West Virginia
This Red Sauce Restaurant in West Virginia Still Feels Like Home, 85 Years After It First Opened
For the Time Capsule sequence, we highlight a cherished restaurant, resort or landmark that’s modified remarkably little over time. This week, we go to Minard’s Spaghetti Inn in West Virginia.
THEN
When Michael and Rose Minard handled their first clients to spaghetti and hand-rolled meatballs, it was of their humble stucco dwelling’s eating room, in Clarksburg, W.Va., modestly furnished with an outdated oak desk and about six chairs. By the Nineteen Thirties, an Italian-American neighborhood flourished in north-central West Virginia, however the Nice Melancholy lingered and industrial jobs that sustained immigrant households on the flip of the century had largely dried up. The Minards had little however culinary know-how, handed down from Calabrian ancestors and that stucco constructing wherein Minard’s Spaghetti Inn was born in 1937.
West Virginia
Cabell County voters in WV make their voices heard on women's reproductive rights, school levy • West Virginia Watch
As Cabell County voters took to the polls Tuesday morning, they had various issues and races on their minds.
Maggi Anderson, of Barboursville, West Virginia, said reproductive rights were her primary issue.
“The most important issue for me is women’s rights,” Anderson said. “I feel as a woman of any age, this should be one of the most important things in this election today.”
For her, Anderson said, voting was a way to fight for women’s futures while honoring those who came before her.
“Fighting for not only our rights as women right now,” Anderson said. “But like I said, the women that are going to come after us and to honor the women that came before us.”
Gina Milum, the Democratic candidate for House District 27, of Huntington, said reproductive rights were also one of her top issues.
“First and foremost, I have been activated by reproductive rights,” Milum said. “Even though my reproductive years are long in my rearview mirror, I have two daughters and six granddaughters. It’s an important thing to me.”
Debra La Pierre Sospe, of Milton, said her top issues included the economy, cost of living and homelessness.
She also said she wanted to “bring the Lord back in our country, starting with our schools and the home.”
She said her motivation mainly stemmed from a sense of duty.
“I’ve voted since I was 18,” La Pierre Sospe said. “It’s always been my life.”
Anderson said her son was her primary motivation to cast her ballot.
“I feel like voting you have to do it for not only the people who are here right now,” Anderson said. “But for the children and the future of our country.”
She said to her, the presidential race was most important, followed by the local elections.
“First and most importantly, the presidential,” Anderson said. “The local elections are all fairly important to me.”
Milum said she wished the presidential election was closer in West Virginia.
“Of course, everybody’s biting their nails over the presidential race. I wish I felt things were closer in West Virginia,” Milum said.
Milum said she focused more on down ballot races than the presidential election.
“A lot of the down ballot races, especially the state senate, especially the House of Representatives, are very important for me to watch because people don’t realize how much either harm or good that people in those positions can do,” Milum said.
La Pierre Sospe said she looked for “truth, honesty, and love for the Lord and our country” when deciding who to vote for.
As for the Cabell County school levy, Anderson said it was not at the front of her mind.
“I don’t know much about it,” Anderson said. “It’s not one of the issues I have dove into deeply today.”
Milum lives in the portion of Huntington located in Wayne County, and cannot vote for the levy. She said she would have certainly voted yes if she was able to.
“I was 100% vote no in May,” Milum said. “Now I am 100% vote yes in November.”
Milum said she believed the pre-primary movement to strike down the levy was successful in its messaging.
“The message was sent to the past superintendent,” Milum said. “He heard, he left, we now have new board members, we have a new superintendent, the libraries have their money, the parks have their money, and the schools have better leadership.”
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
West Virginia
West Virginians' governor choices stand on opposite sides of the abortion debate
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginians on Tuesday will choose between a Republican candidate for governor endorsed by former President Donald Trump who has defended abortion restrictions in court and a Democratic mayor who has fought to put the issue on the ballot for voters to decide.
Both Attorney General Patrick Morrisey and Huntington Mayor Steve Williams have played an outsized role in fighting the drug crisis in the state with the highest rate of opioid overdose deaths in the country. But their similarities are few.
When it comes to abortion, the two couldn’t be more different.
Since he was elected attorney general in 2012, Morrisey, 56, has led litigation against opioid manufacturers and distributors netting around $1 billion to abate the crisis that has led to 6,000 children living in foster care in a state of around 1.8 million.
A self-described “conservative fighter,” Morrisey has also used his role to lead on issues important to the national GOP. Those include defending a law preventing transgender youth from participating in sports and a scholarship program passed by lawmakers that would incentivize parents to pull their kids from traditional public school and enroll them in private education or homeschooling.
Key to his candidacy has been his role in defending a near-total ban on abortions passed by the Republican-controlled legislature in 2022 and going to court to restrict West Virginians’ access to abortion pills.
In a statement after a U.S. District Court judge blocked access to abortion pills in 2023, Morrisey vowed to “always stand strong for the life of the unborn.”
Former Huntington city manager and House of Delegates member Williams, 60, has worked to change his city from the “epicenter of the heroin epidemic in America” to one known for solutions to help people with substance use disorder.
After being elected mayor in 2012, he instituted the state’s first citywide office of drug control policy and created a strategic plan that involved equipping first responders with the opioid overdose reversal drug Naloxone and implementing court diversion programs for sex workers and people who use drugs.
Abortion has been a key part of his campaign platform. Earlier this year, Williams collected thousands of signatures on a petition to push lawmakers to vote to put abortion on the ballot.
West Virginia is among the 25 states that do not allow citizen initiatives or constitutional amendments on a statewide ballot, an avenue of direct democracy that has allowed voters to circumvent their legislatures and preserve abortion and other reproductive rights in several states over the past two years.
Republicans have repeatedly dismissed the idea of placing an abortion-rights measure before voters, which in West Virginia is a step only lawmakers can take.
Republican leadership has pointed to a 2018 vote in which just under 52% of voters supported a constitutional amendment saying there is no right to abortion access in the state. But Williams said the vote also had to do with state funding of abortion, which someone could oppose without wanting access completely eliminated.
If elected, Morrisey would become just the third Republican elected to a first gubernatorial term in West Virginia since 1928. Outgoing two-term governor Jim Justice, now a Republican, was first elected as a Democrat in 2016. He switched parties months later at a Trump rally.
Polls statewide open at 6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m.
West Virginia
West Virginia Cruises in Season Opener
Morgantown, WV – West Virginia forward Tucker DeVries led all scorers with 18 points as the Mountaineers (1-0) handled the Robert Morris Colonials (0-1) Monday night 87-59.
West Virginia forward Tucker DeVries hit a pair of threes, added a steal, leading to a dunk, for the early 8-0 advantage and forcing Robert Morris head coach Andy Toole to take a timeout. The Mountaineers extended their run to 21-0 at the 14:42 mark of the first half before junior guard D.J. Smith hit jumper to put the Colonials on the board.
West Virginia freshman guard KJ Tenner extended the Mountaineers lead to 28 after back-to-back threes with just under 12 minutes remaining in the first half.
Robert Morris began chipping away at the WVU lead, dwindling it down to 16 after Smith buried a three but WVU quickly responded with an 8-0 run behind threes from Tenner and freshman guard Jonathan Powell for a 44-17 with 4:05 left in the first half.
The Mountaineers took a 46-26 lead into halftime, shooting 53.1% (17-32) from the field, including 9-21 from three-point range.
West Virginia senior guard Toby Okani started the scoring for the Mountaineers in the second half with a fadeaway baseline jumper.
Robert Morris senior forward Ismael Plett answered with a bucket and the foul but WVU responded with a 8-0 run with senior guard Javon Small hitting consecutive threes for six of his eight second half points, and finishing the night with 15 points, extending the Mountaineer lead 56-30.
The Mountaineers maintained their 20-plus advantage throughout the second half, leading by as many as 28. Along with Small, freshman guard Jonathan Powell put up eight second half points to finish with 11 points and Okani produced 13 points on the night as the Mountaineers coasted to a 87-59 victory.
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