North Carolina
UNC football player dies from rare lung cancer, Tylee Craft was 23
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina wide receiver Tylee Craft died Saturday morning following a lengthy battle with cancer, the school announced.
Craft, 23, of Sumter, South Carolina, was diagnosed with Stage 4 lung cancer on March 14, 2022. The UNC community had rallied behind him with the #TyleeStrong hashtag since his diagnosis. He had undergone numerous treatments, but the cancer spread through his body and brain. Still, he had enrolled in graduate courses toward his master’s degree in applied professional studies and graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree in exercise and sports science/sports administration.
UNC honored Craft during Saturday’s football game against Georgia Tech. It also happened to be the team’s annual Cancer Awareness Game. Friends and family members wearing shirts bearing Craft’s name and number were recognized during an on-field ceremony.
Wide receiver J.J. Jones wore Craft’s jersey with his No. 13 and last name during the game. Additionally, the UNC men’s basketball team wore shirts bearing Craft’s name and number for its intrasquad scrimmage at the Smith Center following the football game and had a pre-scrimmage moment of silence in Craft’s honor.
I think the family feels the love and they’ll continue to feel the love.
“This young man fought so hard for his two and a half years,” UNC coach Mack Brown said. “The doctors told us he outlived what he should’ve. And he did it with the spirit, he did it with a smile on his face, he didn’t miss a meeting, he didn’t miss practice, he coached these other incredible young people.”
Brown told reporters he didn’t learn of Craft’s death until after the game but sensed something had happened after sharing an emotional hug with Craft’s mother at the end of the first quarter.
“I think the family feels the love and they’ll continue to feel the love,” Brown said. “What we’ve got to do is be strong, and pray for strength for us as leaders, to help these guys on the field and off the field. … So more than ever before I have got to step up and be stronger for them and make sure that I can help them manage the stuff and move forward in their lives.”
Tylee meant so much to so many and affected us in ways we’ll always be thankful for
Craft had been struggling with debilitating back pain, so UNC’s athletic training staff took him to the hospital in 2022 for more testing to determine the cause of it. That’s when he was diagnosed with Stage 4 large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. He immediately began an aggressive treatment of chemotherapy and immunotherapy.
According to UNC, when Craft was diagnosed, his family said doctors told them he was just weeks away from dying.
In 2022, Craft was recognized with the Disney Spirit Award, presented annually to college football’s most inspirational individual or team. He was also one of five college athletes named to the Uplifting Athletes Rare Disease Champion Team that year.
“Tylee meant so much to so many and affected us in ways we’ll always be thankful for,” the football program’s statement said. “He was 1-of-1 and, while he won’t be with us in body, he’ll be watching over us with his endearing smile and endless positivity.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
Copyright © 2024 ESPN Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
NC Senator's office response to woman's abortion law question goes viral after featured on TikTok
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — A viral email from a North Carolina lawmaker’s office is raising eyebrows, after allegedly telling a North Carolina woman to leave the country for raising concerns about our state’s abortion laws.
Video of the email has been circulating all over social media, seen over 200 thousand times on TikTok. It all started from a North Carolina TikTok user Lindsay Talley, who shared an email from her friend who she says has a genetic condition creating life-threatening abnormalities. Her friend wrote to her Republican State Senator Danny Britt concerned about the state’s abortion laws and her ability to expand her family.
I responded how Senator Britt wanted to me to. No further comment
Camille McDougald, Sen. Britt’s Office
And in response, his official email back told her to leave the country. The email says “Thank you so much for the email, I am not quite certain how we are preventing you from expanding your family. I suggest you move to China immediately and see how that works for you. If for some reason that fails Russia is nice in the winter and Venezuela in the summer.”
The email is signed by Senator Britt but appears to be sent from Senator Britt’s legislative assistant, Camille McDougald. In a follow-up email to Talley, McDougald replied “I responded how Senator Britt wanted to me to. No further comment.”
We made multiple attempts to reach the GOP Senator, who has represented parts of the Sandhills including Robeson, Hoke, and Scotland Counties since 2017.
We went to his Raleigh legislative office, and his assistant behind the email declined to comment and walked away from us.
Needs to be respectful of the people they represent. We work for them
Wiley Nickel, Democratic Congressman
Meanwhile, this could serve as a lesson for how to respond to those they serve. Democratic Congressman Wiley Nickel says his office responds to thousands of emails and he says was surprised to see that kind of response from a fellow lawmaker.
“Anyone who has the honor and privilege of representing constituents in Washington or Raleigh needs to be respectful of the people they represent. We work for them,” Nickel says.
Republicans in the legislature including Senator Danny Britt voted to change state law in 2023 on abortion after the overturn of Roe v Wade, overriding a veto from Democratic Governor Roy Cooper to ban most abortions in our state after 12 weeks.
SEE ALSO | Supreme Court unanimously strikes down legal challenge to abortion pill mifepristone
Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
North Carolina dog's search for love after owners killed in Helene ends in joy amidst life's darkest hours
LAKE LURE, N.C. – A dog can teach us many life lessons.
For Moose, it’s that joy can bloom even in the darkest hours.
The North Carolina beagle, once lost and grieving after Hurricane Helene, continues to inspire his new family and those who cared for him following a natural disaster that no one could ever imagine.
The ferocious storm ripped through his world nestled in Lake Lure’s foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains nearly two months ago, leaving destruction and despair in its wake. His family – his safe haven – was killed after his home was swallowed by Helene’s rage.
NORTH CAROLINA WOMAN USES INSTAGRAM TO REUNITE LOST PHOTOS SWEPT AWAY IN HELENE’S FLOODS WITH THEIR OWNERS
Glimmer of hope arrives
In the days following the nightmare, neighbors took turns caring for Moose, even as they faced their own struggles of being without water and power. During that time, Moose was viciously attacked by a pack of wild dogs. His condition was dire, requiring immediate medical attention.
It was thanks to one of those caring soles who called Triangle Beagle Rescue in Raleigh to get the care he desperately needed. The team of volunteers would soon offer a glimmer of hope for Moose, agreeing to take him in as soon as a foster home became available.
NORTH CAROLINA MAN OFFERS THANKSGIVING FEAST OF HOPE TO 5,000 HELENE SURVIVORS
The devastation in western North Carolina weighed heavily on Tara Lynn’s heart. She yearned to help but struggled to find the right way. She and her husband toyed with the idea of fostering another dog from TriBeagles, but nothing seemed quite the right fit.
Then, Moose arrived, and it felt like destiny.
“I just felt like God said, ‘Okay, this is your role, and step up and love on my little dog,” Lynn told FOX Weather.
BODY OF FINAL MISSING IMPACT PLASTICS EMPLOYEE FOUND MORE THAN A MONTH AFTER HELENE
‘Trust the journey’
After being rescued from the mountains and undergoing surgery, Moose was a shell of his former self. But his eyes, filled with hope, were fixed on Lynn, his new savior. With her love and care, he would begin to heal.
HELENE DAMAGES OVER 800,000 ACRES OF NORTH CAROLINA FORESTS
Moose was a fighter, a survivor, and his spirit, though wounded, remained unbroken. As he recovered, his playful side emerged, bringing joy to those around him.
As Lynn documented in her blog on Moose’s recovery, she noticed his tail beginning to wag again, and his spirit was full of playful energy. In it, she reminded others that happiness can be a choice, even when life seems overwhelming.
“Whether we’re dealing with trauma or loss, healing is a slow process that requires patience, but we should trust the journey and give ourselves grace,” she adds.
NORTH CAROLINA COUPLE RECOUNT BEING SWEPT AWAY ON COUCH DURING HURRICANE HELENE
Reunited with the mountains
Now, a new chapter unfolds for Moose as he continues to heal from his physical and emotional scars. A family in Leicester, near Asheville, immediately recognized the urgency of Moose’s long-term needs and opened their home to him back in the mountains.
It was already a safe place for two other beagles from TriBeagles, and despite the potential challenges of adding another to their family, they knew Moose was a part of their community and needed to be brought home.
Lynn said her four weeks with Moose were a celebration of second chances, a symbol of hope for many in western North Carolina still recovering from Helene.
“When life turns upside down, it’s okay to ask for help, and it’s okay to lean on the kindness of others,” she said. “Don’t face hardships alone; the warmth of friends or even strangers can be the lifeline we need.”
Today, Moose finds a second chance at life with joy in the little things – napping in the sun, snuggling in a cozy bed and exploring the smells of his new world. Thanks to Lynn and his new owners, he has also found safety and peace again.
“In a fast-paced world, we often forget to pause,” Lynn said,” and simply appreciate the peaceful moments and simple pleasures life has to offer.”
North Carolina
North Carolina residents could face winter without heat
Certain residents in North Carolina’s Avery and Mitchell counties are at risk of facing winter without the ability to heat their homes, after Hurricane Helene dismantled the area’s only kerosene station.
Rhonda Jean Kowald and her nonprofit, the Western Carolina Emergency Network, stepped up to help deliver heating fuel to local firehouses in the area to distribute to those in need, but supplies are already running out.
The volunteers are now racing against the clock to supply emergency fuel before winter sets in, which would pose an even greater risk to vulnerable residents, according to Kowald.
HELENE DEVASTATION HURTS WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA’S TOURISM ECONOMY, AIRBNB OWNER SAYS
“They’re going to be in a really bad situation,” Kowald said. They started out with over $271,000 in donations. As of Wednesday, they have $50,000 left, which would only cover a week and a half of fuel, Kowald said.
“Donations are dried out because most of the news cycles have moved on,” she said.
Paul Buchanan, emergency management director for Avery County, said the dismantled Quickmart station, serviced by Exxon, supplied kerosene to local gas stations in the area. It also did home delivery.
FOX Business reached out to Exxon for comment.
Buchanan said other companies have been able to deliver fuel to homes, but some areas are still too damaged to get to.
North Carolina Sen. Ted Alexander told FOX Business that “the importance of helping to provide heating fuel, including kerosene, and home heating oil cannot be overlooked or overstated during this time.”
Alexander said that fuel for warmth is just as important in helping people rebuild their lives.
In early October, Kowald and scores of volunteers drove more than 4,000 gallons of gasoline from Asheboro to areas across Western North Carolina, which had been hit hard by Helene.
Kowald said they started by filling up cars that were stuck on the side of the road as well as generators before creating fuel hubs.
NORTH CAROLINA LAWMAKER WARNS HURRICANE HELENE RECOVERY COULD TAKE ‘YEARS’
They “found out about the fuel heat crisis in the area,” while setting up one of their gasoline hubs in Avery, Kowald said.
Shortly after, they began setting up hubs for heating fuel at several fire departments throughout the area, so the supplies wouldn’t be misappropriated.
“It is winter time in the mountains and people shouldn’t be trying to dig out their homes from feet of mud while freezing because they have no way to properly heat their homes through kerosene heat or generators,” she said.
Buchanan said gas stations have started to get kerosene deliveries. However, Kowald said her efforts are still necessary, saying they delivered 3,000 gallons of heat fuel this week alone.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
“There is still so much need we haven’t even tapped into yet,” she said. “We’re getting inundated with messages of people asking for help and for deliveries because they’re either elderly or can’t get out.”
Kowald is especially concerned about elderly people and those who are in hospice care or disabled, as well as those who have lost their car and can’t drive to get fuel.
-
Health1 week ago
Lose Weight Without the Gym? Try These Easy Lifestyle Hacks
-
Culture7 days ago
The NFL is heading to Germany – and the country has fallen for American football
-
Business6 days ago
Ref needs glasses? Not anymore. Lasik company offers free procedures for referees
-
Sports6 days ago
All-Free-Agent Team: Closers and corner outfielders aplenty, harder to fill up the middle
-
News3 days ago
Herbert Smith Freehills to merge with US-based law firm Kramer Levin
-
Technology4 days ago
The next Nintendo Direct is all about Super Nintendo World’s Donkey Kong Country
-
Business2 days ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health2 days ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case