With dozens of headlines every day, it’s easy to miss some here and there.
Keep the conversation going. Here are five stories from this week that got people talking:
- A Tuesday afternoon car crash on Interstate 64 took the life of a Richmond woman, who was identified by police as 47-year-old Darlene Therese Harris.
https://wydaily.com/2017/10/03/police-fatal-car-crash-on-i-64-in-james-city-county-nws/
- An initiative of the Brewers Association — an upside-down bottle logo on beer bottle labels — is a recent phenomenon, but its appearance in Williamsburg dovetails with a larger trend: a battle for market share.
https://wydaily.com/2017/10/05/in-the-shadow-of-anheuser-busch-williamsburg-craft-brewers-split-over-logo-biz/
- Ted Maris-Wolf, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation’s vice president of education, research, and historical interpretation is leaving the foundation after getting a new job with the Enrichmond Foundation as caretaker of the Evergreen Cemetery.
https://wydaily.com/2017/10/05/colonial-williamsburg-leader-of-historical-interpretation-secures-new-job-in-richmond-nws/
- WYDaily uncovered court documents in a case against a local nursing home. The lawsuit claims Envoy, a nursing home in Williamsburg, was negligent for not caring for a man who had suffered a stroke.
https://wydaily.com/2017/10/02/man-who-developed-bedsores-seeks-7m-in-lawsuit-against-nursing-home-nws/
- Five animals are waiting to be adopted by members of the public at Heritage Humane Society. They were abandoned by their owners and some were tied to trees as Hurricane Irma hit.
https://wydaily.com/2017/10/04/abandoned-during-irma-hurricane-irma-survivors-up-for-adoption-nws/

