Title:
1Neil Diamond to donate 'Sweet Caroline'
royalties to One Fund Boston
2Neil Diamond will donate royalties from his song
"Sweet Caroline," which has been played at every
Boston Red Sox home game for more than a decade,
to the One Fund Boston, the singer said on
Twitter on Wednesday. The song was downloaded
more than 19,000 times this week, with sales up
597. The fund has raised more than 23 million
as of Wednesday. The fund was formed to "help the
people most affected by the tragic events that
occurred in Boston on April 15, 2013. The singer
recorded the song in 1969 as an homage to
Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of the late
President John F. Kennedy. It has nothing to do
with the Red Sox. In 2002, new Red Sox management
requested the song become an eighth-inning
staple.
3In Other News
- Gadget fans eagerly awaiting the next wave of
Apple products just got some good news, and some
bad news. First, the bad Based on CEO Tim Cook's
comments Tuesday on the company's quarterly
earnings call, Apple appears unlikely to announce
a major new product until this fall at the
earliest. If so, that would mean the company,
which typically rolls out new stuff every three
or four months, will have gone an entire year --
an eternity in tech-industry time. And now the
good Cook also said Apple sees potential in some
"exciting new product categories. - Have you ever cleaned out your refrigerator or
pantry and found a really old piece of food? You
know what Im talking about - Oreo cookies that
have gone from black and white to all green,
slices of mold-dripping bread, milk that smells
like it was bottled at the sulfur mine. Usually,
we have a knack for knowing when to toss away
food thats about to go bad. But sometimes, we
completely forget about it until we encounter
quite a surprise. Thats what happened to David
Whipple, a Utah native who discovered an old
hamburger in his coat pocket. How old was that
burger? Lets just say it was cooked when Bill
Clinton was president.