LARAMIE Did you know it would take the populations of Gillette (32,857), Laramie (32,381), Rock Springs (23,319), Sheridan (17,844) and Wright (1,200) to create a sellout inside Michigan s famed 107,601-seat Big House, the largest college football stadium in the nation?
For those of you not familiar with the Cowboy State, those are Wyoming s third through sixth most inhabited cities, along with the small mining town in Campbell County.
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If you follow University of Wyoming Athletics at all, you probably know that on fall Saturdays in Laramie, that quaint college town turns into the second largest in the state just 2,045 less than Cheyenne if War Memorial Stadium reaches its 29,181 capacity.
Just The Facts: Size Doesn t Matter War Memorial Stadium kowb1290.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kowb1290.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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If we lived in a functioning democracy, January 6 would be remembered as the day Jon Ossoff and the Reverend Raphael Warnock won their Senate seats. Warnock’s race was called early that morning and Ossoff’s only hours later. Years of Democratic organizing in once deep-red Georgia had finally paid off. The improbable twin victories would bring the party control of the Senate. Democrats’ jubilation proved short-lived, however, as hundreds of Trump supporters ransacked the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to disrupt the certification of Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. Incited by the president’s words “We will never give up, we will never concede . . . we’re going to walk down to the Capitol” as well as by the scores of Republican lawmakers who announced that they would vote against certification, the mob turned that day into one of the grimmest in American history.
Five ways the Alliance Theatreâs drive-in Christmas Carol uplifts the spirit
The show must go on
Photograph by Greg Mooney
For almost 30 years, the Alliance Theatre has ushered in the holiday spirit with a production of
A Christmas Carol. Based on Charles Dickensâ 19th century classic, the play takes the curmudgeonly Ebenezer Scrooge through the Christmases of his past, present, and future in order to teach him an important lesson about compassion and charity.
In a year addled with unprecedented challengesânamely, the Covid-19 pandemicâartistic director Susan Booth says that Dickensâ story stands the test of time and that the company was determined to find a way to lift peopleâs spirits this holiday season.