January 22, 2015

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Thursday January 22, 2015 year: 135 No. 5

@TheLantern weather high 35 low 25 mostly cloudy

thelantern the Hoops to take on Wildcats

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Bieber’s roast tasteless

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Nanorobots become mobile

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Jon Waters applies to get his old band director job back LOGAN HICKMAN AND AMANDA ETCHISON For The Lantern and Campus editor hickman.201@osu.edu and etchison.4@osu.edu

CHELSEA SPEARS / Multimedia editor

Former OSU Marching Band director Jon Waters

Former Ohio State Marching Band director Jonathan Waters has reapplied for his position, even though the university has repeatedly told him there’s no chance he’ll get his job back. And the school might be one step closer to guaranteeing he gets the message — a federal judge scheduled a hearing to consider OSU’s request that

Water’s lawsuit about wrongful firing be thrown out. Waters, who was fired in July after an OSU investigation found the band contained an entrenched sexualized culture, submitted a 4 ½ page application to OSU on Thursday for a tenure-track band director position. “I think that when the university looks at my application — as they will with everyone who applies — they will see my qualifications, they will see exactly what I have

done with the band before,” he told The Lantern. The application opened in December and the university has said it aims to have a new leader selected by February. When asked if OSU would consider Waters’ application, spokesman Chris Davey said in an email that he cannot discuss the specifics of an open job search.

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Luxury Using a laptop for notes could be detrimental apartments coming to Lane Avenue 45 new units are set to be built near Tommy’s Pizza LEE MCCLORY Design editor mcclory.10@osu.edu A Lane Avenue apartment complex will be demolished later this year to make room for a new luxury apartment complex. Edwards Communities Development Company LLC, a Columbus-based company that also owns apartment complex Norwich Flats on Norwich Avenue, plans to begin construction in August, the company’s president, Ryan Szymanski said. Szymanski said he was “not ready to release information” about how much the proposed building would cost. The new apartment building will be located at 144-162 W. Lane Ave. next to Tommy’s Pizza, Szymanski said, but a permanent address hasn’t yet been decided on for the building. Szymanski added that the company still needs to get permission to build from the Columbus city council, but received permission from the University Area

“We think the apartments will be attractive to a wide range of students ... It’s close to the business and engineering schools, and I think it’ll be attractive to international students as well.” - Ryan Szymanski

President of Edwards Community Development Company LLC Commission in December and the Development Commission on Jan. 8. The apartment complex that will be demolished has two buildings with 36 apartments. The new complex, which doesn’t yet have a name, would have 45 units. Rent for the new apartments will be similar to Norwich Flats. Norwich Flats apartments range from $820 for a one-bedroom apartment to $1,175 for a three-bedroom apartment, Syzmanski said. The new apartments will be fully furnished with a private patio for residents, Szymanski said. There will be one-, twoand three-bedroom apartments, he said, but the details are still being worked out about other amenities, such as a pool and workout room. “We think the apartments will be attractive to a wide range of students,” Szymanski said. “It’s close to the business and engineering schools, and I think it’ll be attractive to international students as well.” Szymanski said that the apartments are furnished and the building is managed through an online maintenance request service, which he thinks might appeal specifically to international students. The proposed complex fits with the increased number of luxury apartments being built around Ohio State’s campus. Other luxury apartments include The

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Courtesy of Katie Storme

Study finds handwritten notes lead to better comprehension NOAH TOUMERT Lantern reporter toumert.3@osu.edu Closing your computer could jump start your grades this semester. Computers can be distracting, but using a computer in class can affect students’ study habits as much as it affects their attention spans, according to a recent study. Helena Rempala, an Ohio State clinical psychologist, said there can be retention benefits to using a pen and paper to take notes. “There is more comprehension when you physically write,” Rempala said. “(When we write) we think slower. We comprehend twice. Once when listening, and then again when writing.” In a study published last year conducted by researchers at Princeton University and the University of California, Los Angeles, handwritten notes were found to be more effective in helping students retain information. The study, which tested 67 Princeton students and 151 UCLA students on their retention of information presented in a 15-minute TED talk, showed that students who wrote their notes

QUICK LOOK • • •

The study tested 67 Princeton students and 151 UCLA students Half the students took notes by hand and half took notes on a laptop Handwritten notes were found to be more effective in helping students retain information

by hand comprehended information better than those who typed them on a laptop. Approximately half of the students tested were asked to take notes on the lecture by hand, and the other half were asked to take notes using a computer. The study found that students who typed their notes had more content written down in a cleanly organized manner, but the notes were verbatim from the lecture. On the other hand, students who used longhand had fewer words, but they used keywords that demanded comprehension of topics to recall. “The studies … here show that laptop use can negatively affect performance on educational assessments, even — or perhaps especially — when the computer is used for its intended

function of easier note taking,” the study states. “Although more notes are beneficial, at least to a point, if the notes are taken indiscriminately or by mindlessly transcribing content, as is more likely the case on a laptop than when notes are taken longhand, the benefit disappears.” Rempala said verbatim writing diminishes comprehension and copious notes might not be what students need. She also said she thinks students prefer typing because they can get more words down on the page, so it seems as though they have more information to study. Some OSU professors, like Margaret Rooney, a professor in the School of Communication, have taken steps to reduce the presence of technology in their classes. Rooney said she started this policy four semesters ago because she was worried about technology’s negative impact on the classroom setting. Rooney has taught many courses at OSU, but has most recently imposed her computer ban in her Research Methods course. Although she acknowledged the research behind the benefits of taking notes with pen and paper, Rooney said she was more worried about computers distracting students from the course environment. “Students actually seem to like the class

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Arts scholarship showcase features materials from a pine cone to human hair TAYLOR FERRELL AND DANIKA STAHL Lantern reporters ferrell.178@osu.edu and stahl.145@osu.edu Sometimes masterpieces are right in your backyard. The 23rd Annual John Fergus Family Fund Scholarship Awards incorporated a variety of art forms this year from 10 Ohio State students and alumni. The scholarship is fine arts-based, and the winners’ pieces are now open for public viewing at the Urban Arts Space. Ryan Wells, a third-year in interior design and one of the recipients of the award, said the recipients are selected by a jury encompassed by faculty members from various arts and design departments of OSU. The majority of the recipients said they

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Courtesy of Ryan Wells

Ryan Wells, a third-year in interior design, submitted glued pieces of a pine cone together in a piece that was honored by the 23rd Annual John Fergus Family Fund Scholarship Awards.

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campus DNA origami might lead to real life ‘Transformers’ TIANA REED Lantern reporter reed.1034@osu.edu When Carlos Castro and Haijun Su started working as assistant professors in the engineering department at Ohio State, they didn’t know that just a few years later, they would be creating what some are calling “real life ‘Transformers.’” Castro approached Su with an idea of combining DNA and nanotechology, and by late 2011, the two paired up and began working on turning their idea into a reality. “We have formed a critical team in the traditional machine elements, and Carlos has the DNA origami expertise so we can form a perfect team,” Su said. Su and Castro, who both have backgrounds in mechanical engineering, combined their knowledge of robotics and nanotechnology to use DNA origami, which is the folding of DNA on a nanoscale, to create nanorobots that can change shape as well as repeatedly perform a task. The nanorobots Su and Castro are creating are changing what Su called “mostly static structures” into movable machines. “This research is about designing multiple pieces and then assembling them into machines that have controllable motions,” Su said. Su said these nanorobots are being called “DNA transformers” because of their ability to change shape. These advances in DNA origami could lead to breakthroughs in the treatment of major medical diseases such as cancer. They could allow for doctors to control not only how much but where in the body medications can be delivered, Su said. Castro and Su’s work is funded by the National Science Foundation and has been published in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Although Su said being published and having his work recognized is a great feeling,

“With this paper we are building the building blocks, the building blocks are the joints … We are building a library of building blocks, and that opens the door. We can use these building blocks to construct any kind of machine.” - Haijun Su Assistant professor in the Department of Engineering he added that the path to publication for him and Castro was a difficult one. Su said even though he and Castro were originally ready to publish their findings in early 2013, they found it challenging to get their work published because neither of them had any previous published work and they were only assistant professors with no senior author. “Carlos (and I) weren’t established … and we recognized that,” he said. To overcome the challenges of getting published, Su and Castro decided to wait and publish their research, and they took that time to build up their individual resumes. After two years, they had done enough to have their DNA origami research published. Alexander Marras and Lifeng Zhou are both graduate students in the College of Engineering who joined the project three years ago to help Castro and Su in their research. Marras was finishing his undergraduate degree when he was first introduced to the project by one of his professors, who then put him in contact with Castro. Marras was so interested in the research he decided to apply to graduate school at OSU and work on the research with Castro and Su. “I thought it was pretty fascinating. I always

Courtesy of Alexander Marras

A movable machine researchers Carlos Castro and Haijun Su made with ‘DNA oragami’ at OSU that they said could be a building block for future experiments enjoyed mechanics and the design aspects of mechanical engineering,” Marras said. “And I think biology and the way the body works is just amazing, so when I learned about an opportunity to combine those and be involved in this brand new technology, I decided to apply to Ohio State for grad school.” Both Marras and Zhou said they are excited about the possibilities of the study, and have many ideas on what the future holds for the research. “It will help researchers build custom machines in the future that can serve specific purposes like trapping a molecule, generating forces in response to a bio signal or performing tasks on a cell surface,” Marras said. “The exciting thing is that it’s all really new and there are many different ways we can expand.”

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Waters from 1A

more,” she said. “Once on a course evaluation in Public Speaking, I had a student write, ‘I normally don’t show up to classes, but this one was fun.’” Rooney said she wants her students to focus in class, but thinks the no-computer atmosphere encourages students to contribute more to in-class discussions. “Instead of focusing on their computer before class, they’ll talk to each other,” she said. Some students have also decided to use pen and paper during class instead of computers. “I tried to take all my notes on my computer when I came to college, but it didn’t work out,” said Katie Storme, a third-year in psychology. Storme said she stopped taking notes on the computer after her first semester because she realized her studying was suffering, but it took until after her final exams for her to change her notetaking style. “Having a computer was distracting. It was so easy to get lost,” she said. “But the big thing was that typing the notes wasn’t as engaging.” Now, Storme said she uses a hybrid system including both longhand and typing. Although her pages are color-coded with drawings and boxes and diagrams, her notes sprawl out in organized madness. But using a personal touch is only one added benefit of writing out notes, Storme said. “I’ll handwrite most notes especially when I’m diagramming systems for a psychology class,” she said. “But when doing things like vocab, I’ll still use my computer. I don’t notice a difference.” Rempala had an explanation for this, too. Although typing notes might decrease comprehension of concepts, factual retention is still high when using a laptop, she said. Conceptual information, such a question that asks about the differences between the two major political parties, is better retained when written out by hand, but there is no difference when it comes to factual information, like years, dates and names, Rempala said. For students who have not yet determined what works best for them, Rempala said she would first suggest trying to take notes without the computer. “If you do have problems studying, try not to type your notes,” she said. “Use notebooks, pens — colorful pens — use underlining.” Rempala added that, despite what the study said, a successful notetaking system is ultimately determined by individual preference. “Use a healthy balance,” she said. “Every person is different and needs their own style.”

Meanwhile, Judge James Graham will hear OSU’s case against Waters’ lawsuit on March 5. Waters’ suit — which is against OSU President Michael Drake and Provost and Executive Vice President Joseph Steinmetz — says he was fired without due process and that he was discriminated against on the basis of gender.

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Zhou said he thinks the research “will provide tools or devices that can function as robots to do work not only in blood vessels but also in cells. It can help people to treat lots of diseases, such as cancer.” Each researcher sees the future of their research being extremely beneficial — not only for medical advancements, but also for the understanding of the relationship between DNA and mechanical engineering. Su said the possibilities are numerous for the future of the research. “With this paper we are building the building blocks, the building blocks are the joints … We are building a library of building blocks, and that opens the door. We can use these building blocks to construct any kind of machine.”

Waters is suing for a minimum of $1 million in compensatory damages, in addition to seeking punitive damages, attorney fees and reinstatement. OSU says Waters was an at-will employee and that he either knew about or reasonably should have known about a problematic, sexually charged culture in the marching band and didn’t address the problems.

MARK BATKE / Photo editor

Former OSU Marching Band director Jon Waters directs members of the alumni band during an OSU football game against Kent State on Sept. 13 at Ohio Stadium.

Thursday January 22, 2015


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Apartments from 1A View On High, which is currently under construction on High Street between Woodruff and 18th avenues, and East Village apartments, built on Chittenden Avenue in 2010. Norwich Flats was completed in August of 2014, Szymanski said. Norwich Flats is currently full for the year. He said, as of last week, Norwich Flats was 90 percent booked for the 2015-16 season. Amanda Deevers, a third-year in engineering, said she chose to live in a

luxury apartment building on Lane Avenue this year because it was close to campus but was still off-campus. “I think it’s worth it to live off-campus,” she said. “I don’t think i’s really that much more expensive (than living on-campus).” Edwards Co. approached Tommy’s Pizza to work with it during construction because the company was initially interested in developing the Tommy’s Pizza space as well, Szymanski said. He said Tommy’s Pizza is no longer involved with construction on the project. The owner of Tommy’s Pizza did not respond to a request for comment.

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Clarification Issue 4/Tuesday

In “Wexner Center for the Arts highlights diverse art forms to ring in 25 years,” the article implied that the Wexner Center for the Arts is set to host and sponsor John Mellencamp and Carlene Carter’s performance on Jan. 30. In fact, an outside company is sponsoring the performance, while the Wexner Center for the Arts will host the performance.

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Thursday January 22, 2015

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opinion Don’t hesitate to dial 911, police non-emergency numbers Letter to the editor: Taking responsibility for one’s own safety, as well as the safety of the community, begins with having the proper knowledge. While it’s pretty obvious you should call 911 to report a crime in progress, it’s not so obvious to everyone which other crimes might require dialing that number. Suppose there is a suspicious person hanging around outside your apartment. You know something might not be right, but what if you’re wrong? Read The Lantern’s article from Oct. 16 titled “Masturbation, indecency incidents reported off campus” and you’ll see some real-life examples of hesitation to call the police. Note the advice given by Columbus Division of Police Commander Christopher Bowling: “Don’t think twice about calling the police … If you see something that looks out of place, call. Just do us a favor and call.” Commander Bowling provides good advice! The cops do their best work when we do our part as well by reporting possible criminal activity. The sooner we call, the sooner they can get there and perhaps catch a crook in the act. Waiting a few hours or a day, as in the news article, is not very effective! However, let’s look at it from the witness’ point of view. Most people don’t dial 911 every day, so they’re not used to the idea. And what is obvious to a cop can be filled with ambiguity to a citizen. 911 is a great tool for quickly connecting to the proper authorities, but it’s only one tool. Remember the old saying, “If all you have is a hammer, then every problem looks like a nail?” Some people are going to question if what they’re seeing is an “emergency,” and the only “tool” they have doesn’t seem to fit. Let’s look at this a little closer. If you witness something truly disturbing enough to elicit an adrenaline dump, we can probably say it’s “important.” The simple three-digit 911 is not only the best choice, it will also be the easiest to use with shaking fingers. If you see a crime in progress, then a quick response is likewise indicated. But what if you aren’t sure? Do you have any other choices? Yes, you do: police non-emergency numbers. The Columbus Police non-emergency number is 614-645-4545, while OSU police’s

is 614-292-2121. At a minimum, I would recommend OSU students memorize these two numbers. Add some more if you live or work in any other police jurisdictions. Now you have a phone number to use even if you aren’t sure of the importance of your information. There’s another reason to have the non-emergency number in your head. Sometimes, though it is quite rare, the 911 system is not operative. The other numbers give you an option, but only if you memorize them. Don’t just put them in your phone. Use your brain for a backup in case your phone is lost, broken or stolen. Some considerations when calling for help or to report a crime or unsafe condition: First, make sure you are safe. Get away from any danger if you can before you use the phone. Second, when connected, always give your location first. If your call is dropped or you are attacked, the police dispatcher at least knows where to send the cops to check out an unknown problem. Without that location, they have nothing to go on. Finally, don’t hang up until the dispatcher tells you to. She or he needs you to answer her or his questions to the best of your ability so she or he can get that info to the responding officers. Dispatchers’ roles are crucial, as is yours. As you’re talking on the phone, keep your head turning to try to observe everything around you. Danger doesn’t always stay in one place. There could be more going on than you first noticed. Review the above steps. Remember that Commander Bowling wants you to call the police without even “thinking twice.” Just do it. If you still have doubts, call the non-emergency number. What to you might be ambiguous could be crucial information for police. Consider the following scenarios: • You’re out with three friends when one of them gets in a shouting match with a stranger. After trying to de-escalate the situation to no avail, you suspect a fight is about to start. Your friend, who has a very short fuse, won’t back down or listen to reason. What do you do? • You are in your apartment when you hear a scream from outside. You pause and listen, and go to the window. You see someone outside,

Lantern file photo

A University Police officer and cruiser near Mirror Lake

maybe two or three people, but you can’t tell what they’re doing. It doesn’t feel right. What do you do? • You’re at a party. More than a few people are drunk. A woman you don’t know has had a bit too much and you see a guy gently picking her up and starting to take her down a hall to another room. What do you do? Do you do anything? If so, what? I hope you chose “dial 911” as your choice in the first two scenarios. As for the last scenario, it’s addressed in a pamphlet from Student Life’s Sexual Violence Education and Support titled “Buckeyes Got Your Back.” This resource impressed me

with its clear description of the problem (sexual assault and lack of consent) and the steps to take if one observes a potential sexual assault situation. Here is the link to that pamphlet’s website: swc.osu.edu/ sexual-violence/buckeyes-got-your-back/ In the meantime, you have some phone numbers to memorize. Karl Spaulding Campus crime prevention advocate who works for OSU’s Department of Public Safety spaulding.10@osu.edu Spaulding noted his views do not represent his employer’s views.

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Thursday January 22, 2015


sports

Thursday January 22, 2015

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OPINION

The Bullets are back at linebacker TIM MOODY Sports editor moody.178@osu.edu

KELLY RODERICK / Lantern photographer

Senior forward Sam Thompson (12) guards an opponent during a game against Michigan on Jan. 13 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 71-52.

Bucks looking for rhythm vs Wildcats JAMES GREGA, JR. Asst. sports editor grega.9@osu.edu As the Ohio State men’s basketball team prepares to play its fourth road game in a five game stretch, it is struggling to find its rhythm. OSU coach Thad Matta said he is not only pondering a switch in the starting lineup, he added he is wondering if the Buckeyes can pull their season together as they approach the thick of the Big Ten season. The Buckeyes are coming off of their third conference loss in six Big Ten games, and find themselves outside the top 25 for the second straight week. On the other side of Thursday’s matchup, the Northwestern Wildcats are reeling, having lost four straight with second-year coach Chris Collins. OSU coach Thad Matta said Wednesday that some of the problems the Buckeyes are having seem to be mental, rather than physical or because of a lack of effort. “You got a guy who is not shooting the ball well. He is struggling from the 3-point line right now. I look at them and I say, ‘What has changed? Is the line farther? Is the basketball moving while you’re shooting?’ It’s right here,” Matta said, pointing to his forehead. “We have got to change how we are thinking in terms of our preparation and getting ready to play.” Matta added that even if his team can correct the mental mistakes, it still might not be enough. “Every night we take that floor, you (the players) have a certain thing you have to do, you have a certain thing you have to bring to this team on this given night, and we need it,” Matta said. “In this league, you might play your best and not win. There is always that risk.” Playing a Northwestern team that has lost four of its first five

conference games would, on paper, look like the perfect bounce back game for the Buckeyes. However, OSU has struggled on the road in the past with the Wildcats, having not won a game by more than 10 in Evanston, Ill., since Feb. 13, 2008, and losing by three in Evanston in 2009. OSU senior guard Shannon Scott, who last played in Welsh-Ryan Arena in 2013, said that despite the lack of hype and excitement surrounding this game outside the two schools, Thursday’s matchup is important for both sides. “This is a must-need win for us, and for them as well. We both know that both teams are going to come out ready to play on Thursday,” Scott said. “It (the arena) has kind of like a high school feel at times, but I mean they are going to have a crowd there so it’s not going to be a high school game.” Despite a less-than-impressive start to the conference season, Scott said he feels as though the Buckeyes have yet to hit their stride. “We are still rising right now. We are nowhere near our peak. I think a big part of that is just us playing every game,” Scott said. “I think sometimes we still lose our focus and we don’t play every possession and that really costs us.” Matta agreed, but added not every team has risen to its full potential right away. “Every team I have ever had here has found its stride, some better than others,” Matta said. Ultimately, Matta is hoping that the Buckeyes have yet to hit that stride. “I think that our best basketball hopefully is ahead of us,” Matta said. “One of the things that we have talked about in the five losses, we have shown moments of playing really, really good basketball.” The Buckeyes will try to get back to their winning ways against the Wildcats at 7 p.m.

All Stars bringing about $12M to Columbus KEVIN STANKIEWICZ Lantern reporter stankiewicz.16@osu.edu The city of Columbus is expecting about $12 million to skate into town two years after missing out on the chance. Columbus was supposed to host the NHL All-Star Game in 2013, but a lockout that halted play for three months forced the game to be canceled. This year, the city is getting its chance to host the game. Columbus is set to host the game this weekend, with events taking place downtown from Friday through Sunday. Bruce Wimbish, spokesman for the Greater Columbus Sports Commission, said the event will generate a substantial amount of visitor spending and exposure for the city. “We have projected about $12 million in direct visitor spending,” Wimbish said. This projected figure is generated using a formula, and it is similar to the amount Raleigh, N.C. — which is comparable to Columbus in size — earned when it hosted the game in 2011. Spending by spectators in hotels, flights, at restaurants and other local businesses go into the projected number. Tax revenue from total spending is also accounted for, Wimbish said. R Bar Arena, a bar located near Nationwide Arena, is expecting massive crowds this weekend because of the game. “We are planning for five times the normal amount of customers from a Blue Jackets home game,” said Natalie Darr, a co-owner of the business. “We expect a lot of business to come from the foot traffic of people passing through the downtown area on Saturday and Sunday.” R Bar Arena normally opens at 11 a.m. on the weekends but its doors will open at 9 a.m. this weekend. Darr said there will be more staff scheduled and security will be brought in to help monitor the crowds. They are also removing some of the furniture inside the restaurant to help accommodate more customers. Wimbish said 400 media members are expected in town for the weekend. As a result, nearly $50 million in media exposure is anticipated.

Thursday January 22, 2015

KEVIN STANKIEWICZ / Lantern reporter

Nationwide Arena in downtown Columbus on Jan. 20. Nationwide, home of the NHL’s Columbus Blue Jackets, is set to host the NHL All-Star Game on Jan. 25. “Say you’re watching the broadcast of the game and before a commercial, they show a view of the city. This is advertising for the city that normally would have to be paid for,” Wimbish said. The GCSC predicted 140,000 hockey fans will file into the city to partake in the weekend’s festivities, with at least 10,000 being from out of town. Connor Nowakowski, a first-year in industrial and systems engineering, said having the game in Columbus will be a great chance to showcase the city and, ideally, use the game as a catalyst for Columbus hockey. “This game is huge for the city and even for the Blue Jackets as well,” Nowakowski, who has tickets to the game, said. “The team keeps getting better each year, and hopefully by having the game here, Columbus could establish itself as a hockey center in the Midwest.” Nowakowski said with everything going

on downtown, students who might not normally make the short trip down High Street will head into the city to experience it. “With everything that is planned to take place, it is going to have a festival-like atmosphere,” Nowakowski said. “I think there will be students that take advantage of such a big event happening nearby.” The Arena District has been transformed into a “hockey heaven,” Wimbush said. Attractions, such as a temporary outdoor ice-skating rink at McFerson Commons and a snow slide on Nationwide Avenue, could keep fans entertained during the weekend. The marquee events begin Friday, with the drafting of the All-Star teams at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. Saturday’s main event is the Skills Competition at Nationwide Arena. As for the game itself, the puck is scheduled to drop Sunday at 5:00 p.m.

Historically, Ohio State defenses — especially the linebackers — have lived up to their moniker. But as of late, the “Silver Bullets” have been shooting blanks. Even in August, the Buckeye linebackers were one of the biggest question marks on the team. Senior Curtis Grant had plenty of talent — judging by his five-star rating coming out of high school — but he never seemed to put it all together in Columbus. To an extent, the same could be said for junior Joshua Perry, who racked up just 69 tackles through his first two years with the Buckeyes. And then there was redshirt-freshman Darron Lee, who still looked more like the high school quarterback he was than the elite linebacker he is today. But just before the season Grant was named a team captain — which came as a surprise to some — and Perry and Lee had locked up starting spots. Lee made his mark early on with a key touchdown off a fumble recovery against Navy, but the Buckeye defense still struggled through the season’s first two weeks. And that struggle, combined with a poor day from the OSU offense, led to a 35-21 loss to Virginia Tech in the second game of the MARK BATKE / Photo editor year. Redshirt-freshman linebacker The next Darron Lee week, against Kent State, the defense pitched its first shutout of the season as a new linebacker — freshman Raekwon McMillan — burst onto the scene with a team-high seven total tackles and two sacks. But over the next nine weeks, the Buckeyes gave up at least 24 points seven times. Those high-scoring outputs seemed to be a bad omen going into the Big Ten Championship Game, but OSU — which was led in tackles by Lee — shut out a top-15 opponent as it beat Wisconsin, 59-0. Then Lee was named the defensive player of the game against Alabama, and the Buckeyes shut down Marcus Mariota in the title game, beating Oregon, 42-20. Now even with Grant departing, it’s clear that the “Silver Bullets” are making their return, and the linebackers will be the first ones out of the chamber in 2015. Look no further than Lee’s upper arm — where he has a fresh “Silver Bullets” tattoo, according to an Instagram post — to see that the linebackers have embraced a new mindset. They’ll be backing one of the best lines around once again next season, but led by Perry, who had 124 total tackles last season, Lee, who had 7.5 sacks and 16.5 tackles for loss in his first year playing linebacker full time, and McMillan, who showcased a skillset that could make him one of the nation’s best next season, the linebackers might prove to be the best position unit on the team. So much for question marks.

MARK BATKE / Photo editor

Freshman linebacker Raekwon McMillan returns an interception during a game against Maryland on Oct. 4 in College Park, Md. OSU won, 52-24.

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5


Events Around Town

Everything The “2” Can Take You To: 1/22 - 1/28 Explore Columbus With COTA

FREE

With Your BuckID! Just swipe your BuckID for unlimited riding to your favorite locations!

The #2 bus runs up and down High Street until midnight on weekends fOr SCHEDulES & mOrE InfO:

WWW.COTA.COm | (614) 228-1776

Topher James and Biscuit Brigade Happy Hour Show, 6 pm Rumba Cafe

Columbus Symphony - Cirque De La Symphonie, 8 pm Palace Theatre

Dr. Kaboom! It’s Just Rocket Science, 12:30 pm Lincoln Theatre

OSU Men’s Volleyball vs. George Mason, 7 pm St. John Arena

Schiller Wrestling Club, 5 pm Schiller Park

Go, Dog. Go!, 7:30 pm Studio One, Riffe Center

Rock the Ice Concert ft. Performances by Country Music Artists Josh Thompson & Clark Manson, 8 pm LC Pavilion

OUAB Soul Food Kitchen, 6 pm Ohio Union - Instructional Kitchen

Josh Blue, 7:45 & 10:15 pm Funny Bone

Paisha Thomas with Ingram Street, 7 pm Lincoln Theatre

Turtle Island, 8:30 pm Skullys

NHL Fan Fair, 10 am Greater Columbus Convention Center

Jesse Micheal Barr Band, Rustbelt Rumble Family Band, 10 pm Rumba Cafe

The Columbus, Oh Log & Timber Frame Show, 10 am - 4 pm The Ohio Expo Center & State Fair

Thursday, 1/22

National Showcase, 7:30 pm Funny Bone Burlesque Biographie, 7:30 pm Shadowbox Ladies, 80’s, & More!, 8 pm Shadowbox Bully, 8 pm Rumba Cafe OUAB Karaoke Night, 8:30 pm Ohio Union - Woody’s Tavern

Friday, 1/23

Sunday, 1/25

2015 NHL All Star Game, 1 pm Nationwide Arena

Saturday, 1/24

Go, Dog. Go!, 1 & 2:30 pm Studio One, Riffe Center

OSU Men’s Tennis vs. Auburn, ALL DAY Jesse Owens West Tennis Center

OSU Men’s Volleyball vs. Pfeiffer, 4 pm St. John Arena

The Columbus, Oh Log & Timber Frame Show, 10 am - 6 pm The Ohio Expo Center & State Fair

OSU Men’s Tennis vs. Toledo, 7 pm Jesse Owens West Tennis Center

OSU Men’s Lacrosse vs. Hill Academy, 12 pm Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium

EVO, 7 pm Shadowbox

Wild & Wacky Lunchbox, 1 pm Shadowbox

Go, Dog. Go!, 1 & 2:30 pm Studio One, Riffe Center

The Columbus, Oh Log & Timber Frame Show, 1 - 7 pm The Ohio Expo Center & State Fair

OSU Men’s and Women’s Gymnastics vs. Illinois, 4 pm St. John Arena

Grad/Prof Speed Dating, 5:30 pm The Faculty Club

Toast of Opera, 6 pm The Refrectory Restaurant and Bistro

88 Keys & The Truth Concert, 6 pm Woody’s Tavern

Josh Blue, 7, 9:30, & 11:30 pm Funny Bone

Toast of Opera, 6 pm The Refrectory Restaurant and Bistro

Erin Foley, 7 pm Woodlands Tavern Who’s Bad: The Ultimate Micheal Jackson Tribute Band, 7:30 pm Newport

Josh Blue, 7:30 pm Funny Bone The Bros. Landreth, 8 pm Rumba Cafe

OUABe Fit: Yoga, 6 pm Ohio Union - Dance Room 1 Adam Ezra Group, 7 pm Woodlands Tavern

Tuesday, 1/27 2015 Ohio Science Institute, 8 am Hilton Columbus OUABe Fit: Zumba, 6 pm Ohio Union - Dance Room 1 Columbus Blue Jackets vs. Washington Capitals, 7 pm Nationwide Arena Tear Out the Heart, 7 pm Double Happiness Kill Matilda, 8 pm O’Shecky’s Live Bar & Restaurant

Wednesday, 1/28 Flicks for Free: Dear White People, 6 & 8:30 pm US Bank Conference Theater Dangermuffin, 6:30 pm Woodlands Tavern Hashtag Comedy Presents: The Joe Teeters Scott the Man Experience!, 7:30 pm Shadowbox Live Best of Columbus Showcase, 7:30 pm Funny Bone

Monday, 1/26

Burlesque Biographie, 7:30 pm Shadowbox

2015 Ohio Science Institute, 8 am Hilton Columbus

Let’s Get Cooking and Brunch, 9:30 am Brookside Golf & Country Club

Davines Styling Space, 10 am Brittany Group

Kenny Lecro, 10 pm Rumba Cafe

OUAB Kitchen: Super Bowl Foods, 6 pm Ohio Union - Instructional Kitchen

Go Bucks!

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Thursday January 22, 2015


photos 1

3

MARK BATKE / Photo editor

2

ED MOMOT / For The Lantern

1. Daniel Rodriguez-Ilic, 7, takes to a frozen Mirror Lake with his family for a game of pick-up hockey Jan. 17 on OSU’s campus. 2. Members of the OSU ice hockey team celebrate as fans join in behind the glass during a game against Michigan on Jan. 16 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU lost, 10-6. 3. Junior all-around gymnast Samantha Kent performs a routine on the balance beam during a tri-meet against Michigan and West Virginia on Jan. 17 at St. John Arena. OSU placed 2nd with a score of 195.025.

KELLY RODERICK / Lantern photographer

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Thursday January 22, 2015

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Roommate Wanted

Female

WE ARE a family of 4 living in Plain City (30 minutes to OSU campus) - we are looking for a female student who would receive a free room/ free rent in exchange for daily tutoring for our high school freshman daughter. The tutoring would be 1 hour each day with a focus on Algebra and English. Literature as well as overall study and organization skills. Serious inquiries please email: creativeblink@hotmail. com.

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Help Wanted Tutors

WE ARE a family of 4 living in Plain City (30 minutes to OSU campus) - we are looking for a female student who would receive a free room/ free rent in exchange for daily tutoring for our high school freshman daughter. The tutoring would be 1 hour each day with a focus on Algebra and English. Literature as well as overall study and organization skills. Serious inquiries please email: creativeblink@hotmail. com.

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Typing Services

Call 292-2031 to place your ad or do it online at the lantern.com

WRITING FAMILY HISTORIES ###############

Announcements/ Notice RESEARCH OPPORTUNITY: Need active individuals after Knee-ACL reconstruction. Compensated for time. Go to: https://www.research. net/s/Brain-ACL WIN $500. Write an essay on happiness. No entry fee. humanhappinessfoundation.org (a nonproďŹ t Organization)

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

Call 292-2031 to place your ad or do it online at thelantern.com - Terms of service available at thelantern.com/terms

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

1. Modern "Keep in touch!" 7. Ann's sister 11. Extras may comprise one 14. Tennis star Gibson 15. The real thing, so to speak 17. Riddles 18. Regretting a wild night, maybe 19. *Beginning 21. Field of study 24. "We __ Family": 1979 hit 25. Tamper 26. *They carry remainders 31. Org. where weight matters 32. Without __: riskily 33. On a streak 36. Capp and Capone 37. Syr. neighbor 38. Jueves, por ejemplo 39. Natural resource 40. Tease 42. Vibrater in a wind 43. Like Gen. Powell 44. *Bike safety device 47. __ Men: "Who Let the Dogs Out" band 49. Edible Asian shoot 50. Greek mount 51. *The rest

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56. Burns poem that starts, "Wee, sleekit, cow'rin, tim'rous beastie" 57. Time of your life 61. Marching band instrument 62. Mill around 63. Passing stat. 64. Egyptian symbols of royalty 65. Both words in each answer to a starred clue begin and end with the same one

Down

1. Keep time, in a way 2. Symphonic rock gp. 3. Cadillac sedan 4. Store to "fall into," in old ads 5. Scant 6. First word of the chorus of "The Sidewalks of New York" 7. Parched 8. Dark-haired guy 9. Cask stopper 10. Safecracker 11. Some Cannes films 12. They have hoods and racks 13. Cold-water hazards 16. Was impending 20. Perp subduer 21. Egyptian dam 22. 100 kopecks

23. Parts opposite points 27. First name in women's boxing 28. Racing family name 29. Bay window 30. Aptly named novelist 34. Easily crumbled cookies 35. Betta tankmate 38. "Colonel Jack" novelist 41. "Oh, my!" 42. Uses, as credit card rewards 45. Amasses 46. Work on together, in a way 47. LPGA great Rawls 48. Stay clear of 52. "The boy you trained, gone he is" speaker 53. Sharing word 54. Relax 55. Blackthorn fruit 58. QB's stat 59. Turn right 60. Go wrong

See the solution at thelantern.com/puzzles

Thursday January 22, 2015


Thursday January 22, 2015

[ae] +

thelantern www.thelantern.com www.

Paper spirals from sculptor’s imagination

TAYLOR FERRELL Lantern reporter ferrell.178@osu.edu Samantha Parker Salazar, an artist and printmaking lecturer at Ohio State, said she recalls the summers spent as child at her grandparents’ greenhouse drawing cartoons. The “flower house,” as they called it, was not only filled with various plants, but also tables, chairs and the sounds of her grandmother’s Hungarian opera music. Here, in a space underneath a cherry tree that made sounds of rainfall as it poured cherries onto the glass, was the beginning for Salazar and the artist she is today. Now, as a recipient of John F. Fergus Family Fellowship in 2014, Salazar has been given the opportunity to be a professor and present her exhibition, “Malleable Matrices” Jan. 10 through Jan. 29 at OSU’s Urban Arts Space. “Coming to OSU has been invaluable,” Salazar said. “It has opened up so many doors, like giving me the opportunity to teach while also focusing on my studio practice.” Salazar, who works with elements from traditional printmaking in her art, said she tries to instill that mindset in her students. “I encourage them to think out of the box and work beyond tradition,” Salazar said.

Daymond John of ‘Shark Tank’ to make OSU appearance DANIEL BENDTSEN Asst. arts editor bendtsen.1@osu.edu Producers from ABC’s “Shark Tank” made a stop at Ohio State in May, but this February, a shark himself is coming for an event sponsored by the Ohio Union Activities Board. Daymond John, the founder and CEO of clothing company FUBU, is set to come to campus on Feb. 12 for an event in the Archie Griffin Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. “Shark Tank,” which depicts aspiring entrepreneurs pitching their ideas to high-profile investors with the hope that they’ll invest, has had high ratings since its debut in 2009. Ratings have climbed each season, and its current season premiered with more than 7 million viewers. John founded FUBU as a clothing line targeted at the black community in 1992, after taking out a $100,000 mortgage to start the company. FUBU’s sales peaked at $350 million in 1998 and the company garnered awards from the NAACP. Tickets for the Ohio State event with John are set to be released Monday at 5 p.m.

“Waking Red,” one of Salazar’s installations at the Urban Arts Space, is meant to convey a vivid memory from her childhood: her cousin dissecting a pregnant frog. She described the event as one that only little boys do. Salazar remembered being given the duty of holding the flashlight over the pregnant frog while her cousin dissected it. “He was pulling out all of these white, round eggs,” she said. “It was something I will never forget.” Salazar also wrote a poem — which won an award from the American Academy of Poets — about the event. . Salazar says that even though “Waking Red” has a gruesome backstory, its beauty draws the viewer in. “It’s kind of like watching a car wreck, you just can’t look away,” she said. “Maybe at first you don’t know what it is, but when you look closer you find out that it’s something much deeper than you originally expected.” Salazar said the vinyl frogs positioned on the bottom level were manipulated with Photoshop to skew and distort them. “This is the clue for viewers to realize what the piece is really all about,” she said. She said that without this clue, viewers wouldn’t understand the piece because at the top, the frogs are too distorted. “I always give hints and clues in my pieces as to what it’s dealing with,” she said. “Skyview 837,” another Salazar installation at the Urban Arts Space, is meant to show how people see the world through a digital window.

“There’s this whole other world that we are living in physically, but then there’s this other world that has become its own: the Internet,” Salazar said. Salazar said she has experienced more places than she really has visited because of things on the Internet. “I was thinking about our views of the sky above and how it was mediated through this window,” she said. “I wanted to reference what was outside by bringing in the colors and the shapes with paper.” She said “Skyview 837” wasn’t as personal as “Waking Red,” instead just an impactful thought that she had. Kelly McNicholas, spokeswoman for

“It’s kind of like watching a car wreck, you just can’t look away.”

- Samantha Salazar said of her printmaking sculpture that depicts a pregnant frog’s dissection

the Urban Arts Space, said the “Malleable Matrices” exhibit shows the unlimited options with the medium of printmaking. “When people think of printmaking, they think of what one is able to fit on a screen,” McNicholas said. “Salazar has blown the walls off of that medium and made it an installation.” Merijn van ver Heijden, deputy director of exhibitions and curatorial practice at the Urban Arts Space, said Salazar’s devoted work ethic and dedication to her work doesn’t end once a piece has left her studio.

“She is very hands-on,” Heijden said. “She was down here (at the Urban Arts Space) during the actual installation of her pieces and essentially directed it. She helped install the entire exhibition.” Along with working as a full-time artist, Salazar has another job: being a mother to her 2-year-old daughter, Felicity, and wife to her husband, Rolando. Salazar said that without the support of her husband, none of this would be possible. Salazar said she views herself as more relatable to students because she is just starting to makes waves in the art world. “I hope that students will look at my work and gather that it is entirely possible, even with a family,” she said. When comparing herself to other artists, Salazar said it’s her spin on using color, form and shape that makes her different. “Of course I have to accept the fact that everything has been made before,” Salazar said. “I just find a way to add something new to the conversation.”

‘Skyview 837’ (top left) and ‘Waking Red’ (top right, bottom) are two printmaking sculptures by Samantha Parker Salazar on display at the Urban Arts Space. Photos courtesy of Kelly McNicholas

OPINION

Bieber roast a low-hanging fruit AUDREY DUVALL Lantern reporter duvall.82@osu.edu Justin Bieber is a masochist. This was my single stream of thought when I read the announcement that he is going to be roasted on Comedy Central. According to Bieber’s Twitter, he had been begging Comedy Central for a roast, and it finally delivered. “For years I have wanted Comedy Central to roast me. They said only if I provided them w/ more material so for a year now I have worked hard,” said his Twitter, @justinbieber. Insert eye roll here. Am I really supposed to believe that Bieber’s attention-grabbing antics have all been to get a roast on Comedy Central? So leaving your pet monkey in Germany, breaking up with your girlfriend, fighting with celebrities over Twitter and getting caught drag racing and smiling in your mug shot, have all been a ploy to get a special on TV? No, you have done all that stuff (and more) because you are a 20-year-old with way too much money. But my beef isn’t with

Bieber. I am just a girl heartbroken that he’s not the pubescent teen he once was. I expect this from a Calvin Klein model and (former?) pop star. (Seriously, when was the last time you made a hit, Biebs?) My beef lies with Comedy Central. Come on guys, this roast is way too obvious. Yeah, sure, Bieber took lots of pictures in his underwear. And yeah, sure, he did leave his pet monkey in Germany (that was pretty bad), and yeah we all know he smiled in his mug shot. (But admit it; you secretly loved that he did that) But this is all material we know, material we have already made our own jokes about over and over again. Are there really any more jokes to tell? Instead of flexing its comedic muscles, Comedy Central is reaching for the bad apples, the low-hanging fruits. With previous

roasts of people like Charlie Sheen, Pamela Anderson and Donald Trump, Comedy Central is exemplifying its laziness. I would be more excited for a roast of someone I don’t read jokes about on the Internet every day. Give me a roast of Joe Biden (please Comedy Central, please) or Bill Gates. Give me something unexpected. I am not the only one who feels this way. Twitter reacted to the announcement with the hashtag “#BieberRoast.” With many people wondering the same thing I am, what more can you say? P.S. Preteens, if I don’t get at least three comments on this article about how I am the worst person in the world for being mean to Bieber, then you have really let me down. The roast is set to air March 7, and if you want to make a drinking game of it and take a shot every time you have already heard that joke, you might actually have a really great time.

Photos courtesy of TNS

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@LanternAE Thursday January 22, 2015

Justin Bieber (above) abandoned his pet monkey, Mally (left), in Germany after he failed to bring the proper paperwork for the capuchin while on tour in 2013.

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] Fergus from 1A submitted several pieces at the recommendation of faculty. “The piece that they chose is essentially … a pine cone (I found) in my yard,” Wells said. Wells said he was doing material studies in his design course on biomimicry — a principle of mimicking elements of nature in design — looking for patterns and textures outside to incorporate into design decisions, and stumbled on the pine cone in his backyard. “I just pulled it apart, all the pines out individually, and I arranged them by size from largest to smallest and started gluing them back together,” Wells said. “As I was doing this I was creating this natural vortex … so it resembles a pine cone in a way, but it’s much more ordered and intentional.” Wells said of all the pieces he submitted, the decision of this one, which is part of a larger project,was shocking. “Winning a $1,000 for gluing pieces of a pine cone together … you can make it sound a little silly,” Wells said. Kelsey Shankle, a fourth-year in painting and drawing, said she also is looking forward to the reception where Trevor, her brother and the subject of her two oil paintings, will be joining her. “My brother was in a motorcycle accident last year and they’re paintings of his knee injury,” Shankle said. “We’ll try to get some pictures of him with it.” Shankle said painting from the reference photos of Trevor’s knee was a strange experience for her. “It was fairly emotional,” Shankle said. “That’s the kind of thing I like to explore in my work. And it’s kind of hard to be staring at proof of the mortality of someone you love.” Shankle said she is interested in exploring the idea of the body as something external that cannot be completely controlled. Mumushu Sitot, a third-year in art education and design, said she used her piece, which was created with plastic and human hair, as an opportunity to explore her Ethiopian culture. Sitot said she thought to use hair after remembering an Ethiopian flyswatter is made of the same material. “It’s so related to my culture,” she said. “I’m so connected with art because my culture is rich with it.” Noelle Klein, another third-year in art education, chose to work with blackand-white photography in her piece titled “Nature’s Nurture.” The piece was a 16-by-20-inch black-and-white print on fiber

Courtesy of Christopher Summers

‘Hand-Crank Hologram’ by Christopher Summers on display at the Urban Arts Space paper. Klein describes her work as a photo that captures a deteriorated wood shed with an unhinged door that is being taken over by multiple different vines, leaves and plants. “That’s the reason why it’s called Nature’s Nurture,” Klein said. “You have this old wooden thing that came from nature then became this manmade object and now is being taken over by nature once again and returning to where it came from.” Christopher Summers, a fourth-year in art and technology, took the opposite approach and created a piece from a Victrola — an old brand of phonographs that plays a video feed of an undressing woman called “The Handcrank Hologram”. “Art is usually perceived as being paintings and drawing,” Summers said. “I would consider this like a new media sculpture. New media is a word for art that means a type of art that uses some sort of information technology, like computers or data visualization.” He said he was mimicking old movie players from the 1930s and ‘40s, called peeping toms, that play a small video of a woman undressing. “It’s kind of like a new-age peeping tom,” Summers said. “You watch this girl undress for like six minutes, but then you never see anything. So the joke is kind of on the viewer as being perverted and spending all this time for nothing.” Michelle Vieira, a senior in painting and drawing, said she feels honored to be part of the show.

THE OSU

“This is something I’ve worked towards for three and a half years, and to finally receive that is really awesome,” she said. Vieira said her piece, composed of paint chips from Hopkins Hall Gallery’s old walls, evolves with every setting. “The piece I got in this year is called ‘From the Wall to the Floor IV,’” Vieira said. “The material that I used is 10-15 years of paint that we peeled off the wall. And so I have it in floor installations right now so it changes.” Vieira said her work has been long and skinny, circular and triangular, and now it stretches between two pillars. But in every one of its lives, it is on the floor. “Originally I was going to put them on the wall so they’d be this sort of tunnel thing, but I was laying (the paint chips) out on the floor and I liked it and I liked how it changed the context of it. It was originally on the wall, now it’s on the floor,” Vieira said. Andrea Emmerich, a fifth-year in drawing and painting, said the inspiration for her painting came from women’s issues. She said she played up the roles and stereotypes that women have in American society. She said that these views involve things like ultra pink or “girly.” Emmerich said her piece uses a 1960s wallpaper that gives off the housewife feeling followed by a contrasting religious style. “It’s kind of like an irony between the two sides of those women. There’s the side where you’re the religious, humble, covered type and then there’s the American girl, flashy, girly type who uses her assets,” Emmerich said.

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She said she doesn’t intend to give off a negative feeling toward either side. Kyle Downs, a second-year in the MFA sculpture program, said he created a small play while at a summer residency in Maine and decided to convert it into a four-piece video for the Fergus scholarship. “I basically converted my studio into a exhibition space,” he said. “I reversed the architecture of the studio that they provided for me and built the interior and exterior platform. I decided towards the end of summer that it would be activated in a better sense with a short play. I wrote a little threeto four-act play that starred myself and other candidates that were at the program.” Downs said the experience was different for him because of the separation between the actual project and the performance in front of a live audience. Qicheng Kuang, a third-year in drawing and painting, said his piece is about imagination. “This piece gives people the opportunity to explore their imagination,” Kuang said. “I allow them to have their own imagination and interpretation.” He said that the piece includes three identical groups of two paintings: one square canvas with a black shape and a chalkboard made out of a canvas. “This work is interactive,” Kuang said. “The texts on the chalkboards are the viewer’s springboards. One can add any information or erase existing text to participate in the piece, which is like leaving comments on Amazon, YouTube or Facebook.” Kwong said he felt frustrated while creating the piece because he had to make several pieces with different materials before he got it. Tala Kanani, an OSU alumna who graduated last fall in sculpture, said she was interested in exploring new materials. “I was curious about weaving and textiles, so I tried to do something that would involve that,” Kanani said. “I decided to weave plywood essentially and that’s what the piece is about.” Kanani said her piece, “Blue and Yellow,” also involves canvas and that she just wanted to experiment. All the artwork is currently on display until Jan. 29, with free admission at Urban Arts Space, and a reception to showcase the students and their work Saturday. The Urban Arts Space is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. with hours extended to 8 p.m. Thursdays. Admission for the 23rd Annual Fergus Scholarship Award Exhibition is free.

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