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Thursday October 17, 2013 year: 133 No. 88

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thelantern US Congress passes bill to end shutdown

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MiChelle FuGate Lantern reporter fugate.38@osu.edu

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hyde ready to run

OSU is set to face off against Iowa Saturday, and senior running back Carlos Hyde said running the ball will be key.

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Some Ohio State students and faculty members breathed a sigh of relief Wednesday when it seemed the government shutdown was coming to a close. While an agreement reached by Congress seemed to be the end of the situation, though, some said there is still work to be done in America’s political sphere. The 16-day government shutdown was set to come to an end Wednesday night with the signature of President Barack Obama on a budget agreement reached by the House of Representatives and the Senate. Senate leaders Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada and Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky announced a bipartisan agreement to raise the U.S. debt ceiling through February. Obama was expected to receive the deal Wednesday night, shortly before the U.S. would reach the Thursday deadline for its $16.7 trillion borrowing limit. Wednesday evening, Obama gave a televised press conference on the state of the government shutdown and disagreement in Congress. “One of the things that I said throughout this process is we’ve got to get out of the habit of governing by crisis,” he said. “And my hope and expectation is everybody has learned that there is no reason why we can’t work on the issues at hand, why we can’t disagree between the parties while still being agreeable, and make sure that we’re not inflicting harm on the American people when we do have disagreements.” The shutdown began Oct. 1 as a result of Congress’ failure to pass a federal budget for the fiscal year before its deadline. The controversy surrounding the budget was largely a result of a debate about how the government would be funding the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Obama’s health care initiative, which went into effect Oct. 1 as well. The version of the budget some members of the House was pushing would not have

funded Obamacare, delaying its enactment, while the Senate budget proposal included funding for the legislation. Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio released a statement Wednesday evening and called the progress a “win for the American people” but noted his desire to avoid Washington’s pattern of “overpromising and overspending.” “Lurching from crisis to crisis is no way to rejuvenate America’s economy, and unfortunately, we do not have a long-term fix that will prevent another shutdown in January,” Portman said in a statement posted on his website. Some students at Ohio State were happy Wednesday to hear the shutdown seemed on its way to ending. “It’s great. The debt ceiling is something we need to deal with, but it shouldn’t be dealt with through holding the government hostage,” said Mark Gramila, a thirdyear in accounting. Others said there need to be changes made in

Congress to prevent future shutdowns. “Honestly, (the shutdown) should have never happened in the first place,” said J.C. Reyes, a fourth-year in international studies. “Our political parties should be working together … or at least compromising.” Congress’ agreement was set to reopen the government, ending the furlough of federal employees who had left work or gone without pay during the past two weeks. The agreement was made to fund the government through the start of 2014, at which point officials must determine a federal budget to avoid another shutdown. Reid said on the Senate floor Wednesday representatives would be chosen by the House and Senate as part of the deal to create “a budget conference committee that will set our country on a long-term

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Maymester’s future murky beyond 2014

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Buckeyes band together

The Dan White Sextet, a local band, is in the process of developing a new album.

campus

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Rooftop garden with a purpose A recently-created ‘green roof’ adorning a campus building has positive environmental effects.

weather

Ohio State students can expect to once again have the option of taking up to three credit hours of class in May 2014 without paying tuition, but the future of OSU’s May Session remains uncertain for 2015 and beyond. Executive Vice President and Provost Joseph Steinmetz told The Lantern Oct. 8 the structure of OSU’s four-week May Session, which began in 2013 as part of OSU’s conversion to semesters, would remain the same for the 2014 Summer Term. “As was the case this past spring, no tuition will be charged for up to three credit hours taken during the May Session,” Steinmetz wrote in a memo sent to students, faculty and staff Oct. 10. “The Office of Academic Affairs will assess the relative success of the May session at the conclusion of the 2014 session.” Steinmetz told The Lantern he did not believe OSU learned enough from just one year of the May Session to draw conclusions about the future of the term’s structure and availability. “We don’t have enough data from one year’s run to tell us what that semester is going to actually look like,” Steinmetz said. “We’ll continue to evaluate it and look at it.” Combined with the seven-week Summer Session, May Session is one of two parts of OSU’s Summer Term. Under the term’s existing structure, students enrolled in classes during Spring 2014 who do not graduate at the end of the semester are eligible to take a three-credit class with no additional tuition payment. Students enrolled in May Session are still required to pay Summer Term fees, including fees for student activities and Central Ohio Transit Authority bus services. J. Richard Dietrich, the chair of the University

To some extent, you can view (the May Session classes) as having been subsidized by the students who didn’t take class during the May. J. Richard Dietrich Chair of the University Senate Fiscal Committee and a professor in the Fisher College of Business Senate Fiscal Committee and a professor at the Fisher College of Business, said OSU could have collected an estimated $6 million in tuition, not including scholarships or additional financial aid, had a regular rate been charged in May 2013. Dietrich said that estimate is comparable to a 1 percent increase in undergraduate tuition. As a result, collecting tuition for May Session classes could offset a future tuition increase. “Let’s suppose next year, we want to raise $6 million more in revenue. One way to do that is a 1 percent tuition increase, another way to do that is to push on tuition charges for May,” Dietrich said. “Either one gets the same result, at least with first approximation, and so, we may say, ‘Look, we can increase tuition by 1 percent next year instead of two if we charge May tuition.’” OSU spokeswoman Amy Murray said in an email there were nearly 9,400 total students enrolled in May Session 2013, including more than 9,100 students on the Columbus campus. Murray said 90 percent of those students finished their courses to completion. Another concern the fiscal committee has with May Session being free, Dietrich said, is that some

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feel it creates a sort of inequality between students who take a May class and those who do not. “To some extent, you can view (the May Session classes) as having been subsidized by the students who didn’t take class during the May, because they paid the same tuition (during Spring Semester), they got one fewer class,” Dietrich said. “That’s an issue that I think we’re going to have to address again going forward in senate fiscal.” Aside from the financial concerns surrounding May Session, another issue for students could be the limited amount of class options available during the four-week period. Although there were more than 200 total classes offered during May Session, the courses available were “totally useless” to some students like Kyle Bergman, a third-year in science and mathematics education. “For the math majors, it doesn’t help, because you can’t condense a math class in four weeks,” Bergman said. “If there was something like a longer, cheaper Summer Term instead of a free Maymester, I’d rather have that.” Undergraduate Student Government President Taylor Stepp said more classes should be offered during May Session if the term continues to be in place beyond 2014, whether the three credit hours are offered tuition-free or not. “(A lack of available classes) was one of the hindrances with the plan,” Stepp said. Stepp said OSU needs to take a “hard look” at the future of the May Session, but he felt another year was needed before that evaluation. “Whether that means we keep it or not, it just needs to be evaluated,” Stepp said. “I’m not saying the May Session currently does or doesn’t (work), I’m just saying we don’t know yet. But whatever we do, we’re going to make sure that it works for students in the best capacity possible.”

continued as Maymester on 3A

Bicyclist hospitalized after nearly colliding with car kayla ByleR Managing editor of design byler.18@osu.edu

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Dan hOPe Oller reporter hope.46@osu.edu

A bicyclist was in stable condition at the Wexner Medical Center as of Wednesday night after nearly colliding with a car. A 39-year-old male graduate teaching associate in the College of Public Health at Ohio State was biking on Woody Hayes Drive Tuesday at about 9:30 a.m. when he almost collided with a compact car turning left onto the road. The driver of the car, a 53-year-old female OSU employee, was leaving Blankenship Hall and attempting to turn past two stopped buses when she saw the biker. Both parties slammed on their brakes, and the biker fell forward over his handlebars. No contact was made between the bike and the car, according to a University Police report. Failure to yield on the part of the car’s driver was listed as a contributing circumstance on the report. Witnesses helped the biker out of the road to a bench until emergency medical service arrived and transferred him to the Medical Center, the report said. The biker was in stable condition as of Wednesday

at about 10:15 p.m., according to a Medical Center nurse. The incident was one of six traffic crashes reported on OSU’s campus this week from Oct. 9 to Oct. 16. The other five incidents involved property damage but no reported injuries. Other incident reports on campus this week included 36 thefts. Five of these incidents were thefts of bicycles. A 32-year-old male non-affiliate was arrested for attempted theft from the Scarlet Ribbon Gift Shop at the Medical Center Monday. The incident followed the arrest of a 33-year-old man for attempted theft from the same location last month. There were also five reports of disorderly conduct on campus and five reports of offenses involving underage persons, three of which resulted in arrests, this week. In the first incident resulting in arrest, a 20-year-old male not affiliated with OSU was arrested at Barrett House Saturday shortly after midnight. Sunday, a 19-year-old male student was arrested at the Ohio Union at about 2 a.m. A few hours later, at about 4 a.m., an 18-year-old male non-affiliate and an 18-year-old male student were arrested at Siebert Hall.

1A


campus ‘Green roof’ has aesthetic, environmental benefits for campus building Justin Cline Lantern reporter cline.322 @osu.edu It took about three and a half years of planning and three weeks of renovations to make Howlett Hall’s walkout roof green. What was once a tar and chip rooftop now helps mitigate storm water and minimize heat gain for the section of building it covers, said Megan Welsh, certified green roof professional of Higher Ground Green Roofs, LLC. Welsh, an OSU alumna, graduated in 2011 with a degree in construction management and horticulture. She served as the project coordinator for the installation of the green roof and helped with raising funds, designing concepts and coordinating construction. When Howlett was dedicated in 1967, the area that houses the new green roof was structurally designed to hold a green house, said Mary Maloney, director of the Chadwick Arboretum and Learning Gardens. The green roof is part of Chadwick Arboretum and Learning Gardens and will help to keep chemicals and toxins from being collected by rainfall before making their way to local bodies of water, Welsh said. She added that the addition cost more than $400,000. “This green roof in particular is saving about 200,000 gallons of polluted water per year from going into the Olentangy River,” Welsh said. Howlett is roughly a quarter of a mile from the Olentangy River. In addition, the botanical canopy will “reduce the cost to heat and cool the Food Processing Pilot Plant below,” Maloney said. The life of the roof should also be extended for about 20 years with the new roof, she said. To prepare for the green roof installation, the roof had to pass a leak detection test, Welsh said. Then several layers of material were applied for protection, drainage and to help with plant growth. There are now different varieties of sedum, black-eyed susans, yarrow, thyme and prairie dropseed plants growing, she said. Not only does the new roof help conserve water and energy, but some say it is aesthetically pleasing. “It’s a very nice looking arrangement. It has a slight abstract sense to it,” said Pablo Jourdan, director of the Ornamental Plant Germplasm Center. The cost of the renovations included the green roof itself, design and contract work and the installation of a guardrail and a ramp to make the entrance wheelchair accessible, Maloney said. The entrance ramp is still under construction. To help pay for the transformation, a $102,000 grant was procured from the Environmental Protection Agency and the roof project also received a $60,000 grant from the President’s and Provost’s Council on Sustainability, according to the Department of Horticulture and Crop Science website, Maloney said. In addition, Maloney said she raised private funds.

Ethan Day / Lantern photographer

The green walkout roof of Howlett Hall, which is located at 2001 Fyffe Road, opened at the beginning of October. “I’m not completely finished with my fundraising yet, but the substantial portion of it is done,” Maloney said, adding it is mostly items like tables and benches that have not yet been funded. Fundraising isn’t the only process still unfolding though — Maloney said she wants to add additional tables and chairs to offer students a place to hang out or do schoolwork, she said. Maloney added that the roof is easily accessible. “Anytime Howlett Hall is open, you can just walk in the front door, walk through the building and walk onto the green roof,” Maloney said. Even as developments continue, the green roof will remain active through the fall months, Welsh said. The garden will be dormant during the winter and become active again in the springtime, Welsh said. When it is thriving, the garden is sustained by rainfall twice over. “We catch rainwater in a cistern next door, and then we pump it over. So when we do have to irrigate, it’s with rainwater reused,” Welsh said. The benefits to the Chadwick Arboretum and Learning Gardens and the local environment help demonstrate the importance of having green roofs, Jourdan said. “There is nothing that has to validate the value of green roofs. I think the issue is that we need more of them,” Jourdan said, “It’s a great example of having something in the university so that we can begin to gain those benefits.”

Group seeks campus org cohesiveness Daniel Bendtsen Lantern reporter bendtsen.1@osu.edu The Network, the self-described “student organization for student organizations,” started its year this week with the goal of bringing groups together to work on philanthropic and social events, despite some still unfinalized details. The Network got the ball rolling Tuesday at the Ohio Union with a few dozen of the organization’s representatives, who plan to work together to put on events while helping bring awareness to their own organizations. The budget for the Network, however, which was funded by Student Life last year, has not yet been determined for this year. The first meeting was a much more subdued affair than last year, when the newly formed organization filled the room with more than 100 student representatives, according to The Lantern archives. Adam De Guire, a fifth-year in computer science, came to the meeting Tuesday representing the undergraduate student radio station Arouse, which streams online, and said he hoped the Network would help create connections for his station. “We are a fairly new organization, so we don’t have a lot of ties to other groups on campus. We’re trying to get into this and branch out, and find ways

We want to talk about what issues student leaders see on campus as being prevalent and find solutions that we can bring to the university and say, ‘Here’s what these student leaders think about this problem.’

Ethan Day / Lantern photographer

Howlett Hall’s 12,000-square-foot green walkout roof was installed during August and September.

CMH Fashion Week struts into Columbus A model shows a dress designed by Olivia Brezinski at the CMH Fashion Week Finale Runway Show Oct. 12 at Genoa Park. For more photos from the event visit thelantern.com

Amanda Siroskey The Network president Fourth-year in communication that we can both get stuff from other organizations and give them whatever we can,” DeGuire said. The Network President Amanda Siroskey, a fourthyear in communication, said there’s an added goal this year of addressing student issues at their monthly meetings. “We want to talk about what issues student leaders see on campus as being prevalent and find solutions that we can bring to the university and say, ‘Here’s what these student leaders think about this problem,’” Siroskey said. The Network learned from its inaugural year and is restructuring to streamline its efforts, Siroskey said.

continued as Group on 3A

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Thursday October 17, 2013


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Shutdown from 1A

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continuations would be stopped. OSU has more than 2,200 students using benefits from the Department of Veteran Affairs and the Department of Defense, the overwhelming majority of whom are veterans who use the GI Bill benefits, Carrell said. John Haviland, a former Marine Corps military police officer and an OSU student, previously told The Lantern he would face issues if the shutdown continued. “I rely on my payments through the GI Bill for paying for my rent, paying for my car, as well as all of my other bills,” the second-year in computer science and engineering said. “(But) if it affects me, so be it, I’ll have to drop out of school for a semester or two go and get a full-time job and then I can come back. My money will be here sooner or later. I’ll find some way to survive.” The Post-9/11 GI Bill provides financial support for education and housing for student-veterans who served at least 90 days of aggregate service after Sept. 10, 2001, or who were discharged with a service-connected disability after 30 days, according to its website. OSU College Democrats representatives did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

path to fiscal sustainability,” according to The Washington Post. Paul Beck, professor emeritus of political science, said Wednesday the shutdown shouldn’t have happened at all. “This could have been resolved in this way months ago. We’ve been dragged through a very contentious process,” he said. Some students, meanwhile, were still not fully satisfied with the terms reached. Vice Chair of OSU College Republicans Miranda Onnen, a third-year in political science and economics, said the work isn’t over yet. “This is the best solution for the time being,” she said in an email. “(But) days like today appearing as ‘progress’ is a disillusionment that Americans have with Washington.” Before the Wednesday Congress agreement was reached, Speaker of the House John Boehner, a Republican from Ohio, among several others, proposed alternative solutions that did not make it to the House due to lack of projected success. The agreement reached by Congress Wednesday does not inhibit the Affordable Care Act’s funding. Some student veterans were concerned about the political stalemate, a situation that if continued, would have resulted in a loss of financial support. Mike Carrell, director of OSU’s Office of Military and Veterans Services, said in an email earlier this month if the government ran out of money under a debt-limit scenario, student-veterans’ payments

Matthew Miles and Matthew Mithoefer contributed to this story.

Maymester from 1A Dietrich said the structure of the May Session was not necessarily installed as a long-term plan, but as a service to help students transition during the semester conversion. “One of the reasons for having that May … special rate for one class was to try to provide fairness for the students who are going through semester conversion. And a lot of those students are still on campus,” Dietrich said. “You start thinking about when would it make sense to make a change, purely from a tuition standpoint and sort of a fairness for those who were, went through the semester conversion.” Cynthia Burack, a professor in the Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies who taught a class during the 2013 May Session, said the abbreviated term classes are a “positive experience” for instructors and students but added she thinks it is unlikely the current system will continue to be in place for much longer. “From the educational perspective, it is a positive possibility to continue to have, but I don’t know whether the university will continue to sponsor that,” Burack said. “My understanding had been last spring that the May Session was only a kind of session that was being put in place to assist with

Group from 2A Last year, the organization divided itself into three subgroups: philanthropy, diversity and awareness. That structure became too fragmenting though, Siroskey said, so this year, event committees will likely work more on all three themes while planning the events to be held this year. The three major events are scheduled to be No Place for Hate Week, a benefit concert called Rock the Cause and a human rights conference, Siroskey said. All three are revamps of events from last year. Rock the Cause brought in rapper Khaled M. to raise money for UNICEF’s funds for Syrian refugees and Buckeye Clinic. In April, No Place for Hate week is an attempt to engage students about issues of hate and discrimination in ways they might not otherwise see,

the transition from quarters to semesters and that it probably wouldn’t last for very long.” While there are multiple reasons May Session could be changed or eliminated in the future, Dietrich said keeping its current structure intact for 2015 and beyond is an option. “I don’t know that there will be a change, but I think there will be a review where we have more information than we had right now,” Dietrich said. Dietrich said the fiscal committee wants “wide input” from students. “(Students) are the ones that are most affected by it,” Dietrich said. While some students may not be pleased with the May Session because of financial inequity or a lack of available classes, others believe it should remain part of OSU’s semester schedule. Katie Anderson, a third-year in accounting who transferred to OSU this fall, said she hopes to take advantage of May Session as long as it remains available at no additional cost. “It’s difficult because it’s in such a short span, but it’s good because it’s free and then you get another class,” Anderson said. The 2014 May Session will be held from May 5 to 30, Murray said.

Siroskey said. Last year, members of the Network promoted a social media movement to encourage discussion about diversity and held different events around campus. Event committee chair Timothy Zhu, a secondyear in economics, said the human rights conference last year relied mostly on speakers from within the university because of time constraints. This year, however, he plans on taking that event to new heights. “This year, we’re going to start early. We’re going to start marketing now,” Zhu said. “Basically, we’ll draw a section of the student population that is interested in human rights and we’ll bring them to the Archie Griffin Ballroom. We’ll have keynotes. We’ll have break-out session. We’ll probably book other rooms in the Union and we’ll have an awesome conference.”

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3A


sports

Thursday October 17, 2013

thelantern www.thelantern.com results Wednesday Women’s Volleyball Northwestern 3, OSU 1

upcoming thursday Women’s Soccer v. Penn State 3 p.m. @ State College, Pa.

friday Men’s Tennis: Midwest Regionals All Day @ Columbus Field Hockey v. Iowa 3 p.m. @ Columbus Women’s Swimming: Scarlet v. Gray 5 p.m. @ Columbus Men’s Swimming: Scarlet v. Gray 5 p.m. @ Columbus Women’s Ice Hockey v. North Dakota 8:07 p.m. @ Grand Forks, N.D.

Saturday Men’s Tennis: Midwest Regionals All Day @ Columbus

Buckeyes prepare for tough Iowa run defense matthew mithoefer Senior lantern reporter mithoefer@osu.edu Fresh off its first bye week of the 2013 season, the Ohio State football team (6-0, 2-0) is preparing for a battle this Saturday against Iowa (4-2, 1-1). The Hawkeyes are tied with Oklahoma for the nation’s 12th-best defense in terms of points against (16.8 average per game), doing so by thwarting the rushing attacks of their opponents. The team has yet to allow a rushing score. OSU coach Urban Meyer is well aware of this fact, and was even more impressed by something he learned while scouting his team’s week eight opponent. “They haven’t (played) goal-line defense (yet),” Meyer said. But don’t expect the Buckeyes, who are 11th in the nation in rushing, to become pass-happy for a week. “We’re not going to change our game plan. We’re going to do what Ohio State does, and that’s run the ball,” said senior running back Carlos Hyde. Hyde is determined to crack Iowa’s highlytouted defensive line for large gains the way he did in OSU’s 40-30 win against Northwestern Oct. 5. Against the Wildcats, Hyde tallied 168 yards and three touchdowns. “I run determined not to be stopped … It’’s going to take the whole defense to tackle me,” Hyde said. “That’s my mindset.” Redshirt-senior center Corey Linsley said in a game like Saturday’s, running the ball successfully is essential for the team to come out on top. “We’re (going to) have to play an extremely good game in terms of rushing the football, and

jason morrow Lantern reporter morrow.182@osu.edu

Men’s Cross Country: Pre-National Invitational 11 a.m. @ Terra Haute, Ind. Women’s Cross Country: Pre-National Invitational 11:40 a.m. @ Terra Haute, Ind. Football v. Iowa 3:30 p.m. @ Columbus Women’s Ice Hockey v. North Dakota 8:07 p.m. @ Grand Forks, N.D.

Sunday

Women’s Soccer v. Northwestern 12 p.m. @ Columbus Field Hockey v. Michigan 1 p.m. @ Columbus

Women’s Volleyball v. Illinois 3 p.m. @ Champaign, Ill.

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Junior midfielder Ellyn Gruber (5) fights off a defender during a match against Purdue Sept. 29 at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium. OSU lost, 1-0.

As the Ohio State women’s soccer team (8-3-3, 2-2-2) heads to State College, Pa., to play No. 17 Penn State, it has to prepare to face its second ranked opponent in its last three scheduled matches. Coach Lori Walker said she understands the importance of this match for the Buckeyes. “(Playing) at Penn State is always a great challenge,” Walker said. “It’s going to be a battle, and you know, we’ve just got to take it minute by minute. I (have) got to make sure my A-team gets on that bus.” The Buckeyes won their last match Saturday, ending a three-game scoreless streak in the process, by finding the back of the net three times in a win against Michigan State. “It was a huge weight off our shoulders,” said junior midfielder Ellyn Gruber. “We (had) been working all week on (finishing), a lot of repetition and stuff, so it finally gave us some confidence.” OSU started the year at No. 23, peaking at No. 21, but fell out of the polls after losing to Boston College 1-0 Sept. 5, despite beating Northeastern 4-1 Sept. 8. The Buckeyes currently sit eighth in the Big Ten and if the team wants to move up the standings, it has to start with improved finishing

Although the Hawkeyes are OSU’s first unranked opponent since Florida A&M, the team knows every game during Big Ten play poses a stiff test. “The weeks that we have taken off, those are the weeks that we’ve gotten beat. The weeks that we’ve treated those teams as what the (AP poll) treats them as, what the rest of the country treats them as, as non-ranked, blow-off opponents, those are the weeks that we get beat,” Linsley said. “We’ve kind of learned from history, and we’re not taking this week lightly.” Iowa is scheduled to visit Ohio Stadium for OSU’s homecoming game Saturday at 3:30 p.m.

offensively, sophomore forward Michela Paradiso said. “We just gotta continue to work harder in practice and keep finishing, cause that can give us confidence that we can keep putting goals up on the board,” Paradiso said after Saturday’s game. At 10-3-1 overall and 4-2-0 in Big Ten matches, the Nittany Lions are currently third in conference play, sitting behind No. 22 Nebraska and No. 12 Michigan. The Nittany Lions are coming off a 1-0 home loss to the Wolverines Sunday, their first loss at home since the beginning of the 2012 season to Stanford. Offensively, senior forward Maya Hayes leads Penn State with 13 goals on the season, a mark that makes her second-best in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes lost their matchup last season with the Nittany Lions, a 3-0 decision at home, but Gruber said the Buckeyes will be ready this time around. “That’s going to be a huge, huge game. It’s going to be really tough, but we are just going to have a good, hard, week of practice, and we’ll be prepared,” Gruber said. The game is set for 3 p.m. Thursday. JOIN THE CONVERSATION

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Preseason college football polls should be no more Before each college football season, The Associated Press, USA TODAY and countless other media outlets come out with their preseason top 25 rankings. Essentially, it is daniel rogers a way of letting rogers.746@osu.edu the world know what their predictions are for the upcoming season. These rankings factor in how teams did the previous year, the players they lost and added to their squads and any potential coaching changes that will affect the program. And every year, we fall into their trap. I’ll admit it, ever since I was young I was always excited for the day that AP released its preseason poll because it gave me something to analyze before the season got under way. But these rankings are flawed and need to be fixed. Since the beginning of the Bowl Championship Series in 1998, there has been only one national champion that started the season ranked outside the top 20 in the preseason AP poll. That was No. 22 Auburn in 2010-11. All in all, there have been only eight teams that started the season outside of the AP top 10 and participated in the BCS National Championship, four of which were victorious. So if a team thinks it has a shot of playing in the BCS National Championship Game or,

asst. sports Editor

Men’s Soccer v. Northwestern 2:30 p.m. @ Columbus

our tempo is definitely going to dictate that,” Linsley said. Starting junior quarterback Braxton Miller said the Hawkeye defense is probably the best the Buckeye offense has seen so on film so far this year. Miller, who fumbled twice against Northwestern, said ball security will be key, and is something he has been working on in practice. “Watching film, I really wasn’t holding the ball correctly … I wasn’t holding the ball real tight,” Miller said. The coaching staff had the quarterback hold onto a ball during team stretches in practice this week, Miller said.

Women’s soccer looking to ride momentum into ‘huge’ game at PSU

Men’s Swimming: Alumni v. Varsity 11 a.m. @ Columbus

Men’s Tennis: Midwest Regionals All Day @ Columbus

Shelby Lum / Photo editor

Junior quarterback Braxton Miller (5) hands off the ball to senior running back Carlos Hyde (34) during a game against Northwestern Oct. 5. OSU won, 40-30.

Courtesy of MCT

Former Miami coach Howard Schnellenberger raises the 1983 NCAA National Championship trophy during halftime of a game against Florida Atlantic at Sun Life Stadium. Miami won, 34-6. starting next season, into the College Football Playoff, it has to hope AP thinks so too. Currently there are five undefeated teams in the AP top 20 who started the season unranked: No. 17 Fresno State (5-0), No. 16 Texas Tech (6-0), No. 14 Missouri (6-0), No. 12 Baylor (5-0) and No. 10 Miami (5-0). There is zero guarantee that even one of these teams finishes the season unbeaten but if they do, the odds of them jumping over a one loss

LSU (6-1) or Texas A&M (5-1), currently ranked sixth and seventh respectively, is slim. These teams very well could be the best five in the country, but because of the fact that the rankings in the preseason didn’t include them, they could miss out on the opportunity to play for the crystal football. As much hate as the BCS system gets, the one thing it did get right was when it releases its rankings. It isn’t until the eighth week of games that the initial BCS rankings become available, a style all polls should adopt. If AP waited until mid-October to announce its first poll of the season, it might look very different. Instead of discussing whether No. 4 Ohio State should leapfrog No. 3 Clemson or drop below No. 5 Florida State, we may be talking about Baylor or Miami potentially finishing in the top two and making it to the title game. At the end of the day, the preseason rankings are often closer to correct than incorrect, but that doesn’t mean they should continue. The last time the eventual national champion was ranked outside of the top 5 in the AP poll in week eight of the season was 2006-07 when Florida was No. 9 and coming off its only loss of the season the day before. I would rather wait for a couple of months and give voters time to really evaluate teams than just jump right in and potentially cost deserving schools their shot at a championship. With the adaptation of a college football’s first ever playoff system next season, it is time for AP to change its ways as well. Get rid of the preseason and early season polls, wait to release your rankings until later and give every team an equal opportunity to win it all.

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Thursday October 17, 2013

thelantern www.thelantern.com .com

[ spotlight]

Columbus’ Own

In an attempt to shine light on local music, The Lantern’s “Columbus’ Own” is a weekly series that will profile a new Columbus band every week.

The Dan White Sextet focuses on being ‘free of imitation’ NEN LIN SOO Lantern reporter soo.8@osu.edu Dan White, Chris Ott and Jon Lampley, members of local band the Dan White Sextet, went on a road trip to nine cities including Chicago, New Orleans, Nashville and Memphis to speak with older musicians about their experiences. The trio embarked on this trip not knowing what they wanted the new project to be about, but they knew that they wanted the ideas to grow and develop freely the way their music does. The product is the Dan White Sextet’s next project, “Your Song,” which is greatly inspired by the stories that they heard. “Halfway through the trip, we started realizing some serious themes that everybody was saying,” White said. “People were thousands of miles apart and were saying the exact same thing, and one of those things that they were saying was that being your own person, being independent is the most important thing you can do as a musician. If you want to add something in this world, it should be your own.” Formed in 2010, the band is still in the early stages of its musical career, but the members are no strangers to the music industry. White, who plays saxophone, Lampley, vocalist, trumpet and sousaphone player, and Ott, the trombonist, make up the three core members of the band who write and brainstorm the music, and they are joined by John Hubbell and John Suntken on drums, Adam DeAscentis, bassist, Josh Hill on guitar and Theron Brown and Chris Ziemba as keyboardists. Lampley, a recent Ohio State graduate in jazz studies, played with O.A.R. for three years as its trumpet player and still continues to tour and record with the band. White and Ott worked with the Disneyland All-American College Band in Anaheim, Calif., last summer.

Courtesy of Zane A. Miller

Columbus-based band the Dan White Sextet formed in 2010 and consists of several OSU students and alumni. Suntken, a fourth-year in jazz studies, has to juggle his academics and his involvement with the band. “We just make it work and sometimes we rehearse at 11:30 at night because that depends on everyone’s schedule,” Suntken said. “There’s a huge level of commitment from everyone in the band. We all work very hard individually trying to master our instruments and we bring that into the band.” White, Ott and Lampley currently live in Grandview together, but when the trio first met in 2009 at Baker Hall West on South Campus, Lampley was a first-year in psychology, and White and Ott were music education and jazz studies majors in their second and third-years, respectively. “I was studying psychology because my parents

were like, ‘You’ve got good grades, you should pursue something that you would be able to go make a successful, financially lucrative career out of,’” Lampley said. “By the end of my freshman year, I was realizing that as cool as psychology was, I knew I wasn’t passionate about it. I played with the marching band and the gospel choir on campus, and in Baker, I was hanging out with a bunch of music majors, dance majors and performing majors, and I felt like I was just surrounded by people who are doing what I want to do, but I’m not doing it.” With the OSU Marching Band, Lampley played the sousaphone and had the opportunity to dot the “i” on three separate occasions during “Script Ohio” at football games.

The trio started experimenting a little more than a year ago with Lampley on the sousaphone, White on the saxophone and Ott beatboxing. With this equation, they recorded their adaptation of “Seven Nation Army” by The White Stripes and six other well-known OSU tunes in a CD titled “Fight the Team.” When the band first formed, they played in a Worthington coffee shop called Scottie’s Coffee & Tea House, which is now closed. “We were playing there every week and the focus was on new music — to write and to arrange and to get new material,” White said. “It’s been the foundation of this band, trying to focus on writing, while at the same time, improvise while we’re writing, so every show is different.” Living together has helped some members of the band achieve better progress in their song writing. Making music is now a “collective process” for the three of them, and they’ve managed to combine their strengths and diverse musical backgrounds to form a good piece, White said. “We often call each other out when something’s not as good as it should be, or when it’s not from an honest place,” White said. “I think listeners can sense when music is genuine and what its intentions are, and we take that very seriously.” The band’s latest intention was to relate to all ages by creating modern renditions of childhood tunes in its album “Play,” which was released in August. “We wanted to try a CD that was a little more accessible to the listener, something the listener already knew,” White said. “The challenge with that was to make it our own, make it something that we would love to play at a bar at 1 a.m. or in a theatre in front of people, or just in a small room with kids, and we’ve been doing all of that.” The Dan White Sextet is scheduled to perform 10 p.m. Nov. 9 at Dick’s Den, located at 2417 N. High St.

OSU’s A Cappella Alliance to host Halloween-themed concert MARIO ROBERTSON Lantern reporter robertson.328@osu.edu

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Singers will come together in costume and perfect pitch. A cappella fans are set to gather for A-CreepElla Alliance Presents: This Is Halloween, a Halloween-themed concert hosted by the A Cappella Alliance, at Knowlton Hall this Friday. A Cappella Alliance is a group dedicated to representing the many different a cappella groups on campus, said A Cappella Alliance President Ambria Carpenter, a third-year in psychology. “A Cappella Alliance is an umbrella organization that encompasses all of the a cappella groups that puts on joint concerts, organizes social events and fundraising to represent all of the groups,” said Carpenter, who is also a member of Beauty and the Beats!. There are set to be nine a cappella groups performing at the event including BAAM, Beauty and the Beats!, Buck That!, Dynamic Contrast, MeshugaNotes, OSU Dhadkan, Scarlet Fever, Sound of Science and The Ohio State of Mind, Carpenter said. The a cappella groups plan to celebrate Halloween through song and costume. “We have asked the groups to perform some Halloween-themed songs,” Carpenter said. “Not all of the them are performing Halloween-themed

songs since it takes a long time to learn them … I think about half of the groups are performing some sort of Halloween-themed song. A lot of the groups are taking part in the costume contest as well.” Jenica Kramer, secretary of A Cappella Alliance, a member of the Sound of Science and a thirdyear in psychology and theater, said the Halloween theme is a good idea because it offers a wide selection of songs for the participating groups to perform. “Having a Halloween theme is a really great idea because we know that’s a whole slew of songs people don’t think about,” said Kramer. “You can do ‘Thriller’ and you can do basically anything from ‘The Nightmare Before Christmas.’ It is sort of an untapped resource as far as a cappella music is concerned.” The group plans to have Halloween music playing to set the mood as attendees arrive to Knowlton 250 where the event is being held. The space will be filled with Halloween-themed decorations, Carpenter said. Members of A Cappella Alliance hope to attract more people to the event because of the Halloween theme. “Halloween is one of those holidays where everyone sort of gets excited in a general sense, and everybody wants to do Halloween stuff the entire month of October,” Kramer said. “I think this concert is a great idea simply because it works with that theme and it gives people a chance to have a little fun.”

There will be chances for audience participation during the event, including the costume contest, which Carpenter said should encourage more people to come. “I am really excited about that,” Carpenter said. “This is open to people that are in the a cappella groups and the audience members.” Those who attend the concert in a costume can go onstage stage during intermission in order to be judged, Carpenter said, and a winner will be decided by a round of applause vote by the audience, who will receive a gift basket with gift cards and other items. Dana Mullis, a fourth-year in social work, plans to attend the event because she enjoys a cappella groups and Halloween. “I also want to attend because I know someone who is in A Cappella Alliance and they are going to be performing so I want to be there for support,” Mullis said. Carpenter hopes the event adds to the popularity of the group and attendance of its concerts. “Since I became president this year, increasing attendance to these concerts has definitely been a big thing,” Carpenter said. “They have been pretty popular in the past … I would love to see Knowlton filled all the way up with people sitting on the floor.” Admission to A-Creep-Ella Alliance Presents: This Is Halloween is one donated canned good, or $1. Canned goods will be donated to the Mid Ohio Food Bank, and money collected will be put toward supporting A Capella Alliance.

Comedy queens return to Golden Globes, Spears titles new album, Efron to hit big screen KIM DAILEY Lantern reporter dailey.176@osu.edu This is part of a weekly series called “Pop Opinions” where The Lantern offers its take on the week’s pop culture news.

Pop!

Opinions

The Hostesses with the Mostesses The queens of comedy Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are to return to the Golden throne — I mean Globes. The Hollywood Foreign Press Association announced Tuesday that the dynamic dame duo will host the annual Golden Globe Awards for the next two years. The two hosted the Globes in 2013, which according to the HFPA had the highest number of viewers since 2007 with 19.67 million people tuning in. While Fey and Poehler make a great fit as hosting partners, I can’t help but feel this decision was based on the HFPA thinking that since last year’s ratings were so high, this year’s could even double that. Well you go get ‘em HFPA. Show those other award shows’ ratings who’s boss. All Hail Britney’s Jeans The Princess of Pop truly knows how to garnish her subjects. Britney Spears announced the title of her eighth studio album Tuesday on the British radio station Capital FM. “It’s called ‘Britney Jean,’” Spears said as she smiled and twirled her headset cord in her hand. “Like, all my family always calls me Britney Jean.

It’s like a term of endearment. And I just wanted to share that with my fans.” She’s so thoughtful. Because generally when I’m trying to be endearing, I too name something after myself. This is also the second album Spears has named after herself — remember “Britney” in 2001? Perhaps she’ll have to resort to drastic measures for the next title. But “Britney Jean Pinky Princess of Pop Queen B Spears Formerly-Mrs. Alexander-and-Mrs. Federline” doesn’t necessarily roll of the tongue. Efron Is Hitting the Big Screen Awkward doesn’t begin to describe what Zac Efron and crew will bring in January. The red band trailer for the rom-com “That Awkward Moment” went viral Wednesday, where viewers can see the “High School Musical” alumnus naked in a bed, naked on a toilet and wearing a costume to a formal dress up party that says “Rock Out” on the shirt companied with a phony phallus. The film’s story centers around Jason (Efron) and his two friends Daniel (Miles Teller) and Mikey (Michael B. Jordan) who have agreed they will remain single after Mikey gets dumped. Jason and Daniel ultimately fall in love with the girls of their dreams, jeopardizing the pack. From start to finish, the trailer shows the crew in a bachelor-type setting. Daniel at the start of the trailer complains about having girls over because he can’t talk about X-Box or farts. I suspect this film will be the cult film of 2014, following in line with grotesque, but hilarious comedies such as “Project X,” “There’s Something About Mary” and “American Pie.”

Courtesy of MCT

Tina Fey (left) and Amy Poehler at the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards Jan. 13. The pair is set to host the next two Golden Globes.

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m

Events Around Town

Everything The “2” Can Take You To: 10/17 - 10/23 Explore Columbus With COTA

FREE

With Your BuckID! The #2 bus runs up and down High Street until midnight on weekends FOR SCHEDULES & MORE INFO: FO

Thursday, 10/17 OSU Varsity Wrestle Off, 7 pm St. John Area Taking Back Sunday, 7 pm Newport Music Hall Room and Board, 8 pm Kafe Kerouac Senior Citizen and Border Patrol, Useless Eaters, The Spits, 9 pm Ace of Cups Bar The Prince Party: Ladies 80s, 10 pm Skully’s Comedy Night, 10 pm Kafe Kerouac

Friday, 10/18 OSU Women’s Field Hockey vs. Iowa, 3 pm Buckeye Varsity Field Columbus Marathon Convention Center Battelle Grand OSU Swimming Scarlet vs. Gray, 5 pm OSU Aquatic Pavillion Motion City Soundtrack & Bayside, 7 pm Newport Music Hall Music Open Mic Night, 8 pm Kafe Kerouac Suites & Songs, 8 pm Southern Theatre Wolf People, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, 9 pm Ace of Cups Bar 614 Magazine Showcase, 9 pm Skully’s

Just swipe your BuckID for unlimited riding to your favorite locations! WWW.COTA.COM | (614) 228-1776 CLOUDHAUS- Accumulation, 3:30-6:30 pm Kafe Kerouac

An Evening of Bluegrass with Pikelny, Sutton, BUlla, Bales, and Cobb, 8 pm Lincoln Theatre

CHEERSPORT’s Columbus Grand Championship Convention Center Hall D

Columbus Blue Jackets vs. Vancouver Canucks, 6 pm Nationwide Arena

Ghost Brothers of Darkland County, 8 pm Palace Theatre

OSU Men’s Football vs. Iowa, 3:30 pm St. Johns Arena

Buddy Guy, 7:30 pm The McCoy Center

Beats Antique, 8 pm Newport Music Hall

Wild Child, 8 pm The Basement

Open Mic Comedy 8 pm Scarlet and Grey Cafe

Saturday, 10/19

Neko Case w/ Thao & The Get Down Stay Down, 7 pm Newport Music Hall Tribal Seeds, 8 pm The Basement Bo Burnham, 8 pm Capitol Theatre Suites & Songs, 8 pm Southern Theatre

THE FLEX CREW, 9 pm Skully’s Karaoke , 9 pm Ace of Cups Bar

Monday, 10/21

The Dewdroppers, 9 pm Kafe Kerouac

Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Philidelphia 76ers, 7 pm Schottenstein

LE BOOM!, 9 pm Skully’s

White Denim, 7 pm A & R Music Bar

Second state Butchers, Planktones, Brujas Del Sol, Red Feathers, Mainstreet Gospel, 9 pm Ace of Cups Bar

The Fleeting Ends, 8 pm Kafe Kerouac

OSU Women’s Field Hockey vs. Michigan, 1 pm Buckeye Varsity Field OSU Men’s Soccer vs. Northwestern, 2 pm St. Johns Arena Suites & Songs, 3 pm Southern Theatre Laser Light Magic-Swami Ji, 4 pm Capitol Theatre

Acoustic Open Mic, 5-9pm Scarlet and Grey Cafe OUABe Fit: Hip Hop Dance 6pm Ohio Union Dance Room OUAB in the Kitchen: Steakhouse Favorites, 6 pm Ohio Union- Instructional Kitchen Flicks for Free Ft. “The Great Gatsby, 7 pm Ohio Union- US Bank Conference Theater OSU Men’s Soccer vs. Oakland, 7 pm Jessie Owens

Sunday, 10/20 OSU Women’s Soccer vs. Northwestern, 12 pm Jesse Owens

Wednesday, 10/23

Mount Kiimble, 7 pm The Basement

Tuesday, 10/22 Tera Melos, 7 pm The Basement Columbus Blue Jackets vs. New Jersey Devils, 7 pm Nationwide Arena

Poetry Open Mic Night, 8 pm Kafe Kerouac

Ongoing Events Positive Exposure: The Spirit of Difference Cosi

Lionize, 7 pm A & R Music Bar

Have an event you’d like added to the calendar? Email us at lanternads@osu.edu Thursday October 17, 2013

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For Sale Miscellaneous BOOKS: STOLEN memories, dangerous dreams, collapsing societies, lost identities, lost souls, engineered life, our world transformed. Read Remembering the Future, science ďŹ ction stories by Alan Kovski. Available via Amazon.com.

Help Wanted Child Care

MICRO CENTER, Bethel Road - hiring TV & Electronics sales reps. Professional, interested in technology, and friendly? Apply today! Flexible PT & FT shifts, tuition reimbursement & employee discount. Email mtwebb@ Care Providers and ABA Theramicrocenter.com to apply. pists are wanted to work with OCCASIONAL YARDWORK. children/ young adults with dis$12/hr. 486-3773. abilities in a family home setting or supported living setting. ODW LOGISTICS INC. Is cur- Extensive training is provided. rently hiring for Forklift, Turret, This job is meaningful, allows and General Warehouse for you to learn intensively and can various shifts at our Columbus accommodate your class schedlocation which is near campus. ule. Those in all related ďŹ elds, Please apply Monday through with ABA interest, or who have a Friday 9am to 4pm at 3330 heart for these missions please Groveport Road Columbus OH apply. Competitive wages and 43207 beneďŹ ts. For more information, call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614) PART TIME Call Center in the 475-5305 or visit us at www. Short North $10 / Hour plus bo- LIFE-INC.NET nus. 614-495-1406. DUBLIN TEEN needs assisPART-TIME Research Associate tance afterschool and weekends wanted for an independent re- for social outings and self-help search ďŹ rm specializing in pub- skills. He lives with Autism lic opinion, policy and program and loves swimming and being evaluation for state and federal outside. Great family with exagencies. Excellent position for ible scheduling for an energetic student in social science ďŹ eld. and motivated college worker. Must be detail oriented person Please call 614-216-9531 to who has taken a research meth- learn more! odology class as part of their curriculum. EARLY LEARNING Center Please send resume to ctidy- Seeking committed professionals to become a part of a quality man@strategicresearchgroup. early learning team in our undercom served community. Hiring infant, SIGN SPINNERS toddler and preschool teachers; AA/BS in ECE or Child Devel$10-$12/hour opment required, experience Training provided preferred. Send resume w/cover P/T work based on school letter by fax: 614-252-9164 or schedule email: proberts@cchouse.org EOE Apply online HIRING RESPONSIBLE and www.SpinCols.com reliable babysitters! Make your own schedule, $9-$12/hr. Visit STRATEGIC RESEARCH Group preferredsittingsolutions.com to is looking for a full-time (40 hours read FAQs and to apply. per week) Research Associate. Duties will include management of large databases, working with data codebooks, data entry of survey results, coding of survey responses, assisting with report IS HIRING for multiple after formatting and preparation, and school nanny positions. This other duties as assigned. Quali- is your chance to extend your ďŹ ed candidates will be highly Columbus family while doing proďŹ cient in MS Word and Excel good. A nanny position is also and have at least some experi- a great resume builder. Candience with data management. dates should have prior childCandidate must also be ex- care experience along with relitremely detail oriented. Experi- able transportation. Pay based ence with an analysis software on experience. Apply online at program (SPSS preferred) is collegenannieandtutors.com/ a bonus. Background in social join or call 614-761-3060 for science research methods pre- more information. ferred. Please send resume to: Strategic Research Group, Attn: P/T - Infant Teacher - Hilliard Human Resources, 995 Goodale A 1-Star rated daycare with Blvd., Columbus, OH 43212 or the Step Up To Quality profax to: 614-220-8845. gram is looking for a part-time infant teacher to work Mondays and Wednesdays from STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid 8:00am-6:30pm. Applicants Survey Takers needed in Colum- must have previous experience bus. 100% free to join. Click on working with infants in a daysurveys. care setting. Applicants must also be nurturing, patient, orTELEPHONE INTERVIEW- ganized, able to communicate ERS wanted immediately to with parents, multi-task, be in a conduct interviews for research fast-paced working environment, ďŹ rm. No experience necessary. and physically ďŹ t. Please submit Great part-time job for students. a resume to brooksedgehilliard@ Evening and daytime shifts yahoo.com for consideration. available. Apply in person at: Strategic Research Group, 995 YMCA HILLTOP Educare seekGoodale Blvd., 2nd oor. ing teacher/oater 7-10am and 3-6 pm M-F for children ages VALETS 0-5. HS diploma required, free Driven. Service oriented. A Y membership. team player. Reliable. resumes to cviers@ymcacolumProfessional. Friendly. bus.org Does this sound like you?

Help Wanted Interships

CAMBRIA SUITES Polaris is curently seeking applicants for Front Desk Clerks and Restaurant Servers. Full Time or Part Time. Please email resume to chad.eckard@americanhg. com. For more information about the hotel please visit our website www.cambriasuitespolaris.com

Business Opportunities

A LIFE Changing Income Opportunity: www.Empowerpeople. net

GENERATING MORE INCOME Than 99% Of The People On The Internet. Why? See http:// KellySinclair.mobi

IF WE could show you how to turn less than $350 into $8,000 a month would HUGE CHURCH GARAGE you be interested? Just Push Play www.Eva333.com Eva SALE Friday, October 18th 9-7 & Sat- Baez 310-221-0210 urday, October 19th 9-2. Tent PROSPERITY IS a FORMULA! opens at 8:30. Attention OSU STUDENTS so LINWORTH UMC 7070 Bent is making money online! Watch Tree Blvd. Columbus. Clothing, our NEW VIDEO! www.earnfurn, toys, books, crafts, HH, money4tuitioneasy-online.com/ electronics, etc.

General Miscellaneous

For Sale Real Estate UPPER ARLINGTON One Bedroom condo. $64,700 1536-A Lafayette Dr. See photos and details on Zillo or Craigslist Phone: 614-457-0632

Travel/ Vacation

TARTAN FIELDS GOLF CLUB IS HIRING SERVERS APPLY IN PERSON AT 8070 TARTAN FIELDS DR IN DUBLIN. PAY RATE $8.00/HR PLUS TIPS. BAHAMAS SPRING Break $189 for 5 days. All prices include : Round-trip luxury party cruise. Accommodations on the island at your choice of thirteen resorts. Appalachia Travel. www. PREGNANT LOOKING for BahamaSun.com 800-867-5018 Help? Make an adoption plan with us, Mike and Connie. See our family proďŹ le at www.parentproďŹ les. AWESOME STUDENT POSIcom/proďŹ les/db29290.html and/ TION. The Division of General or call Beacon House Adoption and GI Surgery at The Ohio State at 1-888-987-6300 for help. AtUniversity is looking for students, torney #LA 16976. preferred work-study, but will consider other candidates, to TOM & Jerry’s - a Full Service assist with management of out- Auto Repair Shop. 1701 Kenny patient medical records. Flexible Rd. 488-8507. Take $20 off any schedules available. Requires purchase of $100 or more. Or a high degree of conďŹ dentiality. visit: Please contact Deborah Markey www.tomandjerrysauto.com 614-293-9989 WE WILL REPAIR BROKEN GLASS AND DOOR HANDLES. Tom and Jerry’s Auto Service. 1701 Kenny Rd. 488-8507.

Help Wanted OSU

Automotive Services

Announcements/ Notice

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

CAREER COLLEGE near Easton seeking positive, motivated and reliable individuCAFE COURIER Delivery Ser- als to contact prospective stuvice hiring part time evening dents to delivery drivers. Make $12-15 / schedule college visits. EMERGENCY OVERNIGHT!!! hr. Call 457-3900 if interested. RESUMES BY MORNING!!! Signing Bonus if you stay past $13/hr. 20-25 hours per week 614-440-7416. 60 days. preferred Last minute!!! Flexible hours available Daytime while you wait: DAVE & Buster’s is now hir- Monday through Thursday Evenings. Saturdays. ing for its Hilliard/Columbus 2:30-9pm and Friday 2-6pm Sundays. Holidays. location. Writing. Critiquing. Previous sales and/or Editing. Updating. Server/ Front Desk/ Cook/ Telemarketing experience Pricing negotiable. Dishwasher/ Technician/ Win- required. Cash only. ner’s Circle Executive portfolios. The FUN has arrived! Interested candidates should Curriculum vitae. call: 614-416-6233 Ext. 1 Personal statements. Accepting Applications Now! 614-440-7416. Apply online: HTTP://WWW.DAVEANDEARN CASH by ordering shirts BUSTERS.COM/CAREERS for your chapter with College Hill. Become a campus Rep today! PERSONAL STATEMENTS, Contact Ryan at 425-478-7439. graduate school applications, essays,and resumes for InternaMOZART’S CAFE - Looking for tional Students. Contact Julia at part- time/full-time reliable coun- PART TIME FEMALE cooper.402@osu.edu ter help, server help, kitchen TELEMARKETER, 2-3 hours help, pastry chef. 4784 N. High per day, 4 days/week, exible Street. Email resume to hours. info@mozartscafe.com Contact: Anna annapira7983@yahoo.com or SERVERS. COOKS and Bus- (614)937-9570 person needed at Figlio, an upscale but casual wood ďŹ red piz- WHITE HOUSE/BLACK MarLOOKING FOR EMPLOYEES? za restaurant close to campus. ket is looking for FASHION NEED AN experienced typOhio State has 50,000+ students Part-time. Great Flexibility. Fun STYLISTS!Join a high perfor- ist, proofreader, editor, and/ that you can reach. work environment. Will train. mance team of experts at Po- or transcriptionist? Call Donna Call (614)292-2031 for more in- Apply in person at 1369 Grand- laris mall.PT hrs.Apply at www. @937-767-8622. Excellent refchicos.com formation. view Ave or 3712 Riverside Dr. erences. Reasonable rates.

ResumĂŠ Services

WOW! NEW for Spring Semester! Woody Hayes’ second-favorite sport: BEGINNING HANDBALL (4-WALL) Limited Space: Enroll soon! Tu/Th 3:00-3:55PM Catalog No. KNSFHP 1139.07 under “EXPERIMENTAL�, Class No. 11294. Questions? Chuck Shiebler 614-292-8346

Typing Services

Personals

RED EVO MR Guy seeks White EVO GSR girl . . . you were a vision in the night . . . 614-371-1601

Real Estate Advertisements - Equal Housing Opportunity The Federal Fair Housing Act makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.� State law may also forbid discrimination based on these factors and others. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development at 800-669-9777.

Call 292-2031 to place your ad or do it online at thelantern.com - Terms of service available at thelantern.com/terms 33 Leave port 35 Apportioning word 36 *Nursed, in a way 39 Gp. that houses strays 42 Bowlers and trilbies 43 Millionaire’s retreat 47 Strudel ___ mode 48 Jon Hamm’s “Mad Men� role __ Draper 49 Vocation 50 *All-in-one appliance 54 Dye holder 55 Classy 56 Fish you can smoke 57 Ricky portrayer 58 Handy person suggested by the starts of the answers to starred clues 62 Nebraska native 63 Like Iago, say

thelantern thelantern thelantern thelantern

www.thelantern.com

Los Angeles Times, Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

Across 1 Fur tycoon 6 “Due Date� co-star Galifianakis 10 Rock blasters 14 Conveyed 15 Bassoon cousin 16 Wreak havoc in the streets 17 *Victor at Little Bighorn 20 Zilch 21 Fantasy game brute 22 Latin lesson word 23 New Year’s ___ 24 *2006 “Survivor� setting 28 Attacked 30 November honoree 31 “I’m an idiot!� 32 Abs strengthener

the student voice of The Ohio State University

Crossword

64 Rice/Lloyd Webber musical 65 Trees used to make longbows 66 Attends to one’s whistle? 67 Unreactive gas Down 1 Sawyer employer 2 “Same here!� 3 Poseidon’s staff 4 __ Day vitamins 5 Authority on a field 6 Masked hero who debuted in the 1919 story “The Curse of Capistrano� 7 Stunned way to be taken 8 Member of the fam

9 Casual greeting 10 Cookie shop enticement 11 Ferdinand’s love in “The Tempest� 12 Ph.D.’s further studies 13 Jeanne d’Arc, for one: Abbr. 18 Old geezer 19 “Come no closer!� 24 Consiglieri’s boss 25 Penn et al. 26 Contained opening? 27 “Too noisy!� 29 Big band instrument 33 Defensive effort 34 Ctrl-__-Delete 35 Correct 37 Superhero with a hammer

38 Even once 39 Chain __ 40 Give a sop to 41 Moneymaker 44 Not vacant 45 Charge for using, as an apartment 46 Potter or jeweler, e.g. 48 Style of a historic Miami Beach district 49 Get gooey 51 Outdoor outings 52 Bright again 53 Argues ineffectively 57 Comic Chappelle 58 Almond __ 59 Select group? 60 Roman salutation 61 T. __

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH

Please

Recycle

Thursday October 17, 2013

Missouri Synod 766 South High Street

On COTA Bus Line Near German Village

“Eph. 2:5 ...it is by grace you have been saved.�

Sunday Morning Services 8:00 & 10:30 AM Sunday School for Children & Adults 9:15 AM

(614) 444-3456 www.zionlcms.org

Traditional Service Sundays at 10:00am Contemporary Service Saturdays at 5:00pm 43 W. 4th Ave. (Just west of high st.) Join us for Thanksgiving service on Thursday November 22nd.

www.christchurchanglican.org

Worship Guide Promote your place of worship in our weekly worship guide!

3B


Thursday October 17, 2013

8A


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