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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter! Where yours truly here at Reader Rewards is BACK this week - refreshed and ready to go!!  As we all jumped right into St. Patrick's Day celebrations and now recover in anticipation of the weekend!  Green beer and other adult beverages ARE accepted throughout the weekend, yes? We definitely know The Shamrock marathon extends into the weekend in Virginia Beach.  If you missed the report from The Pilot's Stacy Parker - on street closures, check it out right here. Speaking of streets - hear about the potential for illegal street racing across Hampton Roads this weekend?  The Pilot's Caitlyn Burchett has the report here.  A large marathon and potential street racing - not a good mix. 

Maybe all these street racers need to focus their energy on other action-sports events?  Heck - given the announcement by Mayor Bobby Dyer in Virginia Beach this past week, they could participate in one of the largest action-sports events run in Canada.  Stacy Parker from The Pilot has the report here, in case you missed it!  The Jackalope Festival.....can't beat the event name!

Ever wonder who would end up occupying the space vacated by McCormick & Schmick's at Town Center in Virginia Beach?  Well - in the spirit of us continually keeping you updated on restaurant openings here at Reader Rewards, The Pilot's correspondent - Eric Hodies - has your answer here if you missed it. Legal Sea Foods will open up only its second Virginia location.

Ok - so yours truly here at Reader Rewards has NEVER been able to sit down and watch an episode of The Bachelor.  But - that said - the show is CLEARLY popular.  All the moreso with a local participant from Virginia Beach this season.  Now - the native of Poquoson has won the heart of The Bachelor in the season finale!  If you missed it or want a recap - The Pilot's Saleen Martin has it here. 

Lastly - it is THAT time of year for the sports scene.  Yes: MARCH MADNESS!  We're already one full day into the tournament.  While Norfolk State DID make it into the tournament - they took a tough draw in the #1 overall seed in Baylor.  The Pilot's David Hall has the recap of the game here in case you missed it. Tough way to end the season, but nothing to hang their heads over: Norfolk State finished 24-7.  Congrats to The Green & Gold!  Now for a Friday evening and weekend FULL of college basketball!  I'm sure brackets are busted all over as you read this.

Contests, contests, contests! In the spirit of the NCAA basketball tournaments - we have ALOT of pizza on tap!  Buffalo Wild Wings, Domino's Pizza and Papa John's Pizza!

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

Note to our beloved, loyal readers:  Yours truly will be stepping back to take a break next week - so there will not be a newsletter next week.  We'll be back better than ever the week of March 14th, however!


Last Week's Contest Winners

Amazon -  Lorraine Donovan

Target - 
Teresa Shuma

Home Depot - Sadaqah Shakur


CONTESTS

Enjoy all Buffalo Wild Wings to you has to offer when you order delivery or pick it up yourself or stop by a location near you. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

Order pizza, pasta, sandwiches & more online for carryout or delivery from Domino's. View menu, find locations, track orders.  Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


Enjoy the ease of ordering delicious pizza for delivery or carryout from a Papa John's near you. Start tracking the speed of your delivery and earn rewards   Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

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Meet Izzy!  Izzy is this week's My Reader Rewards Pet of the Week!  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:

State Sen. Louise Lucas reached a milestone in the Twittersphere earlier this month. The Portsmouth Democrat hit 60,000 followers, no small feat for a state politician, and she asked them how she should celebrate.

She offered four options: Hosting a cannabis festival, launching merchandise, dunking on Gov. Glenn Youngkin or all of the above. More than 2,000 followers voted and most selected the latter.

Richmond City Councilwoman Ann-Frances Lambert commented on the post and shared an image of Michael Jackson eating popcorn and grinning.

“When you dunk on the governor this will be me,” Lambert wrote.

It would have been hard to imagine back when Facebook was primarily a platform for college students and Twitter had yet to take off, but politicians now routinely turn to social media to communicate with constituents — or to take shots at their political opponents. Some political and communications experts warn that social media may encourage divisive rhetoric, which was on display in Hampton Roads during the recent General Assembly session.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

The General Assembly adjourned last week after a 60-day legislative session that may be remembered most by what wasn’t accomplished.

A slew of bills, including measures about guns, abortion, voting rights, same-sex marriage and the sale of marijuana, were killed off due to partisan gridlock in the newly-divided Capitol. A handful of other measures — including the state budget — remain under debate in conference committees that House and Senate members use to reconcile differences.

“(The two parties) certainly eliminated the more extreme measures by either side. Each chamber sent a clear message to the other,” said Sen. Monty Mason, D-Williamsburg.

But that’s not to say legislators didn’t find any middle ground.

More than 840 bills were passed by the General Assembly and are awaiting a veto or signature from the governor, according to an aide for Gov. Glenn Youngkin. Here’s a look at some of the measures that made it through:

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

The best-selling author of the book “Hidden Figures” will speak at Christopher Newport University in Newport News on Tuesday.

Margot Lee Shetterly, a Hampton native and Phoebus High School graduate, will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Diamonstein Concert Hall, 1 Avenue of the Arts.

The 2016 book details the accomplishments of Black women mathematicians at Hampton’s NASA Langley Research Center “whose grit and determination in the face of discrimination helped America win the space race” in the 1960s, according to a flyer promoting the event.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Like competitors at the Olympics, the dancers with American Ballet Theatre perform astounding feats that make audience members gasp.

A man hoisting a ballerina with one arm! A dancer spinning with one leg out, then up in a near-vertical split, while en pointe!

Yet they are great artists, not medal-winning gymnasts.

“These dancers could go anywhere in the world,” said Kevin McKenzie, artistic director of ABT since 1992. “Their level is so high it’s ridiculous.”

He is sending a crew of about 130, including 90 dancers, to Norfolk to open the 25th anniversary season for the Virginia Arts Festival.

Performances of the company’s comic ballet “Don Quixote” are set for March 25 through 27 at Chrysler Hall. The tale, drawn from Miguel de Cervantes’ novel, centers on a befuddled old knight errant intent on finding his vision of an ideal woman, Dulcinea. Along the way, he encounters a young couple foiled in love: a tavern keeper’s daughter, Kitri, and her beau, Basilio, a poor barber she is forbidden to marry. The setting is Spain. Music is by Ludwig Minkus.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

Massimo Zanetti Beverage USA’s new warehouse complex in Suffolk extends the length of four football fields. That’s a whole lot of coffee.

Named for its founder, chairman and CEO, the company recently relocated its distribution center from Court Street in Portsmouth to a newly constructed building in Virginia Port Logistics Park.

Brands such as Chock full o’Nuts, Hills Bros., Kauai Coffee and Segafredo Zanetti are delivered, stocked and dispersed to multiple merchants, including Walmart, Amazon and Costco, from the bustling East Coast hub.

The 355,933-square-foot facility, including offices, a conference room and training center, is about 10 miles from Massimo Zanetti’s corporate headquarters and primary roastery in Wilroy Industrial Park.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

Obstacles are more slight hindrances than impasses for Jackson Doane.

Born with a bilateral cleft lip and cleft palate, Doane, a senior at First Colonial High in Virginia Beach, has had 11 surgeries to alleviate the condition, with the most recent coming last August.

That surgery was meant to help his breathing, which was operating at about 20%, Doane said.

It hasn’t stopped Doane from being a four-year member of First Colonial’s cross country team, and he’ll attempt his first marathon Sunday at the Yuengling Shamrock Marathon at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront.

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

It was a memorable high school basketball season on the Peninsula, capped by Menchville’s girls basketball state championship, the first for a Newport News school in 14 years. Turns out 2021-22 has another act left.

The inaugural City All-Star Basketball Classic, featuring Newport News vs. Hampton girls and boys all-star games, begins at 3 p.m. today at Woodside High. The event is so highly anticipated by Peninsula hoops fans that it sold out the Wolverines’ nearly 1,000-seat capacity gym a week in advance, and for good reason.

Rather than a seniors-only game, Tommy Reamon Sr. and Tommy Reamon Jr., founders of the City On My Chest Sports Academy conducting the event, sought permission from the Virginia High School League to allow freshmen, sophomores and juniors to compete. They got it.

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

Double Trouble - Channing Tatum and Sandra Bullock

Parade Picks - Beatlemania Forever








  
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