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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter!  Ok - the heat wave is upon us now, yes??  Just a bit on the toasty side this week and this weekend and into next week looks much the same.  Yes - everyone may remind yours truly here at Reader Rewards now complaining about this temps when I'm complaining about the bone-chilling temps in January and February.

Given the temps maybe some of you will be heading down to the Outer Banks this weekend or next week?  If so, you will recall we mentioned a story about a fist-sized shell found down there in last week's newsletter.  Now a dead creature washed up near Cape Lookout.  Check out the story right here if you missed it. Six inch long worms with bristles and Park staff are stumped?? Keep an eye out if you're down there!

If the beach isn't your thing this coming week - perhaps local trail hikes are?  Regardless, the Elizabeth River Trail is a secret gem in Norfolk.  Soon, a part of the trail will be glow at night.  If you missed the story, The Pilot's Gavin Stone has it right here.  Definitely worth a look soon!

Staying on special Norfolk stories - how about existing on this fine earth for over a century??  YES - Dorothea Gray of Norfolk recently turned 103.  Still painting the back deck to her house!  Yours truly struggles to do that once a year and I'm but half Dorothea's age!  Be sure to check out coverage by The Pilot's Noble Brigham - right here.  Dorothea is more than worthy of a parade.

We've ALWAYS made sure to keep you posted on the local food scene.  Now we're even serving up local events with food prior to the weekend!  For a WIDE variety of food events and offerings this weekend, be sure to check out the coverage by The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson right here. From a crab fest to Caribbean food.....no shortage of options.

For the sports scene this week, we bring you our own local highlights from last year's high school sports calendar.  The Pilot and Daily Press sports staff brings you those highlights from the 2021-2022 high school year right here. So many great/talented athletes have come from right here in Hampton Roads.  So many have made not just an incredible mark on the sports world - but also in the communities they grew up in back here at home once they have turned pro.  A great example of that is Dorian Finney-Smith from The Dallas Mavericks. Be sure to check out Larry Rubama of The Pilot - and his coverage of Dorian and the impact he is making here in Portsmouth.

Contests, contests, contests! Kroger, Home Depot & Wawa!

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



Last Week's Contest Winners

Amazon -             Jeff Diamond
                                                                          

Walmart - 
            Larry Respass
                                                                         

Regal Entertainment -   Zoe Ann Merkle
                                                                              

CONTESTS

Kroger is fresh every day, so shop any way. Save $15 on pickup or delivery through August 1st. Hand-picked fresh pickup, or get your favorites brought right to your door with delivery. Pick Up Curbside. In-Store Pharmacy. Bakery & Deli. Earn Fuel Discounts. Frozen Food Coupons.   Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

Shop online for all your home improvement needs: appliances, bathroom decorating ideas, kitchen remodeling, patio furniture, power tools, bbq grills and more! Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!


Fuel your day with Wawa, your all-day, everyday convenience store. Grab Built-To-Order® food and beverages, coffee, fuel services, and much more. Register at MyReaderRewards.com for a chance to win a $50 gift card!

 Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!


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Meet Samson! Samson 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!!!
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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:

Barbara Harris’ mother was 35 when she was sterilized by the state of Virginia in the 1960s.

“She could have a desire to get married, and have a family with her new husband. But she was not able to do that,” said Harris, a longtime nurse who now is executive treasurer for for Virginia Organizing, an advocacy group. “That choice was taken away from her.”

Her mother, a single parent, was threatened with loss of state aid for her four children if she didn’t get sterilized.

Between 7,200 and 8,300 people - 22% of whom were black - were sterilized in Virginia from 1927-1979 on grounds of homelessness, insanity or “unworthiness to procreate”.

Decades after the program ended, statistics show that women of color still have disproportionately negative outcomes relating to maternal health. Some advocates, including Harris, worry that the Supreme Court’s decision to overrule Roe v. Wade may make that situation even worse if abortion becomes illegal in Virginia.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

You are two to five times more likely to serve prison time if you reside in one of these nine Norfolk neighborhoods, a new report found. Norfolk community leaders are working to change that.

Prison Policy Institute’s latest report found that Olde Huntersville had the highest rate of incarceration at 5,690 per 100,000 people — more than five times Norfolk’s overall incarceration rate of 1,106. Olde Huntersville is followed by Park Place at 4,376 and Bruce’s Park at 3,651.

The findings, community leaders say, are not surprising.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

This wouldn’t be the first time Kristen Green became curious about a piece of Virginia history that led her to write a book.

In 2011, Green was a reporter with the Richmond Times-Dispatch and writing about a graveyard for free and enslaved people, discovered buried under a parking lot. During her research, she learned of the remnants of a nearby slave jail also hidden under a layer of asphalt, along East Broad Street behind the Main Street Amtrak Station.

Green is Virginia born and knew that Richmond was in the thick of trafficking the enslaved before the Civil War. But Robert Lumpkin’s jail was notorious throughout the South.

It housed thousands of children, men and women who were shipped to busy ports, including Norfolk and New Orleans. Owners could also bring their enslaved to Lumpkin’s to have them whipped for a fee when owners didn’t want to bloody themselves.

The jail earned the name “The Devil’s Half Acre.”

Read more in the Sunday Break section

The 13 believers formed a circle, their hands outstretched to the skylight in the sanctuary of Fox Hill United Methodist Church. They were praying that the “reverse mission” they were planning would flood the congregation with energy and fellowship.

Eight of them looked exhausted but excited. They had spent 30 of the last 40 hours in a white van, driving from Utah and New Mexico. The Navajo missionaries would be leading Fox Hill’s vacation Bible school, singing songs in the Navajo Diné language and teaching biblical stories.

Historically, Christian missionaries carried baggage beyond suitcases; early European and American missionaries flocked to Indigenous tribes to push the political goals of their governments. Some modern missionaries are more mission tourists, more concerned with serving their egos than people. But Brian Sixbey, lead pastor of Fox Hill, was looking to flip that narrative — he thought his congregation could learn more from a “reverse mission” than they could teach.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

As Bob and Steve Lawson stood side by side overlooking downtown from the 16th floor of the Truist Building, it gave the father and son time to reflect on all that Lawson Cos. accomplished throughout the past 50 years.

The company, started by Bob Lawson in 1972, relocated its corporate office in May from a 10,000-square-foot office on South Boulevard in Virginia Beach to almost double the size on Main Street in Norfolk. The move takes the real estate development, construction management and apartment property management firm back to the city where it started and where many of its projects were completed.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

Some athletes in Hampton Roads inspired, others dominated in the first full, uninterrupted high school year in sports since the pandemic.

Here’s a look at the athletes and state champions from the 2021-22 year in high school sports, compiled by the 757Teamz staff:

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

Pickleball

Parade Picks - Pickleball Must Haves

What America Eats - A Perfect Summer Cake

  
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