Medicine Bow
Southbound I-225 reopens after driver leaves scene of deadly crash9NEWS2 days ago
Wyoming High School Football Standings: Oct. 19, 2024WyoPreps1 day ago
Shooting slows traffic on I-25 in Denver9NEWS2 days ago
Well Deserved: Latino Woman Wins $8.5 Million Settlement After Being Hit by Train While Handcuffed in Police CarShine My Crown1 day ago
LATEST NEWS
Wyoming High School Football Standings: Oct. 19, 2024
After five games on Saturday, the prep football season around Wyoming is through seven weeks. Six undefeated teams remain after three lost on Friday night. One in Class 4A, 3A, 2A, and 9-man. There are two in 6-man. Four teams do not have a win this year. Guernsey-Sunrise finished winless, as they forfeited the rest of their games. Here are the standings through Oct. 18, 2024.
New Parking Fines Take Effect In Laramie On November 1
The Laramie Police Department wants people to know that a new set of fines for parking violations in the city takes effect on November 1. That's according to a post on the Laramie Police Department Facebook page. According to the post, the minimum fee for all fines is now $40....
'Lines of Sight': UW artists forge an art and engineering story
A new sculpture in front of the Engineering Education and Research Building on the University of Wyoming campus has a big story to tell. The sculpture “Lines of Sight” is a 14-foot, 6 1/4-inch representation of an antique transit, a device used to measure horizontal and vertical angles to help surveyors record geographic details. The artists who designed, produced and placed the sculpture talked about its meaning and construction Oct....
Turning point, unsung hero and what’s next for UW football
SAN JOSE, Calif., -- The gifts kept on coming. Points, on the other hand, did not. Wyoming turned four takeaways Saturday into just seven points in a 24-14 loss inside CEFCU Stadium. Wrook Brown picked off a tipped pass. Wyett Ekeler, despite playing with a pair of broken thumbs, also hauled in an errant wobbler off the right arm of Walker Eget.
Hundreds of Northern Arapaho sacred objects returned
ETHETE — In the mid-1980s, Merle Haas got a call. Representatives of the Episcopal Church of Wyoming wanted her to meet them in Laramie. Haas, who is Northern Arapaho, drove to St. Matthew’s Cathedral, the seat of church leadership. There, she was led into a dark room, packed with boxes. In the boxes were artifacts — everyday clothes, as well as toys, and sacred objects that Northern Arapaho people had traded a church official for food in the mid-1900s. Haas panicked. She didn’t know what...
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.