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The Student News Site of Colorado State University

The Rocky Mountain Collegian

The Student News Site of Colorado State University

The Rocky Mountain Collegian

The Student News Site of Colorado State University

The Rocky Mountain Collegian

Opinion

A woman with long dirty blond hair smiling at the camera and wearing a black shirt.

McMillan: Goodbye, The Collegian, my babygirl

Adah McMillan, Executive Editor December 6, 2024

Editor’s Note: Traditionally, graduating seniors working at The Collegian are given the chance to write a farewell note at the end of their tenure at CSU. I came to Colorado State University with...

Illustration of a historical document wearing sunglasses, leaning on a pile of books.

Weishaar: History provides quirks that make it extremely interesting

Audrey Weishaar, Collegian Columnist December 6, 2024
History is awesome. I think it is, at least. Everyone has to learn history, right? We’ve all gone through the basics and learned about the Roman Empire and the American Civil War. And maybe something stuck out and caught your interest — or perhaps not. Perhaps you were uninterested or bored or didn’t see the point in learning about stuff that happened a few hundred years ago.
Green cover that reads, "The Rocky Mountain Collegian," with the date December 1891 at the bottom left corner.

LFTE: Dear Collegian, 133 years later

Allie Seibel, Editor in Chief December 5, 2024

In the basement of the Lory Student Center, a large framed photo hangs right in the entryway of the Rocky Mountain Student Media Corporation offices. It's hard to miss for anyone coming in, whether they...

A long line of people stand, waiting to give their opinions to someone sitting at an opinion desk.

Lopez: Opinion desks offer students a voice

Dominique Lopez, Opinion Editor December 4, 2024
As someone who has predominately worked on an opinion desk for just about seven years, I have always found it to be the best outlet for me to get out all of my frustrations and thoughts. And that even played a large role in my decision to go to Colorado State University in the first place.
A graphic of a newspaper with a coffee mug next to it.

Seymour: Print newspapers still deliver importance to communities

Charlotte Seymour, Collegian Columnist December 3, 2024
How many times have you sat in a recliner chair on a Sunday morning, sipping coffee while reading the newspaper? I am sure most people have recently found themselves in that situation — or a similar one — fewer than a dozen times.
Someone writing "Collegian" in fancy font with a quill on a newspaper.

Seriously: I time traveled to write for The Collegian’s 1st edition

Emma Souza, Collegian Columnist December 2, 2024
I awoke one morning to a quill in my hands that folded over my body the way a Victorian child would lie — with sickness and boredom but also a roguish Ozempic look.
A graphic of a man surrounded by two children running with a football and shouting "Go long!"

Seriously: Thanksgiving football game ends in injuries, several ER visits

Emma Souza, Collegian Columnist November 21, 2024
Thanksgiving isn’t just a holiday about gratitude. At its core, it’s a holiday about bloodshed. Long have we normalized — even memorialized — a tradition not meant for regular, everyday humans like us. We try to mimic the gods, these untouchables who dominate the upper echelons of their careers. We pretend our 55-year-old fathers can still throw touchdowns like Aaron Rodgers without throwing out their backs. We wash down our pain and torment with gravy and pumpkin pie afterward.
An illustration all in red of several forms of birth control, including a condom, an IUD and a packet of pills.

Seriously: What your birth control says about you

Astrid Thorn, Collegian Columnist November 19, 2024
Birth control is a hot topic, especially among female-bodied individuals in college. The beauty of pregnancy prevention lies in its customizability, with modern medicine giving us numerous great ways to keep the babies away. What a lot of people don’t realize is that birth control is almost like medical astrology — the kind of birth control you choose can reveal who you are to your core. 
Illustration of a pink background and a woman's hands, one hand resting on an open book and another holding a gavel.

Souza: Continuing to celebrate women’s joy is important

Emma Souza, Collegian Columnist November 19, 2024
To be completely transparent, the current state of our government — more specifically, the recent loss of Vice President Kamala Harris for president — has discouraged me. Pure joy is the last thing I’ve felt in the past couple of weeks, and I’ve gone through practically every emotion in the book. Each day since then has blurred into one long, continual mess of 4 p.m. sunsets and 10 p.m. bedtimes. I’ve logged nearly 20 hours on my Nintendo Switch.
An illustration of a man sitting in a classroom with a thought bubble of himself eating turkey, bread and mashed potatoes with his family.

Seymour: Fall break is around the corner to cure your homesickness

Charlotte Seymour, Collegian Columnist November 18, 2024
Picture this: It is a Sunday evening, and you are lying on the couch at home with your family. You just got home from catching up with your old friends, and a family-favorite movie plays on the TV while the aroma of a home-cooked dinner crowds your nose. Sounds great, right? Well, just remember that this image is almost a reality.
An illustration of a cell phone with the words CSU alert on the screen as a notification. Three exclamation marks and a ringing bell are on either side of the phone.

Stephenson: CSU emergency text alerts should be mandatory

Leah Stephenson, Collegian Columnist November 14, 2024
Emergency alerts for students at Colorado State University are not mandatory via text. However, keeping phone notifications optional can jeopardize student safety during times of danger. Making text alerts mandatory for all CSU students is the best way to keep everyone on campus safe.
A graphic of CAM the Ram speaking into a microphone to the left of the words, Collegian Columnist.

Waskey: It’s time to demand a Democratic Party that fights for change

Chloe Waskey, Collegian Columnist November 14, 2024
The results of the 2024 election have left me disappointed. I am disappointed that this nation chose the prospect of a good economy over human rights. I am disappointed that my generation voted for former President Donald Trump, proving that we are no different from the ones that came before us. I am saddened to picture the long-term impacts of another Trump presidency. But most of all, I am disappointed in the Democratic Party.
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