| Cartoons! My friend Mike used some of my tunes in his new cartoon series: Super Unleaded. Content meant for 17 and up. |
| Musicians you should check out: Jonathan Hughes | Susan Kane | Fred Gillen Jr. | Todd Giudice | Project Mercury |
| Artists you should check out: Mitch Waxman | Wendy Marvel | Deb Unger | |
| Studio you should check out: Raw Recording |
Special Thanks to F. Cecil Grace and the Grace Foundation for asking me to be a part of their team.
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F. Cecil Grace
F. Cecil Grace graduated from Harvard as an Electronic Engineer. It was before the Second World War and our country feared enemy invasion. We had no radar. Cecil was one of the select Electronic Engineers our army chose to study British Radar developments in England and to bring the technical information back to us. He flew and studied Radar in England as part of the ETG (Electronic Training Group).
After the war Cecil worked with DuMont Television and received a government patent as part of his interest in mechanical music. He has been acutely aware of the major issues of our times. With scholarly levels declining in our schools and with drugs and delinquency burgeoning, Cecil and Boo decided to try to influence the dialogue of our teenagers in the direction of good instead of evil. They founded the F. Cecil Grace Operation Positive Role Model in 2000.
Volunteer student judges examine student nominations of other students who have been Good Samaritans over the year. Those students selected by their fellow students each receive a one thousand dollar award. The Positive Role Model Program (PRM) expended over $40,000 in the last six years and is growing rapidly. It is now formally recognized as a
not-for-profit Foundation.
The other major problem that Cecil confronted was global obesity which the UN pronounced as the single greatest threat to the health of humankind. He sponsored and financed the invention of the Fullness Program and the diet shake and bar. This program received a US patent in 2002. |
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