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Free McCartney Concert on iTunes Tonight: New Renditions of Old Jazz Standards

Paul McCartney Kisses On the Bottom - album art

Paul McCartney Kisses On the Bottom - album artPaul McCartney will perform selections from his new album Kisses on the Bottom in a live video streaming concert tonight, with downloads of the show available to people who buy the CD. The new LP released three days ago features a collection of favorite standards from Paul’s childhood, as well as two brand new McCartney compositions.

The live streaming performance takes place at 7:00 p.m. PST (10:00 p.m. EST)  from the famed Capitol Studios in Los Angeles where much of the new album was created. Fans can watch the intimate concert through iTunes on their Mac or PC (or on Apple TV).

The two new songs, “My Valentine” and “Only Our Hearts” feature guest stars Eric Clapton on guitar and Stevie Wonder on harmonica. 3-time Grammy-winning jazz vocalist Diana Krall and her band recorded the album with Paul and will join him in-studio tonight.

New Solar Cell Could Boost Efficiency by 25 Percent

sliver panel

sliver panelA new type of solar cell which could boost the efficiency of solar panels by over 25 percent compared to silicon-based cells has been developed by British scientists, but they need another two or three years to assess whether it is commercially viable.

Scientists at the University of Cambridge have developed a hybrid solar cell which is capable of converting 44 percent of sunlight into electrical power, 29 percent more than traditional cells’ capability of 34 percent.

The 8 Greatest Strengths of Generation Y

Bobbie Gottschalk

Seeds-of-Peace photo by Bobbie-gottschalkGeneration Y is generally thought to describe those born between 1980 and 1995. They may have been born in the “me” generation, but came of age in the “we” generation of the Internet. This unique place in history shaped its character in many ways, for better and worse, and bestowed certain traits unseen in earlier decades. Here are eight of our greatest strengths as Generation Y-ers.

The 8 Greatest Strengths of Generation Y

Bobbie Gottschalk

Seeds-of-Peace photo by Bobbie-gottschalkGeneration Y is generally thought to describe those born between 1980 and 1995. They may have been born in the “me” generation, but came of age in the “we” generation of the Internet. This unique place in history shaped its character in many ways, for better and worse, and bestowed certain traits unseen in earlier decades. Here are eight of our greatest strengths as Generation Y-ers.

Marine Vet Crushed on Harley Invents Illuminated Windshield for Bikers

Lit Harley windshield adds safety - Illumatek photo

Lit Harley windshield adds safety - Illumatek photoAfter a debilitating motorcycle accident, former Marine John Miller, saw opportunity in the face of adversity.

Crushed by the weight of his Harley after an SUV ran over him, he wondered, “How could this happen?” Miller’s motorcycle was well lit at night from the front and back, but those lights weren’t visible from the side.

Lucky to be alive, Miller set out to solve the problem that caused the accident. With the help of a veteran’s group in Milwaukee, Wis, he launched an entrepreneurial venture, Illumatek, offering a new product that could prevent accidents like this in the future.

His invention takes custom-etched windshields to the next level, illuminating them with neon-colored fiber optics. After a long process of trial and error, and five years waiting for a patent, Miller perfected his “glowshield” and found a renewed sense of purpose.

Following his military service more than a decade earlier, the veteran moved between a wide variety of employment. Injured on the job as a respiratory therapist, he was told he would not work again. Faced with the reality of living on monthly disability checks, he felt lost. Ironically, it was the accident — and the development of his glowshield — that sparked an entrepreneurial spirit that helped him cope through the painful surgeries that followed.

Hiring disabled vets was a priority

Investors were eager to join his team in the early days of Illumatek, but Miller worried about their motives and losing control of the company. His hesitation was not unfounded. They were looking to outsource manufacturing to China in an effort to cut costs. Miller refused. He wanted to hire disabled veterans (especially those returning home from Afghanistan and Iraq). Like his beloved Harley-Davidson, he wanted to establish his manufacturing facility in Wisconsin.

Enter VETransfer, a Milwaukee business accelerator that offers support to former service members turned entrepreneurs. For the first time, Miller found a solid base of people he could trust to coach him through each step of building his business.

The organization offers entrepreneurship training, office resources, networking, and capital-raising assistance at no cost to veterans. As one veteran entrepreneur puts it, “the overwhelming aspects are taken out, so you can focus on getting your business off the ground.”  Miller says that working with the team “was like doing 3 years of networking in a week.”

Veteran entrepreneurs share a common foundation that makes them eager to help one another. Just ask former Sailor of the Year, Ronnie Reum, who sought to accelerate his cleaning company, but after sitting next to Miller’s Illumatek Illumatek exec Ronnie Reum, VETransfer photodisplay every day (which includes a brilliantly illuminated Harley-Davidson), he began devising business strategies that would help his fellow comrade.

The two formed a strong connection. Reum (pictured, left) was also recovering from a serious auto accident and had spent fourteen months in a hospital, learning to walk all over again. By the time he recovered in 2011, his career in real estate had dissolved and he’d lost everything. Reum joined Miller in his venture, using his sales and networking expertise to take Illumatek to the next level. This type of collaboration is natural for military folks, whose training instills in them a strong sense of teamwork.

From adversity to success with a little help from the V.A.

Today, Illumatek is expanding rapidly. Their neon-colored glowshields and wind deflectors, available at various Harley-Davidson dealerships, are selling briskly.

“When dealers see the product, the average time it takes to Harley lit up by Illumateksell is three minutes,” says Miller.

The two are excited to take their business beyond just motorcycles. Already, they’ve been approached about creating windshields for vehicles from snowmobiles to ATVs. A Florida woman even prepaid so she can have the very first Illumatek windshield for her golf cart.

For these two resilient veterans, the future looks as bright as as a Las Vegas night. Within the year they’ll be moving into their own manufacturing facility and creating jobs for veterans returning home from overseas. It’s been a remarkable journey for these two heroes. Excited but humble, the two find constant motivation in helping other veterans, and most importantly keeping people safe.

As Miller puts it, “If it saves one biker’s life, I’ve done my job.”

Veteran Entrepreneurial Transfer, Inc., (VETransfer.org), funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs as a pilot program, offers training, resources, and mentoring in Milwaukee, Wis. to veterans with entrepreneurial endeavors.

Marine Vet Crushed on Harley Invents Illuminated Windshield for Bikers

Lit Harley windshield adds safety - Illumatek photo

Lit Harley windshield adds safety - Illumatek photoAfter a debilitating motorcycle accident, former Marine John Miller, saw opportunity in the face of adversity.

Crushed by the weight of his Harley after an SUV ran over him, he wondered, “How could this happen?” Miller’s motorcycle was well lit at night from the front and back, but those lights weren’t visible from the side.

Lucky to be alive, Miller set out to solve the problem that caused the accident. With the help of a veteran’s group in Milwaukee, Wis, he launched an entrepreneurial venture, Illumatek, offering a new product that could prevent accidents like this in the future.

His invention takes custom-etched windshields to the next level, illuminating them with neon-colored fiber optics. After a long process of trial and error, and five years waiting for a patent, Miller perfected his “glowshield” and found a renewed sense of purpose.

Dutch Kids Pedal Their Own Bus To School

Bicycle schoolbus made by Tolkamp Metaalspecials

Bicycle schoolbus made by Tolkamp MetaalspecialsThe Dutch are bicycle fanatics. Almost half of daily travel in the Netherlands is by bicycle. Devotees of the two-wheelers have taken the next logical step by launching what is likely the first bicycle school bus.

Powered entirely by children and the one adult driver, the yellow bicycle-built-for-12 does have an electric motor for tough hills and a canvas awning to ward off rainy days.

(READ the story in FastCoexist)

Elderly Woman Leaves her $400,000 Condo to the Homeless

Hawaiian photo by Sun Star

hawaii-elderBefore she died last September, Lelia Boroughs, 84, told her attorney she had no family to whom to leave her estate. So she crafted her will to leave her $400,000 condo to the city to turn into a homeless shelter.

Her gift may bequeath the city enough funds for moving up to 150 families into housing or helping families about to lose their homes stay in them.

 

(READ the story in NBC-San Francisco)

File photo by Sun Star

Wanted: Retirees to Live in Ecuador for a Month Free

Santo Domingo, Equador, by Carlos Echanique - GNU license

Santo Domingo, Equador, by Carlos Echanique - GNU licenseInterested in adventure and exploring new places? An international magazine is looking for volunteers to spend a month in Cuenca, Ecuador to test its potential as a retirement destination.

Applicants must be near retirement age, from the United States or Canada and be willing to relax, explore, shop, try local restaurants, and report on their experience during an all-expense paid month in the Latin American country.

Fungi Discovered In The Amazon Can Devour Plastic in Landfills

mushrooms -by Jorg-Hempel, CC license

mushrooms -by Jorg-Hempel, CC licenseThe Amazon is home to more species than almost anywhere else on earth. One of them, carried home recently by a group from Yale University, appears to be quite happy eating plastic in airless landfills.

The fungus, new to science, has a voracious appetite for a global waste nightmare: polyurethane.

Their findings regarding the species estalotiopsis microspora were published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology late last year.

(READ the story in FastCoexist)

CMA Donates $6 Million for Music Education in Schools

orchestra students Nashville CMA foundation

orchestra students Nashville CMA foundationThe CMA Foundation has donated another $1.4 million to benefit music education programs for Nashville’s public schoola through its “Keep the Music Playing” campaign, bringing the total to more than $6.1 million.

This money, raised during CMA Music Festivals, has been used to build music labs and purchase more than 4,000 instruments, and much needed supplies for 80 Metro Nashville Public Schools.

Keep the Music Playing, now in its sixth year serving 78,000 students, raises money from the hundreds of Country artists who perform and make appearances at the CMA Music Festival for free.

First Mexican Woman Picked as Presidential Candidate

Josefina Vasquez Mota, Mexican candidate for president -by Ads.gm-CC

Josefina Vasquez Mota, Mexican candidate for president -by Ads.gm-CCMexico’s ruling party on Sunday chose a former congresswoman to run for president, the first time a major party has nominated a woman to compete for the nation’s top office.

The National Action Party’s vote for Josefina Vazquez Mota, 51, over two other  candidates sets the race for Mexico’s July 1 presidential election.

(READ the AP story in the Atlanta J-C)

Village School Given Honor of Hosting Queen as she Celebrates 60 years on Throne (Video)

Queen visit flags waving-ITNvideo

Queen visit flags waving-ITNvideoToday marks the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II’s accession to the throne in 1952, after her father, King George VI, died.

A village school in Norfolk was given the honor of hosting the Queen and kicking-off the royal mum’s diamond jubilee year. The primary school students performed music and a play based on her 60 years of service.

Cheering crowds braved the cold outside to greet the 85 year-old monarch. The small children gave three cheers for her as she left the building.

India Tops World with Record Green Energy Growth

solar roof from heliodynamics

solar roof from heliodynamicsIndia racked up investments of $10.3 billion for its green energy sector, an increase of 52 percent over last year, which dwarfed the rest of the world’s economies in 2011.

Solar investments led the growth with a seven-fold increase in funding, according to figures released yesterday by analysts Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Rebellious Chinese Village Takes Baby Steps Toward Democracy

ballot-box by Kodak Agfa via Flickr -CC

ballot-box by Kodak Agfa via Flickr -CC7,688 residents of a southern Chinese village used ballot boxes in their first open and transparent election last week, an experiment in democracy that could affect other places in China.

Wukan was in the spotlight late last year for a high-profile protest by villagers against local officials believed to be illegally selling public land to developers.

Chrysler Praised for Clint Eastwood Ad Touting U.S. Turnaround

Clint Eastwood Chrysler ad superbowl

Clint Eastwood Chrysler ad superbowlThe Chrysler car company aired a poignant Super Bowl ad touting the Motor City’s turnaround, with a message from Clint Eastwook saying the United States could learn from Detroit’s rebound.

“The people of Detroit almost lost everything,” begins the two-minute spot narrated by Eastwood that features auto workers at the Jefferson North Assembly Plant, an abandoned building and a city flag.

“We find a way through tough times … Detroit’s showing it can be done. And what’s true about them is true about all of us.”

Royal Party and Read-a-thon to Mark Charles Dickens’ 200th Birthday

Charles Dickens photo, 1858
Charles Dickens photo, 1858

Charles Dickens photo, 1858Charles Dickens may have died in 1870, but legions of fans around the world will unite on Tuesday and beyond to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of this titan of English fiction.

Queen Elizabeth is throwing a star-studded party for him at Buckingham Palace and leading cultural figures will gather in an old orphanage to read from his works.

The personal story of the author who penned classics like “A Christmas Carol” and “A Tale of Two Cities” is thoroughly modern in its rags-to-riches flair.

Royal Party and Read-a-thon for Charles Dickens’ 200th Birthday

Charles Dickens photo, 1858
Charles Dickens photo, 1858

Charles Dickens photo, 1858Charles Dickens may have died in 1870, but legions of fans around the world will unite on Tuesday and beyond to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of this titan of English fiction.

Queen Elizabeth is throwing a star-studded party for him at Buckingham Palace and leading cultural figures will gather in an old orphanage to read from his works.

The personal story of the author who penned classics like “A Christmas Carol” and “A Tale of Two Cities” is thoroughly modern in its rags-to-riches flair.

Bismarck’s Voice Found on Edison Recording

Otto von Bismarck became Chancellor of Germany in 1871

Otto von Bismarck became Chancellor of Germany in 1871The voice of Otto von Bismarck, one of the 19th century’s most important figures has been identified as one recorded on a wax cylinder more than 120 years ago.

The recording of the German chancellor was one of a dozen cylinders that were once stored near Thomas Edison’s cot in his West Orange, N.J., lab, announced the National Park Service.

It is believed to be the only recording of a person born in the 18th century.

Otto von Bismarck became Chancellor of Germany in 1871.

Las Vegas Principal Goes Door to Door Hoping To Beat The Odds

Teachers can learn something from Finland

Teach for America photoNevada has the lowest high school graduation rate in the country. But now a multi-million dollar federal grant is helping one district turn its schools around. Host Michel Martin speaks with a principal who spent last Saturday knocking on the doors of students who dropped out, encouraging them to come back to school.

“We’re trying to reclaim our students, the students that have dropped out and that’s the whole purpose of this initiative.”