There is something disconcerting when our school officials spend time worrying about the use of Cell Phones and iPods in school instead of focusing strictly on the education of our children.
There is something disconcerting about our school officials in the Seacoast region and throughout the country spending time worrying about the use of cell phones and iPods in school instead of focusing strictly on the education of our children.
It was after 1 a.m. on a Sunday when college freshman Amanda Phillips arrived at the train station. She was nervous about walking alone in the dark to her dorm at Montclair State University. So Phillips activated a GPS tracking device on her school-issued cell phone that would instantly alert campus police to her whereabouts if she didn't turn it off in 20 minutes. After a five-minute walk, she ...