An update on how the pandemic has further impacted the local recycling chain, including Chesapeake now considering nixing its curbside program. On the bright side, James City County has a new glass recycling program that will deliver the material directly to the OI plant in Toano. Other Hampton Roads cities are interested in doing something similar. Â Read more in this Sunday's Main News section At 9:15, the âterroristâ â a sailor in a old grey sweatshirt carrying one of the blue-plastic carbines the Navy and Marines use in training â pulled the fire alarm just inside the air operations building at Naval Station Norfolk. Three minutes later, heâd picked off one of the firefighters that raced to the scene at the far eastern end of the base. Then, as the Navy Police patrol cars, sirens screaming, arrived, he ran back into the building â it controls all aircraft arriving and taking off from the baseâs airfield â followed quickly by sailors. It was a drill, as the base loudspeakers with their echoing message âExercise, Exercise, Exerciseâ reassured the small city that is Naval Station Norfolk, but was one of the largest in recent memory, months in the planning, and designed as much to practice coordination with local first responders and the FBI as the high drama of Navy police taking down an active shooter. Read more in the Sunday Main News section The sun sparkles through three cascading glass domes and into the lobby of the Mary M. Torggler Fine Arts Center. Its light accentuates nine massive white silk flowers that rise and fall in the highest dome, part of the international âNight Lightâ exhibition and a bright debut for Christopher Newport Universityâs arts center. The Torggler Center opened recently after about 1 1/2 years of construction and 10 years of planning. It is designed as part museum, part community arts center and part academic building for CNUâs department of fine art and art history. The 83,000-square-foot building is adjacent to the Ferguson Center for the Arts, connected by a curved colonnade that was extended for the project. As the Ferguson Center has become a popular venue for Broadway shows, concerts and world-renowned ballets, the Torggler was designed to be a destination for fine arts from across Virginia and beyond. Read more in the Sunday Break section
Melissa Holt admits she grew up hating chicken salad. âWhen I was in college, my friends would go to Chicken Salad Chick at least once a week, sometimes more,â Holt said. âAnd I would go somewhere else for lunch.â Further admitting she felt left out of the mix, Holt decided to give it a try â and became hooked. Sold on the brand and its âspread joy, enrich lives, serve othersâ motto, Holt brought the first Chicken Salad Chick franchise to Hampton Roads.
The 2,650-square-foot restaurant, featuring a warm, homestyle atmosphere with an outdoor patio, opened on Dec. 7 at 2850 Kilgore Ave. in Hamptonâs Peninsula Town Center. Holt plans to open a second location in the Williamsburg area in the latter part of 2022.
Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section Â
Tim & Faith Go West Parade Picks - A Recipe For More Fun What America Eats - Retro Holiday Ham
Cynthia (Nixon), Back in the City Best Health Buys Smart Cart - Party Starters |