logo
More than 2,400 graduates participate in CSU's first campus-wide commencement in 27 years

More than 2,400 graduates participate in CSU's first campus-wide commencement in 27 years

Yahoo17-05-2025

More than 2,000 mortarboards were tossed into the air May 16 as the cannon fired at Colorado State University's Canvas Stadium.
Then, the 2,418 graduates began high-fiving and hugging one another as they posed for pictures and waved to family and friends in the stands.
'It was enjoyable,' said master's degree recipient Brendan Kelley, as he filed off the field afterward. 'I think it's important to recognize everyone at CSU that graduates. I think it's really fun to have everyone together.'
That was the big draw for many of the participants. Although CSU still held its usual recognition ceremonies by college and major – there are 37 scheduled from May 15-18 – where individual students' names were read as they walked across the stage.
The university-wide ceremony at Canvas Stadium, with about 12,000 family members and friends in the stands in a ticketed-only event, gave those same graduates the chance to celebrate en masse. Nearly half of the 5,000 graduates eligible to participate in the all-campus event chose to do so. Officials delayed the start by about 10 minutes because of traffic delays that were slowing guests' arrival.
More: Members of von Trapp family, popularized in the 'The Sound of Music,' visit Fort Collins
'I say I'm proud to be a CSU Ram,' they chanted at the urging of the featured speaker, Eugene Daniels, a former CSU football player and MSNBC's senior Washington correspondent. They all held up their hands, clinching their middle fingers tight while curling the outer ones to form the CSU Rams' horn symbol popularized at the school's sporting events, when Vice Provost Michelle Stanley asked them to as she took a selfie from the stage.
There were loud cheers at multiple points throughout the 80-minute ceremony, creating the same kind of game-day atmosphere inside the on campus-stadium that opened in 2017 that there had been outside in the hours leading up to it. It was sunny and warm, but not too hot. A beautiful spring day in Fort Collins, several graduates said.
"It's fun to see everyone in one place and see how big our school actually is," said Rachel Ross, who was receiving a bachelor's degree in theater. "The weather's nice, and I'm excited to be here."
CSU hadn't held a university-wide commencement ceremony since the spring of 1998, when graduates gathered at the former Hughes Stadium, 3 miles west of campus below Horsetooth Reservoir.
Students, wearing robes in black, green and gold – the green and gold were to recognize those graduating with honors – along with hoods and stoles of various colors were walking around campus with friends and family a good two hours before their scheduled 4 p.m. processional into the stadium. International students, many of them receiving master's and doctorate degrees, also wore stoles with the colors of their national flags.
Cesar Reyes was standing in the shade with his wife, Fernanda Luna, before getting in line with the other graduates for the processional. He was wearing a pink hood, as a master's degree recipient in music, and a stole with an orange, white and green stripe, like the flag of his native Mexico.
'This is the first graduation event I have ever attended, because when I graduated from the conservatory in Morelia (Mexico, where he earned his bachelor's degree), they don't do such big things,' said Reyes, a violinist who had to leave early to get to a dress rehearsal later that night with the Boulder Symphony.
CSU President Amy Parsons spoke of the important role journalists occupy in a democracy while introducing Daniels, who earned his bachelor's degree in journalism and technical communication in 2012. And Daniels spoke of the difficulties he had breaking into TV broadcasting as a man who is gay and Black, noting that he was able to persevere and now has his own weekly network TV show on politics. And he was recently elected, by his peers, as president of the White House Correspondents' Association.
'So, remember, Class of 2025, you are not the next generation of leaders starting at some vague point in the future; you're leadership starts now,' Daniels said. 'You are the ones who have the power to hurt or to help. You are going to take the reins of this world, and you will be guiding us. The question is where will we go together?'
Loud cheers also went up when Kim Jordan, co-founder of New Belgium Brewing and a member of the CSU System Board of Governors for eight years, received an honorary doctorate of Humane Letters.
And toward the end of the ceremony when Kristi Bohlender, CSU's senior associate vice president for advancement and executive director of the alumni association, reminded the graduates that they were the newest members of a worldwide CSU alumni base of more than 265,000 members.
A few minutes later, they flipped the tassels on their mortarboards in the customary fashion of graduation ceremonies. And most then tossed those mortarboards high into the air as the historic 'Comatose' cannon was fired.
They danced as the CSU fight song was played, then filed out of the stadium as 'Don't You Forget About Me' by Simple Minds played on the public address system.
'It's really exciting that we're all doing this together with our friends who have other majors,' said Zander Cohn, who was graduating with a bachelor's degree in health and exercise science.
Reporter Kelly Lyell covers education, breaking news, some sports and other topics of interest for the Coloradoan. Contact him at kellylyell@coloradoan.com, x.com/KellyLyell, threads.net/KellyLyell and facebook.com/KellyLyell.news.
This article originally appeared on Fort Collins Coloradoan: More than 2,400 CSU graduates celebrate in university-wide ceremony

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bookclub opens new Black-, woman-, and queer-owned music venue in old Elbo Room building
Bookclub opens new Black-, woman-, and queer-owned music venue in old Elbo Room building

CBS News

time22 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Bookclub opens new Black-, woman-, and queer-owned music venue in old Elbo Room building

New venue, same legacy as Bookclub opens new concert space in old Elbo Room building New venue, same legacy as Bookclub opens new concert space in old Elbo Room building New venue, same legacy as Bookclub opens new concert space in old Elbo Room building Every week, bands play in venues across Chicago, but a new concert space in Lakeview is different than most. Bookclub is proudly Black-, queer- and woman-owned. "It is not a traditional stage shape. We do not have a flat stage, but instead – especially being a queer-owned venue – we built a Lady Gaga catwalk," co-owner Nick Heineman said. The music and art space is located at the six-corner intersection of Lincoln, Lakewood, and George, in the building that once housed Elbo Room, which closed in 2019 after 30 years in Lakeview. "You definitely feel the energy of 30 years of musical performance down here. It's kind of a weird feeling," Heineman said. Bookclub's owners said it's the same, but different. "She definitely has the same spirit, and we have not changed anything structurally. We just are, you know, little aesthetic updates, changes," co-owner Maren Rosenberg said. "You definitely feel the presence of all the live music that came before us," co-owner Cam Stacey said. Bookclub dates back to 2021, when Stacey and co-owner Kevante "K.O." Weakley started an informal performance space near Irving Park Road and Broadway. "We sort of found ourselves hitting a plateau in terms of the types of artists we can service, the types of shows that we do, and the type of programming that we could put on," Weakley said. They realized the old Elbo Room was available, and started moving in last year. Shows at the new Bookclub started in January. There are now several owners, including a woman and members of the Black and queer communities. "Being owned by the types of people who we are means that we bring our unique perspectives, and that we're also going to be sensitive to and inclusive of all of those people," Rosenberg said. "It is sort of our job to just make sure that … they feel seen, they feel welcome," Weakley said. "It's paramount that you know that the place is safe, and there are people who are not only going to be looking out for your safety, but enforce a positive peace in the place that can allow you to be truly singular and be yourself," Stacey said. The owners said losing yourself in a show is what Bookclub is all about. "We're all here for the same reason. We love music. We love performance," Rosenberg said. "Generations pass, but music never fades," Heineman said. Bookclub features an innovative design. The stage is in the basement, and the main floor has a bar with a large screen showing the performance. So you can take a break and still be part of the show.

Heading into US Open, McIlroy still looking for motivation after historic Masters win
Heading into US Open, McIlroy still looking for motivation after historic Masters win

Washington Post

time24 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Heading into US Open, McIlroy still looking for motivation after historic Masters win

OAKMONT, Pa. — Ever since Rory McIlroy checked the biggest box off his impressive golf to-do list, all he wanted was to enjoy it. Very quickly, he has discovered how harsh this game can be with his foot off the gas. Heading into the U.S. Open this week, McIlroy has been disabused of any notion that life once he completed the career Grand Slam with that win at the Masters in April would be smooth sailing. 'I think it's trying to have a little bit of amnesia and forget about what happened,' McIlroy said Tuesday when asked about the difficulties he has faced — on the golf course, at least — since donning the green jacket. 'Then, just trying to find the motivation to go back out there and work as hard as I've been working.' That edge has been tough to rediscover, buried somewhere beneath the satisfaction of finally conquering Augusta National to become only the sixth player to win all four majors in his career. He has celebrated by taking more trips, playing more tennis, hanging out at home and 'basically saying 'no' to every request that comes in.' His forays back to his day job — rough. McIlroy arrived at the PGA Championship a month after the Masters only to learn that the driver he'd been using for more than a year had been deemed nonconforming in a routine test. He hit only 46.4% of the fairways that week, tying him for 68th out of 74 players in that statistic who played four rounds. Those struggles with the new driver made him a nonfactor and he finished tied for 47th. 'It wasn't a big deal for Scottie, so it shouldn't have been a big deal for me,' McIlroy said, noting Scottie Scheffler received the same news about his own driver that week but went on to win the tournament . That the normally closely held news of McIlroy's illegal driver leaked to the media and Scheffler's did not annoyed McIlroy , and he said last week that was why he didn't speak to the media after all four rounds at Quail Hollow. That issue appears to be behind him. The driver? He says he's figured it out — 'I mean, come out and watch me hit balls, and you'll see,' he said — which means the answer must have come during his weekend off after rounds of 71-78 at the Canadian Open last week left him far short of making the cut. The 78 matched the second-worst score he's ever shot in a PGA Tour event. The next test starts Thursday at a brutal, brutish Oakmont course that McIlroy said might be playing easier than the last time he was here. No, he wasn't talking about 2016, when he missed the first of three straight U.S. Open cuts, but rather, last Monday, when he needed to go birdie-birdie down the finish to shoot 81 in a practice round. 'It didn't feel like I played that bad,' McIlroy said. 'It's much more benign right now than it was that Monday. They had the pins in dicey locations, and greens were running at 15 1/2 (compared to an estimated 14 1/2 for the tournament). It was nearly impossible. But yeah, this morning, it was a little softer.' Speaking of soft courses, McIlroy said he bristled at the reputation that began developing after his first major title, in 2011, when he demolished a rain-dampened Congressional with a U.S. Open-record score of 268 that still stands. His other majors — at Valhalla, Kiawah and Royal Liverpool — were also on soft courses. All that, plus his inability to capture the Masters, led critics to label him a player who couldn't conquer firm and fast. 'I didn't like that reputation because I felt like I was better than that reputation, so that's ego driven in some way,' McIlroy said. He tailored his game to handle the toughest conditions the majors can offer. He has runner-up finishes at the last two U.S. Opens as proof that project worked. But golf always presents new challenges. These days, McIlroy's is whether he can find that kind of fire — this week, next month, next year or beyond — now that he had made it over his biggest hump at the Masters. He served up one clue of where his head is when asked what his plan for the next five years might be. 'I don't have one. I have no idea,' he said. 'I'm sort of just taking it tournament by tournament at this point.' ___ AP golf:

49ers' Trent Williams on his future: ‘Not going to retire with something left in the tank'
49ers' Trent Williams on his future: ‘Not going to retire with something left in the tank'

New York Times

time25 minutes ago

  • New York Times

49ers' Trent Williams on his future: ‘Not going to retire with something left in the tank'

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Trent Williams has seen it all as he gets ready for his 16th NFL season, but he is admittedly new to the whole voluntary organized team activity thing he's participated in this offseason. The San Francisco 49ers' left tackle has been at team headquarters for a couple of weeks now, including Tuesday's start of the team's two-day mandatory minicamp. While he said he doesn't regret missing every non-mandatory session the past 10 years, he is very excited to have been around more this offseason. Advertisement 'You wouldn't think that this is a team that went 6-11 last year,' Williams said Tuesday. 'The confidence, the way the kids are flying around. … The new draft class to me looks like it has several steals, several great picks that are going to contribute. 'I was really pleased to see how the confidence and how the atmosphere is coming back and kind of being around the guys for the first time.' Wednesday's session is the last practice before the team parts ways until training camp in six weeks. Williams, who turns 37 next month, had mentioned last year that he would like to play until he is 40 years old, and pooh-poohed any talk of retirement. 'I didn't give it a lot of thought (this offseason), honestly,' Williams said. 'I just feel like I do myself and my teammates a disservice if I'm looking towards the end. I'm paid and people count on me to be here now and we've got goals and aspirations as a team. I just don't think putting brain power towards that helps us get to where we want to go. 'You know, when it happens, it happens. I feel like I'll know. One day I should know when it's getting (to be) that time and then I'll do the responsible thing and let them know early enough so that they can make the adjustments needed … (but) I'm definitely not going to retire with something left in the tank.' Williams said his ankle injury, which caused him to miss seven games last season, was completely healed by February. And 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan said while he was thrilled Williams came to work early this year, the team will manage his workload. 'With age and the wear and tear and stuff, we just try to keep (his) legs fresher and stuff,' Shanahan said. 'I'll be shocked if we put him out there (Wednesday). He'll be good to go for (training) camp. … He's healthy and right where he needs to be.' Advertisement And he has always been a hard worker, even when he was training on his own in the offseason and not always at the facility. A player has to work year-round to be able to earn playing in 188 career games. 'I love Trent being around so people can see how much he does care about football, how much he does work at football,' Shanahan said. 'It's cool at his age and where he is at in his career for people to still see what he has to do to get ready. He has to do it for himself more than anything, but anytime you have the kind of credibility that someone like Trent has earned, anytime someone gets to watch him do that and watch what he puts into it will always help other people.' And it might help him earn another redo on his contract. While Williams' deal runs through 2026, only this next season is guaranteed at $21.1 million. Williams said that 'doesn't concern' him. 'I'm taking everything one year at a time,' Williams said. 'I feel like if my play warrants a new year or two on a deal or whatever, then I'm here for it. If not, then you know it'd be time to sail on into the sunset.' Williams did have to wave goodbye to some of his favorite teammates this offseason, as players like Dre Greenlaw, Talanoa Hufanga, Aaron Banks and Charvarius Ward, among others, left for new teams, while Javon Hargrave and Leonard Floyd were cut and Deebo Samuel and Jordan Mason were traded. 'It's always tough,' Williams said, 'but it's my 16th year, so I understand how the business goes. Those guys are family, so you wanna see the best thing happen to them that puts them in the best situation. All of those guys, I am really, really happy for them. I think that they're really blessed. Like (Aaron) Banks getting compensated, Jaylon Moore getting compensated. It's a blessing that doesn't come often in this league. Advertisement 'I think Deebo found a home that he is going to flourish in.' Williams said he will miss those guys in the locker room and on the field, but is excited about one newcomer, former Philadelphia Eagles pass rusher Bryce Huff. 'He's gonna bring that speed demon off the edge, that guy that's gonna require a running back or a chip (blocker) opposite of Nick (Bosa),' Williams said. 'He adds that Dee Ford effect that they had in 2019 that took them to the Super Bowl. One of the reasons we had a really, really good defense for those couple years is having that guy who can actually make that quarterback step up by getting a good jump off the ball and bending the edge.' Williams also was happy to shake hands with the new Brock Purdy after the quarterback signed his new $265 million contract. 'He's one of the richest people I've ever met in person,' Williams, smiling, said. 'For me, it's just super, super fulfilling just to watch a guy like Brock. You talk about a Cinderella story, and this is the epitome of that, from making a few hundred thousand a year to making 50 million a year is astronomical. … And it couldn't have happened to a better guy.' More importantly, Williams said Purdy is 'the' guy. 'He is the guy for this franchise,' Williams said. 'This is just the tip of the iceberg. He's gonna get another contract. He's going to win a lot of football games. He's that good of a player. So super, super happy to see that happen for him. I love him like a brother, you know, so I couldn't be any happier.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store