Freemasons Grand Charity awards £100,000 to Cancer Genetics team at University of East Anglia

69056778 Grand Charity awards £100,000 to Cancer Genetics team at University of East Anglia Norfolk PGM Stephen Allen and Professor Colin Cooper with the research team Norfolk 3ds

The Grand Charity has awarded a £100,000 grant to the Cancer Genetics team at the University of East Anglia to help fund research that will focus on distinguishing between aggressive and non-aggressive forms of the disease. Lead researcher Professor Colin Cooper explained that a critical problem in clinical management is an inability to distinguish this at the time of diagnosis.

Three Uses of Memory in Freemasonry by W.Bro. J. Scott Kenney

Giulio Camillo - Teatro della Memoria

Why is memory so important to Freemasons? I’m sure to many of you, that will seem obvious. Yet, beyond memorizing material so that you can do things like prove up to a higher degree, perform your ritual part well, do the floorwork, deliver a charge or even deliver a tracing board, there is a great deal more to this topic than one might think at first glance. Thus, in this brief paper, I hope to sketch out three interrelated areas in which memory may – whether consciously or inadvertently – be of significance to Freemasons.

Definition of a Freemason 1823 Farmer’s Almanac

Cathedral Builders

The real Freemason is distinguished from the rest of Mankind by the uniform unrestrained rectitude of his conduct. Other men are honest in fear of punishment which the law might inflect – are religious in expectation of being rewarded, or in dread of the devil, in the next world.

Henry Ford – Freemason & Inventor

Henry Ford Freemason & Inventor

The story of Freemason Henry Ford is not of a prodigy entrepreneur or an overnight success. Ford grew up on a farm and might easily have remained in agriculture. But something stronger pulled at Ford’s imagination: mechanics, machinery, understanding how things worked and what new possibilities lay in store

Air Ambulance Lifted by £16,000 Donation from Freemasons

Air Ambulance Lifted by £16,000 Donation from Freemasons

The Kent, Surrey & Sussex Air Ambulance (KSSA) has received a vital cash boost with a donation of £16,000 from the Freemasons’ Grand Charity. Freemasons from Kent, Surrey & Sussex recently visited the Air Ambulance at its headquarters in Marden to make the donation. Whilst there, they had the opportunity to look around one of the two helicopters and meet the crew and support staff who keep it flying.

Why President William McKinley Became a Freemason

Why President William McKinley Became a Freemason

When General Horatio King asked William McKinley how he happened to become a Mason, he explained,” After the Battle of Opequam, I went with our surgeon of our Ohio regiment to the field where there were about 5,000 Confederate prisoners under guard. Almost as soon as we passed the guard, I noticed the doctor shook hands with a number of Confederate prisoners. He also took from his pockets a roll of bills and distributed all he had among them. Boy-like, I looked on in wonderment; I didn’t know what it all meant. On the way back from camp I asked him: