Research and education at the CSU Center at Todos Santos
Less than two years since inception, the CSU Center at Todos Santos has become a unique education education and research site for CSU professors and students. ,
Less than two years since inception, the CSU Center at Todos Santos has become a unique education education and research site for CSU professors and students. ,
On Friday and Saturday, CSU hosted winter commencement ceremonies to recognize 1,418 undergraduate and 439 graduate students, as well as four Army and one Air Force ROTC Commissionees.
A group of Colorado State University students recently completed an outreach project that simultaneously gave them real-world experience and benefited youth in a diverse town on the eastern plains.
A Colorado State University team of historians is working to preserve and spread the stories of Japanese-Americans who were detained in New Mexico confinement camps during the World War II era.
A Colorado State University faculty member is poring over 18th-century newspapers for a book and online repository focused on accounts of slavery from colonial America.
Recovery from soccer injury gave player opportunity to reflect on life and identity.
Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale might be best known and remembered for a specific stage direction: “exit, pursued by a bear.”
The woman who leads the popular Halo video game franchise says her sports background not only got her into gaming, but helped level the playing field in a traditionally male-dominated field that she wants more women to enter.
The School of Music, Theatre and Dance at Colorado State University will present the annual Holiday Spectacular with concerts celebrating “Goodwill to All.”
The CSU Marching Band once again will lead the way when the 41st annual 9News Parade of Lights winds its way through downtown Denver.
The two-night celebration is set for Dec. 4-5, with the Ram marching band, color guard and Golden Poms leading the parade at 8 p.m. Friday. (Saturday’s parade begins at 6 p.m.) The two-mile parade begins at the Denver Civic Center and concludes at the corner of 14th Street and Glenarm Place.
Once again, CSU is the only collegiate marching band participating in the parade, which includes floats, balloons and dozens of holiday characters. CSU’s trombone section will perform its signature “No. 5” during the parade. Grandstand tickets are available at DenverParadeofLights.com.
“One of the goals of the CSU Marching Band is to entertain our audiences, wherever they are. The Parade of Lights is a great chance for us to connect with a huge crowd that we might not otherwise see, and to be part of a wonderful holiday tradition in Denver,” said Richard Frey, the band’s director. “Simply put, it’s a fun way to kick off the holiday season and bring a little musical joy to people from all over Denver and throughout Colorado.”
9News will broadcast the parade from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday.
Free parade preview Thursday in Fort Collins
If you can’t make it to Denver but still want to see the band in person, a parade preview is set for 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 3. The band – adorned in holiday lights – will march around the University Center for the Arts. The event is free and open to the public, and is followed by a reception featuring hot drinks and cookies in the UCA lobby.
Make a night of it and stay for the annual Holiday Spectacular Concert supporting music scholarships. Tickets for the Spectacular can be purchased at CSUArtsTickets.com.