News
Heating to go back online in rec center
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Hoping to ward off a cold winter, CSU's recreation center will have its heating system back online before the end of the week, Campus Recreation Director Dave Frock said. The system has not been running since April because the facility was making a switch from steam to natural gas power, prompting employees to wear long pants and sometimes run space heaters under their desks, in addition to causing the center to close early homecoming weekend.
Joe the Plumber stumps in Old Town
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Washington Park played host to one of the most politicized figures in the United States Tuesday during a political rally for an ultraconservative organization that aims to reduce the power of the federal government. Samuel Wurtzelbacher -- known across the country as Joe the Plumber -- told one of the largest crowds the Tea Party of Fort Collins has seen recently that the far-reaching influence of the federal government is ruining the fundamental values of American society.
Non-profit helps residents with disabilities
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It's 6:30 a.m., and Patty Ardueser's awake, eating pizza for breakfast before another day of work. She usually saves her paychecks, but like any woman, she likes to splurge on a new pair of shoes every now and then. She loves a good plate of spaghetti while watching the newest episode of "Deal or No Deal.
CSU orgs, students honor the deceased
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As Rich Salas, assistant director of CSU's El Centro, strummed a song on his guitar he said: "Think of someone in your life that has passed, and think about the good things they have left. That's where I think we get our strength from." As lyrical music filled the air, people in the Lory Student Center's Grey Rock Room remembered their late loved ones.
Construction to begin on I-25 and U.S. 34 interchange
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Officials broke ground on improvements to the notoriously dangerous Interstate 25 and U.S. Highway 34 cloverleaf interchange at the Promenade Shops at Centerra near Loveland Tuesday as part of the Interim I-25/U.S Highway 34 Interchange Project. The project, which has a price tag of $8.
Lakota to reveal effects of federal policy on Native Americans
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BREAKOUT INFORMATION!!!! What: Walter Littlemoon, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe and his wife, Jane Ridgway, will describe the impact federal Indian policies have had on their lives and family history. Littlemoon will present information from his memoir, "They Call Me Uncivilized, The Memoir of an Everyday Lakota Man from Wounded Knee.
Spring Break



