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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter!  Well, the Olympics are off and running!  Or rather off and swimming - since track and field doesn't actually kick-in until week 2 I think.  

Just a few more days left in July - and then the "dog days" of summer.  Still beach time for sure!  If heading down to the Outer Banks is in your plans this weekend or in the near future - be sure to check out Maggie Miles' story on the hidden gems for places to visit while down there. Staying on the beach theme - if you didn't catch Ali Sullivan's story on an example of the potential danger of diving head first into the waves while at the ocean - catch her report here. Lastly - Elizabeth Moore reported on the unique challenges that the lifeguards of the Virginia Beach Lifeguard Association go through as part of their races down at the oceanfront.  Between chilly water, waves and jellyfish - definitely not as easy as it might seem! If you missed her story - check it out here. 

As we turn the corner and head into August - guess what is RIGHT around that corner?  You got it: football season!!  The NFL, NCAA and high school football will be back in action before you know it!  Speaking of the NFL and local ties here to Hampton Roads.  Be sure to check out Jami Frankenberry's interview with former ODU football standout, Taylor Heinike. Heinike would appear to have a legitimate shot at winning the starting QB job heading into the season opener.

Lastly - and I bring this topic up without joy for sure.  COVID-19 cases continue to tick back up.  Fortunately not near levels from last year or the beginning of this year.  But the delta variant continues to spread.  Check out Elisha Sauers' coverage on CDC encouragement for EVERYONE to mask up once again. We all know the drill: keep six feet of distance, wear a mask and wash hands frequently!  For those that have yet to get one of the vaccines - you might want to give it serious consideration.

Everyone be well and stay safe!

Contests this week! Once again we've got more of your favorites: Amazon, Target and Kroger!

Enter to win a $50 gift card to one  Go to MyReaderRewards.com to win!


Last Week's Contest Winners

Whole Foods -  Steven Forgione

Bed Bath & Beyond -
Charles Mullen

Carrabba's - 
Dawn Briccetti

Note to Readers: Parade Magazine is not scheduled to publish this Sunday, August 1st.  Parade will return Sunday, August 8th - below is a sneak peek! 

CONTESTS

Free shipping on millions of items. Get the best of Shopping and Entertainment with Prime. Enjoy low prices and great deals on the largest selection of everyday​ items. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

Afterpay and Zip Available. Same day click & collect on orders over $20. Conditions apply. Easy payment Method. Fast Delivery. New Arrivals. 24/7 Services. Types: Shoes, Furniture, Toys, Beauty Products, Men's lifestyle, Women's lifestyle, Baby Products, Grocery. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


Deals that are lower than low. Save time & money today! Kroger® is working around the clock, so you can get what you need in store & online. In-Store Pharmacy. Pick Up Curbside. Frozen Food Coupons. Fuel Centers. Bakery & Deli.Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

EToTod
Meet Samson! Samson is this week's My Reader Rewards Pet of the Week! Samson's proud PAWrents are Charlene and David Yackon from Portsmouth!  Check out our other furry friends in our new Pet Gallery. Want your pet featured? Email a picture of your pet to
Mark.quan@pilotonline.com. Please include your name along with your pet's name. Let's round up those pet pictures folks to further boost our gallery and to showcase!!!
EX
Restaurants are opening back up so don't forget Reader Perks! Take advantage of over 500,000 local and national discounts that can pay for your subscription over & over again! To access Reader Perks, click here. You must be a print subscriber to take advantage of this program. Log in using the email address associated with your newspaper account. No email on file? Email your name and address to Mark.quan@pilotonline.com to add it and gain access! Not a print subscriber? Click here to subscribe!
COMING SUNDAY:

Before this spring, Patricia O’Shea, a rising senior at Granby High School in Norfolk, hadn’t heard of Louis Latimer, a Black inventor who helped Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison.

Or Henry Brown, who climbed in a box and mailed himself from Virginia to Philadelphia to gain his freedom.

Or Sarah Garland Jones, the first female licensed to practice medicine in the commonwealth.

An elective class on African American history opened O’Shea’s eyes to these and many more Black Virginians who helped shape the state over the centuries. In previous history classes, she said, topics like slavery and Jim Crow laws were barely talked about – one unit at most.

But as other states across the country introduce legislation restricting educators from teaching about race, Virginia has gone in another direction. The state has started an initiative to incorporate more African American history into its public schools’ curriculum. More Black history is included in all history classes now, but students like O’Shea who want to explore it deeper have the option to with the new elective.

Experts say it’s an effort to move away from looking at Black history as separate from the country’s history and to see it for what it is: an integral part of the American experience.

 Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

The casket had been polished and the flowers arranged. Children filed into the church to remember their friend, a rising ninth-grader.

Some had yet to attend a school prom. Others had only the first traces of facial hair. Yet here they were, filling the pews of Bethany Baptist Church to mourn the person shot and killed in Norfolk this year, Kristopher “Be-Bop” Edmonds.

They wore red, white and black clothing with Edmonds’ name. “The good die young,” read the T-shirt of one boy who looked no taller than 5 feet.

Later they would watch the casket, topped with a basketball nestled among flowers, be heaved onto the back of a white pickup that would take Be-Bop for one last ride, to his final place of rest.

But now they sat and stared at his smiling face on the projector screen, listening as a reverend spoke from the stage: “Father, we declare the guns have to be put down.”

Edmonds, 15, had been struck by gunfire the week before, in the early hours of July 13, at a playground near his Norfolk home.

He’s one of 10 children shot in the city this month — a jarring string of violence involving Norfolk’s youth, even for a city peppered with gangs that like to woo the young. Edmonds is one of two who died. The other was also 15 years old: Teonna “Tee Tee” Coburn.

The Virginian-Pilot spoke with nearly two dozen families impacted by gun violence, elected officials, community organizers and the city’s police chief who reflected on the cluster of shootings involving children and outlined their path forward.

Everyone has their calls for change — more funding for recreation centers, expanded peer mentorship, getting guns off the streets — but they also agree that there is no single solution.

Read more in this Sunday's Main News section

Step into the Pamunkey Indian Museum, located at the tribe’s reservation in King William, and each artifact will transport you to a different age.

Stone points dating to 12,000 years ago. A treaty from 1677 between several tribes and the English crown, guaranteeing the Indigenous members control over their homeland. Ceremonial headwear and dresses worn in the 1930s.

But the museum’s timeline, depicting traditional pottery styles through the Pamunkey’s history, stops in 1980. Untouched for more than 40 years, the exhibition’s displays are still dotted with carefully cut circles containing information about the artifacts, carefully typed out. In fact, Shaleigh R. Howells, the museum’s director, is considering putting the typewriter used to write these descriptions on display.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

  • We feared we’d missed it.

    For six hours, cousin Georgie Kendall and I had been driving northeast from Reykjavik on Iceland’s Ring Road, a mostly asphalt ribbon that rims the mainland; we gawked at every bend ― a thundering waterfall here, a glacier tongue there, drifts of amethyst lupine, towering cliffs, sky-scraping glaciers and a 360-degree horizon always.

    But no Diamond Beach.

    Relying solely on a paper Michelin map and with towns 100 miles apart, Georgie and I frequently didn’t know exactly where we were. We hadn’t seen another human for more than an hour.

    Locals had warned, only half-jokingly, that Iceland is so completely beautiful, so raw, that a sort of awe ennui could set in. We were nowhere near that on the first of our 10-day circumnavigation, and Diamond Beach was a must.

    Finally, we spotted the unmarked gravel road, parked, zipped up coats and crunched across a sheet of coarse black sand to the edge of the heaving North Atlantic. There, we stood transfixed as chunks of icebergs — some pale blue, some white and one brown — bobbed out of the Jokulsarlon glacier lagoon and ceded to the ocean’s swells and currents.   Lorraine Eaton and her cousin tour Iceland

    Read more in the Sunday Break section

    After more than 17 years in Hampton Roads, a Norfolk used bookseller has finally expanded into Chesapeake.

    Book Exchange opened its third location in the region on June 26 in the Crossways Shopping Center in Greenbrier. As a result, the small business has hired six new staff members and expanded into a city that customers have long requested for a new location, owner John Knight said.

    “We’ve wanted to get out there for a long time,” Knight said.

     Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

    Going to the Olympics has always been a dream for Chidi Okezie.

    It began in 2008 after he watched the Games for the first time.

    “Being a track athlete, that’s the highest notch of running track,” he said. “It’s one of the biggest stages.”

    Okezie, a 2015 Hampton University graduate, realized his dream last month when he anchored the Nigerian mixed 4×400-meter relay to an Olympic qualifying time of 3 minutes, 14.09 seconds at Yabatech Sports Complex in Lagos. Their time set a Nigerian national record.

    Read more in the Sunday Sports section        


Note to Readers: Parade Magazine is not scheduled to publish this Sunday, August 1st.  Parade will return Sunday, August 8th - below is a sneak peek!          




Aretha! 

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