News
CSU hires new 'wine guy'
Professor will educate students about wine making
By
For Stephen Menke, CSU's new "wine guy," working with wineries across Colorado and teaching students about wine-making is the perfect job. Menke, whose official title is associate professor of Enology in the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, began working for CSU University on Feb.
Congress endorses tax hikes
By
By ANDREW TAYLOR The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Democrats in both House and Senate pressed ahead with budget plans that would saddle millions of Americans with higher tax bills in three years by allowing some or all of President Bush's reductions to die after he leaves office.
Donna Rouner encourages CSU to celebrate diversity
By
When Donna Rouner began her career as a journalist at the Daily Iowan, the University of Iowa student newspaper, in the 1960s, she was enamored with the profession because she viewed it as one accepting of diversity. But when she found out that she couldn't join the Society of Professional Journalists, then known as Sigma Delta Chi, because of her gender, some of the romanticism died.
'Shades' brings diversity to light
By
Somebody shouted, "They're here" as the hall outside the Pikes Peak Sunken Lounge filled with students and staff from South Carolina State University. Shades of Promise, an effort to understand and learn about diversity, started last night with a "meet and greet" banquet bringing together 17 students from CSU's President's Leadership Program and 19 student leaders from South Carolina State University (SCSU.
Dance it forward
By
It took a few steps back and forth across the globe for Lotus Blossom, a 24-year-old music therapy graduate student, to realize she needed a new title. Born in Colorado Springs, Blossom was raised in Germany until the age of eight, after which she returned to the plains of the Rocky Mountains.
Business school ranked 73rd out of 100
On any given weeknight at Rockwell Hall, triads and quartets of business students crowd the computer lab, hammering away at group projects for hours. Students and faculty of the business college say hands-on projects and hard work help mobilize recognition for the department.
Spring Break



