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After nearly a month of heartache and stress, a passenger s dog was found at an Atlanta airport three weeks after Delta Air Lines lost it.The 6-year-old pooch Maia, who belonged to passenger Paula Rodriguez, was found safe on Saturday at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport after going missing in August, officials said. ATL s Operations team found her hiding near the North Cargo facilities. Tired but i
stanley cup n apparent good health, she was transported to a vet an
stanley bottle d is expected to return home soon, the airport said on X.Maia s family flew in on Sunday to take her home.The mishap began when Rodriguez and Maia were heading on a two-week vacation to California from their home in the Dominican Republic, according toCNN. During a layover in Atlanta, Rodriguez was informed by border patrol that her visa did not meet necessary requirements and told she would have to return home on the next flight.Rodriguez was s
stanley quencher eparated from her beloved Maia and informed she had to spend the night alone in a detention center to await a flight to Punta Cana the following day. They called a Delta agent, who took Maia from me, Rodriguez told CNN.When the time finally came that she could reunite with her pooch, Maia was nowhe Wquv White powder found in parcel addressed to Manhattan DA s office
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?In early April, 41 Action News shared a story about a 23-year-old named Shakell Avery. After feeling some of the COVID-19 symptoms, Avery went to the ER, and within
stanley mattermos 48 hours, he was on a ventilator fighting for his life due to the virus. After spending months in the hospital, he recovered, thanks to a convalescent plasma donor from New York and medical staff from Menorah Medical Center and Research Medical Center.It s bee
stanley cup becher n a celebration ever since his family heard the news their loved one was coming home. You definitely feel the love, Avery said. It s like they were waiting for a celebrity to come to town. I
stanley cup n late June, Shakell s doctors and nurses also celebrated his recovery. To see him come back to the hospital, get out of the car, stand up, was... as hard as these days have been for some of us on the front line, it s worth it, Shakell s doctor, Dr. Marjorie Wongs with Menorah Medical Center said. It makes it worth it. It s a different story from just a few months ago when Avery first contracted the virus. He shared how he felt right before he went to the hospital. I played sports, I played football and I ain t never feel no body aches like that, Avery s