November 26, 2012

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Monday November 26, 2012 year: 132 No. 137

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Undefeated

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OSU senior linebacker Zach Boren (44) stands over Michigan junior quarterback Devin Gardner (12) after making a sack Saturday. OSU won the game 26-21.

Seniors lead Buckeyes to perfect season

Ohio State 26 PAT BRENNAN Sports editor brennan.164@osu.edu

For all intents and purposes, the 2012 Ohio State football senior class is gone, never to wear scarlet and gray in meaningful competition again. “It’s almost like you’re losing some of your children when they go away to college,� said first-year OSU coach Urban Meyer after the team’s season-ending win against Michigan on Saturday. “Our house is going to be empty.� Gone? Perhaps, but not forgotten. After all, it was their contributions that made the team’s run at perfection a possibility. Behind the strength of many of those 21 departing seniors, the No. 4-ranked Buckeyes (12-0, 8-0 Big Ten) clinched the sixth undefeated and untied season in program history and the first since 2002 Saturday with a 26-21 win against archrival Michigan (8-4, 6-2 Big Ten) at Ohio Stadium. The 109th edition of The Game saw OSU, the Big Ten’s Leaders Division champions, claim its 44th win against the Wolverines. UM, eliminated from Big Ten title contention after Nebraska beat Iowa on Friday, still owns the all-time series advantage with a 58-44-6 record. With Saturday being the final game of the season due to the NCAAimposed postseason ban, one thing was evident within minutes of the final whistle following victory against UM — no more seniors.

Michigan 21

Meyer handed out several “thank you’s� during his postgame remarks, but the biggest thank you went out to those whose eligibility is up, players like Zach Boren, Etienne Sabino and John Simon. Theirs was an effort worthy of remembrance, Meyer said, and he plans to ensure that their memory doesn’t fade away. “I’m going to see to it when you walk into that Woody Hayes (Athletic Center) this team will never be forgotten, because they deserve that,� he said. It’s not hard to imagine why Meyer feels so strongly. Boren switched positions midseason, jumping from offense to defense when he left the fullback position to join a depleted line backing corps. Boren hadn’t played linebacker since high school but, in just six games, he tallied 50 tackles, including a team-high nine in the win against UM. One of those tackles was a bone-jarring sack of Wolverines junior quarterback Devin Gardner. Boren stood above Gardner after the hit, shouting and rattling his face mask just above Gardner’s. Sabino broke his leg during OSU’s Oct. 6 win against Nebraska but returned in time to join the team for its divisional-clinching win against Wisconsin on Nov. 17, as well as the game against the Wolverines. The redshirt senior linebacker said the 2012 season was indeed a dream. “I wouldn’t want it to end any other way,� he said. And there was Simon, a defensive end and the team’s emotional leader throughout the perfect campaign. Simon missed Saturday’s

continued as Football on 3A

ANDREW HOLLERAN / Photo editor

OSU coach Urban Meyer salutes senior defensive end John Simon (54) during the Senior Day ceremony Saturday. OSU beat Michigan 26-21, but Simon missed the game with a leg injury.

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campus Black Friday underwhelming for some campus-area stores kayla byler Lantern reporter byler.18@osu.edu

Courtesy of MCT

Shoppers line up for the doorbuster deals at JC Penney before the 6 a.m. opening on Nov. 23 at Coastal Grand Mall in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

While Black Friday usually comes with visions of long lines and customers driven by desperation fighting each other for discount TVs, some campus-area stores experienced less than anticipated sales. “It was pretty calm in there,” said Claire Meeks, a fourth-year in anthropology, after shopping at Target in the Lennox Town Center at 777 Kinnear Road just before noon on Friday. Black Friday is a shopping trip the day after Thanksgiving that for many marks the start of the Christmas season. The day is noted for lower prices on desirable products and extended store hours that have shoppers out and spending money before sunrise. Pete Bucher, a fourth-year in environmental policy, agreed. Bucher said he was only there buying groceries and expected it to be a bit crazier. Business at Urban Outfitters, located at 1782 North High Street, was “a little weaker than we expected,” said Justin Ryan, women’s accessories manager. Ryan said this was partially due to the large number of students that left campus for Thanksgiving.

Ryan said he thought more students went home for the holiday because they had been away from home since August because classes started earlier this year. “I think we saw a difference in traffic because of that,” he said. Meeks said she also went to stores farther from campus that were busier. “I went to Macy’s at midnight and there was a bit of a line,” she said. “I went to Kohl’s, and Kohl’s was crazy.” Meeks said the large crowds prevented her from buying items at certain stores. “I didn’t get anything at Kohl’s because I didn’t want to wait in line to check out,” she said. Despite slow sales early on Friday, the Ohio State football game against Michigan possibly contributed to higher sales later in the afternoon on Friday and on Saturday, said Ashley Strausbaugh, store manager for Pitaya, a women’s clothing store located at 1618 North High Street. People coming into Columbus for football games always boost business, she said, and others agreed. “All of the games bring in additional business because of more people roaming around but especially the Michigan game,” said Ian Craig, sales associate at Urban Outfitters. Urban Outfitters offered 50 percent off all sale items and brought out additional merchandise on Friday. Pitaya offered 30 percent off all sale items.

Board member to use Wexner Center to ‘globally link’ Ohio liz young Lantern reporter young.1693@osu.edu One of the new members of the Wexner Center Foundation Board didn’t follow the typical path of her college major after graduating. Dr. Janet Reid earned a Ph.D. in chemistry, but after working at Procter and Gamble Co. for several years in chemistry, she transitioned to working in the consumer research department. She then went on to become P&G’s brand manager, a position usually reserved for those trained in business, Reid said. P&G operates popular household, beauty and grooming brands including CoverGirl, Crest, Gillette, Downy and Charmin. And her journey didn’t stop there. Reid left and started her own company, Global Lead, which merged with another company in 2010 to become Global Novations, a global management consulting firm that “helps the world’s leading organizations unleash the capacity of their employees,” according to its website. Global Novations was sold in September to Korn/Ferry International, which offers leadership recruitment and retention consulting services, for an undisclosed amount. On Oct. 30, Reid was appointed to the Wexner Center Foundation Board. Adam Flatto, president of The Georgetown Company, a real-estate investment and development company in New York City and Jeni Britton Bauer, founder and creative director of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams, were appointed to the board on the same day. Reid, a resident of Cincinnati, has won the Leading Women’s Entrepreneur Award, was named one of Cincinnati Enquirer Women of the Year in 1996 and was honored with the P&G Product Development’s Pioneering Black Woman Award. But Reid said she thinks her most important accomplishment is her view of the world. “I was fortunate to be raised by parents who exposed me to the world. World affairs, people around the world, world cultures, etc.,” Reid said.

“So I think one of the greatest accomplishments I’ve had is to be able to bring more of a global viewpoint to the company that I created, to Ohio State, to … Xavier University.” Reid has been on the OSU Board of Trustees since 2009, according to the Board website. She is also a trustee of Xavier University in Cincinnati. Reid is filling the role of liaison between OSU’s Board and the Wexner Center Foundation Board, a position that was held by Robert Schottenstein. He left the Wexner Center board after more than five years and currently serves as OSU Board chairman. Reid had no direct ties with OSU before being appointed to the Board. “Once I got appointed, my son-in-law had to coach me on football,” Reid laughed. “I really had no association with Ohio State. However, I’ve had a long affiliation with higher education, so I had been on Xavier’s board for a long time. Prior to that I had been on the board of the University of (Cincinnati).” Reid said her father, Broadus Butler, was the president of Dillard University, a historically black university in New Orleans, so she grew up on a college campus. One of Reid’s goals in her new role on the Wexner board is to draw international attention to the Wexner Center. “I probably will have an interest in … having the Wexner Center’s profile raised globally so more people will know about it. And also, even though the Wexner Center’s artists really do come from all over the world, I would like to work to have an even greater global array of artists and exhibits and so forth,” Reid said. “Because I think in doing that work … that will bode well in having the state of Ohio become even more globally linked than it is.” Some employees of the Wexner Center said they have been impressed by Reid’s accomplishments. “One of the pieces of her resume that really struck me was her international experience,” said Karen Simonian, directory of media and public relations for the Wexner Center. “(Her appointment is) really going to bring an extra level of expertise.”

Courtesy of Public Domain

The OSU Wexner Center for the Arts located at 1871 North High Street. Reid was appointed by OSU President E. Gordon Gee, and Simonian said she trusts his judgement. Some other Wexner Center board members feel that Reid will bring great experience to the table. “Janet has been a longtime patron and advocate of the arts center who brings savvy leadership, management and international experience,” said Leslie Wexner, chairman and CEO of Limited Brands and president of the Wexner Center board, in a university press release. The Wexner Center Foundation is a private partner of OSU’s Board of Trustees created to represent the interests of the Wexner Center for the Arts, according to a university press release. OSU does not pay its trustees, Simonian said.

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Janet Reid was appointed to the OSU Wexner Center Foundation Board last month.

Student organization aims to unite student activists for collective goal jeremy meehan Lantern reporter meehan.47@osu.edu College campuses have long been a cradle for student activism, and Ohio State is no exception. OSU is home to a diverse community which seeks to address a wide range of issues, from women’s rights to protesting sweatshop labor. One organization, the Ohio Student Association, is attempting to harness the power of these eclectic groups in order to work on what it sees as common goals. “The student org model keeps people really separate a lot of the times,” said Molly Shack, a member of OSA who graduated in June with degrees in Spanish and international studies. “A lot of times there is a very clear intersection between somebody who is working on anti-racist work and somebody who is working on labor work, so part of it is giving the time for students to get to know one another and figure out who is there and present and then figuring out how we can escalate collectively.” One of the primary goals of the organization is to fight for greater public funding for Ohio’s colleges. “Something that we really want to focus on is getting Ohio to put more money to public education,” said Lainie Rini, a secondyear in social work and an OSA member. “We think that education should be something that is a right for everyone.” The organization has adopted a red square, pinned on the chest, as the symbol of this campaign. “It’s a symbol that we are squarely in the red,” Rini said. “Meaning we are all squarely in debt right now.” The symbol was originally used by students who successfully protested tuition hikes in Quebec. OSA members hope to use it in a similar fashion to demonstrate just how pervasive debt is among students here.

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“We go about our day without really acknowledging the fact that we have debt. We’re able to get through school without paying it off, then all of a sudden you get dumped in the real world and owe this huge sum of money,” Shack said. “Part of it is an external way of showing that we really are all in this together.” Virginia Layton, university director and bursar of OSU’s Office of Financial Services, told The Lantern about 40 percent of OSU students depend on student loans to help cover the costs of education earlier this year. Omar Gowayed, a third-year in materials science and engineering, said he believes in the importance of this goal and the effectiveness of student activism. “When students have power, when students are capable of making decisions in government and in their universities as well, the system becomes a lot better,” he said. Gowayed said his Egyptian heritage makes him acutely aware of how powerful student movements can be. His sister, Heba, snuck into Egypt to join the protests that eventually led to the resignation of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Those protests were a part of what came to be known as the Arab Spring, which peaked in early 2011 and instituted a string of uprisings across Northern Africa and the Middle East that overthrew several oppressive rulers. The protests are known for being driven by young people and social media. For Gowayed, activism is an important part of life. “I was an activist before I was a college student, I’m an activist while I’m a college student, and from my family history and for me, I will be an activist after I’m a college student,” Gowayed said. OSA has been an organization since January and it participants include members of Stand Your Ground, an anti-racism group, Buckeyes for Obama, College Democrats, Ohio Student Environmental Coalition, United Students Against Sweatshops and The Pulse, a progressive OSU newspaper, as well as others.

I cr ie d a t th e st a d iu m w h en O S U b ea t M ic h ig a n .

I fa n ta s iz e th a t U rb a n M e y e r is m y dad.

Players and Urban Meyer: ANDREW HOLLERAN / Photo editor iPhones: Courtesy of MCT Photo illustration by CHRISTOPHER BRAUN / Design editor

Secrets shared through new app hannah brokenshire Lantern reporter brokenshire.2@osu.edu

Anonymity and social media might seem an unlikely pair, but a new iPhone application aims to combine the two. Whisper is a new free app that allows its users to share secrets anonymously and add a little creativity into the mix. The first step to posting secrets is to choose a picture, and then filters can be added to customize the image. The next step is to add a message and customize the font, and then the “whisper” can be shared. “We wanted to be able to give people a way to express things in a creative way, to convey something that’s more of a feeling,” said Michael Heyward, Whisper co-founder from Santa Monica, Calif.

continued as Secrets on 3A Monday November 26, 2012


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OSU sophomore quarterback Braxton Miller (5) runs through the line of scrimmage Saturday against Michigan. OSU won the game 26-21 to finish the season with a 12-0 record.

Football from 1A Senior Day activities, as well as the game itself, with a right knee injured sustained one week prior against Wisconsin. “John Simon — the heart and soul of who we are as the 2012 football team,” Meyer said. Simon was not made available for comment following the game. There were other major contributors from the senior class, relatively unheralded compared to Boren, Sabino and Simon, but whose contributions likely went just as far in helping the team achieve an undefeated season. OSU redshirt senior punter Ben Buchanan walked off the Ohio Stadium field for the final time at peace with what he gave to the program. His final play was a 41-yard punt that pinned UM on its 8-yard line with less than 10 minutes to play in the game. Given the moment, Buchanan said, the punt was as good as it gets. “I think this team will be remembered as a very unselfish team, a team that really had to come together with some tough circumstances, there’s no doubting that,” Buchanan said. “I was proud of the way these guys just rallied and, they did, we just refused to lose and to be a senior on this team was truly on honor.” Sensing that he wouldn’t fit in Meyer’s offensive system, OSU senior Reid Fragel went to his thennewly hired coach and volunteered to switch from tight end to right tackle. For his selfless act, Fragel was plunged into a preseason battle for playing time with freshman Taylor Decker, which Fragel later won. Months later, Fragel was able to speak to his teammates in the locker room following the seasonending win against the Wolverines. He tried to speak his mind on the subject of this past season, but the words never came. “I wanted to thank (my teammates) and, really, tell them how I feel about this whole year, but it’s hard to put words to this season we’ve had,” Fragel said. “It’s something out of a movie … Just to see us come out 12-0, beating Michigan, that’s something I couldn’t have wrote up before the game.” As Buchanan and his teammates enjoyed the climactic day of the season, OSU football converged with its troubled past as former coach Jim Tressel, the man responsible for the 2012 team’s postseason ban, returned. Once shamed by the “Tattoo-Gate” scandal in which he knowingly fielded a team of ineligible players during the 2010 season, Tressel was hoisted onto the shoulders of players from his 2002 national championship team, which was honored for the 10-year reunion of its great feat between the first and second quarters. But with Tressel came memories of his unceremonious exit from the university — he was forced to resign in May 2011 — as well as the Buckeyes’ agonizing 2011 campaign in which they posted a 6-7 record. But the loudest cheers during Saturday’s short, in-game ceremony for the 2002 team came during the moments that featured Tressel, the man that recruited

Secrets from 2A

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Monday November 26, 2012

Since the the app’s launch this summer, it has grown to 100,000 users mainly on college campuses, like Ohio State. “I think it’s a great spin off of PostSecret,” said Chelsea Moherman, a third-year in pharmaceutical sciences and Whisper user. PostSecret is a community art project where people mail in their secrets anonymously, which are then posted on a website. PostSecret used to have a iPhone app, however founder Frank Warren shut it down in early 2012 after only a few months of operation due to threatening and pornographic content. “College students have a lot going on and they need a place where they can tell their secrets without judgment,” Moherman said. “The support really makes me feel better about what I’m going through.” Facebook, with more than 1 billion users, and Twitter lead in social media, but for some students, Whisper has been added to the mix. However, unlike other networks, Heyward said he hopes the app will promote honesty. “When you look at Facebook, Twitter, Instagram — it’s so ego-based, everyone is showing the ‘best’ image of themselves,” Heyward said. Ashley Coffey, a third-year in radiation therapy and campus manager for the Whisper on Ohio State Facebook page, said the app helps her feel more connected to the people around her. “You don’t even realize how many secrets, or not even secrets but feelings, you have that you don’t share

ANDREW HOLLERAN / Photo editor

OSU junior safety Christian Bryant (2) tackles Michigan senior quarterback Denard Robinson (16) Saturday. OSU won the game, 26-21. and signed each member of the 2012 senior class. Louder still were the cheers for the current players themselves, now under Meyer’s direction, during actual game action, and particularly when the clock struck “00:00.” Meyer will hold a “season wrap-up” press conference on Monday, according to an OSU athletics release. The Buckeyes will then turn the page on the 2012 season and set their sights on 2013. “After our team meeting on Tuesday, we start a new journey,” Meyer said. The strong foundation that has been laid at OSU exists because of the 21 dedicated Buckeyes that hung up their pads and cleats for the final time on Saturday. For those seniors who won’t rejoin the Scarlet and Gray in pursuit of championship glory, their last gasp as active members of the Buckeye Brotherhood couldn’t have been sweeter. “It’s unbelievable, man, I couldn’t ask for anything more other than a chance to play a couple more weeks,” said OSU redshirt senior defensive lineman Nathan Williams. “This is how the 2012 team is going to be remembered by, you know, going undefeated … going 12-0 and beating Michigan at home. I really wouldn’t want to go out any other way than that.”

with other people until you get on this,” Coffey said. The Facebook page is a collection of whispers that have gained popularity within the app, as well as whispers shared on campus. Pages exist on other campuses including Penn State University and University of Michigan. “I get updates to my phone when someone has whispered in my area (within five miles) and I go through and pick out a few that would be interesting to students,” Coffey said. The most popular Whisper topics at OSU are relationships, sex and school-related frustrations. “Drinking and drugs too. It’s definitely a collegestudent based community,” Coffey said. The Whisper app also has a Twitter account and online blog and despite its relatively new status, the OSU Facebook page had nearly 1,000 likes Monday. “We had a contest between the campus managers on Monday (Nov. 13) to see who had the most downloads, and we, Ohio State, won. We had 82 downloads in one day,” Coffey said. Though the app promotes anonymity, Heyward said in the future Whisper would allow users to connect. “People have posted that they have met friends through posting secrets,” Coffey said, but added she has yet to hear of that happening at OSU. Though connecting would be optional, some students have mixed feelings. “I would probably be apprehensive at first,” Moherman said. “But meeting publicly at the school is something I would do. Maybe you could even make a friend.”

3A


studentvoice

Andrew Holleran / Photo editor

The Ohio Stadium crowd storms the field in the Horseshoe after OSU beat Michigan, 26-21, Nov. 26, and completed its season with an undefeated 12-0.

Buckeye perfection brings inevitable pride Asst. Arts Editor

caitlin essig essig.21@osu.edu

There are moments at Ohio State that are paramount to being a Buckeye. There’s the visit that first makes the campus feel like home. During Welcome Week, walking into the Schottenstein Center for Convocation with your class of thousands is an unparalleled experience. One night in November, there’s the tradition of duct-taping flip flops to your feet, decking yourself out in scarlet and gray and taking an icy plunge into Mirror Lake in the name of beating that team up north.

So many OSU traditions stem from what is perhaps our most beloved asset, our football team. Buckeye football compels dads to text their OSU-student daughters “O-H!� every game day. It is what makes even the most sleep-deprived students wake up before 10 a.m. on a Saturday. And perhaps the epitome of celebrating Buckeye football is attending an OSU-Michigan game in the Horseshoe. Saturday was my first experience at The Game. The walk to the stadium was an ongoing banter between Buckeyes and Wolverines, with fans in scarlet and gray leading the majority of the heckling. At kickoff, I participated in the streamer drop from C-deck. As I watched the black and red streamers fall over the bannister, a wave of excitement rushed over me. Cheering on the Buckeyes among thousands of other fans, all passionately aligned in our hatred for the maize and blue, was exhilarating. The

Black Friday ruins holiday lantern Columnist

The fourth Thursday of every November is set aside to make time for family and remember what we as Americans are thankful for. However, the instant the sugar of the second unnecmegan sharp essary piece sharp.309@osu.edu of pumpkin pie goes to our heads, we go mad. Suddenly, it seems like an excellent idea to fight through our fellow Americans in a crowded, chaotic store in order to get the best deals on the hottest holiday items. I had never actually partaken in the tradition of Black Friday shopping because every year friends and family advise against it. “It’s not worth it. Too much stress, not enough savings.� However, I had to try it this year and let me tell you, the experience was the epitome of infuriating pandemonium. My mom and I finished our Thanksgiving festivities and embarked on the experience of the season. We pulled into the parking lot of Target around 8 a.m. I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to encounter every single bad driver on the roads. They must have been too enthralled with the chance to save a few bucks on that new video game to remember they could potentially cause a wreck. After rounding the jam-packed parking lot a few times, someone had gotten in and out of the Target and started backing out of the parking space. Therefore, brake lights, courtesy blinker and Bazinga! A spot was acquired. Once we entered the store, there were makeshift

displays and disorder that would make any obsessive-compulsive cringe. One woman even walked through with her cart stuffed to the brim yelling, “Mayhem! Mayhem!� But where were the sales? I quickly discovered Black Friday might possibly be the market’s attempt to take advantage of the public’s turkey high and get the masses into a store of normally priced items with the promise of a few good, limited-time deals. I mean, who wouldn’t want to wait in checkout lines for hours in order to buy an item with a mediocre discount instead of spending time with their families? After shopping in Target and Walmart, I left the store without buying anything and headache at no additional cost. Black Friday was a peril I am glad I have not had to experience until now. There are thousands of people who fight and push and shove in order to save $10 on the Barbie dollhouse their daughter has been dying for. These people have forgotten to read the small print disclaimer that the sale is also at the cost of their sanity and good sense. Black Friday shoppers are the archetype of hypocrisy. After sitting around the table with their most beloved family and friends and enjoying good food while remembering what they’re thankful for, they decide that the best way to show they are thankful is by turning into selfish beasts with no care for the people around them. All they think about is their urge to buy that iPad — which they had just said they were happy without having a few hours ago — and the cost of shoving an old lady out of the way to get it is not too high. Black Friday ruins Thanksgiving and puts the holiday season off to a bitter, grimacing start. Sure, if you do your research, you can save some money. However, I’d much rather spend a little more to have a relaxing, pleasant holiday shopping experience at a reasonable hour on a day other than Black Friday.

Game took me back to my first OSU game, when I witnessed the entire stadium chant “O-H-I-O,� letter by letter and section by section, wrapping around the Horseshoe with an incredibly powerful sound. There are certain moments when feeling pride in my school is inevitable, and Saturday was one of them. Not all college students have the opportunity to attend a football game at a school where so many eyes are glued to the game. Buckeye football has a sense of importance, and I hope I always get excited to experience the highs and lows of games at the ‘Shoe. As far as being a part of the finale to the 2012 Buckeyes’ perfect season, I will always remember singing “Carmen Ohio� with my arms around my best friends, watching fans flood the turf and singing “We Don’t Give a Damn for the Whole State of Michigan� while taking the endless flights of stairs from C-deck to the ground floor of the Horseshoe.

Palestinian-Israeli conflict is complex, don’t be one-sided in forming opinions letter to the editor The Palestinian-Israeli conflict is immensely complex and protracted and has played out over more than half a century. There have been tragedies and unlawful acts committed by both sides. However, in this country, we are almost exclusively presented with the biased views and opinions of only one side — Israel — while the sayings of the other side is rarely heard, and is generally deemed anti-Semitic propaganda. As students of this great university, we have a duty to learn about all positions on an issue, and then draw well-informed conclusions. The Letter to the Editor that ran in The Lantern on Nov. 19 described the unfortunate suffering of Israeli civilians — in short, three Israeli civilians were killed, and the general populace was terrorized. With that said, the author completely failed to mention the much greater toll on the Palestinian civilians. According to Reuters, at least 101 Palestinians have been killed — over half of them being civilians, and 24 of them children. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and supporters of Israel claim that the Israeli Defense Force has the protection of the Palestinian people in mind, and that it takes each feasible precaution in order to avoid Palestinian civilian casualties. However its actions indicate otherwise. The Human Rights Watch, news organizations and human rights advocates, condemn Israel for using the extremely toxic and illegal white phosphorous — an incendiary weapon that viciously and indiscriminately burns its victims — during its previous clash with Gaza in 2008-2009. It is important to note that

some uses of white phosphorous were banned by Article 1 of Protocol III of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons as well as by the Geneva Conventions. The claim that Israel is merely attempting to defend itself from its belligerent neighbors when it attacks Gaza is laughable. Let us remember that Israel’s conception began with violence and that Israel is built on an apartheid system, where Jews are upper-class residents, and native Palestinians are, at best, second-class citizens. Israel’s interests are clear: to create a single country in the region, and completely crowd out the Palestinians — a marginalized people that Israel has vehemently refused to recognize. Claiming that Israel is defending itself is like claiming that the U.S. government and Andrew Jackson were simply defending themselves when they forced the Cherokee Indians to make the walk from their native Georgia to the destitute plains of Oklahoma in the 1830s. Furthermore, Palestinians in Gaza are living in terrible conditions. Oxfam reported in 2010 that 80 percent of Gazans are dependent on international aid due to the Israeli blockade in place since 2006. The people of Gaza have been unable to obtain materials necessary for living their daily lives and building up their economy. Again, this is a complex conflict, with atrocious actions committed by both entities, but do not let me tell you what to think. Look into both sides of this struggle, and all issues, for that matter, before producing an opinion or conclusion. Abdulrahman Alwattar is an executive board member of the Muslim Students’ Association.

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Monday November 26, 2012


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Monday November 26, 2012

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thelantern www.thelantern.com

TLC clips out time slot for OSU couponer

Weekend Box 6MÄJL

Title

lindsey poole Lantern reporter poole.130@osu.edu

Weekend Gross Weeks

“The Twilight Saga: $43.1M Breaking Dawn Part 2”

1.

$227M

2

2.“Skyfall”

$36M

$221.7M

3

3.“Lincoln”

$25M

$62.2M

3

4.“Rise of the Guardians” $24M

$32.6M

1

5.“Life of Pi”

$30.2M

1

$22M

Source: Box Office Mojo CHRISTOPHER BRAUN / Design editor

the week ahead Monday

For The Kids Benefit 7 p.m. @ Kobo poetry Forum 7 p.m. @ Rumba Cafe writers Group 7 p.m. @ Wild Goose Creative

Cole Ledford started to coupon in an effort to provide some financial relief to his family — his parents lost their jobs due to the recession, and his mother had a second son on the way. The first-year in international business and political science tuned into TLC’s “Extreme Couponing” to brush up on the trade. This week, Ledford is set to share his aptitude to save with others on an episode of “Extreme Couponing” at 10 p.m. Tuesday. The episode will be Ledford’s second appearance on “Extreme Couponing,” as he was first featured in May. “I studied people from the first season and picked up on what they did and what I could do better than them,” he said. “Extreme Couponing” follows shoppers as they use coupons to spend as little money as possible. Since he started couponing about two years ago, Ledford has saved more than $40,000 and about $3,000 since coming to college. The most Ledford has been able to get for free on a single transaction was $1,100 worth of products. During one trip to Wal-Mart, Ledford used so many coupons that he had an overage of about $700 that the store actually had to pay him following his transaction. “When you walk out of the store with money in your pocket, with hundreds of dollars that you didn’t have before just because you used the sales and coupons to your advantage, it’s like winning a game and everyone wants to win that kind of game,” he said. Peggy Barnett, Ledford’s mother, said this game of couponing was something that grew from being unusual to becoming a passion for her son. “It was very strange in the beginning because I’ve used coupons before but nothing to the level he’s taken it to by any means,” Barnett said. “He took it to a level no one expected it to go to but you can tell he’s passionate about it.” He has converted his Baker East dorm room into a storage area, where his closet and drawers hold multiple packs of soap, razors, cereal, toothpaste and laundry detergent. The top of his closet is filled to the ceiling with boxes of potatoes and Ramen Noodles. Next to the door sit stacks of 2-liter soda bottles, all of which he got for free by using coupons. Brian Kovacs, a first-year in business and Ledford’s roommate, said the stockpiles of products

Courtesy of Cole Ledford

Cole Ledford is scheduled to appear on an episode of TLC’s ‘Extreme Couponing’ Nov. 27. and Ledford’s couponing lifestyle took some getting used to. “At first I thought it was a little extreme and I didn’t understand why he does it, but the first week he explained it to me and now it’s just normal,” Kovacs said. “I just have to explain it to people who come into our room and don’t know why there are stacks of things in our room.” A stockpile of products at home helps out Ledford’s family. “We live out of our stockpile and there are still times when I run out of things that we use the most frequently,” Barnett said. “We still have to buy laundry detergent and diapers sometimes when I run out but I will never have to buy toothpaste or deodorant again.” Ledford said he’s coined “If it’s free, it’s for me” as one of his signature sayings when it comes to couponing. His usual grocery trips at home in Lebanon, Ohio, include about 800 to 900 coupons per trip and take about three hours. While at school, Ledford’s trips consist of about 100 coupons

because he does not have a car on campus and walks about a mile to and from the nearest Kroger store. He also enlists the help of his friends at school when heading out for shopping trips to help carry back the groceries. He said although his friends don’t typically enjoy shopping with him, he tries to make it worth their while with a deal that is hard to resist. “I know my friends hate going to the store with me, but I promised that if they help me, they can take whatever they want from the haul,” Ledford said. Kovacs said this is one of the perks of rooming with Ledford. “It’s pretty nice. Anytime I forgot something I can just go to the stockpile and then I’m set for the next couple of months,” Kovacs said. With so many products taking up his closet space, Ledford lets his friends and floormates use his closet as their own mini grocery store. “If they run out of toothpaste or something, they know they can always come here for a refill to get them by until their parents come with supplies,” he said. Friends and floormates who take advantage of Ledford’s supply closet will often also donate money to local food banks in appreciation for the products Ledford has in his dorm room. Ledford also donates many of the products he gets from couponing to local food banks or sells them for donations to help benefit the Rebuilding Together Foundation, which repairs homes for low-income families and veterans. Most recently, donations to his closet pantry have gone toward raising money for his team Buckeye Beast as part of the “raise a roof” competition against the University of Michigan, which raised money for Rebuilding Together. “There is always someone (in) need, not just my family or friends,” Ledford said. “I get a lot of things for dirt cheap or free so it’s nice to give away some of the food or raise money for those who need it.” Barnett said her son’s giving attitude makes her more comfortable with his decision to coupon. “I will be OK with him continuing to coupon as long as he doesn’t cross the line of hoarding the products for himself,” Barnett said. “As long as there is a need for the things he gets with coupons and if he shares it with others who also have a need for it.” Ledford is in the midst of planning a seminar to teach other students and guests the tricks of couponing.

Aerosmith ‘Back in the Saddle’ on Columbus stage Aerosmith performed Sunday at Nationwide Arena. Check The Lantern Tuesday for a recap of the concert.

Tuesday

Columbus songwriter sessions 6 p.m. @ Backstage Bistro “a Girl like her” 7 p.m. @ Wexner Center’s Film/Video Theater ami saraiya 8 p.m. @ Kobo

wednesday

Flicks for Free ft. “people like Us” 6 p.m. @ Ohio Union’s US Bank Conference Theater Talent search Finals 7:30 p.m. @ Funny Bone Birdshack 10 p.m. @ Rumba Cafe

Daniel Chi / Asst. photo editor

COMMENTARY

Trekking through Louis C.K.’s dirty stand-up, ‘Hilarious’ TV moments zach low Lantern reporter low.65@osu.edu Over the past few years, Louis C.K. has proven to be not only perhaps the finest comedian working today, but with his show “Louie” on FX, one of the most interesting voices on television. With C.K., whose real name is Louis Szekely, scheduled to perform at a sold-out Ohio Union Activites Board event Saturday at Mershon Auditorium, let’s look back at 10 great bits in the comedian’s history. 1. “Offensive Words,” the opening bit from C.K.’s 2008 album “Chewed Up,” epitomizes one of the comedian’s greatest strengths: riffing on wellcovered material in new ways. There’s a long tradition of commentary on dirty words in stand-up, but C.K. manages to do something truly interesting and truly funny with three of the dirtiest on this track. 2. From the same album, “I Hate Deer” is a standout bit and one of C.K.’s funniest. A simple trip to the store for toilet paper is derailed by an encounter with a deer, and C.K.’s vitriol toward the animal is filthy and hysterical. 3. C.K. had a recurring role during the second season of NBC’s “Parks

and Recreation” as Dave Sanderson, a police officer who has a brief relationship with Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler). The Halloween episode, “Greg Pikitis” is a standout for the duo with C.K.’s deadpan Dave stealing scenes throughout. 4. In 2009, C.K also had a small role in Ricky Gervais’ film, “The Invention of Lying.” The scene at the bar where Gervais’ character repeatedly lies to his trusting friends, among them a doltish C.K., is excellent. 5. The first season of “Louie” in 2010 was a good indication of C.K.’s goals as a director, writer and actor. “God,” a darkly funny episode about a young Louie hearing a graphic description of Christ’s crucifixion by a doctor (the great Tom Noonan), was a season highlight, emphasizing the challenging directions C.K. was willing to push the show. 6. The “Hilarious” 2011 concertfilm, which became C.K.’s Grammy award-winning third album, is filled with some of the comedian’s finest material. “My 3-Year-Old is a 3-YearOld,” a bit about the daily struggles of a father trying to reason with a little girl, finds the weary C.K. at his most desperate and honest best. 7. Season 2 of “Louie” took the promises of the first year and ran. One of the highlight episodes “Country Drive” begins with C.K. and his TV

Courtesy of FX

Louis C.K., who stars as Louie on FX’s ‘Louie,’ is scheduled to visit OSU Dec. 1 in Mershon Auditorium as part of an OUAB-sponsored event. daughters on a beautiful drive to visit a relative, in which the comedian shamelessly sings “Who Are You?” by The Who. After the awkward interaction with his racist great-aunt, the episode ends with a fabulous bit about the risks of reading “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” to his daughters. 8. This year, Season 3 of his series found C.K. continuing to play with the formula he crafted over the first two years. The episode “Dad” features a fabulously weird performance from F. Murray Abraham as his uncle Excelsior and ends with C.K. literally running away and stealing a boat to avoid a meeting with his father. 9. The “Late Show” trilogy of episodes, which concerned C.K.

possibly taking over “The Late Show” from David Letterman, was the clear highlight of the third season of “Louie.” The trio of episodes was filled with cameos from the likes of Chris Rock and Jerry Seinfeld, but it was director David Lynch who stole the show as the super-strange Jack Dall, the man tasked with getting C.K. in shape for the job. C.K.’s writing and directing has never been stronger than it is here. 10. C.K. hosted the Nov. 3 episode of “Saturday Night Live.” The timely sketch in which the comedian lampoons his own show by playing Abraham Lincoln as a bitter comic was a riot. His delivery of the joke about Lincoln’s certainty that he would be murdered was flawless.

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sports

Monday November 26, 2012

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thelantern

www.thelantern.com

But are they No. 1?

MICHAel PeRIATT Managing editor for content periatt.1@osu.edu The normally resolute Urban Meyer paused, carefully considering the ramifications of the next few words to come out of his mouth. His Buckeyes had just dispatched their most hated rival, Michigan, 26-21 in Meyer’s first taste of The Game to complete an undefeated season. No ties, no losses, the Buckeyes record stood at 12-0, but now the coach, staff and players were forced to face what they had been putting off all year. Due to NCAA sanctions dating back to infractions committed under former coach Jim Tressel’s tenure, there would be no postseason for Meyer’s Buckeyes. No conference championship game — the Big Ten Leaders Division would send a 7-5 Wisconsin team in OSU’s place — no BCS bowl bid and certainly no national championship game. The question that had been asked all year could no longer be sidestepped with “We’re just focusing on the next game,” or “We’ll worry about that at the end of the year.” No, the time had finally come for an answer, and even then Meyer didn’t seem completely sure how to phrase his response. If OSU is the last unbeaten team at the end of this season, should Ohio State be No. 1 in the Associated Press Poll? “Just trying to picture the headline here,” Meyer

said after his long pause. “You know, I don’t know enough to — I think we’re at this point — like I said, the quote I’d like out there is I think this team could play and compete with any team in the United States of America as of now. I didn’t say that several weeks ago because we couldn’t. I understand, but I’m not going to get into the what if’s and can’t control what you can’t control.” What Meyer can’t control is the perception of his team and the conference it plays in, and right now that perception is that the Buckeyes had a relatively easy road to an unblemished record — especially with no bowl game to use as a final measuring stick. The Buckeyes are ranked No. 4 in the latest edition of the AP poll, which is a collection of 60 sportswriters from across the country that rate what they believe are the best 25 teams in America. Ranked ahead of the Buckeyes are, in order, Notre Dame, Alabama and Georgia. Out of that group, only Notre Dame is undefeated and Alabama and Georgia each have one loss. Seventeen voters ranked OSU as the No. 2 team in the country, and 24 voters ranked the Buckeyes fifth or worst, with the lowest ranking being No. 12. Pete DiPrimio, an AP voter who covers college football for the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel in Fort Wayne, Ind., ranked the Buckeyes No. 11 in his poll, the second lowest of any voter. “They had a fairly weak non-conference schedule and the Big Ten this season is, maybe, historically weak,” DiPrimio told The Lantern. “Now, if there is a playoff, life is different, but there’s not … Through no fault of their own they

haven’t beaten any top-10 caliber team, not even close.” OSU’s players, who were muzzled from talking about the issue throughout the season, weren’t as hesitant as their coach to express where they think the team fits into the national picture. “Yeah I think we should be No. 1,” said junior running back Carlos Hyde. “I feel like we’re the best team in the nation, so yeah, I feel like we should be No. 1 at the end of the season.” Hyde wasn’t alone in his opinion. Redshirt senior receiver Jake Stoneburner, redshirt senior linebacker Etienne Sabino and junior receiver Corey Brown also said they believed OSU should be at least considered for the No. 1 ranking if they are the only undefeated team at the end of the season. More players probably share that opinion as only about a dozen players were made available to speak to the media after the game. But no matter how the rest of the season pans out, the Buckeyes’ chances at being crowned national champions are slim, maybe impossible. “I just don’t think it’s going to happen,” said Joe Walljasper, the sports editor of the Columbia Daily Tribune in Columbia, Mo., who ranked OSU No. 6 in his rankings. “I think there’s too many teams between them and not enough of the right teams could possibly lose.” Clearly, the players on OSU’s team believe their resume is better than the AP voters think it is. The Buckeyes beat two teams currently ranked in the top 25 this season in No. 14 Nebraska and No. 21 Michigan compared to Georgia, which has beaten one (No. 4 Florida), and Alabama, who’s beaten two

(No. 6 LSU and No. 21 Michigan). Notre Dame has beaten three (No. 8 Stanford, No. 12 Oklahoma and No. 21 Michigan). Not playing a team ranked in the top-10 in or out of conference is something holding some voters back. “It’s not like (OSU is) playing in the WAC or something,” Walljasper said. “Normally between Michigan, Wisconsin, Nebraska you’d have a top-10 team in there and you just don’t this year.” OSU beat seven bowl-eligible teams (including 8-win Penn State) compared to Notre Dame’s nine, Alabama’s five and Georgia’s four. Georgia and Alabama play next Saturday in the SEC Championship with the winner presumably going to play Notre Dame in the BCS Championship Game. Many fans have taken issue with Georgia being ranked ahead of the Buckeyes because the Bulldogs suffered a 28-point loss to South Carolina. “They played an SEC schedule,” DiPrimio said of his reasoning. “An average SEC team this year is stronger than most of the Big Ten. I think Georgia gets credit for its SEC schedule.” Walljasper said OSU would probably lose “two or three games” in the SEC. Though the players believe otherwise, they’re satisfied with their accomplishments. “Hey, we’re 12-0. That’s all I can say,” Sabino said. “People can talk what they want. (There are) a whole bunch of what-if’s now. I know we took care of what we had to do. We set out to win every single game this year and that’s what we did. It wasn’t pretty but it happened. We’re happy.”

Foundation laid for continued OSU football success ANdRew HolleRAN Photo editor holleran.9@osu.edu For Ohio State football, it doesn’t get much better than what happened inside The Horseshoe on Saturday. The Buckeyes beat their archrival, on Senior Day, in front of 105,000-plus screaming fans, to finish the season undefeated. As the final seconds ticked off the clock, handing OSU a 26-21 victory against Michigan and securing a 12-0 record, scarlet and gray clad enthusiasts rushed the field, surrounding Buckeye players and coaches as they joyously — and slowly — made their way to the locker room. For first-year coach Urban Meyer, and the rest of Buckeye Nation, the 2012 season was about as good as it gets. Until next year, anyway. Yes, the 2012 season was great. Perfect, in a sense. But due to NCAA sanctions caused by “Tattoo-Gate,” the Buckeyes are banned from the postseason. OSU’s year ended after the Michigan game. No Big Ten Championship Game. No shot at playing for a national championship, either. There is no postseason ban for the 2013 season, and the foundation has been set in Columbus to win championships. OSU is expected to return 9 of 11 starters next year from an offense that averaged 37.1 points per game this season. Sophomore quarterback Braxton Miller is likely to be a Heisman Trophy front-runner in 2013. Redshirt junior running back Carlos Hyde, who rushed for 146 yards and a touchdown against the Wolverines, is “developing into one of the best backs in the country,” according to Meyer. On defense, the Buckeyes lose a bevy of senior leaders and playmakers, including defensive ends John Simon and Nathan Williams, and linebackers Zach Boren and Etienne Sabino. Junior defensive tackle Jonathan Hankins and redshirt sophomore cornerback Bradley Roby could leave for the NFL as well. But sophomore linebacker Ryan Shazier, a Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year candidate this season, returns. So do both starting safeties, freshman defensive linemen Adolphus Washington, Noah Spence and Tommy Schutt. The senior class, which Meyer refers to as the “most selfless group I’ve ever been around,” will not be easy to replace. But the Buckeyes experienced a great deal of

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success in 2012, and the large amount of players that are coming back are anxious to experience it again. “I’m hoping the guys get that taste and they want to do it again. Because once you taste (success), it tastes really good. And the foundation, I think, is strong,” Meyer said after the game Saturday. OSU will celebrate what it achieved this season, and deservedly so. But many underclassmen are already excited for next September. “We’re just glad that the team got to feel what it’s like to be 12-0 so next year, we’re just as hungry in the offseason to get there again,” said junior wide receiver Corey Brown. Because of the postseason ban, OSU players didn’t get everything they said they feel they deserved this year. In 2013, there will be no sanctions holding them back, and they’re looking forward to it. “We’re just going to come out hungry next year though, to get what we were supposed to get this year,” Hyde said. As for Meyer, he is really only getting started. He’s been at the helm of the OSU football program for roughly 12 months, and in that time, turned a 6-7 team in turmoil into a 12-0 team on the upswing. He’s starting to get “his guys” into the program — players that he recruited, not past OSU coaches. The freshman class, which Meyer was largely responsible for, played a big role this season. Washington had a sack and a forced fumble Saturday, while Schutt and Spence were in on numerous third-down situations, often forcing Michigan’s quarterbacks out of the pocket. Meyer said there were a “bunch of recruits in the meeting room again,” after the game. His 2013 class is ranked in the top 10 in the country by multiple sites. And while many criticized OSU’s schedule this season, 2013 could be easier. Michigan State and Nebraska are off the schedule, and replaced with Northwestern and Iowa, who went a combined 13-11 this year. The biggest non-conference game is likely to be at California, which recently fired its coach Jeff Tedford. OSU is likely to be favored in all of its regular season games next season. If all goes well for the Buckeyes in 2013, they could be riding a 23-game win streak when they arrive to Ann Arbor, Mich., on November 30, 2013. In all, Meyer’s first year in Columbus seemed to go as well as could have been planned. Such success, though, likely has amplified expectations, and possibilities, for the future. “I’m ready to go right now. I’m ready to get back into the off-season, working out and preparing for next season,” Hyde said. “I can’t wait.”

Ohio State Football: Projected returning starters Offense (9)

Defense (5)

Jr. safety C.J. Barnett Jr. receiver Corey Brown Jr. safety Christian Bryant So. receiver Devin Smith So. linebacker Ryan Shazier Jr. running back Carlos Hyde So. quarterback Braxton Miller *Jr. defensive tackle Johnathan Hankins So. tight end Jeff Heuerman *So. cornerback Bradley Roby Jr. right guard Marcus Hall So. center Corey Linsley * = potential NFL draftee Jr. left guard Andrew Norwell Jr. left tackle Jack Mewhort PAT BReNNAN / Sports editor

ANdRew HolleRAN / Photo editor


sports Imperfections not enough to deny OSU perfect season PATRICK MAKS Asst. sports editor maks.1@osu.edu On a dark November day befitting of The Game, and in a finale befitting of an entire season, tens of thousands of fans bundled in scarlet and gray scarves, coats and gloves poured from the cement stands of Ohio Stadium and onto the field in a way that was perhaps only befitting of champions. The stream, which started slow, grew greater and greater into a sea of red as fans of the 12-0 Ohio State Buckeyes determined to touch a part of history galloped onto the cold turf of the Horseshoe. Most found themselves leveled into a solid mass of humanity that stretched from the south end zone to about midfield. Some ran around and tried to recreate past moments of Buckeye lore that had happened on the very field they stood on. Some laid down, sprawled out and looked at the gray sky overhead as if to soak up a moment that could really never again be replicated. All, though, knew what it meant — all knew what had just happened before them. The Buckeyes, in spite of their imperfections, were perfect. And its coach — their coach — Urban Meyer was drowning somewhere in all of it. Meyer, who had committed himself to the university as its football team’s orchestrator last November, found himself realizing a promise to his home he’d made a year earlier. “This is the state I made a comment on last November, December, whenever it was, that our objective is to make the great state of Ohio proud,� a fulfilled-looking Meyer said. “I imagine tonight there’s a lot of people in this great state very proud of what their football team, no one else’s, this is the state of Ohio’s football team.� The celebration of the program’s first undefeated season since 2002 was theirs to revel in, too. So was what the 26-21 triumph against Michigan meant to a state that had watched its — or as Meyer insists, their — football team sink to and mire in previously unfamiliar depths of mediocrity in 2011. The Buckeyes, which began the season marred by NCAA violations and their subsequent consequences long before the year’s opener against Miami (Ohio) on Sept. 1, danced like conquerors following their very last battle of the 2012 campaign. Meyer had done it. The 21 seniors had done it. Redshirt senior safety and special teams standout Zach Domicone said there never was a doubt. “I think a lot of guys thought that we could do this, I think that’s where it starts,� he said. “Not once since

I’ve been here did I ever think, even last year when we had a few losses in a row, that we would ever lose.� This year, the Buckeyes didn’t. For just the sixth time in school history, No. 4 OSU found itself ending the year a flawless 12-0 — in spite of an already hampered path, injuries, personnel issues and its own defects. The Buckeyes were perfect, but hardly perfect. On a day that OSU honored its 2002 national championship team, this year’s squad wasn’t without its shortcomings against Michigan. Rarely was it ever. After routing the Redhawks in their seasonopener, a game that will be remembered as Meyer’s first as a head coach in the Horseshoe, the Buckeyes struggled against the likes of inferior competition in Central Florida, California and Alabama-Birmingham. Perfection didn’t seem to be a buzzword. Surviving might have been more apt for the moment. Big Ten play was looming, and a trip to East Lansing, Mich., looked like it might be the end of Meyer and OSU’s honeymoon. But those who believed that were proven wrong as the Buckeyes pulled out a 17-16 win against Michigan State. Braxton Miller, OSU’s heralded sophomore quarterback, said it was then that perfection started to become more of a reality than a dream. “The toughness we showed in that game,� he said, “I thought we could have a chance to take it the whole way.� Slowly but surely, the Buckeyes started to. First came a night tilt against a Nebraska team that had gutted them in Lincoln a year prior. Next was a road contest against Indiana. OSU was undefeated, but not without issues, not without concern, and the national spotlight, which glistened over Alabama, Oregon and other unbeatens at the time, reflected that. Against the Cornhuskers and the Hoosiers, the Buckeyes had surrendered 87 points — 49 of which came against an Indiana team that some supposed would be an easy win. Injuries, too, started to mount as the loss of redshirt senior linebacker Etienne Sabino, who broke his right fibula against Nebraska, forced Meyer to throw fullback-turned-linebacker Zach Boren to the other side of the ball. The fiery criticism hurled at defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Luke Fickell’s defense seemed to become the narrative; the potential of the program’s first undefeated season since 2002 looked blurry and improbable. Not with a team that gives up 49 points to the Hoosiers, not with a team that had struggled early in pillow fights against non-conference foes. Perhaps this team had too many issues, too little to play for in a season that would inevitably end against the Wolverines.

Andrew Holleran / Photo editor

OSU coach Urban Meyer embraces redshirt senior cornerback Travis Howard before a game against Michigan at Ohio Stadium on Nov. 24. OSU won, 26-21. While OSU looked to have put such problems behind them since, Michigan and its senior quarterback Denard Robinson gashed the Buckeyes for big play after big play. Perhaps the defects of this team had come back to haunt them. Fickell, though, maintained that the Buckeyes’ composure never faltered. “We couldn’t panic, we couldn’t change up exactly everything we’re doing just because of the fact that they had two big plays,â€? he said. “So we just went back to the basics and made sure guys knew what they were going to get ‌ We put more pressure on ourselves than anybody in the world, whether the media says something, whether somebody says you’re not very good. “You know, my kids still think I’m really good. And after that game they still thought I was really good. They said, ‘Did we win?’â€? His answer after every week? “Yeah.â€? And maybe that’s what this OSU team’s season comes down to. Maybe it’s what the legacy will ultimately be of a

Buckeye team barred from competing for a Big Ten or national championship. Maybe it was that they just simply won. Nothing more, nothing less. And while a strong argument can almost certainly be made for or against a No. 1 finish in the year’s final Associated Press poll, it might not be the point. “We wish we had more games, but we did all we can do,� Boren said. “We were scheduled to play 12 and that’s it this year and we won all 12.� None of which seemed to come easy for an OSU team looking to avenge last year’s 6-7 finish under Fickell, who served as the team’s head coach after Jim Tressel resigned amid NCAA violations in May 2011. Perhaps the Buckeyes’ imperfections prepared them for their last shot at perfection. “We’ve been in so many close games like this, we know how to come out with a win,� Sabino said. “It’s not always pretty, but that ‘W’ on that column means so much to us.� And likely, based on the Horseshoe’s jubilation Saturday, it meant just as much to all of Buckeye Nation.

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)DOO +RXVLQJ *XLGHV 1RZ $YDLODEOH IRU WKH 5HQWDO 6HDVRQ Ď° ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ώϳϴ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŽ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϴϲ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŻ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď° t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϭϴϹώ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϰ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ƚŚ Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϳϾ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎą ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď° ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ƚŚ Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď´Ď´ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ďą ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎ­ Ͳ Ď­ĎŹĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ďł ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­Ď­Ďł ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎľ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎŹ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϲϯͲϲϾ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎŻ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď´ &ĆŒÄ‚ĹľÄ?ÄžĆ? Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŻĎľ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŽĎŽ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭώϴͲϭϯϏ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϳ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ Ď´Ďą Ͳ Ď´Ďł t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϾώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ϭϯϏͲϭϯώ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭώϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϰ Θ Ͼϴ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϭϯͲϭϹ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϲͲϾϴ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ϭϳϳ Θ ϭϳϾ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ϭϯϹͲϭϯϳ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϯϳ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ĎŻ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ƚŚ Ď­ĎŻĎą Θ Ď­ĎŻĎł ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϭϳϴ ͘ Ď­Ď­ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎą ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ď­ĎŹĎł Ͳ Ď­ĎŹĎľ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϴ Ĺ˝ĆŒ Ď­Ď´ĎŽ t͘ ϾƚŚ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϲϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ĎŽĎ­Ď° ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹώϯ Ͳ ϭϹϰϳ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ >ĂŜĞ ƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´ĎŽ ͘ Ď­Ď­ Ď­Ď­ĎŽ Ͳ Ď­Ď­Ď° ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ°Ďł ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϯ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϾϏ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρϭ ϭϹϳϰ Ͳ ϭϹϾϏ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ƚŚ ϭϾϹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• ϲϲ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? Ď­Ď°Ď­Ďł Ͳ Ď­Ď°ĎŽĎŻ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ ϭϲϲͲϭϲϴ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϭϭϲ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϰϾϹ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ρ Í• ϭϳϏ Ͳ Ď­Ď´Ď´ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϾϴ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹϯϾ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϲϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϹϲ t͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ϭϳώϹ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹώ Ͳ ϭϲϏ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ Ͳ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŽ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ϭϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳώ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹώώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ϭϳϳ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŽĎŹĎ° ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϾ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ϭϾϏͲϭϾϴ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŽĎŽĎŻĎľ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´ĎŻ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϹϲ Ͳ ϭϹϲώ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ ϭϾώ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϴ Θ ĎŽĎŹĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ώϹϏ ͘ ϭϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϾϲ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?ŚůĂŜĚ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϏͲϭϴϴ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϾϲ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^Ćš ͘ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŽĎ­Ď­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ĎŽĎ´ Ͳ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ°ĎŻ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´Ď´ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ώϏϭͲώϹϯ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŻĎ°Ďą t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŽĎŹĎ° ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ°Ďľ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ' ώϏϲϳ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ´ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ǀĞ͘ ϰϰͲϰϲ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ĎŽĎŻĎ­ ͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ Ϲϯ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°ĎŽ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϰϳϭͲώϰϳϯ tÄ‚ĹŻĹŻ ^ĆšÍ˜ ϹϲͲϹϴ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ĎŽĎ°Ď° Ͳ ώϰϲ ͘ ϭϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϲώϳ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ώϳώͲώϳϰ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϰ ĆľÄ?ĹŹĆ? ůůĞLJ ϹϏ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ Ͳ Ď­ĎŹ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ?

Ďą ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď´ĎŻ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ƚŚ ϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• ϲϏ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϲ ͘ tŽŽÄšĆŒƾĨĨ ǀĞ͘ Ͼώ Θ Ͼϲ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ďą ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ϲ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϹϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϹϾ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ

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Monday November 26, 2012

ĎŻ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ώϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ­ Θ ĎŻĎą ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϯϴͲϰϏ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ ĆľÄ?ĹŹĆ? ůůĞLJ ϹϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ ϲϯ Ͳ ϲϾ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϳ ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϳϳͲϳϾ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ĎŽ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϳ Θ ϾϾ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŹĎŹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϏϲ Ͳ Ď­Ď­Ď° ͘ >ĂŜĞ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŽĎŹ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš Ď­ĎŽĎł Ͳ Ď­Ď°Ď­ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŻĎŹ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš Ď­ĎŻĎŻ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŻĎ´ĎŽ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?ŚůĂŜĚ Ď­Ď°ĎŹ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš Ď­Ď°ĎŻĎŽ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ Ď­Ď°Ďą <Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϳϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϹώϲ Ͳ ϭϹϯώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?Ͳ ĆšŽŜ ϭϲώͲϭϲϰ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšÇ Ĺ˝Ĺ˝Äš ϭϲϹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϹϴ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϾϰ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϳϏ Θ ϭϳϰ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϏώ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ρ

ĎŽ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϭϳϹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϭϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϭϾ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϰϲϭͲϴϯ tÄ‚ĹŻĹŻ ^ĆšÍ˜ ώϾώ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎ­ Ͳ ĎŻĎą ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϯϲϰ t͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ΡϰώϾ ϯϲϳ t͘ ϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ΡϾ ϯϾͲϰϹ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϯϾϯ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď°Ď´ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ďľ ĐŞ t͘ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? ϹϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϲϏϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲώϏ Ͳ ϲώώ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ Ď˛ĎŻĎľ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϹϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϳϹ Ͳ Ď´Ď­ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϳϳϯ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ď´Ďą ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϏ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϾϳͲϭϏϹ ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĨĨĹ?Ä?Ĺ?ĞŜÄ?Ĺ?ÄžĆ? ϭϲϏͲϭϲϲ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšͲ Ç Ĺ˝Ĺ˝Äš ϭϲϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ&

Ď­ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽž Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš Ď­ĎŹĎŹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď° DÄ?DĹ?ůůĞŜ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď° Ͳ ĎŽĎŽ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϰϯώͲϭϰϯϰ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ Ď­Ď°Ďľ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ϭϲϹϴ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϾϰͲϭϳϏώ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ϭϳϏ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϳϹͲϭϾϭ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϭϾ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ώώϏϲ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ώϹͲώϳ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎľ Ͳ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ ώϾώ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎ­Ď­ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϯϲϹ Ͳ ϯϲϳ t͘ ϲƚŚ ĎŻĎ´ Ď­ÍŹĎŽ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϰϭͲϰϯ t͘ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϰϲ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ď´ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ΡώϏϭ Ď°Ďľ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ ϲϏϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ρ: ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ ϲϯϾ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϹϭ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϳϳϯ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϾϹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ 8A


classifieds Furnished Rentals

3&4 BEDROOM Apartments, Excellent Location on E. Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. Big Bedrooms, Central Air Conditioning, Free Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, Off Street Parking, Beg, Fall 2013. Sign Up Early Before They Are Gone. Call 761-9035.

EFFICIENCY - $350, Excellent Value, Utilities Paid by Owner, Available NOW, Just remodeled, Very Nice, Has Dining/Kitchen Area, Refrigerator & Stove, Mature/Quite individual, Security Doors, Smoke Free Building, NO Pets, Lease, Deposit 420 E. 12th Ave, Call 614-263-3240, leave message.

Unfurnished Rentals 60 BROADMEADOWS BLVD

WORTHINGTON TERRACE RENTS LOWERED

• 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms • 2 Full Baths In 2 & 3 Bedrooms • Intercom Ctrl Lobby • Garage Available • Elevator • Window Treatments INCL

FROM $420.00

80 BROADMEADOWS TOWNHOMES

PRIVATE UNIT: living and sleeping area, study, bathFROM $505.00 room, cooking facilities, private 885-9840 entrance, in family home. Near Capital University. Utilities and furniture included. $125 weekly. EFFICIENCY AVAILABLE 614-286-6080 $475 - High speed internet included. No Application Fee! Call Myers Real Estate 614-486-2933 or visit www.myersrealty.com

Furnished 1 Bedroom

1368 NEIL Avenue 3rd oor apatment $500 month utilities included. Private kitchen. Share Bathroom with others. Males only, graduate students preferred, free washer/dryer, 488-3061 Jack.

86 WEST Lane Ave. Furnished one bedroom efďŹ ciency. Refrigerator, microwave, community kitchen. No pets. $500 deposit. $500 rent. 614-306-0053.

Furnished 2 Bedroom

2 BEDROOM Apartment, Prime Location on E. Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. Big Bedrooms, Free Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, Off Street Parking, Central Air, Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035.

OPPORTUNITY FOR OSU Student to assist a young man with a disability. Must have car. 7 am - 3 pm Saturdays and/ or 3 pm - 11pm on Sundays at $17.80/hour. Please call Jean Crum 614-538-8728

Furnished 4 Bedroom

4 BEDROOM Apartments, Prime Location on E. 17th and Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. Big Bedrooms, Free Washer/ Dryer, Dishwasher, Air Conditioning, Off Street Parking, Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035.

Furnished 5+ Bedroom

5 BEDROOM Apartments, Prime Location at 16th and Indianola. Big Bedrooms, Two Bathrooms, Free Washer/Dryer, Lots of Off Street Parking, Dishwasher, A/C, Low Utilities. Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035.

Unfurnished Rentals

#1 NR, OSU Hospital and Med School. 6 BR House, Corner of Michigan and 8th. 2 Full Baths and 2 Half Baths, CA LDY, Deck. Phone Steve 614-208-3111. Shand50@aol.com

1 BEDROOM $430/month, Excellent Value, Utilities paid by Owner, Available December 1, Large size with large closets,Just repainted/very nice, Refrigerator and Range,Smoke-free Building, Mature/Quite Tenants, Security Doors, No Pets, Lease, Deposit, 420 E. 12th Ave, Call (614) 263-3240, Leave Message

3&4 BEDROOM Apartments, Excellent Location on E. Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. Big Bedrooms, Central Air Conditioning, Free Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, Off Street Parking, Beg, Fall 2013. Sign Up Early Before They Are Gone. Call 761-9035. LOOKING FOR EMPLOYEES? Ohio State has 50,000+ students that you can reach. Call (614)2922031 for more information.

Furnished Rentals

OSU AVAIL. NOW

750 RIVERVIEW DR.

SPECIAL $100 DEPOSIT 1 B.R. apts. stove, refrig., Gas heat, laundry Carpet and air cond. available NO PETS PLEASE $365 268-7232

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

2 BDRM Apartments 95 & 125 E. Norwich Ave. Great Locations w/ New Kitchens, DW, W/D, Big Bdrms, C/Air, OSP, NO Pets $1,020/Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

4 BDRM DBL, 2153-2155 Indianola/Norwich Large Dbl. w/ 2 Full Bath, W/D, DW, OSP, NO Pets $2,020/Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

2 BDRM Townhouse 100 Frambes Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, W/D, A/C, Free OSP $1,050-$1080/ Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

4 BDRM DBL. 131 E. Norwich DW, W/D, Lg. Porch, OSP, NO Pets $2040-$2,100/Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

4 BDRM House, 66 W. Norwich, 2BDRMTownhouse183,185,193 2 Full Bath, W/D, DW, OSP, NO W. Norwich Ave. Spacious Unit Pets $2,200/Mo. Call 961-0056. w/ W/D, C/Air, Free OSP (Car- www.cooper-properties.com port) $1,040/Mo. Call 961-0056. 4 BEDROOM Apartments, www.cooper-properties.com Prime Location on E. 17th and 2BDRMTownhouse187,189,191 Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. W. Norwich Ave. Spacious Unit Big Bedrooms, Free Washer/ w/ DW, C/Air, Free OSP (Car- Dryer, Dishwasher, Air Conport) $1,040/Mo. Call 961-0056. ditioning, Off Street Parking, www.cooper-properties.com Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035.

2 BDRM Townhouses, 161 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, HW Floors, W/D, OSP, NO Pets. $1,000/Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

2 BEDROOM Apartment, Prime Location on E. Frambes, 1/2 blcok from High. Big Bedrooms, Free Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher, Off Street Parking, Central Air, Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035.

4 BEDROOM House 422 E. 15th Ave. Available Fall. www.GHCrentals.com or call 804-3165.

AFFORDABLE 4 Bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty. 429-0960

FOUR BEDROOM half double. 1705 N. 4th St. Available August 2013. 2103 IUKA Ave. 2BR unfur- www.GHCrentals.com or call nished, kitchen, stove, refrigera- 804-3165 tor, carpet, air. $700/mo. $700 Laundry available, OSU/GRANDVIEW. KING Ave. deposit. off-street parking. No pets. Avail1&2 bdrm garden apts. AC, gas, heat and hot water. Laun- able Fall. Call 614-306-0053 dry facilities, Off-street parking. 2233-F Hedgerow Rd, off Bethel 294-0083 Road close to campus, beautiful #1 LOCATIONS for groups of 2BR/2BA condo for rent. Open 5-13, 66 East Northwood, 34 oor plan, walk-in closets, over- West Oakland, 184 East 15th sized balcony, secure entryway. and many more, visit http://www. Washer/dryer included! Cats veniceprops.com/properties.cfm OK. Price $800/month + utili- for more information. ties. This is a must-see! Call 614-378-8576 or email dami- #1 SOURCE for large homes 6+ person! Visit www.nicas1 BDRM Apartments, 161 E. an.2@osu.edu. troproperties.com for more Norwich Ave.Great Location, Walk-In Closet, A/C, OSP, NO 357 E. 14th Ave. 2 bedroom, info. Pets. $515/Mo. Call 961-0056. large kitchen w/eating area, large bath, living room, stove/ www.cooper-properties.com refridgerator, AC, laundry facil- 5 BDRM Apt. 2159 Waldeck 1 BDRM Townhouse 100 ity available, $575/month, $575 Ave. Completely Renovated, Frambes Ave. Spacious Unit w/ deposit. Tenants pay gas and Spacious Unit w/ 2 Full Bath, Walk-In Closet, W/D, A/C, Free electric.Water surcharge. NO New Kitchen DW, W/D, C/Air & Free OSP $2,375/Mo. Call OSP $555/Mo. Call 961-0056. PETS. 961-0056. www.cooper-properCall 614-306-0053 www.cooper-properties.com ties.com 1 BEDROOM Apartments, AFFORDABLE 2 Bedrooms. 5 BDRM DBL. 150 E. Norwich, 2 Prime Location on 16th and In- Visit our website at dianola. Dishwasher, Big Bed- www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Full Bath, HW Floors, DW, W/D, C/Air NO Pets $2,200/Mo. Call room, Free Washer/Dryer, Off Realty 429-0960 961-0056. www.cooper-properStreet Parking, Beg, Fall 2013. CLINTONVILLE/NORTH CAM- ties.com Call 761-9035. PUS. Spacious townhouse with 1 BEDROOM Apartments, ďŹ nished basement in quiet loca- 5 BDRM Double 2139 Summit Prime Location on 16th and In- tion just steps from bike path (Between Lane & Norwich) Rendianola. Dishwasher, Big Bed- and bus lines. Off-street parking, ovated, Very Spacious Unit w/ room, Free Washer/Dryer, Off 1 1/2 baths, W/D hook-up, AC, 3 Floors, 2 Full Bath, DW, W/D, Street Parking, Beg, Fall 2013. no pets. $720/month. 109 W. C/Air & Free OSP (10 Spots) $1950/mo. Call 961-0056. www. Duncan. 614-582-1672 Call 761-9035. cooper-properties.com AFFORDABLE 1 Bedrooms. 5 BDRM House @ 127 W NorthVisit our website at wood. A Great location close to www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place campus! Completely renovated Realty 429-0960 w/ New appliances, new ooring & ďŹ xtures, 2 1/2 Bath, DW, 3 BDRM Apartment 67 Chitten- WD, C/Air and 5 Free OSP. den, C/Air, Rec-Room, OSP, NO $2775/mo Call 961-0056. www. Pets, $1,275/Mo. Call 961-0056. cooper-properties.com www.cooper-properties.com 5 BDRM House, 112 W. Oakland, 3 BDRM Apartments, 55 E. Nor- 2 Full Bath, W/D, DW, OSP, NO #1 AVAILABLE NOW for short wich Ave. Great Location, New Pets $2,525/Mo. Call 961-0056 term lease. Newly refurbished Kitchen Appliances, C/Air, W/D, www.cooper-properties.com 2 bedroom single family house. OSP, NO Pets $1,350/Mo. Call New kitchen cabinets, counter- 961-0056. www.cooper-proper- 5 BDRM House, 140 Frambes, Ideal Location w/ 2 Full Bath, tops, appliances (dishwasher, ties.com W/D, DW, NO Pets $2,750/ range, fridge), new replacement windows, new furnished with 3 BDRM DBL, 81-83 E. Nor- Mo. Call 961-0056. www.coocentral air, new vinyl and wood wich Ave. Great Location, New per-properties.com laminate ooring, new interior Kitchen & Bath, W/D, DW, NO 5 BDRM House, 155 E. Northlights and interior doors, security Pets $1,320/Mo. Call 961-0056. wood, 1.5 Bath, W/D, DW, system, dry basement (includes www.cooper-properties.com C/Air, OSP, HRWD Floors, washer and dryer), off-street 3 BDRM Townhouse 100 Framb- Very Nice, NO Pets $2,525/ parking, 1445 Hunter. $400/ es Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, W/D, Mo. Call 961-0056 www. month. 614-316-7867 A/C, Free OSP $1,530/Mo. Call cooper-properties.com #1 CORNER of King and Neil. 961-0056. www.cooper-proper- 5 BDRM House. 69 W. PatterSecurity Building. 2BR, CA, LDY, ties.com son, DW, W/D, Walk In Closets, 2 OFF STREET PARKING. Phone 3 BDRM Townhouse, 2147 Wal- Kitchens, Lg. Porch & Decks, NO Steve 614-208-3111. deck Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, Pets $2200/Mo. Call 961-0056. Shand50@aol.com W/D, Free OSP $1,500/Mo. Call www.cooper-properties.com #1 NR Corner of Lane and Neil. 961-0056. www.cooper-proper- 5 BDRM Townhouse 67 Chit2 BR, CA, LDY, off street park- ties.com tenden, Newly Remodeled w/ ing. Phone Steve 614-208-3111. 3 BEDROOM WITH FINISHED 2 Full Bath, DW, C/Air, W/D, Shand50@aol.com BASEMENT. Clintonville/North OSP, NO Pets. $2,300-$2,350/ 1442 NEIL Ave. Grad Building, Campus. Spacious townhouse Mo. Call 961-0056. www.coolarge 2 bedroom, 1 car garage overlooking river view, walkout per-properties.com w/opener, hardwood oors, patio from ďŹ nished basement to 5 BDRM Townhouse, 180 E. A/C, laundry, 1 block to Medical backyard, low trafďŹ c, quiet area, 12th, C/Air, W/D, DW, 2 Full School, no smoking, no pets, off-street parking, 1 1/2 baths, Bath, OSP, NO Pets $2,125/ quiet, best location. Available W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooSteps to bike path and bus lines. July 15th. Call 885-3588 $820/month. 105 W. Duncan. per-properties.com 2 BDRM Apartment @ 181 W. 614-582-1672 5 BDRM Townhouse, 180 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, C/ 12th, 2 Full Bath, C/Air, DW, Air, Free OSP (Carport) $900/ AFFORDABLE 3 Bedrooms. W/D, OSP, NO Pets $1,950/ Mo. Call 961-0056. www.coo- Visit out website at Mo. Call 961-0056. www.coowww.my1stplace.com. 1st Place per-properties.com per-properties.com Realty 429-0960 2 BDRM Apartment 55 E. Nor5 BEDROOM Apartments, BEAUTIFUL TOWNHOUSE wich Ave. Spacious & Very Nice, Prime Location at 16th and C/Air, W/D, OSP, NO Pets $950/ with new hardwood oors, huge Indianola. Big Bedrooms, Two Mo. Call 961-0056. www.coo- bedrooms, A/C, all appliances, 2 Bathrooms, Free Washer/Dryer, full bathrooms, off street parkper-properties.com ing, for more info http://www. Lots of Off Street Parking, Dish2 BDRM Apartments 95 & 125 E. veniceprops.com/1655n4th.cfm washer, A/C, Low Utilities. Beg, Fall 2013. Call 761-9035. Norwich Ave. Great Locations, Lg. Bdrms, C/Air, OSP, NO Pets PATTERSON AND High 3 BR 6 BDR 108/110 E. 16th, great Townhouse, water included, $850/Mo. Call 961-0056. www. laundry, $975/ month. Phone location. D/W. W/D hook-ups. cooper-properties.com Steve 614-208-3111 shand50@ New Baths. 1/2 house. Lots of parking August 1, 2013. Call aol.com 614-370-7978. UPPERCLASSMEN PREFERRED. Large 3 Bedroom 6 BDRM House, 55 W. Patapartment. $900/month. Free terson, HW Floors, 2 Full Bath, washer/dryer. Screened-in DW, W/D, OSP, NO Pets $2,640/ porch. 1374 Neil Ave. Call Jack Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com at 488-3061 6 BDRM House, 66 Frambes, 2 Full Bath, DW, W/D, OSP, NO Pets $3,300/Mo. Call 961-0056. www.cooper-properties.com

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

Unfurnished 1 Bedroom

Unfurnished 3 Bedroom

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Furnished Rentals

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Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

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Both a cat and dog sponsible for supervision of staff reside within the home. Apply Please send resume to at multiple facilities. BA/BS Pre- online at www.collegenannies. employment@ucbinc.com or ferred with prior management com to the Powell, Ohio location fax to 614-732-5019 experience and excellent com- or call 614-761-3060. 4100 Horizons Dr. Cols, OH munication skills. $11.54/hour. 43220 BeneďŹ ts include accrued vaca- THE GODDARD School of EOE tion and sick days, personal Dublin is now interviewing days, paid holidays after 90 for part-time afternoon posidays, paid life insurance and tions. Interested candidates long-term disability, employer must have a high school sponsored health, dental, vision diploma and be available to and 401(k) plans. Supplemental work Monday through Friday 3:00 PM life available. to 6:00 PM. If you love workRequirements: Will work ing with young children and COMPANY IS looking to imme- Sun-Sat, 1st-3rd shift, as need- you are looking for a position diately hire a highly motivated ed, may require mandatory that will provide you with lots Competitive person for the Po- overtime or holiday hours. Valid of experience in the educasition of Sales in the Columbus Ohio driver’s license, auto, good tion ďŹ eld then we would love Area. No experience necessary. driving record (will drive agency to hear from you. Please call Send resume to vehicle). Pre-employment drug 614-799-8870 or send rejobs@centralrm.com. testing and background check sume to jdpgoddard@yahoo. com. required. FRANKLIN UNIVERSITY is looking for PT Student Learn- Obtain Application: http://www. ing Center Assistants to work ncmhs.org/NorthCentralEmploy20 hrs/week, day and evening ment.htm hours & 3 Saturdays/month. Re- Apply: 1301 North High Street, sponsibilities include customer Columbus OH 43201 service, proctoring tests, admin- Email: HR@NCMHS.org OFFICE HELP istrative duties. Send resume to Fax: (614) 298-2227 Law ofďŹ ce seeks part-time help resume@franklin.edu. Equal Opportunity Employer for various ofďŹ ce functions (data STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid entry, ďŹ ling, copying, etc.) 2-3 Survey Takers needed in Colum- hours per day Mon. - Fri. Posibus. 100% free to join. Click on tion also involves running errands as needed. Requires good surveys. communication, organization and computer skills. Must maintain conďŹ dentiality. Non-smoker. Free parking. Apply to: columbuslawďŹ rm1@gmail.com

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PHONE FANTASY Actresses. 16-40 hours available. Safe environment. Woman owned/operated. Excellent earning potential. Call 447-3535 for more info.

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service BONJOUR OSU! The family La Chatelaine French Bistros are looking for great, enthusiastic A.M. counter help, knowledgable servers & assistant restaurant managers. Must have restaurant experience and be very outgoing. Our Upper Arlington and our Worthington locations only. Part-time or full time positions available. Please contact 614.488.1911 or visit www. lachatelainebakery.com for more information. Merci! HIRING COOKS & Servers Apply within at Max & Erma’s German Village 739 Sth 3rd St 444-0917 LUCE RESTAURANT & wine bar in Powell Ohio is looking for servers and hostesses - please call 740- 881-4600 if interested. MCL RESTAURANT and Bakery is looking for reliable, part-time employees, for our 3 Columbus locations, to assist with seasonal catering and deliveries. Reliable transportation and a valid drivers license required. Please apply online at http://www.pleaseapplyonline.com/mcl/ or call MCL Kingsdale 614-457-5786, MCL Westerville 614-818-1700 or MCL Whitehall 614-861-6259.

For Sale Real Estate VACANCIES? VACANCIES? VACANCIES? Let our leasing services pay for themselves. For your leasing, property management, or sales needs Call 1st Place Realty 429-0960. www.my1stplace.com

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MOZART’S BAKERY AND VIENNA ICE CAFE - Looking for part- time/full-time reliable counter help, server help, kitchen help. High Street location, a mile north of campus. Email resume TOM & Jerry’s - a Full Service to Auto Repair Shop. 1701 Kenny info@mozartscafe.com Rd. 488-8507. Or visit: www.tomandjerrysauto.com

Automotive Services

ResumĂŠ Services HR AD executive can help you with your resume to make it perfect. Affordable price. lshrieves@ columbus.rr.com.

Typing Services

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Help Wanted OSU COMPUTER JOB Student IT Position OSU Medical Center $10.00 Hr Pathology IT / IS student position available. Must be able to lift and move computers. Someone obtaining a computer science degree is preferred (but not required). Must have strong desire to learn and work with computer hardware and software. Position requires student to work in ofďŹ ces, labs, and with users. 20-30 hours during school and breaks. Please e-mail resume, school schedule, and hours available to work. scott.wade@osumc.edu

Help Wanted Interships

Tutoring Services A MATH tutor. All levels. Also Physics, Statistics and Business College Math. Teaching/tutoring since 1965. Checks okay. Call anytime, Clark 294-0607. RESEARCH PAPER assistance, help in Literature coursework, and editing. Prompt, dependable, and experienced. Reasonable rates. Call 1/606/465-5021. Accepts major credit cards and Paypal.

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Announcements/ Notice INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE for summer of 2013, learn how to manage a small business! Open to all majors. Paid Program! 614-325-8991, slewis@ collegepro.com , www.collegepro.com

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DISCOVER “101 Things You Didn’t Know About Columbus� ($9.95 at Amazon.com)

Los Angeles Times, Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

Across 1 Ed of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show� 6 “Mystery solved!� 9 Spear 13 Picked 14 Artist’s studio site 16 “Arsenic and Old __� 17 Mischievous girl in classic comics 19 Fairy tale menace 20 Display for the first time, as a product 21 Rajah’s spouse 23 Until this time 24 Grilled fish in Japanese unadon 26 “Exodus� actor Sal 28 Florida NBA team, on scoreboards 31 Jack LaLanne, for one 35 Tries to make it alone 37 Funereal stacks 38 Unaccompanied 39 Baggage handler, e.g. 42 Actress Amanda

Monday November 26, 2012

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43 Put the kibosh on 45 Idle 47 1984 South African Peace Nobelist 50 Williams with a .344 lifetime batting average 51 High-altitude nest 52 Lavish bash 54 Slap-on-the-forehead cry 56 The “height� part of a height phobia 58 Dress to the nines 62 __ hygiene 64 “Star Trek� role for George Takei 66 Late-night Jay 67 Genesis garden site 68 Scrabble pieces 69 Bustle 70 Big name in ice cream 71 Monica of tennis Down 1 Rights protection gp.

2 Knee-to-ankle bone 3 Misbehaving child’s punishment 4 Makeup maven Lauder 5 Raised sculptures 6 Musketeer motto word 7 Time of day 8 On fire 9 __-mo replay 10 Cry that starts a kid’s game 11 Ranch division 12 Borscht ingredient 15 North African capital for which its country is named 18 Mama Cass’s surname 22 Clouseau’s title: Abbr. 25 D-Day city 27 Nile Valley country 28 Eyed lewdly 29 TV sports pioneer Arledge 30 Pitches in 32 Cry that conflicts with 10-Down

33 Christopher of “Supermanâ€? 34 â€œÂżCĂłmo estĂĄ __?â€? 36 Boss’s “We need to talkâ€? 40 Sufficient, in slang 41 Too violent for a PG-13 44 Nickelodeon explorer 46 Figures made with scissors 48 Ornamental wall recess 49 Put down 53 Cow on a carton 54 Birdbrain 55 After-school cookie 57 Gave the green light 59 Quiet spell 60 Beekeeper played by Peter Fonda 61 Kisser 63 Lav of London 65 “__ questions?â€?

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7A


sports Imperfections not enough to deny OSU perfect season PATRICK MAKS Asst. sports editor maks.1@osu.edu On a dark November day befitting of The Game, and in a finale befitting of an entire season, tens of thousands of fans bundled in scarlet and gray scarves, coats and gloves poured from the cement stands of Ohio Stadium and onto the field in a way that was perhaps only befitting of champions. The stream, which started slow, grew greater and greater into a sea of red as fans of the 12-0 Ohio State Buckeyes determined to touch a part of history galloped onto the cold turf of the Horseshoe. Most found themselves leveled into a solid mass of humanity that stretched from the south end zone to about midfield. Some ran around and tried to recreate past moments of Buckeye lore that had happened on the very field they stood on. Some laid down, sprawled out and looked at the gray sky overhead as if to soak up a moment that could really never again be replicated. All, though, knew what it meant — all knew what had just happened before them. The Buckeyes, in spite of their imperfections, were perfect. And its coach — their coach — Urban Meyer was drowning somewhere in all of it. Meyer, who had committed himself to the university as its football team’s orchestrator last November, found himself realizing a promise to his home he’d made a year earlier. “This is the state I made a comment on last November, December, whenever it was, that our objective is to make the great state of Ohio proud,� a fulfilled-looking Meyer said. “I imagine tonight there’s a lot of people in this great state very proud of what their football team, no one else’s, this is the state of Ohio’s football team.� The celebration of the program’s first undefeated season since 2002 was theirs to revel in, too. So was what the 26-21 triumph against Michigan meant to a state that had watched its — or as Meyer insists, their — football team sink to and mire in previously unfamiliar depths of mediocrity in 2011. The Buckeyes, which began the season marred by NCAA violations and their subsequent consequences long before the year’s opener against Miami (Ohio) on Sept. 1, danced like conquerors following their very last battle of the 2012 campaign. Meyer had done it. The 21 seniors had done it. Redshirt senior safety and special teams standout Zach Domicone said there never was a doubt. “I think a lot of guys thought that we could do this, I think that’s where it starts,� he said. “Not once since

I’ve been here did I ever think, even last year when we had a few losses in a row, that we would ever lose.� This year, the Buckeyes didn’t. For just the sixth time in school history, No. 4 OSU found itself ending the year a flawless 12-0 — in spite of an already hampered path, injuries, personnel issues and its own defects. The Buckeyes were perfect, but hardly perfect. On a day that OSU honored its 2002 national championship team, this year’s squad wasn’t without its shortcomings against Michigan. Rarely was it ever. After routing the Redhawks in their seasonopener, a game that will be remembered as Meyer’s first as a head coach in the Horseshoe, the Buckeyes struggled against the likes of inferior competition in Central Florida, California and Alabama-Birmingham. Perfection didn’t seem to be a buzzword. Surviving might have been more apt for the moment. Big Ten play was looming, and a trip to East Lansing, Mich., looked like it might be the end of Meyer and OSU’s honeymoon. But those who believed that were proven wrong as the Buckeyes pulled out a 17-16 win against Michigan State. Braxton Miller, OSU’s heralded sophomore quarterback, said it was then that perfection started to become more of a reality than a dream. “The toughness we showed in that game,� he said, “I thought we could have a chance to take it the whole way.� Slowly but surely, the Buckeyes started to. First came a night tilt against a Nebraska team that had gutted them in Lincoln a year prior. Next was a road contest against Indiana. OSU was undefeated, but not without issues, not without concern, and the national spotlight, which glistened over Alabama, Oregon and other unbeatens at the time, reflected that. Against the Cornhuskers and the Hoosiers, the Buckeyes had surrendered 87 points — 49 of which came against an Indiana team that some supposed would be an easy win. Injuries, too, started to mount as the loss of redshirt senior linebacker Etienne Sabino, who broke his right fibula against Nebraska, forced Meyer to throw fullback-turned-linebacker Zach Boren to the other side of the ball. The fiery criticism hurled at defensive coordinator and linebackers coach Luke Fickell’s defense seemed to become the narrative; the potential of the program’s first undefeated season since 2002 looked blurry and improbable. Not with a team that gives up 49 points to the Hoosiers, not with a team that had struggled early in pillow fights against non-conference foes. Perhaps this team had too many issues, too little to play for in a season that would inevitably end against the Wolverines.

Andrew Holleran / Photo editor

OSU coach Urban Meyer embraces redshirt senior cornerback Travis Howard before a game against Michigan at Ohio Stadium on Nov. 24. OSU won, 26-21. While OSU looked to have put such problems behind them since, Michigan and its senior quarterback Denard Robinson gashed the Buckeyes for big play after big play. Perhaps the defects of this team had come back to haunt them. Fickell, though, maintained that the Buckeyes’ composure never faltered. “We couldn’t panic, we couldn’t change up exactly everything we’re doing just because of the fact that they had two big plays,â€? he said. “So we just went back to the basics and made sure guys knew what they were going to get ‌ We put more pressure on ourselves than anybody in the world, whether the media says something, whether somebody says you’re not very good. “You know, my kids still think I’m really good. And after that game they still thought I was really good. They said, ‘Did we win?’â€? His answer after every week? “Yeah.â€? And maybe that’s what this OSU team’s season comes down to. Maybe it’s what the legacy will ultimately be of a

Buckeye team barred from competing for a Big Ten or national championship. Maybe it was that they just simply won. Nothing more, nothing less. And while a strong argument can almost certainly be made for or against a No. 1 finish in the year’s final Associated Press poll, it might not be the point. “We wish we had more games, but we did all we can do,� Boren said. “We were scheduled to play 12 and that’s it this year and we won all 12.� None of which seemed to come easy for an OSU team looking to avenge last year’s 6-7 finish under Fickell, who served as the team’s head coach after Jim Tressel resigned amid NCAA violations in May 2011. Perhaps the Buckeyes’ imperfections prepared them for their last shot at perfection. “We’ve been in so many close games like this, we know how to come out with a win,� Sabino said. “It’s not always pretty, but that ‘W’ on that column means so much to us.� And likely, based on the Horseshoe’s jubilation Saturday, it meant just as much to all of Buckeye Nation.

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)DOO +RXVLQJ *XLGHV 1RZ $YDLODEOH IRU WKH 5HQWDO 6HDVRQ Ď° ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ώϳϴ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŽ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϴϲ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŻ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď° t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϭϴϹώ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϰ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ƚŚ Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϳϾ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎą ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď° ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ƚŚ Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď´Ď´ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ďą ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎ­ Ͳ Ď­ĎŹĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ďł ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­Ď­Ďł ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎľ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎŹ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϲϯͲϲϾ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎŻ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď´ &ĆŒÄ‚ĹľÄ?ÄžĆ? Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŻĎľ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŽĎŽ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭώϴͲϭϯϏ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϳ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ Ď´Ďą Ͳ Ď´Ďł t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϾώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ϭϯϏͲϭϯώ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭώϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϰ Θ Ͼϴ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϭϯͲϭϹ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϲͲϾϴ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ϭϳϳ Θ ϭϳϾ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ϭϯϹͲϭϯϳ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϯϳ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ĎŻ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ƚŚ Ď­ĎŻĎą Θ Ď­ĎŻĎł ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϭϳϴ ͘ Ď­Ď­ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎą ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ď­ĎŹĎł Ͳ Ď­ĎŹĎľ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϴ Ĺ˝ĆŒ Ď­Ď´ĎŽ t͘ ϾƚŚ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϲϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ĎŽĎ­Ď° ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹώϯ Ͳ ϭϹϰϳ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ >ĂŜĞ ƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´ĎŽ ͘ Ď­Ď­ Ď­Ď­ĎŽ Ͳ Ď­Ď­Ď° ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ°Ďł ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϯ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϾϏ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρϭ ϭϹϳϰ Ͳ ϭϹϾϏ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ƚŚ ϭϾϹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• ϲϲ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? Ď­Ď°Ď­Ďł Ͳ Ď­Ď°ĎŽĎŻ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ ϭϲϲͲϭϲϴ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϭϭϲ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϰϾϹ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ρ Í• ϭϳϏ Ͳ Ď­Ď´Ď´ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϾϴ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹϯϾ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϲϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϹϲ t͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ϭϳώϹ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϹώ Ͳ ϭϲϏ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ Ͳ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŽ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ϭϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳώ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹώώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?ĆšŽŜ ϭϳϳ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŽĎŹĎ° ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϾ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ϭϾϏͲϭϾϴ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŽĎŽĎŻĎľ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´ĎŻ ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϹϲ Ͳ ϭϹϲώ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ ϭϾώ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϴ Θ ĎŽĎŹĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ώϹϏ ͘ ϭϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϾϲ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?ŚůĂŜĚ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϏͲϭϴϴ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϾϲ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^Ćš ͘ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŽĎ­Ď­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎŹĎŹĎŹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ĎŽĎ´ Ͳ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ°ĎŻ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď´Ď´ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ώϏϭͲώϹϯ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŻĎ°Ďą t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŽĎŹĎ° ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ°Ďľ t͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ' ώϏϲϳ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ´ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ǀĞ͘ ϰϰͲϰϲ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ĎŽĎŻĎ­ ͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ Ϲϯ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°ĎŽ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϰϳϭͲώϰϳϯ tÄ‚ĹŻĹŻ ^ĆšÍ˜ ϹϲͲϹϴ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ĎŽĎ°Ď° Ͳ ώϰϲ ͘ ϭϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϲώϳ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ώϳώͲώϳϰ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϰ ĆľÄ?ĹŹĆ? ůůĞLJ ϹϏ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ Ͳ Ď­ĎŹ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ?

Ďą ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď´ĎŻ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ƚŚ ϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• ϲϏ ͘ Ď­Ď´ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϲ ͘ tŽŽÄšĆŒƾĨĨ ǀĞ͘ Ͼώ Θ Ͼϲ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ďą ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ϲ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϹϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϹϾ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ

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Monday November 26, 2012

ĎŻ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ώϳϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ­ Θ ĎŻĎą ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ĎŻĎł ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϯϴͲϰϏ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ ĆľÄ?ĹŹĆ? ůůĞLJ ϹϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ ϲϯ Ͳ ϲϾ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϲϳ ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϳϳͲϳϾ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ Ď´ĎŽ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ͼϳ Θ ϾϾ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŹĎŹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϏϲ Ͳ Ď­Ď­Ď° ͘ >ĂŜĞ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŽĎŹ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš Ď­ĎŽĎł Ͳ Ď­Ď°Ď­ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŽĎ´ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Í• Ď­ĎŻĎŹ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš Ď­ĎŻĎŻ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŻĎ´ĎŽ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?ŚůĂŜĚ Ď­Ď°ĎŹ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš Ď­Ď°ĎŻĎŽ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ Ď­Ď°Ďą <Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϏ Ͳ ϭϳϭ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϹώϲ Ͳ ϭϹϯώ tĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšĹ?ĹśĹ?Ͳ ĆšŽŜ ϭϲώͲϭϲϰ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšÇ Ĺ˝Ĺ˝Äš ϭϲϹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϹϴ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϾϰ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ ϭϳϏ Θ ϭϳϰ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϳϏώ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ^ĆšÍ˜ Ρ

ĎŽ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽžĆ? ŽŜĆšÍ˜ ϭϳϹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϭϾϏ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϭϾ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ĎŽĎ­Ď´ ͘ ϭϳƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ώϰϲϭͲϴϯ tÄ‚ĹŻĹŻ ^ĆšÍ˜ ώϾώ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎ­ Ͳ ĎŻĎą ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϯϲϰ t͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ΡϰώϾ ϯϲϳ t͘ ϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ΡϾ ϯϾͲϰϹ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϯϾϯ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď°Ď´ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ďľ ĐŞ t͘ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? ϹϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ ϹϏ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ϲϏϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϭ t͘ ϭϏƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲώϏ Ͳ ϲώώ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ Ď˛ĎŻĎľ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϹϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϳϹ Ͳ Ď´Ď­ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš ϳϳϯ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ď´Ďą ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϾϏ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϾϳͲϭϏϹ ͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĨĨĹ?Ä?Ĺ?ĞŜÄ?Ĺ?ÄžĆ? ϭϲϏͲϭϲϲ t͘ EĹ˝ĆŒĆšĹšͲ Ç Ĺ˝Ĺ˝Äš ϭϲϲ ͘ >ĂŜĞ ǀĞ͘ ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ&

Ď­ ÄžÄšĆŒŽŽž Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ Ď­ĎŹĎŹ ͘ EĹ˝ĆŒÇ Ĺ?Ä?Ĺš Ď­ĎŹĎŹ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­ĎŹĎł ͘ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­ĎŻ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď­Ď° DÄ?DĹ?ůůĞŜ Ď­ĎŽĎ­ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď­Ď° Ͳ ĎŽĎŽ ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϰϯώͲϭϰϯϰ ,ƾŜĆšÄžĆŒ Ď­Ď°Ďľ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϹϰϹ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ϭϲϹϴ EÄžĹ?ĹŻ ǀĞ͘ ϭϲϾϰͲϭϳϏώ E͘ ,Ĺ?Ĺ?Ĺš ϭϳϏ t͘ DÄ‚Ç‡ĹśÄ‚ĆŒÄš ϭϳϹͲϭϾϭ t͘ ϾƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϭϾϭϾ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ Ρ ϭϾϲϴ /ŜĚĹ?Ä‚ŜŽůÄ‚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ώώϏϲ ^ƾžžĹ?Ćš ^ĆšÍ˜ ώϹͲώϳ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŽĎľ Ͳ ĎŻĎ­ ͘ WÄ‚ĆšĆšÄžĆŒĆ?ŽŜ ώϾώ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ĎŻĎŹ ͘ ϭϯƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ĎŻĎ­Ď­ ϭϲƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϯϲϹ Ͳ ϯϲϳ t͘ ϲƚŚ ĎŻĎ´ Ď­ÍŹĎŽ ͘ ϭϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ϰϭͲϰϯ t͘ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? Ď°Ď° ͘ ϭώƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϰϲ ͘ ϴƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ď°Ď´ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ ΡώϏϭ Ď°Ďľ dŽžĆ‰ĹŹĹ?ĹśĆ? Ϲϳ ͘ ϭϰƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϲϏ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ ǀĞ͘ ϲϏϲ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ρ: ϲϭ ĹšĹ?ƚƚĞŜĚĞŜ Ρ ϲϯϾ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϲϹϭ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ ϳϳϯ ZĹ?Ç€ÄžĆŒÇ€Ĺ?ÄžÇ ĆŒÍ˜ Ͼϯ ͘ ϭϹƚŚ ǀĞ͘ Ρ ϾϹ ͘ ϭϭƚŚ ǀĞ͘ 8A


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