URMC V124no32 20150924.Pdf (8.673Mb)

URMC V124no32 20150924.Pdf (8.673Mb)

Thursday, September 24, 2015 A&E NEWS SPORTS Volume 124, No. 32 • collegian.com Roastin’ with Top 5 highest Joe Hansley: Rick Explore paid CSU not the average the smooth, employees receiver CSU’s earthy taste of Sports employees second leading receiver Kush Badder out-earn the might not look the concentrate majority of part but the with Rick other faculty by results speak Cookson startling amounts for themselves PAGE 14 PAGE 3 PAGE 10 THE STRIP Other magical apps that we wish existed: DroneGrub: It’s an app that has a drone bring you food anywhere. #StepItUpOrderUp #NoTips EasyNotes: It’s an app that lets you know when you should care in class. Bullsh*tGenerator: PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY AUSTIN SIMPSON COLLEGIAN Type in your essay prompt, and let the Bullsh*tGener- ator do the rest. Trebel app customizes * If any of these apps are created, New music app oers unlimited the Collegian claims 23 percent in roy- downloads and access through alties. tunes to you free, ad-based point system PAGE 6 2 Thursday, September 24, 2015 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian collegian.com FORT COLLINS FOCUS OFF THE OVAL Pope Francis praises President Obama on climate change action at White House Wednesday Greeted by thousands at the White House, Pope Francis spoke about climate change during his first visit to the United States Wednes- day. Pope Francis praised President Obama for his actions in developing a plan to combat climate change as the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris nears this December. This conference will be the world’s first substantive climate agreement in history. “I find it encouraging that you are proposing an initiative for reducing air pollution,” Francis said. “Accepting the urgency, it seems clear to me also that climate change is a problem Aaron Patterson, a CSU alumnus, perched on a rocky outcrop in the mountains of west Fort Collins, takes in the sights on a chilly Colorado morn- which can no longer be left to ing. PHOTO BY KEVIN OLSON COLLEGIAN a future generation.” The Pope spent the ma- jority of his speech discussing the issue of climate change, and he deemed this moment KCSU SCHEDULE critical in history. Nisty Tharp Colorado State Univer- DJ Profile sity was named one of the THURSDAY most important universities LISTEN ONLINE AT KCSUFM.COM for President Obama to hear from prior to negotiating KCSU DJ Nisty Tharp is very people focused. 7:00 AM J. Schway: Rise ‘n Jive climate change in Paris, The senior art and interdisciplinary liberal arts major according to the Climate wants her 1 to 3 p.m. Thursday show to be all about her listen- Reality Project. ers. Through America’s 9:00 AM “My show is called ‘Nisty’s Total Request Show,’” Tharp Squid: Squid Pro Quo Clean Power Plan, President said. “I try to get a lot of people to request things. I don’t really Obama is addressing carbon have a theme, because it is really about what the listeners DLauren: Motiva- pollution standards for 11:00 AM want.” tion Station power plants, a first in United As a result, Tharp features a variety of music. States history. The Clean “I got from pop to 70s punk to classic rock to soul,” Tharp DJ Nisty: Dj Nisty’ Power Plan sets standards to said. “Mine is really about the listeners.” 1:00 PM reduce carbon emissions by The Colorado native says she enjoys the KCSU communi- total request show 32 percent from 2005 levels ty as well. by 2030. DJ Mimi: The Weekly “You meet a lot of people at the station — very talented 3:00 PM individuals and bands,” Tharp said. “I get to go to a lot of con- Sound with Mimi Collegian News Edi- certs for free and meet people there. It’s awesome.” tor Christina Vessa can be 5:00 PM Ramblers (sports) reached online at news@ Collegian A&E Editor Hannah Ditzenberger can be collegian.com or on Twitter @ reached at [email protected] or on Twitter at ChrissyVessa. @h_ditzenberger. Captain Jack: 7:00 PM Jukebox Time Machine Follow Follow Follow 9:00 PM Demo @CollegianC CSU Collegian collegiancentral on Twitter on Snapchat on Instagram Lory Student Center Box 13 Fort Collins, CO 80523 EDITORIAL STAFF | 970-491-7513 Haleigh McGill | Opinion Editor Katie Schmidt | Social Media Editor This publication is not an official publication of Colorado [email protected] [email protected] State University, but is published by an independent corporation Skyler Leonard | Executive Editor Emmett McCarthy | Sports Editor Sarah Papa | Copy Chief using the name ‘The Rocky Mountain Collegian’ pursuant to [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] a license granted by CSU. The Rocky Mountain Collegian is a Hannah Ditzenberger | A&E Editor 6,500-circulation student-run newspaper intended as a public Caitlin Curley | Digital Managing Editor ADVISING STAFF [email protected] forum. It publishes five days a week during the regular fall and [email protected] Kim Blumhardt | Advertising Manager spring semesters. During the last eight weeks of summer Colle- Rick Cookson | Print Managing Editor Keegan Pope | Enterprise Editor gian distribution drops to 3,500 and is published weekly. During [email protected] [email protected] KEY PHONE NUMBERS the first four weeks of summer the Collegian does not publish. Christina Vessa | News Editor Kate Knapp | Design Editor Distribution | 970-491-1146 Corrections may be submitted to the editor in chief and [email protected] [email protected] Classifieds | 970-491-1683 will be printed as necessary on page two. The Collegian is a Ellie Mulder | News Editor Abbie Parr | Photo Editor Display Advertising | 970-491-7467 complimentary publication for the Fort Collins community. The [email protected] first copy is free. Additional copies are 25 cents each. Letters to [email protected] or 970-491-6834 the editor should be sent to [email protected]. N NEWS Thursday, September 24, 2015 • Page 3 Athletics employees top list of CSU’s highest paid By Julia Rentsch “In his first year at the helm, @julia_rentsch Eustachy led the Rams to argu- ably the best season in school Athletic coaches once again history, guiding the squad to a top the list of highest paid Colo- program-best 26-9 record, and an rado State University employees, NCAA Tournament victory over confirmed by a report released the Missouri Tigers before bow- Sept. 11. ing out against eventual national Mike Bobo, head football champion Louisville,” Eustachy’s coach, is in his first season at CSU online bio says. and makes top dollar by a large A distant third is President margin: $1,350,000 annually. Tony Frank, who makes $575,000. “Colorado State University He was appointed in 2008 and re- President Tony Frank announced ceived the title of Chancellor of the the appointment of Mike Bobo as Colorado State University System head coach of the Rams’ football on June 1, 2015. program on Dec. 23, 2014,” his Rounding out the top five are online bio says. “Bobo is the 22nd an athletics assistant coach whose head coach in the history of the name is undisclosed and a member program, and came to Fort Collins of the executive leadership, also from the University of Georgia, undisclosed. They make $500,000 where had spent the previous 14 and $342,000 per year, respective- seasons, including the last eight as ly. his alma mater’s oensive coordi- According to the CSU employ- nator.” ee roster, over 60 administrators Larry Eustachy, head men’s and faculty members make at least basketball coach, comes in second, $200,000 annually. earning $946,764 a year. Eustachy Julia Rentsch can be reached at is in his fourth year at CSU. [email protected]. ILLUSTRATION BY MARIAH WENZEK COLLEGIAN O OPINION Thursday, September 24, 2015 • Page 4 NOPE Not our story, not DOPE The guy who brought a fake gun into Free Jimmy John’s sandwiches in the the library. This isn’t a war reenact- library. Like sh*t, man, is it Christ- our Stonewall ment, we’re studying. mas?! read thus far to be incredibly problematic. Kendall The first trailer for the film The litterbugs. Stop littering. And if Fast police response to the library McElhaney about the 1969 Stonewall Riots you litter this paper, you’ll be cursed. incident. Makin’ us feel all safe and seemingly undermines the #CollegianCurse whatnot. @kendallaftrdark history and true players who should be credited for launch- ing the modern movement for Last Sunday, Viola Davis LGBTQ+ rights. The film pres- … You know, it’s a pretty okay day so Fast sandwich response to starving became the first African-Amer- ents a fictionalized character: those two Nopes will suffice. students. On average, every CSU ican woman ever to win Best a white, cisgender - meaning #TodayWasAGoodDay student is less than 3 feet from a sandwich Actress in a Drama Series. The his sexual anatomy and his at all times. #CollegianStatistics “How to Get Away with Mur- gender identity coincide - man der” actress took her time to named Danny, played by War pay tribute to Harriet Tubman, Horse star Jeremy Irvine, as along with dropping some the movie’s main protagonist. serious truth on the Hollywood Almost immediately after the Misuse of technology is making us selfish Elites and audiences watch- trailer dropped, folks across ing at home. Davis called out the Queer spectrum, as well and more importantly, the Psychologist Sherry the lack of representation for as allies and activists, began cost of it. Turkle explained it perfectly, people of color in television, as taking issue with the film and Zara Don’t get me wrong, I’m and more eloquently, in a TED well as in the greater totality of the deceptive “whitewashing” DeGroot all for being present on social Talk in 2012.

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