Page 8 - IAV Digital Magazine #516
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iAV - Antelope Valley Digital Magazine
Delivery Rider Fulfills Customer's Request To Splash Tea On Ex-boyfriend
By Saumya Agrawal
February is known as the month of love around the world. As Valentine's Day is just a cou- ple of days away, couples around the world are busy planning surprises for their significant others. However, people who recently went through dif-
ficult break-ups are having a hard time.
A woman in Shangdong, China decided to pour out her hatred for her ex- boyfriend in an unusual way. She ordered a cup of tea for him and made a special request.
She asked the delivery driver to
deliver to the tea to her ex-lover and splash the drink on his face. "No need to be nice to him, just splash the drink on his face will do," the woman requested.
Surprisingly, the delivery driver fulfilled the cus- tomer's request and the incident was captured on camera.
Former High School Classmates Find Out They're Twin Siblings
By
Ben Hooper
Feb. 12 (UPI) -- A pair of former classmates in Indiana who reconnected decades later on Facebook made a shocking dis- covery: They're long-lost twin sib- lings.
Karen Warner, 51, said she found out her bio- logical mother's name a few years ago when Indiana unsealed adop- tion records, and the
discovery came with a surprise: she had a twin brother.
Warner said she sought help from various adoption websites to try to
find
her long-lost brother.
"Everybody kept coming up with nothing because we didn't have a name to go by or anything," Warner told WTHR-TV.
Warner said the big break came when she obtained local voting records with a list of three men who shared her birth date.
The third name on the list, Mike Jackman, stood out because he was a high school classmate who she had only very recently reconnected with on Facebook.
Warner
said Jackman a Facebook mes- sage saying they might be twin sib- lings, and the pair had a DNA test performed that confirmed their connection.
"It's filled a void in my life I didn't know was there," Jackman said. "There was something out there, I didn't know was there and now it's here. She's here."
The siblings said they now talk almost every day and get together several times a week.
"We're two peas in a pod," Warner said.