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Cell Phones News Archive24-Feb-2008
Smart phones are fun ... but not for everyone (The Sentinel)
Americans are greedy. It?s true. Just look at the latest in cell phone technology ? smart phones.
Students Send Wrong Message on Cell Phones (News Channel 5 Nashville)
Officials at one Montgomery county school are taking a closer look at their cell phone policy after rumors of violence spread through the school by text message.
POA taking part in Cell Phones for Soldiers (NWAnews.com)
BELLA VISTA ? The Bella Vista Property Owners Association is accepting used cell phones to donate to a nonprofit organization that helps soldiers call home, according to a POA news release. (Benton County Daily Record)
Used cell phones answer the call for those in need (The State)
Elderly, crime victims to get lifeline to emergency services thanks to Richland program Cell phones otherwise destined for a landfill will link crime victims and elderly people to emergency services and raise money for a program aiding senior citizens through a partnership of the Richland County Sheriff?s Department and the 911 Cell Phone Bank. ?It could mean the difference between life and ...
New cell phones aim to educate students (The Triangle Online)
On Feb. 18, Drexel University's Math Forum held a demonstration Feb. 18 of a new cell phone that promises to help teens learn and have fun. These new cell phones, called "smartphones," were created as a part of Project K-Nect, a program that aims to help students who have a lack of Internet access, underdeveloped "21st-century skills" and math and science deficits.
Tularosa school eyes drug dogs, cell phones (Alamogordo Daily News)
Drug dogs and cell phone concerns topped the list as Tularosa school board members and principals met for a work session Saturday morning. Board member Mike Mackechnie jumped right in at the beginning, bringing up the drug dog issue.
Donated cell phones allow soldiers to phone home (The Daily & Sunday Review)
Unused cell phones can now be put to good use thanks to an organization called Cell Phones for Soldiers.
Cell phone users dial up dead zones (The Charlotte Observer)
When Angela Pennington moved into her new home off Christenbury Road in northern Charlotte, she was surprised to find neighbors standing on their porches, talking on their Cell Phones. "I thought it was strange," she said. "But it didn't take me long to figure it out. That's the only place where they can get a signal." We have all seen the commercials; the ones showing cell phone users in the ...
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