Want to sell your car? Take a piano class. Interested in law school? Perhaps you should audition for “Guys and Dolls.” A fine arts degree can teach you so many useful skills. Part 4 features Michelle Jarvis (AA, ’10).
Want to sell your car? Take a piano class. Interested in law school? Perhaps you should audition for “Guys and Dolls.” A fine arts degree can teach you so many useful skills. Part 3 features Shaley George (’14).
Want to sell your car? Take a piano class. Interested in law school? Perhaps you should audition for “Guys and Dolls.” A fine arts degree can teach you so many useful skills. Part 2 features AJ Campbell (AA, ’05).
Want to sell your car? Take a piano class. Interested in law school? Perhaps you should audition for “Guys and Dolls.” A fine arts degree can teach you so many useful skills. Part 1 features Matthew Daily (’09).
Mike Olson has been a full-time ceramics instructor at Casper College since August 23, 2005, and currently also serves as the department chair for the visual arts department. Little did he know when he first started classes at CC that he would wind up returning to Casper, Wyoming, to teach and raise a family.
A native of Ghana, West Africa, Afari came to the United States to further his education and ended up joining the Army National Guard in South Dakota. Afari started his college education through the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology where his major was chemical engineering. “I realized that was not my dream,” he says, “so I decided to switch majors.” After talking to Doug Neubert, respiratory therapy program director at the college, “Casper College came into the picture because of the tuition cost.”
The Casper College Public Relations Department was recognized at the 2016 National Council for Marketing and Public Relations District 4 Conference held October 27-29 with nine Medallion Awards of Excellence in marketing and public relations.
“If it wouldn’t have been for my experiences, professors, and friends that inspired me along the way at Casper College, I wouldn’t be the person that I am today,” says Chris Hoffman Coats (’83).