Photo gallery: Scenes from fall commencement ceremonies
Colorado State University honored more than 2,300 graduates at its fall commencement ceremonies held Dec. 16-17.
Colorado State University honored more than 2,300 graduates at its fall commencement ceremonies held Dec. 16-17.
The Colorado State University Board of Governors today confirmed Amy Parsons as the 16th president of CSU – the CSU System’s flagship campus located in Fort Collins – following a highly competitive, nationwide five-month search process.
The Class of 2022 represent the very best of CSU, showing courage in the face of adversity in the pursuit of their degrees. Meet just a few of the outstanding students who are graduating this fall.
The University is set to honor the 2,300-plus students who have navigated the challenges of 2020 and 2021 to earn degrees.
CSU and Fort Collins will celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, Jan. 16, with a community march as well as a keynote by poet and political activist JC Futrell — known by the stage name as Panama Soweto.
SOURCE recently sat down with Amy Parsons to get to know the presidential finalist a bit better.
A federal grant and matching funds valued at $1.6 million to CSU STRATA opens new opportunities to commercialize university-grown startup technology companies under a program called Lab to Life, or L2L.
The 31-member Search Advisory Committee was made up of people who represented a variety of campus and community stakeholder groups including tenured and non-tenure-track faculty, staff, undergraduate and graduate students, alumni, the agricultural community, community and business leaders, as well as members of the CSU System Board of Governors.
Amy Parsons – CEO of a global e-commerce company based in Denver, longtime Colorado State University leader, and former executive vice chancellor for the CSU System – has been named as the finalist in the search for the 16th president of Colorado State University in Fort Collins.
Privacy. Surveillance. Influence. Medical expert Matthew DeCamp and Colorado State University faculty explored the constellation of issues surrounding artificial intelligence during the annual Provost’s Ethics Colloquium this week.