A Wheeling man turned himself in after a shot fired incident on Fairmont Avenue on Saturday morning. According to the Ohio County Sheriff’s Office, 34-year-old
A back-and-forth, fast-paced opening quarter concluded with the Rams (12-1) leading 22-17. The Bees (9-4) got 11 first-quarter points from guard Kailee Haymond, who made a trio of three-pointers over that time to help EFHS keep pace.
While many of us were staying cozy indoors, a father-son duo was hard at work making the best of this week's wintery weather by building a one-of-a-kind igloo.
The following events happened on these dates in West Virginia history. To read more, go to e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia at
After spending 18 years with the Fairmont Senior Polar Bears football program, the school has announced that head coach Nick Bartic has stepped down.
Five forensic science students from Fairmont State University, along with their professor Kristy Henson, recently attended the annual meeting of the Northeastern Association of Forensic Scientists.
The West Virginia Hive Network proudly welcomed three new members to its Board of Directors in 2024: Amy Baker, Vice President of Corporate Communications and Marketing at
Meanwhile, Nitro (8-2) answered Stanley’s triple with nine consecutive points from Jaycee Simon, who made a pair of triples around a driving bucket, along with one free throw that left her team with a commanding 48-27 lead late in the third.
The Wheeling Nailers fell to the Worcester Railers on Saturday 4-3 in the first game of the road weekend series. Wheeling is now 25-8-2-0 on the season as they
Javon Small scored 27 points, grabbed seven rebounds and dished five assists, and West Virginia finished strong for a 64-57 win against No. 2 Iowa State in a Big 12 Conference showdown Saturday evening in Morgantown,
West Virginia celebrated the life of NBA great Jerry West, the school’s all-time leading scorer, at its sellout game against No. 2 Iowa State, and announced at halftime that his No. 44 would be retired across all sports at the university.
The Buckhannon Fire Department started the conference because it wanted a way for local fire departments to hear national conversations in firefighting without having to leave the mountain state.