Utah man reunited with class ring lost in Germany after 38 years
A Utah man who lost his high school class ring in Germany in 1982 was reunited with the ring thanks to a man who found it on a beach in the United States.
Scott Sanders said he accidentally left his ring on top of a paper towel dispenser in Bitburg, Germany, in 1982, and he never expected to see the ring again.
Dan Thomander said he found the ring in the sand at a park in New Jersey or New York nearly 30 years ago. He said his father-in-law kept the ring in a safe for decades before giving it back to him and inspiring him to attempt to find its original owner.
Thomander said his online research revealed Sanders' high school had put all of their old yearbooks online, making it easy for him to determine the identity of the ring's owner. He searched for Sanders' current location and discovered he lives in Utah -- only 5 miles from where Thomander's son lives. ...
Man reunited with lost class ring after 22 years
A Kentucky man was reunited with his class ring after more than 20 years as demolition began on the building where it was last seen.
Stephen Turner of Owensboro said he lost his Apollo High School class ring at a party at Gabe's Tower in Owensboro in 1998, and he didn't see the item again until a Facebook post was brought to his attention. ...
Becki Burton, an employee at Apollo High School, had posted photos of the ring on Facebook, writing that it had been mailed to the school by an unknown person. Classmates tagged Turner in the post, believing it to be his ring.
Burton said the origin of the package containing the ring was unknown. Turner theorized the ring might have been found during preparations for the demolition and mailed back to the school.
"The fact that they were tearing down the tower, I instantly thought maybe they were tearing out some things at the tower and they found it wedged behind one of the dressers. It's pretty crazy," Turner told WEHT/WTVW.
Demolition of Gabe's Tower, a landmark building that opened as a hotel in 1963, began Monday.
Metal detector hobbiest finds 97-year-old class ring in Illinois park
An Illinois man walking with his metal detector in a public park found a class ring dating back 97 years underneath the soil.
Steve Aimone of Godfrey said he was using his metal detector at Rock Springs Park in Alton when he found the 10-karat gold ring at the top of a steep hill.
He said he does not think the ring was intentionally buried.
"It was only about 3 inches below ground," he told The Telegraph newspaper.
The ring, a 1923 class ring from Western Military Academy in Alton, was engraved with the name of its owner, Mervin E. Volle.
Aimone said his research indicated Volle served in World War II and moved to California, where he later died. He said he was able to contact a distant family member who said Volle had a child before he died.
The metal detector hobbiest said he is now hoping to identify and contact Volle's child so he can give them their father's ring. ...
C.B. Jackson, a Western Military Academy historian, expressed interest in adding the ring to his collection in Volle's family can't be found.
A lot of these lost & found rings are 'class rings'. If you get your name engraved of course it makes it possible to trace the owner. It's not a tradition in the UK - are they common/usual in the US?
I gave my first wife a complete mix of songs when we first met at 17. I can’t remember how many years later she realised that the words to special brew by Bad Manners were about beer!I once gave my wife a mix tape when we were seeing each other but not engaged or married. She thought that the songs were a romantic subtle message until she got to the last song. "Waving My Dick In The Wind" by Ween. Thankfully she burst out laughing on the bus.
I gave my first wife a complete mix of songs when we first met at 17. I can’t remember how many years later she realised that the words to special brew by Bad Manners were about beer!
I love you, yes i do
'cause i know that you love me too
I love you, yes i do
gona spend all my money on you
Man spots his long-lost ice skate hanging from signpost
A Quebec man preparing to finally throw out his orphaned left hockey skate seven years after losing its twin discovered the long-lost ice skate hanging from a sign.
Jeff Meldrum, 47, said he was recently going through the sporting equipment in the basement of his Chelsea, Quebec, home as part of his family's preparations for an upcoming move in July when he came across his single size 10D Reebok ice skate.
Meldrum said the last time he saw the right skate was about seven years ago, when he has to leave an ice rink in a hurry when his son, Owen, then 4, fell and injured his chin. ...
Meldrum said he and Owen, now 11, were driving on a local road June 22 -- the same day he had decided to discard the remaining skate -- and spotted a familiar-looking skate hanging from a signpost at the end of a driveway.
"I said to [Owen] jokingly, 'Hey we should turn around -- maybe that's my skate,'" Meldrum recalled.
He did end up turning around, and to his surprise, it was indeed his long-lost skate.
The driveway led up to the home of Elyse Piquette, who had found the skate at the side of the road while walking seven years earlier. Piquette said she suspected someone might be missing the skate, so she took it home and posted an ad in the classified section of a local paper hoping the owner of the lost item might see it.
Piquette said she also posted an ad online, but when there were no responses, the skate ended up forgotten in her garage. She said she put numerous items from the garage at the end of her driveway after a recent cleaning, and the skate was the only object that wasn't quickly taken by passers-by. ...
Long-lost class ring returned to woman after 45 years
A North Dakota woman who lost her high school class ring 45 years ago had it returned to her, thanks to a chance conversation between two firefighters.
Betty Thompson said she graduated from Flasher High School in 1973 and lost her class ring two years later after moving to Mandan.
"My mom saved her money from selling eggs and cream to buy my class ring for me. I never told my mother because I felt so bad she wasted all her money on me," Thompson told KFYR-TV.
Mike Hanson of Mandan said he was remodeling the basement of his home when he found a Flasher High School ring.
"Then we kind of forgot about it. That was 25 years ago," he said.
Hanson, a part-time firefighter with the Mandan Fire Department, said the ring resurfaced in his home recently. He and his wife were researching the ring's potential origins when he got called to a fire.
Hanson said he put the ring on his finger for safe-keeping, and while on the way back to the station, it caught the eye of fellow firefighter Dan Miller.
"He said it had the initials 'BF' on it. I said, 'You know, wife's aunt's name is Betty.' And her last name was Fleck before she got married. It could be her ring," Miller said.
Miller sent photos of the ring to Thompson, who was shocked to see her long-lost ring.
"I just said, 'It can't be!, And I screamed," Thompson said. ...
"Whilst running new wiring through the lofts we discovered a few boxes, and at first we thought they were just empty unused envelopes from the building's former life as a chemist that processed film from old 35mm cameras.
"When we looked inside, we found that the packages were full of developed photos that were never collected by customers. They depicted everything from family holidays, birthday parties, and even royal visits."
When Michelle realised what she had discovered she set up a Facebook group so she could share this time capsule with local residents and maybe even reunite the images with the owners or families.
tortoises can actually move quicker than most people would expect,
I mean, I know that tortoises can actually move quicker than most people would expect, but Linford Christie they aint.
One must wonder, why weren't the photos collected?
I have a vague memory of a news story where the Leader of an expedition sponsored by the Royal Geographical Society (I think) took all the official photos to either Boots or Happy Snaps for developing and they 'mislaid' them all. RGS wasn't impressed with him.
There was a belief that photos would be scrutinised by the staff and any unsuitable ones would be confiscated and disposed of.
There was a belief that photos would be scrutinised by the staff
She came in to collect the photos herself one week and asked the manager if we had any requests.
I recall there was a case when the staff alerted the authorities to a set of bathtime pics by parents, on the grounds that they were potential abusers or providing fuel for perverts. It seemed to mark the onset of a new attitude to depictions of children*.
*Fewer the better, in my view!
And did you?..
"........... asked the manager if we had any requests............"
Utah woman reunited with missing cat after 10 years
A Utah animal shelter said a cat that went missing 10 years ago was reunited with her owner after being brought in as a stray.
The Tooele City Animal Shelter said a stray cat was recently brought into the shelter by a person who said they had been feeding the stray feline, but they were preparing to move and were concerned about leaving the cat without a consistent source of food. ...
The shelter scanned the cat for a microchip and found the contact information for a man who identified the cat as Mocha, his daughter's cat. The man said Mocha had gone missing from the family's home 10 years earlier, when his daughter was a teenager.
The man's daughter, now an adult, came into the shelter and was reunited with her long-lost pet.
The shelter said the story should serve as a reminder of how important it is to bring stray animals in to be scanned for microchips. ...
Farmer returns prosthetic leg that skydiver lost during jump
A Vermont skydiver who lost his prosthetic leg during a jump has it back, thanks to a farmer who kept an eye out for it and spotted it in a soybean field.
Double amputee Chris Marckres, of Hyde Park, went for a jump Saturday at Vermont Skydiving Adventures in West Addison and lost one of his prosthetic legs after leaping from the plane. ...
He then put out the word on social media that he’d lost his leg. Farmer Joe Marszalkowski saw the post before finding the prosthetic on Sunday in a soybean field. Beyond a few scratches, it was undamaged.
“You’ve always got to keep an eye out,” said Marszalkowski, who compared the discovery to a needle in a haystack. He said he was grateful he found the leg without running it over with a machine during the fall harvest. ...
Missouri police diving team locates rafter's prosthetic leg
A Missouri man who lost his prosthetic leg during a rafting trip was reunited with his lost limb thanks to a Missouri State Highway Patrol diving team.
Mike Evans of Woodson Terrace said he and some friends were rafting on the Meramec River on Saturday when he and a friend decided to walk in the water for a while. ...
Evans said they came upon some deeper water and had to swim back to the raft, where he noticed his prosthetic leg was missing.
"When I pulled myself onto the raft, I noticed immediately that my leg felt lighter," Evans told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "Then I realized it was gone."
Evans said he and his friends searched the river, but were unable to locate any sign of his lost limb. He said the leg would cost $27,000 to replace ...
A Missouri state trooper heard about Evans' situation and contacted him via Facebook on Sunday night to request more information so he could send a dive team to search for the leg.
Troopers said the dive team arrived at the river about 9:30 a.m. Monday and had located the leg by noon. ...