An 84-year-old Washington state woman will soon hold her 1953 university class ring, lost six decades ago, after it was found in a dried-up West Texas lake.
Elizabeth Clark lost her Howard Payne University class ring in 1954 in Lake Nasworthy near San Angelo when she and her future husband went for a picnic and waded into the water. Clark said she wasn't certain where she had lost the ring — after discovering it was missing, she looked around her home before going back to search at the lake.

For those who believe in the yeti, the news can only be described as, well, abominable.
Science has cast its methodical eye on samples of hair reputed to have been left by the Himalayan snowman of legend... and determined they came from a bear or a goat.

A neighbor of Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has been fined for allowing his dogs to hunt on the 90-year-old leader's land, state media reported Tuesday.
"President Mugabe's neighbor, Michael Pazarangu, who set dogs to hunt buck at the president's private residence in Borrowdale was yesterday fined $50," The Herald newspaper reported.

Waffle House, America's best-known purveyor of the griddled breakfast goodie, is urging a boycott of Belgian waffles ahead of the United States' must-win World Cup clash with Belgium.
"We don't believe in Belgium waffles," Waffle House said on its official Twitter feed.

A Lenin statue has returned to a onetime model communist city in Poland but the monumental hero of Soviet days is now a small, lurid green man urinating from atop a black plinth.
The ironic take on the Russian revolutionary stands in Nowa Huta, a working class suburb of Krakow, to offer a bit of comic closure with its often difficult communist past.

Australian and New Zealand authorities are investigating whether the identities of top military officers are being used in an international Facebook dating scam, officials said Sunday.
Australian Federal Police confirmed the existence of a fake profile of incoming Australian Defence Force chief Mark Binskin, with the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reporting that the page was used to befriend a woman in Germany and ask her for money.

Signature bottle of bourbon in one hand, "Amy Smackhouse" sticks out the other one and slams down her opponent's arm, her latest victory in a Washington women's arm-wrestling tournament.
The tongue-in-cheek event aims at humor and to raise money for charity, but there is a competitive edge of sorts.

Dutch airline KLM on Sunday deleted a tweet featuring a picture of a sombrero and a moustache after the Netherlands knocked Mexico out of the World Cup.
The picture, posted just after the 2-1 win put the Netherlands into the quarter finals, also said 'Adios Amigos'. But it quickly sparked a social media storm of criticism with many saying it was racist.

Ah, World Cup penalty shootouts. The stress. The anguish. The joy. The mad dash to find somewhere else to watch the final minutes after you smash your flat-screen TV.
That, at least, was the experience of Brazilian fan Rafael Gambarim, who was so overcome with emotion while watching the host nation's penalty shootout against Chile on Saturday that he smashed his own television set.

Top female tennis stars said Friday it would be "creepy" if Wimbledon officials went round inspecting their knickers to check if they were flouting the competition's strict all-white clothing rule.
Players said they understood the All England Club's rules and traditions but would find it "weird" if they suddenly had to start running their underwear past an official.
