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thelantern

Tuesday March 4, 2014

the student voice of The Ohio State University

year: 134 No. 33

www.thelantern.com @TheLantern weather high 28 low 17 cloudy

Braxton likely to take a knee

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The good, bad of the Oscars

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Drug extends life expectancy

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‘Please close, it’s freezing’ Gee to assume WVU presidency, despite retirement Liz Young Campus editor young.1693@osu.edu

Brandon Claflin / For The Lantern

Snow blankets the Oval March 2.

Liz Young Campus editor young.1693@osu.edu

According to the Weather Channel, it is -14 degrees outside with wind chill. Has anyone from your office taken a walk outside? Maybe from High Street to Neil Avenue, just as a test?

Ohio State Interim President Joseph Alutto received a flurry of emails this semester related to the weather and university decisions of whether to cancel classes. “Dear President Alutto, it is very cold outside. That is all,” read one email sent to Alutto from someone whose name was redacted. “Please take a stroll from South Campus to North Campus to see what you are making us walk through on this awful day,” one read. “According to the Weather Channel, it is -14 degrees outside with wind chill. Has anyone from your office taken a walk outside? Maybe from High Street to Neil Avenue, just as a test?” asked another, who titled the email “The weather outside is frightful.” OSU called off classes Jan. 6, 7 and 28 because of extreme weather conditions. Temperatures fell to roughly minus 7 Jan. 6 and 7 and to about minus 11 degrees Jan. 28, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration archives. Students, faculty, staff and parents were among those at OSU’s Columbus campus who sent emails about the weather to Alutto and OSU Emergency Management between Jan. 5 and Feb. 12. The messages ranged from calling for classes to be canceled, to pointing out areas that weren’t cleared, to thanking the ground crews for their work, according to emails provided to The Lantern Thursday to fill a records request filed Feb. 12. OSU spokesman Gary Lewis said in an email the names of enrolled students and information pertaining to “recreational activities of a person under the age of 18” were redacted from the records.

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Former Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee is slated to become the permanent president of West Virginia University, and he made sure those making the decision knew he wanted the job. A few months ago, though, he said he was not interested in pursuing another university presidency post-retirement. “(Columbus) is my home, and look, I’ve done this longer than any person in this country, and I’ve had the greatest opportunities at the greatest institution one could possibly imagine. But I’m really committed to making a difference by doing what I’m doing now, by actually being engaged in this university family but also engaged in and talking about the issues of higher education,” Gee said in an interview with The Lantern in October. And after it was announced Gee would lead WVU while the school searched for a new president, he said he wasn’t looking to assume the permanent role. “The role that I’m playing precludes me from even thinking about it,” Gee said in an interview with The Lantern in December. “My interest is of being of service and being helpful.” Sometime before Feb. 23, however, something changed. “President Gee has made it clear … he’d like to be the full-time president,” said WVU Student Government Association President Ryan Campione Monday. “He didn’t address the Board publicly per se, he kind of shared it with us in a note.” Campione, who holds a seat on the WVU Board of Governors, said the note was brought to the Board’s attention Feb. 23, but he could not disclose what the note said because it was discussed during an executive session of the Board. It looks like Gee will get his way, too, as he was named the permanent president of West Virginia University Monday, pending one last approval. The Board of Governors unanimously voted to name Gee president during an emergency meeting Monday after the Presidential Search Committee endorsed Gee for the position in an emergency session of its own Friday, according to a WVU release. The decision now has to go through

shelby lum / Photo editor

Courtesy of WVU

E. Gordon Gee was president of OSU from 1990-07 and from 2007 to July 1, when he retired.

E. Gordon Gee was president of WVU from 1981-85. Gee is slated to be president of the university again.

the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission to receive its approval, the release said. Gee began as WVU’s president in January and was only set to remain in that position until a permanent president was selected. He is on an unpaid leave from OSU, where he assumed the role of president emeritus after retiring. Gee said Monday he will accept the position at WVU. “I am honored, energized and humbled to serve West Virginia University as the 24th president,” Gee said in a released statement. “When I had the opportunity to return to West Virginia and this university earlier this year, I did not hesitate. And, I have found it to be the same wonderful and welcoming place I remembered. And, with great joy, I also found that our university had grown, matured and was competing on the national academic stage with some of the very best land-grant research universities in the country.” Gee was not available for comment Monday evening.

WVU is located in Morgantown, W.Va., with about 29,500 students enrolled during Fall Semester 2013. It’s not yet clear how Gee’s appointment would affect his role at OSU. University spokesman Gary Lewis said in an email Friday questions about whether Gee would remain on unpaid leave at OSU if he was approved as WVU’s permanent president “will be answered over the next few weeks.” Lewis added in an email Monday those questions are “still pending.” Gee is set to have a two-year contract, the “maximum under statute,” at WVU. As WVU’s interim president, Gee’s contract promises him an annual salary of $450,000. When that contract expires June 30, the new contract, which has not yet been negotiated, will begin, WVU spokesman John Bolt said in an email. Gee earned slightly less than $1.9 million in the 2011-12 fiscal year at OSU. Gee’s base salary as president emeritus and a tenured

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Trayvon Martin’s mother: Easy access to dorms worries some Stand Your Ground law ‘awful’ Alex Drummer Lantern reporter drummer.18@osu.edu

Desiaire Rickman / Lantern photographer

Trayvon Martin’s mother, Sybrina Fulton spoke at the Ohio Union March 3.

Chahinaz Seghiri Lantern reporter seghiri.1@osu.edu Trayvon Martin’s mother does not support the Stand Your Ground law, and she doesn’t think others should either. “I think it’s awful that you have a law that gives a person the right to shoot and kill without being held accountable. I think you need to be accountable when you shoot and kill someone and there should not be a law that allows that to happen,” Sybrina Fulton said in a press conference Monday at Ohio State. The Stand Your Ground law allows for the use of deadly force in a self-defense situation and is in place in Florida, where Martin was killed. George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch leader, killed 17-year-old Martin, allegedly in self-defense, Feb. 26, 2012, in Florida. Zimmerman was found not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaughter in July.

Prosecutors dropped domestic violence charges in December that were brought against Zimmerman by his girlfriend. Fulton spoke Monday night at the Ohio Union about the need to end gun violence. The event was hosted by 10TV news anchor and Ohio State alumna Tracy Townsend. In the press conference before her talk, Fulton said she has traveled throughout the country since Martin’s death, speaking to different universities and religious gatherings as an advocate. Fulton said the Trayvon Martin Foundation, inspired by Martin’s death, aims to bring awareness and support to victims of gun violence. “We felt that it was necessary and we felt that it was a missing piece in the communities that had so much violence and did not have anywhere to turn to,” Fulton said. Fulton said colleges and universities were the

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While Ohio State students living in residence halls are being told to monitor who enters the building behind them after a public safety notice was issued about a reported rape on campus, some residents said the matter is out of their control. Some residents of Archer House on North Campus are concerned about how one of the building’s entrances automatically opens when a student slides their BuckID to enter, and how it takes about 15 seconds to fully close again. “I really do believe, in (light) of all of the things happening in the past week, that that’s a safety issue. Not only for the staff and the people that work here but the people who live here. Anybody could come in and do whatever,” said Dakota Smith, a second-year in education. Smith said he understands the need for an automated door, but thinks a handicap push button would suffice. “The first semester, it was fine. It didn’t do that until we came back from Christmas break. Then the door was like that, and it’s very upsetting,” Smith said. Student Life spokesman Dave Isaacs said students are expected to be extra careful when using that door as a result. “A BuckID is necessary to open all residence hall exterior doors, including this particular one at Archer House,” Isaacs said in an email. “I would encourage students who use that entrance to be especially vigilant in the interests of safety. We always request, as part of our on-going education efforts, that students not allow tailgating by others through any BuckID controlled doors and if you see something, say something.” Isaacs did not say if any other residence halls have similar doors. Michael Mahan, a second-year in actuarial science and accounting and Archer resident said, however, it’s unrealistic to expect students to monitor the door given how long it takes to shut. “You could actually be up on your floor before the door even closes. If that happens, you don’t know who is behind you,” Mahan said. “There’s no other door that requires you to swipe in, so you’re already in the halls of the dorm.” Smith also said students shouldn’t be

shelby lum / Photo editor

A door to Archer House, a North Campus dorm whose door automatically opens when a student slides their BuckID. responsible for making sure no one enters behind them because the only other option is to wait. “I have tried to shut that door, and it’s very difficult. It’s automated. You have to use a lot of force, and then there’s all the stipulations, like you might break the door mechanism,” Smith said. Messages encouraging dorm residents to be extra careful were posted after a rape was reported in a residence hall and later deemed a “continuing threat” by University Police. The rape allegedly occurred Jan. 25 at a South Campus residence hall. More recent information and the suspect’s return after the incident led to a public safety notice being issued, according to the notice sent Feb. 21. Vice President for Student Life Javaune Adams-Gaston addressed the issue in her weekly online column Feb. 23. Adams-Gaston included safety tips such as reporting anyone “who has not followed security protocol when entering a residence hall” and not allowing others to enter residence halls without showing an ID. The case is still under investigation, according to the University Police daily log.

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campus Scholarship aims to help persecuted scholars seek refuge madeLine PoedTke Lantern reporter poedtke.2@osu.edu A passion for the arts, combined with a desire to give back, led Ohio State alumna Jan Dilenschneider to choose to help oppressed scholars in art from around the world. Dilenschneider, who graduated from Ohio State in 1965 with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts education, said her husband, Robert Dilenschneider, surprised her by giving a gift of $250,000 to the Institute of International Education. This gift established the Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts. Mark Angelson, chairman of the IIE’s Scholar Rescue Fund, said the institute began its tradition of rescuing scholars from troubled areas around the world in 1921 with the rescues of Russian scholars from the Bolshevik Revolution and Stalinism. In 2002, the IIE formalized the program into the Scholar Rescue Fund, which is the largest fund in the world specifically dedicated to rescuing scholars, Angelson said. Scholars in area of contention around the world have long been persecuted for their work, and the IIE aims to help these scholars by providing them with fellowships. The fellowships allow these

scholars a safe place to finish their work and eventually to return to their home countries, according to the IIE website. “I’ve always been very impressed with the Scholar Rescue Program,” Jan Dilenschneider said. “Just in the last 11 years, they have brought over 525 endangered scholars in many different areas (of study), mostly science, engineering and things of that sort.” Jan Dilenschneider said her husband, Robert Dilenschneider, and Angelson came up with the concept behind the Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts. The award is the first of its kind for the IIE because it is dedicated to specifically helping arts scholars involved in music, architecture, poetry, painting or the performing arts. The Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts is set to provide 10 scholars with fellowships of up to $25,000 so they can be placed at host universities outside of their home countries and continue working freely, according to a February IIE press release. Robert Dilenschneider, who earned a master’s degree in journalism from OSU in 1967, said he has been involved with the IIE since the 1980s. “The reason this is important is that young people — students, in particular, but also teachers

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Courtesy of Patrick Malone

Jan dilenschneider, a 1965 osu graduate with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts education. delenschneider’s husband gave $250k to the institute of internal education establishing the Janet hennessey dilenschneider scholar rescue award in the arts.

Research at ohio state Doctor: ‘Special’ to see patients live longer with breakthrough drug sam harringTon Senior Lantern reporter harrington.227@osu.edu For one Missouri woman, participating in a clinical trial at the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center gave her the chance to live a longer, healthier life while keeping her cancer at bay. Judy Hileman, a 71-year-old Kansas City, Mo., resident, was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia on her 70th birthday. After six months of chemotherapy sessions failed to halt her cancer, she came to OSU. Hileman participated in a clinical study testing

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a new drug – Imbruvica – and found the treatment prevented the spread of her cancer and gave her fewer and less significant side effects than chemotherapy. “(With Imbruvica) your energy level is building up so quickly, that you feel perfect. There’s just this little leukemia thing, but otherwise you’re great because you feel so normal,” Hileman said. “It’s amazing.” Hileman began taking Imbruvica last year. The drug has not only stopped the progress of her leukemia but it has improved her life, she said. According to her oncologist’s determination, if the disease had continued to progress she would have died last December, Hileman said.

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia, the second most common type of leukemia in American adults, is a blood and bone marrow disease that gets worse over time. In 2013, it is estimated that 15,680 Americans were diagnosed with the disease and 4,580 died from it, said Tara Goodin, public affairs specialist for the Food and Drug Administration, in an email Wednesday. Imbruvica, a drug taken orally, was developed through OSU’s laboratory and clinical work and was approved by the FDA Feb. 12. The drug blocks the enzyme that allows cancerous cells to grow and divide. The OSU study found a higher portion of participants experienced a decrease or halt in the

spreading of their cancer compared to participants taking other treatments, making this drug an attractive alternative to chemotherapy, said Dr. John Byrd, director of hematology at the Medical Center’s Comprehensive Cancer Center. “I’ve been a CLL specialist for 16-plus years and this is the most active drug that’s come into clinics for CLL. It has the potential to completely change how we’re treating CLL,” Byrd said. “We’re not having to use chemotherapy anymore, so it’s really a breakthrough drug.” Imbruvica can have side effects that include bleeding problems, infections, decrease in blood

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Tuesday march 4, 2014


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Issue 32/Monday In the article ‘Arnold Sports Festival, Schwarzenegger come back to C-Bus,’ the caption under the photo of members of World Jump Rope stated that Jenna Bica and Leah Turner were pictured competing in the jump roping competition at the 2014 Arnold Sports Festival. In fact, they were just performing because their team, World Jump Rope, hosted the competition.

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Gee from 1A

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continuations professor in the OSU Moritz College of Law, his new position at OSU post-retirement, was set to be $410,000, to be paid each year from 2013 through June 2018. Gee began his career of leading higher education institutions at WVU in 1981. He was the dean of WVU’s law school prior to his four-year stint as president. Gee later was president at Brown University, Vanderbilt University and the University of Colorado, and he held the office twice at OSU. Gee was OSU’s president from 1990-97 and from 2007 to July 1, when he retired. Gee announced his decision to retire from OSU days after controversial comments he made at a Dec. 5, 2012, OSU Athletic Council meeting came under public scrutiny. Remarks about Notre Dame and the Southeastern Conference in particular brought national attention. Some OSU students said they were upset to hear Gee could be the next WVU permanent president. “I was kind of sad about it,” said Katarina Funk, a first-year in exploration. “It’s cool that he was hanging around Ohio State and still being a part of the community even though he wasn’t president anymore.” Others, though, said it’s a great opportunity for Gee. “Good for him, I guess, getting a new job,” said Harrison Wickman, a fourth-year operations management and economics. “I’m glad to see he’s not just collecting a pension somewhere and he’s still working.” Wickman said the new job suits Gee better than a position at Moritz would have. “His advantages as a person really do come as him being a leader like the president … he wasn’t living up to his potential,” Wickman said. “So I’m

sad to see that he left OSU but this is a much better fit for him. He’s very charismatic and he attracts students because of that, not because he’s a good professor.” Wickman also said he wasn’t surprised to hear Gee had originally said he didn’t want to pursue another presidency. “He can’t just come out and say, ‘Yeah, I want to be president somewhere else’ right away,” Wickman said. “I don’t know if it was ever a change of heart, and even if it was, good for him. If it’s something he wants to do, go and do it.” Campione said he is “excited” by Gee’s pending appointment at WVU. “Students are overwhelmingly supportive of President Gee,” he said. “When Friday’s decision came out … the response on Twitter and from other students around the university was overwhelmingly positive.” Campione said one of the biggest benefits of having Gee be president is that he’s already familiar with the university’s innerworkings. “He can quickly come in and achieve a lot and he’s already sort of done that within the month he’s been here,” Campione said. But Campione also said the comments that stirred up public attention at the end of Gee’s second term at OSU were discussed when deciding whether to hire him. Campione said the Board listened to the tapes when it was first considering Gee as interim president to see what exactly had been said in context. “(We) had a long, in-depth discussion of pros and cons. However, at the end of the day, we decided that the pros of Gordon Gee’s leadership style … outweighed the controversy that had happened at OSU,” Campione said.

Freezing from 1A The majority of those who sent emails weren’t satisfied with how OSU dealt with the weather conditions on various days — of about a dozen emails sent to Alutto, three did not appear to call for campus to close; about seven of roughly 90 sent to Emergency Management weren’t outright complaining about the conditions around campus. Administration and Planning spokeswoman Lindsay Komlanc said in January OSU uses “flexible” guidelines when deciding whether to close. “There is no set policy on what it takes to close the university. This allows for flexibility in decision making. Variables that are considered include whether roads, parking lots and sidewalks are clear, whether buildings are and can be kept warm and whether the weather is dangerous,” Komlanc said. She said according to OSU policy, the president or “authorized designee” is expected to make the decision to cancel classes by 5 a.m. for day classes. Alutto said he typically tests the weather when making his part of the decision whether to close campus. “I’m usually in the office about 6 or 6:30 in the morning and I try and walk around to see what the campus is like when nobody’s around,” he said in an interview with The Lantern Feb. 11. “(The decisions of whether to close campus are) not easy decisions because we really do consult with our medical personnel, who talk to us about what the dangers are … There’s ultimately a team with the president and the senior vice presidents, and everybody worries about the consequences, and everybody worries over and over again. “What I told them over and over again is that you have to make the best decision that you can because you’ll get blamed either way.” At times this semester when the weather was arguably extreme but classes continued as usual, Emergency Management sent emails to the OSU community listing tips for staying safe and asking professors to be lenient on attendance. Some people, though, weren’t satisfied with those messages and chose to respond to them. “Buses are always packed, but who wants to stand and wait on one in the negative 15 degree weather,” an email sent Jan. 26 and signed by a “third-year OSU student” read. “Parents have been calling with concerns to me personally and all of my roommates. They all suggest not going to class, but they do not know how important it is to attend lecture if lectures are held.” “This is crap,” said “an angry student” who sent an email Feb. 5. “I can’t just stay home, I have two quizzes, and since you decided the campus should

Doctor from 2A cell counts, kidney problems and second primary cancers, according to its website. Not only was OSU behind much of the research and development of this drug, but it has also treated the most patients with this drug. Byrd said people have come from around the country “because the results from the initial trials (were) just so much better than what’s available to them.” Seeing people alive because of the drug is

Trayvon Martin from 1A reason Martin’s death was brought to the nation’s attention. “That’s why it’s so important for us (the foundation) to come to the colleges and universities. Because it was the colleges and universities that started the movement, that started the rallies because they were upset,” Fulton said during the event. In April 2012, the words “Long Live Zimmerman” were spray-painted on OSU’s Hale Hall, a building that was demolished in 2013 and previously held the Frank W. Hale Jr. Black Cultural Center. The incident was labeled a hate crime at the time. The reference, officials said at the time, was most likely to the Zimmerman in the Martin case. The incident prompted the creation of the No Place for Hate Task Force and multiple campus demonstrations, including a protest that interrupted a April 2012 Board of Trustees meeting. The No Place for Hate Task Force

shelby lum / Photo editor

Ohio Stadium and surrounding campus March 3.

stay open, I now have to risk my life driving to class on bad roads.” On Feb. 5, the minimum temperature was 22 degrees and 3.5 inches of snow fell, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration archives. The day before, the temperature was as low as 19 degrees and 7.1 inches of snow fell. By a similar vein, there were several complaints sent in by commuters, who said while campus roads and sidewalks were cleared, the roads to campus were not. “I live in the suburbs and I couldn’t get my car out of my neighborhood. This is ridiculous, not everyone has money to live on campus,” an email sent Feb. 5 read. “(My boyfriend and I) live 30 minutes away from campus,” an email sent to Alutto Feb. 5 said. “If we were to miss a test or an important lecture due to not being able to commute to campus, we are many times just out of luck, no matter how many emails the university sends out asking professors to be flexible.” Some, too, demanded compensation for their slips and falls. “I fell yesterday on campus on the icy sidewalk,” an email to Emergency Management sent Feb. 6 read. “Please send a check for 10 million U.S. dollars (only several times the annual salary of (OSU football coach) Urban Meyer) to me.” And some kept their pleas for the university to cancel classes concise. “Please close, it’s freezing,” the entirety of an email sent Jan. 27 read.

humbling, he said. Some patients have led healthy lives on the drug for two or more years. “They’re living their life, they’re back doing their regular things. It’s just very, very special,” Byrd said. For Hileman, it’s the little things in life that are most significant to have back. “You want to be able to go buy groceries, you want to be able to walk your grandkids to the bus … It’s just everyday things,” she said. “I just got my life back. It’s hard to believe.”

came up with short- and long-term recommendations in the areas of awareness, climate and recruitment to combat racism, including the creation of hate crime alerts. Fulton said roundtable discussions and town hall meetings are some solutions that could bring awareness to the issue of racial profiling. Fulton became emotional when she described seeing her son in a casket and being buried. “The worst day of my life was a few days after he had been shot and killed and I had to attend his funeral. I want you to live through my pain. I want you to feel what I am feeling without going through what I go through, and that’s why I came out and talk to you,” Fulton said. SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

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sports

Tuesday March 4, 2014

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Likely out of spring practice, Miller to focus on mental side of game eric Seger Sports editor seger.25@osu.edu For the third time in his college career, Braxton Miller is set to enter spring practice as the starting quarterback of the Ohio State Buckeyes. But for the first time as OSU’s signal caller, the rising senior likely won’t participate over the course of the 15 practice sessions after undergoing minor surgery on his throwing shoulder Feb. 21. According to an OSU press release, Miller “isn’t likely to take a snap” because of the surgery, but that doesn’t necessarily mean he won’t be busy improving his game. Two days before Miller had the surgery, the quarterback from Huber Heights, Ohio, paid a visit to the OSU men’s basketball game against Northwestern to accept his second consecutive Chicago Tribune Silver Football, which is given to the Big Ten’s Most Valuable Player. Miller said that night he “cherished” winning the award for a second time, but also shed some light on what he needs to do to become an even better asset to the team. “Get more polished in the pocket … I think the game is changing now. There’s a lot of things that tie into that,” Miller said Feb. 19. “But I just (have to) work leadership-wise, and just learn the whole aspect of the game from the shoulders up. Just make sure I know everything.” Miller’s quarterbacks coach Tom Herman echoed the Big Ten’s Most Valuable Player, adding how even though he has all the physical tools to wreak havoc on defenses, he isn’t where he needs to be mentally yet. “As improved as he got in the mental side of playing quarterback (this past season), he still can get a whole lot better,” Herman said. “(He) could probably make that same leap this year and still have work to do.”

Shelby Lum / Photo editor

Then-junior quarterback Braxton Miller (5) walks off the field during a game against Purdue Nov. 2 at Ross-Ade Stadium. OSU won, 56-0. Miller’s leap as a passer in 2013 is evident in his numbers, as his passing touchdowns, passer rating and completion percentage all improved from the year before. But Herman said he believes those numbers can jump even higher if Miller puts in the time studying the game. “When you know what you’re doing, and you know what you’re seeing, and you know what everyone around you is doing, it’s easy to play with great fundamentals because you’re very relaxed,” Herman said. Miller officially announced his decision to put the NFL Draft on hold and return for his final year of eligibility Jan. 9, saying he “made the right decision” after talking to Herman, his family and coach Urban Meyer. Meyer said on National Signing Day Feb. 5 he

thought it was a definite possibility he wouldn’t have Miller at his disposal in 2014, but said he wasn’t shy about giving the quarterback his opinion on the matter. “I told him my opinion that he could become a very high draft pick if he continues to improve,” Meyer said. “And he said, ‘That’s what I thought.’ It wasn’t much more than that. We met together as a family … but I gave my opinion as far as how much more he could grow as a quarterback.” It appears that could be the theme of Miller’s 2014 campaign: developing mentally and physically as a quarterback to boost his stock for the 2015 NFL Draft. “You can learn every day,” Miller said. “There’s a lot of things I gotta learn on the field and outside the field too. On the football side, you can learn from

coach Meyer, coach Herman, defensive coach — you can learn from anybody every day. Get better every day. I don’t know if you can learn too much and not be the best, but put in the effort and the time to get better every day so I feel like I’m going to improve.” Herman said he wants his quarterback to be able to know what opposing defenses will do on any given down. “I told him it’s more, you don’t want to memorize like you’re memorizing something to take a test tomorrow. You want to know it so that at any given point tomorrow, a week from now I can say, ‘Hey, show me where the Sam (linebacker) goes in Cover 3. But what about Cover 2?’ And boom, just get on the board and go,” Herman said. “I think he’s getting to that point where all that stuff is slowing down.” Whether or not Miller participates in OSU’s Spring Game, set for April 12 in Ohio Stadium after the Buckeye lacrosse team takes on Michigan at 11 a.m., is still up for debate, but in his absence, the players looking to take the reps and compete to back him up are rising redshirt-sophomore Cardale Jones and rising redshirt-freshman J.T. Barrett. True freshman and early enrollee Stephen Collier will also be in the mix, but his time under center is likely to come after Miller departs. Miller was mum on the feedback he received from draft experts, instead saying with a laugh he would share “maybe when I leave next year.” But he did say he ultimately never thought he was going to leave Columbus. “There wasn’t a deep thought about that,” Miller said. “I always knew I was eventually going to make that decision that I was going to come back.” Barring any other injuries, Miller and his surgically repaired right shoulder are set to lead OSU in its first game of the 2014 season, scheduled for Aug. 30 at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore against Navy. Kickoff is set for noon.

Meyer set for spring practice after ‘short medical procedure’ Eric Seger Sports editor seger.25@osu.edu

Ritika Shah / Asst. photo editor

OSU coach Urban Meyer signals his team during a game against Purdue Nov. 2 at Ross-Ade Stadium. OSU won, 56-0.

Ohio State football coach Urban Meyer had what is being called “a short medical procedure” this past weekend to remove fluid related to a congenital arachnoid cyst, according to a press release. The procedure, done at the OSU Wexner Medical Center, was done to help alleviate pain from headaches Meyer has been experiencing the past few weeks, according to release. Meyer is “doing well” post-procedure and is set to be on the field Tuesday when the Buckeyes open spring practice. The cyst was first found in 1998 when Meyer was the coach at Notre Dame, according to the release. An arachnoid cyst typically develops in the head but can also be present around the spinal cord, and is named such because it happens in the area between the brain and the arachnoid membrane — one of three membrane layers surrounding the brain and spine. If it occurs in the head, the cyst will grow between the brain and skull or in pockets around the brain called ventricles. This is latest in a line of medical issues that have ailed Meyer throughout his coaching career, including when he was admitted to the hospital in the early morning on Dec. 6, 2009 while he was coach at Florida after the Gators lost to Alabama in the SEC Championship Game, 32-13. Even though he was rushed to the hospital, Meyer returned to

the field Jan. 1, 2010 to lead the Gators to a 51-24 victory against Cincinnati in the Allstate Sugar Bowl. Meyer announced he would step down as the Gators’ head coach following the loss to Alabama, but remained on the sidelines for the 2010 season. Florida went 7-5 that season, and Meyer saw issues with his health again, which ultimately led to him stepping down for good. He had a recurring burning sensation in his chest, and doctors told him in December 2010 that he would raise cardiovascular risk factors if he continued to coach, according to espn.com. Meyer took the following year off and became a college football analyst for ESPN, before taking the reigns at OSU prior to the 2012 season. The Buckeyes are set to take on Navy in their first game of 2014 at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. Kickoff is set for noon.

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OSU’s Lenzelle Smith Jr.: ‘Guys gotta get their confidence back’ daniel rogers Asst. sports editor rogers.746@osu.edu College basketball seasons are bound to come with their respective twists and turns. Even an unblemished record doesn’t come without an off night or a close game. One day a team can be seemingly nailing every shot it takes and blowing out opponents while on the next, it can’t hit the broad side of a barn. During the Ohio State men’s basketball team’s current two-game losing streak, the Buckeyes (22-8, 9-8, sixth in the Big Ten) have experienced more of the latter. In particular, shooting from long range has been a struggle for OSU in losses to Penn State and Indiana. Against the Nittany Lions, coach Thad Matta’s team shot a pedestrian 29.4 percent from beyond the arc. As rough as that performance was, it paled in comparison to what OSU did against Indiana Sunday. For the first time since Jan. 10, 2004, OSU failed to connect from threepoint land, missing all 11 of its attempts, and fell to the Hoosiers, 72-64. Senior guard Lenzelle Smith Jr. said after the loss to Indiana, the struggles from beyond the arc are an easy fix, however. “Shooting, that’s about confidence,” Smith Jr. said. “Guys gotta get their confidence back and we’ve got shooters so there’s no excuse. We’ve got to put the ball in the bucket. We’ve got guys who can make threes and we’ve got to step up and obviously put the ball in the bucket.” Smith Jr. tied junior forward LaQuinton Ross for a team-high with 19 points against the Hoosiers and shot 60 percent from the floor, but he missed both of his attempts from beyond the arc. He also shot just 1-6 from deep against Penn State. Matta said he has sensed confidence is dipping for OSU, especially when pressure is turned up. “We were rolling until Thursday night (against Penn State), in all seriousness,” Matta said after the loss to Indiana. “I think we’re really lacking in a confidence issue, we’re lacking in a toughness issue in terms of playing through situations. Those are things that somehow, some way, we’ve got to get corrected.” The Buckeyes’ need to regain their confidence is a high priority as the

regular season draws to a close. They currently sit half a game behind Iowa and Nebraska in the Big Ten standings, who are tied for fourth in the Big Ten. The top four teams in the standings receive a first-round bye in the Big Ten Tournament, set to begin March 13. Smith Jr. was quick to add that even though the confidence has been lacking lately, the mood in the locker room doesn’t give any reason to believe the trend will continue. “We’re a great team when we come to execute and when we’re on top of our game,” Smith Jr. said. “I said we can beat any team in the country, and I’m going to stick by that … I should be happy with what we should produce at the end of the season. “I’m not panicking. I’m not worried about anything.” Since using a huge second half to beat Minnesota, 64-46, Feb. 22, it appears something has been off with the team. Ross said a big part of that is a lack of focus — something that could become a big problem if it is allowed to continue. “We just get too comfortable at times during the game, thinking we’ve got the lead and (that) we’re going to be able to hold it,” Ross said of the 21-5 run the Buckeyes allowed against Indiana, which the Hoosiers used to take the lead for good. “Not thinking that those other teams we’re playing are just as good as us. They’re putting their foot on the gas, and we’re taking ours off it.” Ross, OSU’s leading scorer, knows a thing or two about losing focus during a game. Ross was ejected during OSU’s game against Northwestern for shoving a player and committed a technical foul against Indiana for a similar infraction. Those are the type of things that can prove costly, Matta said, especially late in the season. “I told LaQuinton: ‘Hey, man, you get a technical foul and it’s your second foul and then you’re having your way in the second half and you foul out of the game,’” Matta said. “Little things. Those are the types of things that say, ‘Hey, we’ve got to get our concentration back, get our focus back and an understanding of what we’re doing.’” OSU’s next opportunity to try working through the rough spots in its play comes against No. 22 Michigan State (22-7, 11-5, tied for second in the Big Ten) when the Spartans are set to come to Columbus Sunday. Tipoff is slated for 4:30 p.m.

Shelby Lum / Photo editor

Senior guard Lenzelle Smith Jr. (32) drives to the basket during a game against Northwestern Feb. 19 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 76-60.

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Prank calls turn educational in OSU students’ new website

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J-Law falls, 1st-time winners rise at Oscars

jacob hollar Lantern reporter hollar.38@osu.edu When you think of pranks children might pull, some classics probably come to mind: throwing toilet paper over a neighbor’s house, for example, or making prank calls. Prank calls might have been set back by the adoption of caller ID, but now four second-year computer science students at Ohio State have reimagined the classic prank with a new web app. Abby Benedict, Jeff Casavant, Max Buck and Erik Thiem are the minds behind ewakz. com, a website they developed at BoilerMake, a “hackathon” at Purdue University. BoilerMake is a contest where independent teams come together to develop web, mobile, desktop or hardware projects. The premise of the web app is simple: When you visit ewakz.com, you can enter a topic (an example on the website is Russian history) and a phone number, and Ewakz will call the number you entered and read the corresponding Wikipedia article on the subject you chose. It’s not just Wikipedia, though; one can also send, via ewakz.com, pickup lines, custom messages and definitions from urbandictionary. com to other people. “It’s a weird mix between useful and a prank call,” Buck said. Given that the users of ewakz. com send messages anonymously, the service might potentially be used to bother others. Eventually, though, Buck said he hopes that mix skews toward useful. “Say I want to read ‘The New Yorker’ — but I’ve got more important things to do, like make pancakes,” he said. He wants Ewakz to be a solution. Currently, the web app is mostly used for sending Wikipedia articles, Casavant said. The name, which Benedict admits sounds like “earwax,” has nothing to do with the service being offered, she said. “(The name is) Erik’s fault,” Casavant said. Thiem agreed. “I’m always Erik with a k — or ewak,” he said. And at 3 a.m. the night before the hackathon, when they were sleep-deprived and everything was funny, that was a “really clever” name, Buck said. But ewak.com wasn’t available, so ewakz.com — or the plural of Ewak — was born. It costs Ewakz two cents each time it makes a call, Thiem said. It is free to use, and in the web app’s first 10 days, around 1,500 calls were made from about 550 users. That amounts to roughly $30 in phone calls that users had not paid for. The money came from Twilio, an internet phone company based in San Francisco, Calif that Ewakz uses as its phone call service. Ewakz uses Twilio to make calls, and Ewakz was credited $50 by Twilio during BoilerMake for testing purposes. Plans for monetizing the web app — or even for funding the calls once the original $80 is gone — are still nebulous, Buck said.

Courtesy of MCT

Steve McQueen pumps his fist and trophy into the air as actors and actresses from ‘12 Years a Slave’ celebrate on stage during the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Screenshot of ewakz.com

A screenshot of ewakz.com, a web app developed by 4 OSU students in which the user can send a Wikipedia article, custom message or urbandictionary.com definition to the recipient of a valid phone number. “We want to sell it to Facebook for $4 billion,” Thiem said, laughing. More seriously, Thiem said they might introduce ads or begin charging a small fee for using Ewakz as expenses increase with more users. Ben Stanseski, a second-year in aviation and a beta tester of Ewakz, said he thinks the web app will catch on because of its simplicity. “The ability to send whatever information you want, to whomever you want, provides the most appeal to people,” he said. “Especially when it is as easy to use as Ewakz.” Currently, the recipient of a call from Ewakz has no way of knowing who sent the message unless the sender identifies him or herself via a custom message. The four developers acknowledged that the anonymity of the web app can allow for misuse of the service. There has already been one reported instance of “bullying,” Thiem said. Their current solution is to prevent the recipient of the “bullying” from receiving future calls from Ewakz — a solution they’re admittedly not fond of, Buck said. Moving forward, the creators have considered requiring users to log in to use Ewakz as a measure against misuse, Buck said. No login feature had been added as of Monday evening. Stanseski said he doesn’t think abuse will become a problem, however. “There is a slight concern there,” he said. “But I think people will use it more for fun than for harassment.” Future features, like a required login, a means of monetizing the web app or the development of a “native app” — one that can be downloaded on to a smartphone via an app store — are still being worked out by the group.

Painting becomes a perfoming art Performance painter David Garibaldi paints at the the Ohio Union in an OUAB-sponsored event March 3.

ritika Shah / Asst. photo editor

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katie sullivan Lantern reporter sullivan.235@osu.edu “12 Years a Slave,” “Dallas Buyers Club,” and “Gravity” stole the show on Sunday night’s Oscars. There were tears, laughs and selfies throughout the ceremony, with host Ellen DeGeneres, providing pizza to the stars. The Oscars wouldn’t be the Oscars without Jennifer Lawrence taking a tumble and Leonardo DiCaprio going home empty-handed. Ellen DeGeneres, second-time host of the Oscars, delighted both TV viewers and her audience with her sarcastic jokes, a pizza delivery and a Twitter-crashing selfie. I was not shocked by the wins, but I was surprised that two of the biggest box offices hits this year, “American Hustle” and “The Wolf of Wall Street,” went home completely empty-handed. Winner of this year’s Best Picture honor was “12 Years a Slave,” the true story of a free black man being sold into slavery in the South. Brad Pitt accepted the award saying, “I know I speak for everyone standing behind me that it has been an absolute privilege to work on Solomon’s story.” The other nominees in this category were “American Hustle,” “Captain Phillips,” “Dallas Buyers Club,” “Gravity,” “Her,” “Nebraska,” “Philomena” and “The Wolf of Wall Street.” John Ridley won Best Adapted Screenplay for “12 Years a Slave.” This was his first Oscar. Lupita Nyong’o of “12 Years a Slave” took home Best Supporting Actress. During her speech, she said, “Thank you so much for putting me in this position. It has been the joy of my life.” This was her first Oscar. Nyong’o’s speech was a tear-jerker, as she not only talked of the joys she had while making this film, but also how every person’s dream is valid. Sorry, Jennifer Lawrence, but Nyong’o might be my new celebrity fake best friend. “Dallas Buyers Club” won three awards: Matthew McConaughey for Best Actor, Jared Leto for Best Supporting Actor, and Robin Mathews and Adruitha Lee for Best Makeup and Hairstyling. All four winners experienced their first Oscar wins with these awards. The awards presented to McConaughey and Leto were well deserved after their dramatic depiction of the life of a man and a transgender with AIDS. Both men completely committed to the role, truly putting the audience of “Dallas Buyers Club” in the shoes of people with AIDS in the 1980s. Best Actress went to Cate Blanchett for her performance in “Blue Jasmine.” This was her first Oscar win in the category, but she won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for “The Aviator” in 2005. Blanchett might have had my favorite speech of the night, telling fellow nominee in this category, Julia Roberts, to “Hashtag suck it.” “Gravity” went home with the most wins of the evening, totaling seven Oscars. Director Alfonso Cuarón won his first Oscar for Best Film Editing along with Mark Sanger and also won the Oscar for Best Director. Though “Gravity” had great reviews and acting, I was surprised that it took the most awards home on Sunday compared to “Dallas Buyers Club” and “12 Years a Slave.” “The Great Gatsby” and “Frozen” both won two Oscars. “The Great Gatsby” won Best Costume Design and Best Production Design. Out of the two DiCaprio movies up for awards, “Gatsby” was not the film I accepted to have the majority of wins. “Frozen” won Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song for “Let It Go.” After Idini Menzel’s performance of “Let It Go,” it was clear why this song won in this category. Winners in the other categories included “Mr. Hublot” for Best Animated Short Film, “Helium” for Best Live Action Short Film, “The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life” for Best Documentary Short, “20 Feet from Stardom” for Best Documentary Feature, “The Great Beauty” for Best Foreign Language Film and “Her” for Best Original Screenplay.

Courtesy of MCT

Idina Menzel performs during the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of MCT

Ellen DeGeneres on stage during the 86th annual Academy Awards onstage March 2 in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of MCT

Kevin Spacey on stage during the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of MCT

Matthew McConaughey on stage during the 86th annual Academy Awards onstage March 2 in Los Angeles.

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[ a+e ] OSU Standup Club in pursuit of comedy ELIZABETH TZAGOURNIS Lantern reporter tzagournis.24@osu.edu While Ohio State has several improv comedy groups, one club on campus tackles comedy from a different approach. The Buckeye Standup Comedy Club utilizes meetings and “joke workshops” to help members practice their comedy bits and become more comfortable onstage in front of crowds before performing, said Dave Johnson, club member and fourth-year in a personalized study program combining film and theatre. “Sometimes when people come to the workshop, they’re unsure about their material because they don’t think it’ll be good enough but the whole point of the workshop is to sharpen each other’s jokes (and) make each other better,” Johnson said. Although performing original jokes in front of a group of strangers can be intimidating at first, the Buckeye Standup Comedy Club provides the simplest way to get involved and learn comedy, said current Buckeye Standup Comedy Club President Mike Franke, a third-year graduate student in dentistry. “This is the easiest route into doing stand-up you could ask for,” Franke said. “You can come and do the joke workshops for a month or two if you want and then have that confidence that you know those jokes are going to work when you get out up in front of a crowd at a random place.” Even for students who have never tried comedy in any form, Kyle Tolliver, the club’s treasurer and fourth-year in biomath, said the first step is the hardest, but it gets easier the more students come out with new material and practice it. “There’s a huge moment of inertia when you start,” Tolliver said. “You gotta get up the first time … Come with some ideas and just listen and learn and change those ideas.” Once members feel confident in their jokes and material, they can start participating in one of the shows the club holds three times a month. “We do shows twice monthly on campus here in the (Ohio) Union and also one show each month in Donatos,” Franke said. Members enjoy this aspect of the club, Johnson said, mentioning that these shows are free for students and allow club members to share their comedic expertise in a high-energy environment. Johnson also said the shows are consistently exciting and entertaining for the comedians and audience members because of the great mood surrounding all performances. “The atmospheres of the shows are awesome because whoever shows up, you get a crowd that’s wanting to see comedy so you want to put on a good show and deliver great material for them,” Johnson said. “The energy is always high. We’re always just trying to entertain and have a good time.” Tolliver said the reason for this high energy is the audience is made up of almost entirely college students. “From my experience, college crowds are usually the best

There’s a huge moment of inertia when you start. You gotta get up the first time... Come with some ideas and just listen and learn and change those ideas.

David dances, David designs Performance painter David Garibaldi paints at the the Ohio Union in an OUABsponsored event March 3.

Kyle Tolliver Buckeye Standup Comedy Club treasurer and fourth-year in biomath

crowds,” Tolliver said. “You might go out to like the bar or something and talk about certain topics that older people may not understand or care about but I’ve found that for college students, doing comedy in front of other college students is usually where they get the most laughs.” These shows not only give club members the chance to perform their stand-up bits but also to invite other local comedians and out-of-town performers to share the stage as headliners, Franke said. “We do a format and try to keep it to an hour and a half,” Franke said. “We usually have eight performers doing five- to six-minute sets and then either a headliner doing 30 minutes or two co-headliners doing 15 to 20.” Franke said with the addition of the club there is now a format for more types of comedy on campus. Although the Buckeye Standup Comedy Club began fairly recently, with its first show in Morrill Tower in winter 2012, the amount of shows and number of members have greatly increased in the past two years, Franke said. “We’ve since picked up speed (since we began),” Franke said. He said the club has about 30 members, with around 20 that regularly come to meetings. The shared pursuit in comedy and making people laugh is what binds the group and creates a fun and enjoyable environment, Franke said. “I really enjoy just being around other people who have the same interest in stand-up,” Franke said. “Everybody’s trying to help each other do the same thing: get funnier. So that’s always a blast.” Johnson also said he values the camaraderie with other members. The club has its next show Friday at 8 p.m. in the Cartoon Room of the Ohio Union. “Anyone who is just interested in comedy is welcome to join the club. There are no dues and there is no performance requirement,” Franke said. “There are tons of ways to get involved without having to tell jokes.”

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Breanna’s

RITIKA SHAH / Asst. photo editor

Scholars from 1A — need to experience other cultures in a positive and constructive way,” Robert Dilenschneider said. “With understanding, you get a better appreciation of what’s going on, you make friends and we have less strife in the world.” Robert Dilenschneider said his wife’s background as a painter played a major role in his decision to contribute to the IIE’s Scholar Rescue Fund. “It was obvious to me that if we were going to do something to support the IIE, we should do it through the arts. That’s the reason we reached out,” Robert Dilenschneider said. “Jan will be the bridge between the IIE and the art community in oppressed countries.” Jan Dilenschneider said her experiences as a student at OSU had a major impact on her life. When a professor encouraged her to pursue a major in fine arts, Jan Dilenschneider said she had a “revelation.” “I chose fine arts education because Ohio State is quite renowned in that area,” she said. For the last 20 years, Jan Dilenschneider said she has concentrated on painting extensively, while also standing up for the importance of inductive reasoning and creativity. “I’m afraid with all of the computers and all of the handheld devices our kids are using today that they’re going to lose out on that creative thinking,” Jan Dilenschneider said. After 10 scholars are helped by the Janet Hennessey Dilenschneider Scholar Rescue Award in the Arts, Jan Dilenschneider said she is hoping to write a book titled “From Oppression to Expression,” which would reflect on the experiences of each scholar. When it comes to selecting scholars that need help, Angelson said the IIE has a fulltime staff dedicated to finding endangered scholars and a global selection committee that meets periodically. “IIE has 19 offices around the world. We’ve got a staff of nearly 700 working on 250 different programs so our ability to place (scholars) in safe places the world over is a very good thing for us,” Angelson said. The IIE’s Scholar Rescue Program was able to help 275 scholars from Iraq, the majority of whom were placed in the Middle East and North Africa in order to “curtail the brain drain from the region and also to facilitate easy repatriation,” Angelson said. Jan Dilenschneider said the Scholar Rescue Fund is important because oppression is happening and when scholars are taken in, the host universities are saving lives along with important pieces of culture. “The point is that these artists will be the artists that teach the next generation what the fine arts are all about,” she said.

Guide to College Fashion

Courtesy of MCT

Jennifer Lawrence arrives at the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

FASHION

Use Oscars looks to dress like a movie star BREANNA SOROKA For The Lantern soroka.@15osu.edu Unless you were living under a rock this past weekend, you know that the 2014 Academy Awards show took place Sunday night — and with this celebration of excellent artists and actors also came a celebration of fashion. That’s right: the dresses. Almost more interesting than the show itself is waiting to see what your favorite celebrities wore to the event of the year. So this year, instead of lusting after expensive dresses you’ll likely never be able to wear yourself, take the inspiration of some of the best-dressed of the night and craft casual outfits you’ll be able to wear more than once in your life. Kate Hudson in Atelier Versace This was probably one of my favorite looks of the night, complete with a flowing train, plunging neckline and a looped cape with structured shoulders. Not only is this dress gorgeous on its own, but it provides plenty of inspiration when it comes to creating your own outfit. If you’re a fan of maxi dresses and skirts, you can easily tuck a T-shirt with a plunging V-neck into a floor-length skirt of any color you choose. If you’re more daring, focus more on emulating this ensemble’s upper half; structured shoulders make any outfit look sharper and they are easy to find on various blazers and jackets. Add this piece to dark, sleek jeans and a shimmering top to create the perfect outfit that can go between day and night. Naomi Watts in Calvin Klein Collection The cut of this dress primes it for a more casual manifestation, with cap sleeves and a high neckline. To keep your outfit from looking too much like formalwear, switch it up with a white minidress — a

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tiny shift would help give off a more youthful vibe without losing any of the high fashion appeal. If you’d rather stay away from dresses altogether, though, don’t fret. The texture found on Watts’ gown would look just as good as a cropped shirt paired with high-waisted black pants. Keeping a columnlike silhouette brings forth even more inspiration from this ensemble.

Courtesy of MCT

Kate Hudson arrives at the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of MCT

Chrissy Teigen arrives at the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Chrissy Teigen in Monique Lhuillier This full and flouncy dress already has a more casual vibe than the rest of this list, particularly because it features pockets hidden in the skirt of the piece. A minidress in this strapless cut can easily be used for an outfit on its own, making this one of the easiest styles to recreate. If you want to be more creative than that, take more inspiration from the print of the dress and bring a little bit of spring into your wardrobe. This soft floral print would look great on a silky tank paired with a black pencil skirt, or take it one step further and invest in a pair of floral high-waisted trousers that would go perfectly with a black blazer on top. Meryl Streep in Lanvin This ensemble is just screaming to be reinvented. It’s already split perfectly between top and bottom, so if you have a cream dolman top and black pants, you’re well on your way to having a casual, Oscarsinspired outfit. If that’s just too plain for you, pull a Meryl and accessorize with standout metallic pieces. You can stick to her classic belt-and-bracelet combo, or drape a lengthy chained necklace that stands out from the stark colors of your outfit. Though it can be disheartening to think these Oscar-worthy dresses will never grace our closets, just remember your creative re-imaginings are just as good — and you didn’t need a stylist’s help to come up with them.

Courtesy of MCT

Naomi Watts arrives at the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of MCT

Meryl Streep arrives at the 86th annual Academy Awards March 2 in Los Angeles.

Tuesday March 4, 2014


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Unfurnished 3 Bedroom $1000+/mO ‑ starting at $275 pp. Spacious 3 bedrooms. 45 Euclid,1394.5 Indianola, 1370 Indianola, 45.5 Euclid, 1372 Indianola, 1394 Indianola, mul­ tiple units at 350 E. 12th: Uni­ versity Commons. Available for fall, newly­remodeled, hardwood floors, safe and convenient, large bedrooms, low utilities, DW, W/D, off‑street parking, A/C, www.hometeamproperties. net or 291‑2600.

LarGe 7‑bedroom red brick house, 2‑full baths with double onyx sinks, 1‑1/4 bath bath, all electric granite kitchen. Beauti­ ful tiled entry and kitchen, hard­ wood floors throughout house, 2 each: furnace, a/c, electric water heaters. Washer/dryer, wired for cable/internet, large parking on 13th avenUe, 2 full bath­ property, OSU bus stops at each rooms, completely remodeled end of street. Location: 319 E. townhome http://www.veni­ 17th Ave. Rent $3500/mo for 7 ceprops.com/1655‑n‑4th or $3600/mo for 8. View house at www.osustudentrentals.com Call for tour (740)833‑6435. 3 BedrOOm APT. 69 E. 14th Ave. Available Fall 2014 Large rooms, newer furnaces and air conditioning, up‑dated baths & kitchens, avaiLaBLe nOw 14th Ave. appliances, dishwashers. student group house. Kitchen, off‑street parking, laundry, parking, average $300/ Security system available mo. Paid utilities, 296‑8353 or $1,200 / month 299‑4521. (740) 363‑2158 Grad hOUSe Room for rent. spirealestateservices@gmail. Neil & Eighth Avail. Now. Across com Street from Campus. Furnished rooms, clean, quiet and secure. 3 BedrOOm Double available ­ Utilities included. Call 885‑3588. Available Now! ­ $1000 medicaL cOLLeGe across Leasing throough May 31st the street, 1 house from cam­ Call Myers Real Estate pus. Furnished rooming house 614‑486‑2933 or visit for scholars only. www.myersrealty.com Present tenants= 2 Med stu‑ 3 BedrOOm Double available ­ dents, 2 PhD Engineers and a Available Now! ­ $1600 Law student. Extremely quiet RENTING FOR FALL and safe, as is the neighbor­ Call Myers Real Estate hood. $450/month 1 year lease 614‑486‑2933 or visit minimum. 614‑805‑4448 or www.myersrealty.com comp4861@yahoo.com UnFUrniShed 3 BEDROOM

$600+/mO ‑ Affordable 1 bed­ units available for fall. 71 E. 14th ave, 8 or 9 bedroom rom 556 Drexel, 77 E. 7th, 1181 house for Fall. Paid utilities. 5th, Say Ave. Newly­remodled, great Laundry, parking. 296‑8353 locations, spacious living areas, 3 BedrOOmS‑ 69 E. 14th Ave. hardwood floors, low utilities, DW, W/D, A/C, off‑street park­ Available Fall 2014. ing, www.hometeamproperties. Large rooms, newer furnaces net or 291‑2600. & air conditioning, Up‑dated baths, kitchens, appli‑ 1 BedrOOm available now! ­ ances, dishwashers. $525‑ No Application Fee! Off street parking. Call Myers Real Estate Security system available. 614‑486‑2933 or visit $1,200 / month. www.myersrealty.com (740) 363‑2158, spirealesta­ teservices@gmail.com 1 BedrOOm Woodruff/Waldeck available Fall 2014. 60 BrOadmeadOwS BLvd 1 Bedroom w/ Basement $845 1Bedrom w/out basement $650=$825 Includes Water. Call 614‑846‑7863 RENTS LOWERED Townhomes Management • 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms • 2 Full Baths In 2 & 3 Bed­ LarGe One Bedroom, corner rooms of Patterson and High St. Avail­ • Intercom Ctrl Lobby able August 15, rent $600/mo. • Garage Available Ldy on site. Phone Steve 614 • Elevator 208 3111. shand50@aol.com • Window Treatments INCL OSU area Apartment. No Pets. Security Deposit Required. FROM $475.00 1 bed 1 bath. All Utilities Paid. Central Air. Private Entrance. 80 BROADMEADOWS $530/ month. Call 614‑204‑7604 69 E. 14TH Ave. 3 BEDROOMS: TOWNHOMES to see. 38 East 12th Avenue. Available Fall 2012. 2 & 4 BDRM Townhomes Large rooms, newer furnaces FROM $505.00 SUBLeaSinG 1 bedroom and air conditioning, $345/month now or for summer updated baths, kitchens, 885‑9840 in north campus ­ nice quiet appliances, dishwashers Off street parking, avaiLaBLe FaLL. 1, 2, 3, & 4 area. Contact 2164025810 Security system available bedrooms on Woodruff or 15th. $1,200 / month. Parking. 296‑8353. (740) 363‑2158 eFFiciency avaiLaBLe spirealestateservices@gmail. NOW!­ com $495 ‑ No Application Fee! Call Myers Real Estate 614‑486‑2933 or visit $1000 / 2br ‑ OSU North Cam‑ www.myersrealty.com pus‑ 1/2 Dbl. (W. Patterson) Unfurnished, attractive apt., eas­ ily handles 3 students. Newer brick, one story, well maintained $1500+/mO ‑ starting at $375 pp. GaraGeS avaiLaBLe for rent with basement and laundry pair. 331 E. 18th, 335 E. 12th, 1514 on NE and SW Campus, only Recent Hi­eff. furnace and A/C Hamlet, 84 E. 9th, 50 Euclid, $50/month. and windows. Off­street paved 1550 Hunter, 350 E. 12th, and Call/email for details at parking lot. One year lease, more. Available for fall, newly­re­ 614‑263‑2665, gasproperties@ available August. No pets. Great modeled, hardwood floors, large aol.com. must­see! Shown by appoint­ bedrooms, low utilities, d/w, w/d hookup, off‑street parking, a/c, ment. (614) 457‑7233 www.hometeamproperties.net $700+/mO ‑ starting at $350 pp. or 291‑2600. Several units at 320 E. 17th, 1366 Indianola, 331 E. 18th, 222 $1700 / 4br ‑ OSU North Cam‑ E. 11th, 1548 Hunter, 77.5 E. pus‑ Large 1/2 Dbl. (W. Patter‑ 7th, multiple units at 350 E. 12th: son) University Commons. Available Great 4 bedroom, easily handles for fall, newly­remodeled, hard­ 5 students. Central A/C, Hi‑eff. wood floors, large bedrooms, furnace, 1 1/2 Bath, Off‑street low utilities, DW, W/D hookup, parking, w/laundry, large front off‑street parking, A/C. www. porch and brick paver patio. No hometeamproperties.net or Shown by appointment. pets. One year lease. Available 291‑2600. August (614) 457‑7233 1442 neiL. Grad Building, 2 bed‑ room, 1600 sf. Garage w/opener, 312 e. 16th. 4 bedroom house, hardwood floors, A/C, laundry, OS parking, Central air, new fur‑ 1 block to Medical School, no nace, 2 newly remodeled baths, 614‑885‑1855, smoking, no pets, quiet. Avail­ $1400/mo. 614‑578‑6920, 614‑578‑6720 able July 1st. 885‑3588 Call Rod or George. 5HQWLQJ 12: 2 BedrOOm available 4/1 and 6/1! ­ IRU )$// e. tOmpKinS Ave. 4 bedroom Internet Included ­ house. 2 bath. Large insulated $650‑ No Application Fee! attic. Newly renovated. New Call Myers Real Estate baths, kitchen. High efficiency 614‑486‑2933 or visit gas furnace. Central Air. Refin‑ www.myersrealty.com ished Hardwood Floors. New Area Rugs. New dbl pane win­ dows. W/D Hookups. Off‑Street parking. Available Immedi­ 2 BedrOOm Townhouse avail­ ately. $1800/mo + utilities. Day: able NOW! ­ 221‑6327 Evening: 261‑0853 Internet included ­ Updated Kitchen medicaL/nUrSinG acrOSS $695‑ No Application Fee! st. 375 W. 8th. 3,000 sf. 4 Large Short­term lease only Bedrooms plus 4 study rooms Call Myers Real Estate on first floor. 2 Bath. Includes 4 614‑486‑2933 or visit parking spaces. Efficient furnace www.myersrealty.com and AC. Call 885‑3588. 2 Br for Rent. Available now 2094 Indiana Ave nOrth eaSt, 4BD homes, for Call‑ 614‑263‑2665 more information go to www. www.gasproperties.com compass­properties.com or call 6HH RXU 1(: avaiLaBe nOw 614‑783‑6625 2 bedroom near Lane and Neil 8SVFDOH 8QLWV $700 a month ShOrt nOrth Victorian Phone Steve 614‑208‑3111 Available immediately.Per­ email shand50@aol.com fect for roommates ‑ kitchen mOdern, SpaciOUS 2 B/R on both floors!4 BDRS,2BA, apts, located at 395 E. 13th Ave, fenced backyard.$2,200 AC, New Carpeting, Remodeled month;614‑792‑5291 Bathroom and Kitchen. Rent is $660/mo. Call 718‑0790

WORTHINGTON TERRACE

Help Wanted General

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

Furnished Rentals

Rooms

Help Wanted General

anaLySt, medicaL BILL­ ING PT/FT 9am‑9pm, German Vlg Medical Supply Co.looking for future operational/finance supervisors and managers. Position is for analysis and processing of medical billing claims, processing of denial/ partial pays, review docu­ mentation requirements and ensure database accuracy. Perfect candidate will de­ termine patterns and create preventative measures to be adopted by the company through a project management process. Best performers have the opportunity for leading a small team which could lead to operational management posi­ tions within this entrepreneurial company. Ideal candidate must have the ability to problem solve, be comfortable with numbers, and be able to com­ municate with national offices. Submit resume/letter of inter­ est: careers@sleephealth.com

direct care Needed Part­Time (Columbus East/ North, Dublin and Worthing­ ton ) Lark Residential Support, Inc. is seeking motivated individuals to work as Residential Support Specialist for individuals with developmental disabilities. Current Openings: Part‑Time Qualified Candidates MUST: * Have a high school diploma or GED * Good communication skills * Valid driver’s license with less than 5pts, Valid insur‑ ance, Reliable transportation * Available for immediate start *. Applications are available Mon, Tues Thurs & Fri from 11a‑5p. 6161 Busch Blvd., Suite 340 Columbus, OH 43229 Office: (614) 785‑9941 *Download applications at larkresidential.com* part time Asst 2:30 ‑6 T,W,‑ TH during school year 9 to 6 T,‑ W+TH summer. Duties incld but not limited to shopping, errands running household schedule. References Req, Background and driving record checked. Sal Neg. Please call 614‑558‑2581 Non Smokers Only part time Call Center in the Short North $10 / Hour plus bo­ nus. 614‑495‑1410.

perSOnaL medicaL atten­ dant needed in home. Part time, mornings and evenings. Excellent experience for pre­allied med students. 614‑421‑2183 SiGn SpinnerS

$10‑$12/hour Training provided P/T work based on school schedule Apply online www.SpinCols.com

Help Wanted Child Care St. andrew Parish School, in Upper Arlington, is looking for a “Latchkey Assistant” to complete the 2013‑2014 school year. Latchkey Assistants assist and supervise students enrolled in the after school care program. This is a part time position and would be great experience for those pursuing their career in Early Childhood Education or Child Development. Latchkey hours run from 2:45‑6 p.m. and follow the school year calendar. Candidates need not be avail­ able every day of the week. Requirements: High School di­ ploma, BCI and FBI Background Check, and completing the Columbus Diocese “Protecting God’s Children” class. For more information or to express inter­ est in this position, please con­ tact Latchkey Director, Michelle Peach (mpeach@cdeducation.org or 614.451.1626 x222). Ua FamiLy needs summer nanny. Email resume to ptmulford@sbcglobal.net

Upper arLinGtOn mom look­ ing for a caring, enthusiastic and reliable person to care for our sweet and energetic 9‑year‑old son. He is diagnosed with au­ tism and Dup15q Syndrome. Our son is non­verbal and uses a communication device to com­ municate. This is a part­time position re­ quiring some day and evening hours as well as occasional travel. Experience is preferred and references required. Should you be interested, please email me at ryliemcham@aol. com for more information.

Help Wanted Medical/Dental er ScriBe ‑ Seeking Pre Med students or Pre PA to work as ER Scribes. www.esiscribe.com

maLe careGiver Dublin pro­ fessional to hire PT. Short AM hours. No experience neces‑ StUdentpayOUtS.cOm Paid sary, training provided. Survey Takers needed in Colum­ 614‑296‑4207 bus. 100% free to join. Click on pharmacy technicianS surveys. Discount Drug Mart is currently teLephOne interview‑ seeking individuals to fill full and erS wanted immediately to part time pharmacy technician conduct interviews for research positions at our Powell store. firm. No experience necessary. Must be willing to work flexibile Great part­time job for students. shifts including weekends and Evening and daytime shifts holidays. We offer a compete­ available. Apply in person at: tive starting wage and an excel‑ Strategic Research Group, 995 lent benefits package. We are Goodale Blvd., 2nd floor. a drug free workplace. Apply in teLephOne SaLeS. Flexible person at 9965 Sawmill Parkway hrs. Downtown. 614‑458‑1875. in Powell. Call 8:30 to 3 vaLet attendantS needed

part‑time/Full‑time. Good base pay + tips. Flexible scheduling. must be 20 or older with good driving record. must be able to pass background check! fill out application at ecklparking.com

Help Wanted Child Care

BicycLe mechanic/SaLeS person for NW Columbus Bicy­ cle Shop. FT and PT Position chiLdren and Adults with Please call 614‑889‑1314 or Disabilities In Need of Help 2453 and ask for Chris. cOLUmBUS pOOL MANAGE­ Care Providers and ABA Thera­ MENT is hiring Lifeguards, pists are wanted to work with Lifeguard Instructors, Pool Man­ children/ young adults with dis­ agers, Service Technicians, and abilities in a family home set­ Supervisors for the summer. ting or supported living setting. $8.25‑$15.00/hour. To apply go Extensive training is provided. to columbus­pmg.com or call This job is meaningful, allows 740‑549‑4622 for more informa‑ you to learn intensively and can accommodate your class sched­ tion. ule. Those in all related fields, handy man, good in Wood­ with ABA interest, or who have a work and other construction heart for these missions please work. Decent hourly rate. Call apply. Competitive wages and 718‑0790. benefits. For more informa­ hOme admin. assist.: re‑ tion, call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614) tired, former business owner 475‑5305 or visit us at www. and wife need student for LIFE­INC.NET part time home admin light JeLLy Bean Junction Learn­ housekeeping, some cooking, ing Centers is hiring teachers for pc operation ‑ email, & basic their Bethel, Snouffer, Yearling & Office, family history. Pleas‑ Refugee Road locations. Please ant clintonville ranch. Flex call Brandy at (614) 451‑5200 time, 2‑3 hrs in AM 2 days/ for an interview. week. Background check, re‑ fer.req. You may confer with current asst about the job. SeeKinG One or more (job $15/hr, eOe, foreign students share) education majors to welcome. Send work experi‑ help single Mom with two ence or resume to zettann@ kids (daughter 12 and son 10) part‑time. Large home gmail.com. near grove city, about 15‑20 hOUSe cLeaninG position. min. from campus. School­ Must be detail oriented, and work, chores, fun, some meal reliable. Must have car, license prep, some errands. Excel­ and car ins. $10‑12/hr, gas lent pay, flexibility, long‑term, reimbursement. Background occasional overnight when check. Call Inga 614‑327‑1235 Mom travels (after you and leave msg or email the kids get comfortable). hhhclean.schedules@gmail. Text 865‑258‑6668 Sarah com

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service ServinG pOSitiOnS avail­ able at Figlio Wood Fired Pizza, a casual, upscale gourmet pizza and pasta restaurant close to campus with locations in Grand­ view and Arlington. Meet new friends while working with our fun, attractive staff. Part time. Flexible schedule. WILL TRAIN the right position. (Also hiring bus persons and cooks). Apply in person at 1369 Grandview Ave or 3712 Riverside Dr.

Help Wanted OSU OSU GOLF Club is looking to hire multiple seasonal po­ sitions!!! positions are: serv­ ers, bartenders,dishwashers, cooks, and half‑way house. Please stop by the club and fill out an application.

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

SaLeS/marKetinG: Summer Job Opportunity: Unique. Fun. Flexible. Very attainable. Real. Have the best summer of your life while earning $3500‑$7000 or more working from the comforts of your own home, both male and female, regardless of where your living or from anywhere on the road with any trip(s) you might be interested in tak­ ing this summer. No income limit. Spread the word. Work solo or with friends both close and afar. Literally, looking for hundreds of students from all over the country. Don’t miss out on at least finding out what this is all about. Only advertis­ ing here for 3 days this week so spread the word and re­ ply. We will reply with specif­ ics. For more info check out www.mycampusbuzz.com and send email of interest to info@ mycampusbuzz.com.

Help Wanted Volunteer

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service

Help Wanted Interships

Help Wanted Tutors

LOOKinG FOr empLOy‑ eeS? Ohio State has 50,000+ students that you can reach. Call (614)292‑ 2031 for more information.

hirinG teacherS to work FT/PT with all ages, no nights, weekends or Holidays. Must be 18, have H.S diploma or GED, reliable transportation, good communication skills and atten‑ dance. Apply Arlington Childrens Center, 1033 Old Henderson Road, Cols 43220. 614‑451‑5400

For Sale Bicycles BUy/SeLL USed 937‑726‑4583

Bikes

Looking for empLoyees? Ohio State has 50,000+ students that you can reach. call (614)292‑2031 for more information.

Tutoring Editorial Services 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. SpeLLinG tUtOr. handwritinG cOach. pUnctUatiOn advice. capitaLizatiOn. rUn‑On SentenceS. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

prOFeSSiOnaL writer 48 years. Edit, rewrite, proof­ read, index, type. Papers, mss., dissertations. Connie 614‑866‑0725.

Business Opportunities

For Sale Miscellaneous

StaGGerinG StUdent loan debt for the next 10 years? Or graduating debt‑free? Duh, which would you choose? http://www.Eva33.com BOOKS: aFter catastrophic 310‑221‑0210 biological warfare, we may not agree on what nature is or what civilization is. WILDERNESS, a science fiction novel, is by Alan Kovski. Available via Amazon

BOOKS: StOLen memories, dangerous dreams, collapsing societies, lost identities, lost souls, engineered life, our world earn caSh by ordering shirts transformed. REMEMBERING for your chapter with College Hill. THE FUTURE: science fiction Become a campus Rep today! stories by Alan Kovski. Available Contact Ryan at 425‑478‑7439 via Amazon.com

vOLUnteerS are needed to answer the 24‑hour Suicide Prevention Hotline. Volunteers receive 50 hours of free train­ ing, beginning March 26. Each volunteer commits to working 6 hours a week from June through November, 2014. To volunteer or for more information, call Susan Jennings, Volunteer Coordinator, or Mary Brennen­Hofmann, Pro­ gram Coordinator, at 299‑6600. adriaticO’S pizza is cur­ You can also contact the pro­ rently hiring delivery drivers for gram at sps@ncmhs.org day shifts and weekends. Must be at least 18 yrs old, have a valid drivers licence, reliable transportation, and acceptable insurance coverage. Benefits include flexible schedule, high income potential for motivated LaBOratOry internShip individuals, and great work available immediately. Please environment. Commission avail­ visit our website at able for driver providing their http://www.toxassociates.com own vehicles. Weekly pay plus and click on the link of job post­ tips. Apply in person at 265 w ings/internships for more infor­ 11th ave. mation. cLipperS BaSeBaLL Levy Restaurants @ Huntington Park Season Starts April 3 Part Time Positions Available! Applications are accepted at: math tUtOr needed in Chem­ 330 Huntington Park Lane istry and Calculus... Undergrad M‑F 10am‑4pm taking Chem 1210 and Calcu­ 614‑255‑0008 lus. If interested please contact Enter through double glass doors on Huntington Park Ln, 210‑1095. under blue Clippers Hat. need a French Tutor. In need Levy Restaurants values of a tutor in French for a high workforce school sophomore. 2‑3 days diversity. EOE/M/F/D/V a week LOOKinG FOr an intelligent, In our home in Clintonville. driven individual to cook in $12 an hour Gateway Film Center and Liz please contact: Tondaadi­ Lessner’s new restaurant, The ansingh1@aol.com Torpedo Room. Up to 40 hours a week, focusing on food prepa­ ration, presentation, and kitchen tUtOrS needed $15‑20 p/h cleanliness. Previous restaurant all subjects all grades. Edu­ experience is preferred but not cation background preferred. necessary. To apply, check out SEND RESUME to Mrsjames@ the “About” section at www.gate­ tutoringbyteachers.net. wayfilmcenter.com. mOzart’S caFe ‑ Looking for part­ time/full­time reliable coun­ ter help, server help, kitchen help, pastry chef. 4784 N. High Street. Email resume to info@mozartscafe.com

Help Help Wanted Education Tutors

Travel/ Vacation

General Miscellaneous

614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. typinG. manUScriptS. BOOKS. LeGaL dOcUmentS. diSSertatiOnS. theSeS. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

Wanted Miscellaneous

SprinG BreaK? Book it now. Vacation Package for sale. $500.00 for one week. Rep‑ utable and flexible schedules Please email AngelinaNicholasJoseph@ gmail.com or call 614‑419‑2594

General Services 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. wrappinG GiFtS. SewinG BUttOnS. writinG BiOGraphieS. cOpieS. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

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

caSh in A FLASH FOR VINYL CD’s DVD BLURAY 1155 N High St 421‑1512 www.thunderpussy.com

Announcements/ Notice 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. typinG. manUScriptS. BOOKS. LeGaL dOcUmentS. diSSertatiOnS. theSeS. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

Resumé Services 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. emerGency OverniGht!!! reSUmeS By mOrninG!!! LaSt minUte!!! Pricing negotiable. Cash only. LinKedin prOFiLeS, Resumes, Cover Letters With Sizzling Formatting & Descriptive Verbiage. Stellar resumes open doors. Let me help you!! OSU references. Proofreading services also available. Call & Text 469‑759‑9850.

Typing Services 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. emerGency OverniGht!!! typinG By mOrninG!!! LaSt minUte!!! Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

Tutoring Services 614 ‑ 440 ‑ 7416. SpeLLinG tUtOr. handwritinG cOach. pUnctUatiOn advice. capitaLizatiOn. rUn‑On SentenceS. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.

call 292‑2031 to place your ad or do it online at:

thelantern .com

checK Him Out!!! Travis Rittenhouse http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=a8IYJhgQ0vs Local Artist Re­ leases New Album!!! Check Him Out!!! Travis Rittenhouse http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=a8IYJhgQ0vs

Real Estate Advertise­ ments ­ 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 prefer­ ence, limitation, or discrimi­ nation.” State law may also forbid discrimination based on these factors and oth­ ers. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in viola­ tion of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. To com­ plain of discrimination call the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Devel­ opment 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

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@TheLantern Tuesday March 4, 2014

Across

1 American Revolution supporter 5 Cracked fixture across from Independence Hall 9 Suitor 14 Loser in a fable 15 Ice formation 16 Garden violet 17 Big name in door-to-door sales 18 Eternally 20 Moral precept 22 Arctic inhabitant 23 Suffix with Manhattan 24 In the know 27 Soak up some rays 28 URL letters 31 “Let’s move on to something else” 35 Davis of “Do the Right Thing” 36 Geologic periods 37 Building safety procedure 42 Obstruct 43 Paper tray unit 44 Some studio-based educators 51 Brief missions? 52 Drill sergeant’s address 53 Barbecue residue 54 On the __ vive: alert 55 Debate focus 57 Took a cut 59 What 3/4/2014 is, and a hint to 18-, 31-, 37- and 44-Across 64 Ill-considered 65 Word before circle or child 66 Shore phenomenon 67 Attacking the task 68 Reply to, “Who wants to clean up this mess?” 69 Cry of pain 70 Ballpoints

Down

1 “Consider this scenario ...” 2 Must

3 One with pressing chores? 4 One in a pool 5 Pal 4 life 6 “Xanadu” band 7 Loughlin of “Full House” 8 Crude shed 9 Support for a broken digit 10 Power unit 11 “Give me __!”: start of a Hawkeye’s cheer 12 Philosophy suffix 13 Bill, the “Science Guy” 19 Waikiki feast 21 This and this 25 “__ miracle!” 26 Beach bucket 28 Villagers below the Grinch’s cave 29 Have a yen for 30 Oz. and kg. 32 Steep-walled canyon 33 Creature 34 Pearly whites 37 Turn, as pancakes 38 Electrical particles 39 “Cheers” actress Perlman 40 Oz. or kg. 41 Geek Squad pros 42 Money VIP 45 Guarantee 46 Go up 47 Unlikely to disappoint 48 Compare apples to apples? 49 Takes to jail 50 Tourist attractions 55 News piece 56 Actress Falco 58 Food truck offering 59 Snorkeling aid 60 Year, south of the border 61 Tunneler’s explosive 62 Ruckus 63 Evergreen with elastic wood

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