January 10, 1969: Novelist Tom Kromer Died in Huntington

Novelist and short story writer Tom Kromer died in Huntington on January 10, 1969, at age 62. During his childhood, his family moved frequently—living in Huntington, Fairmont, Kingwood, and Williamstown—wherever his father could find work in the coal or glass industries.

Best known for his first novel, Waiting for Nothing, published in 1935, Kromer chronicled the plight of the downtrodden during the Great Depression. He attracted the attention of the literary left, including Theodore Dreiser and Lincoln Steffens, who published some of Kromer’s short fiction in his magazine, Pacific Weekly. Kromer’s unfinished novel, Michael Kohler, was edited by playwright Eugene O’Neill and others and published partly in American Spectator magazine. In it, Kromer drew upon the firsthand struggles of his father and others in the coal and glass industries.

Kromer attended Marshall College (now University) for brief periods in the late ‘20s before crisscrossing the country, often hopping freight trains. After getting married in 1936, he settled in Albuquerque. He became an invalid about 1940 and gave up writing. Tom Kromer returned to Huntington in 1960 and lived there with family until his death.

December 27, 2006: Artist June Kilgore Dies

Artist June Kilgore died on December 27, 2006, at age 79. The Huntington native was an expressionist painter who spent 30 years as an art professor at Marshall University. Kilgore’s modern and abstract work evokes intense emotion and a sense of the spiritual.

An eloquent communicator, she had a significant influence on her students at Marshall and inspired many accomplished West Virginia artists, including Dolly Hartman and Sally Romayne.

Kilgore’s work can be found in a number of prestigious collections, including those of former Senator Jay Rockefeller and the Federal University of Brazil. She was the subject of the first artist retrospective at the Culture Center in Charleston and had one-person exhibits in Louisville and New York City.

In 1997, Kilgore won one of three Governor’s Awards in the West Virginia Juried Exhibition for her abstract painting “Black Garden Stone for Meditation (With Guardians),” which also received the show’s highest honor, the D. Gene Jordon Memorial Award. Two years later, she won another Governor’s Award.

June Kilgore is remembered today as one of West Virginia’s most influential artists of the 20th century.

November 14, 1970: Marshall University Plane Crash

On the night of November 14, 1970, a Southern Airways DC-9 approached a foggy and rainy Tri-State Airport in Wayne County. The airliner slammed into a hillside just short of the runway and burst into flames. All 75 passengers were killed. 

On board were nearly the entire Marshall University football team along with the head coach, athletic director, and 36 other fans, coaches, announcers, and crew members. It is still the deadliest sports-related air disaster in U.S. history.

The tragedy affected all of Huntington. Everyone seemingly knew someone on board the flight. A local doctor served as a pallbearer at six funerals, and others attended a funeral a day for a week.

The event remains an important part of Huntington’s collective memory. Every year on November 14, community members gather at the Marshall University student center to commemorate the crash. At the center, a memorial fountain with 75 jets of water honors the 75 who died.

In 2006, the movie We Are Marshall brought the tragedy back into the national spotlight. It recounted how the community rallied around the new football team after the crash.

Super Why! Visits Marshall

For the fourth year, WVPB Education Staff participated in Marshall University’s SUPER Day.  Hundreds of students from schools in the Huntington area came to Marshall to celebrate literacy.  Middle school students kept elementary students engaged by reading to them.  Afterwards, students went from station to station engaging in literacy activities.  It is a day of pandimonium and excitement. 

Margaret Miller, WVPB Curriculum Specialist, says” It is a crazy day, but to see so many children get excited about reading and learning makes it workwhile.

PBS LearningMedia at MU's Super Day

Picture 500 grade school children decending upon a college campus eager to engage in reading and literacy  events and you have an image of SUPER DAY (Students Using their Powers to Engage in Reading.)  For the third year Marshall University College of Education and Professional Development has sponsored an event to encourage area students to enjoy reading.  And, for the third year WVPB’s Education staff, incuding The SUPER WHY team have been a part of the day. 

Students at SUPER DAY 2018

This year WVPB staff, Margaret Miller and Debbie Oleksa, engaged students in a PBS LearningMedia art lesson on portraits based on the art of  area artist, Charles Jupiter Hamilton.  “We engage the students with digital content and follow that up with an integrated lesson in which reading and following directions are key” said Miller, WVPB Curriculum Specialist.

Miller enjoys participating in this event which encourages students to become proficient readers.  It is also an opportunity to showcase the free digital library that is PBS LearningMedia. According to Miller “It is an amazing resource that houses thousands of digital media lessons, searchable by content area, age level, and state standard.  The best part, it is free to anyone who sets up an account.”

Marshall University SUPER Day Volunteers from Alpha Xi Delta, Student Government Association, and Pi Kappa Alpha worked to help 2nd graders complete “zany portraits”!

Marshall University Unveils Neurology Residency Program

The Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine at Marshall University has been awarded a new residency program, set to begin next summer. 

Marshall’s School of Medicine announced Wednesday its accreditation for a new neurology residency training program. 

Neurologists study and treat brain and nervous system disorders ranging from strokes to Alzheimer’s disease.

Marshall’s four-year program will accept three residents per year, for a total of 12 when it reaches its capacity. The program begins July 1, 2018.

The addition makes the ninth accredited residency program at the Joan C. Edwards School, which also offers seven fellowships.

Chairman of the school’s Department of Neurology Paul Ferguson said the new program will help increase access to critical care.

“By creating a neurology residency program, we will not only increase the number of providers within the greater tri-state area, but also improve the likelihood that our trainees will move from here into underserved areas of our state following the completion of their training,” Ferguson said.

Neurology residents will see patients at Marshall Neurology, Cabell Huntington Hospital, St. Mary’s Medical Center, and the Huntington VA Medical Center.

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