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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter! Happy Cinco De Mayo!! Right on the heels of Star Wars day yesterday.  Was The 4th with you as well??  Both these days so quickly after Something In The Water last weekend.  Some rough weather Friday and some very unfortunate weather Sunday.  Fortunately Saturday went well.  If you made it out there on Saturday - hopefully you had fun!  You may recall the local entrepreneurship contest that was being held?  Well, a woman from Virginia Beach came up big.  The Pilot's Katrina Dix has all the coverage right here of the winner. $25,000 will certainly help with her business!

Lost in all the local hype over Something In The Water?  It's strawberry picking season!  Where to go and when?  Never fear - correspondent for The Pilot, Patrick Evans-Hylton has all of that and more for you right here. NOTHING better than fresh-picked/local strawberries, right?

Yes, if you cannot find the time to pick them yourself - the local grocery stores will be packed with strawberries.  There are certainly a wide variety of groceries stores to choose from, yes?  For those of you fans of Publix - come 2024 there will be ANOTHER grocery option in Hampton Roads.  Yes...FINALLY.  The Pilot's Trevor Metcalfe has the coverage of Publix entry into Hampton Roads right here.  We DO love our grocery options here, don't we??

With spring in full swing and summer right around the corner - a trip to Busch Gardens may very well in your future.  If so, a notable change is coming: cash-free Busch Gardens.  Yes.  The Virginia Gazette's Sian Wilkerson has the story right here.  Leave the bills and coins at home when looking to ride DarKoaster for the first time!

The local food scene will be influenced by the fact that May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.  As usual, The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson has the rundown right here - on offers and free events.

We are in the middle of baseball season. Many of us have already been or will be heading out to Harbor Park to catch a game and to enjoy some ballpark food.  Who knows what the future of ballpark food may be?  The Pilot's Larry Rubama has some coverage on what it COULD be right here.
Taco on a stick?  Read up on it!

You may have heard about how college athletes have started to benefit from their name, image and likeness.  Less has been heard about how high school athletes may be able to benefit from the same.  Well, that will soon be changing for high school athletes in Virginia.  The Pilot's Jami Frankenberry has the coverage for you right here. It's definitely a new day and age in high school sports!
 
Enjoy the weekend everyone!

Contests, contests, contests! This week we have more Virginia Arts Festival tickets and gift cards to Amazon and Target!

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


Last Week's Contest Winners

The Look Of Love/Sandler Center -  Nathaniel Jones   

The Look Of Love/Sandler Center  - 
Tim Bradley       

Walmart -          
                                    Esther Brooke

Kroger -                                                 Mark Hall

Home Depot -                                       Rose Marie Elizabeth Darwell

CONTESTS
 For more than four decades, this legendary quartet has held a top spot as one of the world’s premier chamber music ensembles. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a pair of tickets at the Robin Hixon Theater in Norfolk on May 15th!


 MacArthur Fellow and Grammy® Award-winning mandolinist, singer, songwriter Chris Thile, who The Guardian calls “that rare being: an all-round musician who can settle into any style, from bluegrass to classical,” and NPR calls a “genre-defying musical genius,” is a founding member of the critically acclaimed bands Punch Brothers and Nickel Creek. Sign up for a chance to win a pair of tickets atMyReaderRewards.com! Ferguson Center of The Arts on May19th, Chrysler Hall on May 20th and The Sandler Center for the Performing Arts on May 21st.

The best Shopping & Entertainment with Prime. Free, easy returns on millions of items. Enjoy low prices on earth's biggest selection of books, electronics, home, apparel & more. Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

Shop Target online and in-store for everything from groceries and essentials to clothing and electronics. Choose contactless pickup or delivery today. Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!


EToTod
Meet Noche! Noche is a two year old cat and is this week's My Reader Rewards Pets of the Week!  Noche's proud PAWrent is Ciara Patton.  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
COMING SUNDAY:

Hattie Friedman loves to go to her school’s library and admires the librarians there.

Hattie said she has not found a book she felt was inappropriate in a school library. The worst, she said, is some cursing. When the eighth-grader heard about attempts to restrict access to books that might be considered inappropriate for students, she said, she worried what could happen.

“The books would basically just be Dr. Seuss picture books if they wanted to do that,” Hattie said.

For more than a year, Virginia Beach has had a series of debates about the content of books and whom should be allowed to categorize or have access to them. The latest iteration is a policy proposal for school library books that is under consideration now by the school board. The result so far has been disagreements among the public and officials and a concern from some board members about the possible repercussions of their vote.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Becky Morrison, a 30-year Poquoson High School teacher, was selected by Joint Base Langley-Eustis as the 2023 “Hometown Hero.” She spent Friday flying in the back seat of an F-16 Thunderbird as the aerial performers practiced for this weekend’s Air Power over Hampton Roads air show.

Morrison, an 11th grade history teacher, created the “Poquoson Veterans Project” at the start of the 2017-18 school year. The project paired Morrison’s advanced placement history students with a local veteran with the goal of bridging the gap between students and veterans.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Dr. William R. Harvey enjoyed many moments of athletic celebration in his 44 years as president of Hampton University.

None surpassed hugging the cheerleaders and players on-court in Boise, Idaho, in the pandemonium following the No. 15-seeded Pirates’ 58-57 upset of No. 2 Iowa State in the 2001 men’s basketball NCAA Tournament.

In their sixth year in Division I, the Pirates had long since outgrown the Division II Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association. They moved in 1995 to Division I and the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, then to the Big South in 2018 and, this academic year, to the Colonial Athletic Association.

Receiving the CIAA Jimmy Jenkins Legacy Leadership Award in Baltimore in February — eight months after retiring as Hampton president — brought Harvey full-circle as he reflected on his legacy in collegiate athletics.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Having devoted the latter part of his life to preserving Pocahontas Island in Petersburg, Richard A. Stewart, the island’s honorary mayor, is gone, dead at age 79. In the wake of the stalwart community historian’s death, though, the island lives on, primed for its second wind.

As it did during his lifetime, Stewart’s presence looms large on Pocahontas Island, a community of some 70 acres bordered on three sides by the Appomattox River, just over the bridge from mainland Petersburg. The island’s documented roots reach back to 1732, when enslaved people were first taken there to work in tobacco warehouses. By 1800, more than 300 free Black people lived and worked there, making it one of the largest communities of its kind in America. Stewart owned and operated the island’s Black history museum, founded in 2006. The two-story yellow clapboard house trimmed in brown today is stuffed with artifacts he collected during his lifetime, including old-fashioned agricultural tools, 19th-century horseshoes, photographs and art, a Ku Klux Klan robe and a set of shackles likely used in the restraint of enslaved people.

Read how to contribute in the Sunday Break section

“Justice, justice thou shalt pursue.” — Deuteronomy 16:20

And boy, did she ever!

The “Notorious RBG” (surely the least likely but most appropriate street name ever meme-etically conferred on a Supreme Court justice) was famous for pursuing, even harrowing, her elusive prey, Justice. In the Virginia Arts Festival one-person play that rocked the sold-out Attucks Theatre on Tuesday, Ginsburg (channeled, even embodied, by actor Michelle Azar) owned the controversy over her staying in office too long, thereby enabling Donald Trump, whom she detested, eventually to appoint a third conservative justice after she died in 2020. Ginsburg’s excuse/explanation was simple: She was certain Hillary would win.

Or it could be, as “All Things Equal,” by supercharged playwright Rupert Holmes intimates, that, having herself been pursued and harrowed by Death all her life (the death of her sister in childhood, her mother at age 48, and her beloved husband, Marty, later in life), Ginsburg may have thought she’d finally learned how to beat the Reaper by personally defeating his minion, cancer, so many times.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

Real estate agents give a variety of items to their clients to celebrate the closing of their new home — such as a bottle of wine, a gift basket, flowers, a home warranty, professional services or gift cards.

Richard Calderon, a real estate agent with RW Towne Realty, gives the gift of a helicopter ride in the skies above Hampton Roads.

“I feel like this is just more memorable, and it showcases the area,” he said.

A former Navy aircrewman and California native, Calderon said the idea came about because he missed flying.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

J.R. and Amy Anderson are so proud of their son, Ethan.

The sophomore has started in all 48 games for the nationally-ranked Virginia Cavaliers, who are No. 14 in Baseball America and No. 21 in D1Baseball.com.

Anderson, a Cox High grad, is ranked in the top five in all of the Cavaliers’ offensive categories, including first in doubles (22), third in average (.388), hits (76) and on-base %, and fourth in runs (48), homers (7) and slugging % (.607).

But what brings them even more joy is seeing what their son is doing off the field.

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

Note To Readers:  A reminder that Parade magazine is now only found along with your e-edition of either The Virginian-Pilot or Daily Press each Sunday morning.  Print copies of Parade magazine ceased after the November 13th issue.


Don Johnson





The Virginian-Pilot

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