CAIRO (AP).- The tombs of seven men, including several who served King Tutankhamen and his father, the pharaoh Akhenaten, were opened to tourists on Monday after restoration. Egypt’s minister of antiquities, Zahi Hawass, told reporters that the tombs in the New Kingdom Cemetery could draw more visitors to the site in South Saqqara, which is better known for its pyramids, including the Step Pyramid of Djoser. The area served as the necropolis for the ancient Egyptian capital at Memphis. Hawass noted that two of the men who built tombs for themselves Maya, the treasurer of King Tutankhamen, also known as King Tut and Horemheb, a general under King Tut who later became king himself, “were very important men during one of Egypt’s most tumultuous periods.” Akhenaten, who lived some 3,300 years ago, closed down the temples where Egyptians worshipped in Luxor and