Wednesday, December 7, 2011

First ever CWC Debate Invite this weekend

Central Wyoming College, which has re-introduced a competitive forensics program, is hosting the first CWC Wind River Debate Invitational Dec. 9-10 and Coach Jeremy Christensen is expecting 12-16 teams from regional colleges and universities to participate.

In some ways this tournament represents an experiment, said Christensen, who was hired at CWC this fall to start the intercollegiate program. To provide a unique tournament experience, he said, the invitational will primarily use propositions of values, encouraging participants and audience members to engage in “good-willed heckling.”

The first round begins the afternoon of Dec. 9 and continues all day on Dec. 10.

Though CWC’s team is made up of students with little or no prior forensics experience, it has done well in fall tournaments. At a recent Northwest College tournament, the CWC team won the novice division of parliamentary debate, and several individuals have placed high.

UW Dance Troupe @ CWC this Saturday

The CWC Diversity Committee is delighted to present a free performance by the UW students who have trained with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company this Saturday, Dec. 10.  The Dance company has been artist-in-residence this year at UW. Geoff O’Gara interviewed Jones and highlighted the UW Dance group on a recent Wyoming Chronicle.

“Continuous Momentum: The Works of Bill T. Jones” begins at 7 p.m. in the Robert A. Peck Arts Center Theatre. The performance is free and open to all.

For more information about the performance, see the news release: https://my.cwc.edu/web/cwc-website/admissions/news_archive/fall_2011/uw-dance

Annual Festival of Carols

The Central Wyoming College Music Department presents its annual Festival of Carols on Sunday, December 11, at 3 p.m. at the Riverton United Methodist Church, 1116 W. Park Ave. There is limited seating in the church, and the performance is often completely full.  Audience members will be able to get into the church sanctuary beginning at 2:30 p.m

The performance includes familiar and not-so-familiar holiday music, with selected readings about the Christmas season.  Featured groups will be the Handbell Choir, the Collegiate Chorale, and the vocal ensemble CWC JAZZMAGIC. Admission to this performance is free; however, a free-will offering will be taken to support the Fremont County Good Samaritan Center and the Lander Care And Share Food Bank.

“Last year, this performance raised over $1000 for these two worthwhile charities in Fremont County,” said Robert Hussa, one of the producers of the concert. “We are always happy that we have a generous audience to help those in need.”

The Handbell Choir is directed by Sharon Dalton, and the performance will include some trumpet work from former CWC staff member Kelly Dehnert.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Come join the fun

Everyone is invited to attend the CWC Alumni Association’s Hoops and Hotdogs event to be held tomorrow (Wednesday) December 7, from 6-7:30 p.m. in the Student Center.  Invite your family and friends to a free hotdog dinner where they will receive a Rustler bandana and a raffle ticket to win one of two signed basketballs from the men’s and women’s basketball teams.  While eating a hotdog, you can cheer for our basketball teams as they take on the Trappers of Northwest College.  The women’s game starts at 5:30 p.m. and the men’s game tips off at 7:30 p.m.  Come and have some fun with the CWC family.  See you there!

Friday, November 18, 2011

Last weekend to catch the play

image

 

The second weekend performance of The Shakespeare comedy, A Midsummer Night’s Dream will take place Nov. 18 and 19 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $8 for adults and $6 for seniors and students.

There will also be a matinee on Nov. 20 production at 2:30 p.m.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Rustler Radio down

Dear listeners,
Due to extremely high winds causing damages to our transmitter tower on Limestone Mountain, 88.1 is off the air until further notice. We apologize for this inconvenience. We are working to fix this problem as quickly as possible. Until then, you can continue listening online, as these damages have not affected our internet streaming capabilities.
Thank you for you support.

Listen to our Online Streaming player:  http://den-a.plr.liquidcompass.net/player/flash/audio_player.php?id=KCWCFM&uid=222

This week @Central

 

Tuesday, November 15

HE IS, ISN’T SHE?? 

Question & Answer Panel to test your “Gay-dar”

          4pm  CWC Little Theatre

Sponsored by GSA-Rainbow Club

 

 

                Wii  Just Dance Competition

          8pm  Student Center Lobby

        Snacks & Prizes!!!

              

Wednesday, November 16

EVOLUTION

The Aging Process

       See yourself in 60 years and learn how to live longer!

CWC Food Court  10am-4pm

 

 

Movie Night  8:00pm  CWC Little Theatre

                                Featuring: Crazy, Stupid Love

                                                                FREE SNACKS!

 

Thursday, November 17

ZUMBA CLASS

                                7pm – Fitness Center

                                Ditch the Routine…Join the Party!

                                                Free for Students & Staff

 

Friday, November 18

                Electrical dynamics inc. classic

                                CWC WOMEN’S BASKETBALL @ 5:30PM

                                                CWC MEN’S BASKETBALL @ 7:30PM

 

A Mid Summer Night’s Dream  Theater Production

                        7:30pm

                RAP Arts Center Theatre

 

 

Saturday, November 19

               Electrical dynamics inc. classic

                                CWC WOMEN’S BASKETBALL @ 5:30PM

                                                CWC MEN’S BASKETBALL @ 7:30PM

 

A Mid Summer Night’s Dream 

Theater Production

                        7:30pm

                RAP Arts Center Theatre

 

Student Center Open  10am-10pm

                                Check out the Rock Climbing Wall, Pool, Wii, Ping Pong & More!!

            Fitness Center Open 10am-2pm

              Get your SWEAT on!

 

Sunday, November 20

          

A Mid Summer Night’s Dream 

Theater Production

                        2:30pm

                RAP Arts Center Theatre

 

 

Student Center Open  10am-10pm

                                Check out the Rock Climbing Wall, Pool, Wii, Ping Pong & More!!

            Fitness Center Open 10am-2pm

              Get your SWEAT on!

 

 

For more information contact the Activities Office.

SC113    activities@cwc.edu         855-2260

 

Monday, November 14, 2011

Spring registration is open

Don’t wait until the last minute to register for Spring 2012 classes!  We advise you to register now!  Register early so you can get the course you want because classes fill up quickly!  We ask all new students to register with one of our academic advisor in the Admissions Office and all returning students to register with their faculty advisor.

The 2012 Spring semester begins January 16th, 2012.  You can view a complete list of available Spring courses by clicking here.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Whoa, it’s been a while

The campus has been humming with student life since the end of August yet we haven’t shared any of our fun on here!

You can also find information on our various Facebook pages:
https://www.facebook.com/cwc.edu  CWC fan page

https://www.facebook.com/cwc.edu  CWC library page

https://www.facebook.com/pages/CWC-Activities-Intramurals/  CWC activities

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Central-Wyoming-College-Alumni-Association  CWC Alumni

Friday, April 29, 2011

Finals and summer

This semester was surprising successful. After some worrying I’m sure many of us experienced with the short semester and all, I think we all made it. This semester and even this entire year was full of experiences, activities, and surprises. Our biggest fund raiser, Oktoberfest, was a huge success and tons of fun. All of our other volunteering times and activities ended great as well. With all of my classes, extra curricular activities, and work there was so much to do, but being a QL was a great and worthwhile experience. It helped me become more involved and I’m sure it did the same for my peers. It was also for many good causes. This year I learned more about managing my time, getting done what needs and has to be done, and enjoying it along the way. As finals week begins I’m just living for Thursday, when I’m finally done, as I’m sure most of us are. Now that the learning for this semester is coming to a close, I think it’s time for some work and play as the sun shows its rays, and summer slowly but surely approaches. I know I can’t wait! I hope you take what you can from your classrooms and appreciate, remember, and incorporate, it into your lives this summer, until fall creeps upon us once again. Until then: enjoy, have fun, and always be safe.

Quality Leader
Rachel Howerton

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

For the green thumbs on campus….

The Library had great intentions of giving away green stuffs last week for Earth Day, but as that one guy wrote, the best laid plans, yadda yadda.

As we see this school year end, we’re giving away starts! Stop by the library to pick up little sprouts of a marigold or an indoor houseplant.

First come, first serve… and please, don’t be greedy. One per taker. J

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Great year for Kelsey

Hey! I cannot believe this semester is almost over. It is hard for me to believe that I will be graduating in a matter of a few days. For me this semester, all the final tests and projects are very stressful and overwhelming. I have been doing a lot of studying and finishing projects lately. I have loved all the help from my professors, though. They understand a lot and have been helping me constantly. This has been such a fun year at Central Wyoming College. I have loved it.

-Kelsey Fustos
Quality Leader

Monday, April 25, 2011

Final blog for Christina

Hey everyone! It’s Christina again and I thought that I would write this final blog for CWC. That’s right! I finally get to graduate this spring and I am counting down the days. Literally…there are only 5 days left! I usually talk about what’s going on around campus and what I have been up to but this time I kind of want to talk about more important things. Things I could have done different while being here at CWC and things that I should have done.

Graduating this spring is a great thing but I really wish that I could have told myself to do homework right after it was assigned because doing it now is really kicking my butt. I have so much homework to get caught up on that I don’t have time to go and chill with my friends are have the time to make Easter cards for my family back home. So for those of you who are reading this, DO YOUR HOMEWORK A.S.A.P.!! That will give you time to do more fun things here at CWC at the end of the semester!

Things that I wish I would have done here at Central are Student Senate, Hacky-Sack Club, Intramurals and more out of town trips that college provides; like ski trips and going to Denver! I think that if I would have participated in more of these I would have made a ton more friends!! Being on Student Senate would have been neat as well because I would be able to come up with activities and have more of an ability to get students involved. Why Hacky-Sack club? Honestly, it would just be nice to learn! I am pretty uncoordinated so I could stand some help in that area! Playing more intramural things would have been fun because I like to be active and I am really competitive so being able to take my school stress out playing intramurals would have been a great way for me to relax! I never went on a Denver trip while I was here at CWC but I really wish that I would have gone. Every one of my friends that ever went to Denver on a field trip had a blast!! I suggest to anyone that goes to CWC to go to Denver just for the heck of it. I love to ski too and the college gets great discount prices!! So hello! Go on a ski trip while you’re here at Central!! Especially if you like to ski or board!!

Well I have to get going but I really did have fun here at Central Wyoming College. I met amazing friends, incredible faculty and inspiring teachers. Thank you to all the wonderful people that helped me get through my two years here at Central!! And YAY!! I am graduating!!!

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

End of the semester

Oh my gosh! Another semester almost done and in the bag! I can't believe the semester was so short, sweet, and to the point! It feels awesome getting out of class this early. This semester has definitely had its ups and downs but it's been pretty fun seeing everyone around campus. I'm going to miss everyone this summer! I will not be graduating this semester but I will hopefully see everybody in the fall!


I'm pretty excited for taking "Best of Category" in the Graphic Design and Photography II/III categories of the CWC Student Art Show. There were so many entries and so many good pieces, I'm not sure how the judge ever decided! If you get the chance, stopping by before it is taken down April 21st. I'm sure you'll agree after you see all of the great works done by CWC students.   


Well everybody have a good and safe summer!

Sharrayah
Quality Leader

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

It’s National Library Week and your CWC Library is celebrating!

We’re hosting a casual Library Open House on Wednesday!

Stop by to browse our DVDs, Audiobooks, Periodicals (Yes! We carry magazines!), newest books, staff picks, and comfy spaces.

Have you seen the new furniture on both floors of the library??

Come by Wednesday, April 13, 11:30am – 1:30pm for light refreshments!

Complete our online survey while you’re here!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Looking back over the past year

So the end of the year is coming nearer and for some reason all the teachers think that it’s time to pile on the homework and tests. Something I have quite understood. Either way I have been super busy with school, work and getting ready to graduate. Since graduation is coming nearer, I thought this would be a great opportunity to tell my 20 best memories at CWC.


Top 20 Memories at CWC:

1. Riding ponies at Professor Patti Stalley’s house for the Equine students BBQ.

2. Completed Mrs. Pryor dressage final with high scores!

3. Riding my bike to Shoshoni! Even though my legs hurt for days!

4. Skiing at Grand Targee in over 3 feet of powder!

5. Getting an advanced on the indoor climbing wall!

6. All my speeches in Public Speaking especially 3 reasons to date me and how to win the lottery without spending a dime!

7. Cracking an egg over my little sister’s head 

8. Going to the X Games in Aspen, Colorado!

9. Playing club soccer with ALL those boys!

10. Shooting a shotgun and hitting a clay pigeon!

11. Preparing my first steak and homemade ice cream!

12. Helping with PBS Wyoming TV!

13. Surviving a “Horse Packing Trip”! Included losing a sleep bag, following a grizzly and having a pathetic tent!

14. Learning to climb in Sinks Canyon and Wild Iris!

15. Taking some AWESOME photos in Black and White class.

16. Dressing my horse up as Fred Flintstone for class!

17. Endless hours in the library studying for EXTREMELY HARD tests and EXTREMELY EASY tests!

18. Snowshoeing and ice skating in Lander!

19. Listening to the National Geographic journalist about Rwanda!

20. Meeting some of the best teachers and best friends!!

I am going to miss Central Wyoming College without a doubt next year!!!

Breanna Richardson
Quality Leader

Wyoming author on campus Thur. April 14

 

Wyoming author Laura Bell presents her memoir, “Claiming Ground”, on Thursday, April 14 at 3:30pm in the Little Theatre.

In 1977, Laura Bell, at loose ends after graduating from college, leaves her family home in Kentucky for a wild and unexpected adventure: herding sheep in Wyoming’s Big Horn Basin. Inexorably drawn to this life of solitude and physical toil, a young woman in a man’s world, she is perhaps the strangest member of this beguiling community of drunks and eccentrics. So begins her unabating search for a place to belong and for the raw materials with which to create a home and family of her own. Yet only through time and distance does she acquire the wisdom that allows her to see the love she lived through and sometimes left behind.

Theatre Showcase 2011

The CWC Theatre Department presents
Theatre Showcase 2011

Short theatre pieces directed and designed by students
Thursday, April 14th, 7:30pm (A)

Friday, April 15th, 7:30pm (B)

Saturday, April 16th, 7:30pm (A)

Sunday, April 17th, 2:30pm (B)

It requires two nights to see all the plays.
1st Run: Thursday and Friday (A&B)
2nd run: Saturday and Sunday. (A&B)

Robert A. Peck Arts Center ● Dance Studio, Art Center 138

Free Admission
Seating is limited so get your tickets ahead of time at the Box Office.

M-F 3pm to 6pm
Rated R

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

SPRING FLING 2011 3/30/11

Diversity Committee Presents:

Chocolat

11:30am  CWC Little Theatre

Free Movie, Lunch & Discussion

 

S’mores & More

7:30pm Housing Fire Pit

Sponsored by CWC Student Senate

 

Movie Night Featuring:

BLACK SWAN

8:00pm CWC Little Theatre

Free Snacks & Soda

 

Contact the Activities & Intramural Office for more information.

855-2260         SC107  activities@cwc.edu

Michael Fosberg’s one-man play “Incognito”

When:  Monday, April 4, 2011  7:30-9:30 PM
Location:  Little Theater located in the Student Center

The Diversity committee presents an important one-man play about identity, family history and race. All are welcome to attend.

Fosberg was raised a middle-class, white suburban Chicago-ite. When he was in his early 30s he learned his real father was African American:

“I share these discoveries in "Incognito," the solo-show I have performed in theatres, high schools, colleges, and performing arts centers throughout the country -a production chosen by The Chicago Tribune as "one of the top theatrical events of the 2001 season." While performing "Incognito" I’ve been amazed at how my story resonates with a wide range of audiences both young and old, black and white.  Post-show discussions have resulted in lively and profound conversation on how we each perceive race and identity.
"Incognito" is the story of my journey to uncover and discover my self, my roots, my family, and the difficult history behind the tragic American complexity of "race".”

“"Incognito" unfolds as a mystery, for both myself, and the audience, as I search for my biological father following the divorce of my mother and step-father. The show’s structure allows the audience to make their own discoveries in the moment along with me – discoveries about themselves, and their perceptions of identity and stereotypes.
Through my investigation and a quirk of fate, I am led to my father in a first phone call.  It is during this call while in Detroit that he reveals he is black…a fact somehow lost as I was raised by my mother and adopted father.  This life-changing information was also somehow hidden from me since I don’t "look black". (The audience and I make this physical discovery at the same time.)
My new-found African-American father tells me of family members who played significant roles in African-American history: a distant relation to the abolitionist John Brown; a great-great grandfather who served in the 54th regiment of the colored infantry during the Civil War; & a great grandfather who was an all-star pitcher in the Negro baseball leagues.  He then tells me my grandparents are alive and living in Virginia.
Rocked by these revelations, I decide to journey to Virginia Beach to meet my adoring grandparents and mirror-image father for the first time. During this reunion, I am bestowed with a package of important family documents. Included in this treasure-trove of ancestral history are handwritten letters my mother wrote, detailing her mental angst in making the decision to leave my father and return to her parents home, raising me as white.
My journey concludes with a visit to newly found African-American cousin on Martha’s Vineyard. In a stop at the "Inkwell," the African-American beach resort on the island, I am introduced to a slew of characters and subsequently invited into the extended African-American family. While delighted by this turn of events, I am also faced with conflicting emotions: elation at my heritage, anger for the time lost with my family, and confusion trying to understand exactly where I fit - black or white.
Finally, at the end of the show, I challenge the audience about their own preconceptions of who I am and how we each define race. We are left with a realization of the difficulties in categorizing, and a clear understanding of the importance of embracing and celebrating all of who we are.”

For more information, http://www.incognitotheplay.com/documents/what.html

Monday, March 28, 2011

Wy Community College Advising Corp

A representative from the Wyoming Community College Advising Corporation (which is one initiative of the College Access Challenge Grant) will be on campus on Tuesday, March 29 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the table located in the Classroom Wing.  Angela Kisse, the rep, will be on campus to help with additional questions regarding school selection, majors, financial aid, FAFSA, scholarships or just moving from Central to another two-year or four-year institution.  If students didn’t get a chance to visit with Angela when she was here earlier in the month, please encourage them to see her this time. 

If you have any questions, please let me know.  Thanks!

Paula Hartbank
Central Wyoming College
SSS Education/Transfer Coordinator
paula@cwc.edu
307-855-2169

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Spring Fling 2011 events

Origami

4:00pm TODAY

Student Senate Hub

(Located in the Student Center outside of the Gym)

Sponsored by CWC Student Senate

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Ladies Night

TONIGHT

5PM-7PM

CWC FREMONT ROOM

Featuring:

FREE Mini-Manicures, Mini-Massages, & Hair Consultations by Sunset Blvd. Day Spa

Satin Hands & Lips and Mini-Facials by Mary Kay Consultants

FREE Zumba Lesson

Great food, entertainment, door prizes and more!!!!

Contact the Activities & Intramural Office for more information.

855-2260         SC107  activities@cwc.edu

Congratulations-Commencement

Congratulations are in order for the following people and their upcoming role in the Commencement Ceremony this April:

Eric Heiser for being selected as Adjutant
Steve McAllister and Jeff Hosking for being selected as Faculty Marshals
Beth Gray for being selected by Student Senate as Student Marshal

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Intertribal Center Dedication Fri, March 25

CWC officially dedicates the Intertribal Education and Community Center. Dignitaries, political officials and will be on hand for the ceremony, beginning at 1 p.m. outside the Center. Tours and refreshments are available from 2-4 p.m. There will be a feast in the Wind River room beginning at noon.

Please join us in celebrating this vibrant educational and cultural center that is an asset to the entire state.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Student Health 101 Newsletter

Below is the link for March’s Student Health 101 Newsletter.  Also look for copies around campus, including the Library, and posters on all the bulletin boards that give you a run down on this month’s issue!

http://readsh101.com/cwc.html

All of this brought to you by the Counseling and Career Services Department (that’s me!!!)

Lance

 

"In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity." Albert Einstein 

Lance W. Goede MS, LPC, NCC
Licensed Professional Counselor
Central Wyoming College
2660 Peck Ave
Main Hall, 123F
Riverton, WY  82501
(307)855-2175 – Office
(307)855-2065 - Fax

lgoede@cwc.edu

Monday, March 21, 2011

This week @ Central

Monday 3/21:

FREE OPEN SWIM @ Riverton Aquatic Center
 5:30pm-8:00pm

Student Senate Meeting 3:30pm—SC100

United Tribes Club Meeting—3:30pm-5:30pm  Intertribal Center Lobby

Hacky Sack Club  7:30-9:00pm  CWC GYM                           

Tuesday 3/22:

  
CWC Poetry Slam
8pm CWC Library

Open Mic for Poetry, Music, skits and more!

Sign up in the Activities Office…or just show up!

 

Coed Intramural Indoor Soccer
8pm—CWC Gym

 

GSA Club (Gay Straight Alliance) Meeting – 4:00pm Intertribal Center 116        

 

Wednesday 3/23:


Central Movie Night
8pm CWC Little Theatre (located in the Student Center)Featuring—STONE

Latter-Day Saint Student Association—7:00pm  LDS Church Across from Intertribal Center

Hacky Sack Club  7:30-9:00pm  CWC GYM

 

Thursday 3/24

SPRING FLING BEGINS
CWC Annual Ladies Night
5-7pm  Fremont Room

Free Mini-Massages, Mini-Manicures, Facials, Zumba Lesson, Food, Prizes and more!! 

Intramural Co-ed Volleyball League
8pm CWC GYM

 

Friday 3/25:

SPRING FLING

ALL-NIGHT MOVIE MARATHON

6PM-6AM (FRIDAY-SATURDAY) LITTLE THEATRE

Free Snacks and Movie Marathon ALL-NIGHT-LONG!

Hacky Sack Club  7:30-9:00pm  CWC GYM

Saturday 3/26:

Ski & Snowboard Trip (Rescheduled from 2-26)

Sign up in the Activities Office (if you are not already)

$20 covers lift ticket, rentals, and transportation

Contact the Activities Office (SC107) for more info!

Sunday 3/27:

Student Center Open  10am-10pm

Check out the Rock Climbing Wall, Pool, Wii, Ping Pong & More!!

            Fitness Center Open 10am-2pm

              Get your SWEAT on!

 

 

Contact the Student Life Coordinator (SC107) at 855-2260 or activities@cwc.edu for more information.

Semester speeding by for Kelsey

Hey everybody! This semester is going by so extremely fast I can’t believe it. It’s a little scary this spring semester is halfway over already. I’m having a lot of tests which means lots of studying, especially since it is getting closer and closer to the end. The professors are all very helpful this spring semester. They are all so great!  I really enjoy Central Wyoming College. I’m excited with this semester because of all the fun activities going on!

Kelsey Fustos
Quality Leader

Don’t miss it

New ceramic work by Danny Brown, Central Wyoming College’s ceramics instructor, is on exhibit in the Robert A. Peck Arts Center Gallery at CWC until Thursday, March 24.  The Gallery is open during regular college business hours and free to the public.

Brown’s ceramic work operates under a two-part focus. The forms follow along the guidelines of utility and are meant to be used or appreciated as potentially useful. Second, the surface of the work has its roots in the landscape, the natural world and storytelling.

Brown, a Riverton native, has a Masters of Fine Arts from Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas. 

Upcoming Transfer events this week

A representative from Utah Valley University from Orem, UT will be on campus on Tuesday, March 22 from 10 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the table located outside of the Student Success Center.  Students interested in transferring to Utah Valley University are encouraged to meet with the rep. 

There will be a Transfer workshop on Tuesday, March 22 from 3:30-4:20 p.m. in the CAL Lab (MH121).  Please encourage students who are interested in transferring to attend this workshop. 

Coming to CWC in April is the Professional Teaching Standards Board.  More information will follow as the date gets closer…

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Stay connected to campus through Rustler Alert!!

Don’t forget to sign up for the Activities SMS (text) Group under Rustler Alerts on myCentral.  Notification of upcoming events and last minute changes will be sent directly to your phone!  You may also sign up to receive notification from Registration and Records (Application Deadlines, Drop-Class Deadlines, etc.), Athletics, and Campus Announcements. 
Login to myCentral and select the Rustler Alerts on the upper left corner located under My Advisor.  From there follow the steps to enter your information and be sure to select the Notification Groups tab to select which announcements you would like to receive. 

Rachel doing well

This semester is quite frankly not as bad as I assumed it would be. I am meeting my deadlines, preparing, and getting things done, even with the time shortage. As we all know this semester is being cut very short, deadlines are approaching quickly, papers are due more closely together than usual, not to mentions tests and quizzes. Though I worry, I try to remind myself that everything gets done in its own time, I always get it done, and I may as well try to enjoy the time I do have, after I get my school work done, instead of worrying. There is so much going on this semester between work, school, activities, and more. I hope everyone is enjoying their semester and the opportunities that are available here at CWC. As always, I encourage you to do your work, then get out there and live it up! I know all my hard work is going towards the greatest goal: an extended summer! Have fun this semester because the end is quickly approaching!

Rachel Howerton
QL Leader

Monday, March 14, 2011

Short week-Spring Break

Campus will be closed this week March 17-18 for Spring Break. 
This includes the CWC library.

The National Weather Service in Riverton if forecasting sunny skies/partly cloudy highs near 50 so get out there and enjoy Wyoming!

Author, John Clayton on campus tomorrow 3/15/11

Author presents Caroline Lockhart, novelist, journalist, homesteader, and founder of the Cody rodeo

Montana author John Clayton discusses his book on the life of Cody’s Caroline Lockhart, a best-selling novelist, newspaper publisher and founder of the Cody rodeo Tuesday, March 15 at 3:30 p.m. in the Little Theatre.

Refreshments will be served. This event is sponsored by the CWC Library and the Wyoming Humanities Council. It is free and open to the public.

Clayton, a Red Lodge, Mont., resident who regularly writes for Montana Magazine and the Montana Quarterly, is the author of “The Cowboy Girl,” a narrative biography of Lockhart, who moved to the newly-founded town of Cody in 1904.

The author speaks of Lockhart’s career in Cody, a place where she wrote seven novels, including three that were made into films; and her years as editor and publisher of the Cody Enterprise.

Clayton’s presentation “Happily Ever Aftering on a 1920s Cattle Ranch,” discusses Lockhart’s move to a homestead in Montana where she tried to enact in real life the “happily ever after” experiences she described in her Western fiction.

Clayton’s book, “The Cowboy Girl”, is available in the library for check out!

Christina is doing well

Hello everyone, it’s Christina again and so far this semester at Central has been very exciting, entertaining and eventful. Since I am graduating this spring, classes have been very overwhelming but thanks to the CWC Jackpots at the Equine Center, ski trips, the play South Pacific, holidays and other activities that Central has promoted or produced, I am having a blast! Just recently the hypnotist Frederick Winters visited campus and I was able to be a participant on stage. I know that for a lot of people this was a great experience and it was very fun and funny. It was also really neat at how many people I got to meet!! I made several new friends!

Since the last time I wrote, our housing area flooded. It set off the fire alarms and the whole building smelt like a swamp for about a week. Thank goodness they workers finally tore out the carpet and beginning to get everything fixed back up; on the plus side, the smell has been gone for about the last three weeks. The building flooded from a broken pipe and of course many people moved out or to the other side of the building. Those of us that happened to live on the other side were very grateful that we got to stay with our roommates and that our floors were still dry.

The last CWC Jackpot series was February 26! It was fun watching my roommate run barrels, poles and do some breakaway! She has been doing really well and always finds areas to work on after competing. Just so you readers know she is the best roommate ever! She and I really support each other and the best part of that is her family was here for the last jackpot and it was very entertaining! We all keep each other from getting bored waiting for my roommate to ride. Another thing I like about the jackpots is the younger kids that run barrels and poles and tie goats. They are so cute! And they are all pretty supportive of one another! The youngsters also seem to have good attitudes.

Well that’s all I have for now! Thanks for reading!

Christina Albertini
Central Wyoming College Quality Leader

Representatives on campus today

A representative from the Wyoming Community College Advising Corporation (which is one initiative of the College Access Challenge Grant) will be on campus on Monday, March 14 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the table located outside the Student Success Center.  Angela Kisse, the rep, will be on campus to help with additional questions regarding school selection, majors, financial aid, FAFSA, scholarships or just moving from Central to a four-year institution.

A representative from Chadron State College will be on campus from 10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the table located outside the Student Success Center.  Students interested in transferring to Chadron are encouraged to visit with the rep. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Comedian speaks at CWC

Renowned inspirational speaker/comedian and internet phenomenon Judson Laipply speaks at Central Wyoming College Tuesday, March 29 in the Robert A. Peck Arts Center Theatre at 8 p.m.

The presentation, “Life is Change,” combines laughter-inducing stories with thought-provoking ideas to drive home the point that we are in constant presence of change. The event is free and open to the public and is sponsored by the CWC Student Senate and Student Life Department.He will also be performing his internet sensation “The Evolution of Dance.” 

Laipply first jumped onto the world stage in March 2001 when he performed for the first time in public. After mixing together 12 popular dance songs from the past 50 years, he introduced “The Evolution of Dance” and it instantly became a crowd favorite. Five years and 18 songs later, he placed a video of the 30-song six-minute dance on You Tube and it became a viral sensation.

You can find his YouTube vids here: http://www.youtube.com/user/judsonlaipply

Former CWC Pres to receive award

Former CWC President, Dr. Bill Day, is among those in the 300th Armored Field Artillery Battalion, Wyoming National Guard, scheduled to receive the Presidential Citation on Saturday, March 12, at 10 a.m. at the VFW Post in Riverton for extraordinary heroism against enemy aggressors during the Korean War.  The public is invited to attend.  Please RSVP to the Wyoming Military Department (307) 772-5253

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Food Symposium Saturday

Central Wyoming College hosts a “Food to Table” Symposium Saturday, March 12 that brings together local producers and consumers.

The 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. event highlights the concept of eating locally grown foods and addresses the economic, social and environmental benefits. It is held in the new CWC Intertribal Education and Community Center. The early registration fee is $20 and includes lunch of local foods. Registration at the door is $30.

Topics include egg production, fruit trees in Fremont County, vegetable growing for markets, grass-fed and pastured meat production, health benefits of eating grass-fed beef, lamb and pork, small fruit production and an overview of current food production and marketing regulations.

The keynote speaker is Sue Wallis, a Recluse rancher who is a well-known advocate for local food issues. Other speakers include Steve Doyle, Stephanie Styvar, Pete Cameron, Kim Wilbert, DeeAnn Doyle, Wendy Barteaux, Kim Briddle, Brian and Kim Peil and Everett Befus.

A panel of local restaurant operators will discuss what they need from local producers.

For more information or to register, contact Sherry Shelley at 855-2125.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Free Day trip tomorrow

Activities is sponsoring a FREE DAY TRIP for STUDENTS to CASPER on Saturday, March 5 to CHEER ON OUR WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM  in the Region IX Tournament!

SPACE IS VERY LIMITED!

Bus will leave @ 10am from the Student Center Parking Lot and head to the Casper Mall for FREE LUNCH paid for by Activities and then shopping on your own dime….

From there…we will head to the CWC Women’s Basketball Game @ 5pm at Casper College!  CHEER LOUD AND SUPPORT OUR GIRLS!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

2011-2012 scholarship applications are due by midnight tonight

CWC is committed to recognizing academic and activity related achievement by offering more than $500,000 annually in merit scholarships.   Scholarship applications for the 2011-12 academic year are due tonight--March 1, 2011 by midnight.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Scholarship deadline is tomorrow!

CWC is committed to recognizing academic and activity related achievement by offering more than $500,000 annually in merit scholarships.   Scholarship applications for the 2011-12 academic year are due tomorrow--March 1, 2011 by midnight.

University of Wyoming Rep on Campus today 9-1pm

Location: Student Success Center
Mon, Feb 28, 2011 starting at 9:00 AM - 1:00 PM

A representative from the University of Wyoming will be on campus on Monday, February 28 from 9 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the table located outside the Student Success Center in Main Hall.  If you’re interested in transferring to UW or just want more information, please stop by and visit with the rep.  Hopefully, the UW Trio - EOC Office can pay that admission application fee for the student. 

Friday, February 25, 2011

Interested in a Criminal Justice Career?

The CWC Riverton campus is home to the Rural Justice Training Center.  The facility includes a state-of-the-art virtual firearms training system. The system includes a shoot back system as well as a split screen recording camera. This split screen camera allows law enforcement trainers and students to review not only their actions, but the scenario to which they are reacting to.

The RJTC contains a fully connected and equipped classroom. The RJTC also contains a hand-to-hand, defensive tactics area for training in custody and control.
For more information, contact Rural Health and Public Safety Director Jeff Hosking, or Eric Heiser @ 307.855.2038

Former Lander resident Matteo Pistono presents

Location: Intertribal Center 116
Mon, Feb 28, 2011 starting at 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
 
            Former Lander resident Matteo Pistono shares the stories and images of his ten-year journey in Tibet while discussing his book “In the Shadow of the Buddha,” at Central Wyoming College Monday, Feb. 28 at 3:30 p.m.
Pistono, born in Cody and raised in Lander, tells a story of multiple pilgrimages to Tibet where he witnessed countless human rights violations against the Tibetan people. The discussion is in the Wind River Room (116) of the CWC Intertribal Education and Community Center and is free and open to the public.
            While Pistono, a practitioner of Tibetan Buddhism, was on his own spiritual journey across Tibet in 1999, he learned of abuses of Tibetans, particularly monks and nuns. For nearly a decade, he secretly carried out evidence of the atrocities by sewing them into boots and backpacks in order to share them with international news organizations and the U.S. government. In an illustrated slideshow, Pistono weaves together images from the Himalayas and vast landscapes of Tibet.
Pistono, who had worked in Wyoming in environmental politics, shared his stories with Wyoming political leaders, speaking often with the late Sen. Craig Thomas.
He earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Wyoming and his masters at the University of London. He is the founder of Nekorpa, a foundation to protect sacred pilgrimage sites around the world.

What is FERPA?

In accordance with FERPA*, Central is prohibited in disclosing student education records without written consent from the student.  How does a student give specific consent for release of educational records?
The student can complete a ‘Release of Information’ form giving specific consent to the disclosure of the student's education records. The release needs to be dated and signed and must describe the records, the purpose for the release, list to whom the records can be given and a time for how long the release is effective. A faculty member should have a student sign a release before providing a job reference or a reference for the student for certain academic purposes, such as scholarships or awards. The job reference is one area where faculty often forget to obtain a written release. The Registrar is the college official responsible for keeping all official academic education records. Only the Registration & Records Office may release an official transcript. All requests for education record information originating from outside the college should be directed to the Registration & Records Office.
*FERPA is an acronym for the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (20 U.S.C. 1232g, 34 CFR § 99). Congress enacted FERPA, also referred to as the "Buckley Amendment," in 1974. FERPA conditions federal educational funding on providing student access to, and maintaining the privacy of, education records. Faculty, staff, administrators and other college officials are required by FERPA to treat education records in a legally specified manner.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

The Central Wyoming College Equine Studies program hosts its annual Saturday Jackpot Series

Saturday, February 26, 2011
Entries: 7 a.m. Positions Drawn
Start time at 8 a.m.
The Central Wyoming College Equine Studies program hosts its 
annual Saturday Jackpot Series this winter.
4D format for open barrels, 3D format for open poles and 2D format for youth barrels and poles. Saddles are awarded in barrels and breakaway. PHT Magnetic Blankets are awarded in poles. Two rifles to be awarded in the Man's Barrel Race (must be 18 or older to enter in the Man's Race.)

All entries must be received by noon on the Friday prior to each Jackpot. No call-in entries. Late entries will be charged a $10 fee or $5 per event for more than two events. All entries are to be paid in cash on the day of the jackpot.  
Complete form and mail to Patti Stalley at 2660 Peck Ave., Riverton, WY 82501. 
No dogs are allowed on the grounds of the CWC Equine Center.
More information and entry forms are located on our CWC website

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

UPDATE

WHITE PINES SKI TRIP WITH CWC!
Saturday, Feb. 26
Bus leaves the Student Center Parking Lot

at 6 am

Don't forget to sign up!

Sat, Feb 26, 2011 starting at 7:00 AM - 11:00 PM
WHITE PINES SKI TRIP WITH CWC!
Saturday, Feb. 26
          Bus leaves the Student Center Parking Lot at 7a.m.


$25 Fee includes 
ALL DAY SKI PASS
TRANSPORTATION
FUN FOR ALL!

Space is limited so hurry down to the
ACTIVITIES & INTRAMURAL OFFICE
to reserve your spot!

SC107                        activities@cwc.edu                       855-2260

"Where did they go? African American history in the Equality State" presentation

Todd Guenther has done considerable research and won awards for his papers about African American History in Wyoming. Come listen to the fascinating stories he has unearthed.

"Where did they go? African American history in the Equality State"

Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011 3:30-5:00 pm
Fremont Room

Refreshments will be served.

A CWC Diversity Committee presentation
February is African American History Month

As a Harvard-trained historian, Carter G. Woodson, like W. E. B. Du Bois before him, believed that truth could not be denied and that reason would prevail over prejudice. His hopes to raise awareness of African American's contributions to civilization was realized when he and the organization he founded, the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH), conceived and announced Negro History Week in 1925. The event was first celebrated during a week in February 1926 that encompassed the birthdays of both Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. The response was overwhelming: Black history clubs sprang up; teachers demanded materials to instruct their pupils; and progressive whites, not simply white scholars and philanthropists, stepped forward to endorse the effort.

By the time of Woodson's death in 1950, Negro History Week had become a central part of African American life and substantial progress had been made in bringing more Americans to appreciate the celebration. At mid–century, mayors of cities nationwide issued proclamations noting Negro History Week. The Black Awakening of the 1960s dramatically expanded the consciousness of African Americans about the importance of black history, and the Civil Rights movement focused Americans of all color on the subject of the contributions of African Americans to our history and culture.

The celebration was expanded to a month in 1976, the nation's bicentennial. President Gerald R. Ford urged Americans to “seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history.” That year, fifty years after the first celebration, the association held the first African American History Month. By this time, the entire nation had come to recognize the importance of Black history in the drama of the American story. Since then each American president has issued African American History Month proclamations. And the association—now the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH)—continues to promote the study of Black history all year.

(Excerpt from an essay by Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University, for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History)
http://www.africanamericanhistorymonth.gov/about.html

Library services for distance ed students

    If you are currently enrolled in a class at Central Wyoming College you have library privileges, whether or not you attend class on campus.
    To activate your library privileges, you must fill out our online library card application. If you have had a library card here before, please let us know and we can re-activate it for you. If you have a CWC student identification card your library number is preprinted on the back. It should be 14 digits long. If you do not have a card, please let us know and we will have a number assigned for you.
     As a CWC student you have interlibrary loan privileges as well, which means that if our library does not have the item you need we can order it for you from another library. Please see our interlibrary loan policy for more information.     In addition, distance students can use their CWC logins to access the dozens of databases and other online resources made available by the CWC Library. Contact us for help getting started.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Student Health 101 online

 
 

Have you signed up for Rustler Alerts?

Students are encouraged to sign up for “Rustler Alert” so emergency messages can be sent to your phone and/or computer. Students can sign up for the service by logging into MyCentral and clicking on the Rustler Alert icon in the upper left hand corner of the page.

The alert system was being launched in conjunction with CWC’s siren warning system that can be heard immediately on and off campus grounds in the event of an emergency.

For more information about Rustler Alert, contact Barlow at 307-855-2143.


 

Comedy Hypnotist Frederick Winters

Location: Little Theatre
Tue, Feb 22, 2011 starting at 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM
 
Comedy Hypnotist Frederick Winters, will be here to show his skills and humor at CWC Tuesday February, 22 at 8p.m. in the Little Theater.

Need help completing your CWC scholarship applicaton?

Location: Student Success Center lab
Tues, Feb 22 & Thurs, Feb 24, 2011 starting at 2:30 PM - 5:00 PM
Paula Hartbank and Kathryn DeWitt will be available to answer any questions

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Basketball schedule

Men's:

Feb.18
@ Laramie County CC
7 p.m.

Feb.19
@ Eastern Wyoming College
5 p.m.

Feb.24
@ Northwest College
7:30 p.m.

Feb. 25
@ Miles Community College
TBA



Women's:
Feb. 19
@ Eastern Wyoming College (Torrington)
3:00  
Feb. 24
@ Northwest College
5:30  
Feb. 25
@ Miles Community College (Miles City, MT)
TBA