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Monday October 28, 2013 year: 133 No. 95

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4A Meyer on victory: ‘Arguably our best team win’ Ohio State players pile up on Penn State running back, Zach Zwinak (28). OSU won against Penn State, 63-14, at Ohio Stadium Oct. 26.

Band’s success is elementary

Mostly teenage pop-punk band The Orwells have garnered a young, strong fanbase since forming in high school.

sports

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O-line brings a+ performance Some stars of Saturday’s Buckeye victory are the ones making the blocks that allowed for ample rushing yards.

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erIC SeGer Sports editor seger.25@osu.edu Twenty games. Twenty victories. Coach Urban Meyer and the Ohio State football team appear as if they can do no wrong. The Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0) dominated from the outset Saturday, sending Penn State (4-3, 1-2) back to Happy Valley on the wrong side of a 63-14 outcome. Such a lopsided victory on national television might seem like Meyer and company were looking to impress the national media and change the perception of the Big Ten’s inferiority, but the OSU head coach won’t be saying that anytime soon. “That was certainly not our mindset,” Meyer said following the win. “Our mindset is ‘find a way to win this game against a very talented team’ … I’d be disappointed if I said (making an impression is) our focus. That’s not our focus.” OSU has held steady at No. 4 in the AP top 25 poll since week three of the season and is currently in the same spot

“This was definitely a statement win,” in the BCS standings behind unbeaten redshirt-junior cornerback Bradley Roby Alabama, Florida State and Oregon. If said. “That’s the attitude we carried to the Buckeyes have hopes of playing for this game, that we were going to make a national title in January, winning by a statement on prime time when everylarge margins might be the only way to body was watching, and that’s what we do so with the Big Ten currently lacking did.” national respect. OSU kept Penn State freshman Redshirt-senior safety C.J. Barnett quarterback Christian Hackenberg under agreed with his head coach, though, and wraps for most of the game, picking him said the only thing his team can do is off twice and sacking him four times. take care of its own business. Hackenberg left the game in the third “We don’t really worry about (polls). quarter with an We don’t really injured shoulder. focus on that,” One of those Barnett said. sacks came at “All that stuff the hands of will take care junior linebacker of itself … If Ryan Shazier, we win all our Bradley Roby who led OSU games and Redshirt-junior cornerback with 10 tackles. take care of Shazier sided our business, I with Meyer and don’t think it will Barnett, saying that winning games is all be a problem. I think that we can only the team cares about, not the polls. handle what we can handle. That’s all we “We (are) trying to go out there and control, is how we play.” just win every game and try to win them Impressing the voters, though, was handily like we should,” Shazier said. a priority for some players heading into “We’re just trying to go out there trying Saturday.

this was definitely a statement win.

? ? ? ? Presidential Search

continued as Meyer on 3A

It has been 101 days since the search began.

Some students desire insight on presidential candidates lIZ yOUnG Campus editor young.1693@osu.edu

2A

Going ‘all Out’ for lGBt rights Alumnus Andre Banks spoke on his international campaign for equality in a lecture at OSU.

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Although even finalists of the Ohio State presidential search are set to be kept a secret until the president is selected, some OSU students contend there should be more of an emphasis placed on gathering input from the community about specific candidates before a selection is made. Some of OSU’s most influential figures, though, insist it is imperative contenders be kept confidential. OSU President Emeritus E. Gordon Gee, who was president of OSU from 1990 to 1998 and again from 2007 until July 1, said it was a private search that brought him to OSU for both of his terms. “My view is very clear on this. I would not be a president of this institution if they would have had a public search, both the first time or the second time,” Gee said in an interview with The Lantern Oct. 21. “The reason is the fact that the very best people you want to get here are very happy where they are, and they don’t want to be put into public jeopardy, and therefore what we have to do is we have to have confidence in our search.” Gee announced he would be retiring from the presidency June 4, days after

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controversial comments he made at a Dec. 5 OSU Athletic Council meeting came under public scrutiny. Remarks about Notre Dame and the Southeastern Conference in particular drew national attention. Presidential Search Committee advisory subcommittee convener Deborah Jones Merritt said there will be public updates from Presidential Search Committee Chair Jeffrey Wadsworth at every Board of Trustees meeting about where the process stands at the time. Undergraduate Student Government President Taylor Stepp, who is a member of the advisory subcommittee, said he could not comment on his thoughts about the candidate confidentiality because all comments are to be referred to Wadsworth or Merritt. Some OSU students said they see both pros and cons to the public not knowing who the candidates are. “I see good things and bad things from it. Bad things where having a more transparent election would be better for the community, not only the students but the faculty and other people who are alumni … They’d like to see who they’re actually possibly going to have as a president,” said Michael Hlatky, a second-year in chemical engineering. “But also the good things as in … it

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to win every game, and at the end of the day, things (are) going to happen how it’s supposed to.” Meyer called the victory “arguably our best team win” of 2013, and said he felt the Buckeyes played well on offense, defense as well as special teams, but particularly the pass rush. “I like where we’re at right now. I like where we’re at as a team,” Meyer said. “We all needed to see some pass rush and pass defense and guys step up and they certainly did. That was the most impressive part of the game to me.” OSU scored on six of its seven first half possessions, taking a 42-7 lead into halftime after Miller threw a dart to senior wide receiver Corey “Philly” Brown from 25 yards out with only seconds left. Freshman running back Dontre Wilson, who scored his first touchdown since the San Diego State game Sept. 7, said the Buckeyes did want to prove something to their doubters. “It’s a pretty big statement because everybody always downgrades us and puts us down,” Wilson said. “So for us

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continued as Candidates on 3A

rItIka SHaH / Asst. photo editor

SHelBy lUM / Photo editor

OSU executive Vice President and Provost Joseph Steinmetz during an interview with The Lantern Oct. 8

kind of keeps those candidates a little more comfortable and they’re not going to be hounded by multiple different people about (their consideration).” Hlatky said overall, he’d prefer the search to be completely public. “It should be more open because I think as a community, we’d love to see who it’s possibly going to be so you can do some background information on them, see what they’ve done in the past, see what they could offer the university,” he said. Aaron Rumbaugh, a third-year in landscape architecture, said he understands that candidates don’t want the public to know they’re trying for the job. “I wouldn’t want to lose my job if I wanted to get a new job, a better job,” he said. “I wouldn’t want them knowing.” Others, though, said that risk shouldn’t matter. “It should still be known by the students,” said Emily Yu, a fourth-year in industrial and systems engineering. “If they are good at what they are doing, they shouldn’t be worried about losing their job.” She added that students should have a say in who is chosen. “The person is supposed to … work for the students or make the organization better for the whole population of the students,” she said. “We should determine who the president is.” OSU Interim President Joseph Alutto, who took the reins the same day Gee retired,

SHelBy lUM / Photo editor

OSU President emeritus e. Gordon Gee during an interview with The Lantern in his office in Page Hall Oct. 21.

OSU Interim President Joseph alutto during an interview with The Lantern Sept. 23.

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campus CFAES chief advancement officer hired

LGBT rights leader speaks at OSU

Madelyn Grant Lantern reporter grant.382@osu.edu

Alexa Carson Lantern reporter carson.239@osu.edu

The Ohio State College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences has hired a new faculty member with Buckeye roots. Chris Delisio was recently named chief advancement officer of the college. Delisio said he wanted to take the position at OSU because of CFAES’s wide reach. “Ohio State is a special place and the college (CFAES) makes a large impact within this (university), within this state and this country,” Delisio said. Delisio started at his position Oct. 7 after working as assistant vice president at Ohio Wesleyan University. That role included managing developmental staff as well as directing the school’s comprehensive fundraising campaign. Delisio’s salary is more than $175,000, said OSU spokesman Gary Lewis. Bruce McPheron, dean of CFAES and vice president of Agricultural Administration, said Delisio will be working on fundraising for scholarships, support for experiential learning, internships and new facilities. The position requires Delisio to “take the lead in framing strategies upon which we can build a successful fundraising campaign,” McPheron said. Delisio will also be involved in the “But for Ohio State” campaign, the university’s largest fundraising initiative in history. The campaign had raised more than $1.66 billion by the end of September. OSU has set a goal of raising $2.5 billion by 2016 to be used for education, research development and a number of global issues including health and wellness, energy and the environment. The CFAES department is looking to receive $150 million of the total amount raised, according to a CFAES press release. Delisio’s past experience includes involvement with fundraising at University of Dayton and Ohio University.

When Andre Banks was a senior at Ohio State in 2000, he participated in a 28 day sit-in at Bricker Hall to campaign for better benefits and wages for custodial, landscaping and food service staff. Today, the OSU alumnus has expanded his social activism by helping form All Out, an international organization that seeks to end discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. The organization has nearly 1.9 million supporters worldwide. Banks revisited his alma mater to discuss life after OSU, his campaign to promote worldwide equality for the LGBT community and the possibilities for building social movements in the 21st century. The lecture was held Friday at Ohio Union. “The story of how I got to this path that eventually led to All Out, it really started here at Ohio State,” Banks, the co-founder and executive director of All Out, said during his talk. Because of his involvement with the on-campus campaign for workers’ benefits during his time at OSU, Banks was recruited by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, a nonprofit and one of the largest federations of unions in the U.S., shortly after receiving his political science degree. While working as the AFL-CIO student program coordinator, Banks met and over the years became friends with Benjamin McKean, an assistant professor of political science at OSU. McKean was a main organizer of Banks’ speech, which was sponsored by the Department of Political Science, the Diversity and Identity Studies Collective’s Sexuality Studies program, the Honors and Scholars Center, the Student Life Multicultural Center and Scarlet & Gay, an OSU gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender alumni organization. Representatives from the Multicultural Center and the Honors and Scholars Center referred The Lantern to McKean for comment. Banks said he and co-founder Jeremy Heimans launched All Out in 2011 after they worked together first for Purpose, a company that aims to help other organizations launch campaigns and use the Internet to drive large-scale participation in social issues. But Banks and Heimans wanted to start their own organization, and decided to focus on an issue they believed was not getting enough attention on a global scale: LGBT community rights. “In 76 countries, it is a crime to be gay, and in 10, it can cost you your life … and in no country in the world are LGBT people treated equally under the law,” Banks said in an interview with The Lantern before his speech. He added All Out’s ultimate goal is to start the process of changing those laws and lead a movement that will ultimately decriminalize being lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender. All Out’s members work toward their goals by partnering with groups in each country they work in, including Russia and Sweden, to discover the best way to help address discriminatory problems the LGBT community faces. Banks said they take action in a variety of ways, but their method typically involves using the

Courtesy of the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

Chris Delisio started as chief advancement officer of the College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Oct. 7. Delisio also served for three years as a senior director of development at the Wexner Medical Center James Comprehensive Cancer Center. Steve Chaykowski, the executive director of development of the James, said working with Delisio is great. “He is the ultimate team player. He will do an incredible job for the college but an even greater job for the university,” Chaykowski said. “The college has always had strong philanthropic support, and with his style of leadership, I’m convinced he will be able to take it to the next level.” McPheron also said Delisio is a good fit for the job. “The first thing I noticed about Chris was his solid experience in fundraising, with a background at both Ohio State and several other institutions,” McPheron said. Delisio said for now, though, he’s just working on learning the ropes. “Everyone has been going out of their way to help me. I am almost through with week three so I am just in the mode of learning a lot and taking it all in,” Delisio said.

Brooke Sayre / Lantern photographer

OSU alumnus Andre Banks, co-founder of All Out, an organization that seeks to end discrimination against the LGBT community, speaks at Ohio Union Oct. 25. Internet to get people involved and start what he calls a “21st century movement.” “We are engaging (members) in various tactics online … everything from signing a petition to being a part of a flash mob to making a donation,” he said in his speech. Banks used the example of a 2012 initiative, which involved “kill lists” being used to target LGBT people in Iraq. All Out reached out to its members via email and social media and raised $60,000 in three days to help a local organization relocate about a dozen of the men on the lists. The organization’s members also create original online content they intend to go viral, including videos, in an attempt to bring attention to the issues and increase support. McKean said he invited Banks to speak in order to show students the power they have to take action. “(Banks) shows what you can do in political action, shows what you can do with an OSU education and shows what you can do about issues of equality,” he said. Megan Kupka, a second-year in Russian and international relations, attended the event and said she was struck by how the Internet could be used to inspire change. “It was amazing to hear he (Banks) could do this sort of highlevel activism through the Internet, and to gather support and to organize through a resource that’s available to almost everyone,” she said. Banks said in his speech using “the language of the Internet” can be a powerful way of delivering a message and pulling people to action, and added he hoped his talk at Ohio Union helped emphasize that. “I want them (students) to take away that there are new opportunities to build powerful social movements,” Banks said during his interview with The Lantern.

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Meyer from 1A to come out with this performance against Penn State, a good team that just beat Michigan, it’s a pretty big statement.” The Buckeye offense racked up 686 total yards, good for third best in program history. A total of 408 of those yards came on the ground, as junior quarterback Braxton Miller, senior running back Carlos Hyde and redshirt-senior quarterback Kenny Guiton ran for a pair of scores each. Miller also threw for 252 yards and three touchdowns, and said he is “very comfortable” with what the passing game is doing right now. “I know what I’m doing and (the) defensive coverage, and I know where the guy is going to be,” Miller

Candidates from 1A felt similarly to Gee with regard to public versus private searches. “I’ve been offered a number of presidencies in my time, and it started quite a while ago. So, if I go back 10 years to the first time somebody approached me about presidency, it was sort of an open search … and I candidly said it was an interesting opportunity but I was not going to go through the normal popularity contest because that’s, to me, not a good way to select a leader,” Alutto said in an interview with The Lantern Sept. 23. “It’s too difficult for someone who is in a sitting position. And that’s (where) you look — you know, this is not a place where a neophyte should become president. This is a very complicated university.” Alutto also said, though, there are still specific qualifications necessary for any certain leader to be considered for OSU’s presidency. “We’re going to look for people who have evidence that they can succeed, who can lead effectively a complex organization. Well, they’re already in positions,” he said. “The last thing they need to do is to have people realize they’re looking at something as attractive as Ohio State. Because if they are not selected, they are done where they are. “Once you’ve lost the sense of commitment to the institution … it’s tough to lead those institutions … And I know it’s difficult for students and for many faculty to accept as a reality, but it is a reality.” Provost and Executive Vice President Joseph Steinmetz, too, said the only reason he’s at OSU is because of a confidential search process. “I understand that process because that’s exactly the process that got me to Ohio State,” he said in an interview with The Lantern Oct. 8. “I’m sitting at the University of Kansas at the time, the last thing I wanted my colleagues at Kansas to know is that I might be looking at a job elsewhere because it undermines the total confidence that the other place that you’re coming from has in you.” Gee said he trusts that whatever decision is made will be the right one.

said. “It’s exciting to see a (teammate) with the ball in his hand do something with it.” With this kind of strength on the ground and a multitude of players playing at such a high level, the end result was something worthy of recognition, Barnett said. “We definitely want to make an impact on the country and have people notice us. We like that,” Barnett said. “We would love for every game to be like that. Hopefully we can just come out and execute like we did tonight.” The Buckeyes are set to travel to West Lafayette, Ind., Saturday to take on Purdue (1-6, 0-3). Kickoff is scheduled for noon.

“I have great confidence in our trustees. They did appoint me so I think they know how to do things pretty well,” he said with a laugh. Alutto said he, too, trusts the Presidential Search Committee to do its job well. “I play no role in the search. And I shouldn’t play any role in the search, just as Gordon (Gee) shouldn’t play any role in the search in terms of determining the outcome,” he said. “If someone calls us and asks for information, that’s fine, all that needs to be coordinated through the search committee.” So far, the committee has been working on completing its tasks — the finalized presidential profile, an eight-page document which describes the qualities of the ideal next president meant to be sent to potential candidates, was released Oct. 2. The document is set to be formally approved by the Board at its Nov. 7 and 8 meeting. The Presidential Search Committee’s advisory subcommittee also expected to be finished with the university portrait, a 30 to 40 page document intended to be a recruitment tool to inform candidates of OSU’s attractive qualities, by the end of October or the first week of November as of Oct. 17, OSU spokesman Gary Lewis said in an email. OSU also hired a private search firm, Dallas-based R. William Funk & Associates, to assist with recruiting the next president. The contract between the two is worth more than $220,000. Wadsworth said July 19 the process is expected to take about 300 days based on how long searches take at other universities considering outside candidates, meaning there could be approximately 200 days remaining in the search. Gee said after all, the search isn’t one that lends itself easily to a democratic vote. “This is not about a plebiscite, this is about finding the very best person,” Gee said. “You don’t do that through a public process. That is kind of like a fashion show or something. We just don’t want to make that happen.”

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Monday October 28, 2013

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Map of C-Bus serves as inspiration for OSU grad’s art Nen Lin Soo Lantern reporter soo.8@osu.edu When an Ohio State mechanical engineering graduate was brainstorming ways to get his foot in the door of the Columbus art community, he didn’t anticipate a full-blown entrepreneurial endeavor with laser cut maps. “I live down on the Short North area, so I always wanted to create something where I can maybe set up a table, and be part of the art scene in Columbus, and I created it for that,” said Dan Linden, designer of Cut Maps. “I thought it looked really cool, so I posted it on Columbus Underground to see whether anybody else thought it was cool, and everyone was saying, ‘It’s cool, where do I buy one?’ So, I had to get a bunch made and sell them.” The creation of these maps, he explained, is simple. Linden creates a black and white image of the city streets in a computer file, which is readable in a laser cutting machine. After loading the file into the machine, he just pushes a button to create the finished product. In October 2012, after garnering some attention from his post on the Columbus Underground message board, Linden posted a video showing how the laser cut street maps were made, which eventually went viral, and was featured on Gizmodo.com and the Discovery Channel in Canada, Linden said. Displaying his work at the Short North Arts District Gallery Hop was his initial aim, but creating laser cut street maps and framing them as wall art was never what he intended. Two years after Linden graduated from OSU in 2010, while still working full-time as an engineer at Coaster Dynamix, a Virginia-based toy company that manufactures roller coaster models, Linden had the idea to make drink coasters that featured the streets of Columbus neighborhoods. “I downloaded a giant PDF map of Columbus, and in Adobe Illustrator, I started tracing Victorian Village, and I thought, people who come to the Gallery Hop will come from Italian Village, so I did that, and then I thought, German Village is downtown and it’s pretty big, so it’ll be cool to put them together,” Linden said. “I kept tracing different parts of the city, and 20 hours later, I have traced the entire city, and I did that all in three days … but I was just sitting there at 2 a.m. tracing Columbus, and it seemed like the dumbest thing at that time.” He said the idea doesn’t seem so dumb anymore.

Today, Linden runs Cut Maps and designs the maps from his home in Victorian Village. Production of these maps are done in the warehouse with the help of his boss, who is also a co-owner of Cut Maps, in Coaster Dynamix in Elkton, VA, where there is a laser cutter machine. With more than 70 designs of city streets, Linden accepts special requests from his customers. Linden said these maps have been popular among people who have been looking for unique wedding gifts, whether for themselves or others. “Essentially, I do a city when someone asks of me, so once that’s designed, I put it up on the website as a city I offer,” Linden said. “One lady wanted Madrid, Spain with a heart where she and her husband got engaged in a hotel, and it’s cool to work with a customer on something really special, because there’s something about cities that’s really special to people. Like Columbus is really special to me.” His older sister, Laura Linden, said the maps are a good reminder for couples who met at OSU and have moved together to a different city. “You can look at where they met, where they are now, where their hometown is, so I love them as wedding gifts,” Laura Linden said. April Smail, a fourth-year in social work, said having street maps as art pieces at home is an interesting idea, and she might purchase one as a gift if she felt the purpose was special. “If someone was really obsessed with the city of Columbus, I would probably buy it as a wedding gift,” Smail said. “It would have to be a big deal for me to pay that price for it.” Hanging Columbus framed maps start at $150, while smaller, framed versions are available for $30. Since Cut Maps was established, Dan Linden still hasn’t had the chance to achieve his initial aim of showcasing his work during Gallery Hop because of his busy schedule with his business and Coaster Dynamix, but he hopes to be able to set up a stall next year when the weather starts getting warm. To Dan Linden, engineering and art are very similar in many ways because the motivations behind actualizing a concept are often similar between the two fields. This mindset has allowed him to combine engineering and art together with his street maps. Dan Linden’s laser cut street maps have been featured on the walls of Brothers Drake Meadery & Bar and The Candle Lab in the Short North. Linden’s Cut Maps can be purchased on Etsy as well as his website.

Courtesy of Erik Rettman

Dan Linden holds a laser-cut map of Ohio. Linden is the owner and designer at Cut Maps.

High-end costumes at HighBall Halloween fashion show Models walk down the runway during the Costume Couture Fashion Show at HighBall Halloween Oct. 25. HighBall Halloween took place in the Short North from Oct. 25-26.

Margaret Mecklenborg / Lantern photographer

Courtesy of Jory Lee Cordy

Pop-punk band The Orwells is scheduled to play at The Basement Oct. 30. It can be two lines maximum in length.

The Orwells young in age, mature in sound Matthew Lovett Senior Lantern reporter lovett.45@osu.edu There is something primal and basic about The Orwells, and it is these characteristics that have garnered them such a strong — and youthful — fanbase. “I guess young kids just know what’s good,” said lead singer Mario Cuomo, in regards to the members’ ages and the youthful following the band has. The Orwells, a garage-inflected pop-punk band from the Chicago area, is comprised largely of 18- and 19-yearolds. Cuomo, 20, is the sole member to have outgrown his teenage years. They are set to arrive Wednesday to play The Basement, located at 391 Neil Ave. Doors are scheduled to open at 7 p.m. The relative success of this band comes from the amount of time its members have spent together. All of the members have been playing music to some degree since middle school, and the group took on the name The Orwells when they were playing together. “Two of us are cousins and two of us are twin brothers. We all just kind of met up in middle school,” Cuomo said. “We didn’t start making songs as The Orwells until high school.” The relationships between the members made the band happen organically. Guitarist Dominic Corso is Cuomo’s cousin. Meanwhile, bassist Grant Brinner and drummer Henry Brinner are twin brothers. That leaves just guitarist Matt O’Keefe as the member without a blood relation in the band. Cuomo said the band sought after a basic sound comprised of simple musicality. “It’s the easiest. I’m not a super-skilled vocalist,” Cuomo said. “We’re not like metal guitarists, like super technical.” The band’s style may be attributed to a major idol of the band Cuomo mentioned, the Black Lips. Aspects of the Atlanta-based garage-rock band’s sound has tucked into that of The Orwells; after all, a song on The Orwells’ September EP “Who Needs You” is named “Salvation is a Parking Lot (A Black Lips Rip-Off).” Spoonful Records owner Brett Ruland said the Black Lips fit as an accurate influence for The Orwells. “(The Black Lips’ sound is) kind of dirty, garagey, sometimes sloppy but really fun. It’s sorta rooted in that old garage and soul sound. They’re definitely having a good time,” Ruland said. “It’s not like boring, or music that makes you think necessarily.” Spoonful Records is located at 116 E. Long Street, about two and a half miles from campus. A fan of The Orwells and a Spring 2013 Ohio State graduate in geology, Wayne Malangone, feels about The Orwells as Ruland feels about one of its major influences. “They’re a catchy, energetic, really young punk band. I just love the hooks,” Malangone said. “Their sound is also pretty raw, too. It’s not as clean as what I hear in most punk bands nowadays.” Fans have responded well to their tour, Cuomo said. “We have yet to get booed or stuff like that. Everybody’s usually pretty into it. So things are going good,” Cuomo said. Doors are scheduled to open at 7 p.m. Goners and Dead is Dead set to open. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 the day of the show.

Margaret Mecklenborg / Lantern photographer

Margaret Mecklenborg / Lantern photographer

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sports

Monday October 28, 2013

thelantern www.thelantern.com Top 25 College Football Poll

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19

Alabama (8-0) Oregon (8-0) Florida State (7-0) OHIO STATE (8-0) Stanford (7-1) Baylor (7-0) Miami (7-0) Clemson (7-1) Missouri (7-1) Oklahoma (7-1) Auburn (7-1) Texas A&M (6-2) LSU (7-2) South Carolina (6-2) Texas Tech (7-1) Fresno State (7-0) Northern Illinois (8-0) Oklahoma State (6-1) Louisville (7-1)

20 21 22 23 24 25

UCLA (5-2) Michigan (6-1) Michigan State (7-1) Central Florida (6-1) Wisconsin (5-2) Notre Dame (6-2)

DROPPED FROM RANKINGS: Cincinnati 21 B1G TENVOTES: STANDINGS OTHERS RECEIVING Toledo 49, Texas 33, Wisconsin 31, TCU 29 Nebraska 24, Penn State 18, N.C. State 13, Oklahoma State 12, Arizona 7, UCLA 7, Tulsa 6, Arizona State 5, NorthernDIVISION Illinois 5, Cincinnati 3. LEADERS *Bold indicates Big Ten team

Big Ten record

Overall record

Ohio State

4-0

8-0

Wisconsin

3-1

5-2

Indiana

1-2

3-4

Penn State

1-2

4-3

Illinois

0-3

3-4

Purdue

0-3

1-6

Team

LEGENDS DIVISION Team

Big Ten record

Overall record

Michigan State

4-0

7-1

Michigan

2-1

6-1

Nebraska

2-1

5-2

Minnesota

2-2

6-2

Iowa

2-2

5-3

Northwestern

0-4

4-4

bigten.org

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Meyer: O-line ‘one of the best in the country’ Dan hope Oller reporter hope.46@osu.edu

Shelby Lum / Photo editor

Junior quarterback Braxton Miller and senior running back Carlos Hyde were the offensive stars for Ohio State (8-0, 4-0) once again in the Buckeyes’ 63-14 win against Penn State (4-3, 1-2). However, five players who, on paper, appear to have made less of a dent in the win, also played a crucial role in OSU’s 686-yard offensive performance against the Nittany Lions. So well, in fact, that even a former Buckeye was impressed. Miller (252 passing yards, 68 rushing yards) and Hyde (147 rushing yards) accounted for 467 yards, or 68.1 percent, of OSU’s total offense in the victory. But in order to achieve that success, they needed effective blocking from the offensive line. The starting five offensive linemen — redshirtsenior left tackle Jack Mewhort, senior left guard Andrew Norwell, redshirt-senior center Corey Linsley, redshirt-senior right guard Marcus Hall and sophomore right tackle Taylor Decker — were praised by their coaches and teammates following Saturday’s win. “I see an offensive line that’s one of the best in the country,” coach Urban Meyer said during a post-game press conference. “I’ll take my offensive line anywhere. Those guys are playing very well.” That offensive line led an effort that amassed 32 first downs, averaged 8.9 yard gains per offensive play and converted seven of 10 third downs. “Offensive line did a hell of a job,” Miller said of the unit’s performance Saturday.

Redshirt-senior left tackle Jack Mewhort blocks a defender during a game against Penn State at Ohio Stadium. OSU won, 63-14.

continued as Offensive Line on 4B

‘Nightmare’ continues for OSU volleyball tim Moody Lantern reporter moody.178@osu.edu The No. 24 Ohio State women’s volleyball team has hit the halfway point of 2013 Big Ten play and cannot seem to wake up from its first half “nightmare,” sophomore middle blocker Andrea Kacsits said, as it has extended its losing streak to six matches. “We are not the team we were in this nightmare of a first half,” Kacists said. “We’ll be better in the second half (of the season) for sure.” The Buckeyes, who have not won since Oct. 5 at Indiana, dropped a 3-1 decision against Nebraska Friday, bringing their conference record to 2-8. “We need to remember what it feels like to win, and love that feeling enough to want to do it every time,” Kacsits said of the team’s recent struggles. The Buckeyes looked strong early Friday, taking the first set 25-22, but were unable to build on that form the rest of the way. Nebraska jumped out to a 12-4 lead over OSU in the second set, eventually winning it 25-12. The third ended 25-17 in favor of the Cornhuskers, and a late rally was not enough for OSU as they fell 25-19 in the final set. The final period was close until the end, as the Buckeyes only trailed one point, 20-19, but five straight Nebraska points closed out the match. Coach Geoff Carlston said his team can take positives from the match, but they still have work to do in the second half of Big Ten play. “I thought some individuals played really well (against Nebraska),” Carlston said. “I think (we had) … the effort that we need to get better.” Carlston has been working with multiple lineups during the losing streak, going with a two setter look against Nebraska as freshman Maggie Heim and junior Taylor Sherwin both saw significant playing time. “It’s an option, something that I like components of,” Carlston said about the different look. Heim finished with three kills and 14 assists while Sherwin tallied 24 assists. Senior outside hitter Kaitlyn Leary led the Buckeyes with 12 kills, while Kacsits added eight of 14 attempts for an attack percentage of .500. Senior outside hitter Kelsey Robinson led the match with 19 kills for Nebraska, while freshman outside hitter Kadie Rolfzen had 16 and sophomore middle blocker Meghan Haggerty added 10. After the loss, the Buckeyes have a week to rest, with their next match scheduled for Friday against No. 10 Michigan State in East Lansing, Mich.

Brandon Klein / Lantern photographer

Sophomore middle blocker Andrea Kacsits (4) defends a shot during a match against Nebraska Oct. 25 at St. John Arena. OSU lost, 3-1. Leary said the second half of the season gives the Buckeyes a chance to see teams again and learn from their mistakes. “The good thing about the Big Ten is you play everyone twice,” she said. “Now everyone knows the teams better, they know us better, we know them better.” Carlston said the time off will help his team’s rhythm and give them a chance to get back on the same page. “We’re going to take these days off, regroup, and really focus on the second half of the season,” he said. After their match at Michigan State, the Buckeyes are scheduled to head to Ann Arbor, Mich., for a date with the No. 17 Michigan Wolverines.

Men’s hockey wins 2 against Robert Morris daniel fyffe Lantern reporter fyffe.22@osu.edu After opening the season on a three-game losing streak, the Ohio State men’s ice hockey team bounced back by sweeping Robert Morris over the weekend. The Buckeyes (2-3-0) traveled to Pittsburgh Saturday for the second of the two-game home-and-home series against the Colonials (0-4-1), and pulled out a 4-3 victory. Neither team managed to score until the second period, when the Buckeyes opened the gap to take a 4-0 lead after the first 40 minutes. Freshman forward Nick Schilkey tallied a goal 17 seconds into the stanza and junior defenseman Justin DaSilva raised the lead to 2-0 nearly a minute later. Freshman defenseman Drew Brevig added to the shutout with his first goal of the season at 13:03 with an assist from junior forward Max McCormick — his team-best fifth assist of the season. Capping the second period was a late goal by sophomore forward Tyler Lundey on the power play with 11 seconds left. The third period saw Robert Morris fall just short of a furious comeback. The Colonials cut the lead to 4-2 with

Julia Hider / Lantern photographer

Freshman defenseman Drew Brevig (4) passes the puck during a game against Robert Morris Oct. 25 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 5-3. two early goals at 2:23 and 4:07, and sophomore forward Zac Lynch narrowed the gap even more with a goal on the power play to make it a one-goal game with less than eight minutes to go. OSU managed to hold on for the remainder of the game, though, to clinch the victory. The first of the two-game series was played Friday in Columbus, and the Buckeyes finished on top, 5-3, after overcoming an early two-goal deficit. The victory was the first of coach Steve

Rohlik’s career as a collegiate head coach. “We didn’t start out pretty tonight and we certainly have some things to work on, but what I liked about our team tonight is they weren’t going to let it (a loss) happen to them again,” Rohlik said during a press conference after the game Friday. “We have a good group. We bounced back and fought hard. Good teams find a way to win, and we did that tonight.”

After trailing the Colonials by two goals early in the first period, the Buckeyes scored five straight to put a victory out of reach for Robert Morris. “I think it was that our guys just finally said, ‘Enough is enough’ and ‘Let’s get after it,’ and that was kind of the mentality on the bench, and the guys were ones talking like that,” Rohlik said. Among those who were being vocal was senior forward Travis Statchuk. “We took it upon ourselves to find a way to win tonight,” Statchuk said Friday. “Coach challenged us between periods and we went out there, stuck to our plan and got it done.” Robert Morris got a goal back during a power play in the third period, but it was not enough and the Buckeyes held on for the victory. Junior forward Nick Oddo said the team’s preparation to play more physically was a contributing factor to the win. “We’ve been working on that all week — driving the net, getting bodies around, second-chance opportunities — and it worked out for us tonight,” he said Friday after the win. The Buckeyes are slated to return to action Tuesday in a non-conference rematch against Bowling Green, who beat OSU 4-3 Oct. 15. The puck is set to drop at 7:05 p.m. at the Schottenstein Center.

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studentvoice

Condoleezza Rice qualified for role on football selection committee Sports Columnist

Beginning in 2014, College Football will fall into a new playoff system, where the top four ranked teams will compete in two semifinal games with the winners playing for the National meghan wallis Championship. wallis.36@osu.edu The semifinal matchups will be decided by a selection committee, and it will seed the top four teams, as well as some of the lower ranked teams. This will allow the two best teams to play in the championship game, rather than the top two ranked teams. The new selection committee will involve 13 people, some household names and some not — a few selections were unexpected. The biggest surprise, and somewhat controversial pick, is the addition of former National Security Adviser and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Rice is the only female committee member, and a partial reaction to her selection has been negative — but it’s not like we’re living in the progressive age of 2013 or anything. Women don’t hold high power in the world of men’s sports. Women are still pushing their way into the world of athleticism in general, let alone making their way onto a selection committee with a lot at stake for a lot of people. ESPN college football analyst David Pollack isn’t keen on the idea of including Rice on the committee, as football is a man’s sport and women don’t know what they’re talking about,

Courtesy of MCT

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice speaks to the delegation at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., Aug. 29, 2012. or something like that. Pollack created a few seconds of awkward television all but saying he did not think women should be on the committee during College Gameday Oct. 5. He later attempted to amend his comments, via Twitter. “I want people on the committee that eat, sleep & breathe college football during the season. It has nothing to do with male or female,” Pollack’s tweet read, a few hours after the broadcast was over. However, the least intelligent criticism is from former Auburn head coach Pat Dye. “All she knows about football is what somebody told her,” Dye said. “Or what she read in a book, or what she saw on the television. To

understand football, you’ve got to play with your hand in the dirt.” His justification is completely invalid, though, as she’s not the only committee member who hasn’t played the game. Former Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese and a former football beat writer Steve Wieberg have also not played football at a collegiate level. The funny thing though, is that Rice knows plenty more about football than most critics would like to admit, which is not new information. In a 2007 interview, Rice told ESPN that she had never missed a Super Bowl, including a time when she was in Israel meeting with officials in Jerusalem.

“I had to wake up at 2 a.m. to see the kickoff,” she said. It’s obvious she loves and follows the game. As much as I don’t want to make this into a “We are women, hear us roar” type of thing, it is. I for one, probably know more about football, and most other sports, than many men. Like Rice, I’m proud of what I know — you don’t want to get into an argument with me about whether or not Tom Brady is a better quarterback than Peyton Manning — I’ll win. She’s equally as qualified as the 12 men she’ll be joining on the committee. She might not have played the game at a high level, and she might not have been a top-notch coach or athletic director, but she certainly knows what she’s talking about. She’s likely to be the voice of reason balancing a room full of testosterone. She’s unquestioningly intelligent. When the top four teams are selected next season, those four teams, and their affiliates, won’t have a bad word to say. It’s all fun and games until your team doesn’t end up where you think it should. I’m talking to you, Pat Dye. Condi is a smart lady though; she knows what she’s getting herself into. But this is a good thing for women, for sports and for women in sports. The sports world is changing for the better, like it or not. Rice was the first ever female AfricanAmerican Secretary of State and the first female National Security Adviser. Now she’ll add another first.

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Bicycling a sign of resilience, strength for Afghan women melissa prax Lantern reporter prax.1@osu.edu

Courtesy of MCT

Afghan women line up to vote during the first democratic presidential election in Kabul, Afghanistan, Oct.9, 2004.

The first time I felt both sophisticated and powerful was on my bicycle. I was hooked after the first crash in my driveway and later became an employee at a bicycle shop near Cleveland. I was consumed with the pleasure that selling bikes, riding and racing gave me, but I was oblivious to individuals worldwide. America has molded an industry out of biking that proclaims leisure, fitness and sport. Customers purchase bikes to accomplish goals such as organized rides, tours across the country or weight loss. There are countless American-based organizations that promote the purchase of a bicycle to raise money for those who are in need of bikes in developing countries, such as the Kona Africa Bike Project. These programs give bikes to doctors in Africa or students in India. Many Americans donate, but few understand how biking exists socially differently in those countries. Afghan women, for example, have a long history of not being able to take part in athletics. Riding a bicycle is a bold move said Heidi Swift, a freelance writer and photographer, in her blog Grit and Glimmer, which is partially about women in the cycling industry. “They do it as a statement — a very literal statement of freedom,” Swift said. “And now, they propose to do it as a sport.” The hobby that touched me the most is practiced in Afghanistan by women who ride at night, gliding in between dirt roads, avoiding cars and glaring lights. A male relative or coach must accompany them.

Exploration program helpful resource in major decision campus Columnist

There are several ways to approach entering Ohio State as a first-year student enrolled in the University Exploration program, designed for undecided students. One matthew miles approach is to miles.217@osu.edu be comfortable with the prospect of being at one of the largest universities in the nation with nearly unending resources and possibilities. While it can be comforting to know there are hundreds of options, it’s easy to be overwhelmed when presented all of these possibilities in the first semester of college. My exploration survey recitation class, which met for the final time Friday, consisted of a series of activities and exercises that were designed to provide a sense of direction and ultimately move me closer to making a decision. I would definitely say this portion of the class oriented my analytical mind when looking at majors. I learned to how to look at many areas of study and almost immediately register majors as either a possibility or an area outside my interests. This learned skill is especially helpful during the

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lecture portion of the class, which, while recitation has ended, will continue the rest of the semester. Once a week, a representative from a different college presents a brief overview of what majors are offered within their school, what it might be like to declare the major, what career options follow a degree, how to apply for the major and other general information. Here’s where the skills from recitation were personally helpful: I can sit through a presentation and by the end have a developed sense about if the presented majors seem like a fit for me. However, there were several cases when I knew I had no interest in the college that was presenting and it felt like a waste of time. Knowing what I don’t want to study only draws me closer what I want to study, though. As the last recitation class rolled around, what seemed to be a majority of the class had an individual direction and prospect in mind. I am circumstantially still without precise direction in the realm of academic interests, but I have certainly narrowed down the wide horizon of options. This is something I am comfortable with, and I am notably more comfortable with my academic future than the first day of survey class. And with many more presentations left in the lecture portion of the class, I can only predict that I will have a more precise direction in the next few weeks. The exploration experience was (and still is) a process consisting of funneling and weeding out academic areas that don’t interest me, which I feel is a similar experience for my undecided classmates. The process works, too, especially well when paired with

The members of the recently put together Afghani women’s cycling team are risking everything said Shannon Galpin, who has worked to help the Afghan women’s cycling team through her non-profit Mountain2Mountain. “The cycling team is facing deep seated cultural stigmas that prevent women from riding bikes,” said Galpin in an interview with The Lantern. “It’s considered taboo, and they receive threats and are sometimes targeted when riding.” Biking is a solution that offers renewal for women in Afghanistan. Galpin explained how it is hard because it is an outdoor activity that covers immense areas. “If this was a sport that could be done indoors, like boxing, volleyball, or basketball, it would be much safer and much easier for the girls,” Galpin said. Elaheh Rostami-Povey, writer of “Afghan Women: Identity and Invasion” blamed the war in Afghanistan, which confused women’s duties. “They found their culture under attack,” RostamiPovey said in her book. “What sought to help these women who are thought of as passive victims awaiting liberation was turning their world upside down.” These women are neither damsels in distress, nor are they in need of a feminist movement: they are in need of routine and normality to their lives. That routine could be cycling. A bicycle is so much more than a skeleton of metal and wheels. For women who need a light, cycling is hope. Galpin was named a 2013 adventurer of the year by “National Geographic” for her accomplishments which included becoming the first woman to tackle the Afghan mountains on bike. She was the subject of the award winning documentary film, “MoveShake,” along with being featured on news outlets and magazines.

Poem: Iceland Harrison Lejeune For the Lantern lejeune.8@osu.edu I sit on the beach, Watching the waves roll in. I feel the Earth beneath my feet, And taste the brine in the air. A girl dances in the waters. And I love her. And I am not alone. Her blonde hair glitters like Infinite galaxies.

shelby lum / Photo editor

The Exploration advising office is located at 352 Denney Hall. an adventurous mindset when scheduling classes. An exploration adviser might suggest students try out different areas of study while fulfilling general education requirements, and I’d chime in right with them. While I can’t say I was handed a shimmering major on a silver platter, I can say the program has helped me analyze and discern my inner interests and apply them when exploring majors and discovering what to study.

Swirling through the Emptiness of space An endless void, I am her Beloved. My Beloved is mine. And we are existent. The sea crashes around her. Wet and salty, Like the tears on my cheeks, When I awake.

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Monday October 28, 2013


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ADMINISTRATOR/INSTRUCTORS NEEDED for childcare $10-$12/hour center. Immediate start availTraining provided Email DaydreamsLC@ P/T work based on school able. yahoo.com with questions & schedule resume. Apply online www.SpinCols.com CHILDREN AND Adults with Disabilities In Need of Help STRATEGIC RESEARCH Group Care Providers and ABA Therais looking for a full-time (40 hours pists are wanted to work with per week) Research Associate. children/ young adults with disDuties will include management abilities in a family home setof large databases, working with ting or supported living setting. data codebooks, data entry of Extensive training is provided. survey results, coding of survey This job is meaningful, allows responses, assisting with report you to learn intensively and can formatting and preparation, and accommodate your class schedother duties as assigned. Quali- ule. Those in all related ďŹ elds, ďŹ ed candidates will be highly with ABA interest, or who have a proďŹ cient in MS Word and Excel heart for these missions please and have at least some experi- apply. Competitive wages and ence with data management. beneďŹ ts. For more informaCandidate must also be ex- tion, call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614) tremely detail oriented. Experi- 475-5305 or visit us at www. ence with an analysis software LIFE-INC.NET program (SPSS preferred) is a bonus. Background in social science research methods pre- COUPLE LOOKING for ferred. Please send resume to: babysitter for weekly date night. Strategic Research Group, Attn: Live in Grandview(close to Human Resources, 995 Goodale campus!) and have 5 year old Blvd., Columbus, OH 43212 or girl. Previous experience sitting fax to: 614-220-8845. and majoring in early childhood development preferred. Please STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid email jjbates55@gmail.com if Survey Takers needed in Colum- you are interested! bus. 100% free to join. Click on DUBLIN TEEN needs assissurveys. tance afterschool and weekends for social outings and self-help TELEPHONE INTERVIEW- skills. He lives with Autism ERS wanted immediately to and loves swimming and being conduct interviews for research outside. Great family with exďŹ rm. No experience necessary. ible scheduling for an energetic Great part-time job for students. and motivated college worker. Evening and daytime shifts Please call 614-216-9531 to available. Apply in person at: learn more! Strategic Research Group, 995 HIRING PART-time to work with Goodale Blvd., 2nd oor. school aged children at child care center in Hilliard. Hours are 6-9 and/or 3-6 Monday through Friday. Must be able to pass criminal background check and have clean driving record. Experience working with children preferred. Email resume to joylandofhilliard@att.net

THIRD & Hollywood is NOW HIRING Service & Culinary Team Members! Our successful restaurant in Grandview strives to bring together caring and intelligent people who love food and enjoy serving others. Expect a fast paced, high volume, clean and extremely professional restaurant. You will love being a part of a unique company that is locally owned, growing quickly, and absolutely committed to excellence. Please apply in person Monday Friday between 2:00 & 4:00 PM. 1433 West Third Avenue www.thirdandhollywood.com

TUTOR/BABYSITTER NEEDED IN BEXLEY. Looking for a college student. (sophomore/junior is preferred). For middle school/high school aged kids in a nice central Bexley home for a very fast pace and highly active family. very We look forward to meeting you! exible hrs and a pleasant, fun, fast paced environment with State-of-the-Art equipment and designated media in VALETS Driven. Service oriented. A study rooms. Primary activities would include light tutoring, help team player. Reliable. around the house and help out Professional. Friendly. with organizing kids schedules. Does this sound like you? The kids are active in sports Currently hiring FT/PT Valets and other afterschool activities. for various shifts throughout $10+/hr depending on experience. References and good Columbus. driving record required. Nursing www.ParkingSolutionsInc.com or Early education backgrounds are a plus. please send resume VETERINARY RECEPTIONIST to info@homteamproperties.net needed for busy walk-in clinic. M-F 3pm to 8pm Experience preferred. Please fax resume to Dr Brown 457-4646.

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WANTED SINGERS AND MUSICIANS

To Produce and Perform Gigs On Campus and Commercials for www.collegebargain.com If You Are Successful You Can Become A Millionaire! Please send your Resume to Info@collegebargain.net

BONJOUR OSU! La Chatelaine French Bakery & Bistro Restaurants are now hiring morning A.M. Counter Help (7 a.m. to 3 p.m.)and Dinner Servers (4 p.m. to 10 p.m.) We are looking for enthusiastic, personable, reliable & happy individuals who have strong work ethics & some serving experience. We are a family-owned business with 3 locations around Columbus. Long term employment preferred. Please visit one of our locations for a application & introduce yourself to the manager on duty. Upper Arlington 1550 W. Lane Avenue Worthington 627 High Street Dublin 65 W. Bridge Street Merci!

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Typing Services

LABORATORY INTERNSHIP available immediately. Please visit our website at http://www.toxassociates.com and click on the link of job postings/internships for more information.

NEED AN experienced typist, proofreader, editor, and/ or transcriptionist? Call Donna @937-767-8622. Excellent references. Reasonable rates.

Help Help Wanted Education Tutors YOUTH WORKER Seeking PT (15 hrs/wk) professional to work with elementary school-age youth in afterschool program. Exp. in program planning and working with a team required. Excellent organizational and communication skills needed; and must have an understanding of the developmental needs of this age group. Send resume w/cover letter via Fax: 614-252-9164 or Email: proberts@cchouse.org EOE

For Sale Miscellaneous

CAFE COURIER Delivery Service hiring part time evening delivery drivers. Make $12-15 / hr. Call 457-3900 if interested. BOOKS: AFTER catastrophic Signing Bonus if you stay past biological warfare, we may not agree on what nature is or what 60 days. civilization is. ‘Wilderness,’ a science ďŹ ction novel, is by Alan Kovski. Available via Amazon. com

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ENTRY LEVEL Duties include -Managing FOH operations -Creating front of house motivation -Training FOH staff Seeking highly motivated individuals. Very strong customer service and communication skills. Experience requirements HIRING RESPONSIBLE and -Restaurant management reliable babysitters! Make your -Upscale dining own schedule, $9-$12/hr. Visit -Flexible schedule preferredsittingsolutions.com to read FAQs and to apply. MOZART’S CAFE - Looking for part- time/full-time reliable counter help, server help, kitchen help, pastry chef. 4784 N. High Street. Email resume to IS HIRING for multiple after info@mozartscafe.com school nanny positions. This is your chance to extend your SERVERS. COOKS and BusColumbus family while doing person needed at Figlio, an upgood. A nanny position is also scale but casual wood ďŹ red piza great resume builder. Candi- za restaurant close to campus. dates should have prior child- Part-time. Great Flexibility. Fun care experience along with reli- work environment. Will train. able transportation. Pay based Apply in person at 1369 Grandon experience. Apply online at view Ave or 3712 Riverside Dr. collegenannieandtutors.com/ join or call 614-761-3060 for more information.

Compensation: Service Team: $19-$23/Hour + Paid Vacations Culinary Team: Hourly wage based on experience + Paid Vacations

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

CAREER COLLEGE near Easton seeking positive, motivated and reliable individuals to contact prospective students to schedule college visits. $13/hr. 20-25 hours per week preferred Flexible hours available Monday through Thursday 2:30-9pm and Friday 2-6pm Previous sales and/or Telemarketing experience required.

Tutoring Services

PHYSICS AND Chemistry Tutor here to help, experienced in tutoring individually or in a group, $50 for two hours, call Bill at 419-908-2699.

Business Opportunities

IF WE could show you how to turn less than $350 into $8,000 a month would you be interested? Just Push Play www.Eva333.com Eva Baez 310-221-0210

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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 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. BahamaSun.com 800-867-5018

General Services

PREGNANT LOOKING for Help? Make an adoption plan with us, Mike and Connie. See our family proďŹ le at www.parentproďŹ les. com/proďŹ les/db29290.html and/ or call Beacon House Adoption at 1-888-987-6300 for help. Attorney #LA 16976.

Announcements/ Notice

ART CONTEST $800.00 in cash and merit based awards. Any art entered will be exhibited on our global site, you can sell your artwork. http://www. GALLERYHOP.COM/art-register

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Automotive Services TOM & Jerry’s - a Full Service Auto Repair Shop. 1701 Kenny Rd. 488-8507. Take $20 off any purchase of $100 or more. Or visit: www.tomandjerrysauto.com

Interested candidates should call: 614-416-6233 Ext. 1 EARN CASH by ordering shirts for your chapter with College Hill. Become a campus Rep today! Contact Ryan at 425-478-7439

ResumĂŠ Services

EMERGENCY OVERNIGHT!!! RESUMES BY MORNING!!! 614-440-7416. Last minute!!! Daytime while you wait: Evenings. Saturdays. PART TIME FEMALE TELEMARKETER, 2-3 hours Sundays. Holidays. per day, 4 days/week, exible Writing. Critiquing. Editing. Updating. hours. Pricing negotiable. Contact: Anna Cash only. annapira7983@yahoo.com or Executive portfolios. (614)937-9570 Curriculum vitae. Personal statements. WHITE HOUSE/BLACK Mar- 614-440-7416. ket is looking for FASHION STYLISTS!Join a high perfor- PERSONAL STATEMENTS, mance team of experts at Po- graduate school applications, laris mall.PT hrs.Apply at www. essays,and resumes for Internachicos.com tional Students. Contact Julia at cooper.402@osu.edu

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 LOOKING FOR EMPLOYEES? Ohio State has 50,000+ students that you can reach. Call (614)292-2031 for more information.

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.

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Crossword Los Angeles Times, Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

See the solution at thelantern.com

Monday October 28, 2013

ACROSS 1 Forget where one put, as keys 7 Pedro’s eye 10 Golf great Ballesteros 14 Crumbly Italian cheese 15 Lao Tzu’s “path� 16 Slangy prefix meaning “ultra� 17 Computer storage medium 19 When repeated, island near Tahiti 20 Male sibs 21 Kadett automaker 22 Apple music players 23 Vintner’s prefix 24 Quick-on-the-uptake type, in slang 26 Athenian walkway 28 Otherwise 29 Persian rulers 31 Irene of “Fame� 33 Used-up pencils 37 Carton-cushioning unit 40 Latin being 41 Latin love word 42 Muslim pilgrim’s destination 43 Tombstone lawman Wyatt 45 Mischievous trick 46 Showy authority figure 51 Facebook notes, briefly 54 Put back to zero 55 Orator’s place

56 Vivacity 57 Fitzgerald of jazz 58 Tense pre-deadline period ... or when to eat the ends of 17-, 24-, 37- and 46-Across? 60 Bedframe part 61 Notes after dos 62 Pop singer Spector who fronted a ‘60s girl group named for her 63 Alley prowlers 64 Function 65 Chuck who broke the sound barrier DOWN 1 Up-tempo Caribbean dance 2 River of Grenoble 3 Kids’ imitation game 4 Vietnam neighbor 5 Part of USDA: Abbr. 6 Multiple Grammywinning cellist 7 Catchall option in a survey question 8 They’re related to the severity of the crimes 9 Caveman Alley 10 Summoned as a witness 11 Novel on a small screen, perhaps 12 “Falstaff� was his last opera 13 Wipe clean 18 Tax pro: Abbr. 22 Cyclades island 24 Nothing to write home about

25 Applaud 27 Feats like the Yankees’ 1998, ‘99 and 2000 World Series wins 29 Opposite of NNW 30 6’3�, 5’4�, etc.: Abbr. 31 Close associates 32 Roadside assistance org. 34 Preparing to use, as a hose 35 Tampa Bay NFLer 36 RR stop 38 Jamie of “M*A*S*H� 39 Arabian leader 44 Play a part 45 Discern 46 Take by force 47 “Is anybody here?� 48 Quran religion 49 Underlying reason 50 Relatives 52 Mrs. Eisenhower 53 Snide smile 56 Sicilian volcano 58 French vineyard 59 Earth chopper

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sports OSU men’s soccer wins second straight, tops CSU 1-0 Dan hessler Lantern reporter hessler.31@osu.edu After going nine straight matches without a win, seven of which were coincidentally without a goal, the Ohio State men’s soccer team (4-6-5, 0-2-2) is now riding a two-game winning streak following a 1-0 victory over the Cleveland State Vikings. With a second half goal by freshman forward Danny Jensen, OSU now has five goals in its last two matches and has won backto-back matches for the first time all season. Buckeye coach John Bluem said despite a poor first half, the team stuck with it and earned a big win Sunday. “We made the one change putting Jensen up top and bringing (junior forward) Kenny Cunningham into midfield and Danny ended up getting the goal,” he said. “A little different look there and something as little as that maybe changed it for us. They had a much more difficult time dealing with Danny than they did Kenny and that’s just how games go sometimes.” Bluem said the team’s goal moving forward is to try and be at its best heading into the Big Ten Tournament. “We’re experimenting. We’ve been forced to change our defense around a little bit and that’s worked out all right … and we’re finding that we can score goals,” he said. “(We have) a little bit of confidence, we now have a win streak for the first time this season, so I’m just happy for the guys,” Jensen’s goal came when he connected with junior midfielder Ryan Ivancic’s cross to break the deadlock.

Offensive Line from 1B Miller said the offensive line was “aggressive throughout the week of practice,” and offensive line coach Ed Warinner said the way OSU’s offensive linemen have practiced has led to their success this season. “When you practice the same way — high level — your fundamentals get better, your technique, your understanding and just the whole cohesiveness up front,” Warinner said. Through its first eight games, the OSU offense ranks eighth in the Football Bowl Subdivision in total offense with an average of 517.3 yards per game and fifth nationally with a average 47.3 points scored per game. That offensive success has been a team effort, Warinner said. “(The offense) has the ability to horizontally stretch the field in the run game, and we do it in the pass game, and then vertically stretch you and so we’re putting defenses in a bind,” Warinner said. “They don’t know exactly where to try to load their defense. When you have good players at a lot of positions playing at a high level, which we do right now at receiver, quarterback, running back, O-line, tight end … we can be explosive. We are an explosive outfit right now.” The OSU rushing offense ranks ninth nationally with an average of 295.6 rushing yards per game. Miller said the offensive line’s ability to block on the perimeter has played a key role in OSU’s success running the ball, much like Hall did on a Miller scramble early in the game where he leveled a Penn State defender. “Getting guys the ball on the outside frees up the inside,” Miller said.

Jensen, who scored his second goal of the season, said after the match the shot was not a difficult one thanks to the help of his teammates. “Basically, I saw the ball going into an area where there’s obviously going to be a cross,” he said. “Ivancic happened to put a ball right on my head and it was a pretty easy goal. I was inside the six yard box and you just have to put those away to win the game, I’m happy it happened. I’m happy it helped our team win, we needed that win, and overall a great play on that.” Sunday‘s match was almost dead-even as OSU outshot CSU 9-8, while the Vikings held the advantage in corners 5-4. Redshirt-junior goalkeeper Alex Ivanov earned his seventh shutout in 2013 and recorded three saves on the day, putting his season total at 90. Sophomore midfielder Zach Mason said the consecutive wins were a “long time coming” and the team will be able to use them as motivation to finish the season strong. “We’re just going to try and keep the winning streak going all the way through the postseason and hopefully get a win in the Big Ten tournament, right out of the gate,” Mason said. He also mentioned that having the tournament at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium will be a big advantage and the Buckeyes plan to “defend it with (their) hearts.” The Buckeyes have five days off until they are scheduled to resume Big Ten play when No. 13 Penn State travels to Columbus Saturday. The game is set to begin at 7 p.m. Mark Batke / Lantern photographer

Freshman forward Danny Jensen (9) takes a shot during a match against Cleveland State Oct. 27 at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium. OSU won, 1-0.

Warinner said OSU’s success as a rushing offense has been a “credit to a lot of people.” “Running the football is important to us as a program, as a team,” Warinner said. “So that makes it important to the running backs, the O-line and all perimeter guys as well. And then we have the ability to run the ball outside as well as inside and we’re throwing the ball well so we’re just keeping people off-balance.” Norwell said the offensive linemen have “great chemistry” with one another. “We’re all on the same page,” Norwell said. “Coach Meyer knows how many reps we need to get in practice, and we just went hard every play.” One reason for that chemistry might be the experience the offensive linemen have with playing with one another. Mewhort and Norwell are both third-year starters on the offensive line. Hall came into the season with 18 career starts, while Linsley is also a second-year starter. Warinner said he thinks the experience of the offensive line has helped that unit play as well as they have this season. “That it’s helped us a lot, because we can lean on those guys when we need to and they can be productive when they need to,” Warinner said. Warinner said Decker, the only new starter on the offensive line, has fit in well. “His talent level is really high,” Warinner said. “Experience and confidence were the two things he lacked. Now that he’s played eight games

and played well these last three or four games, his confidence level is high along with talent level.” Mewhort, Norwell, Linsley, Hall and Decker have each started all eight games for the Buckeyes this season, but with the result of Saturday’s game well in hand by the middle of the third quarter, OSU was able to get playing time for many of its backups, including the offensive line. Warinner said there were 11 offensive linemen in total who received playing time for the OSU offense Saturday. Current OSU coaches and players are not the only Buckeyes impressed by the play of OSU’s offensive line this season. Orlando Pace, who played left tackle at OSU from 1994-96 and was honored on the field during Saturday’s game for being selected to the College Football Hall of Fame, said the OSU offensive line plays “really well together as a unit.” “Those guys, they do a great job in protecting Braxton, and they run the ball well,” Pace said at halftime Saturday. Pace said he expects Mewhort to follow in his footsteps from being an OSU left tackle to playing in the NFL, in which Pace played for 13 seasons. “You’re definitely going to see him play on Sundays,” Pace said. “He moves well, footwork and hand placement and all those things, I think he’ll be fine.” OSU will be looking for another impressive effort from its offensive line when it plays Purdue (1-6, 0-3) Saturday at noon in West Lafayette, Ind.

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