Vnes One more inconvenience: Broad Street bridge in Waynesboro closed on Friday
漏 MargJohnsonVA 鈥?stock.adobe A crash at the intersection of Tinkling Springs and Ramsey roads in Augusta County resulted in one fatality Tuesday.Brenda K. Diaz-Villalobos, 68, of Staunton, died at the scene.A 2019 Nissan Altima was traveling south on Tinkling Springs Road when it failed to stop for a red light. The Nissan entered the intersection and collided with a 2005 Toyota Corolla, driven
stanley deutschland by Diaz-Villalobos, that was traveling east on Ramsey Road. The impact of the crash caused the Toyota to run off the road into a ditch and then up
vaso stanley an embankment.The driver of the Nissan, Christopher S. Allen, 37, of Nellysford, was transported to a nearby hospital for treatment of minor injuries.Both drivers were wearing seatbelts.Virginia State Police is investigating the crash.Charges are pending. Share this page Share Facebook Twitter
stanley cup Linkedin Telegram E-mail TagsAugusta CountyVirginia State Police Crystal GrahamCrystal GrahamCrystal Abbe Graham is the regional editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1999 graduate of Virginia Tech, she has worked for 25 years as a reporter and editor for several Virginia publications, written a book, and garnered more than a dozen Virginia Press Association awards for writing and graphic design. She was the co-host of Viewpoints, a weekly TV news show, and co-host Nezz Women s soccer: 2 UVA blitzes Delaware, 6-1
Bridgewater native and James Madison University gr
stanley us aduate student Julia Stutzman will be heading to the Galapagos Islands Feb. 7 to research the plant genus Cordia.Stutzman, who will receive her masters degree in biology this spring, is trying to determine how many species of Cordia grow in the archipelago, located about 600 miles west of Ecuador in the South Pacific.While there are perhaps 300 Cordia species around the world, current literature states there are four Cordia
stanley mug species found only in the Galapagos. JMU biologist Conley McMullen, who published Flowering Plants of the Galapagos in 1999, isnt convinced the identifications are accurate. One of them is obviously different from everything else, so we would agree that there are at least two species, said McMullen, who advises Stutzman and will make the trip too. But these other things they say are divided into three species, you really cant tell what they are. And thats what Julias project is, to study all of these plants that have been collected and determine whether they should be considered different species and if so, how many. Its possible we could say no, this is all just a very variable single species or we might say its just two species or we might agree its three or we might actually have to s
stanley uk ay there are four. Stutzman, who will return from the trip Feb. 22, graduated from Turner Ashby High School in 2004 and from Bridgewater College in 2008, where she earned undergraduate degrees in biology and environmental