“Everybody’s just trying to figure out, why Isaac?” his godfather said.
Virginia State Police say Evans was driving a 2014 Mazda 3 west on Route 3 near Route 610 at about 6 a.m. Sunday when a 2008 Mercury Milan being driven the wrong way crashed into his car head-on.
The impact caused Evans’ car to hit a 2012 Jeep Wrangler that a 45-year-old woman was driving beside him.
Evans was pronounced dead on the scene. He was wearing a seat belt.
The driver of the Mercury also died at the scene. Police identified him as J’haun G. Pendleton, of Fredericksburg. He was 27. It was unknown if Pendleton was wearing a seat belt.
AT the break of dawn, cadets from the Marianas High School Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps and the Northern Marianas College Senior Reserve Officers Training Corps on Saturday competed in the 2nd (not 3rd as earlier reported) Annual Extreme Raider Challenge held at MHS.
There were five teams: Team Itim, Cho Debu, Island Made, and Taco Belles from the MHS JROTC and Proa Warrior from the NMC SROTC.
Each team raced against the clock to complete a multitude of strenuous physical fitness events, including push-ups, curl-ups, a mile-run, the Assault Beach Run, the Van Push, the Team Pull-Up, the Litter Carry, and the Relay Race.
Garcia: Legendary St. Mary s professor inspired three current City Council candidates
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Charles Cotrell, President Emeritus, Professor of Political Science, Director, Institute of Public Administration, Politics and Public Policy at St. Mary s University.J. Michael Short/SPECIAL TO THE EXPRESS-NEWS
After 55 years at St. Mary’s University, legendary professor Charles Cotrell plans to step down at the end of this semester.
His long tenure at St. Mary’s includes 13 years as university president, thousands of classroom hours as a political science professor and countless acts of mentorship for his students.
Even as Cotrell prepares to step away from his university duties, however, the evidence of his massive impact can be seen in this year’s City Council elections.
Chinese spy case in Chicago linked to larger foreign espionage scheme
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CHICAGO (WLS) The spy case against a former U.S. Army reservist and student at Illinois Institute of Technology wasn t a one-man espionage show, according to federal investigators.
Ji Chaoqun s federal court appearance in Chicago on Thursday is routine, in an anything-but-normal case. Chaoqun is charged against the backdrop of a possibly wider Chinese scheme to siphon intelligence information overseas.
Chaoqun and a similarly-accused spyman in Cincinnati, Ohio, shared the same foreign connection according to authorities, what s known in intelligence circles as a handler. That link is pointed out in federal court records examined by the I-Team.