New U2 Song Out Next Week

From U2.com: 

U2 have recorded John Lennon’s ‘Instant Karma’ for an Amnesty album drawing attention to the crisis in Darfur. It’s out next week.

More than 50 artists are taking part in the Amnesty International campaign which combines the music of John Lennon with new technology and human rights activism.

Highlights include: U2 (“Instant Karma”), Green Day (“Working Class Hero”), R.E.M. (“#9 Dream”); Jackson Browne (“Oh My Love”); Christina Aguilera (“Mother”), Avril Lavigne (“Imagine”), Corinne Bailey Rae (“I’m Losing You”); Snow Patrol (“Isolation”), The Flaming Lips (“(Just Like) Starting Over”) Regina Spektor (“Real Love”); Lenny Kravitz (“Cold Turkey”); Los Lonely Boys (“Whatever Gets You Thru the Night”); Jakob Dylan with Dhani Harrison (“Gimme Some Truth”) and Ben Harper (“Beautiful Boy”).

It also appears the new album is coming along:

U2 are in Africa, writing songs with Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno.

The band have set up a studio in Morocco’s medieval city of Fez where they have been writing and recording from morning till night for the past couple of weeks.

‘There’s no word on what the new material is for,’ according to one of the team in Fez. ‘But they’re on a roll and the ideas are coming thick and fast.’

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Krispy Kreme Ice Cream?

krispy_kreme.jpgWINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Krispy Kreme Doughnuts is testing TV advertising in some of its markets and will also try selling ice cream products.

Company CEO Daryl Brewster says the spots focus on the theme, “Think Krispy Kreme,” which he hopes will generate more frequent trips by its customers. He says Krispy Kreme stores have about a million customers each week, but the average customer “only comes back five times a year.”

The company is testing a proprietary Ice Kreme product that will be sold in cups, cones and shakes, as some customer say that’s something that could get them into the stores more often.

Link

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Big-box, online retail tide rolls over Christian stores

David may have defeated Goliath, but in the battle between independent Christian bookstores and retail giants, it’s the little guy who’s losing.

Across Northeast Ohio, small, locally owned religious bookstores and church suppliers are going out of business, conceding defeat to the Internet and big-box retailers like Wal-Mart, Borders and Target.

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