Category: "coronavirus"
CSU engineers will design medical-grade, mass-producible masks for COVID-19 response
They've received a grant from the Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute under the COVID-19-Related Research Pilot program.
Extension, task force helping farmers’ markets, food producers adjust to new COVID realities
With COVID-19 presenting new realities as the season begins, Colorado State University Extension and food systems experts are offering support to market managers and producers as they implement new ways of doing business.
CSU Extension launches victory gardens for the age of COVID-19 with Grow & Give
Learn more about Grow & Give, a modern-day Victory Garden project designed to encourage Coloradans to grow vegetable gardens and plant extra to share with local food banks and community members in need.
Dancing in the Pandemic
Without access to the tools of the trade during COVID-19, CSU Dance students and faculty are coming up with new ways to dance, deliver curriculum, interact with students, and accomplish semester-end assignments.
Morgan Library says Ask Us, and student workers have the answers
On ordinary days, student workers are a reliable source of knowledge for patrons at the Morgan Library Help Desk. On these extraordinary days, they are indispensable.
Dear COVID-19: A personal note from Chancellor Tony Frank
You’ve made your mark in our history books – you will be remembered – but what’s more important to me is what you can’t do.
Why humans are howling every night, and why wildlife is joining in
As day-to-day interactions have been disrupted by COVID-19, communal howling offers a way to express both joy and grief – and can include coyotes.
Minimizing transmission: Testing asymptomatic healthcare workers to find silent COVID-19 carriers
Over the last two months, a team at CSU tested samples from 462 healthcare workers in Colorado.
Design and Merchandising students ‘transcend’ circumstances to hold CSU Fashion Show virtually
The theme of this year's Fashion Show was “Transcend,” and it turned out to be a more appropriate title than any of the students could have originally imagined.