CSU In The News Archive

Unions cash in bargaining chip in rare joint effort with bosses

Outlet:

October 03, 2008

“They got some money. They got some visibility. They got to look like adults,” said Ray Hogler, management professor at Colorado State University. “They rightly perceived that what they proposed was a substantial and risky change in the employment- law …

Colorado Renewable Energy Profile

Outlet:

October 02, 2008

“Under the auspices of the Colorado General Assembly, Colorado’s Research Collaboratory has partnered with National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the University of Colorado, Colorado State University, and the Colorado School of Mines. In addition, the state is fortunate to enjoy a …

Mutually assured destruction

Outlet:

October 01, 2008

“If they all passed, it’d be a disaster,” said Ray Hogler, management professor at Colorado State University. “Every one of those is a policy issue that’s being promoted through the ballot rather than through the legislature, and that’s a bad …

Hurricane Experts Predict Three Big Storms for October

Outlet:

October 01, 2008

It’s going to be a stormy month. That’s according to the forecast issued Wednesday by Philip Klotzbach and William Gray, longtime Atlantic hurricane trackers based at Colorado State University.

Plan propels energy talk

Outlet:

October 01, 2008

Jones and other speakers cited Fort Collins-based ventures such as Solix Biofuels, a firm working to commercialize fuel production from algae; engine and power-systems developer Woodward Governor; nonprofit energy-technology firm Envirofit; and Colorado State University’s Engines & Energy Conversion Laboratory.

U.S. Energy Blueprint Strategy Announced At CSU

Outlet:

October 01, 2008

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says it has a new non-partisan strategy for the country’s energy resources. The organization unveiled the plan in Fort Collins because of energy research at Colorado State University.

US forecaster sees 3 Atlantic cyclones in October

Outlet:

October 01, 2008

Warm sea water and low surface pressures will help spawn three new Atlantic-Caribbean tropical storms in October and two will become hurricanes, the Colorado State University hurricane research team predicted on Wednesday.