1-3-11 The Lantern

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Monday January 3, 2011 year: 13 No. 1 the student voice of

The Ohio State University

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thelantern State budget deficit threatens tuition rise

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ALEXA ODOM Lantern Reporter odom.33@osu.edu

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Big Ten struggles in bowls

Big Ten teams went 0-5 in bowl games on New Years Day, leaving the conference at 2-5 overall before Ohio State plays Arkansas in Tuesday’s Sugar Bowl.

arts & life

It’s scary, but at least we know what we’re looking at.

Tuition increase. Until recently, Ohio State students had avoided that phrase and higher bills, but Buckeyes should start planning to hear it frequently and prepare to pay more to attend classes. Ohio Gov.-elect John Kasich, who is expecting a more than $8 billion deficit and must propose a new budget by March 15, refuses to rule out further tuition hikes. OSU officials already are cutting costs, and other state universities facing budget gaps have started raising tuition. In a Cincinnati Enquirer article published Dec. 8, Kasich said higher education spending is rising too quickly, but refused to predict what the funding would be or whether the state would put a cap on tuition or college spending. “We have not said exactly what we plan to do. We’re putting that together now,” said Rob Nichols, Kasich’s spokesman, in an interview with The Lantern. “Tuition increase is nothing we’ve said. Everything is on the table.” Nichols said Kasich had meetings and will

Christmas break unwraps shooting, plane crash

Micah Kamrass Undergraduate Student Government President

continue an ongoing dialogue with OSU officials and President E. Gordon Gee to discuss financial issues. Under Gov. Ted Strickland, OSU received $394 million a year in the form of state funding, including $60 million per year in stimulus money the past two years. Stimulus money will run out July 1, unless the state replaces it, said Geoff Chatas, OSU’s chief financial officer. “The state could choose to plug it or they could choose to let it go — we don’t know,” said Susan Ballinger, OSU’s director of budget and resource planning. The final decision on a possible tuition increase will not be announced until June, Chatas said. “It’s scary, but at least we know what we’re

looking at,” said Undergraduate Student Government President Micah Kamrass. “I trust the university will work out the best solution.” Kamrass said he joined OSU administrators in financial discussions early this fall to provide a student perspective. After the state-imposed three-year freeze on public universities’ tuition ended, OSU tuition rose 3.5 percent in Summer Quarter 2010 and an additional 3.5 percent for the 2010-11 academic year, totaling $9,420 for in-state tuition and $23,604 for out-of-state tuition. OSU withheld 1 percent of each college’s budget, totaling $9.3 million in July 2010, and will withhold another $9.3 million in July in anticipation of the stimulus money not being renewed, Chatas said. “We set some money aside for a rainy day and it may start raining,” he said. Other public Ohio universities face similar difficulties. The University of Cincinnati is preparing for a budget decrease of up to 25 percent, which would require a tuition increase, said Jim Plummer, the school’s vice president of finance. Cincinnati is anticipating a $28.5 million decrease, effective July 2012, Plummer said.

continued as Tuition on 3A

Buckeye pride Right to left: Gary Daugherty, Robin Daugherty, Patty Baxter and Chuck Baxter show their Ohio State pride at the Allstate Fan Fest located off Decatur Street in the French Quarter of downtown New Orleans on Sunday.

ALLY MAROTTI Campus editor marotti.5@osu.edu Many students left campus for most of December, therefore, leaving behind college life and what was going on at Ohio State. News, however, doesn’t take breaks for the holidays. Here’s a recap of what you might have missed during break:

SoulPancake

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Rainn Wilson, best known as Dwight Schrute in ‘The Office,’ pens a New York Times best-seller

Pilot walks away from plane crash near OSU’s Don Scott Airport The pilot of a small cargo plane was injured after his plane went down near OSU’s Don Scott Airport around 10:45 p.m. on Dec. 27. Duane Revennaugh, 45, was the only person on board. He was transported to Riverside Methodist Hospital and treated for head and face injuries, said Dale Gelter, airfield operations manager at the OSU airport. Revennaugh was discharged Dec. 28, according to Riverside Hospital. The plane, a twin-engine Aero Commander 500B numbered N888CA, apparently lost power as it was preparing to land and went down in a hilly area in the southeast corner of the airport.

continued as Break on 2A

campus

ANDY GOTTESMAN / Lantern photographer

OSU medical Buckeyes preparing for unfamiliar foe center gets new CFO

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When the No. 6-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes (11-1) play the No. 8 Arkansas Razorbacks (10-2) in the Sugar Bowl on Tuesday, they’ll be facing a team that they have no history with and an opponent unlike any other they’ve played this season. Arkansas’ teaming of coach Bobby Petrino’s spread offense and projected first-round pick quarterback Ryan Mallett has made the Razorbacks fourth in the nation in passing yards per game and 15th in scoring, with 37.3 points per game — the highest of any OSU opponent this season. “With coach Petrino, they want to throw the ball. They want to be a passing offense,” said OSU senior linebacker Brian Rolle. “That puts more on the back end — the back seven guys — to play harder, cover early and give the D-line time to get to the quarterback.” Mallett’s favorite target has been senior D.J. Williams, the 2010 recipient of the Mackey Award, which is given annually to the nation’s top tight end. Williams finished the regular season with 49 catches for 589 yards and four touchdowns. He is also the NCAA’s active leader for career catches and receiving yards by a tight end. Arkansas has supplemented its potent passing attack with a physical rushing game, highlighted by 6-foot, 220-pound sophomore running back Knile

continued as Arkansas on 3A

Photo courtesy of MCT

South Carolina Gamecocks safety Akeem Auguste (3) sacks Arkansas Razorbacks quarterback Ryan Mallett (15) in the second quarter at Williams-Brice Stadium, Saturday, Nov. 6, 2010, in Columbia, S.C.

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campus Rutherford named medical center CFO Chris Burkett For the Lantern burkett.41@osu.edu A new chief financial officer will take over Tuesday at the Ohio State University Medical Center to focus the center’s growth potential. C. Michael Rutherford, who has more than 30 years of health care experience, was hired as the medical center’s new chief financial officer in early December. Rutherford will replace John Stone who retired last summer after being CFO at the medical center since 2005. “The medical center now is extremely well respected in the world of health care,” Rutherford said. “The opportunity to help it grow and continue up the national rankings in the various categories is very attractive.” Dr. Steven G. Gabbe, senior vice president of health sciences and CEO of the medical center, said Rutherford’s experience and knowledge put him at the top of the list of candidates for the CFO position. “I think he comes to us at a very, very important time,” Gabbe said.

“We have someone in Mike who has had vast experience and will be a great member of our team.” Rutherford was most recently vice president and CFO of Summa Health System in Akron. He was also CEO and CFO of the Sisters of Charity Health System in Cleveland and has held other positions with health organizations. “Michael has been an accomplished and solid performer at every stop in his career,” said Peter Geier, CEO of the Ohio State University Health System, in a press release on Dec. 8. “We are C. Michael extremely happy to have been able to attract Rutherford someone of his caliber to the university.” Rutherford will be responsible for the financial operations of the medical center and expected growth in patient volume. He will also assist the oversight and financial management of other projects, including ProjectONE, the medical center’s $1 billion expansion project. “I think that I can help identify and prioritize some of the growth

opportunities that the medical center may have,” Rutherford said. “I’m looking forward to learning as much as I am contributing. This is a phenomenal organization and it’s filled with incredibly bright people.” Rutherford was born in Huntington, W. Va., and graduated from West Virginia University in 1979 with a master’s and bachelor’s (cum laude) in business. Rutherford has four children with his wife, Debbie, who is an OSU graduate. Rutherford started working in health care after he finished graduate school in 1980. Helping people was a reason for him getting into and remaining in the field, he said. “I had a very good professor who was giving us a little bit of advice in terms of what to do with the rest of our lives,” Rutherford said. “(The professor) said that health care was one of the few areas where you can make a difference. You can go in and help people. At the end of the day, it’s all about improving the health status of individuals and the population you serve.”

To fix Gulf’s woes, think years and billions of dollars kevin spear The Orlando Sentinel MCT ORLANDO, Fla. — John Hankinson Jr., a veteran of many of Florida’s biggest environmental battles, is now the federal government’s point man for one of the nation’s most pressing challenges: cleaning up the Gulf of Mexico in the aftermath of the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. In December, Hankinson stood by the water in Mississippi, near the midpoint of the 1,600-milelong arc that the Gulf’s shoreline forms between the Florida Keys and the Texas-Mexico border. He took in what he could of an ecosystem regarded as a treasure but treated like a toilet — marred by obliterated sea-grass beds, vanquished oyster reefs, debilitated marshes and algae-blighted waters. And those are just some of the ailments that predate the oil spill. About 120 miles south of where Hankinson was standing that day, a well drilled in the Gulf floor for the British oil company BP PLC had erupted in late April, destroying a drilling rig called the Deepwater Horizon, killing 11 workers and spewing nearly 5 million barrels of oil during 87 days. Scientists expect it will take years to understand all of the harm caused by the offshore spill, and even longer to fix it. Since his appointment in October, it has been Hankinson’s job to develop a federal strategy for the Gulf, using fines and damages paid by BP, that will repair the damage from the oil spill and fix the longer-term problems caused by decades of pollution, coastal development and dredging. “This will probably kill me,” the St. Augustine resident said of the challenge, which others describe as incomprehensibly large and complex, because it involves everything from changing how Iowa farmers drain their fields into the Mississippi River to digging

tar balls out of once-pristine beaches along the Florida Panhandle. Disaster and opportunity are constant companions in the Gulf of Mexico, the world’s ninth-largest sea. It is a catcher’s mitt for hurricanes such as Ivan, which pummeled Pensacola in 2004, and Katrina, which killed hundreds of New Orleans residents in 2005. It collects treated sewage and stormwater, and drains much of the nation’s watersheds between the Rocky and Appalachian mountains. Nearly 35 million Americans live within 100 miles of the Gulf, whose coast is lined with refineries, power and chemical plants, casinos and shipping ports. It satisfies a quarter of the nation’s daily appetite for petroleum. It also is among the nation’s most popular playgrounds and fishing spots; generates 73 percent of the shrimp and 67 percent of the oysters harvested in the U.S.; and sustains a rich variety of wildlife, including the brown pelican, bottlenose dolphin, loggerhead turtle, whale shark and bluefin tuna. “America needs the Gulf to be clean,” U.S. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus wrote in September in a spill report sent to President Barack Obama. During the past three decades, Hankinson has been an environmental activist, a state water manager and a regional director for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, working on behalf of imperiled environments such as the Wekiva River near Orlando, the Everglades in South Florida and the Apalachicola River in the Panhandle. Now, as executive director of the new Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Task Force — whose formation was proposed by the Mabus report — Hankinson will need all of the experience gained from his struggles with those earlier projects as he works to compile by Oct. 4 of next year a list of environmental goals for the Gulf of Mexico and a timeline for achieving them.

Break from 1A

OSU football players suspended and former OSU teaching assistant involved in shooting Gelter said the plane, hauling only cargo, appeared to be totaled. OSU police and the Columbus Fire Department received calls about the crash around 10:45 p.m. and responded. The airport did not incur any damage. The Federal Aviation Administration and Ohio Highway Patrol are investigating the crash. Terrelle Pryor, four others suspended for first five games of 2011 for receiving improper benefits The NCAA suspended five OSU football players for the first five games of the 2011 season “for selling awards, gifts and university apparel and receiving improper benefits in 2009.” Terrelle Pryor, Dan Herron, Mike Adams, DeVier Posey and Solomon Thomas must repay between $1,000 and $2,500 in money and benefits to a charity. The players are eligible for the Sugar Bowl, in which OSU will face Arkansas Tuesday in New Orleans, on the basis that the athletes “did not receive adequate rules education during the time period the violations occurred,” said Kevin Lennon, NCAA vice president of academic and membership affairs in a press release Dec. 23. Jordan Whiting must also sit out the first game of the 2011 season. The athletes sold items including Big Ten championship rings, a Fiesta Bowl sportsmanship award, Gold Pants (given to players for beating Michigan), football jerseys, pants and shoes. Herron, Posey and Thomas also traded their autographs for discounted tattoos. The NCAA, not OSU, handed down the suspensions. Athletic Director Gene Smith said the university did not suggest self-imposed sanctions to the NCAA. For their first five games next year, the Buckeyes play Akron, Toledo, Miami (Fla.), Colorado and Michigan State. Juniors Pryor, Herron, Posey and Adams could have looked into entering the NFL draft early, rather than spend nearly half of their senior seasons sidelined. They made the decision to stay at OSU after Tressel made them promise to come back or they couldn’t play in the Sugar Bowl. Police arrest bank robber who could be ‘church lady bandit’ An exploding dye pack caused a woman who police suspect could be the infamous “church lady bandit” to be charged with a bank robbery Dec. 23. The suspect robbed the U.S. Bank branch at the Ohio Union on Oct. 20. A woman holding a scarf to her face robbed the Fifth Third Bank at 155 W. Nationwide Blvd, at about 12:57 p.m., the FBI said. The woman approached the teller counter and showed the teller a note saying she had a gun, was robbing the bank and that the teller had ‘Church lady one minute to comply. The teller gave the woman bandit’ money from her drawer along with a dye pack. The woman fled the bank with the money. Witnesses outside the bank watched the dye pack explode on the woman, causing her to drop the stolen money, all of which was returned to the bank.

2A

He counts among his assets the support of EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, who chose Hankinson for the job and is from New Orleans, the U.S. city perhaps most closely tied to the Gulf’s fate. “She’s very direct and very clear about making this a priority,” Hankinson said of the task force. He also expects to have lots of money — billions of dollars — in his corner, as the government moves against BP financially on two fronts. The first involves a Natural Resource Damage Assessment that will calculate how much to bill BP for repairing the environmental damage caused by the spilled oil and the chemical dispersants used to chop the crude into smaller droplets. Federal agencies and five states have deployed hundreds of researchers to take stock of everything spill-related, from the more easily found problems, such as oil buried in beach sand, to the less-obvious losses, such as reduced populations of sea turtles. There’s also damage that hasn’t been found because it hasn’t occurred yet. “It appears that there is still oil hanging around that has sunk and is near the shore, and potentially may re-oil some beach areas,” said Gil McRae, director of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute and the state’s trustee for damage assessments. Spending that damage-assessment money could take years. For example, the final restoration project for a 1993 barge collision that dumped 330,000 gallons of oil on mangroves, sea grasses and beaches by the entrance to Tampa Bay is still months from happening. The second source of money for Hankinson’s Gulf restoration work is the fine pending against BP for violating the federal Clean Water Act. Based on the 200 million gallons of crude that gushed from the broken well, the fine could total as much as $21 billion, if the company and its drilling partners are found to be highly negligent. BP argues that the spill estimates as calculated

Columbus police found the woman hiding in a building across the street from the bank, her clothes covered in red dye. Police identified the robber as Sylvete P. Gilbert, a 46-year-old black woman from Columbus. Gilbert was taken into Columbus police custody where she confessed to and was charged with the robbery. Officials say Gilbert could be the “church lady bandit,” a robber who has been a suspect in eight bank robberies and a hotel robbery since 2006. Officials are comparing Gilbert’s physical description to previous surveillance images of the “church lady bandit” and comparing the way the robberies were committed. The FBI, Columbus Police Department and OSU Police Department were working on this case Dec. 23. Hacked: Data breach costly for Ohio State, victims of compromised info OSU revealed a data breach Dec. 15 that jeopardized the identities of 760,000 people and could cost the university $4 million. In October, hackers accessed the server that stored the names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth and addresses of current and former students, faculty, applicants and others affiliated with the university. University officials said every current and former student, faculty and staff member was sent an e-mail Dec. 15 informing them of the breach and precautions the university was taking in the breach’s aftermath. The breach will cost the university $4 million in expenses related to investigative consulting, notification of the breach, credit security and a calling center for anyone with questions or concerns. Between the time and notification of the breach, the university hired two computer security consulting firms, Interhack Corp., based in Columbus, and Stroz Friedberg LLC, based in New York. The firms found no evidence data were stolen, but the university is offering 12 months of free credit protection to everyone whose information was on the server through Experian, Equifax and TransUnion. This was the largest data breach among educational institutions in 2010 and in OSU’s history, according to Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, an organization that protects consumers’ privacy rights. On Dec. 15, the university couldn’t release how the server was hacked because the case was still under investigation. Former Ohio State teaching assistant to be charged with attempted murder, kidnapping A former OSU teaching assistant will be charged with attempted murder and kidnapping after she allegedly shot her ex-fiancé and then forced him into her car Dec. 14, Dublin police said.

The Lost City of Scioto

by government-supervised scientists are too high. That and other factors could ultimately reduce the size of the fine. But some experts, such as Ian MacDonald, a Florida State University oceanography professor, think any final estimate should also include the methane gas ejected from the ruptured well, and that would boost the estimated total nearly 40 percent. “It would increase the fine,” MacDonald said. Environmental groups, Mabus and the presidential commission investigating the Deepwater Horizon disaster have all called on Congress to dedicate a significant share of any BP fine to restoring some of the dozens of areas in the Gulf of Mexico in need of repair, from the sickly Laguna Madre of south Texas to the imperiled Florida Bay wedged between the Everglades and the Keys. Hankinson was in Mississippi in December because a $21 billion reconstruction of Deer Island, which sits a few hundred yards from Biloxi’s waterfront casinos, is already under way. Rebuilding the five-mile-long island will require dredging up 2 million cubic feet of sand from the bottom of Mississippi Sound — a massive ecosystem intrusion that could have been swamped by controversy. But the five years and 60 meetings it took to launch the project minimized any opposition, according to that state’s director of marine resources, William Walker. Said Hankinson: “If I can get everybody to play nice in the rest of the Gulf, I’ll be able to get my job done.” Among the more contentious projects under consideration: the much-called-for rebuilding of Louisiana’s wetlands, which have been chopped up by oil-drilling operations and cut off from the Mississippi River’s renourishment over time. Another major challenge — a “dead zone” of oxygen-starved water in the Gulf that extends from the mouth of the

continued as Gulf on 3A

Thirty-year-old Melissa “Missie” Stredney of Columbus taught a lab section of Chemistry 122 before OSU fired her in February 2009 after receiving reports of misconduct. Dublin police responded to a 9-1-1 call saying a woman with a gun was forcing a man into her silver Chevrolet Cavalier in the parking lot of NCO Financial Systems at 5626 Frantz Road. Police pulled the car over a mile from the scene and took Stredney into custody. The victim, identified as 30-year-old Jamie Hart, was flown to Grant Medical Center in critical Melissa Stredney condition. Hart had stabilized that night. Stredney and Hart were engaged to be married in October 2010, according to an article from Ohio’s Tribune Chronicle website, but they didn’t get married. Police believe the break-up was Stredney’s motive. Stredney graduated from OSU in 2004 with a Bachelor of Arts in chemistry and is pursuing her Bachelor of Science in pharmaceutical sciences, although she is not enrolled for Winter Quarter 2011. Stredney was fired as teaching assistant during Winter Quarter 2009 after canceling labs, telling students what to write on their reports and sending threatening e-mails to students. Lauren Hallow and Zack Meisel contributed to this story.

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Arkansas from 1A

Razorbacks’ offense

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to test the Buckeyes Davis. In 2010, Davis rushed for 1,183 yards and scored 13 rushing touchdowns. “You look at them and think that they’re a spread football team, but they’re a very physical team,” Rolle said. “All their guys are 225, 235, 240 (pounds). So, they’re a physical team if you didn’t know it.” OSU senior safety Jermale Hines said the Razorback offense’s dual-threat nature would test the Buckeye defense. “When you got a quarterback like that and a great running back, you’ve just got to have great eye control ’cause the second that you peak in the backfield, that’s the second where they go playaction and he’s going up top over you,” Hines said. On the defensive side of the ball, the Razorbacks aren’t as statistically impressive as their offensive counterpart, ranking 42nd in the nation in points against, giving up 22.8 points per game, and 34th in yards against, giving up 339.8 yards per game. OSU senior guard Bryant Browning said that he’s been impressed by what he’s seen from Arkansas’ defense. “They’re definitely a good bunch on defense. Those guys are flying around, trying to make big

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Gulf from 2A

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Tuition from 1A

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plays,” Browning said. “Their defensive scheme, they definitely line up in different ways to try to confuse offenses, and I feel like they do a great job of that.” Junior linebacker Jerry Franklin leads the Razorback defense, with 93 tackles and 12.5 tackles for loss. Franklin also has 6.5 sacks on the season — good for second on the Razorbacks’ roster, behind junior defensive end Jake Bequette’s seven sacks. Browning said that the Buckeyes have been well prepared for the blitzing nature of the Arkansas defense. “They do blitz,” Browning said. “Certain teams we’ve played have blitzed about as much as them, or maybe even a little more, so it’s nothing new.” Arkansas is 3-2 this season when facing a team ranked in the nation’s Top 25. Both of its losses were against teams then-ranked in the top 10, in Alabama and Auburn. OSU coach Jim Tressel said the Buckeye coaching staff would pay particular attention to the Razorbacks’ loss to Auburn because of the similarities between Auburn quarterback Cam Newton and OSU quarterback Terrelle Pryor. “We always love to steal ideas from anybody and most especially when you think you have similar capabilities,” Tressel said. “The reason they worked is because Auburn is good at them and we’ve got to decide what we’re good at.”

Though many scientists and environmental groups think every effort should be made to repair all damage from the spill, ultimately the most effective response to the BP disaster, they say, would be to shrink the dead zone, repair the Louisiana wetlands and otherwise nurse the Gulf back to health. “What I’ve found often, working in environmental management, is it’s often not one ‘stressor,’ as scientists like to call it, that’s causing the collapse of an environment, but the interaction of several,” Hankinson said.

In May, the University of Illinois Board of Trustees approved an annual 9.5 percent tuition increase for four years. California State University implemented a two-step plan for tuition increase, with a 10 percent increase effective Jan. 1, and an another 5 percent in fall 2011. “We are always conscious of the impact of tuition costs,” Chatas said. “We’re not being flippant — we very much understand the impact on the students.” Dylan Tussel contributed to this story.

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9A 3A XX


student voice Ringing in the new year out on the town A columnist’s reaction to everything from outfits and alcohol from his New Year’s Eve experience at bar near campus LANTERN Columnist

The older I get, the more I think that New Year’s is a pointless holiday. It is a giant celebration centered around a single split second, when the clock transitions from 11:59 p.m. to midnight, as it does on most nights. But if you obey my life’s motto — “Always give in to peer pressure” — then, inevitably, you will be talked into going out on New Year’s Eve. This year I went with a group of friends to Park Street Saloon. I had never been, so I asked some of them what I should expect. The most resounding and concise advice I received was to “dress to impress.”

BRAD MILLER miller.4410@osu.edu

Now, I have been dressing myself for some time, but I’m not sure anyone has ever been impressed by it. One thing was certain, however: My usual attire — stained jeans, T-shirt and Indians pullover — would not make the cut. It is my belief that most men do not normally worry about the clothes they wear. We remember what a pain it was to shop for them and therefore have a general dislike toward anything made of thread. I fit into this category, so I decided to wait until I saw what others were wearing before making my decision. I ended up going along with the crowd and wearing a button-up shirt and dark jeans — the best the bottom of the closet had to offer. It was New Year’s, after all! After arriving at Park Street, I saw that I had conformed nicely. The general wear at the place could be described as a skanky prom night for the women and a metrosexual night for the men. I am now proud to say that I am officially licensed to provide some advice of my own. The first thing to do after entering the bar is to calculate just how much money could be spent in a place like that. It is best to order a few different drinks right away — strictly for research purposes, of course.

It doesn’t take many drinks at the price of $46 an ounce to realize that this isn’t your typical Out-r-Inn mug night. Shortly after embarking on the research process, you will find it useful to locate the nearest restroom, which, depending on your location, might be in New Hampshire. Do not be alarmed if at first you think that there is no men’s restroom. It very well could be — as it was in my case — that women are haphazardly walking into it. I at least think they were women. On your journey to the restroom, it is fun to consider just how great a haunted house Park Street Saloon would make, with its many corners, corridors and catacombs. If you have never been to Park Street, then this paragraph is probably lost on you. Simply move to the next. Finally, settle in and find a good place to rest your elbows, such as lodging them under your rib cage like everyone else. You might experience tenderness and swelling the next morning, but do not be upset. You have 365 days to heal.

ANDY GOTTESMAN / Multimedia editor

DeVier Posey, Mike Adams, Dan Herron, Terrelle Pryor and Solomon Thomas apologize in front of the media at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center on Dec. 28. The NCAA suspended the five for the first five games of the 2011 season for receiving improper benefits.

The Buck stops where? Letter to the editor Fred A. Strine North Bend, WA Varsity “O” Baseball, ’68-’70 (walk-on) 1st Team All-Big Ten, 1970 B.S. Education, 1970 I’m tired of hearing, “They didn’t know,” “We weren’t explicit enough,” “These are tough times,” and “We intend to appeal.” Enough already! At what point does my university do the right thing and insist on even tougher standards than the NCAA? Who at Ohio State finally has the guts to hold student-athletes personally accountable for their actions? I want my alma mater to set a lasting example. Acquiescing to an NCAA ruling then filing an appeal is way too wimpy. OSU can and should do much better. Specifically, kick the tattoo crew off the team now, before the Sugar Bowl. They’ve broken the rules and dishonored the university. They should forfeit their scholarships. Team members who think only about themselves should be on their own — just like regular students.

To deter similar incidents in the future, the athletic department should: 1. Give parents and prospective athletes a legally prepared list of OSU do’s and don’ts that reflect or exceed NCAA standards. Clearly state disciplinary policy for violators. No signatures, no scholarship. 2. Quiz students-athletes repeatedly on rules during preseason practice. No pass, no play. 3. Establish OSU standards for player punishment independent of NCAA regulations. Don’t wait to see if the NCAA will let an infraction slide. 4. Initiate a scholarship forfeiture-repayment plan to deter future misbehavior. It should incorporate the following: A. If an athlete leaves OSU for pro sports before eligibility expires, the scholarship becomes a student loan and must be repaid. B. If an athlete is dismissed from the team for OSU or NCAA violations, the scholarship becomes a loan that must be repaid. C. The university should put money from repaid loans from No. 1 and No. 2 above in a scholarship fund. If athletes won’t value their scholarships, give the money to deserving students who will.

An athletic scholarship is an honor, not an entitlement. As such, the university should demand rule compliance in writing. Quit making specious excuses for rule breakers. Put some teeth into every athletic scholarship/contract by spelling out real penalties — financial consequences to benefit those who appreciate an OSU education. This year’s tattoo crew didn’t learn much from Maurice Clarett’s bad example. Apparently, Troy Smith’s Alamo Bowl suspension didn’t send them a meaningful message either. Collectively, they spat on team honoraria. It’s time for all loyal Buckeyes to demand their university take charge with bold, principled policies that will shape future athlete behavior in ways we can all admire. To the OSU Department of Athletics: Don’t pass the buck. Here’s your chance to make us proud of more than just stats and rankings. Boot the tattoo crew now and demand higher standards for all who wear scarlet and gray.

Send your letter to the editor and contact information to lanternnewsroom@gmail.com

An example of the ‘excellence to eminence’ Ohio State strives to achieve LANTERN Columnist

If Ohio State had a New Year’s resolution, it would be President E. Gordon Gee’s mantra. We see it everywhere and it is reiterated in many spaces and places in the university community. What does it mean to take “excellence to eminence” in the coming New Year? Gee has a vision for our flagship school; how can we procure our own vision of that mantra? For more than a month, a friend of mine, Lucy, spent time in PATRICIA CUNNINGHAM Uganda. She had been planning cunningham.212@osu.edu to take her fall quarter off for some time now in order to serve in this capacity. Gee often refers to being part of the global society; for me, it means being a global citizen. Lucy is now a senior, and since I met her four years ago, she has

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had a heart for Africa and all marginalized people domestic and abroad. She has spent the past three years preparing herself for her eventual destination by getting involved in student organizations and international organizations like UNICEF. She even convinced me this past May to do a 20-mile bike ride in which the proceeds benefited entrepreneurship in Africa. The everyday experience is how we should measure our lives. And I think that Lucy has the insight to the greater purpose of life. Life is about relationships and how we use our talents to help others. As human beings, this is how we can use our own strengths or excellence to impact the world around us. Eminence can be determined by an equation. A person’s series of strengths developed over time and experience to be multiplied by use equals excellence. Now, eminence is the calculus of life. Excellence is then taken and is integrated by variables such as community, opportunity and work ethic. Eminence is infinite as a set of experiences, but cannot be operationalized in isolation. Excellence is algebra. This is how Lucy has arrived at eminence. She has spent her time at OSU harnessing all of her strengths and practicing and developing

them. She has never hesitated on opportunities and has not become lackadaisical with her abilities, but has increased her work ethic and commitments while still achieving academic balance. She has pushed herself to her own limits and surprised herself when she achieved more. Her humanity was challenged right before leaving for Uganda because she doubted her choice to go. Her excellence had helped her to develop courage and she left for the experience of a lifetime. Now home, Lucy is preparing to reengage with the campus. She has become the global citizen she had been preparing for with all of this personal drive. Her eminence now serves as an example. Our university motto is “education for citizenship.” When we make the right choices and create seamless relationships with what we learn in the classroom and what we do outside the classroom, we can calculate eminence. Lucy is one of my heroes. She reminds me that there is hope for our generation to not be totally selfish and individualistic. OSU became the space for her to cultivate excellence and eminence. This New Year, we can all afford to be a little more like Lucy.

Monday January 3, 2011


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

Sudoku by The Mepham Group ©2009

See solutions to sudoku, octo & crosswords online at thelantern.com

Doodle-a-day we started it, so how will you finish it?

ACROSS 1 Nick and Nora Charles’s dog 5 When repeated, island near Tahiti 9 Game with checks 14 Disapproving fans’ chorus 15 Tied, as a game 16 Line with many stops 17 With 25-Across, WWI U.S. Army command nickname 19 Greek market 20 Overnight flight 21 Sad interjection 23 PC linking system 24 Haul to the shop 25 See 17-Across 27 Judge 31 Argentina aunt 32 Custard-filled pastry 38 Chop 39 Gift of the garrulous 40 Sch. WNW of Topeka 41 Flip side of “Eleanor Rigby” 48 Three, in Asti 49 Most Chaplin films 50 With 64-Across, breed whose common colors begin 17-, 32and 41-Across 55 Chill in the air

56 Stat for Koufax 57 Opposite of “yup” 58 Rectangular 62 Solzhenitsyn subject 64 See 50-Across 66 Extremely overweight 67 First African-American selected for a U.S. Davis Cup team 68 Trillion: Pref. 69 Indian wraps 70 Attention to “pay” 71 Brings to a close DOWN 1 This ans. is one 2 Foot bottom 3 Tadpole, grown up 4 One leading a spartan lifestyle 5 Decorate with gems 6 Eggs, biologically 7 Summary 8 A bobby sock is often folded down to it 9 Like the most elegant old autos 10 Monopolize 11 Dangerous bacteria 12 Plastic wrap brand 13 Street language, often 18 Environmental protocol city

22 Commedia dell’__ 26 “2001” computer 27 In need of a massage 28 Syngman of Korea 29 Knock down some pins 30 Joplin works 33 Sigma follower 34 Recedes to the sea 35 Related 36 “Winning __ everything” 37 Regrets 42 P.O. box item 43 Florida crops 44 Shared wedding vow response 45 Studied secondarily, with “in” 46 Perp-to-cop story 47 Abundantly filled (with) 50 Kids’ blocks 51 Curaçao neighbor 52 Hay bundler 53 Daytime TV mogul 54 Pee Wee of the Dodgers 59 Pizzeria fixture 60 Teen comedy stereotype 61 Pâté de foie __ 63 “Just __ thought!” 65 Common article

Horoscopes by Nancy Black and Stephanie Clements, ©2010 Tribune Media Services Inc. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY Your creative mind takes over this year. You may doubt yourself in times of trouble, but don’t despair. On a day like today in 1496, Leonardo da Vinci failed to make his machine fly. He still went on to be one of the most brilliant minds in history. Keep working at it.

VIRGO Aug. 23 – Sept. 22 Today is a 7 -- All may not go according to plan. Don’t follow along blindly. Be willing to voice any objections and shift course. This flexibility pays off.

To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

LIBRA Sept. 23–Oct. 22 Today is a 6 -- Definitely no gambling today. Confusion reigns today and you feel confined. You may want to focus on your career, or just take the day off.

ARIES March 21 – April 19 Today is a 7 -- Your imagination can easily take flight today. It may help in your career, but remember to keep one foot on the ground, in case it gets challenging.

SCORPIO Oct. 23 – Nov. 21 Today is an 8 -- Consider the consequences of a frivolous suggestion. Be grateful. Don’t lose what you have in order to get more. It’s not the quantity that counts.

TAURUS April 20 – May 20 Today is an 8 -- The first Monday of the year is full of promises. Bring peace, stability and a little bit of adventure to your work. This inspires everyone.

SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22 – Dec. 21 Today is an 8 -- Don’t get over-impressed with your own bravado (although you do look dashing). Restate your love for someone close to your heart. It turns out great.

GEMINI May 21 – June 21 Today is a 7 -- Get rid of things you no longer need. Pass them on to other people. Think eBay, Craigslist, Freecycle or the thrift store. This provides space. CANCER June 22 – July 22 Today is a 7 -- Imagine fulfillment. But don’t finance the whimsical dreams of another. You can say no to the request if it doesn’t make sense for you. LEO July 23 – Aug. 22 Today is a 9 -- The best things in life are freely given, like friendship and love. You may want to save by postponing travel until tomorrow. Hang out with buddies instead.

CAPRICORN Dec. 22 – Jan. 19 Today is a 7 -- New ideas don’t always work, but are worth trying out. It’s not a good day to take chances with your money, though. Do the free parts now and pay later. AQUARIUS Jan. 20 – Feb. 18 Today is a 6 -- Avoid an argument with a person close to you by just being present with them rather than trying to solve past problems. PISCES Feb. 19 – March 20 Today is a 7 -- Accept all the help that you can get. There’s less than anyone really expected, but you make it work for all as if by magic, with everyone contributing.

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Monday January 3, 2011

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arts&life

Monday January 3, 2011

thelantern www.thelantern.com

Wilson ponders life’s wonders

upcoming MONDAY

Alex Antonetz Senior Lantern reporter antonetz.3@osu.edu

Andrew Varner 9:30 pm @ Scarlet & Grey Cafe Ticket Release: Dr. Patch Adams 5 pm @ Ohio Union - Information Center

TUESDAY Da Squad Boyz 6 pm @ Major Woody’s

WEDNESDAY Ticket Release: “Whoa, Dream Big!”: Directing with Jason Reitman 5 pm @ Ohio Union - Information Center Photo courtesy of Comedy Central

OUAB Flicks for Free featuring “Easy A” 6pm @ Ohio Union - US Bank Conference Theatre

Rainn Wilson, known for his role as Dwight in ‘The Office,’ started the SoulPancake website as a place to discuss philosophy and art.

From TV to film and from acting to directing, Rainn Wilson has ventured into yet another medium: literature. Wilson — best known as Dwight Schrute in “The Office” — is the author of “SoulPancake,” a New York Times bestseller, released in October, designed to “chew on life’s big questions, stimulate the brain, spark the soul, and figure out what it means to be human.” The book is based on Wilson’s website, SoulPancake.com, which features a message board for users to post and discuss similar questions as those featured in the book. “I think that a lot of people in our culture don’t really peek into life’s big questions,” Wilson said in a conference call last month. Wilson’s inspiration for “SoulPancake” stemmed from an early interest in philosophy, art, literature and spirituality. However, he isn’t fond of the way it was taught. “Philosophy classes in college are boring, let’s face it,” Wilson said. “They’re really dry and they have no bearing on real life whatsoever. It’s just a bunch of pointless intellectual arguments.” Designed to be interactive, the book

continued as Philosophy on 8A

New Year’s reveals revelers’ lack of taste

Pierce the Veil 6 pm @ The Basement

ARTS Columnist

It does not take a philosopher to argue that Christmas as a holiday represents the commercial identity of the American people. There is one holiday that trumps even Christmas for its commercial fanfare, however. When it comes to our corporate culture, New Year’s takes the fruitcake. At its core, at least Christmas has some purpose. When you remove the loan you took out to buy gifts, the thousands of blinking Christmas lights and Mariah Carey, Christmas is actually a religious holiday (something to do with the birth of Jesus). New Year’s marks the beginning of a new year, true, but why this merits a party is questionable. Ryan Book Just take a look at the capitol of New Year’s book.15@osu.edu festivities: Times Square in New York City. During my stay in New York last year, my group and I decided to walk to the square as it was close to the hotel. I was mesmerized not because of any innate beauty, but because that’s what happens when so many electric advertisements are placed in one area. It was like watching “Blade Runner.” One Times Square, the most recognizable, is a 395-foot monument to commercials.

THURSDAY Free Thursday @ the Wex 4 pm @ Wexner Center Galleries Girl Talk 7 pm @ LC Pavilion OUAB Karaoke Night 7:30 pm @ Ohio Union - Woody’s Tavern Speak Easy 7 pm @ Wild Goose Creative

FRIDAY Screening of Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws” 2 pm @ Wexner Center Film/Video Theater

Photo courtesy of MCT

Times Square erupts during this year’s New Year’s celebration.

continued as Gaudy on 8A

Best

includes exercises that ask readers to list things, such as what they would chop off their little toe for, non-physical traits that turn them on and questions they hate not having the answer to. “SoulPancake” also features art from more than 100 artists. Wilson and co-creator Devon Gundry said they scoured the Internet for art that fit the questions posed on the book, and artists that haven’t been discovered. “Having a book filled with art and bright, vibrant color and interactivity is what we’re about, so we couldn’t really have a book that was just have dry text,” Wilson said. “No one wants to read just text.” The book also assigns readers chores, such as the “reverse pickpocket,” where readers are asked to place money in a stranger’s pocket. The process of designing the book, choosing what questions and chores to include, was time consuming for Wilson and Gundry. More than 40,000 questions posed on the website were considered for inclusion and divided into categories such as “The Brain & The Soul,” “Experiences & Emotions” and “God & Religion.” “We took every question that had ever been asked on the site and we put it in a document and we started shaping that into

of

2010

Back to the Cemetery

Playlist

The other

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Arts editor Ryan Book compiled a 15-song playlist of his favorites from the past year. Listen online at thelantern.com!

Dancing on My own

Deny All

Robyn

Bettie Serveert

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3

German punk band crafts Robyn reserves this dance No denying that Dutch great piece of grotesque single for herself band gets single right Shock value has always had a place in modern music. Artists from Alice Cooper to Eminem have used bombastic and controversial lyrics to simultaneously draw in curious listeners while pushing away the old world order that decried their efforts. The Other, a German punk band, is the most recent act to rattle society’s comfort level. The band’s music sticks to a theme of cinematic horror (drummer Dr. Caligari takes his name from the classic German expressionist film, “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari”), but it doesn’t thrust grotesque brutality onto listeners like some metal acts. The group’s single “Back To The Cemetery” covers a bizarre subject matter, but it doesn’t threaten to make the listener ill. The subject matter in question is grave robbing. The band makes the topic subtly humorous by putting a modern “green” spin on the idea: dead bodies are recyclable. The band’s ideas for reuse will make the listener cringe and smirk at the same time: consumption a la “Soilent Green,” organ harvesting and, in a more interesting interpretation, a lamp shade. Vocalist Rod Usher lists the morbid options in his dramatic voice, while guitarist Sarge von Rock adds a thrash riff, and Caligari keeps pace with both bass drums kicking. The song’s refrain is the cherry on top and brings The Other back to its punk roots. The anthemic shouting of the song’s title is reminiscent of early AFI and other politically incorrect punk standards, such as the Dead Kennedys’ satirical “Kill The Poor.” The Other has picked up right where the original “horrorcore” band, The Misfits, left off. “Back To The Cemetery” might be tougher to understand than most of the tracks on the list, but a close listen will reveal that like any “South Park” episode, all of the shock is done in the name of having a good time. As the song states, “grave robbing is a delight,” and so is the song itself.

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Swedish pop star Robyn released three new albums in 2010, effectively kicking down the door to the U.S. music market. The “Body Talk” series has received general acclaim from critics, but “Body Talk Pt. 1” and its correlating single, “Dancing On My Own” have been the highlight of Robyn’s year. Robyn bounces between different moods during the course of the three albums, so it is interesting that the saddest song in the series would become its biggest hit. The song is one of hopeless yearning for someone that is already taken, and the heartache of being forced to watch the rival win out at the club. Part of the reason the song got huge is likely that the music doesn’t mirror the vocalist’s attitude. Robyn and the song’s co-writer, Patrik Berger, take dual credit for producing the beat for the song. It opens with a rapid synthesizer line and is joined by a simple drum machine fill to create a worthy clubgoing track. It’s not upbeat enough to be an all-out rave, but it keeps the mood lifted enough that the depressing lyrical content won’t scare away listeners at a party. The lyrics aren’t entirely depressing, however. Robyn comes to grips with her loss in a way and decides that the best thing to do is just dance the pain away. It follows themes similar to many Lady Gaga tracks, but makes the feeling more relatable to the listener by toning down the grandiosity. The Guardian ranked “Dancing On My Own” the best song of 2010 and Pitchfork ranked it fourth best for the year. The track is nominated for Best Dance Recording at the Grammy Awards. Robyn laments during the song, “I’m over here, why can’t you see me?” If only her desired could see her now.

“How many times did it pass you by?” Dutch alternative band Bettie Serveert (“Bettie Serves” in English) asks this question during the refrain of its single “Deny All.” The question could be relevant to the group. It has gotten along well, releasing nine albums since 1992, including the 2010 record “Pharmacy of Love,” but it has never had enormous success on U.S. airwaves. If any song from its catalogue should change that, it is “Deny All.” The pace of the song is rapid, but front woman Carol van Dyk’s alluring vocals are easy on the ears. The subject is a common one: taking control of one’s life and seizing the day. As van Dyk says, “Grab it by the throat, grab it while you can.” The message might come across as clichéd in the music world, but the kicker is that the addressee doesn’t take van Dyk’s message to heart, as evidenced by the line “Deny all,” which is repeated multiple times in a negative response to von Dyk’s advice. The pace of the accompanying music adds to the urgency of the message. Van Dyk and Peter Visser open the song with a punk-style riff and drummer Gino Geudens keeps pace with a simple yet upbeat tempo. The guitars drop off 15 seconds into the song, leaving just Geudens and bassist Herman Bunskoeke to accompany van Dyk for the verse. Bunskoeke plays a solo bass line that slows the song down just enough so that when the guitars reenter at the refrain, it seems all the more rapid. Visser’s “solo” following the refrain, a repeating of the same high note, might seem overly simplistic but it stays in uniform with the song. Bettie Serveert has done its time as an opening act, but with a track like “Deny All,” it’s tough to deny the band’s potential for mainstream success.


Monday January 3, 2011

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arts&life ‘True Grit’ indicates western rebirth RoBeRT W. BUTleR McClatchy Newspapers MCT The movie Western has been in decline for so long that no one film is going to pull it from its commercial doldrums. Yet the success of the Coen brothers’ “True Grit,” $36 million in ticket sales over its first five days in theaters, offers a glimmer of hope that a once-beloved genre may yet retain a bit of life in those stiff bowed legs. Here’s my list of seven essential Westerns. Now, all fans of cowboy movies have their own criteria for greatness. Mine is probably a bit more rigorous than most. The following are not just great Westerns. They’re great movies that happen to be Westerns. In many cases, these films stand a bit outside the mainstream of Western movie tradition by commenting on the very notion of what a Western entails. So while you’ll get cowboys and Indians and gun battles here, you’ll also find a deep vein of revisionism as various filmmakers, and there are some great ones represented here, not only celebrate the genre but pick it apart to see what makes it tick. Let’s start with a couple of traditional classics, both directed by John Ford, Hollywood’s greatest maker of Westerns: In “Stagecoach” (1939), passengers take a cross-country trek during an Apache uprising. There’s some terrific action (stunts by the great Yakima Canutt), but the real thrill is in the interplay of the characters. There’s a banker making a getaway with embezzled funds, a boozy physician and a mousy liquor salesman. Especially there’s a prostitute (Claire Trevor), who’s been driven out of town by the bluenoses, and a cowboy (John Wayne) on the run from the law. The film is hugely enjoyable, and it made Wayne a full-fledged movie star (after a decade of kicking around in B movies). “Shane” (1953) offers a template that has been recycled through countless subsequent Westerns. A former gunfighter (Alan Ladd) puts away his six-shooters and is hired on as a farm hand for a sod-busting

Gaudy from 6A

Media outlets add to New Year’s trashiness The coverage of the New Year’s festivities is almost as gaudy as the square itself. Fox is the heavy hitter, drawing viewers to see Ryan Seacrest and Dick Clark narrate the night’s events. There are “The Far Side” comic strips from the mid ‘80s that poke fun at the chemical alteration that keeps Clark looking young. I’m sure the comics were funny then, but they are hilarious now that it’s 25 years later and they still ring true. Seacrest is Fox’s ace because his name on a program makes it a show that young people will watch, regardless how desperate the rest of the show is. And the Fox New Year’s festivities are desperate. New Kids on the Block , the Backstreet Boys and Ke$ha were the musical entertainment. New Kids and the Backstreet Boys would’ve been a noteworthy act during the ‘90s. Right now, their best hopes at resurgence are in Las Vegas night shows. Ke$ha was the relevant

couple (Van Heflin, Jean Arthur) and their little boy (Brandon DeWilde). When local farmers are persecuted by a ruthless cattle baron, Shane must once again strap on his weapons. George Stevens’ film gains extra poignancy and mythos by being seen through the child’s eyes. But in the mid-’50s, something changed. Most of the Western tropes had been worn out, and filmmakers began re-examining the genre. Ford’s “The Searchers” (1956) is one of his darkest films. Wayne plays Ethan Edwards, an Indian hater who mounts a years-long search to find the tribe who killed his brother’s family and kidnapped a young girl. This was Ford’s letter of apology to American Indians. For decades he’d made Indians the faceless heavies of his films. Here Wayne is a racist whose goal is not to rescue his niece, but to kill her, since she has undoubtedly been “ruined” by her life as a warrior’s squaw. Heavy stuff for the Eisenhower era. But it was just the beginning. Sam Peckinpah’s “The Wild Bunch” (1969) is almost as shocking today as it was 40 years ago, with hypnotic “blood ballets” that were meant to show audiences the awfulness of violence, but instead elevated mayhem to poetry. Running out of lawless frontier, a bank-robbing gang (William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Ben Johnson, Warren Oates) flees to Mexico and gets involved in the 1917 revolution on behalf of a despicable general with the federales. Thematically it may be the richest Western ever. It also features three of the greatest action sequences to be captured on film. Kevin Costner’s “Dances With Wolves” (1990) is one of two great films to examine the West through American Indian eyes (the other is 1950’s “Broken Arrow”). In the last days of the Civil War, a Union officer (Costner) is sent to a remote post on the prairie and is adopted by a Lakota tribe. Winner of seven Oscars (including best picture and director) “Wolves” works as a great escapist fantasy (we vicariously get to play Indian), as a celebration of noble primitivism and as a eulogy for a vanishing way of life. Clint Eastwood became famous playing tight-lipped, cigar-chewing gunfighters, murderous machines who specialized in high body counts.

performer, but the network still stooped pretty low to get her. Surely they could have found someone who succeeded in 2010 that doesn’t have a kindergartner’s grasp on melody. When asked what her resolution for 2011 was, Ke$ha ironically said “not become a douchebag,” thereby proving my point. New Year’s is not a time for taste; it’s a time for what’s popular. Fox and Ke$ha weren’t the only ones thriving on the tastelessness required to slake the alcohol-inspired desire for shameless entertainment. Party stores were packed with those buying gaudy hats and other props, and the U.S. Champagne Bureau said that three times as many bottles of champagne were sold in December than any other month. The most popular brand: A $5.99 bottle of Andre Brut, the Natty Light of champagne. Behind alcohol, the biggest commodity was single people, to fill the demand for someone to snog at midnight. The amount of people wearing “free kisses” apparel during New Year’s must be encouraging to oral hygienists. As usual, most of this rant is attributable to my cynicism. But the commercialism of holidays like Christmas and Thanksgiving are enough. I don’t care for a holiday that was made just to be commercial.

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Brad Pitt starred as Jesse James in the 2007 film ‘The Assasination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.’

In his Oscar-winning “Unforgiven” (1992), he toyed with that man-withno-name image by portraying an apparently irredeemable bad man who comes out of retirement to collect a reward offered by a maimed prostitute for the murder of her attackers. The movie works both as a brooding Western and as a meditation on the mythologizing process that turns evil men into heroes. Finally there’s “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” (2007), a visually splendid and morally vexing yarn that depicts Jesse (Brad Pitt) as an increasingly paranoid killer who’s a danger to everyone. New Zealander Andrew Dominik directed it, making it the only Western on this list not helmed by an American-born filmmaker. Here’s a dreamy blend of art-film sensibilities, familiar Western elements and an almost documentary immediacy. The movie turns upside down our ideas of Western heroism, both the scary Jesse and his back-shooting killer (Casey Affleck) are creeps, yet the film has an almost tragic inevitability that keeps us glued. It’s almost not a Western.

Philosophy from 6A

‘Office’ star

questions what it is to be human categories,” Gundry said. “And we tried to figure out where they fit and we figured out nine categories that would pretty much fit every question that we’d ever seen on the site, then we deleted all of them and then we started brainstorming all of the topics under all those categories.” Though Gundry said the surplus of questions leaves room for “about 10,000 more books,” Wilson expects readers of the first “SoulPancake” to take away a new perception on life. “Hopefully by engaging in life’s big questions and looking at the intersection of philosophy, creativity and spirituality and all the different facets of it … you’ll probably have a renewed perspective on what is to be a human being,” Wilson said.

The Lantern’s

Student Guide Reaching students as they settle in for the Winter Quarter, this special advertising section will be inserted into each issue of the January 12 Lantern. Plus there will be bonus distribution at the Winter Student Involvement Fair at the Ohio Union on the same day.

Each quarter’s Student Guide offers a comprehensive listings of area businesses plus detailed information about the Involvement Fair for that quarter. The Winter Involvement Fair will be Wednesday, January 12 from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Ohio Union Ballrooms. For complete information (including special multi publication discounts) contact your Lantern student sales representative today at 614-292-2031 or email us at advertising@thelantern.com.

Publication Date: Wednesday, January 12, 2011 Space Reservation Deadline: Wednesday, January 5, 2011 Finished Artwork Deadline: Friday, January 7, 2011 Rates (discounts are available for multiple publications)

Full page - $ 835 3/4 page - $ 695 1/2 page - $ 485 3/8 page - $ 345 1/4 page - $ 280 1/8 page - $ 160 Four color - $ 200 Spot color - $ 50 See www.thelantern.com for complete advertising details including advertising sizes and specifications.

614-292-2031 614-292-3722 fax advertising@thelantern.com www.thelantern.com Monday January 3, 2011


sports

Monday January 3, 2011

thelantern www.thelantern.com

FRIDAY Women’s Hockey 4, Wayne State 2 Men’s Basketball 85, Indiana 67

SATURDAY Men’s Hockey 3, Vermont 1

SUNDAY Women’s Basketball 86, Bethune-Cookman 38 Men’s Hockey 5, Army 3

upcoming TUESDAY Football v. Arkansas 7:30pm @ New Orleans Men’s Basketball v. Iowa 9pm @ Iowa City, Iowa

Buckeyes, Big Ten need win in 2011 ZACK MEISEL Editor-in-chief meisel.14@osu.edu

2010-11 Big Ten bowl game results

No Big Ten team has won a football game this year. Despite 2011 embarking on just its third day, five Big Ten teams have taken to the gridiron. All five have failed. On a New Year’s Day that will live in conference infamy, Northwestern, Michigan, Michigan State, Penn State and Wisconsin all came up short. Three of those schools — Michigan, Michigan State and Penn State — perpetuated southerners’ favorite notion that the Big Ten can’t hang with the SEC. Mississippi State, Alabama and Florida thumped their Midwest adversaries by a combined score of 138-45. In late November, Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee questioned the merits of schools from non-BCS conferences. He said TCU and Boise State, then ranked No. 3 and No. 4 in the BCS, respectively, weren’t worthy of a shot at the national title. “I do know, having been both a Southeastern Conference president and a Big Ten president, that it’s like murderer’s row every week for (the BCS conference) schools,” Gee told The Associated Press. “We do not play the Little Sisters of the Poor. We play very fine schools on any given day.”

21

Wisconsin

19

Rose Bowl

TCU

Insight Bowl

Iowa

27 Missouri

24

Texas Bowl

Illinois

38 Baylor

14

Capital One Bowl

Alabama

49

Ticket City Bowl

Texas Tech

45 Northwestern 38

Outback Bowl

Florida

37 Penn State

24

Progressive Gator Bowl

Miss State

52 Michigan

14

Michigan State 7

MIKE YOUNG Lantern reporter young.1408@osu.edu

TCU beat Wisconsin 21-19 to cap off an undefeated season in the Rose Bowl. Wisconsin was the only team to knock off Gee’s Buckeyes. Even incoming Big Ten member Nebraska lost last week in the Holiday Bowl to Washington, an opponent it defeated 56-21 on Sept. 18. The Cornhuskers totaled 189 yards of offense, a far cry from the 533 yards they amassed against the Huskies three months earlier. Iowa’s win over Missouri in the Insight Bowl on Tuesday and Illinois’ victory over Baylor in the Texas Bowl on

continued as Big Ten on 2B

Pryor’s future uncertain ZACK MEISEL Editor-in-chief meisel.14@osu.edu

WEDNESDAY Women’s Basketball v. Indiana 7pm @ Columbus, Ohio

As the U.S. economy continues on its rocky path, the job market remains unstable. It’s especially shaky for a third-year athlete facing a five-game suspension and questions about whether he can succeed as quarterback at the professional level. Terrelle Pryor, center of the Buckeye universe since he committed to Ohio State on March 19, 2008, must confront an intricate situation containing the key to unlocking his future. The Jeannette, Pa., native confirmed to the media Saturday that he will return for his senior season, even though he will first serve a fivegame suspension for receiving improper benefits. “When bad things happen to you, that’s when you want your family around you,” Pryor said. “Going through all of this, that’s when you realize that Ohio State football is your family.” The NCAA suspended Pryor, running back Dan Herron, receiver DeVier Posey, tackle Mike Adams and defensive end Solomon Thomas for five games after learning the players had violated NCAA rules by selling gear, apparel and memorabilia to the owner of a Columbus tattoo parlor in 2009. Freshman linebacker Jordan Whiting must sit out one game. NCAA rules prohibit athletes from receiving benefits or discounts based on their persona. The suspensions, however, won’t take effect until next season, allowing the athletes to play in Tuesday’s Sugar Bowl. The NCAA concluded that the rules education provided by the OSU compliance department did not meet NCAA standards at the time the players sold the merchandise. Pryor came to OSU because he felt coach Jim Tressel’s system would better prepare him for the NFL than if he chose to run rampant in Michigan’s spread offense. Now, despite a 30-3 career mark as a starter in scarlet and gray, his legacy rests on thin ice. Fans have voiced displeasure toward the quarterback who, although proud of the Block ‘O’ tattoo on his right forearm, didn’t value the sentiment of his Big Ten championship ring or gold pants trinket as highly as Buckeye Nation preferred. “You shouldn’t worry about what other people say, but you do take a lot of what other people say into your mind,” Pryor said. “They’re saying it for some reason. That’s the hardest thing, is hearing people say some cruel things about you. You know what you did and you take the responsibility, but guys are still out there nailing you and talking about you.”

FRIDAY Women’s Swimming v. Wright State 5pm @ Columbus, Ohio Men’s Swimming v. Wright State 5pm @ Columbus, Ohio Women’s Track: Buckeye Classic 6pm @ Columbus, Ohio Men’s Track: Buckeye Invitational 6pm @ Columbus, Ohio Women’s Hockey v. Wisconsin 7pm @ Columbus, Ohio Men’s Hockey v. Miami 7:35pm @ Columbus, Ohio

SATURDAY Wrestling: Cliff Keen/NWCA National Wrestling Duals All Day @ Cedar Falls, Iowa Women’s Swimming v. Toledo 1pm @ Columbus, Ohio Women’s Hockey v. Wisconsin 4pm @ Columbus, Ohio

continued as Future on 2B

Women’s Gymnastics v. Minnesota 4pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Terrelle Pryor QB #2

Women’s Basketball v. Iowa 4pm @ Iowa City, Iowa Men’s Hockey v. Miami 7:05pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Year

Pass yds

Pass TDs

Int

Rush yds

Rush TDs

2008

1311

12

4

631

6

2009

2094

18

11

779

7

2010

2551

25

11

639

4

SPORTS Columnist

results

Pryor’s flashy legacy on the line with Bucks

For Terrelle Pryor, the Sugar Bowl is bigger than busting Ohio State’s 0-9 slump against the SEC in bowl games or redeeming the Big Ten after its horrid, winless New Year’s Day bowl performance. The junior quarterback’s mental toughness and his ability to fight through adversity will be on display. If he fails to rise to the occasion, it will harm his legacy, something that Pryor speaks so fondly about. In his attempts to rally the spirit of the Buckeye faithful, Pryor has boasted that he’ll get his “jersey hung up” at Ohio Stadium and that he “wants to leave a legacy here.” Apparently whatever legacy of success Pryor has at OSU is neatly displayed on some guy’s mantel, rather than at the Horseshoe. After the public learned of the Buckeye players’ fivegame suspensions for improper benefits, including selling awards and receiving discounted tattoos, the legacy of selfish behavior seems to be the only one they’re leaving behind. That’s certainly not what Pryor implied originally. Of course, Pryor is not the only Buckeye guilty of selling out tradition for personal gain, but he obviously is the most prominent of the bunch and the most oft criticized. ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit is seemingly Pryor’s most public and outspoken critic. The former Buckeye quarterback ripped Pryor for his sideline demeanor during games, to which Pryor responded by calling Herbstreit a “fake Buckeye” on Twitter. That’s coming from the “true” Buckeye in Pryor — if “true” Buckeyes hock their hard-earned, team-oriented rewards for cash and tattoos. At the end of the day, showcasing your “school pride” with a giant Block “O” tattoo that looks like a 4-year-old scribbled it in crayon doesn’t sound like it’s worth the price to me. That may sound harsh, but it’s tame in comparison to Herbstreit’s blanket statements about Pryor’s award-selling controversy, such as, “You wonder how much involvement he had in this, if he was the ringleader in this.” I, meanwhile, can’t help but

continued as Fake on 2B

JOE PODELCO / Lantern photo editor

SUNDAY Wrestling: Cliff Keen/NWCA National Wrestling Duals All Day @ Cedar Falls, Iowa Men’s Basketball v. Minnesota 2pm @ Columbus, Ohio Men’s Volleyball v. Pepperdine 5pm @ Malibu, Calif.

@LanternSports

Follow @LanternSports on Twitter for instant pressbox updates during the Sugar Bowl.

Buckeyes snap 3-game skid with rout of Bethune-Cookman BEN AXELROD Senior Lantern reporter axelrod.17@osu.edu After enduring a rare three-game losing streak, the Ohio State women’s basketball team (9-4, 0-1) got a shot of confidence Sunday, when it defeated Bethune-Cookman (6-6), 86-38. “I think there’s a concerted effort that we understand how hard we have to play. It’s something that this group has had difficulty comprehending,” said OSU coach Jim Foster. “If you play hard every day, things get taken care of.” After falling behind the Daytona Beach, Fla., team 4-0 early in the game, OSU senior center Jantel Lavender took the game into her own hands, scoring the first 11 points for the Buckeyes, and 15 of their first 19 points as OSU jumped out to a 46-25 first-half lead. Lavender, who entered the game as the nation’s third-leading scorer, finished with 29 points in 21 minutes of action. “We have to take this game and just try to

emulate what we need to do in the Big Ten games,” Lavender said. “It was just a good game to just get that feeling back and just refresh ourselves and know that we have confidence.” OSU junior guard Samantha Prahalis bounced back from her 1-for-13 shooting performance against Michigan, scoring 10 points and making 10 assists in her first double-double performance since OSU’s Dec. 5 win over Oklahoma. Prahalis provided the customary dazzling passes and flashy ball handling that had been absent from her game throughout much of the Buckeyes’ three-game skid. Prahalis said that her success on the offensive end of the court started on defense. “We played pretty good defense and rebounded. We just got the ball out,” Prahalis said. “We were just in a flow, in a good rhythm, and we just pushed it.” For the game, OSU held a 31-2 advantage in fast-break points against the Wildcats. Foster said the difference between OSU’s win and its previous three losses was the Buckeyes’ ability to get score on fast breaks. “Sammy and Jantel, they see each other,” Foster

2010-11 results Date

Opponent

Result

Score

12/19

UCONN

L

50-81

12/28

Duquesne

L

67-71

12/30

Michigan

L

51-64

1/2

BethuneCookman

W

86-38

said. “We can get in transition because we’re playing such good defense, and we can get in transition, and Jantel can run. We haven’t been getting that — we haven’t been getting those easy baskets in transition.” After dropping their conference opener to Michigan, the Buckeyes find themselves in the unfamiliar position of looking up in the Big Ten standings and

continued as Prahalis on 2B


sports Fake from 1B

Future from 1B

Strong return

Pryor considered

next season can save what’s left of Pryor’s legacy

NFL career, vows to remain with Buckeyes wonder why Herbstreit’s obnoxious Byers Auto Group commercials on local TV label him an “MVP quarterback.” Is it his memorable 8-3-1 1992 campaign as OSU’s starter? Is it referring to his legendary days in Centerville’s peewee league? Whatever the case may be, he’s certainly the “MVP” of hyperbole when it comes to trying to prove to college football fans that he’s not a biased Buckeye. If Pryor’s saltiness toward his critics in harsh times is any indication of how he’ll play on the field, it doesn’t look too good. The tweet parade doesn’t stop with Herbstreit, as Pryor even addressed the rumors of getting improper benefits before the suspensions were passed down. “I paid for my tattoos. Go Bucks,” Pryor posted on his personal Twitter feed. That tweet mysteriously and conveniently disappeared a day later. Evidently, he’s taking public relations lessons from his “mentor” LeBron James. In the face of all the criticism, the Sugar Bowl presents an opportunity for OSU and, most importantly, for Pryor. It’s a challenge more demanding than a last-second drive to beat Wisconsin in Madison. Essentially, it’s steeper than any challenge he’s faced in his career. A singular, heroic, final-minute drive defines just a season. How Pryor and his fellow Buckeyes respond to the public backlash will define their entire careers. If Pryor replicates his winning performance from last year’s Rose Bowl and makes good on his promise to return next season, his decaying legacy can be salvaged. OSU currently has a 30-3 record with him as a starter, and that sparkling record on his résumé will stand out even more with a strong end to his career. However, if he’s not able to steer the Buckeyes through its most trying time in the Jim Tressel era, he’s an outcast, much like Herbstreit appears to be within the Buckeye community. Starting with this Sugar Bowl, we will find out if Pryor’s closer to Archie Griffin or Maurice Clarett in OSU lore. If there’s one thing I’ve

Prahalis from 1B

Foster says

JOE PODELCO / Lantern photo editor

Quarterback Terrelle Pryor singing during warm-up in Illinois on Oct. 2. learned about the nimble-footed quarterback, however, it’s not to count him out when the weight of the world is seemingly on his shoulders. Look no further than the fourth-and-10 against Iowa earlier this season.

Big Ten from 1B

Big Ten needs

duo needs to step up

Buckeye victory to notch SEC

will continue to rely on the play of the tandem of Lavender and Prahalis as they enter the remainder of conference play. OSU returns to conference play Wednesday when it hosts Indiana in its Big Ten home opener. Despite the Buckeyes’ 0-1 start in conference play, Foster said that his team is still the team to beat in the Big Ten. “Everybody in this league still wants a piece of us, and rightfully so,” Foster said. “We’ve earned the right for them to want a piece of us, but now you got to back it up.”

Wednesday have the Big Ten sitting at 2-5 overall. The Big Ten isn’t the only conference to struggle this bowl season, however. None of the BCS conferences has blown away the competition, and only the ACC (4-3) and the Big East (3-2) have compiled winning records. That’s the same Big East scorned by many after sending unranked, four-loss Connecticut to the Fiesta Bowl, which the Huskies lost 48-20 to Oklahoma on Saturday.

ACC champion Virginia Tech faces Stanford in tonight’s Orange Bowl. Before Saturday’s trifecta against the Big Ten, the SEC had been 0-3. The Big 12 is 3-4, while the Pac-10 is 1-1. OSU can salvage what’s left of the Big Ten bowl season by knocking off SEC foe Arkansas in Tuesday’s Sugar Bowl. The Buckeyes and Razorbacks have never played, but OSU has never won a bowl game against an SEC opponent (0-9). “I know personally — I have lost three in a row against the SEC,” said OSU coach Jim Tressel. “I’m not tired of hearing about it. It’s a reminder to me of just how good the SEC is in football.”

Pryor said he tossed around the idea of turning pro after the Sugar Bowl to evade the lengthy suspension and lessen the hit on his draft stock. But then Tressel required all five players to pledge to return for their senior seasons before granting them permission to travel with the team to New Orleans. Although the promises are nonbinding, Pryor vowed to hold up his end of the bargain. “I think some guys pledged and some guys — we were just basically saying sorry,” he said. “I don’t want to say that if (someone) would choose to leave, that they’re breaking a pledge. I think some guys have different situations. (But) once you pledge something, I think you’ve got to keep your word for it.” Should the NCAA uphold its ruling — which OSU is appealing — Pryor wouldn’t be eligible until the Buckeyes’ contest at Nebraska on Oct. 8. That would leave him with seven games, plus a possible conference championship game and bowl game, to script the final chapter of his college career. But would he regain his starting job that easily? Tressel has had a penchant for rewarding veteran players. Quarterback Joe Bauserman, who has served as Pryor’s primary backup for two years, will be a redshirt senior next year. Ken Guiton, who has also seen action this year, will be a redshirt sophomore. Then there’s Braxton Miller, widely considered one of the top recruits in all of college football. The Huber Heights, Ohio, native enrolled early at OSU so he could take part in spring practices. Tressel said he expects a testy quarterback competition in the spring. “I’m sure in the spring and so forth … in the spring that would heat up,” Tressel said. Regardless of how he fits into next year’s plans, Pryor knows a memorable Sugar Bowl performance will go a long way for his legacy and NFL stock. For the quarterback who always seems to have the ball in his hands, he’ll have to learn to bide his time until it’s his turn. “I’ve never sat out a game in my life,” Pryor said. “I don’t know how it’s going to affect me next year.” Pryor acknowledged that he has work left to do at the college level, work that somehow must be completed in the minimal time he has remaining in Columbus if he’s to improve his job prospects. “We’ve just got to win,” he said. “I’ve got to come up with some type of plan with (Tressel) for next year, because that five-game suspension could really mess up things I really want to accomplish. As of right now, (I’ll) keep winning as much as possible and keep leading the team as best I can. “I guess I’ll need to leave the rest to everyone else.”

Career Fairs and Events

A comprehensive listing of upcoming Career Fairs and Recruiting Events at The Ohio State University January 21, 2011

Sport and Recreation Industry Job Fair

http://ehe.osu.edu/career-services/events.cfm Contact Information: Ryan Brownfield 614-292-2469 or Brownfield.39@osu.edu

January 25, 2011

Fisher College of Business Internship Invitational

http://fisher.osu.edu/services/career-services/ career-fairs/ Contact Information: Mark Wilson 614-292-8615 or wilson_46@cob.osu.edu

January 26, 2011

Environmental Career Expo

http://cfaes.osu.edu/careerexpo Contact Information: Adam Cahill 614-292-1589 or Cahill.71@osu.edu

OMA Career and Job Fair

http://oma.osu.edu/current-students/graduatestudent- resources/career-and-job-fair/index.php Contact Information: Jackie Lipscomb Lipscomb.3@osu.edu

February 9, 2011

Nonprofit Opportunities Fair

http://asccareerservices.osu.edu/nonprofitfair/ Contact Information: Randy Dineen 614-688-4522 or Dineen.2@osu.edu

February 17, 2011

Knowlton School of Architecture Career Fair

http://knowlton.osu.edu/careerfair Contact Information: Angi Beer 614-247-7244 or beer.38@osu.edu

February 23, 2011

College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Career Expo

Link: http://cfaes.osu.edu/careerexpo Contact Information: Adam Cahill 614-292-1589 or Cahill.71@osu.edu

Engineering Career Fair

https://career.eng.ohio-state.edu/swefair Contact Information: Elisabeth Zimowski 614-292-8694 or Zimowski.1@osu.edu

February 24, 2011

OSU at Marion and Marion Technical College Career and Education Fair

http://osumarion.osu.edu/career_services Contact Information: Will Smith smith.4818@osu.edu

April 5, 2011

OSU Spring Career Day

http://springcareerday.osu.edu Contact Information: Jeanine Baumann 614-292-3366 or Baumann.63@osu.edu

TeachOhio

http://ehe.osu.edu/career-services/events.cfm Contact Information: Jean Wyer 614-688-5663 or Wyer.6@osu.edu

May 9-13, 2011

International Careers Week

http://slaviccenter.osu.edu/jobs.html Contact Information: Lance Erickson Erickson.107@osu.edu

May 12, 2011

Foreign Language Center Career Night

http://flc.osu.edu Contact Information: Rebecca Bias 614-292-4137 or Bias.3@osu.edu

February 23, 2011

2B

FALL HOUSING GUIDE If it is the Winter Quarter it is time for students to decide their housing plans for next fall. This special advertising section will be inserted into each issue of the Wednesday, January 13 Lantern and have bonus distribution at the Off Campus Housing Fair at the Ohio Union on Thursday and Friday, January 13 & 14. So if you are looking for tenants next fall this is the perfect way to start off the marketing year at The Ohio State University. The Off-Campus Housing Fair will be from 12 pm to 5 pm on Thursday, January 13 and Friday, January 14 at the Ohio Union Performance Hall. For complete information (including special multi publication discounts) contact your Lantern student sales representative today at 614-292-2031 or email us at advertising@thelantern.com.

Publication Date: Thursday, January 13, 2011

Space Reservation Deadline: Thursday, January 6, 2011

Finished Artwork Deadline: Monday, January 10, 2011

Rates (discounts are available for multiple publications)

Full page - $ 665 3/4 page - $ 555 1/2 page - $ 390 3/8 page - $ 280 1/4 page - $ 220 1/8 page - $ 125 Four color - $ 200 Spot color - $ 50

See www.thelantern.com for complete advertising details including advertising sizes and specifications.

614-292-2031 614-292-3722 fax advertising@thelantern.com www.thelantern.com

Monday January 3, 2011


sports Buckeyes anticipate new breed of top-notch quarterback BLAKE WILLIAMS Senior Lantern reporter williams.3012@osu.edu The Ohio State defense has not surrendered 200 yards passing in more than three months and has done so only twice all season, to Eastern Michigan on Sept. 25 and to Miami on Sept. 11. Arkansas quarterback Ryan Mallett has thrown for more than 200 yards in every game but one this season, an Oct. 16 meeting with Auburn that saw the junior signal-caller knocked out of the game in the first half with a head injury. When Mallett lines up opposite the Buckeye defense in Tuesday’s Sugar Bowl, something’s got to give. “He is probably the best quarterback we have seen all year. He does a good job of reading the defense,” linebacker Ross Homan said. “It’s a matter of getting pressure and making plays.” Statistically Mallett is one of the best quarterbacks in the country. Mallett is “different from the other quarterbacks we’ve played this year,” cornerback Chimdi Chekwa said. “I don’t think we’ve played anyone similar to him.” The Arkansas passer has the third-best quarterback rating in the country and sits at fifth nationally in passing yards. Mallett has also connected on 30 touchdown passes, five more than any quarterback on the Buckeyes’ schedule. At 6-foot-6-inches and 238 pounds, Mallett is far from a mobile quarterback. He has lost 46 yards this season on the ground. Pressuring him might be the best way to limit his production. “He’s one of those guys that you definitely have got to get after him,” linebacker Brian Rolle said. “He’s a guy that if you let him sit back there he’ll throw for 400, 500 yards.” Mallett has thrown for 400 or more yards twice this season and the Razorbacks have allowed 24 sacks on the year. “I’ve heard that all season. I just expect it from a top defensive team,” Mallett said about the likelihood that the Buckeyes would bring a lot of pressure. “They are one of the top 10 defenses in the country. I wouldn’t expect anything less from them.” If the Buckeyes are able to get to Mallett in the pocket, it may be a familiar feeling. The Buckeyes sacked him once when he saw limited action for Michigan in 2007. Mallett transferred to Arkansas after Rich Rodriguez took over as Michigan head coach.

OSU players don’t expect to see many similarities between this Arkansas quarterback and the one who donned the maize and blue. “That was basically four years ago, and now, he’s on top of his game,” senior defensive lineman Cameron Heyward said. “He leads his team very well. When you need a big play, you can always rely on him.” Choosing Arkansas meant choosing to play for a coach, Bobby Petrino, whose teams are known for gaining yards through the air. “After I talked to him and got to know his offense a little bit, I got excited about the opportunity to play for him,” Mallett said. “That pretty much sealed the deal.” Once he got a grasp on the offensive scheme, Mallett became one of the best quarterbacks in the country. His quarterback rating, completion percentage, and yards per attempt are all up from a year ago, his first in Petrino’s system. “I think just systematically … they do a great job of knowing what you’re trying to do and attacking you with the thing they know hurts those coverages,” coach Jim Tressel said. “You better not go in there with just one thought because they’ll figure it out and they’ll adjust and they’ll stall you pretty good.” Those adjustments often come from Mallett at the line of scrimmage rather than from the coaching staff. “If you don’t have enough guys in the box, he is going to check for a run and if there is a stack in the box, he is going to pass the ball,” Rolle said. “I feel that he being as smart as he is, is probably the thing you have to watch out for.” Those smarts have lead to Mallett spreading the ball around. Arkansas is the only school in Division I to have five receivers with more than 500 yards. Mallett has also tossed touchdown passes to nine different players. The versatility of the Razorback receiving corps makes the challenge greater for the Buckeye secondary. “You have to expect it and to look forward to it,” Chekwa said. “If you’re not looking forward to it you’re in the wrong position.” With a quarterback as talented as Mallett, simply limiting his production might be the best the OSU defense is able to do. “He can make every throw,” co-defensive coordinator Luke Fickell said. “The hard part is to find a weakness when he can make every throw.”

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Arkansas quarterback Ryan Mallett in the first half of the 31-24 victory over Georgia on Sept. 18.

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3B


classifieds CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING TERMS

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CALL 292-2031 TO PLACE YOUR AD OR DO IT ONLINE @ THELANTERN.COM – ACCEPTING PERSONAL CHECKS & ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Furnished Rentals

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, PRIME LOCATION ON E. FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, FREE WASHER/DRYER, DISHWASHER, OFFSTREET PARKING, CENTRAL AIR, BEG. FALL 2011. CALL 761‑ 9035

Furnished Efficiency/Studio

Furnished 2 Bedroom

86 West Lane Ave. Furnished one bedroom efficiency. Refrigerator, microwave, community kitchen. No pets. $400 deposit. $400 rent. 614‑306‑0053. Available December 15th thru February 28th.

modern 2 bdrm flat. Furnished, very beautiful area. Excellent shape. A/C, parking, and very beautiful furniture. $700/mo. 718‑0790.

92 E.11th Ave. Very clean, neat, cozy. A/C, parking available, short term ok! $435/mo. (614)457‑8409, (614)361‑ 2282.

3 & 4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS, EXCELLENT LOCATION ON E. FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING, FREE WASHER/DRYER, OFFSTREET PARKING, DISHWASHER, BEG. FALL 2011, SIGN UP apartment. EARLY BEFORE THEY ARE #Available Super convenient location, 1‑2 GONE, CALL 761‑9035 bedroom apartments, 38 E. 17th Ave, just off of High Street, laundry, offstreet parking. Available Summer and/or Fall and onward. $350‑$400.004 BEDROOM APARTMENTS, /month. Call 296‑6304, 263‑ PRIME LOCATIONS ON E. 1193. 17TH AND FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, FREE WASH- 92 E.11th Ave. Very clean, ER/DRYER, DISHWASHER. neat, cozy. A/C, parking availOFFSTREET PARKING, AIR able, short term ok! $499/mo. CONDITIONING, BEG. FALL (614)457‑8409, (614)361‑ 2011. CALL 761‑9035 2282.

Furnished 1 Bedroom

Furnished Rentals Furnished Rentals

Furnished 3 Bedroom 2‑roommates. Modern 3‑ BR/1.5 bath on Maynard. Furnished, off‑street parking, fenced yard, small pets. 937‑ 776‑7798

Unfurnished Rentals # 1,2,3,4,5 and 6 BR beautiful TOWNHOUSES, HOUSES, HALF‑DOUBLES, APARTMENTS close to campus. Call your one source for the best in campus housing! North Campus Rentals ph: (614)354‑8870 www.northcampusrentals.com

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

OSU available NOW 3 Bedrooms‑ 69 E. 14th 750 Ave. Available Fall 2011. Large RIVERVIEW DR. rooms, newer furnaces & air SPECIAL $100 DEPOSIT conditioning, up‑dated baths, kitchens, appliances, dishwash- 1 & 2 B.R. apts. stove, refrig., Gas heat, laundry ers. Off‑street parking. Security system available. $1050/month Carpet and air cond. available NO PETS PLEASE 740‑363‑2158, From $340 268‑7232 jeffersrentals@gmail.com

2 Bedroom House 129 Rear W. 10th Ave. Available Fall 2011. Large rooms, washer / dryer, wired for high‑speed internet. $750 / month (740) 363‑2158 jeffersrentals@gmail.com

3 & 4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS, EXCELLENT LOCATION ON E. FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING, FREE WASHER/DRYER, OFFSTREET PARKING, DISHWASHER, BEG. FALL 2011, SIGN UP 1,2,or 3 Bedrooms available for fall on Woodruff or 15th EARLY BEFORE THEY ARE GONE, CALL 761‑9035 Ave. Parking. 296‑8353. #1 www.VARSITYREALTY.COM 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 bedroom houses. Great locations near High St. 614‑989‑1866 or varsityrealty@gmail.com.

Furnished 4 Bedroom

15 E. NORWICH Ave $590. per month. Large 2 bedroom townhouse for rent near Lane & High. Robbins Realty 444‑ 6871

4 Bedroom House. 422 E. 15th Avenue. (3.5 Blocks from High St.) Central A/C, Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher, 2 baths. Available Fall. $1240/mo. www.ghcrentals.com or call 614‑804‑3165

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, PRIME LOCATION ON E. FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, FREE WASHER/DRYER, DISHWASHER, OFFSTREET PARKING, CENTRAL AIR, BEG. FALL 2011. CALL 761‑ 9035

Furnished Rentals

Furnished Rentals

3 BDRM Apt. 168 Chittenden available now. Gas, Electric & Water included in Rent!! Off street parking. Pets Negotiable. $1290/mo. New capet throughout. Sunrise Properties, Inc. 846‑5577 North osu Riverview Dr. Hardwood Floors. Gas Heat. A/C. H20 pd. O.F.S Parking. Laundry on site. Walk in Closet. New Windows. Available now. Ideal for Grad Students. Call 571‑5109.

Furnished Rentals

4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS, PRIME LOCATIONS ON E. 17TH AND FRAMBES, 1/2 BLOCK FROM HIGH, BIG BEDROOMS, FREE WASHER/DRYER, DISHWASHER. OFFSTREET PARKING, AIR CONDITIONING, BEG. FALL 2011. CALL 761‑9035 6 Bedroom Unit 129 W. 10th Ave. Available Fall 2011 Large Rooms, washer / dryer, wired for high‑speed internet. $2460/month (740) 363‑2158 jeffersrentals@gmail.com 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 BROADMEAOWS TOWNHOMES

FROM $505.00 885‑9840

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APARTMENTS

340 E. 19th 2Bdr. $595 340 E. 19th 3Bdr. $1050 296 E. 17th 2Bdr. $650

OTHER LOCATIONS AVAILABLE

614‑527‑9655 SEE WEBSITE FOR DETAILS CampusApartment.biz Crown Real Estate

DON’T WAIT!

Get the best housing now. for next school year

Showing and renting now for Fall 2011

2‑ 9 bedroom houses and half doubles ALL HAVE Central A/C Dishwashers washer/dryer and many other amenities

 Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

visit our website at

crowncolumbus.com 614‑457‑6545

Unfurnished Efficiency/Studio 101 E. 14TH AVENUE‑ Studios available for December 15th thru August. $475 month w/heat, water & gas included. Centrally located‑ just minutes from campus, gateway, busline and parking. A/C, on‑site laundry and PETS ARE WELCOME! Mokas Management, family owned & operated since 1994. Call Nikki @ 614‑374‑ 3468. Application fee Waived! 1900 N. 4th St. Studio and 1 bedroom apartment with full bath and kitchen, on site laundry, off street parking. $435/ month. No Application Fee! Call Myers Real Estate 614‑ 486‑2933 or visit www.myersrealty.com JUST STEPS to Campus! 106 E. 13th Avenue. $460/month. Newly remodeled large studio with full bath and kitchen, A/C, and laundry facility. Heat, water and high speed internet included! FIRST FULL MONTH OF RENT IS FREE!!!! Call Myers Real Estate 614‑486‑2933 or visit www.myersrealty.com

Unfurnished 1 Bedroom #1, Affordable spacious and updated, large 1BR apts on North, South and central campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ street parking, dishwasher. Starting at $425 614‑294‑7067 www.osupropertymanagement.com 1 BDRM Apartments, 161 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, Walk‑In Closet, A/C, OSP, NO Pets. $490/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com 1 BDRM Townhouse 100 Frambes Ave. Spacious Unit w/ Walk‑In Closet, W/D, A/C, Free OSP $525/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com Affordable 1 Bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty 429‑0960 Application fee Waived! 1900 N. 4th St. Studio and 1 bedroom apartment with full bath and kitchen, on site laundry, off street parking. $435/ month. No Application Fee! Call Myers Real Estate 614‑ 486‑2933 or visit www.myersrealty.com Attention OSU students, off campus housing available! 1 bdrm apartment $450/mo. + utilities. 490 Alden Ave.Walk to bus stop. Located close to campus, crew stadium & freeway access.Clean and tidy, located on a dead end street. Call Jill (614)989‑9049 for info. and application ($35 app fee).

New Listing. 21 E. Oakland Ave. Second House East of High St.. 3‑5 Bedroom House. 2 Full Baths. A/C, New Kitchen, W/D, Front Porch, Enclosed Back Yard with Built‑ In Grill. Available Now Through Summer Quarter. No #1 Nr Lane and Neil, C/A, Ldy, off street parking, one block to Pets. campus, phone Steve 614 208 Call Harvey 571‑0704 3111 SMHrentals.com

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

OSU/GRANDVIEW King Ave, 1&2 bdrm garden apts. AC, Gas heat and water, Laundry facilities, Off‑street parking. 294‑0083

#1 Corner of King and Neil, water and parking included, C/A, Ldy, Nr. Hospital and Medical Schl. phone Steve: 614 208 3111 SMHrentals.com

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

Iuka Park Commons Neighborhood style living with a campus address Huge 2 bedroom apartments • Available furnished and unfurnished • Large bedrooms • Eat-in kitchens • Central air • On-site laundry • Well-lit off-street parking • Located on the CABS East Residential bus line •

Starting at only $339/person

Call today to schedule a viewing! Ask us about our deposit special! www.inntownhomes.com

614-294-3502 4B

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

# 1 2 BR AVAILABLE SUM2 Bedroom House MER AND FALL! Beautiful re129 Rear W. 10th Ave modeled TOWNHOUSES and Available fall 2011 APARTMENTS close to camLarge Rooms, washer/dryer, pus. Features include large wired for high‑speed internet bedrooms with ceiling fans, air $750 / month conditioning, insulated win(740) 363‑2158 dows, cable/internet, washers jeffersrentals@gmail.com & dryers, beautiful woodwork, FREE lighted off‑street parking. Call North Campus Rentals to- 2 Bedroom Townhouse in day! (614)354‑8870 www.- Quiet Neighborhood. Close to OSU and Short North. northcampusrentals.com $890/Month. 614‑314‑1918 #1 Awesome! 308 E. 16th Duplex, 2 bedroom/1 bath, new 274‑ 284 E. Lane‑2 bdrm TH kitchen & bath, DW, free wash- avail for fall. N. campus at Indier/dryer, blinds, basement, anola and Lane, very spacious porch, new windows & furnace, w/lndry hkups in bsmt. Ceiling refinished hardwood floors/car- fans, dining Rm, newer crpt, frnt pet, off street parking. Well porch, yard area. Off St. pkg. maintained. Fall $720. 891‑ Walk little save a lot. Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑2665 1835 www.gasproperties.com #1, Affordable spacious and updated, large 2BR apts 28W. Maynard‑2 bdrm TH on North, South and Central avail for fall on N. campus. campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ Front porch & rear deck, yard street parking, dishwasher, on‑ area Bsmt w/lndry hkups, F/P, blinds, gas heat, newer crpt.site laundry Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑ Starting at $409 614‑294‑7067 www.osupropertymanagement.- 2665 www.gasproperties.com com 34 E 13th – 2 brm flats avail for $700 / 2br ‑ North Campus fall. Modern bldg on great central campus location just east Apartment of N. High St. Huge brms & $700/MONTH, 2 bedroom town kitchens w/dishwasher, A/C, home, 9 E Tompkins and High lndry across the st. call G.A.S St., recently renovated, excel- Properties 263‑2665 lent north campus location, www.gasproperties.com hardwood floors, new appliances, dishwasher, central a/c, 344 E. 20th Unit B, 2 bedroom FREE washer/dryer, low utili- flat, 1 bath, remodeled, central ties, private deck. Units avail- air, large kitchen, off street able for fall quarter. Call Gary parking, NO dogs, $525.00. to schedule a tour @ 614‑402‑ Call Pat 457‑4039 or e‑mail pmyers1@columbus.rr.com 0206 Available FALL. 102 W. 8th‑2 bdrm flats avail for fall. Modern Bldg. w/security 357‑363 E 14th. 14th & 4th‑ 2 system, ceramic tile flrs.,DW, bedroom, LV, Lg Kit. w/ref & A/C newer crpt, updated appli- stove, A/C, Lg bath, off street ances, ceiling fans. Off St. pkg parking, laundry on premises. must see. Call G.A.S. Proper- No pets.‑$420 rent, $420 deposit. 614‑306‑0053. ties 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com 410 W. King #A ‑2Brm flat very spacious Victoria Vlg area avail 112‑114 W. King‑2 brm TH Vic- for fall. Near med. Schools, 2 torian Vlg area avail for fall. full baths lndry in bsmt, A/C, Very spacious 1 ½ bath w/air- off str prkg & garage avail. conditioning, huge kitchen, Great location call G.A.S. Propbasement, newer crpt, porch & erties 263‑2665 www.gaspropgarage avail. Must see! erties.com Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑ 2665 www.gasproperties.com 412 E. 20th Ave. Convenient to OSU and Downtown! Units 130 W. 9th‑ 2 bdrm flats avail are 700 sq. ft. Off street parkfor fall. Modern Bldg com- ing, A/C, gas heat. $395‑ pletely remodeled. S/W cam- 445/month. Call Myers Real pus w/huge bedrms & kit. A/C, Estate 614‑486‑2933 or visit Off St. pkg. W/new crpt, storm www.myersrealty.com windows, blinds and new appliances. Must see! Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑2665 429 E. Oakland Ave. 2 bedwww.gasproperties.com rooms, 1 bath, living and dining rooms, full basement w/ washer/dryer hook‑ups, front porch 133 W. Oakland & Neil Ave‑2 $525 (614)457‑4039 bdrm TH avail for fall. Modern Bldg on N. campus close to Affordable 2 Bedrooms. Buss. School, corner of Neil Visit our website at Av. newer crpt, tile flr, A/C Off www.my1stplace.com. St. pkg new bath. Must see!- 1st Place Realty 429‑0960 Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑ 2665 www.gasproperties.com At University Gardens. Beautiful 2 bedroom condos. 168 west 9th Ave. Great Lo- new W/D, stove, refrigerator cation. 1 Block East of Neil and dishwasher, free wi‑fi. SepAve. 2 Bedroom remodeled arate laundry and spacious LR. Apartments for Fall. Air condi- Quiet Complex. Best value in tioned, new carpeting, ceramic OSU off‑campus student and floor tile in bathroom & kitchen, faculty housing. new overhead fan lights. Off‑ $520/month 1st month free. Street parking. No pets. Call 614‑778‑9875. Dawson Properties. 571‑0704 www.offcampus.osu.edu www.universitygardenscolum1890 N. 4th St. Convenient to bus.com OSU and Downtown! Application Fee Waived! Large mod- Av. Fall 83 E. 11th, great loern units are 910 sq. ft. Quiet cation near the Gateway. building, off street parking, laun- Deluxe modern townhouse with dry facility, A/C, gas heat, dish- 1.5 baths and washer/dryer, washer, on bus line. $550‑ parking, AC, new kitchen, car650/month. No application fee! pet, lots of storage, all ameniCall Myers Real Estate 614‑ ties. Privately owned and man486‑2933 or visit www.myersre- aged. $680/mo ‑ lease ‑ no alty.com pets ‑ utilities separate 614‑395‑4891. 190‑192 E Norwich‑ 2 brmTH avail. for fall. N. campus west AV. Fall‑ 171 E. 12th, deluxe of Indianola. Recently updated modern 2 bedroom townhouse, spacious units w/on site lndry & large rooms, parking, AC, new hkups in units. Updated baths ,- kitchen, finished basement, A/C, off str prkg, Must see! separate utility room with washCall G.A.S. Properties 263‑ er/dryer. Lease, no pets, utili2665 www.gasproperties.com ties separate. $980 a month. deposit. Call 614‑395‑4891. 198 E Norwich – 2 brm TH avail for fall. Modern Blg on N. East 16th between Summit campus, west of Indianola. and Fourth. 2 bed, extra study Lndry nearby, A/C, newer crpt room, Remodeled kitchen, tile huge kitchen,off str prkg floors, free washer and dryer, call G.A.S Properties 263‑2665 osp, nice, $820.00, no pets, www.gasproperties.com skrentals.net, Steve @ 614‑ 582‑1618 2 BD, 1 BA, spacious, $565/mo., recently renovated, 5 min from campus, fitness center, well maintained, 24 hr emergency maintenance, courtesy officer, on‑site laundry, no app fee, $200 deposit. 276‑7118 2 BDRM Apartment @ 181 W. Norwich Ave. Great Location, C/Air, Free OSP (Carport) $870/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

No 1 spot! 220 E. Lane‑2 bdrm flats avail for fall corner of Indianola and Lane. Modern Bldg on N. campus. Spacious w/newer crpt, huge bdrms, on site lndry, A/C. Off St. pkg. Courtyard area. Must see!Call G.A.S. Properties 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com

Updated 2 bedroom apt., located at 56 1/2 Woodruff, dishwasher, disposal, microwave, gas stove, ac. Includes 2 off street parking spaces, washer 2 BDRM Apartment 55 E. Nor- and dryer. Call 513‑774‑9550 wich Ave. Spacious & Very after 6:30 pm or email inquiries Nice, C/Air, W/D, OSP, NO to: lwalp1@gmail.com Pets $890/Mo. Call 961‑0056. XLarge 2BR from $740 per www.cooper‑properties.com month. FREE GAS & WATER, 2 BDRM Apartments 95 & 125 Central Air, Deluxe Appliances, E. Norwich Ave. Great Loca- W/W Carpet. Laundry Room, tions, Lg. Bdrms, C/Air, OSP, Video Security & Monitored InNO Pets $830/Mo. Call 961‑ trusion Alarms. Suitable for 2‑4 0056. www.cooper‑properties.- People, Available Fall. com 285 E 14th Ave 614‑310‑3033 www.LandisProperties.com 2 BDRM Townhouse 100 Frambes Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, W/D, A/C, Free OSP $990‑$1020/Mo. Call 961‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

Unfurnished 3 Bedroom

“318 Wyandotte charming 3BR w/ modern kitchen & bath. DW. W/D. A/C. 1‑1/2 bath w/ Whrlpl Tub. Off st. parking. 1/2 block from COTA & CABS. $1000/month. David: 2 BDRM Townhouse 191 W. 614.496.3150” Norwich Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, C/Air, Free OSP (Carport) # 1 3 Bedroom Duplex, North $990/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.- Campus, Fall Rental, 2181 Indiana. Rear Deck, off‑street cooper‑properties.com parking and central air. Eat‑in 2 BDRM Townhouses, 161 E. bar counter in kitchen. WashNorwich Ave. Great Location, er/Dryer in basement. Tons of HW Floors, W/D, OSP, NO space. Rent is $1,200 per Pets. $950/Mo. Call 961‑0056. month. Call Mark at 207‑4321 www.cooper‑properties.com or email me at mmayers@columbus.rr.com for 2 Bedroom House an appointment or visit ‑ GATEWAY www.quadmproperty.com 129 Rear W. 10th Ave. Available fall 2011. #1 NW corner of Patterson Large rooms, washer / dryer. Wired for high‑speed internet. and High, 3 BR TH, very large, Ldy, $925.00 $750/month. Phone Steve: 614 208 3111 (740) 363‑2158 SMHrentals.com jeffersrentals@gmail.com 2 BDRM Townhouse 185 W. Norwich Ave. Spacious Unit, C/Air, Free OSP (Carport) $990/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

Monday January 3, 2011


classifieds Unfurnished 3 Bedroom

Unfurnished 3 Bedroom

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

#1 @ 286 E. 13th: nice, remodeled 3BR half‑double. NEW: kitchen & bath w/ ceramic tile; furnace/AC; refinished hdwd floors; W/D (free). Oak trim, stained glass window. Off‑ street parking. Garage avail. Sorry, no pets. Stirling Properties of Ohio. 519‑6543 “www.StirlingOSU.com”

69 E. 14th Ave. 3 bedrooms: Available for Fall 2011. Large rooms, newer furnaces and air conditioning. Updated baths, kitchens, appliances, dishwashers Off Street Parking. Security system available. $1050/month (740) 363‑2158. jeffersrentals@gmail.com

207 E. 13th Ave. Large 4 bdrm townhouse complete with carpeting throughout, kitchen appliances, W/D hookups. Parking, 1 year lease. $1520/month. Available Sept. 1, 2011. 764‑ 9644.

# 1 5/6 BR AVAILABLE FALL! Beautiful remodeled HOUSES, TOWNHOMES, HALF‑DOUBLES close to campus. New kitchens with all appliances, large bedrooms, refinished hardwood floors, porches and wood decks, full basements with FREE washers & dryers, new windows, ceiling fans, high‑efficiency furnace with A/C, cable/internet, and FREE lighted off‑street parking! Call North Campus Rentals today! (614)354‑8870 www.northcampusrentals.com

#1 Available quiet 3 bedroom townhomes available fall 2011 http://www.veniceprops.com/1655n4th.cfm

#1 rental avail immediately! 363 E 12th Ave gorgeous home with room for 5 or more! Pictures and more at www.nicastroproperties.com

#1, Affordable spacious and updated, large 3BR apts on North, South and Central campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ street parking, dishwasher, W/D hookups, decks, Jacuzzi tubs. Starting at $371 614‑294‑7067 www.osupropertymanagement.com $1200/MONTH, 3 bedroom half double house, 2113 Indiana and Lane Ave. (between Indianola and Summit), excellent northeast campus location, recently renovated, beautiful quiet street, front covered porch, hardwood floors, FREE washer/dryer, new furnace and A/C, security system, dishwasher, fenced in backyard with deck! Ohio State Property Management, 614‑374‑5769

2390 Neil & Maynard‑4 Brm house avail for fall. Great location, spacious with beautiful woodwork, hardwood floor living rm, newer carpet, blinds, Affordable 3 Bedrooms. DW plus free W/D in bsmnt, Visit our website at front porch. Call 263‑2665 www.my1stplace.com. www.gasproperties.com 1st Place Realty 429‑0960 398 W. King near Belmond 3or4 bdrm + 2 bath TH avail for fall. Spacious, completely remld w/newer carpet, A/C, DW, blinds & FREE lndry. Close to med. schl off st. prkg. Call 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com

#1 5 or 6 large bedrooms, $1800 or $1900 2 1/2 double house at 2136‑38 Summit (Northwood), hardwood floors, garage, A/C, W/D, dishwasher, gas heat, free parking. Louie daytime 294‑4006.

4 BDRM Apartment, 180 E. 12th, C/Air, DW, OSP, NO Pets Call 961‑0056. Large North Campus apart- $1,460/Mo. ment with finished basement. www.cooper‑properties.com Twin single, 3 off‑street parking spaces, 2 baths, DW, ceiling 4 BDRM Apartment, 180 E. fan, W/D hook‑up, AC, no pets. 12th, C/Air, DW, OSP, NO Pets $1000/month. 55 W. Hudson. $1,620/Mo. Call 961‑0056. 614‑582‑1672 www.cooper‑properties.com

#1 @ Summit & Lane: Large 5 BR half‑double overlooking Iuka ravine. Nicely updated NEW: kitchen w/dishwasher; 2 baths w/ceramic tile; furnace/AC; hardwood floors; washer/dryer (free). Garage. Sorry, no pets. Stirling Properties of Ohio. 519‑6543 “www.StirlingOSU.com”

Av. Fall‑ 171 E. 12th, deluxe modern 3 bedroom townhouse with large rooms, parking, AC, new kitchen, finished basement and separate utility room with washer/dryer. Lease, no pets, utilities separate. $980 a month. deposit and last month’s rent. 614‑395‑4891

North osu 3br, family room, new interior, new carpet & paint, basement, fenced 2c garage NICE! $895 975‑3984 457‑5689 NW Cols/Dublin. One block behind Sawmill Meijer. 3BR $1299/mo. Garage/Basement. 614/285‑ 5552

$975/mo. South Campus Gateway Area. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath double, all hardwood floors, beautiful oak woodwork, free washer and dryer, very spacious, updated kitchen, renovated front and covered rear sitting porch, fenced in back yard, off street parking, Call # 1 4 Bedroom Duplex, CenSteve at 291‑8207. www.euclid- tral Campus, Fall Rental, 1986 Summit. Great unit, newer inteproperties.com rior. Dishwasher and Microwave in Kitchen, Washer 118 W King & Hunter 3Brm TH Dryer in Basement. Rear deck, available fall Huge brms ,quiet off‑street parking and central Victorian Vlg area, bsmt w/ air. Full bath and two bedFREE W/D, A/C, newer carpet, rooms on 3rd floor, Full bath blinds,D/W &off str. parking. and two bedrooms on second floor, half bath on the first call 263‑2665 floor. Rent is $1,900 per www.gasproperties.com month. Call Mark at 207‑4321 or email me at 2‑6 Bedroom Homes available mmayers@columbus.rr.com for for 2011‑2012, www.compass‑ an appointment or visit properties.com or call Diane @ www.quadmproperty.com 614‑783‑6625

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

20/22/26W. Maynard‑3 bdrm TH avail for fall on N. campus. Front porch & reardeck, yard area Bsmt w/lndry hkups, F/P, blinds, gas heat, newer crpt. Call 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com 220 E Lane & Indianola ‑3 Brm flats avail for fall. Modern Bldg, spacious units w/AC, huge brms,courtyard, on site laundry, blinds, newer carpet &off str parking. call 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com 3 BDRM Apartment 67 Chittenden, C/Air, Rec‑Room, OSP, NO Pets, $1,170/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ properties.com 3 BDRM Apartments, 55 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, New Kitchen Appliances, C/Air, W/D, OSP, NO Pets $1290/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com 3 BDRM DBL, 81‑83 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, New Kitchen & Bath, W/D, DW, NO Pets $1,305/Mo. Call 961‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

3 bdrm double, W. Maynard, walk to OSU, CA, newly remodeled bath & updated kitchen, hdwd floors, off st. parking, W/D, 90% efficient furnace. $1200 Avail. Fall 2011 Call (614)206‑5855 or (614)348‑ 2307 www.byrneosuproperties.com

# 1 4 Bedroom Duplex, North Campus, Fall Rental, 2176 Summit. New Kitchen. Huge duplex. Third floor is all one room. Two full baths, Washer/Dryer in basement, rear deck, off‑street parking. Rent is $1,700 per month. Call Mark at 207‑4321 or email me at mmayers@columbus.rr.com for an appointment or visit www.quadmproperty.com # 1 4 Bedroom House, North Campus, Fall Rental, 2177 Indiana. Great corner house with huge rear deck. Dishwasher and microwave in kitchen. Washer/Dryer in Basement. Two car garage in rear. Central Air. Rent is $1,900 per month. Call Mark at 207‑4321 or email me at mmayers@columbus.rr.com for an appointment or visit www.quadmproperty.com # 1 4 BR AVAILABLE NOW OR FALL! Beautiful remodeled HOUSES, HALF‑DOUBLES, TOWNHOUSES close to campus. Huge bedrooms and eat‑in kitchens, new insulated windows, awesome porches and wood decks, FREE lighted off‑street parking, gleaming hardwood floors, new appliances, large dry basements with FREE washers & dryers, internet/cable, A/C, ceiling fans. Call North Campus Rentals today! (614)354‑8870 www.northcampusrentals.com

# 1 A: nicely renovated 4BR North campus home: 185 E. Oakland. NEW: kitchen w/dishwasher, microwave; 2 baths; insulated windows; NEW furnace/AC; W/D (free), decorative fireplaces, lovely old woodwork. Sorry, no pets. HOF Properties of Ohio, 614‑204‑ 3 BDRM Townhouse, 2147 4346. Waldeck Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, W/D, Free OSP $1,395/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.- #0‑4 bedroom house ideal cencooper‑properties.com tral location, corner 14th and Summit. 2 blocks from campus. Excellent condition. Kitchen re3 Bedroom APT. done. A/C, W/D, off‑street park69 E. 14th Ave. ing, security system. 470‑0813. Available Fall 2011 www.scarletandgrayproperties.Large rooms, newer furnaces com and air conditioning, up‑dated baths & kitchens, appliances, dishwashers. #1 @ 1956 Summit; 2133 Indioff‑street parking. ana & 71/73 W. Northwood; 2 Security system available. nicely renovated 4BR North $1050/month. campus single homes; one su(740) 363‑2158, per double: NEW: kitchen jeffersrentals@gmail.com w/dishwasher, microwave; 2 baths w/ceramic tile; insulated windows; furnace/AC; W/D 406 W King& Hunter 3 Brm flat (free). Off‑street parking, decoavail. for fall in a quiet Victorian rative fireplaces, lovely old Vlg. area close to Med. School. woodwork. Sorry, no pets. StirRmdeled & spacious w/ huge ling Properties of Ohio. 519‑ kit, A/C, newer crpt, porch, 6543 www.StirlingOSU.com” yard, blinds,lndry next door & off str pkng.call 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com #1, Affordable spacious and updated, large 4BR apts on North, South and Central campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ 54 E 13th ‑3Brm flats avail. for street parking, dishwasher, fall. Great location. Modern W/D hookups, decks, Bldg on Central campus just E. fireplaces, Jacuzzi tubs. of High St. Spacious w/AC, Starting at $318 614‑294‑7067 blinds,D/W, off str parking lndr www.osupropertymanagement.across the str.call 263‑2665 com www.gasproperties.com 3 BDRM Townhouse 100 Frambes Ave. Spacious Unit, DW, W/D, A/C, Free OSP $1,485/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

56E. Woodruff, 3 bedroom for Fall, excellent northeast location, steps from High St., new windows, mini‑blinds, new kitchen cabinets, microwave, gas stove, dishwasher, disposal. Central heat and ac, coin‑op laundry, 3 off‑street parking with well lit area. lwalp1@gmail.com or 513‑774‑ 9550 after 6:30pm

#1. Location OSU colors! 67 W. Patterson Easy walk to OSU stadium. Big 1/2 double with total of 8 rooms on 4 levels plus 2 full baths. Off street parking. New insulated windows and security doors. Outside lighting. Central air, DW & new appliances, hardwood floors and carpet. Unique attic/loft. Great architecture throughout. Clean, attractive, well maintained. Come see the OSU colors! Call or email for information. $1,600 September 1, 2011. 941‑323‑0148 ktaho@comcast.net

4 BDRM Apt. 111 E. Norwich Spacious Apt. w/, C/Air, DW, W/D, OSP $1,580‑$1,620/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ properties.com

4 BDRM Apt. 2157 Waldeck Ave. Completely Renovated, Spacious Unit w/ 2 Full Bath, New Kitchen DW, W/D, C/Air & Free OSP $1,860/Mo. Call #1 Awesome! 306 E. 16th 961‑0056. www.cooper‑proper- Duplex, 5 bedroom/2 bath, new ties.com kitchen & baths, DW, free washer/dryer, blinds, base4 BDRM DBL, 2153‑2155 Indi- ment, porch, new windows & anola/Norwich Large Dbl. w/ 2 furnace, refinished hardwood Full Bath, W/D, DW, OSP, NO floors, off street parking. Well Pets $1,940/Mo. Call 961‑ maintained. Fall $1,700. 891‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.- 1835 com 4 BDRM DBL. 131 E. Norwich DW, W/D, Lg. Porch, OSP, NO Pets $1,920‑$1,980/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑properties.com 4 Bdrm Double 2139 Summit (Between Lane & Norwich) Renovated, Very Spacious Unit w/ 3 Floors, 2 Full Bath, Rec‑ Rm, DW, W/D, C/Air & Free OSP (10 Spots) $2000/mo. Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ properties.com

#1 Awesome. Nice 6 Bedroom House. Ideal Central/NE Location, 2 blocks from campus, 2 full baths. Updated kitchen. W/D, A/C, Security System, ample off‑street parking. 470‑0813 www.scarletandgrayproperties.com

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

7‑8 bdrm House @ 285 Lane. Beautiful house in great location w/ wood floors, large bdrms, large kitchen w/ sun‑rm and rec‑rm, large deck & porch w/ 3 Full Bath, DW, WD, C/Air and Free OSP. $3,605‑$3800/mo Call 961‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.5 & 6 bedroom houses for rent. com $1950/$2600 W. Patterson near tommys pizza on lane. 8 Bdrm House 57 E. 17th Dan 614.316.3986 Great Location, New Renovations, Hrwd Flr, 3 Full bath, Lg. www.osurentals.com Porch & Deck, Lg. Bdrms, DW, 5 BDRM Apt. 2159 Waldeck W/D, Free OSP $4,200/mo. Ave. Completely Renovated, Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ Spacious Unit w/ 2 Full Bath, properties.com New Kitchen DW, W/D, C/Air & Free OSP $2,300/Mo. Call Affordable 5 Bedrooms. 961‑0056. www.cooper‑proper- Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. ties.com 1st Place Realty 429‑0960 5 BDRM DBL. 150 E. Norwich, 2 Full Bath, HW Floors, DW, Huge 7 bdrm house, walk to W/D, C/Air NO Pets $2,175- campus, this is a fabulous, /Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.- completely renovated house New everything!! 2 bath, CA, cooper‑properties.com hdwd floors, sec system, fire alarm system. Avail Fall $3325 5 Bdrm Double 2139 Summit Call (614)206‑5855 or (614)(Between Lane & Norwich) 348‑2307 Lots of pix at www.Renovated, Very Spacious Unit byrneosuproperties.com w/ 3 Floors, 2 Full Bath, DW, W/D, C/Air & Free OSP (10 Spots) $2000/mo. Call 961‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.com 0 utilities, furnished rooms, 5 bdrm House @ 127 W flexible lease periods, super Northwood. A Great location convenient location, 38 E. 17th close to campus! Completely Ave. Laundry, off‑street parkrenovated w/ New appliances, ing, $200‑$400/month. 296‑ new flooring & fixtures, 2 1/2 6304, 263‑1193. Bath, DW, WD, C/Air and Free OSP. $2600/mo Call 961‑0056. 1368 Neil Avenue, furnished, www.cooper‑properties.com clean, quiet, safe. $350/month, utilities included, males only, 5 BDRM House, 112 W. Oak- graduate students preferred, land, 2 Full Bath, W/D, DW, free washer/dryer, 488‑3061 OSP, NO Pets $2,425/Mo. Jack. Call 961‑0056 www.cooper‑ properties.com Available now 14th Ave. Kitchen, laundry, parking, aver5 BDRM House, 140 Frambes, age $270/mo. Paid utilities, Ideal Location w/ 2 Full Bath, 296‑8353 or 299‑4521 W/D, DW, NO Pets $2,625/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.- Dead quiet near medical cooper‑properties.com complex. Safe. Excellent, low noise/crime neighborhood, 5 BDRM House, 155 E. North- quiet serious tenants. OSU wood, 1.5 Bath, W/D, DW, across the street. $350/month, C/Air, OSP, HRWD Floors, no utilities. 614‑805‑4448. Very Nice, NO Pets $2,300/Mo. Call 961‑0056 www.cooper‑properties.com 4‑5 bdrm House @ 2121 Indiana. Recently renovated w/ new appliances, new flooring & fixtures. Lg. Deck & porch w/ 2 Full Bath, DW, WD, C/Air and Free OSP. $1900‑$2150/mo Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ properties.com

Rooms

Roommate Wanted Female

5 BDRM House. 69 W. Patterson, DW, W/D, Walk In Closets, 2 Kitchens, Lg. Porch & Decks, NO Pets $2125/Mo. Female, to share 3 BDRM Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ condo near Easton/Polaris Mall and OSU. Partly furnished, properties.com $300+utilities. (937) 656‑4399 5 BDRM Townhouse 67 Chit- or (937) 829‑0936 tenden, Newly Remodeled w/ 2 Full Bath, DW, C/Air, W/D, OSP, NO Pets. $2,125‑$2150/Mo. Call 961‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.com

#1, Affordable spacious and updated, large 5BR apts on North, South and Central campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ street parking, dishwasher, W/D hookups, decks, fireplaces, Jacuzzi tubs. 4 bdrm double, W. Maynard Starting at $303 614‑294‑7067 Ave, completely renovated, www.osupropertymanagement.- 5 BDRM Townhouse, 180 E. new everything!! 2 bath, CA, com 12th, 2 Full Bath, C/Air, DW, W/D, off‑st. parking. BEAUTIW/D, OSP, NO Pets FUL, won’t last long $1900, $1875/Mo. Call 961‑0056. available Fall 2011, (614)206‑ #1, Affordable spacious www.cooper‑properties.com 5855 or (614)348‑2307 Pic- and updated, large 8BR apts tures at www.byrneosuproper- on North, South and Central 5 BDRM Townhouse, 180 E. ties.com campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ 12th, C/Air, W/D, DW, 2 Full street parking, dishwasher, Bath, OSP, NO Pets $2,025W/D hookups, decks, /Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.4 BDRM House, 66 W. Nor- fireplaces, Jacuzzi tubs. cooper‑properties.com wich, 2 Full Bath, W/D, DW, Starting at $401 614‑294‑7067 OSP, NO Pets $2,100/Mo. www.osupropertymanagement.55 East Oakland. Great 6 BR Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ com 2 BA House. W/D, AC, Fenced properties.com Backyard, front porch, 1 car garage; $2550/mo #1, Affordable spacious Call A.J. 614‑571‑5501 4 Bedroom Half Double and updated, large 6BR apts or aj.solomon@spgroup.com 1703‑05 N. 4th St. on North, South and Central Available 9/1/11 (between 13th and 14th) 2 Kitchens, 2 Baths, Central campus. Gas heat, A/C, off‑ A/C, Washer, Dryer, Large street parking, dishwasher, 6 BDRM House, 55 W. PatterRooms, Hardwood Floors, W/D hookups, decks, son, HW Floors, 2 Full Bath, Large Second Floor Porch in fireplaces, Jacuzzi tubs. DW, W/D, OSP, NO Pets Starting at $446 614‑294‑7067 Rear. Off‑Street Parking. $2,550/Mo. Call 961‑0056. www.osupropertymanagement.- www.cooper‑properties.com Available Fall. $1140/mo com www.ghcrentals.com or call 614‑804‑3165 6 BDRM House, 66 Frambes, 2 Full Bath, DW, W/D, OSP, NO $1500/MONTH, 5 bedroom half Pets $2,850/Mo. Call 961‑ 4 bedroom house fall quar- double house, 2117 Indiana & 0056. www.cooper‑properties.ter One block off Lane @ 2158 Lane Ave (between Indianola com Indiana Ave Washer/dryer Big and Summit), recently renobedrooms $1600 614‑562‑ vated, excellent northeast cam- 6 Bedroom HOUSE, 262 E. 1137 or paulgroeniger@aol.- pus location, beautiful, quiet Lane, Very Spacious, 3 stories com street, 2 full baths, hardwood plus finished basement, attic floors, new appliances, dish- loft, 3 kitchens, 2.5 baths, W/D 4‑5 bdrm House @ 2121 Indi- washer, FREE washer/dryer, hook‑ups, DW, living room, dinana. Recently renovated w/ security system, low utilities, ing room, hardwood floors, new appliances, new flooring & front covered porch, plenty of front porch, back patio, fenced fixtures. Lg. Deck & porch w/ 2 free off‑street security lighted back yard, 2 car garage. Sorry Full Bath, DW, WD, C/Air and parking, Ohio State Property No Pets. $2150/mo. Call YIANNI at 614.296.1877 Free OSP. $1900‑$2150/mo Management, 614‑374‑5769 Call 961‑0056. www.cooper‑ 6 Bedroom Unit ‑ GATEWAY properties.com $1800/MONTH, 5 bedroom sin- 129 W. 10th Ave. Available fall gle house, excellent northeast 2011. Large rooms, washer / 84/86 Euclid Avenue ‑ campus location, recently reno- dryer. Wired for high‑speed in$1400/mo. south Campus Gate- vated, new furnace and A/C, ternet. way Area. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, security system, low utilities, 2 $2,460/mo (740) 363‑2158 brick double. Hardwood floors, full baths, basement, carpet, jeffersrentals@gmail.com beautiful fireplaces, spacious, FREE washer/dryer in unit, free washer and dryer, full dishwasher. Ohio State Prop6 Bedroom Unit basement, air conditioned, new erty Management, 614‑374‑ 129 W. 10th Ave furnace and appliances, 5769 Available fall 2011 garage and security system Large Rooms, available. Call Steve at 291‑ washer/dryer, 8207. www.euclidproperties.- $1800/MONTH, 6 bedroom half wired for high‑speed internet com double house, 2111 Indiana $2460 / month and Lane Ave. (between Indi(740) 363‑2158 jeffersrentals@gmail.com Affordable 4 Bedrooms. anola and Summit), excellent northeast campus location, reVisit our website at cently renovated, beautiful www.my1stplace.com quiet street, front covered 65 W. Maynard near Neil 1st Place Realty 429‑0960 porch, hardwood floors, FREE 5Brm+2 full baths TH avail. for washer/dryer, new furnace and fall. N. Campus very spacious East 16th between Summit A/C, security system, dish- & modern with huge liv rm, and Fourth. 4 bed, 2 bath, ex- washer, privacy fence in back- newer carpet, D/W, FREE W/D tra study room, Remodeled yard! Ohio State Property Man- on basement, AC, blinds, front porch. Call 263‑2665 kitchen, tile floors, free washer agement, 614‑374‑5769 www.gasproperties.com and dryer, osp, nice, $1640.00, no pets, skrentals.net, Steve @ 614‑582‑1618 $2000/MONTH, 5 bedroom 7 bdrm‑‑2065 Summit (behouse, 2148 Indiana and Lane tween 19th and Lane). $3,150. Ave (between Indianola and www.buckeyeabodes.com. 378‑ Horse Farm. Entire house Summit), recently renovated, 8271. for rent. Can also rent stalls. 28 excellent northeast campus lominutes to OSU. No Pets. cation, beautiful, quiet street, $1200/mo. 614‑805‑4448. front covered porch, 3 full baths, 3 kitchens, 3 refrigeraHuge 4 bdrm W. Blake Ave, tors, living room and rec‑room! walk to OSU, 1.5 BRAND NEW Very spacious! FREE washsecurity system, bathrooms!! Updated kitchen, er/dryer, off‑st. parking, CA, W/D Avail.- plenty of FREE off‑street, security lighted parking. Ohio State Fall 2011, CAll (614)206‑5855 or (614)348‑2307. www.byr- Property Management, 614‑ 374‑5769 neosyproperties.com

Roommate Wanted Male

Roommate wanted ‑ $400/month ‑ includes utilities, internet, and telephone. Upper Arlington Townhome 2BR. newly remodeled. Bedroom is furnished with desk and NEW deluxe queen size mattress. Place is clean, quiet, safe, and close to OSU. call for more details 614‑330‑2809. Thanks.

Roommate Wanted NW Cols/Dublin. One block behind Sawmill Meijer. 3BR $400‑$500/mo. Garage/Basement. 614/285‑ 5552 Sharing 2 B/R Apt., completely and beautifully furnished, CA, parking, New carpeting, $350/mo. plus half utilities. Call owner: 718‑0790

Sublet

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted Clerical

HANDYMAN‑ WORK PART TIME ON OFF‑CAMPUS PROPERTIES, PAINTING, PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL EXPERIENCE A PLUS, START AT $11/HR., FLEXIBLE HOURS, CALL 761‑9035

Easton Psychologist’s office is looking for part time receptionist. M‑Th 4‑8pm and Fri 2‑6pm. No weekends or holidays. Great opportunity for a college student. If interested please e‑mail your resume to cpayne@matrixpsych.com

House CLEANING. Looking for hardworking, detailed oriented individuals to work 20 hrs/week. $12/hr. Must have car. Daytime hours only. Please call (614)‑527‑1730 or email hhhclean@hotmail.com. Prepbooks.com’s hiring Campus Representatives I,II,III for Part‑Time positions. Apply on website Career Section under About Us. Pay from $9 to $22/hr.

Help Wanted Child Care BABYSITTERS NEEDED. Must be caring, reliable, have great references and own transportation. Pick your schedule. Apply TheSitterConnection.com CARE PROVIDERS and ABA Therapists are waned to work with children/young adults with disabilities in a family home setting or supported living setting. Extensive training is provided. This job is meaningful, allows you to learn intensively and can accommodate your class schedule. Those in all related fields, with ABA interest, or who have a heart for these missions please apply. Competitive wages and benefits. For more information call L.I.F.E. Inc. at (614) 475‑5305 or visit us at www.LIFE‑INC.NET EOE

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service BONJOUR OSU! La Chatelaine French Bakery & Bistro is looking for outstanding servers, prep cooks and line personnel. Our three locations in Columbus are hiring servers with serving experience, prep cooks with restaurant kitchen experience and line personnel with customer service/serving experience. La Chatelaine is looking for dynamic, outstanding students. Please inquire at La Chatelaine Upper Arlington‑ 614.488.1911,La Chatelaine Worthington‑614.848.6711 or La Chatelaine Dublin‑ 614.763.7151 Please visit our website‑www.lachatelainebakery.com Merci!

Help Wanted OSU Ortho Outreach Program Manager for The Ohio State University, Dept. of Orthopaedics, Columbus, Ohio. Implements and manages national and international outreach programs, develops marketing plans and training materials to recruit program participants; plans national and international programs and international conferences; establishes program policies, budget and other resource management; manages project planning, fiscal activities and staffing for specific programs; develops business plans for new faculty recruits and for new program initiatives. Requirements: MBA and 1 year of experience in national/international program planning and financial management; computer literacy; knowledge of PeopleSoft Financials and HR, and Microsoft Office software applications. Send resumes to: B. Hammond, 4110 Cramblett Hall, 456 W. 10th Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43210. EEO\AA Employer.

College Nannies & Tutors is the country’s largest child care staffing agency providing Nannies and Tutors for families. We are currently looking for a fun, creative, and responsible Nanny to work part time, after school. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to: daily care and responsibility of the children, preparing healthy meals and snacks, actively engaging the children in fun and educational activities, transporting the children to and from school and/or activities, assisting with homework, getting dinner started for the family, and helping to keep the home clean and tidy. Apply online at www.college- Research Assistant to perform neuro‑oncology and nannies.com “join the team.” neuroscience research experiments and assist with laboratory administrative functions in I am looking for someone who The Ohio State University, can provide care for an 11‑year‑ Dept. of Neurological Surgery, old with mild developmental de- Columbus, Ohio. Send resume lay. He attends regular classes to: E. Chambers, HR with some modification and has Associate, 394 Wiseman Hall, been diagnosed with ADHD. 400 W. 12th Ave., Columbus, The caretaker would assist with Ohio 43210. EEO/AA empicking him up from school and ployer. helping him to transition from the school environment to the home environment (i.e. helping him with his homework). The caretaker would also assist him with becoming more independent and learning self‑sufficiency skills (picking out clothes for school, making himself a snack, washing hands www.specialmuse.com etc). The hours are Mon‑Fri 40‑60% commission sales 3‑5:30 pm. If interested please Flexible hours‑wk from home contact: ernurse1262@aol.com Special Needs Web Site

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

166 East Lane sublease for Summer 2011. 1 bedroom stu- Part time help wanted in the dio. $505/month all utilities in- evenings, 4 day/week varied, w/mildly autistic 5yr old. Must cluded. be reliable and willing to work. Must pass BCI check. Westerville area. Moose251985@gmail.com Marketing Interns We are looking for Marketing Interns for an international company to explore the US market. ##! Bartending Up To The OSU Child Care Program ‑‑No experience needed! ‑‑Stu$300/ Day. No Experience Nec- is currently seeking reliable, dents currently pursuing a outgoing students to serve as essary. Training Provided. 800‑ part time employees for sum- Bachelors degree in marketing 965‑6520 ext 124. mer quarter.. As a teaching ‑‑Excellent communication and interpersonal management #1 Piano, Voice and Guitar aide, you will be working with skills ‑‑Self motivated with exteachers needed to teach in our professional staff in an in- cellent organization and time students’ homes. Continuing fant, toddler, preschool, or a management skills ‑‑Flexible education provided. Excellent kindergarten classroom. If inter- hours. Our office is 15 minutes ested, please attend an Empay. 614‑847‑1212. away from the OSU main camployment Information Session. pianolessonsinyourhome.com pus. If interested, please email to centohio@gmail.com or fax A variety of shifts are available a photographer looking for students to do video work, including 7a‑10a, 10a‑1:30, 12‑ at (614)846‑8814, attention to Gary Chan. 3p, 2:30‑6. (a minimum of 9 no experience needed but open‑minded. Female pre- hours p/w preferred) Must be current OSU student to apply. ferred. $100/hr. please email If you have this availability The Ohio Veterinary Medito: joeselane@gmail.com please contact Thea Sheppard cal Association is currently AMATEUR MODELS Needed ‑ at tsheppard@hr.osu.edu. seeking multiple interns to 18+. No experience necessary! assist with preparations for $100 cash per shoot (614) 329‑ Sessions will be held on: its annual conference Feb. 3407. modelcuties@gmail.com 24‑27, 2011. Internship beMonday, January 3rd 4:00 p‑5:- gins the week of January 10, 30pm 2011. Flexible hours to acBOWLINGFORCASH.COM ‑ Tuesday, January 4th, 10a‑11:- commodate class schedules Survey Site ‑ Fun way to make 30a are available. This is a paid extra money! Completely FREE! Wednesday January 5th 4:00p‑ internship open to all majors. 5:30 Please send resume to mlPart‑Time/FUll‑TIME Colc@ohiovma.org for considerlector, 5 Minutes from campus This Session will be held at the ation. For additional informaalong #2 bus line. Part time af- Child Care Program’s Acker- tion, please contact Mia Cunternoons & evenings. Call 614‑ man Road facility, located at ningham at 614‑486‑7253. 495‑1407, Contact Helen 725 Ackerman Road.

Help Wanted Interships

Help Wanted General

For Sale Automotive

2003 Civic Coupe. Manual trans., black, great mileage, clean record. $4900 obo. Email Pat at mcaloon.1@osu.edu

Aaron Buys ALL CARS NEW * OLD * JUNK WRECKED Any Vehicle, CA$H Today! FREE TOW! FREE Notary! local buyer, www.268CARS.com 614‑268‑CARS(2277)

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

Travel/ Vacation

Bahamas Spring Break $189 for 5 DAYS or $239 for 7 DAYS. All prices include : Round‑trip luxury cruise with food. Accommodations on the island at your choice of thirteen resorts. Appalachia Travel. www.BahamaSun.com 800‑ 867‑5018

General Services

Arlington Children’s Center. Enrolling for winter quarter. FT/PT. 6 weeks ‑ school age. Title XX Accepted. Call 451‑5400 for info or tour. Convenient to OSU/315.

Legal Services

Student Rates. Free initial consultation. Attorney Andrew Cosslett. Alcohol/Drug, Traffic/DUI, Landlord/Tenant, Immigration. 614‑725‑5352. andrewcosslett@cosslett.com.

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.

ACCOUNTING 310 You can get through it! Great tutoring TutorMike.com Mike.Tutor123@gmail.com

General Miscellaneous

Music Instruction: Classical guitar, other styles, Theory, Aural Training, Composition & Songwriting. Call Sound Endeavors @614/481‑9191 www.soundendeavors.com.

$2100/MONTH, 6 bedroom single house, 1760 N 4TH and E. 15th Ave, excellent central campus location, recently renovated, large rooms, 10 ft ceilings, new insulated windows, new furnace and A/C, security system, low utilities, 2 full baths, dining room, ceramic tile kitchen and bath floors, hardwood floors, FREE washer/dryer, dishwasher, front covered porch, plenty of free, unblocked, security lighted off‑ street parking. Ohio State # 1 5 Bedroom Duplex, Cen- Property Management, 614‑ tral Campus, Fall Rental, 1988 374‑5769 Summit. Great unit, newer interior. Dishwasher and Microwave in Kitchen, Washer Dryer in Basement. Rear deck, 2‑6 Bedroom Homes available off‑street parking and central for 2011‑2012, www.compass‑ air. Full bath and two bed- properties.com or call Diane @ rooms on 3rd floor, Full bath 614‑783‑6625 and three bedrooms on second floor, half bath on the first floor. Rent is $2,400/mo. Call 2173 Indianola‑5Brm House Mark at 207‑4321 or email me avail for fall. North Campus, at mmayers@columbus.rr.com huge living rm, 2 full baths, for an appointment or visit bsmnt w/ washer & dryer, ceilwww.quadmproperty.com ing fans, front covered patio & back deck. Must see call G.A.S Properties 263‑2665 # 1 5 Bedroom Duplex, North www.gasproperties.com Campus, Fall Rental, 2166 Summit. Three floors plus basement. Two Full baths. Dishwasher and Microwave in 2184 Indianola‑5Brm House Kitchen, Washer Dryer in Base- avail. for fall. Quiet N. Campus ment. Rear deck, off‑street location, beautifully remodeled parking and central air. Rent is kitchen & bath in spring’05, $2,200/mo. Call Mark at 207‑ dishwasher, washer&dryer, AC in some rooms, carport, front & 4321 or email me at mmayers@columbus.rr.com for back porch. Must see! call G.A.S. Properties 263‑ an appointment or visit 2665 www.gasproperties.com www.quadmproperty.com

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

2403‑2405 East Ave. 5 bdrm 2 baths TH. Avail NOW & FALL! N. campus . Just N. of Patterson. Completely remld w/newer carpet & ceiling fans. Huge kit. w/DW and huge liv. rm. Blinds, A/C & free WD Frnt and rear porch, free off st prkg. See and compare living space and cost! Call 263‑2665 www.gasproperties.com

*

For Sale Real Estate

Ideal north Campus Location, 4 Bdrm, 1/2 double. 200 yds from campus. W/D, A/C, Security system, ample off‑ street parking. 470‑0813 www.scarletandgrayproperties.com

56E. Woodruff, 3 bedroom, excellent northeast location, steps from High St., new windows, mini‑blinds, microwave, dishwasher, disposal, gas stove. Central heat and ac, coin‑op laundry, 3 off‑street $1500/MONTH, 4 bedroom parking. lwalp1@gmail or 513‑ plus 5th walk through bedroom, 774‑9550 half double house, 2115 Indiana & Lane Ave (between Indianola and Summit), recently 63 W Maynard near Neil Ave– renovated, excellent northeast Beautiful 3 Brm TH avail for campus location, beautiful, fall. Quiet N. Campus location ,- quiet street, 2 full baths, hardhuge kit & dinning rm ,newer wood floors, new appliances, carpets, A/C, blinds, bsmnt w/ dishwasher, FREE washFREE W/D,porch & yard. er/dryer, security system, low call 263‑2665 utilities, front covered porch, www.gasproperties.com plenty of free off‑street security lighted parking. Ohio State 66 E Norwich‑ 3brm flats avail Property Management, 614‑ for fall on N. campus just East 374‑5769 of High St. Quiet area Modern Bldg w/AC newer carpet, blinds, updated appl, off str 2‑6 Bedroom Homes available parking & laundry nearby call for 2011‑2012, www.compass‑ # 1 6 Bedroom House, North properties.com or call Diane @ Campus, Fall Rental, 2188 Indi263‑2665 614‑783‑6625 ana. Can be 5 or 6 bedroom. www.gasproperties.com Three floors plus basement. Washer and dryer included. 96‑98 W 9th‑3Brm ½ double 4 BDRM Apartment 67 Chitten- Three car garage in rear. Rent TH, avail. fall. Modern & spa- den, New Carpet, 2 Full Bath, is $2,100 per month. Call Mark cious w/ dinning rm, basement C/Air, DW, W/D, OSP, NO at 207‑4321 or email me at w/FREE W/D, AC, D/W, blinds, Pets, $1,680/Mo. Call 961‑ mmayers@columbus.rr.com for front porch &yard. call 263‑ 0056. www.cooper‑properties.- an appointment or visit www.quadmproperty.com com 2665 www.gasproperties.com

Monday January 3, 2011

#1 Available 5,6,7 bedroom homes fall of 2011, awesome locations and houses, more information http://www.veniceprops.com/properties.cfm

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

Please send resume and cover letter to Eric Luebke, Advertising Manager at advertising@thelantern.com 5B


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Monday January 3, 2011


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