A Texas man is reunited with the class ring he lost 56 years ago

It was May 1969 when Al DiStefano stood on a dock on Long Island, New York, watching the sunset.

“I was leaning over the railing,” DiStefano said, “and the ring just slipped off my finger, and I watched it go down into the darkness. And I said, ‘Well, that’s gone. I’m never going to get that back.'”

That class ring was set with a red garnet and engraved with the seal of Fordham University — from which DiStefano was graduating — as well as his name and the year 1969.

A closer look at Al DiStefano's Fordham University class ring.
A closer look at Al DiStefano’s Fordham University class ring. (Al DiStefano)

It rested underwater for over five decades until earlier this summer, when an electrician named David Orlowski took his metal detector to Cedar Beach in Mt. Sinai, New York.

“I was about up to my knees at low tide and got a really strong hit on the metal detector,” Orlowski said. “I dug quite a few times, pretty deep, and finally pulled it up. And I was like, ‘Wow, look at that thing!’ Not realizing what it was.”

Back home, Orlowski sat with the ring for a few days. He considered selling it — made of palladium, it would be worth a few thousand dollars as scrap.

But something about that didn’t sit right.

“I said to my wife, ‘What should I do with this?'” he said. “And she says, ‘Well, if you lost your ring, you would want it back, right?'”

You know what? Question answered right there.”

Based on the ring’s engravings, he searched online and found Karen Manning, who graduated from Fordham the same year.

“He said, ‘I found a ring belonging to somebody in your class,'” Manning said. “So I posted a message on our Facebook page and I asked if anybody was in touch with Al DiStefano.”

Now 77 years old and over 1,600 miles away in Arlington, Texas, DiStefano calls the discovery a “miracle.” He asked his mail carrier to film the moment his ring was returned.

Class Ring Found After 56 Years ( (Al DiStefano))

“Fifty-six years. Can you imagine that?” DiStefano says in the video. “And look at it! For being in the water for that long…”

“It looks like it’s in pretty good shape!” the mail carrier says.

“It still doesn’t fit,” DiStefano adds, laughing.

For Manning, who helped connect the dots, the real story isn’t about the ring.

“To me, the biggest thing was that somebody took a lot of joy in returning this valuable item that had a lot of memories attached to it,” she said. “You just don’t see a lot of that happening these days.”

David Orlowski doesn’t expect a reward — he just hopes the gesture sticks.

“Hopefully it’s contagious and people do the right thing,” he said.

Corrections:

  • August 29, 2025
    Previous audio and web versions of this story misstated the last name of Karen Manning as Morris.

 

Nancy Guthrie search enters its second week as a purported deadline looms

"This is very valuable to us, and we will pay," Savannah Guthrie said in a new video message, seeking to communicate with people who say they're holding her mother.

Immigration courts fast-track hearings for Somali asylum claims

Their lawyers fear the notices are merely the first step toward the removal without due process of Somali asylum applicants in the country.

Ilia Malinin’s Olympic backflip made history. But he’s not the first to do it

U.S. figure skating phenom Ilia Malinin did a backflip in his Olympic debut, and another the next day. The controversial move was banned from competition for decades until 2024.

‘Dizzy’ author recounts a decade of being marooned by chronic illness

Rachel Weaver worked for the Forest Service in Alaska where she scaled towering trees to study nature. But in 2006, she woke up and felt like she was being spun in a hurricane. Her memoir is Dizzy.

Bad Bunny makes Puerto Rico the home team in a vivid Super Bowl halftime show

The star filled his set with hits and familiar images from home, but also expanded his lens to make an argument about the place of Puerto Rico within a larger American context.

Japan’s Takaichi to pursue conservative agenda after election landslide

Japan's first female Prime Minister, Sanae Takaichi, brought the ruling Liberal Democratic Party its biggest-ever electoral victory, fueling her ambitions to pursue to a political agenda which she says could "split public opinion."

More Front Page Coverage