Three fixes come to mind. 1) You could make "false ribs" (a "strip rib", like on an I-Beamer), and glue it in directly on either side of the duff rib...a doubler or sandwich. Could probably get it out of the sheet the ribs came from in about 10 seconds. 2) Or, you could glue "cap strips" onto those two ribs, sand them flush with a sanding bar, and then, if you want, trim the width down to the rib thickness. 3) You could cut out the entire front of those two ribs and replace the nose section.
The second option would look better when bystanders are looking at the remains (in 10 or 20 years, we hope!) and will be slack-jawed about your fine workmanship. But the first option would work just fine. Nobody with any sense would do the third option. I think most of us would do the 2nd method. Easy-peasy. OBTW, my guess is that those two ribs are installed "upside-down" relative to the rest. Symetrical ribs aren't always perfectly so. Best plan is to stack them up and flip 'em 'round until they're the best fit, then mark the top on all. Stack sand them before assembly, if needed.
Steve
PS: Be careful watching Windy's Miss Ashley wing vid while building a Vector 40 wing. You might end up with a Mrs. Vector wing.