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Welcome to your weekly Reader Rewards newsletter! Where the unofficial start to summer is upon us!!  Before you know it, we will be talking about 4th of July cookouts.  Before we get there though - we DO have graduations to celebrate.  Along with other local community events to attend!

Normally we END your Reader Rewards newsletter with sports-related topics/content, but given the accomplishment up at Christopher Newport University this past week - we need to adjust!  The Captains just secured their FIRST NCAA national title in softball!  The Daily Press' correspondent Steve Hemphill - has it all right here.  SUCH an incredible job by The Captains this year - congratulations!!!

Alright - who made it out last weekend to see Top Gun: Maverick??  Yours truly here at Reader Rewards DID NOT and has not made it out yet to see - but early signs are positive - even compared to the original Top Gun movie??  If you missed The Daily Press' Dave Ress' report on the Navy Captain that made this movie LOOK realistic, check out Dave's report right here

Before we move too far away from report from the U.S. Navy, how about the report from The Pilot's Stacy Parker this week on a 120 ton battle ship gun barrel receiving a 2nd life?? Read up on Stacy's report right here! 

Lastly, there is MUCH going on around Hampton Roads this week and this coming weekend.  Check out The Pilot's Rekaya Gibson's report on ALL the upcoming events - right here!  Good to be out and about with these events once again.

Contests, contests, contests! This week we have Amazon, Wawa and Walmart.  For those in need of continued delivery to your doorstep, those in need of relief at the gas pump AND those in need of some help at the grocery store - we have you covered!

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



Last Week's Contest Winners

Target -       David Whitted

Barnes & Noble -  
William Pardee, Jr.

Domino's Pizza -   Bruce Jensky

Gaylord National Resort Weekend Getaway -   Sharon Davis


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!

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!


Shop Walmart.com today for Every Day Low Prices. Join Walmart+ for unlimited free delivery from your store & free shipping with no order minimum. Sign up for a chance to win a $50 gift card at MyReaderRewards.com!

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Meet Jack & Ellie! Jack & Ellie are  this week's My Reader Rewards Pets 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
[email protected]. 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 [email protected] to add it and gain access! Not a print subscriber? Click here to subscribe!
COMING SUNDAY:

FORT JACKSON, S.C. -- More than 40 feet up on the tower at Fort Jackson, Army recruit Robert Smith missed setting his feet on the 4-by-4 plank from which he was to start rappelling down.

“I said: ‘Sergeant,” what should I do?’ I was kind of scared. And sergeant said: ‘Trust your equipment. Now straighten your legs.’ Then he said: ‘Now wave at me,’ I waved. ...

“I’m going to remember that for the rest of my life.”

Smith made it down.

Waving was not a dare or an act of bravado, his drill sergeant, Staff Sgt. Joseph Flanagan said later. Rappelling -- walking down a wall or cliff with a safety rope -- involves two hands. One is kept behind the rappeller’s back as a brake, The other is used to manage how quickly the rope moves as the rappeller walks down. Waving with that hand is meant to demonstrate how securely the brake hand holds you in place.

Smith was new to the Army -- about two weeks in, and the tower came the first day he came out of the Army’s new “Yellow” phase.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Meredith Cramer loves her work as an assistant public defender in Hampton.

One day a few weeks ago, she handled the bond hearing for a past client, a woman with a mental illness now charged with misdemeanor assault. Cramer told a judge about the woman’s history, and the judge allowed her out on an unsecured bond rather than jailing her pending trial.

“She was so at ease as soon as she saw me,” Cramer said. “That just made me feel good, like I’m doing something that’s helping someone.”

But Cramer — a mother of two who’s worked in public defense work for 12 years — is leaving her job within the month to take an attorney job at a private local civil litigation firm. She will start the new gig at $120,000 a year, nearly doubling her $62,000 pay at the public defender’s office.

“It’s hard to say no to that,” she said of the raise. “Altruistically, you want to do something that makes your heart feel good, and is good for the community. But at some point, you have a family, and you have to think about them.”

Cramer’s story isn’t uncommon. Experienced public defenders have long left for greener pastures — either in private law firms or in local prosecutor’s offices — because the pay can’t keep up.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

On the evening of March 1, 52-year-old James Schilo became the sixth pedestrian killed in Norfolk in 2022. He was struck by a driver in a hit-and-run on East Little Creek Road. His death came as a shock to family members, who said he had recently moved to the area to be closer to his daughter.

“He hit him like an animal and kept going, you know? It was upsetting,” Arthur Schilo, James’ brother, told The Virginian-Pilot. He said he couldn’t understand how someone could run someone over with their car and leave them to die in the street. The man who hit Schilo was arrested the following day.

“I just lost the only brother I have,” Schilo said.

Nearly three years ago, in response to rising pedestrian deaths, the Norfolk City Council adopted a plan, dubbed “Vision Zero,” to bring the number of pedestrian traffic deaths to zero. The city improved crosswalks and lowered speed limits in some neighborhoods, but those efforts haven’t worked. The city tied a record for highest number of pedestrian deaths in 2021 with nine — and is on track to break that record this year.

Read more in the Sunday Main News section

Granby Street bustles with sports cars and party revelers hurrying to bars this Sunday evening. Near the corner with Charlotte Street stands a dark red brick building with medieval doors and a wine-colored awning.

It is business as usual inside the Monastery Restaurant, one of the oldest businesses in downtown Norfolk. The waitstaff hustles to serve a family of four sitting in the middle of the dining room and a couple from New York in the rear. The soft lighting makes the space feel warm and inviting; mirrored arches, wood trim and oil paintings of bearded men create an Old World ambiance.

Read more in the Sunday Break section

“Junk fees” drain tens of billions of dollars each year from Americans’ budgets, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The costs to consumers can appear in various forms, including late penalty, overdraft, return, out-of-network ATM, money transfer and inactivity fees.

Now, some Hampton Roads banks have reduced their consumer fees while others have eliminated some charges altogether.

The changes come after such fees have come under the scrutiny of U.S. lawmakers and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, a regulatory agency for national banks, expressed concern about the effect of overdraft fees on lower income individuals late last year.

Read more in the Sunday Work & Money section

Some grilled steaks. At least one went to the zoo. Another got a haircut and chilled.

Notably, none traveled, and none went to work.

This past Memorial Day was unlike in-season holidays of the past for the Norfolk Tides. For that matter, the season itself is almost unrecognizable.

Sunday concludes a rare 12-game, two-week homestand for the Tides, who are enjoying an overhauled minor league schedule that keeps them in one place for much longer spurts than past itineraries.

For decades, teams have spent three to four days in a road city before hopping on a bus or a plane and moving on to the next, with homestands occasionally lasting as long as 10 days.

Since Major League Baseball took over the minor leagues in 2020, scheduling has been streamlined to reduce travel and make players and staff more comfortable.

Teams now play six-game series, eliminating the quick turnaround required in past seasons. They also have three evenings a week free: Each Monday is an off day, and Thursdays and Sundays bring day games.

Read more in the Sunday Sports section

Dog Days with Melissa McCarthy

Parade Picks - Summer by the Numbers

What America Eats - Crunchy, Colorful Chicken Salad

  
The Virginian-Pilot

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