Monday, February 10, 2020
COLLEGIAN.COM
Vol. 129, No. 41
Softball starts season off with success CSU ends weekend with 4-1 record, will head to Puerto Vallarta College Challenge next week
By Savvy Rafkin @SavvyCollegian
Members of the United Women of Color pose for a photo with winner Aishat Akolade, center, after the annual Black History Month Hair Show in the Lory Student Center Theatre Feb. 9. PHOTO BY MATT TACKETT THE COLLEGIAN
Pride in plaits at Hair Show United Women of Color celebrate cultural identity By Emily Pisqui @emilypisq15
In a country where women of color regularly experience objectification, appropriation and biased dress codes based on European beauty standards, events like the United Women of Color Hair Show are critical for appreciating Black culture and understanding aesthetic trends that stem directly from
Black women. On Feb. 9, the United Women of Color presented their annual Hair Show. Housed within the Black/African American Cultural Center, the UWC works to bring together underrepresented women with strong sisterhood and community outreach. As part of Black History Month at Colorado State University, the UWC celebrates a
piece of their heritage that has been used as a sign of identity and a visual art, as well as a subject of discrimination: hair. “We have to consider the history of our various people,” said Joycey SaintJour, the vice president of United Women of Color. “There has been a long history of forced assimilation into Eurocentric hairstyles, more recently transitioning to a natural hair movement where
the Black community has challenged expectations. Along the way, there have been creations of pretty incredible styles.” For the Hair Show, three hair stylists were challenged to interpret historical and modern hairstyles that were categorized in three themed rounds. The most innovative and skilled hair stylist was awarded with a $300 prize. see HAIR on page 13 >>
Picking up where they left off last season, Colorado State softball took care of business while in the Lone Star State this weekend in their first taste of spring ball. The Rams participated in five games in the 2020 Texas Classic held in Austin, Texas, at Red & Charline McCombs Field, and they ended the Texas Classic tournament with a record of 4-1. The defense was a strong suit for Colorado State and will help the team to an impressive standing in the Mountain West Conference despite some setbacks. “I was actually really happy with our pitching,” head coach Jen Fisher said. “I think offensively we’re always going to have to be patient. That’s just the way offense is. It comes in streaks, and with a powerful team like we have, there’s going to be lulls when you’re just going to be missing or be a little early. You’re always going to have to be patient.” The Rams emerged victorious after their first three games against Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, the University of Maryland and Lamar University, and pitching was a key part of it.
see SOFTBALL on page 11 >>