Fairmont State University Student Wins National Poetry Award

April is Celebrating Poetry Month across the nation. West Virginia’s had a great many poets find success, including Irene McKinney, Linda Goodman, and Tom…

April is Celebrating Poetry Month across the nation. West Virginia’s had a great many poets find success, including Irene McKinney, Linda Goodman, and Tom Andrews. But there’s a young man from Fairmont who’s now also making a name for himself in the field of poetry.

Ian Williams is a 21 year old college student at Fairmont State University. He studies English Education and he dreams of becoming a college professor at some point during his life. But before that, he’s finding success as a poet. Williams recently won a national Poetry Award, in the National Federation of State Poetry Societies College/University Level Poetry Competition. Ian was one of two first place winners. He says he first got interested in poetry as a high school student in Fairmont.

I was that kid who thought he was super sensitive, and was really pretentious about being able to feel. I can feel the pains in the world and I am able to write them down,” Williams joked.

Williams stopped writing for awhile in high school and early on in college but picked poetry up again during his second year at Fairmont State. He says he worked with a professor who helped him better shape his work. Now, he’s a teacher too. He is completing his student teaching at North Marion High School, in Marion County. He says writing poetry is like going on an adventure, and he hopes to convince young people that the adventure is worth taking.

I think that poetry has been largely overlooked by a lot of people because it’s short, and it’s compact, and there’s a lot of meaning into it. I think it has gained this very pretentious reputation. I’m hoping in some small way I can help break down that reputation, and can make poetry more accessible for a broader selection of people,” he said.

Williams’s winning selection is a manuscript entitled “House of Bones.”

Here’s an excerpt:

Rattling Sounds, Bone to Bone

I have bruised my knees       against the tiles flooring this       clerestory of ribs         backed by a Doric spine.       Head bent, eyes adjacent   polished marble—narrow       lips dry the lines escaping.       Everything I see shrinks away—             now a valley of dry bones.       The words shrivel behind   my throat, knowing I cannot       attach tendons; I cannot cover you       with skin; I cannot         put breath into your lungs again.       I cannot make you live.   I fear a vacant throat— I fear it might one day be filled.

What does it take to be a good poet?

Williams says writing a poem can present a great deal of struggles; including being happy with the words you’ve put to paper.

“I think that’s one of the biggest struggles with writing poetry in particular, that kind of self-criticism that goes on,” he said.

“I think the qualities that you have to have to be a good poet, is that you have to the determination to do it, and you have to study, and do your reading, to study it seriously. You have be open minded enough to take criticism, and allow other people to butcher your work,” Williams said.

Williams will be receiving the Florence Kahn Memorial Award for his win in this competition. That includes $500 in cash, and his manuscript will be published as a chapbook, a small publication including ten of his poems, which will be limited to just 100 copies. He will also be reading from the book in Salt Lake City in June to celebrate the victory.

“I’ve never really done a public presentation although that’s going to come up when the celebration for this chapbook comes up in Salt Lake City. So how I’m going to present that and perform poetry at that reading, I have no idea. It’s a completely new world for me. This award has opened so many new opportunities, it’s unreal,” Williams said.

Williams may have to get used to it. He’s already working on new poems, and on a new book of poetry about art. He hopes it to be released this year.

Groups Work to Restore Wheeling's Oldest Cemetery

Work is underway to reset the headstones at Wheeling’s oldest cemetery.
 
Most of the headstones at the city-owned Mount Wood Cemetery have fallen, either due to shifting land or vandalism. 

The Restore Mount Wood Cemetery project is being funded by donations to the Community Foundation for the Ohio Valley. Monument company Rock of Ages donated its time to reset four large obelisks.
 
Wheeling historian Margaret Brennan tells The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register that several noted Wheeling residents are buried in the cemetery, including The Linsly School’s founder, Noah Linsly.
 
Organizers of the project are the Wheeling National Heritage Area Corp. and the Friends of Wheeling.
 
The heritage area’s historian, Rebekah Karelis, says the Ohio Valley Young Preservationists is working to create a database of people buried at the cemetery.

W.Va. Barn Demolition Uncovers 19th Century School

A barn demolition project in Mercer County has uncovered a 19th century log school.
 
Brian Pigg discovered the hand-hewn logs at his barn’s core while removing siding. The barn is located on Browning Lambert Mountain in the Montcalm area.
 
Retired Montcalm High School history teacher Jack Johnson tells the Bluefield Daily Telegraph that the log structure was once known as the Mullins School.
 
Pigg says the demolition project is on hold while he determines his next step. He wants to find out whether the logs are American chestnut.
 
A fungal disease nearly wiped out the American chestnut between the early 1900s and the mid-1950s.
 

"My Bike" Program Comes to West Virginia

For young children with certain disabilities, it’s just about impossible to ride a conventional bicycle. So a children’s charity known as Variety, which began in Pittsburgh in 1928, along with several people who wanted to get involved, started a program called the “My Bike” program. It provides specialized bicycles, that are built to suit the special needs of the child.

Nearly 30 children received these specialized bikes at a recent ceremony in Morgantown with Variety.

One of the most exciting aspects of the event was a bicycle parade, when the children rode these rides for the first time around the SteppingStones Facility in Morgantown. One of the children, six year old Isabella, was extremely excited. It was her first bike, according to her mom, Stephanie Derby.

“We have tried other bicycles from general stores, and nothing has ever worked for her, and she gets kind of frustrated. When she got to try the bike out the first time, she was so excited, and she was pedaling and going within seconds. It gives her a sense of independence; it also gives her an opportunity for a shared activity with her older sister,” she said.

Derby says her children like to ride bikes in their spare time. She says now with Isabella in the seat she hopes the whole family bonds together over this recreational activity.

“Now that [Isabella] is going to have one, it’s something that we will hopefully do as a family and get some good exercise,” said Derby.

These are the first bikes of this kind to be donated through Variety in West Virginia. There are three wheels on the bike, instead of two. There’s a handle bar that looks like those on exercise machines and there are special safety straps too that aren’t on other bikes. Adults can step in and help maneuver the bike if necessary.

Isabella’s family proudly watched as she wheeled around in the bicycle parade.

Also on hand was U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin. He walked around the room with some of the children during the parade. He says his son in law told him about this charity; he hadn’t heard of it before. He says for children to succeed, they need adults in their lives to provide guidance.

These children are blessed because they do have adults out there who care about them. They want for them to have a normal life as much as humanly possible and today it’s a dream come true for them. It’s really special,” he said.

According to Variety, for a family to qualify for a bike, it must reside in one of 10 counties that are participating and the family’s income must meet specific poverty guidelines. The counties participating are Barbour, Doddridge, Harrison, Marion, Marshall, Monongalia, Ohio, Preston, Taylor and Wetzel.

Wheeling Jesuit University Invites Public "Celebration of Appalachia"

Wheeling Jesuit University in Wheeling just kicked off what will be a month-long celebration of all-things Appalachia. “Celebrate Appalachia” is the name of the series of lectures and events.

An open letter addressed by a Bishop to Catholic clergy, laity and the general public in 1975, entitled, “This Land is Home to Me,” was the impetus for what has become the Appalachian Institute at Wheeling Jesuit—a place for research, service, and advocacy for and with the people of Appalachia. From that place, through the initiative of a vista volunteer turned director of the institute, “Celebrate Appalachia” has grown.

Beth Collins was that volunteer. She says what started as a single night of celebrating Appalachian culture with food and revelry has turned into a month full of events that shines a light on everything from corn cob pipes and bluegrass music to mountain top removal coal mining techniques.

Morgantown Changing the Way Deer Are Discovered

West Virginia’s got a lot of deer within its borders, and they can be a burden. For instance, the state’s vehicle collision rate with deer is one of the…

West Virginia’s got a lot of deer within its borders, and they can be a burden. For instance, the state’s vehicle collision rate with deer is one of the highest in the nation, according to a study by State Farm Insurance. In Morgantown, new technology is being used to monitor these animals.

You see them while driving along the interstate. You’ll catch them in your residential neighborhoods, eating vegetables from your garden.

They’re deer, and the state is trying to find better ways to quantify how many of them are in West Virginia. Sheldon Owen is a wildlife specialist at the West Virginia University extension office in Morgantown.

A lot of people will say that we have too many deer out there. Those individuals who love to see a lot of deer are happy with the numbers. We are experiencing a lot of deer damage in the state, to agriculture, to our gardens, and also to our natural resources,” said Owen.

“Our forests are taking a hit because of the number of deer foraging on the seedlings and things that are trying to grow.”

This week, members of the extension office are canvassing Morgantown using new methods to track how many deer are in the city. This includes using a special infrared technology, said Owen.

Any object gives off heat radiation, or a thermal signature. A thermal imaging device basically captures that information and translates it onto a screen so we can form a picture of what is going on out there. We can see this thermal picture of what is across the landscape,” he explained.

“We can determine the outline of a deer, a dog, raccoon, houses, cars, so we can differentiate between what is a dog, deer, or what is going on in the landscape.”

Owen says the infrared technology is superior to the current system that utilizes spotlights.

“We have used spotlights and have driven specific routes and located deer and counted deer over certain area. In using spotlights, we are relying on an external light source, we are missing deer because we can’t see them through vegetation,” he said.

By using this infrared technology, Owen said they find up to 30 percent more of the deer that are out there.

The extension office works closely with the Division of Natural Resources on projects like this. Owen is hoping more counties will use this infrared technology so deer counts can be more accurate.

We’re doing this to try to see, well to come up with a kind of protocol, that everyone can use, other municipalities and communities can use to get a handle on the number of deer in their area,” said Owen. 

Even with the new system Owen expects there will be challenges. He says the biggest one may be line of sight, in other words, finding deer that may be hidden behind buildings and in geographically tricky locations where it could be tough to find them. But he says infrared gives another advantage.

You’re able to see through heavy fog, smoke, mists and things, so it allows us to detect animals that are otherwise missed with our other technologies, such as using a spotlight,” Owen said.

The locators will be traveling in vehicles to do the work. Once the information is collected, the Extension Office will pass along the numbers to the city of Morgantown, which allows urban deer hunting. Owen and his team also work with the Division of Natural Resources, so they will receive the more accurate numbers as well.

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