State Investigates Sheen on Monongahela River in Fairmont

  State environmental regulators are investigating a sheen on the Monongahela River in Fairmont.

The Department of Environmental Protection tells media outlets that the substance appeared to be petroleum based.

The DEP says the substance won’t affect Fairmont’s water supply. The city’s water intake is upstream on the Tygart Valley River.

Morgantown’s water intake is about 15 to 20 miles downstream. The DEP says the Morgantown Utility Board’s water intake is too deep to be affected, since petroleum based substances float on the water’s surface.

The sheen was sighted Saturday. The DEP says no industry or business has reported a spill.

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.

North Central W.Va. Students to Enter National Rocket Competition

West Virginia’s got a rich history of young people involved in the science fields, many using rocket science to fulfill their dreams. A group of students from North Central West Virginia is hoping a rocket will also launch them to the very top.

There are five students in North Central West Virginia who are building a rocket to launch in the Team America Rocketry Challenge competition.

This competition entails sending a rocket 825 feet into the air, which will hold two raw eggs inside of it. The rocket must come down within a certain time period, almost 50 seconds, and the eggs can’t break. Simple right? Well, actually, no.

But a very special machine is helping these students. It’s a three dimensional printer housed at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s facility in Fairmont.

“I like the 3-D Printer a lot, I think it’s really cool. I think it’s really cool that he invited us to play around with it at any time, that’s really amazing,” said Luc Peret, one of the students on the team.

NASA’s Todd Ensign helps students across the state enter these types of events.

“I personally believe that competitions like this provide a gateway for students to delve so much deeper than they could during their school studies. They don’t have the opportunity to use the kind of software and tools that we have here, but they really dig deep,” he said.

These students come from different backgrounds. Jack Thompson for instance, wants to be a ballet dancer. He’s only 16 and is receiving offers from different places for his services.

“If you’re a teenager and you don’t think you are ever going to use math or science in your life, it’s crazy how reality can kick you back into gear and realize everyone uses it at some point in their life,” said Thompson.

The team must launch its rocket before the end of the month, and if its scores are strong, it can qualify for the national competition. That takes place in May in Virginia.

New Satellite Hopes to Improve Weather Predictions

A new satellite is hoping to get a better handle on how weather patterns change, so that forecasters can warn people of severe weather.With help from some…

A new satellite is hoping to get a better handle on how weather patterns change, so that forecasters can warn people of severe weather.

With help from some of the folks at the NASA facility in Fairmont, the satellite is now into space.

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