HUNTINGTON — The 39th anniversary of a plane crash that killed most of Marshall University’s football team has been marked by hundreds at a memorial service.
They gathered Saturday around the Marshall University Memorial Fountain to honor the 75 victims of the 1970 plane crash. The service was held a few hours before the Thundering Herd’s game against Southern Mississippi.
The keynote speaker was Joe Gillette, a 1973 Marshall graduate who would have been with the team had it not been for a shoulder injury. He called Nov. 14, 1970, a day “I will never forget.”
The chartered jet bringing the Thundering Herd back from a 17-14 loss at East Carolina crashed short of the runway at Tri-State Airport in Kenova.
The crash killed players, coaches, staff, supporters and the flight crew.
It was the subject of the 2006 film “We Are Marshall.”
West Virginia
Marshall marks anniversary of plane crash
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LiveWell West Virginia is a collaboration of the West Virginia University Extension Service and the Charleston Gazette. -
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W.Va. could add hurdles to primary ballot
West Virginia officials have several options if they want to avoid a repeat outcome of this month’s primary election, when imprisoned felon Keith Judd attracted nearly 41 percent of the vote against President Barack Obama.
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Computers used to grade WESTEST essays
Thousands of essays written by West Virginia students are largely going unread by human eyes.
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State figures show that coal mining employment in West Virginia is at its highest level since the 1990s.
The Charleston Gazette says a recent analysis of Workforce West Virginia figures by Ted Boettner with the West Virginia Center for Budget and Policy shows there were nearly 22,700 mining jobs in 2011. - More West Virginia Headlines
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Man gets life sentence for ex-wife’s death

