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This Family Hosted a Wedding For 2 Strangers at the Last Minute

Dulce Gonzalez was hoping for perfect weather for her beachside wedding in Pascagoula, MS, on July 1. While she awoke to clear skies on the big day, the sunshine didn’t last long, and just before she was set to marry Ariel, her boyfriend of two years, it started to pour as a storm rolled in.

Panicked, Dulce hopped in a car with the rest of her wedding party to wait out the storm until a friendly onlooker, Cynthia Strunk, offered up her home to the couple as a potential wedding venue. Cynthia shared how the situation went down in a Facebook post — and yes, she and her husband Shannon completely saved the day.

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Tears flow as Thai boys and parents see each other for first time since cave rescue

July 11–CHIANG RAI, Thailand — Thai authorities aired the first footage Wednesday of the Thai boys rescued with their coach after being stranded in a flooded cave complex for days, in a tightly controlled event designed to protect the children from media attention and showcase pristine hospital facilities.

The boys, rescued in three groups from the Tham Luang Nang Non caves in northern Thailand, were in good health mentally and physically, according to doctors, with only one showing signs of a lung infection. They had lost weight — an average of 4 1/2 pounds each — but were hungry and largely unharmed from their ordeal.

Another boy who earlier showed signs of a lung infection has recovered, doctors said.
Video showed the boys wearing masks while resting in beds in Chiang Rai Prachanukroh Hospital in the city of Chiang Rai near the rescue site. Several flashed a victory sign.

Some parents wept as they gazed excitedly at their children through a window looking onto the hospital, some waving. All wore yellow shirts in celebration of the birth month of Thailand’s King Rama X.

Some families were allowed in the ward, although they had to remain six feet from the boys and no hugging was allowed, doctors said.
Rear Admiral Apakorn Youkongkaew, chief of the Thai Navy SEALS, said there had been no choice but to bring the group out of the cave swiftly, because oxygen levels were depleting rapidly and they would not have survived much longer.

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She Found Her Long-Lost Dad Right Under Her Nose

1. Andrew
Hands trembling, the young woman could barely believe that her fingers were able to act faster than her brain. She dialed a number that she’d worked so hard to acquire, filled with hope. A man answered. Breathlessly, she asked for the name she’d been given. “Andrew?”
Everything hinged on this fragile moment. This was the last missing fragment of the puzzle she had wanted to complete all her life. If she had succeeded in her search, the man on the other line was her father. But she was met with deafening, paralyzing silence.

2. Ensnared By Addiction
Twenty-four years before, a young Arizona man named Will Russell was fighting to regain some semblance of control over his life. Barely in his twenties, his path was anything but straight and well-defined. Caught in a downward spiral, he had fallen prey to a slew of addictions.

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The bizarre reason why the Queen has 2 birthdays

Being the Queen comes with special privileges, like owning 200 of the same handbag, and having not one but two birthdays.

The Queen turns 92 on her actual birthday on April 21, but she also has an official birthday that is celebrated every year on a Saturday in June.

The reason for the second birthday has to do with the weather. Sovereigns whose real birthdays fall in colder months have often celebrated an official birthday on a different date in the hope of good weather for their birthday parade, known as the Trooping the Colour, according to the Royal Family’s official website.

Because British weather can be cold on April 21, the Queen celebrates her official birthday in June. The Queen’s official celebration usually falls on the second Saturday of June.

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School lunch lady given new car by the teens she serves

California high school students who restored a car in their automotive class gave the refurbished vehicle to someone they couldn’t imagine a day without — their lunch lady.

“Thank you all so much, thank you all so much,” Debra Davis, a cafeteria worker at Hoover High School said as she spotted the car. “I’m looking for my reward in heaven and you all gave me a little bit here on earth.”

Davis, known as “Aunt Debbie” to the students, told KFMB she has a strong relationship with the teens.

“I feed the kids, I prepare the food, I talk to them, I stop them from fighting,” Davis said. “They don’t cuss. They have to respect, and they call me ‘Aunt Debbie.'”

 

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The Genius Reason You Should Take a Photo of Your Stove Before You Travel

When I leave for vacation, I check all of the doors. And the windows. About 17 times. I then make sure each knob on the stove is turned to “off” and start the whole process over again just for good measure. Still, inevitably, I will be thousands of miles from home, wake up in the middle of the night, and know without a doubt that I left a burner on and my house (along with my cat) is doomed.

This fear is definitely not uncommon, but luckily, there’s a very simple hack that will change the way you travel forever. Instead of wondering hours or days later if you left the oven on, take a photo of the knobs in the “off” position before you leave! Then you can quiet your anxieties by simply opening up your images – no matter where you are in the world, you’ll have photo evidence that you did, in fact, turn the stove off. Lifehacker shared this genius hack, and it’s so simple but something I’ve never thought to do!

If you’re generally worried about your appliances being left on, take photos not just of your stove, but of your unplugged straightener, you’re deadbolt turned the right direction (burglars won’t be able to waltz on in!), thermostat (you didn’t leave the A/C running!), your unlit candle (no fires!), etc. That gallery of images will give you peace of mind wherever you are so that you can truly enjoy your travels.

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I Bought a $45,000 Dog and I Don’t Regret It

Ten long years — that’s the amount of time my two youngest kids had been begging for a puppy. Even though we love dogs, my husband and I had always said “no way” would we bring a four-legged creature into our already busy lives.

For starters, my hubby Earl and I travel a lot, both for work and leisure; having a dog wouldn’t be conducive to our lifestyle, we reasoned. Besides, a dog would require a lot of work. We’d have to clean up after it all the time, potty train it and take it outside for frequent walks.

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Malian ‘spiderman’ hero to get French citizenship after saving child from fourth floor balcony

A Malian man hailed a hero after saving a child dangling from a fourth floor balcony in Paris will be granted French citizenship.

Mamoudou Gassama met with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace after a video of his daring rescue went viral on social media.
As well as being made a French citizen, the 22-year-old – who recently moved to the country in the hope of a new life – will be offered a place in the fire brigade, Mr Macron said on Monday.

Mr Macron hailed the “exceptional act”, telling Mr Gassama: “You saved a child. Without you, no one knows what would have become of him.
“You need courage and the capability to do that.”

He added Mr Gassama had become an “example” because millions have viewed the astonishing act after footage was uploaded to Facebook.
The migrant admitted he was “trembling” after the rescue, but told the French president: “When I started to climb, it gave me courage to keep climbing.”

Mr Gassama also received a medal and certificate for bravery on his visit to the presidential residence.
He scaled an apartment block in northern Paris on Saturday evening after seeing a four-year-old in danger.

Footage shows Mr Gassama pulling himself up from balcony to balcony in a matter of seconds, while a man on the fourth floor tries to hold on to the child by leaning across from a neighbouring balcony.

On reaching the fourth floor, Mr Gassama puts one leg over the balcony before reaching out with his right arm and grabbing the child.
Firefighters arrived at the scene to find the child had already been rescued. A spokesman said: “Luckily, there was someone who was physically fit and who had the courage to go and get the child.”

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Rachel Weisz, 48, and Daniel Craig, 50, are expecting their first baby together

Congratulations are in order for Rachel Weisz and Daniel Craig.

The actress, 48, told The New York Times Friday that she is expecting her first child with the Spectre star, 50.

“I’ll be showing soon,” she told the newspaper. “Daniel and I are so happy. We’re going to have a little human. We can’t wait to meet him or her. It’s all such a mystery.”

The happy couple married in 2011 and both have children from previous relationships.

Craig shares a daughter, Ella Craig, who is in her mid-20s, with first wife Fiona Loudon. Weisz shares a son, Henry Aronofsky, 11, with her former partner, director Darren Aronofsky.

Craig is best known for his work in the 007 franchise. Weisz, who won a best-supporting-actress Oscar in 2006 for The Constant Gardener, has also starred in The Mummy movies.

USA TODAY has reached out to Weisz and Craig’s reps for comment.

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Linda Brown dies; she was at center of Brown v. Board of Education desegregation case

Linda Brown, who as a little girl was at the center of the Brown v. Board of Education US Supreme Court case that ended segregation in schools, has died, a funeral home spokesman said.

Brown died Sunday afternoon in Topeka, Kansas, Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel spokesman Tyson Williams said.
Brown was 9 years old when her father, Oliver Brown, tried to enroll her at Sumner Elementary School, then an all-white school in Topeka, Kansas.

When the school blocked her enrollment her father sued the Topeka Board of Education. Four similar cases were combined with Brown’s complaint and presented to the Supreme Court as Oliver L. Brown et al v. Board of Education of Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, et al.

The court’s landmark ruling in May 1954 — that “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal” — led to the desegregation of the US education system. Thurgood Marshall, the NAACP’s special counsel and lead counsel for the plaintiffs, argued the case before the Supreme Court.

Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer acknowledged Brown’s contribution to American history.

“Sixty-four years ago a young girl from Topeka brought a case that ended segregation in public schools in America. Linda Brown’s life reminds us that sometimes the most unlikely people can have an incredible impact and that by serving our community we can truly change the world.”

Brown was a student at Monroe Elementary School in 1953 and took a bus to school each day.

My father was like a lot of other black parents here in Topeka at that time. They were concerned not about the quality of education that their children were receiving, they were concerned about the amount — or distance, that the child had to go to receive an education,” Brown said in a 1985 interview for the documentary series “Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil Rights Years.”

“He felt that it was wrong for black people to have to accept second-class citizenship, and that meant being segregated in their schools, when in fact, there were schools right in their neighborhoods that they could attend, and they had to go clear across town to attend an all-black school. And this is one of the reasons that he became involved in this suit, because he felt that it was wrong for his child to have to go so far a distance to receive a quality education.”

Monroe and Sumner elementary schools became National Historic Landmarks on May 4, 1987, according to the National Park Service. President George H.W. Bush signed the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site Act of 1992 on October 26, 1992, which established Monroe as a national park.

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