Sdne NYT: Facebook offered more user data to companies, including private messages, than it has admitted
A New Jersey woman thought her diamond wedding ring was lost forever when she accidentally flushed it down the toilet nine years ago.But thanks to a public works employee with a keen eye she was reunited with it.Paula Stanton, 60, received the gold ring encrusted with several diamonds from her husband as a gift for their 20th wedding anniversary. Nine years ago while she was cleaning, the ring slipped off her finger and down the drain it went. It was heartbreaking, Stanton toldCNN affiliate WPVI. I was embarrassed to tell my husband because it was meaningful. Her husband bought her duplicate ring as a replacement, but Stan
stanley water bottle ton said she always hoped that maybe one day the original would be found.Two years ago, she talked to Ted Gogol of the Somers Point Public Works Department and explained what had happened. Gogol told her
stanley cup he had never come across the ring but would keep her in mind.Last month, as he was working on a pipe about 400 feet away from Stanton s house, Gogol saw something glimmer and shine in the muck. He plucked the shiny metal object out of the pipe, cleaned it off, and
stanley cups sure enough it was the long-lost diamond ring. That ring didn t want to leave her family, Gogol told WPVI. There are so many things that could have happened. It could have been washed away, it could have been crushed, but it was just meant to be. Stanton couldn t believe the news when she saw a note on her door from the public works department.When Gogol brought her the ring she said, You are Daie Simone Biles is now the most decorated female gymnast in history
When Missy Owen heard that the non-profit National Safety Council was putting together a memorial for opioid victims called Prescribed to Death and was, in effect, looking for personal stories to help put a human face on the crisis, she was excited. I was like, oh yes,this is a great idea, Owen said, This is an awesome project, yes Ill do that! The project would be another way to try and keep the memory of her son Davis alive. Not only that, but it could potentially help make an impact on others in the hopes of one day ending the epidemic that takes 22,000 lives a year. I knew that it would help othe
stanley cup r people, she said.But months went by. I procrastinated, and I procrastinated, she said.Owen said bringing herself
stanley isolierkanne to fill out the paperwork鈥?to spell out, in detail, the pain she suffered when she lost her 20-year-old son, an honor student and class president 鈥?was so painful that she waited until the very last day the organization would accept submissions.But in the end, she said she knew this memorial would be something people would remember. You look at all this, and you go up to it, and you see it, and you see those faces so close, she said.With this exhibit, being close is the only way to experience it because it consists of 22,000 pills, one for each opioid death that occurs in the U.S. each year.Owen said when she sees the enormity of it, she thinks of 22,000 families that learned to live differently, as she had to. These families learned their n
stanley kubek ew normal, and l