Vol. 105 Issue 12
78°|57°
@thepittnews
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Can you still get a Lyft in Pittsburgh?
ANCHORS AWAY
Katelyn Prosachik For The Pitt News
Popularity: the fast track to nowhere Nerine Sivagnanam For The Pitt News
Pittsburgh may soon suffer from a mustache shortage — pink, oversized car mustaches that is. The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, which governs public services, ordered two ride-sharing services, Lyft and Uber, to cease and desist service after they operated for months without authorization. The citations, issued June 30 by Mary D. Long and Jeffrey Watson, PUC administrative law judges, against Lyft and Uber fall under the definition of “common carriers by motor vehicle.” The ride-sharing services are required to have permits or certificates to authorize the services they perform, according to the commission’s spokeswoman Jennifer Kocher. Both Lyft, whose cars wear pink mustaches on their front bumpers, and Uber applied for experimental services permits in April, as ridesharing is a new form of transportation, but the applications are still pending as of July 7. The cease and desist orders didn’t stop Lyft and Uber from operating — both continued providing services in Pittsburgh after receiving the orders. City resident Mili Patel, a junior premed student at Pitt, said she has yet to see any changes result from the order. Lyft’s Pittsburgh website is fully operational and drivers are still available upon request. “I’m pretty angry about [the cease and desist Pitt Sailing Club hosted its first ever Invitational over the long weekend, compet-
Ride-sharing
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ing with challengers from surrounding universities. Theo Schwarz | Staff Photographer
One aspect of grade school years made the experience a little more difficult — and it definitely wasn’t the schoolwork. Children everywhere change the way they dress, talk or have fun in order to fit in during their school years. At the time, being “cool” may have seemed like the only thing that mattered but, years later, some adults are grateful they did not involve themselves in the popular crowd when they were younger, even if it did mean sacrificing their “coolness.” In June 2014, Joseph P. Allen, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia, published a study on children who were called “cool” by their peers during childhood and early adolescence. The study appeared in the June issue of the journal Child Development. Allen assessed 184 seventh and eighth graders annually over a three-year period and obtained follow-up data once the subjects were in their 20s. The study showed that after a few years of being in the limelight, the children’s social status eventually went downhill. By their mid-20s, a greater percentage of their problems resulted from drug and alcohol use, compared to those who were less popular in middle school. While the “cool” kids may be heading down a bad road from a young age, their peers are not always able to understand the long-term
Cool Kids
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