Word: cellularly
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...three-hour predawn ride from New York to Massachusetts to collect signatures for state-campaign-finance reform. The coffee's awful, and his cell phone doesn't work. "We should have a working phone, even if you have to FedEx one," the actor growls as he tosses the offending cellular to an aide. Maybe he'd be in a better mood if he were in jeans and sweaters like the other volunteers. But Baldwin is twisting about in a tight gray suit. Comparing himself to the rancid glop that fishermen use as bait, he says, "I'm the chum...
CALL ME A decade ago, with just two carriers allowed in each U.S. city, cellular-phone rates were boosted by a lack of competition. But dozens of new carriers and the arrival of cheap personal-communication-service networks have pushed rates down. Today's 56 million users pay 34% less per minute than in 1987. The drop, say experts, is likely to continue...
...need that desire to create something," said fellow panelist Walter Gilbert, co-founder and former chief executive of Biogen Inc.; professor of molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard, and a Nobel Prize winner. "It takes a lot of arrogance to create a company...
...Pullman) and his wife, Paige (Andie MacDowell), live in a house that seems to be located on the edge of the world. The water in their swimming pool laps over its edge and into the Pacific Ocean. Mike spends his mornings teleconferencing with his secretary and barking into a cellular phone while lounging in a deck chair. On the same day that his wife calls from the living room to announce that she's leaving him, he receives a mysterious 400-page e-mail that sets his life spiraling out of control...
While a thesis is not mandatory, Gelbart, who is also professor of molecular and cellular biology, says that about 45 to 50 of the department's approximate 150 senior concentrators write theses each year...