Monday April 14, 2014 year: 134 No. 54
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The interim: Ohio State sails on in year of transition KRISTEN MITCHELL Editor-in-chief mitchell.935@osu.edu Ohio State is in some ways like a ship: the president is the captain, administrators are the crew and students are the passengers, along for the ride. And for a ship the size of OSU, the direction can’t be changed overnight. The past year at OSU can be considered a turning point. The era of former university President E. Gordon Gee has ended, and the time of Dr. Michael Drake has yet to begin. The ship is veering, preparing for a turn, but it hasn’t quite made it yet. OSU is in transition, with Interim President Joseph Alutto at the helm. OSU spent several months over the last academic year searching for its new president, and found that leader in Drake, the current chancellor at the University of California Irvine. While the official changing of the guard won’t take place until July 1, OSU has spent all year preparing for the new president’s arrival. During this time of transition, public attention has been centered around the announcement of the new president, though university officials have been going through their regular routines. The Lantern has obtained records that detail what exactly what those routines entail — documenting travel expenses and performance reviews of members of OSU’s top administrators over the past two years. Performance reviews outlined the work that
officials have done — and ways others needed to improve. Travel expenses documented millions of dollars spent on trips to conferences, overseas visits and attempts at spreading the OSU brand. The day-to-day operations of the university have marched on in this period of limbo — keep in mind, Alutto stepped in as interim president before Gee began his second term in office in 2007 — and Alutto, who had announced in November 2012 his intent to retire by the summer, has aimed to keep the parade moving. “There is no such thing as an interim president, there’s just a president and, so if you look at what we’ve been able to do since I’ve been there, it’s all the things the president would do,” Alutto said in a Feb. 11 interview with The Lantern. “We’ve made tough decisions, we’ve expanded some operations, we’ve SHELBY LUM / Photo editor made Dr. Michael Drake
decisions not to go into other areas, we’ve implemented the strategic plan and ultimately that’s what a president winds up doing.” Keeping forward motion has been the mantra of Alutto’s term in office, which will come to exactly one year when Drake takes over. In that time, there have been several administrative changes. CEO of the Wexner Medical Center Dr. Steven Gabbe is set to
step down in December or sooner if a successor is appointed, as Geoff Chatas, former OSU chief financial officer and senior vice president of business and finance, moved into the role of senior vice president for optimization and integration and Medical Center chief transformation officer as of March 1.
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RITIKA SHAH / Asst. photo editor
Interim President Joseph Alutto
SHELBY LUM / Photo editor
E. Gordon Gee
OSU Nurseline Meyer focuses on individuals in Spring Game receiving calls about mumps ERIC SEGER Sports editor seger.25@osu.edu
Increase in calls to the 24/7 Nurseline
+
An extra 2 calls a day on top of 50 is an increase of
4% source: reporting
MADISON CURTIS / Design editor
REGINA BONFIGLIO Lantern reporter bonfiglio.20@osu.edu A few Ohio State faculty and staff members per day have been calling into a hotline to seek nurses’ advice on whether they have the mumps. The OSU 24/7 Nurseline, run by HealthFitness, is a service available to faculty and staff who have the OSU Health Plan that allows them to call a registered nurse at any time during the day or night to ask health-related questions. Representatives from the program have received more calls because of the mumps outbreak, with many calls focused on various questions about mumps, Jane Ferris, the clinical supervisor for the 24/7 Nurseline, said in an email. In addition to the average 50 calls per day, the line has been receiving an additional one or two calls per day about the outbreak, Ferris said. As of Friday afternoon, 199 mumps cases had been reported in Franklin and Delaware counties, up 10 from Thursday. Of those cases, 126 of were linked to the OSU outbreak, an increase of six cases from Thursday, according to a Columbus Public Health release. The onset of the first case connected to the Franklin County outbreak was Jan. 7, while the first case connected to OSU was Feb. 10. Mumps is a viral infection of the salivary glands, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. It can spread through coughing, sneezing or contact with saliva or mucus. According to the CDC website, the disease can be carried without any symptoms. Those who are affected by mumps might have swollen and tender salivary glands under the ears or jaw on the side of the face, fever, headache, muscle aches, tiredness, loss of appetite and inflammation
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To Urban Meyer, the 2014 Ohio State Spring Game wasn’t about statistics, which intrasquad team won or lost, or which side played better as a unit. “It’s more of an individual — I’m not trying to evaluate an offense because who cares?” Meyer said after the Gray team defeated Scarlet, 17-7, Saturday at Ohio Stadium. “There are guys out there that will either never play or they’re not ready to play now.” With players like starting senior quarterback Braxton Miller, senior tight end Jeff Heuerman, a skill guy like sophomore H-Back Dontre Wilson and even starting offensive lineman junior Taylor Decker not seeing a single snap during the game, it was clear Meyer was more interested in how much he was going to get out of some inexperienced players. “I’m not evaluating — like (OSU spokesman) Jerry (Emig) hands me stats and I’m not sure what to do with these. I don’t care,” Meyer said. Individually, the final stats for those players who actually saw time Saturday weren’t exactly impressive. The two quarterbacks who started and played the majority of the game — redshirt-sophomore Cardale Jones, who Meyer named backup to Miller after the game, and redshirt-freshman J.T. Barrett — combined to throw for just 277 yards and no passing touchdowns. No ball carrier had more than 55 yards on the ground, but redshirt-sophomore running backs Warren Ball and Bri’onte Dunn both managed to find the end zone for the Gray team. “I was just talking with Cardale out there and you are so used to 14 practices playing with the same guys and that chemistry started through spring and there were a lot of new faces,” Decker said after the game about playing with players who might not see time this fall. “You start to develop a lot of chemistry and there were guys flipping sides, playing both ways so that makes it a little difficult when you are
MARK BATKE / For The Lantern
Redshirt-sophomore running back Bri’onte Dunn (25), who was on the Gray team, attempts to run past Scarlet defenders. Gray beat Scarlet at the Spring Game April 12 at Ohio Stadium, 17-7. not used to playing with somebody, but that’s not excuse. You still have to go out there and execute and do your job at the highest level.” After having a solid Spring Game a year ago, redshirt-sophomore wide receiver Michael Thomas performed well again and led Gray with six receptions and 64 yards, while redshirt-junior receiver Corey Smith snagged five passes from Jones for 72 yards. Senior wide receivers Devin Smith and Evan Spencer hardly saw the field at all — Spencer is still rehabbing from an injury suffered in the 2014 Discover Orange Bowl, and Smith played sparingly — but Meyer still wasn’t pleased with what he saw from the unit specifically. “Not enough,” Meyer said of the wide receivers’ efforts Saturday. “Without a doubt with what we expect, we’re not where we need to be. We’re better than we were two years ago … (a) notch (better) than we were last year. We got a ways to go.”
Another question mark for the Buckeyes was what the pecking order will be at running back next season after losing Carlos Hyde, who in the 2013 season became the first running back under Meyer to eclipse the 1,000-yard plateau. The expected favorite before spring practice was sophomore Ezekiel Elliott, who often came in to let Hyde rest last year. Other candidates include Dunn and Ball as well redshirt-senior Rod Smith. Smith sat out the last half of spring practice — including the Spring Game — as Meyer said “he’s focusing on academics.” “We have some depth there right now,” Meyer said. “But still it’s pretty much … I’m not ready to name a starter yet.” Dunn said after the game no matter who is at the
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Students compete to code new health software programs KHALID MOALIM Lantern reporter moalim.2@osu.edu As Ohio State students glued themselves to computers for 24 hours to create programs that would address health and wellness issues, some found themselves wishing OSU’s curriculum was focused more on what they could use in the real world. “Four of us learned how to do Ruby on the fly tonight,” said Lakshmana Mukkapati, a second-year in computer science and engineering. Only one of Mukkapati’s four teammates knew how to code with Ruby, a computer programming language. “I was the only one who knew how to do it,” said Paul Breuler, a fourth-year in computer science and engineering. Fourteen groups of students took on a 24-hour Codefest challenge hosted by Cardinal Health, in partnership with OSU and TechColumbus, to fix
real-world health and wellness problems. The event was held at 1275 Kinnear Road, Columbus-based start-up incubator TechColumbus’ office. Codefest is a competition held for programmers and web developers to showcase their creativity by creating usable software for phones or computers with limited amount of time. Several participants said OSU doesn’t offer much practice in the field of computer science other than practicing theory. “A lot of real world applications stuff we learn outside the classroom. They don’t really teach that at OSU,” said Daniel Brown, a fourth-year in computer science and engineering. “It’s more program theory and you learn how to test which code works faster, and ultimately the theory behind code and why code works. But a lot of the real practical applications you only get if you go out on your own and seek it. “What would be nice is if OSU offered more classes or made it possible for part of its curriculum for computer science majors to do real world projects so they can build their portfolio outside just their senior project.”
Brown and his partner Natenon Tongtae, a fourthyear in biomedical engineering, were one of five groups that won Amazon gift cards worth $400 per group and the top prize of GoPro cameras. Each member of the duo took home a GoPro. Awards like most innovative, most impactful, best demo and people’s choice were also given out to teams. Brown and Tongtae created software to help reduce the amount of time it takes patients and nurses to fill out paperwork. The patient, before showing up to the hospital, would fill out the information so any doctor they visit would have access to their data. Brown and Tongtae said they found a study suggesting that on average, health care providers only see patients for nine minutes, and six go toward filling out paperwork. “One of the things we wanted to do was expedite how fast they could do forms so that they could have more time to actually be a health care provider,
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campus A YEAR OF TRANSITION
President
Joseph Alutto
The following individuals have changed roles this year.
Interim President Office of the President Term: July 1, 2013, through July 1, 2014 Salary: $637,508
Vice Presidents Joseph Steinmetz Executive Vice President and Provost Office of Academic Affairs Term: July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2018 Salary: $461,040
Michael Hofherr Vice President, Chief Information Officer Office of Academic Affairs Effective: March 1, 2014 Salary: $230,000
Andrew Thomas Chief Medical Officer, Senior Associate Vice President Office of Health Sciences, Wexner Medical Center Effective: July 1, 2013 Salary: $484,999
Gene Smith Vice President, Athletic Director Department of Athletics Term: Jan. 29, 2014, through June 30, 2020 Salary: $940,484
Michael Boehm Special Assistant to the President, Vice Provost for Academic and Strategic Planning Office of Academic Affairs Effective: Oct. 21, 2013 Salary: $204,795
Carol Diedrichs Vice Provost and Director Office of University Libraries Term: July 1, 2013, through Jan. 5, 2015 Salary: $253,980
Patricia Hill-Callahan* Vice President, Advancement and Principal Gifts Strategist Office of Advancement Term: June 17, 2013, through June 16, 2018 Salary: $375,000
David Ripple*
David Manderscheid*
Vice President Office of Development Term: May 5, 2014, through May 4, 2019 Salary: $375,000
Executive Dean, Vice Provost College of Arts and Sciences Term: July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2018 Salary: $360,000
Deans & Directors Lonnie King
Alan Michaels
Garry Jenkins
Executive Dean for Health Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine Term: Sept. 1, 2014, through Aug. 31, 2015 Salary: $303,000
Associate Dean Moritz College of Law Term: Jan. 1, 2014, through Dec. 31, 2015 Salary: $189,662
Dean Moritz College of Law Term: Nov. 1, 2013, through June 30, 2018 Salary: $360,000
Dean College of Pharmacy Effective: Aug. 15, 2013 Salary: $295,000
Trevor Brown Director John Glenn School of Public Affairs Term: March 1, 2014, through June 30, 2018 Salary: $208,250
William Martin
Michael Bisesi
Dean College of Public Health Effective: Aug. 12, 2013 Salary: $350,000
Interim Dean College of Public Health Term: May 15, 2013, through June 30, 2013 Salary: $203,229
*Employees newly hired to the university KAYLA BYLER / Managing editor of design
source: reporting
The Interim from 1A In February, Kris Devine, the OSU vice president for business and finance operations, was named deputy chief financial officer. In June, Chief Information Officer Kathy Starkoff resigned after five years and a tenure that included a data breach scandal that jeopardized the identities of 760,000 people. Her role was filled in the interim by associate vice president for Distance Education and eLearning Michael Hofherr, who assumed the position on a permanent term in March. Athletic director Gene Smith was named a vice president in January and given a nearly 12 percent pay increase and a four-year contract extension. Set to report directly to the president, Smith’s base salary is to be $940,484, roughly $140,000 more than Drake’s $800,000, effective July 1, 2013. Gayle Saunders, assistant vice president of media and public relations, resigned in February after being with the university for roughly a year and a half.
Nurseline from 1A of the testicles in men, according to the CDC. The website also says there is no specific treatment for mumps, but it is usually gone in a week or two. Ryan Radebaugh, a program coordinator for global engagement in the Office of International Affairs, said although he has not used the service, he has noticed the increased tension at his workplace whenever someone gets sick since the mumps outbreak. “People with children, husbands and wives
Henry Mann
Joseph Steinmetz assumed the position of provost and executive vice president in July, a plan announced in January that hadn’t accounted for Gee’s departure and Alutto’s delayed retirement. He had moved up from the position of executive dean and vice provost for the College of Arts and Sciences, a position that was passed to thenNebraska dean David Manderscheid, effective July 1, 2013. Alutto, who makes a salary of $637,508, said in a March 31 interview he considered these changes to be a normal part of university growth. “It’s a normal activity, one of the characteristics of all organizations is that they self-regenerate over time, and particularly in universities where there are opportunities for administrators and faculty to try new horizons and new opportunities, it’s not at all unusual,” he said. “We haven’t seen an unusual number of turnovers. “The size of our university is such that, when you’re in a position like mine, you come to expect
the turnover that happens,” he continued. “It’s just a natural cycle of deans that move on, other administrators that move on, faculty that move on and I think you become sensitive to that when there is a transition at the top of the university going on at the same time.” One transition leads to another, and when a university is searching for a new president and has spots to fill, that can send a ripple of changes through its core. Steinmetz, who makes a salary of $461,040, said he considers himself to be an “anchor point” throughout it all, a feat he deemed the most significant thing he’s done as provost. “I think I can provide that sort of backstop, and that connection between Dr. Gee and Dr. Drake through Dr. Alutto. So I think that I worked hard to perhaps remind my colleagues in Bricker Hall all the time exactly why we’re here, and that is to teach students, do research and our outreach function,” Steinmetz said in an April 1 interview with The Lantern.
are definitely more concerned — they have families to worry about ,” he said. “They don’t want to take that home with them.” Radebaugh said although he has not used the line, the Nurseline was mentioned to him during his first week of employment three months ago. “It sounds like a great service,” he said. There are 11 registered nurses who work for the Nurseline. The cost of the service to OSU is “less than $70,000 annually,” Lorena Owings, director of medical management and customer service for the OSU Health Plan, said in an email.
Ferris said typically the calls to the line fall under three categories: • New illnesses: Most often, callers use the service to ask questions about their symptoms and either scheduling an appointment with a physician or going straight to the emergency room. • Continuing or recent conditions: About 25 to 30 percent of the calls are for health information, such as diagnoses, new prescriptions or advice about the level of care the person should receive for their condition.
“Sometimes universities can get lost thinking about other activities that are going on, but that’s the fundamental reason that we’re here. So that’s been my message since I’ve been there and I think people listen to it, so that’s an accomplishment.” As part of a series on the OSU administration, The Lantern aims to shed light on exactly what has been going on behind closed doors in Bricker Hall and across campus during this time of transition. And while overall the fundamental activities of the university haven’t changed, a new captain is set to steer the ship. This story is the first in a series about Ohio State’s administrators, including travel expenses and performance reviews over the last two years. The series was made possible by the generosity of Ohio State and The Lantern alumna Patty Miller.
•
Potential illnesses: Callers sometimes ask about what they should be doing before seeing a physician or signs and symptoms to watch for. Alyson Moses, an OSU communication professor, said she has used a similar program through her pediatrician’s office and said the 24/7 Nurseline seems like a “great resource” for faculty. “It’s nice to get expert perspective from a health care professional without having to go in for a doctor’s appointment, especially if symptoms are minor,” she said in an email.
'DWHV OLVWHG DW FRWD FRP
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MARK BATKE / For The Lantern
Redshirt-freshman quarterback J.T. Barrett, who played on the Gray team, runs the ball. Gray beat Scarlet at the Spring Game April 12 at Ohio Stadium, 17-7.
Spring Game from 1A top of the list, his mindset doesn’t change. “Every day I’m just going to work hard. I’m going to work hard,” Dunn said. “Everybody in my unit, in the running back unit, is like my brother. Whoever gets the (top) spot is going to deserve that spot.” So with no clear-cut starter at running back or wide receiver, and backup quarterbacks who struggled in a defensive-minded affair as playmakers were split up between both teams, what exactly was the 2014 Spring Game about? “What I do care is who is physically going to
make the plays. This is more of, it’s almost like an individual game today and that’s what I wanted to watch,” Meyer said. “Who’s going to compete, who’s going to make plays, not who’s going to fit into the team concept because we all know what we saw out there. That’s not team, that’s not the Ohio State Buckeyes. That’s a bunch of people all over the place.” After reconvening later this summer for training camp, the Buckeyes are set to take on Navy in the first game of their 2014 campaign Aug. 30 at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. Kickoff is scheduled for noon.
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to give support to that individual, and one of the ways to do that is to expedite the process for creating care plans,” Brown said. There were four prompts given about health care and a fifth that allowed teams to create their own prompt related to health care. Mukkapati said his team merged some of the prompts given to create a program that would allow for at-home data collection. “We came up with an idea that was a merge of the prompts. One of the prompts was ‘How do we bridge the connection between doctors and patients,’ and one of the things we wanted to do
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was data. While the patient is at home, the doctor does not collect data, whereas the patient can,” Mukkapati said. “So we’re providing the capabilities to collect that data themselves and when they go to the doctor, they can show this data. From there, the doctor can easily make a diagnosis because they’ll have everything they’ll need.” Dublin-based health care business Cardinal Health’s manager ecommerce digital marketer Amy Weber said the Codefest was put together to push creativity. “The objective for the weekend overall is to promote creativity, promote innovation, promote out-of-the-box thinking around the health care industry,” Weber said.
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Just say ‘know’ to drugs!
Introducing PHR2010, Fundamentals of Pharmacology
WHAT? An undergraduate pharmacology class for non-pharmacy majors (3 cr hrs) WHEN? Tuesdays & Thursdays, 2:20-3:40PM during Fall 2014 WHERE? 1184 Postle Hall, 305 W. 12th Avenue WHO IS TEACHING? Nicole Cartwright Kwiek, Ph.D., Clinical Assistant Professor of Pharmacy WHO CAN ENROLL? Anyone interested in learning more about how drugs work. There are no prerequisites for enrollment, though the class is not open to those students with credit for PHR4400.
Monday April 14, 2014
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studentvoice 1st year of STEP program ‘incredible’ Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement misunderstood
amanda stefanik For The Lantern stefanik.16@osu.edu Countless second-year students at Ohio State breathed a heavy sigh of relief as they click to upload and submit their final copies of projects that they have poured a decent amount of blood, sweat and tears into. As Ohio State’s pilot year of the Second-Year Transformational Experience Program comes to a close, students and faculty alike took a moment to reflect on the aftermath of the experience and share predictions for the future year. According to the STEP website, the program “was developed as a continuation of the university’s effort to redefine the student experience.” One thousand second-year students volunteered to live on campus and fulfill the participant requirements while engaging with their peers and assigned faculty member to create a project that fit the needs of each individual and what they hoped to get out of their sophomore year. Participant requirements included attending a weekly meeting with assigned faculty, attending and submitting reflections on three approved co-curriculars, completing a financial literacy program with the Student Wellness Center and developing a written proposal and budget of how they intend to use the fellowship provided by the university of up to $2,000. With the first year of the program coming to a close, Vicki Pitstick, STEP program manager, revealed the rewards and challenges she has experienced during the program. “I work mostly with the STEP faculty members. The most rewarding part has been getting to know all of them and learning what I can do to serve as an advocate and resource for them. The other rewarding part is getting to assist in the development of this new, exciting program. The most challenging part is figuring out how to serve the needs of many different types of students, and many different types of faculty while creating a quality program,” Pitstick said. Faculty STEP mentor Anna Soter also shared the benefits of the journey. “Relationship building, opportunities to help students discover strengths within, discover each other as resources, building community within the group and the larger STEP community, working with other faculty across disciplines and thinking big. These are what I consider the most rewarding aspects of my year with STEP,” Soter said. What goes up must come down, and Soter did have a few frustrations involving her understanding of what the bottom line was on requirements and a clear sense of the vision of the program in general. Participant and neuroscience major Julia Aminov shared concerns about the program as well. “The most challenging part of serving as a pilot year member did just not know how to get access to different STEP requirements such as the outlines for what our proposal was supposed to look like,” she said. Across the board, there was a general consensus of the overall outcome of STEP to be one in the positive direction.
Letter to the editor:
Courtesy of Amanda Stefanik
Second-year OSU student Amanda Stefanik (left) poses with STEP faculty mentor Anna Soter. “Some of the things we were hoping for STEP was students to build community in cohorts and increased student-faculty interaction. Based on the feedback we have received thus far, these things have happened,” Pitstick said. Aminov felt optimistic in the program to advocate it on to future students. “I would definitely recommend participating in STEP to future students because it’s an opportunity to do something we love and are passionate about. A lot of students have so many goals and dreams but don’t have the money or time to fund it. STEP gives those students the chance to set aside some time and get money to achieve something they’ve always wanted to do,” Aminov said. With this test year now over, the STEP board hopes to take the experiences and feedback into consideration and put them into good use. Pitstick has high hopes for years to come. “There are many things we look to make better including providing more resources and support for the faculty and the students, getting students more involved with the workings of STEP through a STEP Student Ambassador Program and a STEP Student Advisory Council; assisting students with the reflecting and reporting back process in order to start sharing the amazing projects students are doing and finding ways to spread the word about this incredible program,” Pitstick said. Amanda Stefanik participated in the STEP program.
We were heartened to see the conversation about Israel’s nearly half-a-century long, illegal occupation of Palestine our recent actions have sparked on campus. As an organization committed to working in solidarity with the Palestinian people in their struggle for equality and self-determination, the Campaign for BDS at Ohio State welcomes constructive feedback of its work on campus and in the Columbus community. However, when grossly misleading and inaccurate accusations are levied against our nonviolent, grassroots campaign, we feel compelled to set the record straight. The Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions movement is a global citizens’ response to the call made in 2005 by Palestinian civil society to pressure Israel into complying with its human rights obligations under international law. The BDS movement supports a targeted campaign of academic and cultural boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel until it ends the occupation and respects Palestinian human rights. Arguing that BDS is “divisive,” opponents of BDS, such as Mr. Frankel, who wrote a letter to the editor last week, call for the continuation of the so-called “peace process” and point to dialogue as a means to resolve the current IsraeliPalestinian impasse (as though Palestinians and Israelis are equally powerful and equally culpable in the ongoing conflict). However, as the near-collapse of the latest round of peace talks demonstrates, decades of negotiations have failed to achieve a just resolution to the conflict and have only further entrenched the status quo — and Israel’s privileged position within it. Mr. Frankel’s arguments, though commonly repeated elsewhere, fundamentally mischaracterize the intent of the BDS movement and its campus components. BDS is not about “delegitimizing” Israel, but putting pressure on Israel to recognize and guarantee equal rights under law for all of its residents. Nor does BDS claim to be a panacea to the
problems of the Middle East — rather, it aims to pressure academic institutions, governments, and corporations to critically examine and ultimately end their complicity in the repression of Palestinian human rights. Perhaps the most outrageous argument against BDS, however, is that it should not be attempted because it would be “impractical.” Listing the millions of dollars that OSU has invested in corporations complicit in the Israeli occupation, Frankel says that BDS supporters would have to “delete their personal Facebook pages” in order to adhere to the spirit of BDS. For the record, the BDS campaign has no interest in regulating what companies individual students support, but rather, seeks to end our institutional investments in such companies. However, the ubiquity of such university investments as highlighted by Frankel is perhaps the greatest argument in favor of divestment. Frankel demonstrates well just how complicit OSU’s investments are in the occupation of Palestine. Moreover, according to the logic of what is and is not “practical,” OSU should not have divested from apartheid South Africa because it would have been too cumbersome. Although it was late to join the bandwagon and divest from South Africa (OSU didn’t divest until 1985), OSU’s eventual decision to divest not only revealed the folly of refusing to adhere to ethical standards of investment, but also the moral power and inevitable success of BDS tactics. We in the Campaign for BDS at OSU recognize that many students have strong opinions on this issue, and welcome vigorous debate. To continue the discussion, we invite the campus community to join us for a discussion with Ali Abunimah, an internationally-acclaimed author and journalist on Palestinian issues, on April 16 at 6 p.m. in Cartoon Room 2 of the Ohio Union.
Brian Yeh Director of Publicity, The Campaign for BDS at Ohio State Fourth-year in economics contact@bdsohiostate.org
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Across 1 Steady look 5 Uneducated guess 9 Knife and fork separator, in a place setting 14 Black cat, to some 15 Like a guru 16 Long-eared hoppers 17 Hand Vac maker 19 Haloed messenger 20 Nocturnal annoyance 21 Once in a while 23 Until now 25 Road groove 26 Bermuda hrs. 29 Special “Jeopardy!” square 36 Stir-fried hodgepodge 38 Ad-lib comedy style 39 Hailed vehicle 40 Cavity filler’s letters, or, said another way, a hint to 17-, 29-, 49and 65-Across 42 Comedian Cook 43 “The Real Slim Shady” rapper 46 Big name in gloves 49 A&E reality series featuring the Robertson family 51 Arid 52 Past-tense verb that sounds like a number 53 EMT technique
55 Squirrel’s discard 60 Continental bank notes 64 Hauled to the hoosegow 65 Computer component 67 Speak one’s mind 68 Good earth 69 Peak 70 Moisten, as a lawn 71 Tolkien tree creatures 72 Ash Wednesday-to-Easter time Down 1 Zeus and Apollo 2 Idi of Uganda 3 None 4 Way in 5 Nor. neighbor 6 DVR pioneer 7 “Not a chance!” 8 Steeple section with a ringer 9 “The __ of the Opera” 10 Touch down 11 Jason’s ship 12 New driver, often 13 Immigrant’s subj. 18 Closing documents 22 German automaker 24 Cross-shaped Greek letter 26 Played a part (in) 27 SeaWorld orca 28 Poisonous, as waste
30 Mil. roadside hazard 31 Winona’s “Beetlejuice” role 32 Prom hairstyle 33 Mark with an iron 34 Introvert 35 “__ Breath You Take”: Police hit 37 Internal color of a medium steak 41 Puncture sound 44 1970s Mary Tyler Moore costar 45 Folk story 47 Non-prescription: Abbr. 48 Used a keyboard 50 Tattoo tool 54 Not urban 55 California wine valley 56 Textbook chapter 57 Fork prong 58 Big cat 59 Test for a future atty. 61 Like a red tomato 62 Cookie cooker 63 Modern message between trysters, perhaps 64 Spreadsheet feature 66 Metric distances: Abbr.
Monday April 14, 2014
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Monday April 14, 2014
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thelantern www.thelantern.com
Band to bring breath of fresh Aer to C-Bus
Miley comes in like a wrecking ball Pop singer Miley Cyrus performs on top of a car at the Schottenstein Center April 13 as a stop on her Bangerz tour.
SHELBY LUM / Photo editor
Courtesy of Samara Shwidock
OPINION
OSU fashion show expresses seasons in ‘kaleidoscope of dazzling shades’
AMANDA ETCHISON / Lantern reporter
Students in the OSU Fashion Production Association presented their original designs at the 2014 ‘Incrementa: Seasons of the Self’ fashion show at the Ohio Union April 12.
AMANDA ETCHISON Lantern reporter etchison.4@osu.edu
Entering the Archie M. Griffin Grand Ballroom at the Ohio Union and taking a seat at the end of a large x-shaped runway, the crowd around me buzzed with anticipation, eager to see the designs of Ohio State students come to life. Settling down and preparing my camera and notebook, I looked around the room and almost did a double take. On Saturday evening, the ballroom had been transformed by the Ohio State Fashion Production Association from a spacious room hosting university orientation sessions into a scene indicative of the glamour and opulence of New York Fashion Week. Even the crowd was dressed to impress. Across the room, members of FPA, a flurry of intricate dresses and sparkling accessories, filed into their seating section, and I watched as a man sporting a bejeweled captain’s hat took a seat a few rows behind me. The runway stretched out in front of me, lit by an ever-changing kaleidoscope of dazzling shades. A few minutes past 8 p.m., the lights dimmed and the show began. FPA’s 2014 show, titled “Incrementa: Seasons of the Self,” began with a short preview video, projected on four large screens set up around the room. The fashion film was a compilation of “behind the scenes” footage of models and images associated with nature and the four seasons. The video ended to applause from the audience, and the two emcees entered the runway to introduce the first collection. “Incrementa: Seasons of the Self” is a theme representative of the passage of time through the changing of the seasons. Members of FPA were challenged to incorporate their view of the four seasons into their designs to create a commentary on body image and confidence. The show was divided into five collections. “Auró” (autumn), “Lumi” (winter), “Primavera” (spring), “Ardente” (summer) and “Nova.” Each collection featured approximately 10 models wearing an original student-produced garment, although some collections such as “Primavera” and “Nova” featured more designs. I was in awe of the finesse and clean execution of concepts showcased in each collection. While the garments grouped together all shared aspects such as general
Rap, reggae and indie rock band Aer is set to perform at A&R Music Bar April 15 with doors set to open at 7:30 p.m.
MADELINE POEDTKE Lantern reporter poedtke.2@osu.edu At just 20 years old, musicians Carter Schultz and David von Mering have been busy touring nationwide in hopes of growing its “Fresh Aer Movement.” The duo is set to bring a blend of rap, reggae and indie rock to Columbus’ A&R Music Bar Tuesday evening. Doors are set to open at 7:30 p.m. While attending high school together in Wayland, Mass., Schultz said he and von Mering united as members of a freestyle rap league. “That’s where we honed our skills and tried to be the next best emcee(s), but then David and I took a turn,” Schultz said. “We joined a rock band and after that rock band dispersed, David and I reunited our rap skills and threw down.” Dubbing themselves Aer, Schultz and von Mering said they officially began making music together in 2010 and released a mixtape on social media. “We were screwing around, making (music) in a basement. We put it on Facebook, threw it up, we made a Twitter account and just started tweeting and, slowly but surely, it became something,” Schultz said. The duo released another mixtape and the debut EP “What You Need” over the course of 2011. Aer’s first fulllength album “The Bright Side” earned the No. 1 on iTunes’ top albums chart upon its July 2012 release, according to Aer’s Facebook biography. The creative process is different for each of them,
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von Mering said, but most of the final decision-making is completed together. “I make the instrumentals and the lyrics and the vocals are each our own. A line here and there will be a group effort but the words we sing ourselves, on the album, usually we write separately,” von Mering said. “But the picking and choosing of the songs that we do is a complete group effort.” Aer is currently touring in support of its sophomore selftitled album, which was released in January. Schultz said the album is different from previous projects. “You don’t ever want to be pigeonholed by one thing (genre) to provide because if you’re always bringing happy reggae songs every time, you get predictable and that’s not what we’re going for,” Schultz said. Since Aer is not signed to a record label, von Mering said he attributes the success to fans who share Aer’s music with their friends. “Word of mouth is basically what got us here because we’re still independent,” von Mering said. Nathan Smith, a third-year in mechanical engineering, said he has not seen Aer live before but he is excited to attend Tuesday’s concert with his friends. “A lot of their music is laid back, but I’ve heard that the live shows are pretty crazy, so I’m ready to see what they’re all about,” Smith said. Tickets for Tuesday’s show cost $15 in advance and $17 day of the show. A&R Music Bar in located at 391 Neil Ave.
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OPINION
Instagram shutdown shows users life without a filter SHELBY LUM Photo editor lum.13@osu.edu “Zooming In” is a weekly series in which Photo editor Shelby Lum provides her insight on pop culture. Hold tight Insta-verse. Those selfies had to wait for a little
AMANDA ETCHISON / Lantern reporter
Students in the OSU Fashion Production Association presented their original designs at the 2014 ‘Incrementa: Seasons of the Self’ fashion show at the Ohio Union April 12. color scheme and similar materials to link them to the assigned season, each garment invoked a different persona. My favorite collections were “Lumi” and “Nova.” “Lumi,” the Finnish word for “snow” incorporated lush furs and fuzzy knits into a small, albeit cozy, collection. The diversity of the designs in “Lumi” was the most impressive to me, as almost every garment appeared on the runway obscured by an overcoat or vest, only to be unveiled at the end of the model’s walk. This choreography added an element of surprise to each design and kept the audience looking for little pops of detail hidden beneath the heavier winter fabrics. The last collection, “Nova,” represented a more abstract concept compared to the rest of the show. Described in terms of its cosmic origin, the word “Nova” was chosen to represent the future of fashion. The designs presented in this segment of the show drew upon the experiences of the past to create something truly innovative and futuristic.
bit. Saturday the photo sharing app Instagram went down and suddenly the plethora of food photos (#nomnomnom), cats and seflies didn’t have a home. Instagram tweeted from @instagram (since they couldn’t Instagram a reason for the down time) that indeed the app wasn’t working but did not give a reason why. “We’re working to fix a feed delivery issue. Thank you for your patience,” the tweet read. Because of the app failure, users were forced toward another social media: Twitter. “With Instagram not working I’ve just been knocking on people’s doors to show
them my dinner and frankly the app leads to fewer arrests” and “Instagram is not working: Suddenly we see what people REALLY look like #nofilter,” users tweeted. Of course, with such a serious impending issue like not being able to creep on which friends went to what parties and when and where celebrities’ new fave dining spots are, solutions had to be found and blame had to be placed, and Coachella took the hit for this one, at least, according to the world of Twitter. All those music-loving hippies ruined it for the rest of the Instagram world, who were just trying to casually stalk friends via social media. Film reporter and critic Charles Thorp tweeted “Tragic News: @Instagram down, people at #Coachella forced to enjoy music.” As music festival Coachella marches onward in the desert, fans have likely been enjoying music through the lovely screen on their phone, because who needs the real-life experience when you can take pictures and slap on a few filters to become the envy of all your followers? So with photos of OutKast flooding Instagram feeds, supposedly that’s what shut down the app — all too many photos of André 3000, and probably a few too many “Oh my gosh look I’m at Coachella” selfies. Looks like your flowery crop top and retro cool sunglasses couldn’t be Instagrammed, only latergrammed. Mostly though, the Instagram downtime just brought amusement to a lot of users, poking jokes at the lack of “news” dumped into the world through photos. Considering the app was up and running again after about three hours, looks like Instagram found a way to counteract all those blasted Coachella Courtesy of MCT photos. Photo app Instagram went down April 12.
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5A
sports
Monday April 14, 2014
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OSU defense taking steps to get back to ‘Silver Bullets’
results Friday Men’s Tennis OSU 4, Tulsa 3 Women’s Tennis OSU 7, Indiana 0 Softball Purdue 1, OSU 0 Baseball Penn State 5, OSU 4 Men’s Volleyball Loyola 3, OSU 1
Saturday Football Gray Team 17, Scarlet Team 7 Men’s Lacrosse OSU 15, Michigan 6 Softball OSU 8, Purdue 0 Baseball OSU 7, Penn State 0
Sunday Men’s Tennis OSU 4, Purdue 3 Women’s Tennis OSU 5, Purdue 2
Kane Anderson Lantern reporter anderson.1995@osu.edu With big-time players like senior quarterback Braxton Miller, sophomore H-back Dontre Wilson and others sitting out the 2014 edition of Ohio State’s annual Spring Game, it was the defense that stole the show. The intrasquad scrimmage Saturday was one of the first chances the Buckeye coaching staff got to show off the revamped unit to the public, complete with two new coaches in defensive line coach and assistant head coach Larry Johnson and co-defensive coordinator and safeties coach Chris Ash, as the group looks to get back to a defense known as the “Silver Bullets.” “Silver Bullets” is the endearing nickname that has been given to the defense of the OSU football team. Looking at old tales and folklore, a silver bullet is known as the only weapon that can defeat monsters like witches and werewolves. The past two seasons, though, the Buckeyes’ silver bullet defense had a tough time stopping Hoosiers and Wolverines. While the offense has taken flight under coach Urban Meyer and offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Tom Herman, the defense has been left a little bit behind.
Shelby Lum / Photo editor
Members of the Gray defense swarm Scarlet H-back Curtis Samuel (4) during the 2014 Spring Game April 12 at Ohio Stadium. Gray won, 17-7. The defensive problems didn’t seem to be too big of an issue with the offense being able to score consistently, but they reared their ugly heads in the final three games of last season, though, as they gave up 41, 34 and 40 points to Michigan, Michigan State and Clemson, respectively. The latter two games resulted in losses and left OSU with much to work on heading into the offseason. The Spring Game provided fans with their first look at the 2014
kane anderson Lantern reporter anderson.1995@osu.edu
Baseball OSU 12, Penn State 6 Softball Purdue 5, OSU 4
upcoming Monday Fencing: Division I All Day @ Minneapolis, Minn.
Tuesday Baseball v. West Virginia 6 p.m. @ Morgantown, W. Va. Softball v. Wright State 6 p.m. @ Dayton, Ohio
Wednesday Baseball v. Ball State 6:35 p.m. @ Columbus
Friday Women’s Track: Jesse Owens Classic TBA @ Columbus Men’s Track: Jesse Owens Classic TBA @ Columbus Women’s Tennis v. Iowa 3 p.m. @ Iowa City, Iowa Men’s Tennis v. Iowa 6 p.m. @ Columbus Baseball v. Murray State 6:35 p.m. @ Columbus Softball v. Nebraska 7 p.m. @ Lincoln, Neb.
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continued as Bullets on 8A
OSU baseball takes 2 of 3 in weekend series against PSU
Women’s Lacrosse OSU 10, Penn State 9
Women’s Lacrosse v. Notre Dame 6 p.m. @ Columbus
edition of the Bullets and redshirtsophomore safety Tyvis Powell said it was the start of getting back to their namesake. “I knew we were going to lose a lot of key players after last season, but coming in now after going through spring practice, I’m confident we can go out there and compete at the highest level,” Powell said after the game, a 17-7 victory by the Gray team. “We have to get better and all, but now I feel like we’re on our way to being back
to the Silver Bullets that everybody watching thinks of.” The game saw both the Scarlet and Gray defensive lines dominate the opposing teams’ offensive lines throughout, putting pressure on anything and everything the offenses tried to do. The Scarlet defense scored the first points of the game when redshirt-senior defensive lineman Rashad Frazier had a strip sack of redshirt-freshman quarterback J.T. Barrett and recovered the ball in the end zone for a touchdown. The Scarlet team didn’t score an offensive touchdown for the rest of the game, while the Gray team finished with just two. It was a small sample size to work with, but Meyer said his squad showed a vast improvement from where they ended last season. “Defense, I hope the reaction was that they looked quicker, they look faster, they trigger on the ball much better than they have in the past,” Meyer said after the game. “If that’s your perception, that’s mine as well.” The final statistics saw neither team gain 300 yards, with the Gray team earning 262 and the Scarlet team only mustering 185. Redshirt-freshman Chris Worley led the Scarlet team with nine total tackles, including a game-high six solo stops, and redshirt-freshman
Lauren Weitz / Lantern photographer
Senior pitcher Greg Greve (32) throws the ball during a game against Penn State April 12 at Bill Davis Stadium. OSU won, 7-0.
The Ohio State baseball team (21-15, 4-8) got back on track with a weekend series victory at home against Penn State. The bats woke up in a big way for the final two games of the three-game series — both victories for OSU — and coach Greg Beals credited the lineup change and the wind for helping out the offense. “When the wind is blowing, it really helps the mentality of the hitters,” Beals said. “And we’ve been talking mentality and maybe it took the wind blowing to get them going a little bit and get that mentality at game time to attack.” Sunday’s game began with the Buckeyes jumping all over the Nittany Lions’ sophomore pitcher Nick Hedge. After scoring a run in the first on an RBI single from sophomore second baseman Troy Kuhn, redshirt-junior first baseman Josh Dezse led off the second with a deep home run to straightaway center to put the Buckeyes up two. Sophomore third baseman Jacob Bosiokovic followed with a single and junior catcher Connor Sabanosh brought him home with a stand-up triple to center. With no outs in the inning and Sabanosh on third, the Nittany Lion coaching staff had seen enough and pulled Hedge in favor of senior Ian Parvin before Hedge could allow any more damage.
The pitching change didn’t stop redshirtsophomore shortstop Nick Sergakis from scoring Sabanosh with a sacrifice fly to center. Dezse continued his onslaught on the Nittany Lion pitching staff with another bomb to center in the third to put the Buckeyes up by five. “I’ve always thought I’ve had a good swing. I just think that circumstances are starting to line up. Couple sliders, wind was blowing out and was just able to square a couple up,” Dezse said Sunday. “I’ve always known that I got a decent swing if I make contact. I’m just not really thinking too much. Just going up and see ball, hit ball.” The Nittany Lions began mounting a comeback and tied things up by scoring two runs in the fourth and three in the fifth. The Buckeyes took the lead right back in the bottom half of the fifth, though, on a bases-loaded ground ball from Bosiokovic. They broke it open again in the seventh with four runs, including RBIs from Sergakis and Dezse, giving them a total of five and seven, respectively, for the weekend. “It’s really been the same approach that I’ve had all year. It’s just falling in my favor lately,” Sergakis said. “Every at-bat I go up there and I try and fight the pitcher. I don’t want him to beat me on a pitch and I want to put my best swing on it.” The Nittany Lions got one run back in the eighth, but the Buckeyes got two more in the bottom half to end the scoring and give them the series-clinching 12-6 win.
continued as Baseball on 8A
Matta lands Virginia Tech freshman transfer Thompson eric seger Sports editor seger.25@osu.edu To say the Ohio State basketball team is going through an overhaul is a bit of an understatement. First, the Buckeyes saw the careers of two of the most decorated players in program history — a total of 119 wins — come to a close on a cold, windy day in Buffalo, N.Y., more than three weeks ago when senior guards Aaron Craft and Lenzelle Smith Jr. battled to a 60-59 loss Dayton in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Two days later, sophomore guard Amedeo Della Valle told coach Thad Matta of his intentions to leave Columbus and head back home to Europe to pursue a professional basketball career. Then only six days later, OSU got hit with another departure — this time its leading scorer — when junior forward LaQuinton Ross announced his intentions to follow in Della Valle’s footsteps and leave early to pursue a pro career. But with 40 points per game lost from the 2013-14 season, Matta didn’t flinch. In fact, he might even come out on top. Barely two weeks after adding Temple transfer and redshirt-junior
forward Anthony Lee to his roster, OSU’s basketball coach landed another big man, as Virginia Tech freshman Trevor Thompson committed to OSU Sunday, per a report by ESPN College Basketball Insider Jeff Goodman. “I love the academics, the fans, my new teammates and the coaching staff,” Thompson told ESPN. “It was the perfect fit.” Thompson also took to Twitter to announce his decision, one day after attending the OSU football Spring Game. “Well it’s official I’m a Ohio State Buckeye Show Me Love #BuckEyeNation !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” Thompson tweeted from his personal account, @TrevBallinTrey2, at 1:29 p.m. Sunday. Thompson, a 6-foot-11 center who will likely sit out the 2014-15 season per NCAA transfer rules unless he chooses to request a waiver from the NCAA because of his father’s medical condition, averaged 5.0 points and 4.7 rebounds per game this past season at Virginia Tech. An OSU spokesman did not immediately respond to The Lantern’s request for comment about the transfer Sunday. Attempts to contact Thompson directly also were unsuccessful. The addition of Thompson brings the scholarship count of the men’s basketball
Shelby LUm / Photo editor
Trevor Thompson (right) looks on with OSU men’s basketball coach Thad Matta during the 2014 Spring Game April 12 at Ohio Stadium. Thompson announced his decision to transfer to OSU April 13. program to 12, one below the NCAA allotted 13. If Thompson does sit out the 2014-15 season, he is set to be one of two centers on OSU’s roster in 2015-16, as junior centers Trey McDonald and Amir Williams are scheduled to enter their final season of eligibility next year. The other center who is set to be on roster with Thompson is David Bell, who is a member of Matta’s 2014 recruiting class. That class also includes guard D’Angelo Russell and forwards Jae’Sean Tate and Keita Bates-Diop.
Other members slated to be a part of next year’s squad that saw action in 2013-14 aside from Williams and McDonald — who combined averaged 9.8 points and 7.5 rebounds per game this past season — include junior forward Sam Thompson, junior guard Shannon Scott and freshman fowrward Marc Loving. Freshman Kam Williams figures to be in the mix as well after sitting out last season as he battled back from illness.
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PART TIME marketing job with CertaPro painters. Earn $15 per hour or $10 a lead, whichever is greater, by canvassing in neighborhoods around Columbus. Immediate openings. No sale required. Flexible work schedule. Must have good communication skills and transportation. Bring a friend and earn a $50 bonus. Contact dgoodman@certapro.com Some gas reimbursement.
AVAILABLE NOW 14th Ave. student group house. Kitchen, laundry, parking, average $320/ mo. Paid utilities, 296-8353 or PART- TIME CLERICAL customer service position 3 BEDROOM Double available - 299-4521. working in an office setting Available Now! - $1600 GRAD HOUSE Room for rent. doing clerical work along with RENTING FOR FALL Neil & Eighth Avail. Now. Across phone calls. Call Myers Real Estate Afternoon thru early eveStreet from Campus. Furnished 614-486-2933 or visit rooms, clean, quiet and secure. ning hours. 3-4 days a week. www.myersrealty.com Utilities included. Call 885-3588. Comfortable doing data entry, 3 BEDROOM Double available - MEDICAL COLLEGE across filing, printing, sorting mail. Comfortable making Available Now! - $1000 the street, 1 house from cam- outbound phone calls to set Leasing throough May 31st pus. Furnished rooming house appointments. Call Myers Real Estate for scholars only. Contact: ColumbusRes@ 614-486-2933 or visit Present tenants= 2 Med stu- certapro.com www.myersrealty.com dents, 2 PhD Engineers and a Law student. Extremely quiet 96 WEST PATTERSON #2 1 bedroom with hardwood and safe, as is the neighbor- PERFECT JOB! floors. Freshly painted. Kitchen hood. $450/month 1 year lease FT summer, PT flex sched. durwith range and refridgerator. minimum. 614-805-4448 or ing school yr. Kitchen cabinet and countertop installer. Basement. Parking. near Neil comp4861@yahoo.com NO exper. required. Reliable Avenue. Water included. $730. ROOM FOR Rent. Ideal for car. kwikkitchens1@gmail.com 614-486-7779 Med. Students on Hospital or 614-348-8088. Hrly wage. Rotations. Part of House with FALL RENTAL PT/FT KITCHEN help wanted Plenty of Space. Renter will North Campus 10-40 hours/week. Must be have own Bathroom. No Long 53 West Maynard Ave available Saturdays. No experiTerm Lease. House located in 3 Bedrooms ence necessary. Apply in person Reynoldsburg. Email phertyCentral Air at 693 North High Street. gerty@gmail.com if interested. Off Street Parking $1,100.00 monthly rent SIGN SPINNERS Call 614-851-2200. $10-$12/hour UNFURNISHED Training provided 3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE SUBLEASE. P/T work based on school 69 E. 14TH Ave. 3 BEDROOMS: 120 West Lane Avenue town- schedule Available Fall 2014. house available for sublease Large rooms, newer furnaces 2 dates: May - July 2014 and Apply online and air conditioning, Dec. 2014 - July 2015. 2-story www.SpinCols.com updated baths, kitchens, with Living room, Dining room, appliances, dishwashers Kitchen, 1 Bedroom, 1 BathOff street parking, room, Loft, AC, Basement with Security system available Laundry & extra room, off street $1,200 / month. parking, garden, very nice! Call (740) 363-2158 or text Nick at 330-774-5173 GET HIREDTODAY! spirealestateservices@gmail. for more information. com MOVERS/DRIVERS Needed – ASAP - ALL shifts!
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Sunrise Properties, Inc. 614-975-9004 • 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms • 2 Full Baths In 2 & 3 Bed2 BEDROOM available 4/1 and rooms 6/1! • Intercom Ctrl Lobby Internet Included • Garage Available $650- No Application Fee! • Elevator Call Myers Real Estate • Window Treatments INCL 614-486-2933 or visit $1500+/MO - starting at $375 pp. www.myersrealty.com FROM $475.00 331 E. 18th, 335 E. 12th, 1514 2 BEDROOM town home, 1.5 Hamlet, 84 E. 9th, 50 Euclid, baths, central air, gas heat, 1550 Hunter, 350 E. 12th, and 80 BROADMEADOWS basement with W/D hookup. Off- more. Available for fall, newly-reTOWNHOMES 2 & 4 BDRM Townhomes street parking, enclosed back modeled, hardwood floors, large patio. $685/month, quiet neigh- bedrooms, low utilities, d/w, w/d FROM $505.00 borhood. 15 minutes to OSU. hookup, off-street parking, a/c, Ideal for OSU law students. no www.hometeamproperties.net 885-9840 pets. or 291-2600. AVAILABLE FALL. 1 or 2, bed- 614-519-2044. $1700 / 4br - OSU North Camrooms on Woodruff, North Campus or 15th. Parking. 296-8353. 2 BEDROOM Townhouse avail- pus- Large 1/2 Dbl. (W. Patterable NOW! son) EFFICIENCY AVAILABLE Internet included - Updated Great 4 bedroom, easily handles NOW!Kitchen 5 students. Central A/C, Hi-eff. $495 - No Application Fee! $695- No Application Fee! furnace, 1 1/2 Bath, Off-street Call Myers Real Estate Short-term lease only parking, w/laundry, large front 614-486-2933 or visit Call Myers Real Estate porch and brick paver patio. www.myersrealty.com 614-486-2933 or visit Shown by appointment. No www.myersrealty.com pets. One year lease. Available GARAGES AVAILABLE for rent August (614) 457-7233 on NE and SW Campus, only 2 BR for Rent. Available now $50/month. until July 30 Call/email for details at 2094 Indiana Ave and 102 W. 2211 NEIL Ave at Lane, across from Tommy’s pizza. 614-263-2665, gasproperties@ 8th Ave House with much, including aol.com. Call- 614-263-2665 washer/dryer, best prices, call www.gasproperties.com HORSEFARM’S 4 bedroom 237-8540 house and huge yard. 28 min- 2103 IUKA Ave. 2BR unfurutes from OSU. $1200/mo. nished, kitchen, stove, refrigera- 312 E. 16th. 4 bedroom house, Garden, hunting, lake, and ca- tor, carpet, air. $630/mo. $630 OS parking, Central air, new furnoeing near by. 614-805-4448 deposit. Laundry available, nace, 2 newly remodeled baths, rom5436smith@yahoo.com off-street parking. No pets. Avail- $1400/mo. 614-885-1855, able Fall. Call 614-306-0053 or 614-578-6920, 614-578-6720 OSU AVAIL. NOW 614-999-8053 Call Rod or George. 750 357 E. 14th Ave. Fall Rental. 2 E. TOMPKINS Ave. 4 bedroom RIVERVIEW DR. bedroom, large kitchen w/eat- house. 2 bath. Large insulated SPECIAL $100 DEPOSIT ing area, large bath, living room, attic. Newly renovated. New 1-2 BR apts. stove, refrig., Gas stove/refridgerator, AC, laundry baths, kitchen. High efficiency heat, laundry facility available, $575/month, gas furnace. Central Air. RefinCarpet and air cond. available $575 deposit. Tenants pay gas ished Hardwood Floors. New NO PETS PLEASE and electric.Water surcharge. Area Rugs. New dbl pane winFrom $410 NO PETS. dows. W/D Hookups. Off-Street 268-7232 Call 614-306-0053, parking. Available Immedi614-999-8053 ately. $1800/mo + utilities. Day: 221-6327 Evening: 261-0853 OSU-HALFDOUBLE and 2 AVAILABE NOW bedroom apartments. Appli- 2 bedroom near Lane and Neil ances, a/c, various locations. $700 a month 614-457-1749 or 614-327-4120 Phone Steve 614-208-3111 OSU/GRANDVIEW KING ave email shand50@aol.com 1 & 2 bdrm garden apts. AC, MODERN, SPACIOUS 2 B/R Gas heat, and hot water. Laun- apts, located at 395 E. 13th Ave, dry facilities. Off-street partking AC, New Carpeting, Remodeled $1800+/MO - starting at $360 pp. Large 5-12 bedrooms, 119 294-0083 Bathroom and Kitchen. Rent is E. 13th, 52 Euclid, 79 E. 7th, 80 $660/mo. Call 718-0790 Euclid, 90 E. 12th, 115 E. WoodOSU NORTHWEST- 2 Bed- ruff, 186 Northwood, 1957 Indiroom. Complete Remodel. Hard- anola, 405 E. 15th, 38 E. 17th, wood floors. Gas heat. A/C. New 185 E. Lane, 222 E. 11th, 333 windows. Balcony. Ldy on site. East 12th, 88 W. Northwood, O.S. Parking. Available Now and 2312 N. High, 1668 N. 4th, and more. Newly-remodeled, great $600+/MO - Affordable 1 bed- Fall. 614-571-5109. Jolene@ locations, spacious living areas, rom units available for fall. 71 E. molitoris.us many with 3+ bathrooms, hard5th, 556 Drexel, 77 E. 7th, 1181 wood floors, A/C, lower utilities, Say Ave. Newly-remodled, great newer kitchens with DW, W/D locations, spacious living areas, hook-up, off-street parking, hardwood floors, low utilities, www.hometeamproperties.net DW, W/D, A/C, off-street parkor 291-2600. ing, www.hometeamproperties. $1000+/MO - starting at $275 $2000+/MO - starting at $400 net or 291-2600. pp. Spacious 3 bedrooms. 45 pp. Large 5-bedroom units 52 1 BDRM Apt. East 13th & N. 4th. Euclid,1394.5 Indianola, 1370 Euclid, 192 E. 11th, and 222 E. Water Included, A/C, disposal, Indianola, 45.5 Euclid, 1372 11th. Newly-remodeled, great Off Street Parking, Pets Nego- Indianola, 1394 Indianola, mul- locations, spacious living areas, tiable, $520/mo. Sunrise Proper- tiple units at 350 E. 12th: Uni- many with 3+ bathrooms, hardties, Inc. 614-975-9004 versity Commons. Available for wood floors, A/C, lower utilities, 1 BDRM Apts. 15th & N. 4th. fall, newly-remodeled, hardwood newer kitchens with DW, W/D GAS, ELECTRIC & WATER floors, safe and convenient, hook-up, off-street parking. ConINCLUDED in Rent! Off Street large bedrooms, low utilities, tact info@hometeamproperties. parking, Pets Negotiable. Sun- DW, W/D, off-street parking, net or 614-291-2600. rise Properties, Inc. $630/mo. A/C, www.hometeamproperties. 2403-2405 East Ave. Available net or 291-2600. 614-975-9004 For Fall. Call 614-263-2665.
WORTHINGTON TERRACE
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(PART TIME) Catholic organization seeks strong,dependable,honest individual for lawn care, moving heavy furniture, cleaning. Flexible schedule. Phone Father Anthony at 614-253-8980.
ATTENTION OSU Students! Need Fast Cash? Call ACT-I Staffing, We Pay Weekly! Openings for Office Assistant and Customer Service! Professional office looking for candidates now. Must have experience with Word and Excel and must be motivated! Find your dream job while finishing your degree! We have short term and long term openings. Call 614-841-2500 for the location nearest you. BECOME AN EGG DONOR (Asian egg Donors in high demand!) Help create families, compensation is generous. Seeking reliable, healthy, women age 21-30. Call today! (877) 492-7411 or visit www.westcoasteggdonation.com CLEANING SERVICE-Two Girls And A Mop is looking for cleaners to start immediately. We offer flexible hours and competitive salary. Employees get paid weekly. girlsandmop@yahoo. com COLUMBUS POOL MANAGEMENT is hiring Lifeguards, Lifeguard Instructors, Pool Managers, Service Technicians, and Supervisors for the summer. $8.25-$15.00/hour. To apply go to columbus-pmg.com or call 740-549-4622 for more information.
FULL TIME PART TIME SEASONAL Persons needed for retail sales in fishing tackle & bait store. must be able to handle live baits of all types. Applications accepted M-Th at R&R Bait & Tackle, 781 So. Front St, Columbus - 614-443-4954. HANDY MAN, good in Woodwork and other construction work. Decent hourly rate. Call 718-0790.
HOUSE CLEANING position. Must be detail oriented, and reliable. Must have car, license and car ins. $10-12/hr, gas reimbursement. Background check. Call Inga 614-327-1235 leave msg or email hhhclean.schedules@gmail. com
LIFEGUARDS - Tartan Fields Golf Club is seeking qualified applicants for LIFEGUARD positions (starting at $8.50/hr) contact: plausch@tartanfields.com
NEW BUT growing company looking for hard working individuals who exhibit extreme moral integrity and tremendous work ethic. Positions available for summer employment with the possibility of career opportunities. As a young company we offer tremendous growth potential, opportunities to learn from the best,a chance to travel and work on historically significant homes and structures. To apply go to our website: centennialpreservation.com No Experience Necessary PART TIME Call Center in the Short North $10 / Hour plus bonus. 614-495-1410.
MOVERS - Pack, move/handle customer’s furniture, load/ unload trucks. DRIVERS - Clean MVR/Valid DL REQUIRED. Non-CDL/Box Truck – experience, PREFERRED, but not required. Excellent customer service skills and ability to pass a b/g check and drug screen upon hire also required. We offer a FUN work environment, comprehensive benefits package (+ TUITION REIMBURSEMENT for students) and loads of growth potential! Come join a true LEADER in the moving industry – apply online at www.leadersmoving. com.
WAREHOUSE WARRIORS Get a head start on your summer job search! ACT-I Staffing is in need of reliable individuals for Warehouse openings all over Columbus. Great way to put some extra money in your pocket! We pay weekly! Call 614-841-2500 to schedule an appointment.
Help Wanted Child Care SUMMER NANNY needed in Grandview, Ohio for our boys ages 4 and 8. The ideal candidate wants to spend the summer swimming and biking. Must like dogs. Hours 7:30 to 5. Please send resume to Barbara at Edgewood885@yahoo.com.
UPPER ARLINGTON. Parttime summer care needed for 14 and 12 yo in our home WORK IN the Arena District! PT & FT Maintenance Posi- M-F 11-4. $10/hr. Must have reliable vehicle tions Available and transport to and from $10.00 - $12.00 per hour local activities. NS. Exper -Flexible hours & references reqd. -Advancement opportunities Email resume & -Team atmosphere To apply call 614-610-4042 or references to visit SPPLUS.com and click on summercc1200@yahoo.com. the career link* WESTERVILLE AREA fam*Under the Standard Job appli- ily looking for summer childcare cant site, search for Columbus starting the end of May through and/or Maintenance Porter. mid-August. 4-5 days a week with two children ages 11 and 14. Pool and Columbus Zoo passes included for activities. Please email Chad at chattjd@ gmail.com.
Help Wanted Child Care
BABYSITTER FOR summer vacation for Dublin Family with 12/F and 10/M/M twins. From 9 am to 6 pm. Should have reliable car. Please call 703-217-6938 or kshaila@hotmail.com CHILDREN AND Adults with Disabilities In Need of Help Care Providers and ABA Therapists are wanted to work with children/ young adults with disabilities in a family home setting or supported living setting. Extensive training is provided. This job is meaningful, allows you to learn intensively and can accommodate your class schedule. Those in all related fields, with ABA interest, or who have a heart for these missions please apply. Competitive wages and benefits. For more information, call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614) 475-5305 or visit us at www. LIFE-INC.NET
Help Wanted Medical/Dental EASTON PSYCHOLOGIST office is seeking a PT customer service coordinator to work 4-8PM Monday-Thursday and 2-6PM on Friday. Experience preferred but not required. Great opportunity for college student. This is a permanent position. Do not apply if looking for summer employment only. Fax resume to Aleisa at 614-475-9821 or email ashort@matrixpsych.com
MULCHING OR Mowing Crew Member in Powell. $9-$11 . Email resume to info@ MoreTimeForYou.com or call 614.760.0911.
SMALL LANDSCAPE firm looking for reliable/hard-working individuals for seasonal FT/PT landscape maintenance. M-F. transportation necessary. Good driving record and exp. a plus, but not necessary. Start Immediately. Start Pay $11/hr w/ raise potential. Email resume to etsusan@aol.com or call 614-581-5991.
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
Ohio State has 50,000+ students that you can reach. Call (614)292-2031 for more information.
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
Stellar resumes open doors. Let me help you!! OSU references. Proofreading services also available. Call & Text 469-759-9850.
Typing Services
Tutoring Services
Help Wanted Tutors
Tutoring Editorial Services
614 - 440 - 7416. SPELLING TUTOR. HANDWRITING COACH. PUNCTUATION ADVICE. CAPITALIZATION. Preferred Qualifications: RUN-ON SENTENCES. Bachelor’s degree Prior tutoring or instructional ex- Pricing negotiable. Cash only. perience Familiarity with all areas of the PROFESSIONAL WRITER ACT (English, Math, Reading, 48 years. Edit, rewrite, proofScience and Writing) read, index, type. Papers, mss., dissertations. Connie Candidates who are specialists 614-866-0725. in advanced mathematics, science, English, and essay writing are especially encouraged to apply.
Business Opportunities
Email resumes to hiring.bwseducationconsulting@gmail.com. Hiring decisions will be made in STAGGERING STUDENT loan BRENEN’S CAFE at the Bio- May and training will be in early debt for the next 10 years? Or medical Research Tower is graduating debt-free? Duh, June. hiring now for May Term and which would you choose? Summer. http://www.Eva33.com Apply in person at 460 W 12th 310-221-0210 Ave.
Help Help Wanted Education Tutors
Now Hiring for Servers, Hosts, & Bartenders.
LOOKING FOR responsible and fun child care giver for this summer for our 12 and 9 yo children in Dublin. kerryrazor@yahoo. com
LINKEDIN PROFILES, Resumes, Cover Letters With Sizzling Formatting & Descriptive Verbiage.
614 - 440 - 7416. EMERGENCY OVERNIGHT!!! TYPING BY MORNING!!! LAST MINUTE!!! Pricing negotiable. LABORATORY INTERNSHIP Cash only. available immediately. Please visit our website at http://www.toxassociates.com and click on the link of job postings/internships for more information. 614 - 440 - 7416. SPELLING TUTOR. HANDWRITING COACH. PUNCTUATION ADVICE. CAPITALIZATION. RUN-ON SENTENCES. Pricing negotiable. LIKE WORKING with kids and Cash only. want to be a part of a well-respected, Columbus-based SPANISH NATIVE from Central tutoring company? BWS Edu- America. Offering Spanish cation Consulting is looking for Tutoring services at any part-time ACT/SAT test prepara- level. Please contact Mario tion and academic tutors. Exten- 513-444-3606 or marioaruano@ sive training included. Schedule hotmail.com. is flexible. Typically 10 to 20 hours a week. Compensation is $20-25 an hour depending on experience.
SPAGHETTI WAREHOUSE
SUMMER POSITIONS AVAIL- Do you have the following exABLE LIFEGUARDS AND perience and qualifications? CAMP COUNSELORS * Prior experience in the field of childcare (at least 2 references Camp JB Mac is located north outside of your own family). of Cincinnati since 1990. Camp * Driver’s License & reliable perJB Mac has been in operation sonal vehicle (this is due to the M-F from June- August. We care varying location of client homes). for children aged 6-12 years. All * At least 18 years of age. trainings provided by Camp JB * Non-Students are eliMac (except lifeguard). Excel- gible for this position. lent pay and awesome end of summer bonus! Applications If you believe you would make are available online at www. a fantastic asset to our thriving campjbmac.com or call Lucy at team, then stop by our table 513-772-5888. on Monday and Tuesday April TELEPHONE INTERVIEW- 14-15th outside on the NorthERS wanted immediately to west Oval near the library beconduct interviews for research tween 11-1pm. Or email myeafirm. No experience necessary. ger@collegetutors.com for more Great part-time job for students. information. Evening and daytime shifts CURRENTLY SEEKING eneravailable. Apply in person at: getic, nurturing, patient, creative, Strategic Research Group, 995 passionate individuals whose Goodale Blvd., 2nd floor. love of children and learning TELEPHONE SALES. Flexible makes them prime candidates to hrs. Downtown. 614-458-1875. be a Primrose teacher. Part time and full time positions available. Call 8:30 to 3. -Must meet all requirements stipulated by State of Ohio and THE JOHNSON Family’s Dia- Primrose. -Previous experience in a qualmond Cellar ity preschool/care center is preferred. Do you enjoy a fast paced -Degree related to early childluxurious work environment? hood, elementary education is We are looking for bright desired. energetic individuals for a -Working with co-teacher to plan position in: Part Time evening and weekend and implement the daily lessons and activities. Receptionist -Contact Katelyn Rine: 614-888-5800 Closed Sundays Applications are being accepted krine@primroseworthington. for: com Part Time Receptionist Part time at our Easton Town Center location FULL-TIME SUMMER NANNY Please contact: POSITION Nanny needed full-time (M-F; Jodelle Tremain Jodelle.tremain@diamondcel- 9-5)for an 11 year-old boy and a 8 year-old girl in our Westerville lar.com home from June 2- August 12. Must be at least 21 years-of-age The Diamond Cellar with previous childcare experi3960 New Bond Street ence and a clean driving reColumbus, Ohio 43219 cord. Must like summer outdoor 614-923-6633 activities, including swimming. Because of the nature of our Please send an email containing merchandise, our screening a resume to: Jill.Fortney@gmail. process involves *complete background checks com *written testing *drug testing Equal Opportunity Employer IN HOME ABA Therapist needed for energetic, fun-loving 6 y/o boy w/ Autism. $10/hr to start. Pd Training 614-348-1615.
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MALE CAREGIVER Dublin professional to hire PT. Short AM hours. No experience necesRequirements: sary, training provided. Reliable transportation 614-296-4207. Clean background check Access to email
ADRIATICO’S PIZZA is looking for qualified applicants to fill part-time server shifts immediCollege Nannies + Tutors is look- ately. Apply in person at 265 W ing for nannies that would like to 11th Ave. Experience a plus but work part-time after school for not required. 2014-15. Do you have the following experience and qualifications? * Prior experience in the field of childcare (at least 2 references outside of your own family). * Driver’s License & reliable personal vehicle (this is due to the varying location of client homes). * At least 18 years of age. * Non-Students are eligible for this position.
Help Wanted Landscape/ Lawn Care
MOZART’S CAFE - Looking for part- time/full-time reliable counter help, server help, kitchen help, pastry chef. 4784 N. High HIRING TEACHERS to work FT/PT with all ages, no nights, If you believe you would make Street. Email resume to weekends or Holidays. Must be a fantastic asset to our thriving info@mozartscafe.com 18, have H.S diploma or GED, team, then stop by our table reliable transportation, good on Monday and Tuesday April communication skills and atten14-15th outside on the Northdance. Apply west Oval near the library beEEO/DFSP Employer Arlington Childrens Center, tween 11-1pm. Or email myea1033 Old Henderson Road, Cols ger@collegetutors.com for more 43220. 614-451-5400. information. Are you looking to work next STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid fall? Are you creative, proSurvey Takers needed in Colum- fessional and fun? Then we bus. 100% free to join. Click on may be the right fit for you! surveys. Great Benefits & SUMMER CAMP JOBS across College Nannies + Tutors Flexible Schedules the midwest and USA. Exciting is looking for nannies that BUY/SELL USED Bikes and rewarding positions avail- would like to work part-time after school for 2014-15. 937-726-4583. able. www.campchannel.com
WE ARE looking for FT and PT Valet Attendants with outstanding customer service at our downtown hotel locations. Have fun parking nice cars and getting exercise while working with an upbeat team and earning great income! Hourly pay is $7.95 plus tips. Perfect job for students as we provide flexible schedules and shifts including nights/weekends. Please apply online at spplus.com under the career tab.
LOOKING FOR EMPLOYEES?
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For Sale Bicycles
Apply in person 397 West Broad
464-0143
TARTAN FIELDS GOLF CLUB
General Miscellaneous
614 - 440 - 7416. TYPING. MANUSCRIPTS. BOOKS. LEGAL DOCUMENTS. DISSERTATIONS. THESES. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.
DO YOU NEED MONEY? Yes? Free Gift Cards! Rush $5 For Info & Postage: Murphy, Inc, 5247 Wilson Mill Rd, #426, Cleveland, OH 44143
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PART TIME SERVERS Please submit all applications at www.columbiahospitality.com
SCIENCE FICTION: After a global catastrophe, how will we rebuild our world? What vision will we follow? And who will corTartan Fields Golf Club is a rupt it? WILDERNESS is a novel premier, full service golf club, by Alan Kovski. Available via exceeding the expectations of Amazon.com our Members. Providing a first class, private club experience for Members, and their families SCIENCE FICTION: Life will and guests, by developing rela- change fast amid genetic engitionships, creating a sense of neering, climate engineering, camaraderie and instilling pride and economic upheavals. Will in our Members through the con- we cope? WONDERS AND sistent delivery of quality prod- TRAGEDIES is a novel by Alan ucts, programs and services. Kovski. Available via Amazon. âWhere World Class Golf Meets com Your World Class Familyâ. SCIENCE FICTION: What will COMPENSATION: DOE we become, years from now? Better or worse? Fools, victims, fortunate souls, survivors in dangerous times? REMEMBERING THE FUTURE: stories by Alan Kovski. Available via Amazon. com
Help Wanted Sales/Marketing
BUSINESS MUSIC Company pays $50 for every bar/restaurant you sign up. Easy. Email m.marquardt@thecloudcasting. com for more.
JOIN OUR Team as a Camp COSI Teacher!! Prepare and facilitate developmentally appropriate science summer camp programs for children, ages 5 through 14, in week-long and half-day sessions. Temporary position with training, planning, and meetings late-May; and programs running June to August 2014. Daytime hours Monday thru Friday, with occasional Saturdays, Sundays, travel and evening hours.
General Services
PRESCHOOL/DAYCARE LOOKING for infant teacher/ preschool teacher. Staff are responsible for the daily activities that keep our children active and engaged, enjoy working w/ children. Email littlebuckeyelearningcenter@gmail. com or call 614-580-5986
LANDSCAPE FOREMAN, Laborers, irrigation help. Landscape company in the Grandview area needs to fill several positions immediately. Must be dependable and have current driver’s license. Good starting rate. Call 614-486-2525.
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
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Announcements/ Notice 614 - 440 - 7416. TYPING. MANUSCRIPTS. BOOKS. LEGAL DOCUMENTS. DISSERTATIONS. THESES. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.
614 - 440 - 7416. WRAPPING GIFTS. SEWING BUTTONS. WRITING BIOGRAPHIES. COPIES. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.
UPPER ARLINGTON Area Chamber of Commerce hosts a HAULING - Customer load and city wide garage sale and local unload moving services. Across business market. Visit uachamthe street, town or the state. ber.org to sign-up! Very affordable. Contact us for a price quote today! Web- Real Estate Advertisements site: crispcourier.com or Email: - Equal Housing OpportuniCrisp.courier@aol.com ty The Federal Fair Hous-
Automotive Services
Stipend pay of $600 per camp TOM & Jerry’s - a Full Service week. Auto Repair Shop. 1701 Kenny Rd. 488-8507. Take $20 off any Visit www.COSI.org for full job purchase of $100 or more. Or descriptions and to apply. visit: www.tomandjerrysauto.com
Help Wanted Landscape/ Lawn Care
CASH IN A FLASH FOR VINYL CD’s DVD BLURAY 1155 N High St 421-1512 www.thunderpussy.com
Resumé Services 614 - 440 - 7416. WE WRITE RESUMES IN YOUR HOME OR OFFICE. WE BRING LAPTOP AND PRINTER. Pricing negotiable. Cash only.
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
ing 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 800-6699777.
Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service
Call 292-2031 to place your ad or do it online at thelantern.com - Terms of service available at thelantern.com/terms Monday April 14, 2014
7A
sports OSU men’s tennis earns hard-fought wins against Purdue, Tulsa KANE ANDERSON Lantern reporter anderson.1995@osu.edu The nation’s top-ranked men’s collegiate tennis team keeps on rolling. No. 1 Ohio State won two more matches over the weekend to push its record to 25-3 overall and perfect in Big Ten play, beating Tulsa Friday at home and Purdue Sunday at home, each by a score of 4-3. In doubles play against the Boilermakers (15-4, 7-2), the Buckeyes came out on fire. Senior Peter Kobelt and redshirt-freshman Ralf Steinbach of OSU crushed Purdue senior Szymon Tatarczyk and freshman Ricky Medinilla, 8-1, while redshirt-junior Kevin Metka and freshman Herkko Pollanen whipped senior Mark Kovacs and sophomore Mateus Silva, 8-2. The point the Buckeyes gained from the doubles victories proved vital as singles play was much more evenly split. Kobelt got the better of Tatarczyk again, winning 6-1, 6-1, and redshirt-junior Hunter Callahan prevailed against Silva 6-4, 6-0, to put the Buckeyes only one win away from capturing the match. The Boilermakers would not yield, though. Kovacs downed Buckeye redshirt-sophomore Chris Diaz 7-6 (7-4), 6-1, and junior Diego Acosta beat Steinbach 6-4, 7-6 (8-6), to pull Purdue within one. Pollanen quickly finished off the Boilermakers though, defeating Medinilla 6-3, 6-3, to get the Buckeyes one step closer to an outright conference title.
Bullets from 6A Tyquan Lewis paced the Gray squad with five tackles, including two sacks. Meyer is one to say that to have a great football team, you need a great defensive line. With all four starters coming back in the form of senior Michael Bennett, juniors Adolphus Washington and Noah Spence and sophomore Joey Bosa, he did not shy away from his expectations for them as a unit. “I’d be disappointed if we’re not one of the better defensive lines in America, with those four guys. They’ve had a good spring and their coach is really coaching them,� Meyer said. The coach he’s referring to is Johnson who took over for Mike Vrabel, who left for the Houston Texans of the NFL in January. Junior defensive lineman Tommy Schutt said the transition to Johnson wasn’t easy at first, but said he has made the unit stronger. “When coach Johnson first came in it was a difficult
BRIAN BASSETT / Lantern photographer
Redshirt-junior Hunter Callahan hits the ball during a match against Tulsa April 11 at the Varsity Tennis Center. OSU won, 4-3. Metka eventually fell to senior Aaron Dujovne to put the final score at 4-3 Buckeyes. Friday evening against the Golden Hurricane of Tulsa (12-12, 10-5), the Buckeyes had another tough match on their hands, but ultimately prevailed. OSU coach Ty Tucker said after the match he believes the wear and tear of the season might be getting to his team. “We’ve been struggling. We’re a little beat up,� Tucker said. “When you use the same six guys for 30 matches in a row, guys are bumped and bruised and there’s two or three guys at 75 percent. All you can hope is that they keep hearting it out.�
OSU was able to win the doubles point on the strength of the second and third teams. Metka and Pollanen were off first and took down sophomore Carlos Bautista and freshman Daniel Santos, 8-4. Kobelt and Steinbach fell to redshirt-senior Clifford Marsland and sophomore Dylan McCloskey, 8-6, to square things up. Callahan and Diaz took care of business, though, and beat senior Japie De Klerk and junior Alejandro Espejo, 8-5, to earn OSU the point. Since shuffling with the doubles lineup,
transition, but we’ve all bought in to what he is trying to teach us and we are playing well right now,� Schutt said. “I think the unit is going to be very successful.� Outside of the four linemen, Meyer said the other players who have earned starting spots are junior Joshua Perry at linebacker, senior Doran Grant at cornerback and Powell at safety. That leaves four more spots open for the Bullets and the competition is sure to be fierce and last all the way through fall camp. No matter who fills those roles, however, Powell said they are ready to change the storyline of the offense outplaying the defense. “See, back in the day it was about the defense,� Powell said. “So that’s what we’re trying to get the theme to go back to. Everybody (saying) ‘Let’s go to the game to see their defense.’� OSU is scheduled to open the season Aug. 30 against Navy at Baltimore’s M&T Bank Stadium, with kickoff set for noon.
Baseball from 6A
Move your job search to the fast lane.
Move your job search to the fast lane.
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Sophomore pitcher Jake Post earned the win and redshirt-senior reliever Tyler Giannonatti came on in the sixth to allow only the one run in the eighth before freshman Travis Lakins came in to close it out. Saturday’s tilt was all Buckeyes as senior pitcher Greg Greve threw a complete game shutout, allowing only four hits and walking just two. Despite his strong performance, Greve said it was just another game for him. “I try to approach the game the same each way. I want to go out there and give my team a chance to win,� Greve said afterward. “You try to do too much as an individual player, that’s when you start getting in trouble. Win as a team, lose as a team. Defense made some great plays for me and the offense really came alive, so that made my job easier.� Offensively, home runs by Dezse and Sergakis
Callahan and Diaz have shown strong chemistry on the court that could keep them together the rest of the season. “I think we feel pretty comfortable together,� Diaz said after the match about playing with Callahan. “We just try have fun out there. We played a little in the fall so that’s helped a lot.� Moving to singles, Kobelt got things started with a solid 6-1, 6-3 win against De Klerk and Steinbach cruised in straight sets against freshman Or Ram-Harel, 6-3, 6-0. Marsland defeated Pollanen 6-2, 6-3 to get the Golden Hurricane on the board. They also were up a set on Diaz and Metka to give them some life. But then Callahan came to the rescue for the Buckeyes. Staying on serve through the first eight games of his first set against Bautista, Callahan broke serve in the ninth and held his own serve to take the set. He broke Bautista’s serve early on in the second and kept his foot on the gas to clinch the match with a 6-4, 6-2, victory. After breaking serve, Callahan knew he had to execute to keep things in his and the Buckeyes’ advantage. “The pressure was on still. I looked on the scoreboard and we were down some sets,� Callahan said afterwards. “I had to win that game.� The Buckeyes are next scheduled to return to action at home against Iowa April 18. First serve is set for 6 p.m.
and three errors by the Nittany Lions gave the Buckeyes a much-needed 7-0 win. “This was very important for us after losing seven straight conference games,� Beals said. “We need to get back in good ways and Greve, our senior co-captain, grabbed the bull by the horns and shut them out today.� Friday night, the Nittany Lions took the lead early and pulled out a 5-4 win. The Buckeyes are next scheduled to play on the road against West Virginia in Morgantown, W. Va., Tuesday at 6 p.m.
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Ohio State University Buckeye Flowers are hand painted and assembled by artists with and without disabilities. Each flower is unique and made using recycled newspaper printing plates.
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