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Family of boy killed at Disney World urges organ donation JOSH FUNK, Associated Press FacebookTwitterEmail 3 1of3This Oct. 2, 2015 photo provided by the Lane Thomas Foundation shows Lane Thomas Graves, in Omaha, Neb. Graves died in 2016 after an alligator attacked him at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. The Lane Thomas Foundation his parents created after his death is moving beyond the small-scale donations it has been making so far to individual families with children undergoing transplants to raise awareness nationally about the need for pediatric organ donation. (Lane Thomas Foundation via AP)APShow MoreShow Less 2of3This Feb. 24, 2021 photo provided by the Lane Thomas Foundation shows Lauressa Gillock, left, of North Platte, Nebraska, meeting with a Mississippi boy, KeVon Long, in Louisiana, who received her daughter s heart after her organs were donated. Gillock is part of a campaign the Lane Thomas Foundation organized to promote pediatric ....
The Curse of Tutankhamen’s Tomb – Part 1 On 29th November, 1922, Egyptologists Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon were confronted by the tomb of King Tutankhamen apparentely guarded by a stone inscribed with the ominous threat: “Death Shall Come on Swift Wings to Him Who Disturbs the Peace of the King. Undeterred, they later opened the tomb and discovered the famous pharaoh along with a wealth of treasures, launching the world into the modern era of Egyptology. The first incident fuelling local rumours of a curse occurred on the very day that the King’s tomb was broken into when Carter came home and found his bird cage occupied by a cobra, the symbol of Egyptian monarchy. Carter’s canary had died in its mouth and the story was reported in the New York Times with claims that the Royal Cobra, the same as that worn on the King’s head to strike enemies, was the first sign of a curse in action. ....
Charleston City, partners start African American Cemetery Restoration Project VIDEO: Charleston City, partners start African American Cemetery Restoration Project By Lillian Donahue | March 13, 2021 at 2:36 PM EST - Updated March 13 at 11:54 PM CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) - For decades, the tombs of two freed slaves and Civil War Union Soldiers laid forgotten, cloaked by thick woods next to a busy Lowcountry highway. Morris Street Baptist Church Pastor Rev. Leonard Griffin walked aside those tombstones belonging to Corporal Samuel Ferguson and Private Pompey Grant for the first time Saturday morning. “The stories, heroism, contributions and biographical information of those formerly enslaved patriots will be brought it to the light of the word,” Griffin said. ....