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Mar 31 Tuesday
Dust off your memory of what a more compassionate world used to be like. And experience China before communism. Shen Yun’s performance is a beautiful display of goodness, wisdom, and faith. Its timeless legends celebrate valor and traditional virtues. For our world today, it is a message of hope.
Shen Yun invites you to discover a magical land where emperors, generals, and philosophers seek harmony with the Way of the Universe, where celestial maidens dance with ethereal grace, and warriors battle with explosive athleticism.
Based in New York, Shen Yun’s mission is to revive the best of 5,000 years of civilization. Combining the singular expressivity of classical Chinese dance with traditional stagecraft, an East-West live orchestra, and innovative backdrops, Shen Yun is being hailed as a breakthrough in performing arts. Every year, Shen Yun premieres an all-new production and takes the world by storm.
More than just a performance, Shen Yun is a taste of a world and a culture that can inspire us to be better. Journey to where heaven and earth intersect. This is what you have been waiting for.
Apr 01 Wednesday
This series will be taught by Sarah Hemphill, DW staff and certified Pilates instructor. Sarah has trained in the Moving Through Parkinson’s modality with the Center for Healthy Aging at Colorado State University and has 7 years of experience working with older adults. This class series is rooted in creative movement practices adapted for individuals living with Parkinson’s disease. While the methodology was developed for people with Parkinson’s, the class is suitable for a wide range of mobility issues including Huntington’s, multiple sclerosis, and the general limited mobility associated with aging.
WEDNESDAYSMarch 4, 11, 18April 8, 15, 22, 29May 61:30-2:30PM
Participants will focus on balance, coordination, spatial awareness, and creative expression. Each week introduces new movement ideas while revisiting and deepening previous skills, encouraging both continuity and mastery. This class combats the isolation experienced by some in this demographic by fostering social connection while supporting physical and emotional well-being.
Join Juliette Angelo and her guitar for a night of rich testimony, faith, heartbreak, and pain, that ultimately led to complete redemption in Jesus. Angelo firmly believes that you can never too far gone to be saved. Your past does not dictate your future. "I was born into darkness, but I am made of light."
Apr 02 Thursday
The Children’s Advocacy Project would like to invite the community to help us bring awareness to Child Abuse Prevention Month. The community is invited to the Children’s Advocacy Project building at (350 N. Ash Street) to help us plant a pinwheel garden and join the mayor for the reading of the proclamation.In an effort to raise awareness about child abuse, the Children’s Advocacy Project will create a pinwheel garden in which there will be a pinwheel planted for every child victim of abuse and maltreatment we served in 2025 -- 286 children, 286 pinwheels. The pinwheels serve as a visual reminder of the child abuse that continues to occur in our own community.Can’t attend? We encourage you to plant a pinwheel in front of your home or business during the month of April as a way of honoring those who helped you or your children experience a childhood without abuse and neglect.Learn more about how you can support the Children's Advocacy Project and child abuse prevention during the month of April at https://www.childrensadvocacyproject.org/blog/93-child-abuse-prevention-month-2026
Printmaking with Gelli Plates - We utilize a "Gelli Plate" and acrylic paint to produce prints on various surfaces. Gelli plates enable you to create monoprints on different types of paper, employing stencils, texture tools, and rubber ink stamps. I will be enjoyable to create unique prints for family and friends, culminating art show at the workshop conclusion.
Event Details: Need assistance with filling out legal forms? Have questions about the court system or how to navigate your case? Get free legal information from a Volunteer Reference Attorney! A volunteer attorney will be available for brief one-on-one visits with community members to provide instruction in filling out legal forms and navigating the court system. Civil (non-criminal) legal questions only. First come, first served -- no appointment necessary.
Sponsored by Equal Justice Wyoming and the Wyoming Access to Justice Commission in partnership with Campbell County Public Library.
Calling all musicians for open jams at the Gryphon Theatre.
Bring an instrument. Full stage lights and sound. Drums and amps provided.
In partnership with UWYO Music Production Club.
7:00 pm on the first Thursday of the month.
The Cheyenne Little Theatre Players Production of "1984" presents Pay What You Can Night on Thursday, April 2nd at 7:00 P.M. Tickets are general admission. No presale. No minimum ticket purchase required. No refunds or exchanges offered. Check in begins at 6:00 P.M. Seating starts at 6:30 P.M.
Living under the totalitarian rule of the Party, Winston Smith has the idea of writing a diary. It is a crime punishable by death and there is no way of knowing if he is being watched. He imagines two futures—in one, a future readership in a free society thinks of him as a hero; in the other, he is caught, executed, and forgotten. Perhaps both things are true. Winston starts the diary, writing the year, so far as he knows it: 1984. This multi-award winning adaptation of George Orwell’s ultimate dystopian novel continues to resonate throughout the world.
Apr 03 Friday
Acclaimed fiction writer and award-winning author Nina McConigley will speak Friday, April 3, at the University of Wyoming. Her presentation, which is free and open to the public, will be at 4 p.m. in Room 506 of Coe Library. Light refreshments will be served. A book signing will follow the talk. The University Store will have copies of her books available for purchase before and after the event.
McConigley is the author of the short-story collection “Cowboys and East Indians,” which won the PEN Open Book Award and a High Plains Book Award, and was longlisted for the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award. A stage adaptation of “Cowboys and East Indians,” commissioned by the Denver Center for Performing Arts, had its world premiere in 2026. Her latest novel, “How to Commit a Postcolonial Murder,” published in January, is a complex coming-of-age story set in 1986 rural Wyoming that blends dark humor and mystery with an exploration of family, identity and the lingering effects of colonial history.
For more information about McConigley, visit her website at https://ninamcconigley.com/.
McConigley’s presentation is sponsored by UW Libraries and the Honors College.
Those who are not able to attend in person will have the option to attend online via WyoCast at https://uwyo.video.yuja.com/LiveStream/I/826/1029773352.