3.18.13

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Monday March 18, 2013 year: 133 No. 36

the student voice of

The Ohio State University

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Buckeyes advance

OSU men’s hockey team will advance to the CCHA tournament semifinals after winning against Ferris State on Sunday.

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CODY COUSINO / Multimedia editor

The OSU men’s basketball team celebrates after a 50-43 victory against Wisconsin to win the Big Ten tournament championship in Chicago, Ill. The Buckeyes are the No. 2 seed in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament.

Best of the B1G: OSU captures tourney title ANDREW HOLLERAN Photo editor holleran.9@osu.edu CHICAGO — Thad Matta said in October that this season’s Ohio State men’s basketball team would play its best basketball in March. There were some doubts regarding that statement throughout the year, but the coach’s prediction proved to be prophecy. OSU bested Wisconsin for the Big Ten tournament championship, 50-43, at the United Center in Chicago Sunday afternoon. The conference tournament title is the fourth in the program’s history. The snow pouring of confetti, the bevy of smiles, high-fives and the cutting down of the net comes

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Hot films on the horizon

Our columnist takes a look at which films will be worth a trip to the theater this summer.

campus

3 DUI arrests near campus

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weather

only weeks after Buckeye players were admittedly “embarrassed” by the Badgers in Madison, 71-49, on Feb. 17. That day in mid-February was the “low point of the season,” said junior guard Aaron Craft. The Buckeyes have turned their season around as well as anyone could have imagined since that miserable outing. OSU has won eight straight games and heads into the NCAA Tournament a No. 2 seed in the West Region with as much momentum as any team in the country. Standing on a makeshift trophy-presentation stage in front of thousands of scarlet and gray-clad fans at the United Center following the victory, Matta echoed a sentiment felt by many of his team’s supporters in attendance: pride. “I’ve never been prouder of a basketball team than I am of these guys,” Matta bellowed. “You

continued as Win on 2A

2 students die in spring break accident KAYLA BYLER Design editor byler.18@osu.edu Two Ohio State students died and two others were injured in a car crash while on spring break. OSU students Brittney Gallagher and Courtney Miller were near Ebro in the Florida Panhandle Saturday morning when their car collided with a pickup truck after drifting into oncoming traffic, according to a report from the Associated Press. Gallagher and Miller were both pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, according to the AP report. Two other passengers in the backseat of the car, Diana Mitchell and Lauren Kane were hospitalized in critical condition. According to the AP report, they are also OSU students. “We are absolutely devastated by the loss of our friends,” said Emily Zanin, a third-year in nursing,

in an email. Zanin lives in a house with Mitchell and Kane and was friends with Gallagher and Miller. “To say Courtney and Brittney will be missed is an understatement. They changed the lives of so many, and we feel honored to have known them. Our thoughts and prayers go out to their friends and family and for Lauren’s and Diana’s full recovery,” Zanin said. Alcohol was reportedly not involved in the crash, and Gallagher and Miller were both wearing a seat belt, the report said. OSU President E. Gordon Gee said from this Facebook account Sunday night that he was “so very saddened to learn of the tragic car accident in Florida this weekend. My thoughts and prayers are with the friends and loved ones of all those involved.” Kelly Porter, the driver of the pickup truck, and four of her passengers were hospitalized, according to the report. Porter was hospitalized in serious condition. Passengers Tyler Magar, Courtney Burnett and

Matthew Gallant were hospitalized with serious injuries and Braden Solis with minor injuries. Porter, Solis and Magar are students at Oklahoma State University. Gallant is a student at the University of Oklahoma, and Burnett is a student at Southeast Missouri State, according to the AP report. Eric Wheeler, a fourth-year in management information systems, said he was also driving back from spring break in Florida on Saturday. Wheeler and three friends left Panama City Beach, Fla., for Ohio at about 9:30 a.m. on Saturday. The drive took them about 12 hours, and they took turns driving, Wheeler said. They drove through some heavy traffic and passed an accident in Alabama. “I heard about the accident, that’s terrible,” Wheeler said, though he did not personally know the students involved. Representatives from the Florida Highway Patrol did not immediately return requests for comment.

Sigma Chi investigated, suspended at OSU LIZ YOUNG Asst. sports editor young.1693@osu.edu

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Ohio State’s Alpha Gamma Chapter of Sigma Chi fraternity was served an interim suspension, according to University Police reports. The chapter, served its suspension sentence on Feb. 26, is being investigated for multiple possible violations of the Student Code of Conduct. Both Student Conduct and the national organization of Sigma Chi are investigating the chapter. The executive director of Sigma Chi Fraternity, Mike Dunn, said the national organization is working with OSU to “find out what all the circumstances are,” and said there are local and national people from the fraternity on site to investigate. OSU Student Conduct looks at investigations on a case-by-case basis and does not have a defined set of repercussions should the investigation turn up Student Code of Conduct violations. “Each case is treated differently, and any sanctions would be based on the violations and the nature of the case,” said Student Life spokesman Dave Isaacs. The investigation will continue until Student Conduct reaches

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Buckeye fans, you are the only ones that kept believing.” Lots of people believe in this group now, with numerous analysts projecting OSU to make it back to the Final Four after reaching college basketball’s mecca in 2012. “Where we were, the situations we were in to where we are now is a great accomplishment,” Craft said, sitting in front of his locker at the United Center with the tournament trophy behind him. OSU was the last team standing in the country’s premier conference Sunday following a season of heavyweight slugfest after heavyweight slugfest. The Big Ten has seven teams in the NCAA Tournament, five of which are seeded a No. 5 or better.

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DANIEL CHI / Asst. Photo editor

Sigma Chi Alpha Gamma Chapter is on interim suspension according to an OSU Police report.

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campus 2 guilty in Steubenville rape case, grand jury to examine kristen mitchell Campus editor mitchell.935@osu.edu

Halie Williams / Asst. arts editor

A group petitioning for an additional arrest in the Steubenville rape case rallies outside the Ohio Attorney General’s office on March 4.

Win from 1A “It was a brutal season with all the bumps and grinds,” said sophomore forward Sam Thompson, who celebrated the team’s tournament victory by hugging his parents in the stands. “I think it’s prepared us well.” The bumps and grinds seem to have ended since that game against Wisconsin Feb. 17. The reason for the turnaround after the blowout at the Kohl Center? “We clicked at the right time,” Thomas said while sporting a Big Ten tournament champion T-shirt and hat in OSU’s locker room. “That’s what’s good about this team. We knew we had to sacrifice for it and we did that.” What sacrifices did the team make? “Staying together and staying in the (offense) and playing hard and playing with effort, that’s one thing we sacrificed after that game,” Thomas said. OSU looked like a cohesive unit throughout its time in Chicago. Craft, who dropped 20 points against Michigan State in the tournament semifinal Saturday and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, has proved he can be a potent scorer. Sophomore forward LaQuinton Ross and sophomore guard Shannon Scott have developed into valuable assets off the bench throughout the weekend. Thompson, a Chicago native, had 19 points in the team’s opening win against Nebraska Friday. OSU won its final two games of the tournament with Thomas, its go-to player and the Big Ten’s

The two teens charged in the rape of a 16-year-old girl in Steubenville, Ohio, last summer were found guilty Sunday, but Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine said charges could be brought against other people involved in the incident. Steubenville, a small town along the Ohio River, has gained national attention leading up to the trial involving two high school football players, 17-year-old Trent Mays and 16-year-old Ma’Lik Richmond. Mays was also found guilty of disseminating a nude photo of a minor. The teenagers were tried as juveniles, and evidence was presented over four days. Mays was sentenced to a minimum of two years in a juvenile correctional facility, and Richmond was sentenced to a minimum of one year. The teenagers have potential to be in detention until they are 21. The teenagers were accused of raping the intoxicated victim during a series of parties in August. The girl said during the trial that she had no memory of the alleged attacks.

leading scorer, shooting an enigmatic 12-38 from the field. “At the beginning of the season we didn’t know who the other scorer was, now we got everybody stepping up, making big plays,” Thomas said. Sunday’s game was, to an extent, a microcosm of the Buckeyes’ season, which started the year ranked No. 4 in the nation, fell out of the top 10 after the beatdown in Madison and now sit atop the nation’s best conference. OSU rode its momentum from Saturday’s 61-58 win against No. 3 seed Michigan State into the beginning of its bout with the Badgers. The Buckeyes stormed out to a 13-6 lead in the opening minutes. Wisconsin clawed back, though, as its outside shots started to fall. The Badgers used a 14-0 run — sparked by an outside jumper from sophomore guard Traevon Jackson and a 3-pointer apiece from senior forward Mike Bruesewitz and sophomore forward Frank Kaminsky — to take a 20-13 lead, forcing a timeout from Matta. The Badgers pushed their lead to 24-15 before Thomas propelled the Buckeyes back. The 6-foot-7 forward scored six points within the last three minutes of the first half – highlighted by a one-handed, no-jump tip-in before heading into halftime to cut Wisconsin’s lead to 24-23. “I was kind of excited when we got down by nine today because we had a bad run and we played ourselves through it. To get it to one (point deficit) at halftime was a great feat for us. A month ago, we couldn’t have done that,” Matta said.

While only the two teenagers were charged in connection to the case, that could change, DeWine said. A grand jury has been called and is scheduled to meet on April 15 to determine if other crimes had been committed. DeWine issued a statement on the verdict in the case and future proceedings. “A prosecutor’s most important duty is to seek justice. I believe with these verdicts that justice has been done,” DeWine said. “However, this is not a happy time for anyone. Every rape is a tragedy. This is a tragedy.” DeWine said the issue of rape is a society issue, not just a Steubenville problem. “Rape is not a recreational activity. We, as a society, have an obligation do more to educate our young people about rape. They need to know it is a horrible crime of violence. And it is simply not okay,” DeWine said in the statement. DeWine also said investigators have completed 56 interviews to date in relation to the case, including students who were at the party where the rape took place, Steubenville High School officials and football coaches.

OSU and Wisconsin proceeded to trade blow for blow in the game’s second act. Ross hit the Buckeyes’ first 3-pointer of the contest on the team’s ninth attempt from deep. Ross, on a later possession, was called for an offensive foul while driving to the basket, bringing Wisconsin fans to their feet with the game tied, 41-41. Following a steal by Scott, Craft got the ball in transition and finished down low. Ross then scored OSU’s next two baskets to give the Buckeyes their biggest lead of the half, 47-41, with 2:27 left. The lanky sophomore forward scored seven points against the Badgers, all of them coming in the second half. “I told them at the under-eight timeout, somebody just make a play, and we need someone to ignite, and LaQuinton was who that was today,” Matta said. Three consecutive free throws made by Thomas, who led the Buckeyes with 17 points and seven rebounds in the win, all-but wrapped up the win for OSU. Craft, who tallied nine points and six rebounds, dribbled the clock out for OSU, which celebrated modestly as the horn sounded. There were no passionate screams of joy. No leaps in jubilation. “The fun’s just about to begin. We have to take it one game at a time and hopefully there’s more than one game that we get to play,” Craft said. OSU is set to play No. 15 seed Iona (20-13)

continued as Steubenville on 3A

cody cousino / Multimedia editor

OSU junior guard Aaron Craft holds up a piece of the net after defeating Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament championship game, 50-43. Friday in Dayton. If the Buckeyes win, they will play the winner of the game between No. 7 seed Notre Dame (25-9) and No. 10 seed Iowa State (22-11). If OSU gets through its first two games, it will head to Los Angeles for the West Regional semifinal and potential final. Gonzaga (31-2) is the No. 1 seed in the region.

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Monday March 18, 2013


lanternstaff Editor: Ally Marotti marotti.5@osu.edu Managing Editor, content: Michael Periatt periatt.1@buckeyemail.osu.edu Managing Editor, design: Jackie Storer storer.29@osu.edu Copy Chief: Lindsey Barrett barrett.684@osu.edu Campus Editor: Kristen Mitchell mitchell.935@osu.edu

Sports Editor:

Asst. Sports Editor:

Patrick Maks

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Liz Young

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[a+e] Editor: Caitlin Essig essig.21@osu.edu Asst. [a+e] Editor: Halie Williams williams.3948@osu.edu Student Voice Editor: Ally Marotti marotti.5@osu.edu Design Editors: Kayla Byler byler.18@buckeyemail.osu.edu

Kayla Zamary

zamary.3@buckeyemail.osu.edu Photo Editor: Andrew Holleran holleran.9@osu.edu Asst. Photo Editor: Daniel Chi chi.55@osu.edu

continuations Letters to the editor

Chapter from 1A

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a decision, but there is no set time limit, Isaacs said. While it is on suspension, the fraternity cannot participate in recognized student organization activities, including intramural sports, recruiting of new members and Greek Week, which is scheduled to begin March 31. Because the investigation is ongoing, Sigma Chi president Joe Panos, a second-year in

Steubenville from 2A Ohio State was pulled into the case after a video taken from the night of those parties, which features former OSU student and Steubenville High School graduate Michael Nodianos talking and laughing about the alleged rape for more than 12 minutes, was released online. Nodianos was no longer a student at the university through Fall Semester exams on Dec. 12, and his name no longer yields any results on FindPeople, the university directory. The video, which can be found on YouTube under the title “Michael Nodianos confession #oprollredroll #occupysteubenville Steubenville rape case� and several other names, shows Nodianos wearing an OSU T-shirt making analogies that the alleged victim was “deader than� or was “raped harder than.� Earlier this month more than 85,000 signatures were given to DeWine by members of the Ohio National Organization for Women (Ohio Now), calling

biomedical engineering, said he could not comment on details. “The Alpha Gamma Chapter of Sigma Chi, its members and our national headquarters are working in full cooperation with the university to ascertain the facts of the situation,� Panos said in an email Thursday. Antonio-Phillip Lytle, coordinator of OSU Sorority and Fraternity Life, referred The Lantern to Isaacs for comment Thursday.

for the arrest of Nodianos because of comments made about the rape. The law firm of Dennis McNamara, which is representing Nodianos, declined comment. DeWine acknowledged that Nodianos did not act respectfully, but he told the protestors on March 4 he disagreed that Nodianos’ actions warranted an arrest. “There’s a difference between what is a criminal violation and what is obnoxious, or otherwise immoral,� DeWine said to the crowd. Adam Martello, a Steubenville native and thirdyear in economics at OSU, said he attended the hearings on Wednesday and Friday where evidence such as text messages and an unreleased photos advanced the prosecutor’s case. “Hearing what those text messages were cleared up a lot of rumors,� he said, adding that he agreed with the case verdict. Martello called the incident and case “embarrassing to the city and the area� and hopes that it can be put in the past.

Corrections will be printed in this space.

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campus Ohio GOP Sen. Portman supports gay marriage

St. Patrick’s Day DUIs The Franklin County DUI Task Force conducted a sobriety checkpoint on North High Street at 17th Avenue from 9 p.m. on March 16 until 3 a.m. on March 17th.

DANIEL ROGERS Lantern reporter rogers.746@osu.edu

Courtesy of MCT

Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman announced he supports gay marriage.

Lane Ave Woodruff Ave

Summit St

of same-sex marriage, including former Vice President Dick Cheney, former President Bill Clinton and President Barack Obama. During the last election cycle, Portman was a contender for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s running mate before Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., was chosen. Ohio’s other senator, Democrat Sherrod Brown, has been a known supporter of same-sex marriage and praised Portman for his new views on marriage on Friday. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral cases on the Defense of Marriage Act, as well as California’s ban on same-sex marriage known as Proposition 8, at the end of March.

Vehicles Checked: 366 Total Citations: 18 DUI Arrests: 3 Driver’s License Violations: 8 Vehicle Registration Violations: 1 Misdemeanor Drug Possession: 2 Vehicles Impounded: 6 Traffic Warnings: 13 Open Containers of Alcohol: 4 Curfew Violations: 2 Firearms Recovered: 1 N High St

Ohio Republican Sen. Rob Portman changed his stance on same-sex marriage, becoming the first GOP senator to openly support it. Despite the growing number of politicians who openly support gay marriage, the change in position has shocked some around Ohio State’s campus. Sam Zuidema, a second-year in history and political science and chairman of OSU College Republicans, was surprised by Portman’s change of heart. “I was surprised at his position, as I would be for any prominent Republican politician to switch sides on this issue,” Zuidema said. “His reasoning behind his decision is one that I respect, and it was a very personal one involving his family that I will not judge.” Sarah Teutsch, a second-year in marketing who considers herself liberal, said Portman’s stance could potentially bring out other Republicans who support same-sex marriage. “I think there are probably people who feel the same way maybe that aren’t so strong at voicing their opinions since the major people aren’t doing it,” Teutsch said. “I think that this is a good step.” On Friday the senator wrote a commentary for The Columbus Dispatch, stating his support for same-sex couples and their right to marry. “I have come to believe that if two people are prepared to make a lifetime commitment to love and care for each other in good times and in bad, the government shouldn’t deny them the opportunity to get married,” Portman said in the commentary. Previously in opposition to same-sex marriage, Portman was a co-sponsor of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) passed during former President Bill Clinton’s administration. Portman stated the reason for his change in position is his son, Will, who told the senator he was gay about two years ago. “Knowing that my son is gay prompted me to consider the issue from another perspective,” Portman said. “That of a dad who wants all three of his kids to lead happy, meaningful lives with the people they love.” The senator is just one in a line of prominent political figures to publicly declare their support

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Monday March 18, 2013


studentvoice Tobacco-free push could be beginning of restrictions lantern Columnist

dan salter salter.36@osu.edu

In a move worthy of a crafty politician, Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee released news about his controversial tobacco-free campus proposal in an email the Friday before spring break. Normally, politicians do this to minimize the number of people who see a given news item and hopefully have it escape the notice of both the media and the general population. In this case, Gee’s March 8 news dump failed because people in the media did notice. The email stated that the next “important steps” were to gather feedback about the ban. If he truly wanted student input on his proposal, Gee would not have sent it out one of the days of the semester that it would attract the least notice. The proposed ban’s goal is to eliminate all tobacco consumption by everyone on campus, and it is intended to go into effect in August. Gee’s email concluded by saying, “Know that your health is at the heart of this initiative. It is our intent to become the healthiest campus in the nation.” Let me be clear; this health push will not stop with tobacco. If Gee is serious about being the healthiest campus in the nation, he will be forced to go beyond a mere tobacco ban because there are a number of colleges that already have a similar policies in place. Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, is smoke free and the University of Toledo bans all tobacco but allows its use in designated areas. About 700 colleges across the country are smoke or tobacco free.

So what will be banned next? It could be a couple different items. Take a look at New York City. It began with a smoking ban. Then Mayor Michael Bloomberg tried to ban sugary drinks over 16 ounces, and he has recently turned his attention to eliminating the harmful effects that headphones can have on hearing. Since OSU has a contract with CocaCola worth more than $33 million, I hope you’re not too attached to those earbuds. The idea that health is Gee’s primary concern is laughable. Reducing the tobacco consumption of everyone on campus will save OSU money on their health insurance premiums, but you won’t find that piece of information in Gee’s email. In the end, this university and Gee care for your health as long as it helps them save money and gains them public praise from government organizations. Does the administration’s hypocrisy know no bounds? It’s OK for students to consume something that’s not good for them as long as the university can make money from it. However, if student choice has the potential to cost them money, then your individual rights are expendable. However, if they can make $33 million selling students something that’s bad for them, that’s OK. OSU sells alcohol, sugary drinks, junk food, fast food, ear buds and coffee on campus. All of those things can have negative effects on your health. It seems a strange double standard to only target tobacco, doesn’t it? However, do you really expect the university to crusade against items it profits from even if they are proven to be harmful? I have spent most of my college journalism career attempting to avoid political controversy because of its potential to impact my future career. That is over. I will no longer sit silently while people in positions of authority attempt to undermine the rights of individuals. Gee, I do not care that your email said, “the majority of the feedback supported a tobacco free campus,” because simple majorities are not how this country is supposed to be governed. We do not live in a direct democracy.

justine boggs / Lantern photographer

President E. Gordon Gee set a goal to have a Tobacco-free policy in place on OSU’s campus by Aug. 1. We live in a representative republic for the express reason of protecting the rights of minorities from the oppression of a tyrannical majority. Perhaps you should take a refresher course on American government from this fine institution over which you preside. Better yet, wait until after the tobacco ban goes into effect and take that class from a professor who smokes a pack or two a day. This will allow you to fully feel some of the unintended consequences of your initiative. With all due respect, Mr. President, I don’t give a damn what you feel is in the best interests of my health. It is definitely outside of the scope of

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your authority to infringe upon my personal rights, and it is certainly none of your business what I do to my body. This policy is being pursued at the urging of several government organizations including the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Ohio Board of Regents and the State of Ohio Healthy Ohio Program. I have zero respect for an unelected official from a governmental organization or even from this university, which I so dearly love, that has the gall to tell me what I can or can’t do to my body. I smoke very rarely, and I intend to graduate before this ban goes into effect, so its impact on me will be nonexistent.

However, I refuse to sit on the sidelines while appointed bureaucrats dictate away the personal rights of U.S. citizens. That is an intolerable tyranny that must not go unanswered. Most students might not care about a tobacco-free campus, but answer this question: If this administration is allowed to remove the rights of one group, or even one individual, which one of you will it come after next? We must stand together to protect the rights of all members of the OSU community, because as Benjamin Franklin so famously said, “If we do not hang together, we will all hang separately.”

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Monday March 18, 2013

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Monday March 18, 2013

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Summer to bear wealth of blockbusters

Weekend Box Office

Shelby Lum Lantern reporter lum.13@osu.edu Summertime brings beloved moments filled with fewer responsibilities and more warm weather. The months between semesters also pack in some of the year’s biggest blockbusters. Here are the top 10 most anticipated movies for the summer of 2013, by release date:

Title 1.

Weekend Gross Weeks

“Oz The Great and Powerful”

$42.2M

$145M

2

$17.1M

$17.1M

1

$10.3M

$10.3M

1

4. “Jack the Giant Slayer” $6.2M

$53.9M

3

5. “Identity Thief”

$123.7M

6

2. “The Call” 3.

“The Increadible Burt Wonderstone”

$4.5M

Source: Box Office Mojo KAYLA BYLER / Design editor

the week ahead monday

“Oblivion” — April 19 Tom Cruise and Morgan Freeman star in the movie adaptation of the graphic novel by the same name. The story centers on the end of the Earth as a planet, but not the end of humans. Cruise plays Jack Harper, an Earth repairman searching the planet for viable remaining resources. His mission is thrown off when he rescues a woman from a falling spacecraft and later is captured by the insurgency group led by Freeman’s character, Malcolm Beech. “Iron Man 3” — May 3 Robert Downey, Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow return for the third installment following Marvel Comics’ character, Iron Man. For this movie, Pepper Potts (Paltrow) plays a larger role, and Downey’s character, Tony Stark, seems to be given a choice between his love for Potts and his duty as Iron Man. Attacks from a group called the Mandarin continue on the nation, and citizens look toward Stark as Iron Man to protect the country. “The Great Gatsby” — May 10 Pushed back from its original December 2012 release date, the movie adaptation of F. Scott

Courtesy of Sony Pictures

‘This is the End’ is scheduled to release in theaters June 14. Fitzgerald’s classic will star Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby and Tobey Maguire as Nick Carraway. The movie seems to closely revolve around the novel, following Carraway’s relationship with Gatsby during the Roaring ‘20s. As Gatsby pines for Daisy Buchanan, played by Carey Mulligan, the characters are drawn in by the mystique of Gatsby’s presence. The extra time I have had to wait had better ensure the movie be extra good, because the five-month delay has risen my (and I am sure everyone else’s) expectations.

“The Hangover Part III” — May 24 “The Hangover Part II” got a little weird and uncomfortable. Personally I am hoping the third movie dials it back a notch. For “Part III,” the cast returns to Las Vegas for the usual shenanigans, and old characters, including Stu’s Vegas wife from the original movie, come back. The exact specifics of what trouble the three best friends get into aren’t really clear — but hasn’t that been the point of every “Hangover” movie? Nothing is clear, just a little fuzzy.

continued as Movies on 7A

Green Day-inspired ‘American Idiot’ play to premiere in Columbus Alexis Preskar Lantern reporter preskar.1@osu.edu

Short Films 7 p.m. @ Wexner Center’s Film/Video Theater escaping the Allure of the game 9 p.m. @ Skully’s Music-Diner Arrows Over Athens 9 p.m. @ Scarlet & Grey Cafe

Tuesday

mira Schor: Artist’s Talk 4:30 p.m. @ Wexner Center’s Film/Video Theater

Punks and theater lovers in Columbus may find common ground this week when a Tony Award-winning musical hits the city for the first time. “American Idiot,” the musical based on the 2004 multi-platinum Green Day album, is set to visit the Palace Theatre, located at 34 W. Broad St., Tuesday through Sunday. The rock opera is focused around three angry young men and their different attempts at leaving suburbia. One goes off to war (Tunny), one heads to the city and finds love and drugs (Johnny) and one stays at home with his pregnant girlfriend and gets stoned (Will). Alyssa DiPalma plays Whatsername, Johnny’s love interest. She said she wanted the role since she first saw the show about three years ago. She said the character, who she described as a “freedom fighter” and “mother of the revolution,” is fun to live vicariously through. “She’s really kind of a hellion, and I’m not so it’s really exciting,” she said. She said she’s embraced the independent spirit and passion of Whatsername in her own life. The show ran on Broadway from March 2010 to April 2011 and is touring nationwide for the second time. This is the first time the show will come to Columbus.

Courtesy of John Daughtry

‘American Idiot’ is set to open March 19 at the Palace Theatre. DiPalma described the musical as an “attack on the senses,” but in a good way. “(It’s) a lot of noise — really great noise. It’s very emotionally thrilling, mentally thrilling and visually stunning,” she said. “It’s a very extreme show.” The extreme nature of the show includes sexual scenes, cursing and adult themes. Rolanda Copley, publicist for the Columbus Association for the Performing Arts, said in an email that there is no age limit to the show, but “we ask parents to make their best judgment.” The styles of the show, punk and opera, might not seem to go together. DiPalma said she found the combination odd at first, but she quickly saw how the two musical styles could mesh. “Punk rock has always been about sticking it to the man and doing

Celebrities’ true colors revealed through interviews, interactions

milo greene 8 p.m. @ The Basment

Wednesday

Flicks for Free ft. “A league of Their Own” 6 p.m. @ Ohio Union’s US Bank Conference Theater kate nash 7 p.m. @ A&R Music Bar

6A

Hollywood has a quality of distant glamour. Adding to this, makeup creates a mask for celebrities, making it hard to know if the personas of these people are real or fake. I’ve always found the culture Caitlin Essig of worshipping essig.21@osu.edu celebrities to be a detriment to society. Why should we waste time reading about people we don’t know — and probably never will — and why do magazines and newspapers waste the space printing stories about them? But the thing is, these people are interesting. We see their movies, read their books and listen to their music, and in turn, become interested in what they’re like beyond their creative work. Some celebrities have shown their true colors through the way they act and the things they say in interviews, and it is interesting to finally get some real insight into the lives of people we hear about daily. Mila Kunis recently sat down with a rookie BBC reporter named Chris Stark, who began the interview by admitting that he was “petrified.” From there, Kunis went completely off script, talking with Stark about his friends and his football club. She called it the best interview she’d had all day, and it was obvious that she was

Arts Editor

American idiot 8 p.m. @ Palace Theatre

“laugh Til you’re Scarlet” 8 p.m. @ Ohio Union’s Woody’s Tavern

unexpected things that are out of the norm. So making a musical out of a punk rock CD is kind of the most punk rock thing you could do because nobody expected it and nobody expected the success it had,” DiPalma said. That success partially comes in the form of two Tonys for the Broadway run — one for Best Scenic Design of a Musical and one for Best Lighting Design of a Musical. DiPalma said rehearsals for the second national tour began in July, and the show has been on tour in the U.K. and U.S. since October. She admits that the schedule is tiring at times. “I think the hardest part is how tired we are from the combination of traveling and doing such a physical show, but it’s funny how that kind of evaporates the minute the show starts,” she said. The cast has a pre-show ritual of

chants and handshakes that she said helps put them in the right mindset for the show. The plot focuses significantly on post-9/11 America and how younger generations have dealt with the stress and media-inundated culture, something DiPalma said is relatable to the younger cast. “I think that we all kind of ended up having to live in this very fearful world, this particular generation, and we got kind of stuck having to grow up with a lot of limitations and restrictions only based on fear of the outside world,” she said. “I think that this show really speaks to this generation and says, you know, you have to break through all that fear and all of those restrictions and live your own life.” Erica Beimesche, a first-year in exploration, said she plans to attend the show to fulfill a theater class requirement but hopes to get more out of it. “I’m a big theater lover. I don’t know much about Green Day, I’ve heard a few of their more popular songs so I think that making a musical out of that is a pretty interesting topic,” she said. The show is set to begin at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, with performances at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets start at $28 and are available through Ticketmaster or the CAPA Theatre Box Office, located at 39 E. State St.

Courtesy of MCT

Mila Kunis showed her personality in an interview with rookie BBC reporter Chris Stark.

relieved to talk about something other than the general questions she must get asked in every interview. She begged him to continue chatting with her about her favorite beer (Blue Moon) and how she used to bartend, until a voice off camera urged her to talk about the movie she was supposed to be promoting, “Oz the Great and Powerful.” At this, Kunis launched into the “answers (to the questions) I know you’re going to ask.” The interview was refreshing, and seeing Kunis act so down-to-earth made her entirely more likeable. Interviews with celebrities promoting movies have been done thousands of times, and most fly under the radar. This interview gave Kunis and Stark better publicity than an average, run-of-the-mill interview ever could. It seems other celebrities might fall into these parameters of “fun” interviewees, we just might not always hear about them. In the past two months, I have had the pleasure and privilege of attending two press junkets in New York City. One was for a movie called “Admission,” which is set to release in theaters Friday, and another for “The Place Beyond The Pines,” set to release in theaters March 29. Travel and hotel accommodations for both were paid for by Focus Features. The junkets involved me attending a screening of each movie, and a press conference followed the day after the screening. For “Admission,” stars Tina Fey, Paul Rudd and Nat Wolff as well as director Paul Weitz were at the conference, and for “The Place Beyond The Pines,” stars Ryan Gosling, Eva Mendes, Dane DeHaan and Emory Cohen as well as director Derek Cianfrance attended.

continued as Kunis on 8A


[ a +e ] Artists fresh from SXSW festival set to hit Columbus stage Shelby Lum Lantern reporter lum.13@osu.edu A 200-person cafe is a drastic switch from playing for a mass of blurry faces at a festival, but two artists fresh out of South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, will return to a more intimate setting in Columbus. Laura Stevenson and the Cans is scheduled to play at Rumba Café on Wednesday at 8 p.m. Joe Fletcher is scheduled to be the opening act. The smaller show size might be more comfortable for both artists. “Sometimes I feel more energized from a smaller show,” said Laura Stevenson, lead singer for Laura Stevenson and the Cans. “It’s better than a sea of faces.” Fletcher agreed, noting the more intimate setting of a smaller venue. “(SXSW) is the fantasy land,” Fletcher said. “Rumba Café-type places are what I do all the time, all year long.” The venue is familiar territory for Fletcher, an Americana singer. He played at Rumba Café on Feb. 5 with Brown Bird. Todd Dugan, managing partner at Rumba Café, said Fletcher contacted him about returning to the venue on his way through Columbus. “He kind of fit what I was looking for, for the Laura Stevenson show,” Dugan said. “Rumba is a type of room he does well.” But Fletcher isn’t alone in his familiarity with the city.

Movies from 6A “Now You See Me” — May 31 Morgan Freeman is killing it this movie season. He joins forces with Jesse Eisenberg, Isla Fisher, Woody Harrelson and others to tell the story of a group of magicians who seem to get into more trouble than the average magician (if such a thing actually exists). After pulling stunt after stunt, the group robs a bank and gives the money to the audience as part of their act. Authorities are less than pleased with the performance. Freeman plays Thaddeus Bradley, who works with the FBI to expose the group’s secrets. He also narrates the trailer, which makes it all the better.

Courtesy of Dave Gaiwacke

Laura Stevenson and the Cans is slated to perform March 20 at the Rumba Café. The members of Laura Stevenson and the Cans are looking forward to returning for the food. “We sample the local cuisine,” Stevenson said. For Columbus, the members plan on heading to Skyline Chili. “We do enjoy Skyline quite a bit,” she said. Fletcher also plans to hit a specific restaurant: Dirty Frank’s Hot Dog Palace. “I have a favorite hot dog place I am looking forward to getting back to,” Fletcher said.

“The Internship” — June 7 Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. Is there a funnier film duo? The two pair up yet again, this time as business partners who realize the company they work for has failed. Rather than join the unemployment line, Billy (Vaughn) sets up an internship at Google for both of them. Obviously older than the rest of the crowd, the two men seem unfit to compete with the younger interns. Billy and partner Nick (Wilson) cannot seem to figure out how to act appropriately among managers who are half their age, or distinguish the vast difference between a Sharpie and Expo marker.

Fletcher’s setup will differ from Stevenson’s, as his usual band will not accompany him at Rumba Café. “I’ll play acoustic guitar and sing. That’s it,” Fletcher said. For his SXSW performance, he played with a backing band, Joe Fletcher and the Wrong Reasons. Before beginning her own band, Stevenson toured with Bomb the Music Industry, a punkska rock band. While she carries over influences

“This is the End” — June 14 “This is the End” might break new cinematic ground, which is challenging these days. James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel (“Tropic Thunder”), Danny McBride (Pineapple Express) and Craig Robinson (“The Office”) all play fictional versions of themselves during the apocalypse. Essentially, they are movie stars, playing movie stars. The celebs find themselves comically fighting to survive as Hollywood’s best are dying all across L.A. The cast handles the end of the world as only famous people could, and the cast list is packed full of huge names. Rihanna, Emma Watson and the Backstreet Boys have all been pulled together for the end of life as we know it — or the end of life as celebrities know it.

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from her previous band, the punk style is not as prevalent in her current music. “I think we have a lot of punk influences, but it doesn’t clearly come out in the music,” Stevenson said. The influences are there, but are not audible, she said, and Laura Stevenson and the Cans have taken on a more indie-pop style. “We experiment with different genres and make it our own,” she said. Both Laura Stevenson and the Cans and Joe Fletcher are scheduled to release new albums in the next few months. Stevenson said her album “Wheel” is scheduled to drop on April 23, and Fletcher said his album is scheduled to release in June. Stevenson said the band will play new songs off “Wheel” at Rumba Café. For the newest album though, Stevenson said the band is thinking of dropping “and the Cans” off the group name. The Cans band name began as the name for Stevenson’s backing band for whoever “can” play at the time. “We are in a transitional period,” Stevenson said, and the band is no longer in its ragtag beginning phase. Stevenson said the band is becoming more serious, and because the lineup is steadier, the backing band name is less necessary. Tickets are available online for $10 through Vendini. The Rumba Café is located at 2507 Summit St.

World War Z — June 21 Zombies. Brad Pitt. Lots of explosives. I think that hit every good summer movie criteria. “Monsters University” — June 21 If you didn’t cry when Sully left Boo at the end of “Monsters Inc.,” I may question how human you are. I’m certain it left every viewer wanting more, but Pixar and Disney aren’t that easy. For the sequel, rather than following up on Boo and Sully, the creative minds have decided to go back in time, to when monsters James Sullivan (Sully) and Mike Wazowski first met at Monsters University. While the first movie depicted the monsters as friends, audiences will come to find out that the characters

were not always close, and the two were forced together as roommates. Sully and Mike begin a fierce rivalry as to who will become the scariest monster. Also, Mike wears a retainer, which is the most fitting way to think of the little green monster while he went through school. “Despicable Me 2” — July 3 The actual plot line of the movie is pretty vague from the trailer, but a few things are clear. The minions are just as yellow and just as hilarious as ever. The minions are being kidnapped by an unknown spaceship. No cats were harmed in the making of the movie. If that isn’t enough, Al Pacino will be the voice actor playing Gru’s nemesis.

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

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Monday March 18, 2013

Across 1 Discoverers’ shouts 5 Dictation takers 11 “Every kiss begins with __”: jeweler’s slogan 14 Red salad veggie 15 Clear the fustiness from 16 Grand __ Opry 17 2012 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee 19 Not too bright 20 Volume of maps 21 Versailles ruler 22 Plucky movie pig 23 Michelle, to Barack 24 Best Supporting Actor nominee for “Argo” 27 Patio furniture repairman 28 Expressive music subgenre 29 Report card figs. 30 Hopi home 34 Kind 37 Modern, in Munich 38 Relatives, and an apt title for this puzzle 39 “__ do not!” 40 Hee-hawing critter 41 Watchdogs from Japan 42 Get snippy with 43 Unrefined find 44 Superhero duds 45 Iowa senator since 1985 51 Elevator innovator

52 “Can I get a word in?” 53 D-backs, on scoreboards 54 Formal decrees 56 Party coffeemaker 57 Al Pacino’s “Sea of Love” co-star 60 Statistical data: Abbr. 61 City known for its Boys’ Choir 62 Giggly Muppet 63 “Schedule uncertain at press time” abbr. 64 Passages between buildings 65 Gets the point Down 1 “Fernando” band 2 Stretches in the high 90s, say 3 Flier with a shamrock logo 4 Fires on from above 5 “My gal” of song 6 Sparkling topper 7 Flamboyant Flynn 8 Cellphone giant 9 “I’d love to, Yvette!” 10 MTA stop 11 Camera name since 1888 12 Suspect’s excuse 13 Aden’s country 18 Belgian river 22 Dude 25 Actress Carter and “little” Dickens character Trent 26 Hog-wild

27 Water-to-wine village 30 Penny pincher 31 Prefix with cycle 32 Wee newt 33 Showy wrap 34 Up the creek 35 Runs too slowly, as a watch 36 X, in valentines 38 Former “Idol” judge DioGuardi 42 Ironic sketches 43 Resistance measure 44 Musical wrap-up 45 Talk trash to 46 “The Dick Van Dyke Show” catchphrase 47 Brainy bunch 48 Superman, on Krypton 49 Dancer Castle 50 Simpleton 55 Years in España 57 One of the Gabors 58 Small, in Dogpatch 59 History majors’ degs.

See solutions to crosswords online at thelantern.com/puzzles

7A


[ a +e ] Reverend to hail blues tunes in C-Bus Hilary Frew Lantern reporter frew.12@osu.edu After a brief stint in seminary school, Reverend Joshua Peyton (who goes by Rev. Peyton) decided ministry was not for him and began pursuing a career as a blues musician. “I ended up going in a different career path, but the nickname stuck,” he said. Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band is making a stop in Columbus Thursday with guest musicians Jimbo Mathus and Alvin Youngblood Hart. The show starts at 8 p.m. at Woodlands Backyard. The band is touring to promote its album “Between the Ditches,” which was released in August. The trio hails from Brown County, Ind. Members Peyton, (lead singer, guitarist, songwriter) wife Breezy Peyton, (washboards and backup vocals) and Joshua Peyton’s cousin Aaron Persinger (drums) have been touring full time since 2006, Joshua Peyton said. In terms of sound, Joshua Peyton describes his music as country blues, which is a more stripped-down blues with traditional instruments. In contrast to its records, Joshua Peyton said some fans are surprised by the amount of sound that comes off the stage during live performances. “One big thing is the few people we have on stage. We only have one melodic instrument,” Joshua Peyton said, alluding to his guitar. “On record, (the fans) hear it and they think there are more instruments happening. It’s pretty surprising to see it on stage. You really gotta see it to almost believe it.” Katie Krenelka, an Ohio State alumna and singer for the local Americana band Contraband Boots, has seen the band perform three times and noted the high energy of the group. “They have very high-energy shows and they like to involve the crowd a lot,” Krenelka said. “The main guy, Rev. Peyton, will do interactive stuff with the crowd and tell funny stories … the interactive part is a cool part of the show.” When writing songs, Joshua Peyton said he does not have a specific set of guidelines and instead uses lyrics to reflect what he is thinking about at the time. “I don’t set out to write about a particular theme. If there are any themes, it’s things I like, or things I don’t like,” he said. “I write about food, I write about my old truck, you name it … whatever sort of inspires me.” Joshua Peyton said he enjoys coming to Columbus, where the band toured in 2011 with guitar player Reverend (Jim) Horton Heat and in December with punk band Flogging Molly. Paul Painter, booking manager at Woodlands Tavern, said he has seen the Big Damn Band perform with Flogging Molly and enjoyed the show. He said it makes sense for the band to come back to Columbus. “They are a strong, nationally touring act and play many large festivals including the upcoming All Good Festival in July at Legend Valley,” Painter said. The Columbus show is set to be held at the Woodlands’ newest location, the Woodlands Backyard, formerly Loose Goose Tavern & Grill. Painter said the Backyard is a more suitable venue than

Courtesy of Scott Toepfer

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band is scheduled to perform March 21 at Woodlands Backyard.

Kunis from 6A These are by far the most high-profile people in the entertainment industry I’ve met and been able to interview firsthand. In the press conference for “Admission,” the actors bounced ideas off each other like they were doing improvisational comedy. Fey and Rudd made quick quips that evoked laughter from each other and the members of the press. Rudd joked that he didn’t even apply to college, and he “just showed up” to the University of Kansas. Wolff and Fey argued that he must have applied, and the bit made just about everyone in the room laugh. During breaks in conversation, sometimes the actors would ask each other questions to keep the ball rolling, which added an easygoing flow to the conference. Basically, it was not what I expected. When I imagined a press conference with big names in entertainment, what came to mind was a more structured, Q-and-A session than a laid-back, generally fun time. The actors in the second junket were again likable. Through their interactions, it was clear that they all respected each other, and especially respected director Cianfrance. Compliments rolled off the tongue of each actor for the style and vision of the film. Two things struck me about the conference for “The Place Beyond The Pines.” Mendes followed the vibe Kunis gave in her BBC interview with not particularly loving answering questions about the film right away. She was never rude but was quick to pass off questions to DeHaan, who sat to her right. “Dane, would you like to tackle that?” she would ask. But then when she really got going about her role or the film at all, she became animated in talking about it, and it was obvious her answers captured her genuine feelings. That leads into the second thing I noted about the actors: they were all well-versed, smart talkers. DeHaan gave calculated answers to each question, pausing to think and decisively choose his words. The film was distinct in that it was told in three parts, and the actors and director focused on explaining its intricacies in a way that was captivating. It could be easy to write off an actor’s job, to say they simply must memorize lines and movements, but it wouldn’t be possible to speak so fluently about a film unless they really understood it. In this instance, Cianfrance seemed to undoubtedly help this by working closely with his actors, but I was impressed by how the way the actors spoke echoed his remarks, sharing his vision for the film. While we might never meet every celebrity we admire, it is refreshing to glimpse into their personalities and passion for their work. When a star or director has passion for his or her work and can be candid while talking about it, it makes it that much easier for us to appreciate their role in our world.

the Tavern for this show because it is intended for a larger crowd. Woodlands Tavern can hold 300, and Woodlands Backyard can hold up to 400. Tickets are $15, available at the bar and online, but Joshua Peyton promised fans will get their money’s worth. “We live and love playing music,” he said. “You’re going to get a show that is 100 percent from the heart, from people that know what they’re doing.” Woodlands Backyard is located at 668 Grandview Ave.

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8A


sports

Monday March 18, 2013

thelantern www.thelantern.com

50

results SUNDAY Men’s Basketball 50, Wisconsin 43 Baseball 6, Bryant University 4 Softball 9, Pittsburgh 0

43

Men’s Ice Hockey 3, Ferris State 2

upcoming TUESDAY

With its win against Wisconsin in the final round of the Big Ten Championship tournament, OSU is seeded No. 2 in the 2013 March Madness tournament bracket (see page 4B), which begins March 19 in Dayton, Ohio. OSU will play March 22.

Men’s Tennis v. Louisville 5pm @ Columbus

OSU takes title, drops reliance on Thomas

WEDNESDAY

PATRICK MAKS Sports editor maks.1@osu.edu

Men’s Lacrosse v. Notre Dame 4pm @ Notre Dame

THURSDAY Wrestling: NCAA Championships All Day @ Des Moines, Iowa

FRIDAY Baseball v. Purdue 3pm @ Purdue Softball v. Indiana 3pm @ Columbus Women’s Tennis v. Purdue 3pm @ Purdue Men’s Tennis v. Purdue 6pm @ Columbus Men’s Volleyball v. Ball State 7:30pm @ Ball State Women’s Track: UCF Invitational TBA @ Orlando, Fla.

CHICAGO — It seems the Ohio State men’s basketball team has overcome the blessing and the curse of having a man who might have been put on Earth to shoot a basketball. In its eighth consecutive win, OSU captured the Big Ten tournament championship against the Badgers, 50-43, in part because of that man — junior forward Deshaun Thomas — and in part due to its ability to overcome its dependence on him. After stringing together three wins in three days, the Buckeyes can call themselves champions of one of the nation’s most rugged conferences. That feat, though, seemed dubious — maybe even impossible — following a 22-point loss to the Badgers in Madison that came across as a curtsy before exiting the Big Ten basketball stage. More than a month ago, it seemed rather obvious that OSU, for as talented as it might be, was a one-man show — with Thomas as its only marvel. That loss to Bo Ryan’s squad on Feb. 17 breathed life into the sentiment that the Buckeyes would only go as far as Thomas, who totaled 18 of OSU’s 49 points that day, could take them; symptomatic of a team in dire need of second scorer. But Aaron Craft said losing has a way of cleansing the soul. “I mean, you obviously you want to win every game. But — and I hate to say you have to lose to learn a lesson — but sometimes we’ve had to do that,” the junior guard said after Sunday’s contest. “We’ve just looked at each other and, you know, we didn’t have anyone else to lean on. It was us when no one else really kind of gave

continued as Champions on 5B

CODY COUSINO / Multimedia editor

OSU junior guard Aaron Craft shoots over Wisconsin forward Mike Bruesewitz during the championship game of the Big Ten tournament. OSU won, 50-43.

OSU sits at No. 2 in NCAA tourney bracket

Wrestling: NCAA Championships All Day @ Des Moines, Iowa

ANDREW HOLLERAN Photo editor holleran.9@osu.edu

Fencing: NCAA Championships All Day @ San Antonio, TX. Men’s Track: Vanderbilt Black and Gold Invitational TBA @ Nashville, Tenn.

CODY COUSINO / Multimedia editor

OSU sophomore forward LaQuinton Ross (10) and sophomore forward Sam Thompson (12) try to grab a rebound during the championship game against Wisconsin in the Big Ten Tournament at the United Center in Chicago.

CHICAGO — Roughly an hour after Ohio State won its third Big Ten tournament championship in four years, defeating Wisconsin, 50-43, the Buckeyes learned they are a No. 2 seed in the West Region of the NCAA Tournament. Viewing the Selection Show from a private room in the United Center in Chicago, the Buckeyes watched the unveiling of the NCAA Tournament bracket. The No. 1 seed in the West Region is Gonzaga out of the West Coast Conference. The No. 3 seed is New Mexico from the Mountain West Conference. Kansas State, Big 12 co-regular season champion, is the No. 4 seed. “It feels good but seeding doesn’t mean a ton once you get there,” junior guard Aaron Craft said. OSU will play No. 15 seed Iona Friday at 7:15 p.m. in Dayton. If the Buckeyes win, they will play the winner of the game between No. 7 seed Notre Dame and No. 10 seed Iowa State. Should the Buckeyes win that game, the Sweet 16 opponent — if the seeds hold — is New Mexico. The West Region semifinals and final will be played at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. “Ohhh yeah, that’d be nice,” junior forward Deshaun Thomas said of the possibility of playing in the Staples Center. Some of the other seeds in the region: No. 5 Wisconsin, who will face No. 12 Mississippi, and No. 6 Arizona, who will face No. 11 Belmont. The other No. 1 seeds are Indiana (East Region), Louisville (Midwest Region) and Kansas (South Region). Michigan State (No. 3 seed), Michigan (No. 4 seed), Illinois (No. 7 seed) and Minnesota (No. 11 seed) are the other Big Ten teams in the field.

Buckeye briefs: Hockey goes to semifinals Follow Us @LanternSports

LIZ YOUNG Asst. sports editor young.1693@osu.edu While Ohio State was on spring break, Buckeye athletics continued on. Here are some of this week’s game results. Men’s ice hockey OSU men’s hockey will move on to the semifinals of the CCHA tournament after winning against Ferris State, 3-2, in a series-tiebreaker game Sunday night at the OSU Ice Rink. Senior goalie Brady Hjelle made 47 saves, a new career-high, against the Bulldogs during Sunday’s game. The No. 4 seed Buckeyes lost Friday against No. 5 seed Bulldogs, 4-2, in the CCHA tournament opener at the OSU Ice Rink, but won Saturday, 3-1, splitting the series and making a third game necessary to determine which team will move on in the CCHA tournament. OSU (16-16-7) is set to play No. 2 seed Notre Dame in the semifinals at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit on Saturday. Women’s basketball

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The OSU women’s basketball team was knocked out of the Big Ten tournament March 8 after losing to Penn State, 76-66, at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Ill. The No. 9 seed Buckeyes (18-13, 7-10 Big Ten) took down No. 8 seed Minnesota (18-13, 7-9 Big Ten), 57-48, the night before. The next day, though, OSU fell to the No. 1-seeded Nittany Lions (25-5, 14-2 Big Ten). OSU demonstrated its scoring spread against Penn State despite the loss, with three players earning double digits. Senior guard Tayler Hill had 23 points, redshirt senior guard Amber Stokes made 18 and junior center Ashley Adams sank six shots for 13 points.

continued as Briefs on 2B

SHELBY LUM / Lantern photographer

OSU sophomore forward Chad Niddery goes for the puck during a game against Michigan on Feb. 23 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU lost, 6-3.

1B


sports Top 25 College Basketball Poll

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19

Gonzaga (30-2) Duke (27-5) Indiana (27-7) Louisville (29-5) Georgetown (25-6) Michigan (26-7) Kansas (29-5) Michigan State (25-8) Miami (Fla.) (26-6) Ohio State (25-7) Kansas State (27-7) Marquette (23-7) Florida (26-6) Oklahoma State (24-8) New Mexico (29-5) Saint Louis (26-6) Pittsburgh (24-7) Arizona (25-7) Syracuse (26-9)

20 21 22 23 24 25

Memphis (30-4) UCLA (25-9) Wisconsin (23-10) Creighton (27-7) Notre Dame (25-9) Virginia (26-7)

DANIEL CHI / Asst. photo editor

OSU redshirt senior guard Amber Stokes shoots a layup during a game against Michigan on March 3 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 66-55.

Briefs from 1B The bracket for the women’s NCAA tournament is set to be released Monday night. Wrestling OSU wrestling finished fourth in the Big Ten tournament March 10 at Assembly Hall in Champaign, Ill. Hunter and Logan Stieber were both crowned conference champions in their weight classes, 141 and 133 respectively. It was redshirt sophomore Logan Stieber’s second time winning the title and sophomore Hunter Stieber’s first time. Seven other Buckeyes also qualified for the NCAA tournament: senior Nikko Triggas (125-pound weight class), redshirt junior Ian Paddock (141), redshirt sophomore Josh Demas (157), freshman Mark Martin (165), redshirt junior Nick Heflin (174), redshirt senior C.J. Magrum (184) and sophomore Andrew Campolattano (197). The NCAA championships are scheduled for March 21-23 at the Wells Fargo Arena in Des Moines, Iowa. Men’s lacrosse OSU men’s lacrosse won against No. 9 Virginia, 11-10, on Saturday in Charlottesville, Va. The Buckeyes trailed the Cavaliers, 4-1, until a 4-1 streak put them one goal ahead at halftime. At the end of the third quarter, OSU led, 10-8, when

CODY COUSINO / Multimedia editor

OSU sophomore wrestler Cam Tessari grapples with Minnesota’s redshirt junior Danny Zilverberg during a Jan. 11 match at St. John Arena. OSU lost, 25-9.

the game was delayed for almost two hours because of the weather conditions. When the teams resumed play, the Cavaliers tied the game, 10-10, with 1:48 left. But a goal by senior midfielder Dominique Alexander less than 30 seconds later put the Buckeyes back ahead, 11-10. Junior goalie Greg Dutton was able to hold Virginia scoreless for the remainder of the game. The No. 12 Buckeyes (5-1, 0-1 Big Ten) are next scheduled to play No. 3 Notre Dame Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Notre Dame, Ind. Baseball The OSU men’s baseball team went 6-2 while OSU was on spring break, playing games in Myrtle Beach, S.C., North Charleston, S.C. and Columbus. OSU won against Harvard, Ball State, Coastal Carolina, Charleston Southern and Bryant over the time period from March 8-17. It lost March 10 against Coastal Carolina, 3-1, in Myrtle Beach, S.C. The team played Bryant at home over the weekend, winning Sunday, 6-4, losing Saturday, 3-2, and winning Friday, 4-1. The Buckeyes (12-6) are set to begin their season Friday against Purdue in West Lafayette, Ind. Men’s tennis OSU men’s tennis won against No. 12 Pepperdine, 4-1, on Tuesday in Malibu, Calif. Back-to-back singles wins by redshirt senior Devin

McCarthy and senior Connor Smith sealed the victory after earlier wins by doubles pair juniors Blaz Rola and Ille Van Engelen and doubles pair McCarthy and redshirt sophomore Hunter Callahan had the Buckeyes in the lead, 2-1. The No. 9 Buckeyes are 15-2 on the season and 6-2 against teams ranked in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association top 25. OSU currently has a home-game winning streak of 160-0. It is set to next play Louisville at the Varsity Indoor Tennis Center on Tuesday as one of four home matches before the team hits the 10-year anniversary of its streak. Softball The OSU women’s softball team hit a six-game win streak after winning against Pittsburgh, 9-0, in five innings Sunday afternoon at the Cherry Blossom Classic in Fairfax, Va. Sophomore pitcher Olivia O’Reilly struck out nine batters and allowed one hit during the game. OSU ended the tournament with a 5-0 record and four shutout victories. The Buckeyes won against Canisius, 8-0, in a six-inning shutout Saturday morning. They also won against George Mason, 5-2, that afternoon. On Friday, OSU won against Pittsburgh, 4-0, and George Mason, 10-0, in five innings. OSU (18-8) is scheduled to begin regular season play on Friday against Indiana at Buckeye Field.

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classifieds Furnished 1 Bedroom

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

357 E. 14th Ave. Fall Rental. 2 bedroom, large kitchen w/eating area, large bath, living room, stove/refridgerator, AC, laundry facility available, $575/month, $575 deposit. Tenants pay gas and electric.Water surcharge. 86 WEST Lane Ave. Fur- NO PETS. nished one bedroom efficiency. Call 614-306-0053 Refrigerator, microwave, com- AFFORDABLE 2 Bedrooms. munity kitchen. No pets. $500 Visit our website at deposit. $500 rent. Available www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Fall. 614-306-0053. Realty 429-0960 86 W. LANE AVENUE. 1 bedroom efiiciency furnished, Central air, Off Street Parking. Available May 10. NO PETS. $500 rent, $500 deposit, 614-306-0053. 614-571-1496.

Unfurnished Rentals #1, AFFORDABLE spacious and updated, large 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, & 6 BR APTs on North, South and central campus. Gas heat, A/C, dishwasher, off-street parking. $400-$600 614-294-7067 www.osupropertymanagement. com 60 BROADMEADOWS BLVD

WORTHINGTON TERRACE

RENTS LOWERED • 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms

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

FROM $475.00

80 BROADMEADOWS TOWNHOMES

FROM $505.00 885-9840

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitchens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, basement, very nice. 273-7775. www.osuapartments.com AFFORDABLE 4 Bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty. 429-0960

AVAILABLE FOR fall. 4 Bedroom half of duplex located at 137 E. Norwich. $1500 per month. 2 blocks from High Street. Great location. Please CLINTONVILLE/NORTH CAM- call 614-486-8094 for more dePUS. 2 bedroom apartment with tails. newer cabinets, granite countertops, off-street parking, AC, no COUNTRY HORSE FARM’S pets, $520/month. 95 W. Hud- HOUSE & 5ac yard. 28min. son. 614-582-1672 OSU, plant an organic garden, board your horse, gaze at the CLINTONVILLE/NORTH CAM- nighttime star-filled sky (you PUS. Spacious townhouse with can see all of it). No pets, 1yr finished lease, $1200/mo. 805-4448 basement in quiet location just steps from bike path and bus lines. Off-street parking, 1 1/2 baths, W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. $720/month. 109 W. Duncan. 614-582-1672

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

KENNY/HENDERSON ROAD, 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, townhouse apartment. Ideal for graduate students. A/C, basement with W/D hookup. Near busline, offstreet parking, enclosed patio. $675/month, 614-519-2044. brunopropertiesllc@yahoo.com

LOOKING FOR somewhere to live close to but not on campus? We can help!! 2 bedroom, 1 bath townhouse available in the Kenny/Henderson area. $595 per month. Contact Myers Real Estate 614-486-2933 or visit www. myersrealty.com.

QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD Setting; NW - Reed & Henderson AVAILABLE FALL. 1, 2, 3 or 4 Area; 10 Min From Campus; bedrooms on Woodruff or 15th. 2BR 1 1/2BA; Finished BaseParking included. 614-296-8353 ment with W-D Hookup; Beautifully Renovated; Storage Galore; OSU AVAIL. NOW Walk to Grocery, Post Office, 750 Banks, Restaurants; $800/mo. RIVERVIEW DR. Call Owner Now: 614.459.9400; SPECIAL $100 DEPOSIT Pets Considered. 1 B.R. apts. stove, refrig., Gas heat, laundry Carpet and air cond. available NO PETS PLEASE $365 268-7232

Unfurnished 3 Bedroom

Unfurnished 1 Bedroom

100E.13TH Ave 5BR 2 or 3 baths suites. Available for fall! Roll out of bed & make it to the Ohio Union or class on time! Washer, dryer, dishwasher, microwave AC 1600 square feet www.barealty.com 1909 WALDECK. 9 Bedroom, 2 Kitchens, 2 1/2 Baths, Ready for Fall $2,250/mo. Call Robin 614-846-7863

2403-2405 East Ave. 5 bedroom 2 baths townhouse. Available in the FALL! North campus. Just North of Patterson, one block E of High. $350 per person. Completely remodeled with newer carpet & ceiling fans. Huge kitchen with DW and huge living room. Blinds, A/C & free WD, front and rear porch, free off street parking.Walk a little and save a lot! Call 263-2665 www.gasproperties.com 5-6 Bedrooms, 3 bath, NEW kitchen w/ granite countertops, huge rooms, dishwasher, laundry, A/C, parking. (614) 457-6545 www.crown columbus.com.

6 BR. 14th and Summit. Near Greek houses. W/D provided (free). Central AC. Front/ back porch. $2800/mo. Adam 419-494-4626 or Sean 614-915-4666

2587 INDIANOLA Recent Remodel, Wood floors, Parking, Laundry 65 WEST Maynard near Neil $925/mo Commercial One 5Bedroom +2 full baths town614-324-6717 house available for fall. North 1 BEDROOM for rent- 240 W. www.c1realty.com Campus. Very spacious & modLane ern with huge living room, newer Brand New! You will love the 3 BEDROOM WITH FINISHED carpet, D/W, FREE W/D in baseBASE MENT. Clintonville/North renovations in this beautiful ment, AC, blinds, front porch. 1 bedroom apartment. New Campus. Spacious townhouse Call 263-2665 countertops, appliances, tile overlooking river view, walkout www.gasproperties.com floors, and new baths highlight patio from finished basement to this amazing location across backyard, low traffic, quiet area, 7 BR 43 West Maynard. Comthe street from Fischer College off-street parking, 1 1/2 baths, pletely remodeled. 3 bathrooms, of Business. Access to laundry, W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. lots of parking, on-site launworkout facility, game room, and Steps to bike path and bus lines. dry, central air. $3000/mo. Call more. $850.00 per month. Call $850/month. 105 W. Duncan. Adam 419-494-4626 or Sean 614-582-1672 614-915-4666 (614)294-1684 for a tour! AFFORDABLE 1 Bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty 429-0960

AFFORDABLE 3 Bedrooms. Visit out website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty 429-0960

LARGE NORTH Campus apartAVAILABLE NOW & Fall. Updated 1 Bedroom on 15th or ment with finished basement. Twin single, 3 off-street parking Woodruff. With Parking. spaces, 2 baths, DW, ceiling 614-296-8353. fan, W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. $1050/month. 55 W. Hudson. 614-582-1672.

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

# 1 2-BR affordable townhouses & apartments near campus. AC, FREE OSP, FREE W/D, new windows, nice! North Campus Rentals (614)354-8870 http://www.northcampusrentals. com

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

AFFORDABLE 5 bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty 429-0960.

Unfurnished Efficiency/Studio EFFICIENCY AVAILABLE $490 - High speed internet included. No Application Fee! Fall Units Available. Call Myers Real Estate 614-486-2933 or visit www.myersrealty.com

# 1 4-BR affordable brick Townhouse close to OSU! FREE OSP, FREE W/D, AC, new windows, basement, nice! North Campus Rentals (614)354-8870 #1 2 BR, 194 King Ave. Utilities http://www.northcampusrentals. ROOM: 92 E. 11th Ave. Clean. Cozy. Parking available. Short included, LDY, OFF STREET com term okay. Free internet. $375/ PARKING, CENTRAL A/C, 116 WOODRUFF. 1 Bedroom mo. plus utilities. Phone steve 614-208-3111 apartment. Available Fall 2013. (614)457-8409, shand50@aol.com $595-660/mo. 846-7863 (614)361-2282 1957 SUMMIT St. (Corner 18th 229 E. 11th & Summit). 2 large bedroom 4 BDRM 2 BATH with closets along one wall. Ceramic tile bath. New vanity and 3rd Floor Suite w/ bath, walk-in, study, fixtures. Kitchen with gas range, Fenced Yard, fridge, microwave, diswasher, Double Garage disposal, tile floor. Living room $1580 15’ x 13’ with large picture win(614)267-8631 dows. Gas heat, gas hot water FEMALE OHIO State stu(614)670-1824 heater. New gas furnace. Cendent wanted for 3-bedroom tral A/C. 2 free reserved parking 398 W. King near Belmond 3 or apartment at Harrison Apartspaces. Laundry facilities on 4 bdrm + 2 bath TH avail for fall. ments (222 W. Lane, by Neil site. Water paid. Available Fall. Spacious, completely remld w/ Ave). Apartment is furnished, Call David 614-571-5109 newer carpet, A/C, DW, blinds & close to campus and utilities 2 BEDROOM for rent-49 E. FREE lndry. Close to med. schl included. Share with 2 Ohio State Sophomores. Non-smokoff st. prkg. Call 263-2665 Norwich er please. Rent is $700 per Beautifully renovated 2 bed- www.gasproperties.com room offers new appliances, 4 BEDROOM, 2 Bath. Super month. Please reply to new countertops, new tile floors Nice Townhouse located at E. CKJ23@comcast.net and more! Townhomes and 2 13th Ave. Just right for 4 girls/ flats still available for August boys that want low utilities & a 2013! Great location just one very nice place to live & study! block from High! Call today Call Bob Langhirt for an appoint(614)294-1684. ment to view 1-614-206-0175, 2103 IUKA Ave. 2BR unfur- 1-740-666-0967. Slow down $$BARTENDERING$$ UP nished, kitchen, stove, refrigera- when you leave your phone #. tor, carpet, air. $700/mo. $700 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitch- To $300/ Day. No Experience deposit. Laundry available, ens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, Necessary. Training available. off-street parking. No pets. Avail- basement, very nice. 273-7775. 800-965-6520 ext 124. able Fall. Call 614-306-0053 www.osuapartments.com LOOKING to rent an apartment 322 E. 20th Ave--2 bedroom 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitchtownhouse for fall. $750.00. ens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, or house? Call The Lantern at www.buckeyeabodes.com. basement, very nice. 273-7775. (614) 292-2031. 614-378-8271. www.osuapartments.com

Rooms

Roommate Wanted Female

Help Wanted General

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Help Wanted Medical/Dental

SCP DISTRIBUTORS is looking for a summer warehouse associate starting in April. Previous warehouse/forklift experience preferred. Send resume to: jeremy.svitana@scppool.com

ER SCRIBE - Seeking Pre Med students to work as ER Scribes. www.esiscribe.com

STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid Survey Takers needed in Columbus. 100% free to join. Click on surveys.

$500 ESSAY Contest. Details at www.abortionpoliticians.com

ARCHITECTURE STUDENTS PT Position Office Assistant needed. Flexible hours. $10 to $15 per hour. Responsibilities include all general office tasks, assisting with marketing, field survey, construction drawings and coordinating with clients and overseas drafting team. Knowledge of AutoCAD and Photoshop required. E-mail resume to info@oaeinc.com. ATTN: PT Work - for spring + secure summer work Local Company Hiring: 10 Minutes From Campus Customer Service & Sales Great Starting Pay Flexible PT Schedules Internship Credit Available for select majors Call 614-485-9443 for INFO or buckeyedivunited.com EARN $1000-$3200 a month to drive our new cars with ads. www.DriveCarJobs.com GROCERY STORE: Applications now being accepted for Full-time/Part-time employment. Produce Clerk, Cashier, Deli Clerk, Stock Clerk, and Service Counter. Afternoons, evenings. Starting pay $8.00/Hr. Enjoyable work atmosphere. Must be 18 years or over. Great personalities only! Apply in person Huffman’s Market, 2140 Tremont Center, Upper Arlington (2 blocks north of Lane Ave and Tremont).

SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE! CAMP WAYNE FOR GIRLS Children’s summer camp, Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania 6/15-8/11. If you love children and want a caring, fun environment we need Counselors, Instructors and other staff for our summer camp. Interviews on the OSU campus March 31st. Select The Camp That Selects The Best Staff! Call 1.215.944.3069 or apply on-line www.campwaynegirls.com TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS wanted immediately to conduct interviews for research firm. No experience necessary. Great part-time job for students. Evening and daytime shifts available. Apply in person at: Strategic Research Group, 995 Goodale Blvd., 2nd floor. THE CACHET salon of Worthington Hills seeks part time customer service rep for front desk. Fridays 1:30pm-8pm and Saturdays 7:45am- 1pm starting at $8/hr. Permanent position. Please apply in person at the Cachet salon. 7792 Olentangy River Road Columbus 43235, at the base of Worthington Hills. Call 614-841-1821. VALETS Driven. Service oriented. A team player. Reliable. Professional. Friendly. Does this sound like you? Currently hiring FT/PT Valets for various shifts throughout Columbus. www.ParkingSolutionsInc.com

Help Wanted Child Care

“ABA PROVIDER needed for 15 yr old autistic girl, assist with leisure activities, chores & social skills. Training provided. Hours: before/ after school & weekends. Very flexible. Pay is through Transition DD waiver, everage $15/hr. Great reference for Grad School! Female prefered. ConNEED A strong college male to tact hangnguyen.1971@yahoo. provide maximum care for our com� son at 17.80/hr on Saturdays 3 to 11pm. Lifting is required. AFTER 2:30 T/Th and or weekNeed own transportation. ends take 15yo autistic male on Close to OSU. Please call Jean outings zoo shopping swimming 10/hr to start need car referenc284-7276. es dobos.1@osu.edu OPEN POSITION BABY-SITTER needed 9am-5pm, once/week Title: Research Associate Victorian Village. One infant. We are now accepting applica- Email resume to tions for a Research Associate vvbabysitter@gmail.com at Strategic Research Group, LOOKING FOR a summer an independent research com- (5-30-13 to 7-30-13) babysitter pany based in Columbus Ohio. in Grandview home for 5th gradThe successful candidate would er and 7th grader on Tuesday’s, work with a team of researchers Wednesday’s, Thursday’s from conducting educational research 7:45 AM to 5 PM. Please e-mail under the supervision of a proj- rebeccalearyan@gmail.com if ect manager. The position re- interested. quires a person who is organized and can communicate effectively MAKE A difference this summer. with a wide variety of individuals Help a 12-yr-old girl w/ disabiliof different educational levels. ties improve communication and Tasks include, but are not lim- self-care skills, and engage with ited to, assistance in preparing peers at camp/pool/etc. Start questionnaires and protocols, 3:40-6:30 p.m. some days in scheduling meetings and site April/May, and add hours in earvisits, interviewing, conducting ly June. Reliable car required. observational research, data You’ll drive girl & her 7-yr-old entry, transcribing, and other brother to camp/park/pool/etc. tasks as required by the project Must like to have fun & be acmanager. The successful candi- tive. Must complete PDP prodate should have a Master’s de- vider training through the county, gree in a social science field, a pass background check. Pay Bachelor’s degree in education $12-$14 per hour. 20 min north with some research exposure, of campus. Email susanlps@ or experience in conducting re- gmail.com. search in schools. PARTTIME AFTERNOON Interested candidates should Teacher needed for Toddler class at northwest Christian submit resumes to: School. M-F, 3-6pm, Requires ctidyman@strategicresearchhs diploma plus experience group.com working with kids, college ORDER PROCESSOR/ courses in early childhood or Customer Service full and part education pref. time opportunities between 8am-7pm. Strong data entry Please fax resume to Anna skills required. at 614-336-8485 or call Located in Dublin. 614-336-9559. www.linworthPlease apply on line at cc.org EOE www.sygmanetwork.com PLEASE HELP DISABLED PART TIME 4-6 days a AND TERMINALLY ILL YOUNG month, begining of the month PEOPLE. at west side mailing facility. 3 You are needed as Care Providshifts; 8am to 4:30pm, 4pm ers to work with and encourage to 12:30am & midnight to young people with disabilities in 8:30am. Also offer 12 hour family home settings. Bring joy to shifts. Great way to earn the life of these young people by extra money and only work caring for them, helping them to about a week each month. participate in their communities Pay rate is between $9.00 & and enjoy life. If you have play $10.50, depending on shift & skills or encouragement gifts postiion. Call 614-850-8601 please apply. This job allows for more info or for interview you to learn intensively and can accommodate your class schedtimes. ule. Those in all related fields or who have a heart for these misSALES FT/PT. Cousins Army/ sions please apply. Training proNavy Store. 1453 N. High Street. vided. Competitive wages and Corner of 8th ang High. Campus benefits. For more information, Tradition since 1970. Apply be- call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614)475-5305 tween 2-6 or visit us at www.LIFE-INC.NET EOE

Unfurnished Rentals

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service **AM AND PM Servers** Downtown private Club seeking WAIT STAFF for lunch and/ or dinner service Mon - Fri with limited Saturdays. This is a part time position that offers minimum 20 hrs weekly in a prestigious environment that excludes Sundays and holidays. We seek only friendly, quality orientated service personnel in exchange for a starting wage near 12.00 hr. This is not the typical high volume, tip based, table turning restaurant. Please apply in person BEFORE 11am or AFTER 2pm at 181 East Broad Street (Corner of 4th St and Broad Street, downtown Columbus). The Columbus Club www.columbusclub.com No Emails please BONJOUR OSU! La Chatelaine French Bakery & Bistros are looking for enthusiastic, charming and hardworking mademoiselles & monsieurs that love to work in an established family run restaurant & bakery. Our locations are hiring Weekday & weekend Counter help, restaurant experience recommended. Weekday nights & weekend morning Prep/Cook, must have cooking experience. We our also always looking for great servers for all three locations, Upper Arlington, Worthington & Historic Dublin Please stop in for an application or email us at lachatel@aol.com www.LaChatelaineBakery.com Merci! CLIPPERS BASEBALL Sodexo @ Huntington Park Season Starts April 11 Part Time Positions Available! Applications are accepted at: 330 Huntington Park Lane M-F 10am-4pm 614-722-1125 Enter through double glass doors on Huntington Park Ln, under blue Clippers Hat. Sodexo values workforce diversity. EOE/M/F/D/V MOZART’S BAKERY AND VIENNA ICE CAFE - Looking for part- time/full-time reliable counter help, server help, kitchen help. High Street location, a mile north of campus. Email resume to info@mozartscafe.com

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

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 mid-May; and programs running June to August 2013. Daytime hours Monday thru Friday, with occasional Saturdays, Sundays, travel and evening hours. Stipend pay of $100 per full-day session, $50 per half-day session. Visit www.COSI.org for full job descriptions and to apply. SALES LEADER wanted to develop and lead a sales team for wellness and weight loss products. Must bust be self motivated. Part time or full time, set your own hours. Commission and cash bonuses. For more information contact: fitworksfindlay@gmail.com

VOLUNTEERS ARE needed to answer the 24-hour Suicide Prevention Hotline. Volunteers receive 50 hours of free training, beginning March 27. Each volunteer commits to working 6 hours a week from June through November, 2013. To volunteer or for more information, call Susan Jennings, Volunteer Coordinator, or Mary Brennen-Hofmann, Program Coordinator, at 299-6600.You can also contact the program at sps@ncmhs.org

Help Wanted Interships FLOWERS ON Orchard Lane is looking for interns to fill two paid positions.

Help Wanted Sales/Marketing

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

COLLEGE STUDENTS. Highly motivated people with good attitude needed for irrigation service industry. Full and Part-time. 457-6520. E-mail sales@golden-rule-service.com.

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Typing Services

Tutoring Services

http://www.twomenandatruck. com

For Sale Miscellaneous

Business Opportunities

MONEY-MONEY-MONEY! Massive Spillover = Massive Income With No Recruiting! Free Tour At: http://zuma1980.STIFORPMovie.com

START YOUR own successful home-based business marketing the essential services that people need and use every day, while earning lasting, residual income. You can be a part of it; the time is now. Contact me to find out more information. ACN Independent Business Owner Gary Campbell 614-749-9666 pinpointvalue@yahoo.com VACANCIES? VACANCIES? www.garyacampbell.acndirect. VACANCIES? Let our leasing com services pay for themselves. For garyacampbell@acnrep.com your leasing, property management, or sales needs Call 1st Place Realty 429-0960. www.my1stplace.com

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Announcements/ Notice

Travel/ Vacation $199 FLIGHT from Columbos to NYC, direct round trip info@roselawntravel.com or call 347.770.2488 Discount code:Lantern

General Services

This work requires a great deal of physical labor.

Please NO phone calls or third party contacts. TWO MEN And A Truck/Columbus is looking for a self-motivated and task-oriented individual to help our company recruit and hire movers and drivers for out busy summer season. This is an excellent opportunity to gain ‘real world’ experience with a reputable and fast growing company. The HR Intern will assist the HR Department: recruit, process applications, conduce phone interviews and first interviews with screened candidates, conduct background checks for potential hires and other hiring related tasks as needed. Training is provided.

The OSU Stress and Health Study is seeking an undergraduate student pursing a degree in nursing or other medically related field for a research assistant position. The position is a 10 - 20 hour per week commitment with availability two to three mornings during the work week. The person should have an interest in research and background in psychology or a related bio- Qualifications: The HR intern logical or social must have good organizational sciences field. skills, excellent communication abilities, and good time/task Duties include drawing blood prioritization. Basic math skills from research participants, and problem solving skills are reviewing medical records, necessary. The intern will need administering psychological working knowledge of Microsoft questionnaires, conducting Windows, Excel, Word and Acresearch interviews, and cess Programs. working with data in the lab. A main focus of the position is per- Work Schedule would be : forming blood draws on a cancer Monday 8am-5pm, Tuesday survivor population, so excellent 3pm-7pm, Friday 8am-5pm phlebotomy skills are essential. Pay: $7.85/hour The ability to drive to partici- Start Date: March 2013 pants homes for Qualified Candidates should research visits is required. email cover letter and resume to the above email. Interested persons can apply online at www.stressandhealth.org or email a resume to stressandhealth@osu.edu.

Help Wanted Clerical

FAST, ACCURATE, professional proofreading and copy editing. Will edit papers, term papers, thesis, dissertations and manuscripts. 27 years of Responsibilities include but are experience in publishing. Call not limited to: 614-204-4619 or email -Researching competitors tcunning53@gmail.com. -Tracking customer data and trends -Assisting w/customer relations -Delivering marketing materials to referral sources -Tracking marketing activities -Developing and maintaining a local media list NEED AN experienced typ-Coordinating community ser- ist, proofreader, editor, and/ vice involvement and activities or transcriptionist? Call Donna @937-767-8622. Excellent references. Reasonable rates. **Applicants must be able to drive company car and qualify under our insurance requirements. Must be 21 or older, valid driver license, acceptable driving record. Schedule is Monday-Friday. Up to 20 hours per week. Days and A MATH tutor. All levels. Also hours may vary. Compensation: Minimum wage Physics, Statistics and Business College Math. Teaching/tutoring Please contact us if you are since 1965. Checks okay. Call interested: kurt.baker@twom- anytime, Clark 294-0607. en.com

BOOKS: HYSTERIA Molt echoes the great writers in Clumsy Hearts, a slightly misguided romance. They may never forgive her for it. Some people #1 CORNER of King and Neil. cannot take a joke. Available via Security Building. 2BR, CA, Amazon.com. LDY, OFF STREET PARKING. $750/ month Phone Steve 614-208-3111. Shand50@aol.com

Help Wanted Volunteer

Help Wanted OSU

UNDERGRADUATE Research Assistant

ResumĂŠ Services

TWO MEN And A Truck/Columbus is now hiring a part-time Marketing Intern to help implement our marketing plan.

~ a sophomore or junior from a local college ~ someone able to work through November 2013 ~ flexible scheduling weekends WE ARE hiring for all positions. are a must To apply go to work4gb.com or call us at Send your resume with a cover 614.246.2900 letter to Flowers on Orchard Lane 18 Orchard Lane Columbus, OH 43214 Or email fool@columbus.rr.com HANDYMAN-WORK part time on off-campus properties, painting, plumbing, electrical experience a plus, work 15 to 20 hrs. per week, flexible hours to meet your class schedule, current OSU student preferred, call 761-9035.

Help Wanted Interships

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CAMPUS PARTNERS is seeking and undergraduate or graduate student to fill the Student Director’s seat on the Campus Partners Board of Directors for the 2013 - 2015 term. If interested please fill out the application at www.campuspartner.osu.edu and return it to Campus Partners, 1534 N High St, by April 1st, 2013. Contact prosser.20@ osu.edu MAINTENANCE SERVICES For Landlords & Tenants www.campushandyman.com The help you need... to get the job you want www.jobexpertsonline.com/ osu 40% student discount

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us any due or believed in us. So we kind of wanted to take more ownership as players, as a team … whatever our role is, we wanted to do that.” While those roles have changed on a game-to-game basis lately, they’ve guided the Buckeyes to recent success. Thomas has continued with his offensive role as the team and Big Ten’s leading scorer, but help from Craft, among others, has lifted the Buckeyes to its fourth conference tournament crown since 2007 and a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament. In OSU’s first game of the conference tournament, a 71-50 blowout of Nebraska on Friday, Thomas did his part, scoring 19 points, but he had substantial help from sophomore forward Sam Thompson, who also tallied 19 points playing in the United Center in his hometown, Chicago. Against Michigan State, Thomas played second fiddle to Craft, who gashed through the Spartans defense for 20 points in a 61-58 win. And while the Fort Wayne, Ind., native still had 16 points, it appeared clear that Thomas didn’t have the burden of being OSU’s only capable scoring threat. Sunday unfolded in a similar manner, except this time, sophomore forward LaQuinton Ross assumed the role as Thomas’ sidekick and chipped in seven points. While Thomas led the team with 17 points, Ross’ play down the stretch is what ultimately sealed the Buckeyes’ fate. “That feels great. That’s like a great moment, man, knowing that you’re in there with the last two minutes in on the game, knowing that like, it’s not only on you but it’s on your teammates, that you got to help them win,” Ross said. Ross has become one of OSU’s ever-growing arsenal of scorers who form a legitimate threat as the team heads into the NCAA tournament. And, Thomas, who has served as a stabilizing force for the Buckeyes for so long, said those scorers can only help the team en route to March Madness success. “At this stage right now, a lot of people (are) scoring on our team and people know I can score, and right now it’s all about winning and getting to that next play and next play and the next game,” Thomas said. No. 2 OSU is set to play No. 15 seed Iona in the first-round of the NCAA tournament in Dayton on Saturday at 7:15 p.m.

Monday March 18, 2013

Cody cousino / Multimedia editor

Ohio State junior forward Deshaun Thomas (1) tries to shoot over Nebraska senior forward Brandon Ubel (13) during the 2nd half of a quarterfinal game in the Big Ten tournament at the United Center in Chicago on March 15. OSU, won 71-50.

cody cousino / Multimedia editor

Ohio State sophomore guard Shannon Scott (3) has the ball stripped by Michigan State sophomore guard Travis Trice during the 1st half of a semifinal game in the Big Ten tournament at the United Center in Chicago on March 16. OSU won, 61-58.

cody cousino / Multimedia editor

Ohio State sophomore forward LaQuinton Ross (10) tries to shoot over Wisconsin senior forward Ryan Evans (5) during the 1st half of the championship game of the Big Ten tournament at the United Center in Chicago on March 17. OSU won, 50-43.

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Cody cousino / Multimedia editor

Ohio State coach Thad Matta (left) and junior forward Deshaun Thomas (right) cut off a piece of the net after defeating Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament championship game, 50-43.

Chicago tourney weekend highlighted by Big Ten bests Craft, the Buckeyes overcame big games from Spartan junior forward Adreian Payne and junior point guard Keith Appling.

andrew holleran Photo editor holleran.9@osu.edu

Best shot: Illinois senior guard Brandon Paul’s buzzer beater against Minnesota, Thursday, first round

Best player: Craft

CHICAGO — Throughout the regular season, the Big Ten was considered the nation’s best conference. With its teams on display this weekend at the conference tournament in Chicago, the Big Ten didn’t disappoint. Ohio State won its fourth tournament championship Sunday, beating Wisconsin, 50-43. There were plenty of highlights though, from the tournament’s start on Thursday afternoon through the finale.

The rosy-cheeked fan favorite was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, and rightfully so. Craft had what was potentially the best game of any player in the tournament in OSU’s semifinal win against MSU. He scored 20 points, 18 in the second half, while adding nine assists, four steals and three rebounds. On the tournament, Craft averaged 12 points, six assists, three rebounds and two steals a game. Best crowd: MSU vs. No. 6 seed Iowa, Friday, quarterfinal round

Best game: No. 2 seed OSU 61, No. 3 seed Michigan State 58, Saturday, semifinal round The Buckeyes and Spartans had two close battles in the regular season, and the third matchup of the season between the two teams was no different. Behind a 20-point outburst from junior guard Aaron

referees, too, as Iowa coach Fran McCaffrey said after the game his players deserved a “better fate.”

The Spartans and Hawkeyes both had large groups of fans in Chicago, and their close battle in the quarterfinal round proved it. MSU overcame a 12-point deficit in the second half to overtake Iowa, 59-56, after a 3-point attempt from the Hawkeyes in the closing seconds was off. The crowd’s energy had a lot to do with questionable calls from the

With the game tied, Paul got the ball at the top of the key with the seconds ticking down. He waited until about the six-second mark to make his move. Paul dribbled hard to the left elbow, crossed over, stepped back, and hit a fadeaway jumper that flushed through the net to give the Illini a 51-49 victory. Biggest surprise: Indiana not making the tournament final The Hoosiers were widely considered the conference’s most talented team throughout the season. Indiana has experienced skill, too, with its best players nearly all having big-time roles last year. They came into Chicago as the No. 1 seed, but Wisconsin best the Hoosiers, 68-56, behind 16 points from senior forward Ryan Evans.

JUST A SHORT TRIP TO THE

SHORT NORTH GET TO KNOW A BETTER (STUDENT) SHOPPING EXPERIENCE

1350 NORTH HIGH STREET When shopping for groceries, you look for quality, convenience and the best prices. Why not come to the Short North Kroger and get all three? Whether you want to catch a delicious meal at the Bistro with friends or just need to make a quick trip for snacks, Kroger has what students need. So make the short trip to the Short North Kroger and see the difference.

– Beverage Center – In-Store Bistro – Olive Bar – Hot Soup Bar – Sandwich Station – Chef on the Run

– Bulk Natural Foods – Free WiFi – Sushi – Pharmacy – Service Meat and Seafood – Artisan Bread

– Liquor Store (adjacent to store) – Produce/Floral/Organics – Now Accepting

©2012 The Kroger Co.

Monday March 18, 2013

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