Academic Village This Fall for Engineering Honors Students CSU Press Release June 11 2007 Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 pg 137 Meisler Natalie Lubick Leaving Legacy The Denver Post 11 27 07 Colorado State University 2007 Season Review McGraw Athletic Center Fort Collins CO Release No 13 12 31 07 Pg 16 Jim McElwain introduced as Colorado State football coach The Rocky Mountain Collegian December 13 2011 Archived from the original on January 8 2012 Retrieved December 14 2011 Frei Terry December 4 2014 Jim McElwain leaves CSU named Florida head football coach The Denver Post Archived from the original on December 8 2014 Retrieved December 4 2014 CSU Board approves on campus stadium Colorado State University December 6 2014 Archived from the original on December 27 2014 Retrieved December 6 2014 McKissick Nathaniel October 4 2021 McKissick Peanuts the dog gone but not forgotten The Rocky Mountain Collegian Retrieved December 30 2023 Home SOURCE SOURCE Archived from the original on October 10 2008 College Scorecard Colorado State University United States Department of Education Archived from the original on June 14 2022 Retrieved May 8 2022 Money Magazine Best Places to Live 2006 Archived January 25 2021 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 3 2008 a b Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 Pg 5 a b c d e Colorado State University Fort Collins Archived April 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine History of the Collegian Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU Student Media Page Retrieved March 3 2008 History of the Collegian Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU Student Media Page Retrieved March 3 2008 Editor s fate in the hands of CSU panel Archived September 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine Rocky Mountain News Retrieved October 31 2008 Gannett Archived September 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times Retrieved October 31 2008 Committee Advises NonProfit Status Archived January 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Rocky mountain Collegian Retrieved October 31 2008 About KCSU Archived May 14 2008 at the Wayback Machine KCSU Online Retrieved March 3 2008 CTV Student Media Page Archived July 4 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 3 2008 CTV History Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU Student Media Page Retrieved March 3 2008 Letter from the Editor Fall 2005 Issue Archived September 10 2006 at the Wayback Machine Accessed March 1 2008 Chapters and Councils CSU Greek System Archived July 19 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 2 2008 Silver Spruce Yearbook Fort Collins Colorado Agricultural College 1918 157 Archived from the original on October 11 2012 Retrieved October 13 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Silver Spruce Yearbook Fort Collins Colorado A amp M College 1940 176 Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved December 19 2008 The Eta chapter was established on the Colorado State campus in 1932 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sahuaro Yearbook Phoenix Arizona State University 1960 140 Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved December 19 2008 The Off Campus Women of Arizona State received their charter as Eta Chapter of Phrateres on March 9 1958 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CSU prepares for the full capacity of residence halls with renovations and Aggie Village Archived November 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine Rocky Mountain Collegian Retrieved November 6 2016 Colorado State University Will Open New Academic Village This Fall For Engineering Honors Students Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSU News and Info Online Retrieved March 3 2008 Laurel Village Housing and Dining Archived November 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine CSU Housing and Dining Website Retrieved November 6 2016 Housing amp Dining Services Colorado State University Housing colostate edu October 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 31 2011 Retrieved October 26 2011 Apartment Life Central Programs at Colorado State University Housing colostate edu May 15 2011 Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved October 26 2011 Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 Pg 11 Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 Pg 9 Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 Pg 59 Colorado State University Fact Book 2007 2008 Pg 62 Sherry Allison More Minorities in State Colleges But Totals Low The Denver Post 10 12 07 Further reading editHansen II J E 1977 Democracy s College in the Centennial State A History of Colorado State University Salt Lake City Utah Publisher s Press Hansen II J E 2007 Democracy s University A History of Colorado State University 1970 2003 Canada External links editColorado State University at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews Official website nbsp Colorado State Athletics website Colorado State Agricultural College Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Hunter s Danforth Chapel at CSU solarhousehistory com April 2 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Colorado State University amp oldid 1217153930, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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