Spring 2013 Issue 10

Page 1

DISTRACTED DRIVERS: A ROAD BLOCK TO SAFETY Distracted Driving Awareness Month highlights the dangers of multitasking on the road

BY ERIN DAGE

erindage@mail.sfsu.edu

Sneaking a peek at your phone while behind the wheel is never a good idea, but it could be extra costly this month as the California Highway Patrol cracks down on distracted drivers.

When approached for the 2011 Statewide Traffic Safety Survey conducted by the California Office of Traffic Safety, drivers felt that cell phone usage while driving topped the list as the biggest safety problem on California roads. Distracted Driving Awareness Month, an April tradition spearheaded by the CHP

GOLDEN GATE XPRESS //

STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER PROUDLY SERVING THE SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY SINCE 1927.

and OTS, seeks to raise awareness for this hazard. Chris Cochran, OTS spokesman, believes that Distracted Driving Awareness Month serves as a time to remind drivers that operating a vehicle while distracted is a dangerous act on the rise that can take lives. SEE OFFICERS ON PAGE 11

// 04.10.13

VOLUME LXXXXVI ISSUE 10

CAPSIZED: Lea Lunden, a psychology major, says the $85 per ticket price is too high for her and her family to attend the department’s graduaton celebration that will be held on the Hornblower — a local yacht in San Francisco. Photo by Virginia

GRADUATION: LAVISH CELEBRATION PRICES OUT STUDENTS

T

HREE OF THE four years of her college career, Lea Lunden worked anywhere from 25 to 40 hours a week as a server while pursuing her dream of being a psychology researcher. In her senior year, she injured herself while moving furniture at work and was diagnosed with scoliosis. Many students may have backed down, but a dedicated Lunden is now ready to graduate after a grueling four years of school and work with honors as the president of the SF State chapter of Psi Chi,

BY JOE FITZGERALD | jfitzger@mail.sfsu.edu

a national honors society for psychology students. She even interned at one of New York University’s research labs, one of the most prestigious universities in the country. All Lunden wanted was for her father and grandmother to see her graduate and walk the stage as proudly as she’s walked through school; to have her determination recognized. She’s not getting that wish. The San Francisco Chronicle broke the news of Lunden’s struggle with SF State’s psychology department. The department is charging $85 a ticket for a graduation “celebration” aboard a local yacht called

the Hornblower, a price that Lunden and many other students say is too high SOME STUDENTS and would stop their families from seeing MUST PAY FOR them graduate. GRADUATION A family of four, CELEBRATION plus the graduating student, would end PAGE 8 up paying $425 to hear the graduate’s name called, and see them walk the stage. Notably, students must purchase tickets

R E L AT E D E D I T O R I A L

SEE HIGH ON PAGE 3

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PHOTO OF THE WEEK: The Golden Gate Xpress will feature a photo every week in print and online from SF State students — and it could be yours!

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Arleen Winkelbauer, a recent graduate of SF State, sits on a dead tree at Ocean Beach. Photo by Sam Dosick / Special to Xpress

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