Why Greeley for a presidential visit?
Outlet:
Political Science Professor John Straayer of Colorado State University said Friday that the spending, combined with the Bush visit, are strong indicators of Republican concern.
Political Science Professor John Straayer of Colorado State University said Friday that the spending, combined with the Bush visit, are strong indicators of Republican concern.
“This is the sort of thing that’s more likely to have people scratch their heads and say what’s this all about? That’s not the same thing as saying, ‘I’m going to flip my vote,’ ” said John Straayer, political science …
This DNA was found “even in treated drinking water,” researcher Amy Pruden, an environmental engineer at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, told LiveScience.
John Straayer, a Colorado State University political science professor, said he’s not sure how the visit will affect the election.
Such ads are more and more the norm in the final days of elections, particularly high-stakes ones such as the Webb-Allen race, says John Straayer, professor of political science at Colorado State University.
For Armelia Hughes, listening to Colorado State University students talk about the admissions process, classes and campus life was a bit more meaningful that getting that information from other people.
Colorado State University’s Don Estep, a professor in the mathematics and statistics departments, was recently awarded a $500,000 grant from U.S. Department of Energy, to provide mathematical tools to enable whole-device modeling for the U.S. fusion program.
Analysts and activists say the Democratic rise has been building quietly but steadily. Robert Duffy, a political science professor at Colorado State University, said he thought Republicans began losing the public’s confidence after 2002, when the General Assembly was not …
“I think both sides have polls we don’t know much about,” said John Straayer, a political science professor at Colorado State University.
They were miners, servants and laborers whose unmarked graves behind the state mental institution in Pueblo lay unnoticed for a century after their deaths. One Colorado State University professor is now trying to get their stories out.