New Exhibit Brings W.Va. Coal Mining History To Nation’s Capital

From March 16 to July 6, the National Archives will display a new exhibit entitled “Power & Light: Russell Lee’s Coal Survey.” It features more than 200 photographs taken by documentary photographer Russell Lee.

Coal mining has long served a place of importance in Appalachian history. But a new exhibit in Washington, D.C. will help the region’s industrial past reach a wider audience later this week.

From March 16 to July 6, the National Archives will display a new exhibit entitled “Power & Light: Russell Lee’s Coal Survey.” It features more than 200 photographs taken by documentary photographer Russell Lee.

In 1946, Lee conducted a survey across 13 U.S. states, documenting the inner workings of the coal industry and its impact on miners and their families.

Alongside his wife Jean, Lee captioned the collection of works slated for display. His survey followed a series of strikes from coal miners that had originally been met with national skepticism, according to the National Archives website.

The exhibit spans 3,000 square feet of the Lawrence F. O’Brien Gallery. It also features a handwritten note from President Harry Truman on the strikes, and several other primary sources.

The exhibit is free and open to members of the public.

For more information visit the National Archives website at https://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2024/nr24-13.

Randolph County Fourth Grader To Light U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree 

Ethan Reese, a 4th grade student from Randolph County, will light the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree on Tuesday in Washington, D.C. The Beverly Elementary School student has a deep connection to the Monongahela National Forest, where this year’s U.S. Capitol tree came from. His great-great-grandfather Arthur Wood was one of the first superintendents there.

Ethan Reese, a 4th grade student from Randolph County, will light the U.S. Capitol Christmas tree on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.  

The Beverly Elementary School student has a deep connection to the Monongahela National Forest, where this year’s U.S. Capitol tree came from. His great-great-grandfather Arthur Wood was one of the first superintendents there. 

“I think my great-great-grandfather Arthur would be so happy that I’m talking about his family history,” Reese said.

Reese said he and his family love to visit the park to view wildlife, bird watch and identify different plants and animals, and he hopes to be part of a generation to keep the forest a preserved public land for the future. 

“I really hope that they’ll still be protected by the national forest guard. Wildlife preserves, and I just hope people take good care the forest,” he said.

4-H, a club for kids and teens to develop leadership skills and become productive citizens, chose Reese through an essay contest. Reese’s mother Amanda said her son is a fourth generation member of the 4-H club. 

“His great-grandmother, his grandmother, myself and his aunt have all been in the same 4H club that’s about to turn 100 years old,” she said.

The Capitol tree, otherwise known as the “People’s Tree,” is different from the National Tree. The National Tree also came out of West Virginia, having been timbered at the Monongahela National Forest, and will be lit by the First Family and U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin.

The Capitol tree will be lit by Ethan Reese and is adorned with 5,000 ornaments made by youth and volunteers. 

“Ethan has a great connection to this tree and where it came from,” Amanda Reese said. 

The ceremony for the tree lighting will be at 5 p.m. EST on Nov. 28.

Smoky Haze Blanketing US And Canada Could Last Into The Weekend

With weather systems expected to hardly budge, the smoky blanket billowing across the U.S. and Canada from wildfires in Quebec and Nova Scotia should persist into Thursday and possibly the weekend.

NEW YORK (AP) — On air quality maps, purple signifies the worst of it. In reality, it’s a thick, hazardous haze that’s disrupting daily life for millions of people across the U.S. and Canada, blotting out skylines and turning skies orange.

And with weather systems expected to hardly budge, the smoky blanket billowing from wildfires in Quebec and Nova Scotia and sending plumes of fine particulate matter as far away as North Carolina and northern Europe should persist into Thursday and possibly the weekend.

That means at least another day, or more, of a dystopian-style detour that’s chased players from ballfields, actors from Broadway stages, delayed thousands of flights and sparked a resurgence in mask wearing and remote work — all while raising concerns about the health effects of prolonged exposure to such bad air.

The weather system that’s driving the great Canadian-American smoke out — a low-pressure system over Maine and Nova Scotia — “will probably be hanging around at least for the next few days,” U.S. National Weather Service meteorologist Bryan Ramsey said.

“Conditions are likely to remain unhealthy, at least until the wind direction changes or the fires get put out,” Ramsey said. “Since the fires are raging — they’re really large — they’re probably going to continue for weeks. But it’s really just going be all about the wind shift.”

Across the eastern U.S., officials warned residents to stay inside and limit or avoid outdoor activities again Thursday, extending “Code Red” air quality alerts in some places for a third-straight day as forecasts showed winds continuing to push smoke-filled air south.

The smoke has moved over Greenland and Iceland since June 1, and was expected to reach Norway on Thursday, the Norwegian Climate and Environmental Research Institute said, but wasn’t expected to be a health concern.

In Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered schools to cancel outdoor recess, sports and field trips Thursday. In suburban Philadelphia, officials set up an emergency shelter so people living outside can take refuge from the haze.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state was making a million N95 masks — the kind prevalent at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic — available at state facilities, including 400,000 in New York City. She also urged residents to stay put.

“You don’t need to go out and take a walk. You don’t need to push the baby in the stroller,” Hochul said Wednesday night. “This is not a safe time to do that.”

The message may be getting through. So far, officials said Wednesday, New York City has yet to see an uptick in 911 calls related to respiratory issues and cardiac arrests.

More than 400 blazes burning across Canada have left 20,000 people displaced. The U.S. has sent more than 600 firefighters and equipment to Canada. Other countries are also helping.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke to President Joe Biden by phone on Wednesday. Trudeau’s office said he thanked Biden for his support and that both leaders “acknowledged the need to work together to address the devastating impacts of climate change.”

Canadian officials say this is shaping up to be the country’s worst wildfire season ever. It started early on drier-than-usual ground and accelerated quickly. Smoke from the blazes has been lapping into the U.S. since last month but intensified with recent fires in Quebec, where about 100 were considered out of control Wednesday.

“I can taste the air,” Dr. Ken Strumpf said in a Facebook post from Syracuse, New York, where the sky took on the colorful nickname of the local university: Orange.

The smoke was so thick in Canada’s capital, Ottawa, that office towers just across the Ottawa River were barely visible. In Toronto, Yili Ma said her hiking group canceled a planned hike this week, and she was forgoing the restaurant patios that are a beloved summer tradition in a nation known for hard winters.

“I put my mask away for over a year, and now I’m putting on my mask since yesterday,” Ma lamented.

Eastern Quebec got some rain Wednesday, but Montreal-based Environment Canada meteorologist Simon Legault said no significant rain is expected for days in the remote areas of central Quebec where the wildfires are more intense.

In the U.S., federal officials paused some flights bound Wednesday for New York’s LaGuardia Airport and slowed planes to Newark and Philadelphia because smoke was limiting visibility.

Major League Baseball’s Yankees and Phillies had their games postponed. On Broadway, “Hamilton” and “Camelot” canceled Wednesday performances and “Prima Facie” star Jodie Comer left a matinee after 10 minutes because of difficulty breathing. The show restarted with an understudy, show publicists said.

It was not to be at Central Park’s outdoor stage, either. Shakespeare in the Park canceled its Thursday and Friday performances of “Hamlet,” saying ’tis not nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of wretched air.

___

Gillies reported from Toronto.

W.Va. Senior Named Finalist In National Poetry Competition

Sprouse is one of nine finalists out of a field of 54 state and jurisdictional champions from across the country to compete reciting classic and contemporary poetry.

A West Virginia high school student has been named a finalist in the national Poetry Out Loud competition. 

Bridgeport High School senior Morgan Sprouse will compete for the title of 2023 Poetry Out Loud National Champion and a $20,000 award Wednesday night in Washington, D.C.

Sprouse is one of nine finalists out of a field of 54 state and jurisdictional champions from across the country to compete reciting classic and contemporary poetry. 

She says she is grateful to be a part of the first in person Poetry Out Loud since 2019.

“There’s such a connection to be made when you’re looking at someone, and you can feel their presence,” Sprouse said. “It’s just so nice to be there and be in front of people and get to convey your emotions in front of a group of people and know that they have heard you.”

As a student also involved in her school’s theater department, Sprouse said she found Poetry Out Loud as a welcome distraction during the COVID-19 lockdown.

“My sophomore year it was in the very midst of COVID and I was just looking for things to be involved in even if it was online,” she said. “I was a little bored, I was tired of having to stay in and not having anything to perform and do because that’s really what I love to do.”

Sprouse will perform two poems, “Perhaps the world ends here” by Joy Harjo and “Shall earth no more inspire thee” by Emily Brontë. If selected for the final round, she will perform “I Am Offering this Poem” by Jimmy Santiago Baca.
A one-time, live online broadcast of the competition will be available here starting at 7 p.m.

New W.Va.-Washington, D.C. Liaison Seeks Federal Grants

Melissa Decker said her title is D.C. Director for Gov. Jim Justice. She will identify areas where the state can compete for more federal grant funding, serve as liaison with the West Virginia congressional delegation and be the primary point of contact between federal officials and the state of West Virginia.

A member of Gov. Jim Justice’s staff is now working in Washington, D.C. to bring home federal grant money.

Melissa Decker said her title is D.C. Director for Gov. Justice. She will identify areas where the state can compete for more federal grant funding, serve as liaison with the West Virginia congressional delegation and be the primary point of contact between federal officials and the state of West Virginia.

“I’ve met our folks in Charleston just to get to know them and establish relationships,” Decker said. “So I can pick their brains on what grants they have looked at. I’m working so we can identify if we haven’t competed for a grant, and how we can change that legislatively.”

Decker said her decades of experience in working with federal legislators and agencies has honed her communication skills.

She brings more than 30 years of public service experience to the position having worked in various roles with state governments and the federal government.

Most recently, she served as Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary of Memorial Affairs within the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

Decker previously worked in former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s administration as Deputy Director of California’s D.C. Office and as a Deputy Cabinet Secretary. She also served as a legislative analyst for the U.S. House Republican Conference under U.S. Rep. John Boehner.

Decker has a Master’s Degree in Public Administration, an Executive Master’s Degree in International Relations, and a Certificate of Advanced Study in Security Studies from Syracuse University.

Originally from Ashland, Ohio, Decker earned her Bachelor’s Degree in Politics and Public Policy from Bethany College in Bethany, West Virginia She says she went to college as a math major, but the curriculum at this small liberal arts school swayed her interests.

“I took an amazing class from a Reagan Democrat appointee for American government studies,” Decker said. “And all of a sudden I realized that public policy was really cool because there’s no one answer. It’s all about building the coalition and finding ways to get everyone on board and moving something forward.”

Decker says she’s a grant researching nerd who knows how to compete for the money.

“And I think it just allows West Virginia to be more competitive,” Decker said. “Just being able to walk across the street and up to Capitol Hill and talk with our delegation anytime it’s needed.”

Justice recently said there were 381 possible grants that West Virginians could tag on to. Decker said she looks forward to seeking that number, or more.

W.Va. Native Works With Legends At Kennedy Center

On a busy holiday afternoon at the Capitol Market, Kanawha County native Kevin Struthers was trying not to sound too excited about his job, but sometimes it’s near impossible for him not to gush.

“I’m the Kennedy Center’s Director of Programming Jazz, Chamber and Classical New Music,” he said, laughed and added, “It’s kind of an unwieldy title.”

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is the United States National Cultural Center. Located in the nation’s capital, it’s a sprawling building that houses theaters and concert halls that have hosted some of the most respected and revered artists in the world.

The 55-year-old oversees a chunk of what is seen and heard on those stages and is responsible for the artistic programming and day-to-day direction of jazz, chamber, and classical music programming at the Kennedy Center.

Struthers has been around the famous and notable for decades. He’s been there backstage, but also listened to superstars in their respective musical fields rehearsing from his office and been at his desk when some of these same performers have ducked their heads in through the door to say hello, but he can still get impressed.

The director sighed and marveled at his own career, which seemed, if not impossible, at least unlikely for a saxophone player from South Charleston High School.

“It has been amazing,” he said. “I have been so lucky, so privileged.”

Struthers was born in Charleston and went to school in South Charleston. His father, George, now deceased, was a dentist for 37 years in Kanawha City.

“My mom, Nancy, still lives in Charleston,” he said. “So, does my mother-in-law, Susan Harpold.”

Struthers said he was one of the local music and theater kids. He was in the band, sang in show choir and took roles with the Charleston Light Opera Guild.

“I did all the artsy stuff,” he said.

One of his strengths, though, was leadership. He was organized, focused and responsible — which often led to him being tapped for those kinds of roles behind the scenes of performances.

In 1986, after he went to Washington and Lee University in Virginia to study musicology, he fell into the same kind of pattern.

Management and administration suited him.

“A lot of people in administration are frustrated artists,” Struthers said. “To be an artist, you really have to have that drive.”

He had a lot of drive, but he wasn’t so sure he had enough talent as either a singer or a saxophone player to be really successful.

“But the arts were such an important part of my life,” he said. “I always wanted to be part of that.”

Friends told him he could maybe find a career in arts management — either overseeing a theater or maybe a few performers. He started looking for a program.

While studying at Washington and Lee, he met his future wife, Courtney Harpold, a pre-med student, who also happened to be from Charleston.

They got to know each other while singing in a school choir.

“We’d never met,” Struthers said. “I went to South Charleston, and she went to ‘The Hill,’ George Washington.”

Harpold lived two doors down from his grandparents. Struthers said they knew many of the same people, even had some of the same friends. There was some crossover between schools and church.

“We were at the same events at the same time,” he said. “We just didn’t know each other.”

A romance blossomed.

In 1989, Struthers earned his music degree, with an emphasis on musicology, while Harpold went on to WVU Medical School.

They continued to date, while Harpold worked toward her medical degree. Meanwhile, Struthers took a job with the West Virginia Division of Culture and History and then Tourism.

“That was really fun,” he said. “I was one of the public relations officials. I got to travel all over the state and host travel writers from across the country.”

The job allowed him to mountain bike, ski and go rafting.

“It was a great job for a 24-year-old,” he said, adding, “But not a lot of money.”

In Charleston, he stayed active in the arts, sang and was in the light opera guild’s production of “Oklahoma!” which starred a teenage Jennifer Garner.

“She was something then and look at her now,” Struthers said.

In 1993, he decided to pursue a master’s degree in arts management at American University in Washington, D.C., just as Harpold was finishing her studies at the West Virginia University School of Medicine.

She graduated with honors and then was placed at Georgetown University Hospital for her medical residency.

“She’s just brilliant,” Struthers said. “We got married and moved to Washington.”

While studying, he interned at National Public Radio, where he worked in development.

“Which is what they call fundraising,” he said.

One of his American University professors was also the vice president of development at NPR. After Struthers completed his degree in 1995, he said the professor helped him get a job as the assistant to the vice president of development at the Kennedy Center.

“I had no idea what I was doing,” he said. “I learned everything as I went.”

After a year and a half of working in the back office, Struthers said he became aware that he hadn’t stepped foot inside a theater in years.

“This was not why I got into the business,” he said.

So, when a line producer job opened up at the Kennedy Center, he applied for it and was made line producer for “Billy Taylor’s Jazz at the Kennedy Center.”

“A line producer job is a lot of rigmarole,” he said. “It’s contracts and travel arrangements and housing and hospitality — a lot of details.”

But it was still very cool.

The job opened up new worlds of music to Struthers, who didn’t know an awful lot about jazz.

“I’d had some exposure to jazz at Washington and Lee,” he said. “I’d played some.”

But spending time around Dr. Billy Taylor, an acclaimed jazz composer and pianist, who was considered a living legend, was entirely different.

“So, here I am in this job, meeting all these amazing artists and I don’t know who any of these people are,” he said. “I didn’t really understand what I was being exposed to, but I was learning.”

From a line producer, Struthers eventually became the director of jazz programming at the Kennedy Center, working with Taylor until his death in 2010 at the age of 89. He continued as the director of jazz programming with the center’s current artistic director for jazz, Jason Moran, who succeeded Taylor in 2011.

“The artistic director has the vision and the ideas,” Struthers said. “My role is to take these thoughts and view them through the lens of our institutional mission and then look at hall availability, the budget, what’s playing in the market and create a season.”

It’s a weighty responsibility for all of them, he said.

“The Kennedy Center’s mission is to present the best in performing arts in the world,” Struthers said. “We are the national performing arts center.”

While on staff, Struthers has met or been in the room with some of the most prominent artists in the world as well as a few of the most powerful people in the country. Washington’s elite comes to the Kennedy Center.

“You really know who you’re going to see there,” he said.

The pandemic changed things at the Kennedy Center. Struthers was asked to take on the role of director of programming for classical new music and chamber music, as well as jazz.

“It began a whole new chapter for me,” he said.

Like many other organizations, Kennedy Center employees shifted to remote work during the pandemic. This changed everything for Struthers and not necessarily for the worse.

Struthers and his family have lived in Shepherdstown since the late 1990s.

He said, “For the first six or seven years, I took the train into Washington, but as Courtney and I had kids and they got older and my job evolved, making the train became impossible.”

For over 15 years, he drove 75 miles each way to work, but remaining in West Virginia was important to Struthers and his wife.

“I was what the government calls ‘an extreme commuter,’ but the pandemic changed all of that,” he said. “I could work from home. That much has been such a gift.”

It turned out that he could do a lot of his work from home and because everyone was meeting more online, he was able to make contact with some people more easily than before.

These days, Struthers splits his time between his office in Washington and his office at home.

“We’re working on trying to find the right balance,” he said. “But I clearly don’t need to be there all the time, still.”

The pandemic brought something else to the Kennedy Center: “Mountain Stage.”

Struthers’ bosses said that while the Kennedy Center was doing a lot of programming, they weren’t focusing that much on folk, country, or world music.

“Mountain Stage was the perfect vehicle to elevate that kind of work,” he said. “Mountain Stage has an eclectic mix of music — and it’s in West Virginia.”

Struthers said his superiors were aware that he was from West Virginia.

“They were like, ‘Oh really, Kevin,’” he laughed.

Stuthers said he told them, “I know, I know, but they’re the best.”

“Mountain Stage” made its debut at the Kennedy Center Oct. 24. Hosted by Kathy Mattea, the show included performances by Asleep at the Wheel and West Virginia’s own Tim O’Brien.

Behind the scenes, before the show, Struthers said he ran into “Mountain Stage” piano player Bob Thompson.

Struthers remembered the first time he watched him play, over 40 years ago. Thompson had been hired to play music at area schools.

He saw him perform at South Charleston Junior High.

“What a great piano player,” Struthers said. “Never would I have imagined our lives would intersect like that.”

The director had no idea what was ahead for him. The pandemic makes looking too far into the future difficult, but he knows he has an amazing life and an incredible job for someone who loves the arts.

“There’s nothing like being in a room with live music,” he said. “You can’t quite replicate the sound of a live orchestra. There’s just something incomparable to listening to a record and being 30 feet away when Aretha Franklin is singing.”

Exit mobile version