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Thursday March 28, 2013 year: 133 No. 44

the student voice of

The Ohio State University

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thelantern OSU cast as the favorite in Los Angeles

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andrew holleran Photo editor holleran.9@osu.edu

heads held high

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The OSU hockey team’s season is over, but coach Mark Osiecki said he was proud of what his team accomplished.

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For the first time since the preseason, the Ohio State men’s basketball team has a target on its back not many other squads currently claim. The Buckeyes started the year ranked No. 4 in the country but fell from the top rung of the college basketball world after non-conference losses to Duke and Kansas. Following a blowout loss at Wisconsin in mid-February, OSU dropped out of the national limelight all together. OSU has since rebounded; winning 10 straight contests highlighted by a Big Ten Tournament championship and NCAA Tournament wins against Iona and Iowa State. During their recent stretch, though, the Buckeyes were never truly the hunted — the team everyone else was eyeing and going after. In Chicago at the conference tournament, OSU was a secondary thought to No. 1 seed and regular season champion Indiana. In the NCAA Tournament, the Buckeyes were seeded below Gonzaga in the West Region and considered the worst of all the No. 2 seeds by the NCAA’s S-curve. That’s all changed heading into this weekend, with Thad Matta’s squad now being the clear favorite in the West Region. OSU is the highest remaining seed in its region. Gonzaga, No. 3 seed

Cody CoUSino / Multimedia editor

oSU sophomore forward Sam Thompson (12) shoots a layup in the March 24 nCaa Tournament game against iowa State at the University of dayton arena. with the 78-75 win, oSU advanced to the Sweet 16. New Mexico, No. 4 seed Kansas State and No. 5 seed Wisconsin have all fallen in the West. The Buckeyes will play No. 6 seed Arizona Thursday at the Staples Center in Los Angeles and, if victorious, will take on either No. 9 seed Wichita State or No. 13

seed La Salle Saturday in the Elite Eight. For OSU, anything less than a trip to the Final Four at this point will be construed as a disappointment by many. Reporter Andy Glockner said in

a Monday SI.com article that OSU is “the most polished and accomplished team left,” in its region. In a mock re-seeding of the 16 teams remaining in the field, Myron Medcalf of ESPN.com placed the Buckeyes fourth, only behind Louisville (Midwest Region No. 1 seed), Michigan (South Region No. 4 seed), and Florida (South Region No. 3 seed). Matta’s Buckeye squads have fared well in previous NCAA Tournaments as the higher seed. Since 2007, OSU is 14-3 in the NCAA Tournament against teams seeded lower than it, with the three losses coming to No. 9 seed Siena in 2009, No. 6 seed Tennessee in 2010 and No. 4 seed Kentucky in 2011. Much of that can be attributed to Matta having his team playing its best basketball at the most important time of the season. It’s no different this year. “Coach does a great job preparing us for March,” said junior forward Deshaun Thomas. OSU is finally playing like the team many thought it could be when the season began with the Buckeyes ranked among the country’s elite. Junior guard Aaron Craft and sophomore forward Sam Thompson have proven to be competent secondary scoring options to Thomas. Sophomore guard Shannon Scott and sophomore forward LaQuinton

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Some turn profile pics red for gay marriage

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immersed in the role

Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes embraced the city of Schenectady for the movie ‘The Place Beyond the Pines.’

campus

RPAC to get new outdoor courts

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anThony SzUhay Lantern reporter szuhay.3@osu.edu The Supreme Court is hearing arguments on same-sex marriage this week, and some students have turned to social media to share their support for the cause. As part of the Human Rights Campaign’s “United for Marriage,” people all across the world have been changing their profile pictures to a red graphic with an equal sign, symbolizing support for marriage equality. Aaron Clapper, a third-year in public affairs, said he loved seeing the swarm of red on social media. “For friends and allies, random friends on Facebook and even gay partners-in-crime to show their support is astounding,” he said. “I was emotional today seeing everyone’s support, and even reading posts made by everyone who find the issue so thrilling.” Clapper called the support “overwhelming.” “It was awesome to experience as a student who studies this on a daily basis, and as a gay man,” he said. The campaign started in light of the U.S. Supreme Court hearing oral arguments on California’s Proposition 8 on Tuesday and the hearing on the Defense of Marriage Act on Wednesday. Proposition 8 was passed in California in 2008, 142 days after same-sex marriage became legal in the state. The state constitutional amendment made it so only marriage between a man and a woman was legally recognized.

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In those 142 days, about 18,000 same-sex couples wed, according to the Associated Press. The Defense of Marriage Act, passed in 1996 under former President Bill Clinton, defines marriage as a legal union between a man and a woman. Under this law, same-sex married couples are deprived of a number of benefits in areas of tax breaks, social security and tax benefits.

But for some students, the ability to marry who they want means everything to them. “For me personally, to be able to get married means the world,” Clapper said. “If it (were to) ever happen for me, it would mean that I am recognized as an equal in this world — that I am valued the same as my straight counterpart.”

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Oval to be a ‘Walk Zone’ starting next month Shay TroTTer Lantern reporter trotter.35@osu.edu

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demonstrators gather in front of the US Supreme Court on March 27 as the court hears arguments on a part of the defense of Marriage act that prevents legally wed same-sex couples from receiving certain benefits.

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ally MaroTTi / Editor-in-chief

2 oSU Police officers patrol the area of woodruff avenue between high Street and College avenue for jaywalking.

Bicyclists and skateboarders will be required to dismount before crossing the Oval and the South Oval when the areas are designated walk zones starting April 17, in a new policy that some students say misses the point. Ohio State Police will enforce the new “Walk Zone” policy in Fall 2013 and, for those who do not comply, citations will be written at the officer’s discretion, according to a document from the Office of Administration and Planning. Officers will consider multiple factors, including, location, time-of-day, past violations and danger presented by the violation, according to OSU’s “Walk Zone Guide.” Fines for university violations begin at $20, and fines for state and municipal violations begin at $129.

Alex Smith, president of Bike OSU and a graduate student in city and regional planning, said he is unsure of just how effective the new policy will be. “I don’t think it’s really going to do much,” he said. “And I don’t really understand what the purpose of it is.” While Smith said he rarely rides his bike through the Oval and therefore likely won’t be impacted, other cyclists might respond differently. “It may cause less students to ride their bikes because they don’t want to be ticketed for a violation,” he said. Nick Palmiotto, a first-year in finance and economics, said although he doesn’t ride a bike on campus, he feels OSU should focus more on the safety of the cyclists. “I saw a kid riding his bike and he hit a bump on the Oval, completely flipped over the handlebars and collapsed,” Palmiotto said. “So I think the sidewalk

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campus Some students already planning Final 4 trips MJ Dorony Lantern reporter dorony.4@osu.edu

andrew holleran / Photo editor

OSU fans try to rattle freshman guard Denzel Valentine (45) during a game against Michigan State on Feb. 24 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 68-60.

The Ohio State Buckeyes have to win two more games in the NCAA Tournament before the team can begin thinking about playing in the Final Four, but some OSU students are already starting to make plans for the more than 500-mile trip down south. With the No. 1, No. 3, No. 4 and No. five seeds already eliminated from the west region of the tournament, the No. 2 seed Buckeyes are the favorite to advance to the Final Four. OSU is scheduled to play No. 6 seed Arizona on Thursday and either No. 9 Wichita State or No. 13 La Salle if they advance to play on Saturday. However, in a tournament that is filled with upsets, nothing is guaranteed.

If the Buckeyes can get past those two contests, they will be booking flights and hotels to Atlanta for the Final Four. Zach Bickett, a second-year in logistics management, decided Monday night to book a hotel for him and two of his friends. “We are luckily able to cancel our reservations if we don’t make it to the Final Four,” Bickett said. “But it worked out to be $37 a night and just outside of Atlanta, so it’s a steal.” Dustin Stinson, a fourth-year in sports industry, made a guarantee. “I will absolutely be there,” Stinson said. “I didn’t go to last year’s Final Four and I kind of wish I did.” Stinson said he has family in Atlanta he can stay with, and three of his roommates are also thinking about going.

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Gee forms partnership in Brazil, aims to take OSU global liz dickey Lantern reporter dickey.88@osu.edu President E. Gordon Gee told members of the Columbus Metropolitan Club that Ohio State has the potential to become the leading global institution in America, but before that potential could be realized, he had to take a trip to the most populous city in South America. OSU formed a $1.4 million research partnership last week with São Paulo, expanding Gee’s Global Gateways initiative. “The purpose of our trip is part of a larger global strategy to build partnerships and to discover new opportunities for both Ohio State and the state of Ohio and to explore the possibility of opening our third Global Gateway office,” Gee said at the Columbus Metropolitan Club forum Wednesday. Gee said he believes OSU is in a

position to lead the nation as a global institution and stressed the importance of actively reaching out through global gateways and research partnerships. “Public higher education is the fuel and fire that moves us forward, individually and collectively, toward the noble horizon of achieving the nation’s founding promise, that promise that was embodied in the statement, ‘We the People,’” Gee said. “The most basic value of public higher education is its role in advancing our understanding of who we are as humans.” Gee began his discussion of public higher education with a depiction of his office view of the Oval, describing his regular observation of students from all different backgrounds making their way to various classes across the intersecting sidewalks and patches of grass. “Ohio State’s Oval is not merely the physical heart of the university, it is also a

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Andrew Holleran / Photo editor

OSU President E. Gordon Gee during an interview with The Lantern on March 25.

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Ross have provided major sparks off the bench in recent games. Redshirt senior forward Evan Ravenel and sophomore center Amir Williams, while making limited impacts offensively, have rebounded well and played stingy defense in the lane. It’s every team’s goal to be playing as well as possible as the season comes to an end; the Buckeyes are actually doing it. The Buckeyes will find out Thursday whether that can continue against an Arizona team that struggled with consistency down the stretch. The Wildcats won their first 14 games of the season, but lost three of their final five games heading into the NCAA Tournament and finished tied for second in the PAC-12. Arizona is led by its point guard Mark Lyons, who transferred from Xavier after last season. The Wildcat senior who averages 15.4 points per game will face off against the defensive minded duo of Craft and Scott. On the inside, Arizona features forward Solomon Hill. The

Red from 1A Connor Hooper, a first-year in public affairs, changed his profile picture on Facebook and joined Clapper and others in support of equal rights. “I did it for all of my friends and family members who are gay,” Hooper said. “I did it because it is unacceptable to make any American anything less than entirely free.” Like Clapper, Hooper said he was happy to see friends and students support the cause online. “It’s heartwarming,” Hooper said. “It is inspiring and I never had the expectation that so many people would publicly stand up for the cause.” Lawrence Baum, professor emeritus of political science, said the cases raise the question of whether the laws violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. “These cases have attracted enormous interest because they involve an issue that is very important to many people and that is highly controversial,” he said. Baum also said the amount of attention the cases receive could affect their outcomes.

Oval from 1A condition would be the biggest issue here, which means it’s a liability for the university, not necessarily if the students should be able to ride their bikes or not. And they should, given people are respectful when they are looking out for other people walking and such.” Since enforcement will not begin until the fall, the April 17 date is intended to launch an educational period for people to learn more about the “Walk Zone,” said Lindsay Komlanc, spokeswoman for OSU Administration and Planning, in an email. “We understand that this is a significant change that will take a lot of education throughout the university community,” Komlanc said. “We wanted to wait until a point in time in the semester when the weather would be nice enough that we would likely see a lot of traffic throughout the Oval, but would still have enough time left in the semester to engage in educational efforts that the university community would have time to adjust their behavior throughout the spring.” The “Walk Zone” was a recommendation from the Traffic Safety Task Force, Komlanc said, which was created last fall and co-chaired by senior vice president of Administration and Planning Jay Kasey and vice president of Student Life Javaune Adams-Gaston. One of the task force’s main goals was to define how the university expects all modes of transportation to interact with one another. “When looking at how to start a major cultural change in how pedestrians, motor vehicles and bicyclists interact on campus, the Traffic Safety Task Force felt that the Oval was a good place to start in that almost all members of our community use it to cross campus and that it would be a high-profile way to start to educate the university community on which modes of transportation are safe and suitable for specific areas of campus,” Komlanc said.

senior averages 13.3 points and 5.4 rebounds per game, and will be playing in his hometown. OSU players, however, aren’t really paying attention to anything going outside “The O,” a term used by the Buckeyes to describe their inner circle in which nothing is supposed to distract them from the goal ahead. “We just focus on us and ourselves, what we got in our circle and on our team,” Thomas said. “We don’t let (any) distractions come in our circle. We know once that happens, bad things can happen.” There are three teams standing in the way of OSU and a return to the Final Four, and while none of them are considered elite, the Buckeyes aren’t taking any of them lightly. “The teams that are left, they’re there for a reason, and they’re not going to be slouches,” said Craft, whose game winning 3-pointer vaulted OSU past the Cyclones Sunday. OSU and Arizona are set to tip off at 7:47 p.m. Thursday at the Staples Center in LA.

“In particular, the justices who think that state prohibitions of same-sex marriage violate the U.S. Constitution might hesitate to reach such a decision because it would have a sweeping effect on the country and because it would bring the Court directly into the controversy,” he said. Baum said growing support for same-sex marriage might yield opposite effects, however. “If (the justices) perceive a political tide favoring same-sex marriage, they might feel that the issue ultimately will be resolved in legislatures and public votes,” he said. “They might then conclude that the Court would do best by letting that happen without intervening to resolve the issue itself.” Clapper said that while the legalization of same-sex marriage might not come overnight, these hearings are a step in the right direction. “(This) is a huge milestone,” he said. “Not only for gay rights and same-sex marriage, but also for our Supreme Court. For us to possibly experience one of the most controversial, extreme cases of the Supreme Court is huge.”

Some students such as Laura Burmeister, a thirdyear in political science and English, voiced approval of the “Walk Zone.” “I like that idea,” she said. “I just wish they’d enforce riding on the streets instead of the sidewalks.” John Troisi, a first-year in chemical engineering, also said he is not opposed to the new policy, adding he doesn’t believe it will be a major concern for those traveling on foot. “I personally haven’t had any encounter with being hit by a bike, but I feel like it’s a big inconvenience to bike riders, not that big of a nuisance for people who walk,” Troisi said. The Columbus Division of Police began enforcing jaywalking rules and issued citations for law-breaking after a series of accidents in the campus and off-campus area last fall. The Traffic Safety report noted jaywalking as a concern on campus, particularly on 17th Avenue, that could be improved by enforcing rules with and without citations by University Police. Representatives from University Police were seen reprimanding people crossing the road outside of crosswalks Wednesday near Woodruff and College avenues. While some people have doubted the effectiveness of the safety task force, OSU President E. Gordon Gee is not one of them. “I do think the task force has been helpful, and they’re going to be out in full force soon,” he said in a Monday interview with The Lantern. Gee has attributed to safety issues on campus to the $2 billion worth of construction going on and the differing rhythm of semesters. “You would think we had twice as many students on this campus now than we did on quarters,” he said, noting it seems like students are spending more time on campus than in previous years. “As soon as the weather turns, we’re going to have a big safety event across the whole campus,” he said.

USG officials sworn into office USG President Taylor Stepp (middle) and Vice President Josh Ahart (right) are sworn into their offices on March 27.

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campus $320K to fund 2 basketball, 2 v-ball courts outside RPAC caroline keyes Lantern reporter keyes.64@osu.edu The RPAC will be adding four new outdoor recreation courts this spring at an estimated cost of more than $320,000. The Department of Recreational Sports is building two new outdoor basketball courts and two sand volleyball courts on the RPAC’s northwest lawn. The project, which is expected to be completed by May 17, will replace the former Cannon Drive basketball courts. Dave DeAngelo, the department’s senior associate director of facilities, said the opportunity to construct the new courts came when the university began upgrading the campus steam and condensate system. “The two Cannon Drive basketball courts across from the towers were going to have to be destroyed as part of the steam line project, so we decided it would be great to relocate in front of the RPAC,” DeAngelo said. The Board of Trustees approved the steam distribution lines upgrade in August, with estimated project costs totaling $20.3 million, according to meeting minutes. DeAngelo said the RPAC had money in reserves to be able to provide additional financial support to complete the courts as well. “This is just one small part of the bigger steam line project,” DeAngelo said. “We contributed

Final from 2A Jay Short, a third-year in human nutrition and dietetics, said he is planning to attend the Final Four if OSU makes it, and is considering carpooling, flying or taking a bus with friends to Atlanta for the game. “And then we have to figure out where to stay,” Short said. “We have no problem if we can even figure out a camping spot.” He plans to enter the student lottery, however he said he would go to the game even if he didn’t receive tickets.

around $100,000 for the basketball courts, and then the volleyball courts were around $223,000.” DeAngelo said the project will not disturb any of the other facilities and courts outside of the RPAC but will share some of the same lights as the tennis courts. He added the courts will likely have a pushbutton system for lights so students can still play when it is dark outside. Coltin Balser, a first-year in biology and Morrill Tower resident, said the construction has been a little inconvenient but likes the location of the new courts. “We do use the tennis courts (outside of the RPAC) a lot, so I think having something like that so close to a primarily freshman dorm is a good idea and will get a lot of use,” Balser said. DeAngelo said other than for special events such as Welcome Week activities, the courts will be completely available for students to use at their discretion. “We aren’t going to reserve the courts for anything,” DeAngelo said. “It’s just so convenient to have them right here and not have to go out to Fred Beekman Park or North Campus.” Rachel Garcia, a second-year in human development and family science and Morrill Tower resident, said she does not plan on using the courts. “I think they will be pretty popular with students, especially those who live nearby, and a good use of space,” Garcia said. “I do wonder though how the courts will be affected during football season.”

“We would at the very least go and enjoy the environment and go to tailgates. You can’t pass it up as a student. It’s the Final Four, it’s going to be crazy,” he said. Bickett and Stinson don’t have tickets to go to the games yet either; they plan to enter into the online student lottery and see what happens. Stinson said even if he has to buy more expensive tickets online, he will be in the Georgia Dome as long as the Buckeyes are there. “It’s my last year and I’m graduating in a month. This is my last big sporting event to be able to travel to,” Stinson said. “It’s now or never.”

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Daniel chi / Asst. photo editor

4 new basketball and sand volleyball courts located near the RPAC are expected to be completed by mid-May.

Gee from 2A place from which hope and light radiate without ceasing,” Gee said. “It is the crucible from which a better and more just global future will emerge.” Gee, Caroline Whitacre, vice president for research, and William Brustein, vice provost for global strategies and international affairs, traveled to Brazil to sign this new agreement with representatives of the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), São Paulo research foundation. OSU has existing partnerships with researchers of São Paulo in fields such as translational plant science, but with this new partnership, collaboration is open to all disciplines. The partnership is part of a university-wide initiative to expand international ties and assert OSU as a global institution. “We have more than 6,000 international students, putting us in the nation’s top 10 for international student enrollment,” Gee said. Sahra Osman, a third-year in international relations and diplomacy, plans to study abroad Fall Semester. Osman said this partnership could help bring in international students to OSU and send out more students abroad. “I want to go to Europe or Africa,” Osman said. Senait Temesgen, a fourth-year in international studies and international development, spent time in Brazil for part of last summer through the Global Gateway program. Temesgen visited São Paulo

while studying through the program and hopes to return after graduation. “It was a wonderful experience,” Temesgen said. Temesgen said she thought this research partnership would reinforce the already strong ties between OSU and Brazil, and the way the university’s international program is seen worldwide. Brazil has implemented a new government program that aims to send 45,000 Brazilian students to the United States for science, technology, engineering and mathematics programs (STEM) within the next few years, Gee said. “We currently have 14 Brazilian students at our university,” Gee said. The university has two offices similar to the partnership formed with São Paulo — one in Shanghai, established in 2010, and another in Mumbai, India, established last March. “They serve as home bases for the university’s expanding teaching and research collaborations around the world as well as connecting points for thousands of students and alumni living and working abroad,” Gee said. Gee said the trip to Brazil demonstrated the need for OSU to shift away from his idea of global engagement and move more toward global embodiment. “Global embodiment is about actively and aggressively seeking out other’s perspectives,” Gee said. “If we are going to be truly internationally engaged we need to be globally present.”

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sports

Thursday March 28, 2013

thelantern www.thelantern.com upcoming Thursday Men’s Basketball v. Arizona 7:47pm @ Los Angeles

Friday Softball v. Purdue 4pm @ West Lafayette, Ind. Men’s Tennis v. Nebraska 4pm @ Lincoln, Neb. Baseball v. Michigan State 6:35pm @ Columbus Men’s Volleyball v. Mount Olive 7pm @ Columbus Men’s Swimming: NCAA Championships All Day @ Indianapolis

Saturday Women’s Lacrosse v. Hofstra 11am @ Columbus Softball v. Purdue 12pm @ West Lafayette, Ind. Men’s Lacrosse v. Loyola Maryland 1:30pm @ Columbus Baseball v. Michigan State 3:05pm @ Columbus Men’s Volleyball v. Lees-McRae 7pm @ Columbus Men’s Swimming: NCAA Championships All Day @ Indianapolis

SUnday Baseball v. Michigan State 1:05pm @ Columbus Softball v. Purdue 1pm @ West Lafayette, Ind. Men’s Tennis v. Iowa 12pm @ Iowa City, Iowa Women’s Tennis v. Iowa 11am @ Columbus

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Frizzy ‘fro helps make Della Valle a fan fave Allison Slonaker Senior Lantern reporter slonaker.15@osu.edu Amedeo Della Valle doesn’t get much time on the court. The freshman guard played in only 15 out of Ohio State’s 35 games this season. That trend likely won’t change when the Buckeyes face Arizona Thursday in the Sweet 16. But throughout the season, where his presence is lacking on the court, it’s made up for in the stands. Fans often chant Della Valle’s name, wearing wigs resembling his now-recognizable dark, curly-haired afro. But standing at 6 feet 5 inches and weighing 190 pounds, he said he just feels like a normal student. “I can see myself as a regular student, and many students can maybe see themselves as me because I maybe don’t look like a basketball player,” Della Valle said. “So they can tell he is working really hard and trying to be successful.” The Alba, Italy, native came to the United States in 2011 and played for Findlay Prep High School, in Henderson, Nev., his senior year. He said he never expected to get the kind of attention he does at OSU -- but he can’t get enough. “I just get a lot of love from everybody, I love it honestly,” Della Valle said. “The first couple of games, I was like, ‘This is crazy so we will see how it goes,’ and then it started increasing and increasing over time,” Della Valle said.

Daniel Chi / Asst. photo editor

OSU freshman guard Amedeo Della Valle shoots the ball during a game against Nebraska on Jan. 2 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU won, 70-44. Andy Johnson, assistant coach at Findlay Prep, said Della Valle was also a fan favorite during his time there because of his personality. “He is just a great young man who is extremely outgoing and caring,” Johnson said. “Everybody just fell in love with him. We still talk about him and miss him.” Unlike Della Valle, Johnson wasn’t surprised by the shower of fan love. “I kind of expected this for him, wherever he went,” Johnson said. “He is a great addition to the team and the student body.”

Dustin Stinson, a fourth-year in sports industry and member of Buckeye NutHouse, the official OSU basketball student section, said it’s easy to start a conversation with Della Valle via Twitter and get to know him. “He’s formed an identity as being the Italian guy with the big hair and warm heart, and he’s really likable because of it,” Stinson said. Sarah Wynn, Buckeye NutHouse director and a fourth-year in communication and women’s, gender and sexuality studies, said she believes Della Valle’s passion

New recruits will add fresh ‘firepower’ to OSU wrestling squad Ethan Day Lantern reporter day.369@osu.edu After coming up short in its pursuit of the coveted NCAA National Championship, the Ohio State wrestling program is looking to use this season as a stepping stone toward its ultimate goal of winning a title. Coach Tom Ryan said next year’s incoming talent will greatly improve the team’s chances at that goal. “Recruiting is going very well,” Ryan said. “We’re bringing in two of the nation’s top wrestlers and they’re really going to add some firepower to our lineup.” Both five-star recruits according to The Open Mat, Nathan Tomasello, a 125-pound wrestler from Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, has verbally committed to the Buckeyes, while Bo Jordan, a 160-pound wrestler from Graham High School in St. Paris, Ohio, has already signed his national letter of intent. Ryan was disappointed with how the season ended and said the Buckeyes will have to push themselves harder next year. “There’s a tremendous amount of work to be done,” Ryan said. “We have the guys to do it (win a title). We just have to put ourselves in a better position to win it.” The Buckeyes finished the regular season as the No. 6 team in the nation, posting an overall record of 11-4. In Big Ten play, the Scarlet and

Gray went 5-3. The conference is arguably the best in the country when in comes to wrestling. “This was definitely a good learning year for us,“ said 141-pound sophomore Hunter Stieber. “Next year we’ll be a lot better than this year and hopefully go for a title.” OSU got off to a hot start, placing first in the Buffalo Invitational and winning its first three dual meets. The Buckeyes then took home their second consecutive Cliff Keen Las Vegas Wrestling Invitational title and won both of their matches against Maryland and Hofstra in the inaugural “Grapple at the Garden” located in New York City’s Madison Square Garden. The streak ended there, however, as the Buckeyes would be defeated by then-No. 5 Iowa in their first Big Ten action of the season. Despite the loss, the team rebounded by going 5-1 in its next six meets, suffering their only defeat in that span at the hands of Minnesota on Jan. 11 at home. In their last match of conference play, the Buckeyes went head-tohead with Penn State in the first several bouts before falling to the eventual NCAA champions, 29-18. After being rewarded an automatic bid into the finals of the NWCA/Cliff Keen “Mat Mayhem” National Duals because they were among the top four returning dual-meet teams from the previous year, the Buckeyes looked poised to make a run. But whatever aspirations they had soon faded as they were routed by Missouri, 28-6. Next, the Big Ten Championships

Cody Cousino / Multimedia editor

OSU redshirt junior 141-pounder Ian Paddock wrestles redshirt sophomore Dylan Ness during a match against Minnesota on Jan. 11 at St. John Arena. OSU lost, 25-9. presented a challenge for OSU, even with six wrestlers earning top-10 seeds in the tournament. The team went on to place fourth with a total of 109.5 points. Winning individual titles for the Buckeyes were redshirt sophomore Logan Stieber at 133 pounds, his second-straight Big Ten title, and his younger brother, Hunter Stieber, at 141 pounds.

Next, at the NCAA championships, OSU amassed 59.5 points en route to a sixth place finish out of the 10 teams in the tournament. Both Stieber brothers earned No. 1 seeds for the championships, but Hunter Stieber placed third as his older brother earned the title of

continued as Wrestling on 6A

Buckeyes complete last CCHA season, prepare for B1G hockey Eric Seger Lantern reporter seger.25@osu.edu

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for OSU has a lot to do with all of the publicity. “I have never seen a player who is as willing to meet with people and go to events,” Wynn said. “He just loves his fans and wants to make a connection with them.” Even with all the eyes on him, Della Valle has been able to keep his concentration on basketball and not let it affect him. Della Valle broke the record for 3-pointers made in a single season at Findlay Prep with 66. This season Della Valle is 10 of 26 from the 3-point line, shooting at 38 percent. “I don’t really pay attention to the fame, although I do like it and I hope it stays like this, but I’m just a regular student like everyone else and I don’t really care if somebody roots for me or against me,” he said. The fans know of his ability behind the arc and are usually pretty vocal about it. Della Valle said he tries to block out all of the cheering, but it isn’t always easy. “I really can’t do it all the time, but it’s really crazy that as soon as I get the ball they just want me to shoot,” Della Valle said. “Sometimes it’s hard because you hear so many people just screaming and everything, especially when I walk off the bench and everyone looks at me, but I just try not to care and think about it.” OSU plays Arizona Thursday at 7:47 p.m. at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, Calif.

Shelby Lum / Lantern photographer

The OSU men’s hockey team huddles up during a game against Michigan on Feb. 23 at the Schottenstein Center. OSU lost, 6-3.

The Buckeyes are looking ahead to playing in the new Big Ten Hockey Conference after ending their season Saturday in the semifinals of the CCHA tournament. The loss was the final game for Ohio State men’s hockey in the CCHA, as this season was the league’s last. Other schools joining the Big Ten Hockey Conference are Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Michigan State and Penn State. The Buckeyes fell Saturday against the No. 2 seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish, 3-1. The loss put an end to the Buckeyes’ up and down year as the team finished the season with a record of 16-17-7. But coach Mark Osiecki said he was in no way disappointed with what his team was able to do this year. “I’m awfully proud of what they went through this year,” the third-year coach said. “We said to our guys after, we were proud of the fact that to get to this point, to get on this great stage. It’s been a while for our program.”

For the first time since 2005, the Buckeyes earned the right to play in the CCHA semifinals in Detroit at Joe Louis Arena. In order to get to that point, though, the team had to overcome injuries, such as junior defenseman Curtis Gedig’s hurt shoulder and freshman forward Anthony Greco’s high ankle sprain, and a schedule that took them away from Columbus for the first six games of the year. Osiecki said he is proud of the way the team fought through all the injuries and tough travel to stay together. “We’re going to look back on our year and reflect on that tough start to the year with some difficult travel, and then we got injury problems right away, on that first weekend,” Osiecki said. “Our guys did a heck of a job to battle through that all year. We couldn’t be more proud of the way these guys responded to each other, and it’s a great step for this program.” It was the first time OSU finished in the top four of the conference standings in eight years, giving them a first-round bye in the tournament. Sophomore forward Max McCormick said achieving that

continued as Hockey on 6A 5A


sports Hockey from 5A goal was a top priority at the start of the season. “I think we believed in ourselves all along and wanted to take it one step at a time,” McCormick said March 21. “The first thing was to get that bye and we got that and we got home ice. That was huge for us.” Senior goalie Brady Hjelle, one of only four seniors on the team, called getting the opportunity to play at Joe Louis Arena “one of the biggest highlights of the year.” Hjelle turned in one of his best performances of the season during the Buckeyes’ final game. His 41 saves helped him become OSU’s all-time leader in season save percentage, with his .933 mark passing Jeff Maund’s .921 set in 1998-99. Hjelle’s 2.08 goalsagainst average on the season is second all-time in Buckeye history, just behind the 2.07 Dave Caruso set in 2005-2006. He was one of three finalists for the Most Valuable Player award in the CCHA, which Miami (Ohio)’s Austin Czarnik was awarded March 22. Osiecki said that Hjelle was an MVP to OSU, though. “Obviously he meant a ton (to our team),” Osiecki said. “In our eyes, he’s our MVP, and he’s the MVP of our league. If you take him off our team, obviously we play differently.” After playing two seasons at Minnesota Duluth and transferring to OSU, Hjelle saw limited time last season behind then-senior Cal Heeter. Osiecki said the way Hjelle waited his turn showed genuine sportsmanship. “Brady (Hjelle)’s meant the world to our team this year,” Osiecki said. “What a great kid, going through a lot of adversity to get to this point.” Looking ahead to this fall, OSU’s three leading scorers will return to provide a formidable punch for the offense. Sophomore forwards Ryan Dzingel, Tanner Fritz, and McCormick finished the season with 38, 37 and 31 points, respectively. Schedules for next season have not been released, but the team is slated to play 20 conference games, down from the 28 played this year. The winner of the conference tournament at the end of the season will be awarded the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

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Thursday March 28, 2013

Wrestling from 5A NCAA champion in the 133-pound weight class for the second year in a row. “It was a pretty good season I guess,” Hunter Stieber said. “There was a little letdown towards the end, but I only lost one match this entire season as opposed to seven last year. I’ve improved but I just wish I could have wrestled for the title.” Redshirt junior Nick Heflin placed fifth at 174 pounds and joins the Stiebers as an All-American. “It’s what you work for,” Heflin said of earning the honor. “It means a lot, but you know, I definitely want more. I want to be the champion.” Key Contributors: 125: Nikko Triggas, senior, 22-14 131: Logan Stieber, redshirt sophomore, 27-0 141: Hunter Stieber, sophomore, 36-1 / Ian Paddock, redshirt junior, 15-9 149: Cam Tessari, sophomore, 13-7 157: Josh Demas, redshirt sophomore, 20-12 165: Mark Martin, freshman, 19-18 174: Nick Heflin, redshirt junior, 20-7

184: Kenny Courts, redshirt freshman, 22-8 197: Andrew Campolattano, sophomore, 17-12 / C.J. Magrum, redshirt senior, 18-9 HWT: Peter Capone, redshirt junior, 17-6 / Kosta Karageorge, redshirt sophomore, 9-8 Looking forward, Heflin envisions big things for the program in the upcoming years, comparing the process they’re making to that of the Nittany Lions. “It’s going to continue to grow,” Heflin said. “It’s going to be like Penn State. They got Cael Sanderson (2004 Olympic gold medalist) and now they’re becoming a powerhouse. I see that in Ohio State’s future, being a contender to compete with them in the next two or three years.”

Shelby lum / Lantern photographer Please

RECYCLE

OSU 157-pounder Josh Demas wrestles Penn State sophomore Dylan Alton during a match against Penn State on Feb. 10 at St. John Arena. OSU lost, 29-18.

Buckeye lacrosse looks toward Loyola Daniel Rogers Lantern reporter rogers.746@osu.edu After a challenging three-game road trip that matched the Ohio State men’s lacrosse team against two then-top 10 teams, the Buckeyes return home for another staunch test against the defending national champions, No. 5 Loyola (Md.). Taking two games out of three, with wins over then-No. 9 Virginia and Bellarmine and a loss to then-No. 3 Notre Dame, the Buckeyes hope to improve on their 6-2 record this year against the Greyhounds. Senior midfielder Dominique Alexander said he was pleased with the results on the road but said he wished things had gone differently against Notre Dame. “Obviously we would have liked to get the win at Notre Dame and had a better effort,” Alexander said. “But we bounced back and got the win at Bellarmine, which is a conference win, which helped us a lot.” On the year, Loyola is averaging nearly 12 goals per game and will likely look to push the ball against the stout OSU defense. Led by junior goalkeeper Greg Dutton, the Buckeyes are allowing about eight goals per contest. Sophomore midfielder Jesse King said he believes OSU is capable of matching the Greyhounds offense considering its big performances against Marquette, Detroit and Virginia this season.

Shelby Lum / Lantern photographer

OSU sophomore attacker Reegan Comeault goes for the ball during a game against Marquette on Feb. 23 at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center. OSU won, 18-8. “We’ve been working on our scheme all week, and coach has been putting a lot of pressure on the offense,” King said. “Just because we had one off game doesn’t mean we won’t be able to come back out and score 18 like we did earlier this year.” Coach Nick Myers said he thinks his squad will be prepared for the Greyhounds’ style of play.

“I think the key to them is you have to make sure you defend the first 15 to 20 seconds over the midfield line. They’re as good as anybody at early offense and transition,” Myers said. “They get a lot of goals that way, so if you turn the ball over and don’t do a great job defending the early offense they can score in bunches.” OSU lost the only matchup between the teams last year, falling to the Greyhounds, 8-7, in Baltimore. After splitting its first two Eastern College Athletic Conference games of the season, OSU looks to close the gap at the top of the conference with a win against the league-leading Greyhounds. The game is the second of six straight ECAC matchups to end the season for the Buckeyes. Alexander hopes a win against Loyola and the recent victory against Bellarmine will be enough to spring OSU into a postseason run. “We want to get this win and go to 2-1,” Alexander said. “Start building from there and get some steam as we start rolling into the playoffs.” The Buckeyes are set to take on Loyola on Saturday at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium at 1:30 p.m.

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Courtesy of Focus Features

Ryan Gosling (left) stars as Luke and Eva Mendes stars as Romina in Derek Cianfrance’s ‘The Place Beyond the Pines.’

‘Pines’ stars discuss genuine quality of film, Gosling’s tats Caitlin Essig Arts editor essig.21@osu.edu While filming “The Place Beyond the Pines,” Ryan Gosling said he couldn’t even look at himself in the mirror. “I had this face tattoo that I regretted immediately and I said to (director) Derek (Cianfrance), ‘I can’t do this, I look ridiculous, I’m going to ruin your movie,’” Gosling said. “He said, ‘You know that’s what happens when people get face tattoos, they regret them.’ He said, ‘This movie is about consequences, and now you have to pay for what you’ve done.’” Gosling said he was so ashamed, feeling like he had taken the fake face tattoo too far, that he couldn’t look at himself in the mirror, in magazines or on the movie’s poster. But at the same time, he said it connected him to his character, Luke, who finds out in the beginning of the movie that he has a son. “I felt like when I was in the movie I had this shame that I don’t think I could have acted, you know? I just felt like I was embarrassed, it felt like it gave me a connection to the character, you know?” Gosling said. “Because when I was like holding this kid (his son in the movie), named Tony Pizza, that is his real name, I felt ashamed, you know? That I was his father and that this was the person I had chosen to be.” “The Place Beyond the Pines” is set to open Friday in most theaters, including in Columbus. Focus Features, the film’s production company, hosted a press junket for “The Place Beyond the Pines” in New York City with access for college

media March 9-10. Travel and hotel accommodations were paid for by Focus Features. The film also stars Eva Mendes as Romina, the mother of Luke’s child, Bradley Cooper as police officer Avery Cross, Emory Cohen as Avery’s son AJ and Dane DeHaan as Luke and Romina’s son Jason. All but Cooper attended the junket. Pizza played a baby version of Jason. Other than its actors, the film has another main focus, something director Cianfrance called a crucial part of the movie — its setting in Schenectady, N.Y., which derives from an American Indian word meaning “the place beyond the pines.” “For the last 10 years I’ve been visiting (my wife) and her family (in Schenectady) and I felt like every time I went up there I was doing a location scout, felt like such an interesting place,” Cianfrance said. In the movie, Luke quits his job as a motorcycle rider in a traveling circus upon learning he has a 1-year-old son. For his new day job, Luke chooses to rob banks, which Cianfrance said the film’s location helped facilitate. “Every time I drove by that bank on Brandywine and State Street, I always thought that it would be a cool place for a bank robbery,” Cianfrance said. “Then I met this writer, Ben Coccio, who was going to write the script with me, he was from (Schenectady) too, and we talked about this place, this kind of American town that had seen a brighter day … The movie is all about legacy and one thing about Schenectady is that is has a real past, a real history.” To add to the honesty of the film and the characters’ behaviors, Mendes did some of her character research by taking on Romina’s job as a waitress in a local diner.

Columbus’ Own

“Derek had the idea of, ‘Why don’t you work in the diner on your days off and go be a waitress,’” Mendes said. “So I went and I got to know the women that worked there and I heard some amazing stories and they were born and raised in Schenectady. And you know, it was great ‘cause a lot of people didn’t recognize me, so it wasn’t ‘actress trying to be normal’ or whatever … it really helped me get into my role and know the people.” Mendes added that playing Romina, a woman who is stuck in a small town struggling to get by and raise her child, wasn’t too much of a stretch for her, based on her life growing up. “I was raised in a very lower middle-class family and my mother was always struggling for the bare necessities, and I could have easily ended up like Romina, and taken that path,” Mendes said. She said because of this, the film drew her closer to her mom. “My mother … was very strict with me, and now I realize it was to keep me from going that way (like Romina), so there was a lot of what-ifs,” Mendes said. “I was very connected to my mom in the film, throughout the film I was very connected. I called my mom all the time and cried with her, and we got a lot closer.” DeHaan said spending extra time in Schenectady prior to filming helped him get to know his character. “I didn’t have to pretend at all,” DeHaan said. “Just like going around the town and seeing all the kids around the town, I think one thing I really noticed is that it’s a dangerous place. If there’s one thing every single youth in Schenectady does is find some way to protect themselves, whether that be how they dress or how they act or how they walk or whatever it’s protection. Protection is key.”

Cohen also spent time familiarizing himself with the city. “I think particularly when you’re improvising, it’s helpful to be in the environment cause you can talk about it with a sense of veracity,” he said. “I’d walk down State Street and stuff and you throw something like that in the movie and you’ve actually done it.” Along with securing reality in the film by having the actors get comfortable with the town, Cianfrance said while filming he encouraged them to be their best by not being afraid to fail. “The thing that’s most important for me with actors is I want them to surprise me and I want them to fail,” Cianfrance said. “I feel like if they can surprise me I feel like as an audience member I like being surprised, and if I’m on set and I see something that I didn’t expect it’s like the greatest gift.” He likened his method to a lesson he learned from American auto racing driver Danica Patrick. “I had interviewed Danica Patrick some years back when I was doing documentaries and I asked her, ‘How did you go so fast, how did you get to go so fast?’ And she said her whole life she had always known how fast she could drive, and she would always go that fast, and then she said she would drive a couple miles per hour over the speed in which she felt in control, and that meant oftentimes she would crash, but by crashing she would push her own boundaries and get better. I ask my actors to crash for me,” he said. “If they can do that, there’s no more judgment and they can succeed greatly because it’s OK to fail.”

continued as Pines on 3B

In an attempt to shine light on local music, The Lantern’s “Columbus’ Own” is a weekly series that will profile a new Columbus band every week.

OSU lecturer, singer-songwriter Daniel Dye collaborates with family in Miller Road Band Matthew Lovett Lantern reporter lovett.45@osu.edu When Daniel Dye is not lecturing in English for the Education and Human Ecology Department at Ohio State, he fronts a folk outfit with the Miller Road Band. Dye is a self-trained singersongwriter and guitarist, who collaborated with his younger relatives after a long trip abroad. “I’ve been doing music alone for years,” Dye said. “I lived in Europe and came back about three years ago or so and I found out my nephews and nieces were amazing classical musicians and had been training while I was gone.” The Miller Road Band consists of Dye, two of his nephews, Andrew and Thomas Miller, and his niece, Carrie Miller. Dye and the Millers played at farmer’s markets “just for fun” in their beginning, but in 2010 they started taking music seriously, Dye said. Toward the end of the same year Dye released his first album, “Daniel Dye featuring the Miller Road Band.” The Millers largely provide a string section to Dye’s music and were surrounded by music starting at a young age, said Andrew Miller, a third-year in economics as well as multi-instrumentalist for the band. The Millers’ father holds a degree in music education, and their mother teaches piano lessons as well as music classes at an elementary school. “All growing up we took piano lessons and eventually started doing strings. That’s sort of our main thing,”

Courtesy of Daniel Dye

Daniel Dye and the Miller Road Band is slated to play at Kafe Kerouac April 12. Andrew Miller said. Andrew Miller plays viola in Ohio State’s Community Orchestra, but with the Miller Road Band, he plays more instruments including guitar, banjo, mandolin, melodica and cajón. Carrie Miller is a violinist, and Thomas Miller is a cellist. The band is in the process of mixing its newest album, which is slated to release sometime in the summer or fall of 2013. Dye said his songwriting process with the Miller Road Band has developed since the release of the first album. “Probably the biggest difference is that we’re better musicians,” Dye said.

“The band is tighter, we know how to grow a song more. When I write a song, I’ll have three verses and a chorus and now we’re able to actually develop the song better.” Andrew Miller said the songs on the first album were completed in a few takes, as opposed to the songs on the new album which sound “more produced, polished.” The increased production value should add to the sound, he said. Dye writes the melody and the lyrics, and the Millers contribute additional melody lines to the songs. “I come up with the original melody

and lyrics, and a lot of the parts that they add they work out on their own,” Dye said. “Sometimes it’s together. Sometimes I’ll just play through a song, and literally just start jamming and see what sounds good and what doesn’t.” The Millers embellish Dye’s melodies with their expertise as string players and provide thicker instrumentation. “There’s a lot of arranging that goes on after (Daniel) writes a song. We come up with counter-melodies or instrumental melodies, as well as harmonies,” Andrew Miller said. “While

the song is considered written, the song is still pretty shaped and is still growing by our process as we all work together on it.” A groundbreaking song for Dye and the Miller Road Band was “Hard Cider,” a song that won the band a spot on CD102.5’s Local Band Showcase on March 22, although the band ultimately lost the contest. The Millers’ part in the song supports the front-and-center act: a duet between Dye and a guest vocalist, Dye’s sister Sarah Kelly. Kelly does not appear in many of the songs with Dye and the Millers, but enjoys her time performing with the group nonetheless, Kelly said. Kelly said she finds playing music and singing with a family makes the performance much easier. “What I think makes (Dye and the Miller Road Band) unique besides Daniel’s songwriting … is the family connection,” Kelly said. “With family, it’s so easy to sing together, it’s just really natural to harmonize, which is one thing I love about singing with them.” Daniel Dye and the Miller Road Band is scheduled to perform a free show at Kafe Kerouac, 2250 N. High St., on April 12 at 9 p.m. Donations will be accepted.

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OSU students to showcase short films in ‘Digi-EYE’ Julia Hider Lantern reporter hider.8@osu.edu Ohio State’s lack of a filmmaking program isn’t stopping some students from creating their own films, and this weekend some of those filmmakers will debut their work. “We don’t have a program, but we do have a lot of students who are making work on campus, and I think it’s pretty interesting,” said Janet Parrott, an associate professor teaching media in the Department of Theatre. “Digi-EYE,” a showcase of student-made films and videos, is scheduled to take place for its second year on Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in Thurber Theatre. Parrott said some of the films are short, with most being in the three-minute range, because filmmaking has so many steps, including writing the script, filming and editing. “(The students) are primarily the sole creators (of each video),” Parrott said. “They do it all.” Seth Radley, a fourth-year in political science and film studies, who submitted several pieces to “Digi-EYE,” said this was a challenge. “You’re doing a one-man show,” Radley said. Thomas Heban, a second-year graduate student in digital animation and interactive media, submitted three pieces into this year’s “Digi-EYE,” including one called “Focus.”

Pines from 1B Another aspect Cianfrance took immediate control over was the way the audience would watch the film. He said he didn’t want the audience to feel as though they could just sit back and watch, but instead he “wanted the audience in this movie to be alert and be active and (he) wanted their imaginations to peak.” Part of this was brought on by the opening scene, which follows Luke through a circus setup, eventually getting on a motorcycle and riding in “the globe of death,” a trick which involves motorcyclists riding simultaneously inside a large mesh cage, with two other cyclists. “We came up with this idea with Ryan starting in this trailer and you

Heban said the assignment for “Focus” was to highlight the audio aspects of films and how they work with the visual aspects. “It involves the sounds of a person who’s doing Olympic weight lifting,” said Heban, who has worked at a gym in the past. “It was something that I was very familiar with and I was able to highlight the sounds that stick out to me.” Heban also worked with Radley and film studies student Taylor Stokes on a group piece called “Computer Screen,” which was based on the short story “EPICAC” by Kurt Vonnegut. “All three of us had input as directors, all three of us had input as editors,” Heban said. “It’s a lot different doing something like that, but you get some nice collaboration.” Although Heban said having three people collaborating on one piece was challenging, in the end it was worth it. “We all worked really well together,” Heban said. Although some aspects of filmmaking are difficult, Radley said he enjoyed the editing process most. “It’s fun to take what you have and make it into a polished, finished piece of work,” Radley said. Heban agreed that editing can be very satisfying. “When you get a sequence that works,” Heban said, “You feel like you made something that’s worthwhile and somebody else might actually like to look at it.” Parrott coordinated the showcase and said

don’t know what he’s doing with the knife (that he’s playing with), you don’t know what this guy who’s all like jacked-up covered in tattoos is doing with this knife and he goes out and he’s in this carnival, and all of a sudden there’s people taking pictures of him and all of a sudden he’s a performer,” Cianfrance said. “Just constantly reveal something new about him; you’re going to learn something as this shot unfolds.“ The film is told in three parts — focusing individually on Luke’s story, then Avery’s and ending with the focus on AJ and Jason. “I guess it was pretty compartmentalized,” Gosling said. “You have to admire Derek, he’s the most stubborn man of all time and everybody told him to cut it and to change (the three-part

Courtesy of Dave Fisher

‘Digi-EYE’ is scheduled to run March 29-30 in the Thurber Theatre. she campaigned to have the public viewing for the students. “Ever since I’ve been here, I have, somehow, every year, tried to have a public showing of student work,” said Parrott, who coordinated the showcase. “The last two years (2012 and 2013) we’ve actually been listed as part of the season in the Department of Theatre.” Parrott said that at this year’s “Digi-EYE,” about a dozen pieces will be shown from a wide range of genres including animation, narrative and documentaries.

formula) and not to do it that way, and I think everybody assumed that he would eventually cave in the edit, but he didn’t.” Regardless, Gosling said the movie delivers everything a viewer would want in a film. “What (Cianfrance has) done is I think you have all the conventions of why you go to the movies,” Gosling said. “You’ve got the conventions of the heist film or the crime drama, family drama, thriller. You have all these things that you love, but he constructed them in a way so you can experience them in a slightly different way which I think, as somebody who loves those kind of movies it’s nice to be able to still get those things but get them in a different way and experience them in a different way.”

“They don’t quite fall into easy categories,” she said. “Some of them are very much experimental pieces.” Parrott said she often assigns her students to focus on particular aspects or gives them prompts for their videos, giving them “a very specific problem or challenge to solve.” The Thurber Theatre is located in the Drake Performance and Event Center at 1849 Cannon Drive. Admission is free.

The actors agreed that Cianfrance’s style and keen eye with directing made them excited to work on the project. “I just love what he does,” Mendes said. “He’s obviously an incredible filmmaker and a real risk-taker and I think that word along with genius gets thrown around a lot these days. But I think he’s just such a risk-taker and when I read the script I was just like, ‘Derek’s doing this and it’s so unconventional and it was like he’s defying like structure and all that kinda stuff.’ So I think that was it (for me).” One aspect of the film — the weather — was something no one could control, but Cianfrance said it’s unpredictability was something to embrace. “Dogs and babies are the best two things to put in a movie because

they’re so chaotic and they just ruin the scene in a great way, you know? And weather is the same way,” Cianfrance said. “I guess like the biggest weather thing that happened (during filming) was the hurricane came through and shut us down for a day, but I was also like so thankful because I was so exhausted, you know what I mean? (And) we got a day off. “It did bury our trucks under water and our assistant cameraperson, Ludovic Littee, he’s a true hero, he rowed out to the truck in a rowboat and saved our film.”

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diversions Crossword Los Angeles Times, Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis Across 1 Short glasses? 6 1979 exile 10 “Collective unconscious” coiner 14 Necklace material 15 Big Island port 16 “Beauty __ the eye ...” 17 President who appointed Sotomayor to the Supreme Court 18 Loads 19 Beatles movie 20 New Year’s Day staple, familiarly 23 One making sidelong glances 24 Bias-__ tire 25 Mil. roadside hazard 26 Highest of MLB’s “minors” 28 Ode relic 29 Animation unit 32 Place to learn to crawl? 37 “Harold and Maude” director Hal 39 Aptly named 22-Down 40 Band since 1980 that disbanded in 2011 41 Freeway no-no 42 “The Wizard of Oz” device 43 It has a handle and flies 45 Comaneci score 46 “Now I __ me ...” 48 Getting-in approx. 49 90210, e.g.

50 Stylist’s supply 52 Run in the heat? 56 Place to split a split 60 Goes downhill fast 61 Ricelike pasta 62 Worthless 63 Confined, with “up” 64 “Terrif!” 65 Lena and others 66 Surfers’ guides 67 __ qua non 68 What one might see in a 20-, 32-, 43- or 56-Across Down 1 Make a point 2 NOLA sandwich 3 Wipe clean 4 One concerned with composition and angles 5 Hunk 6 Wrapped accessory 7 Like links golf courses 8 Crooked 9 Bloviator’s talk 10 Muslim holy war 11 Exploited 12 “Aida” backdrop 13 Macroeconomics fig. 21 Gem for a Scorpio, perhaps 22 39-Across automaker 27 Fake nail material 28 “Semper Fi” org. 29 Carp family fish 30 Spanish Civil War battle site

31 Snowshoe hare hunter 32 Narrow cut 33 Are in the past? 34 Emblem 35 Pretentiously showy 36 “Wide Sargasso __”: Jean Rhys novel 38 Overpower 44 Plant in an underwater forest 47 Golf green borders 49 Citrus peels 50 Certain strip native 51 Overact 53 California town whose name means “the river” 54 Doone who turned out to be Lady Dugal’s daughter 55 Secret rendezvous 56 Furniture store that also sells Swedish meatballs 57 Quatre et un 58 “... __ saw Elba” 59 Starting from 60 No. at the beach

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Horoscopes by Nancy Black ©2012 Tribune Media Services Inc. Today’s Birthday What do you really want for yourself, your community, and the world? Keep your networks buzzing into summer with possibilities. Launch into action, and monitor the pace. Rejuvenate at home, with friends and family. Manage finances closely for gain, especially insurance and investments. Play, learn and be creative. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries March 21-April 19 Today is a 9 -- Balance must be restored, which will require love. Don’t be afraid to express your feelings to solve a domestic puzzle. Talk things over, and discover romance as a sweet side benefit. Taurus April 20-May 20 Today is an 8 -- What you need is closer than it appears. Your fame travels far and wide, but do you really do it for the glory? Love blooms all around you. Art is present. Follow your bliss. Gemini May 21-June 20 Today is a 7 -- Children teach you the rules. Invite yourself and others to play. It doesn’t need to be serious, does it? Laughter really is the best medicine (and it makes you quite attractive). Someone falls in love. Cancer June 21-July 22 Today is a 7 -- Plan things carefully, and write ideas down so you don’t forget important details. You’re making a great impression. A female has a contribution to make. Record it to share. Communicate love.

Scorpio Oct. 23-Nov. 21 Today is a 7 -- Communications are getting through, even if it doesn’t seem like it. When in doubt, pick up the phone and ask. Don’t be afraid to make a special request. Give back, with love. Sagittarius Nov. 22-Dec. 21 Today is an 8 -- Continue to work faster to advance to the next level and make more money. Beyond the financial gains, you feel more empowered. Celebrate with loved ones, and rest up for tomorrow. Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19 Today is an 8 -- Time for introspection and beauty is well spent today. Redecorate your office without losing track of work obligations. Put some energy into romance and receive a hidden benefit. Take notes in your journal. Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 18 Today is an 8 -- There’s a beneficial development, career-wise. Find another motivation besides money, and look for the pull on your heartstrings. You’re admired for the company you keep. Friends help you make a new connection. Pisces Feb. 19-March 20 Today is a 7 -- Your skills continue to improve with age and practice. Be grateful as you gain confidence. Invest in your business, and get farther than expected. A female enters the picture. Invite her counsel.

Leo July 23-Aug. 22 Today is a 9 -- Every now and then, you need to do something that feeds your soul. Enrolling in a creative class could support your overall goals. It’s more fun than expected. Save some energy for romance. Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22 Today is an 8 -- Stick to practical financial plans. Pay close attention to what you eat. Go ahead and obsess on details; you’re gaining wisdom. Let it all go for a lovely moment with family and friends. Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 22 Today is an 8 -- You’re full of brilliant ideas. The best of them come when you’re relaxed and not thinking too hard. Look at things from an unfamiliar vantage point for a new view that reveals new possibilities.

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Thursday March 28, 2013


classifieds Furnished 1 Bedroom

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

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.

2 BEDROOM, 2 bath 1580 sq ft townhouse with 2 car garage. Totally updated, immediate possession. $1900/mo plus utilities. $1900 security deposit. Off N W Blvd & North Star. 614-402-1011 bwaters@barbarajwaters.com for showing.

229 E. 11th 4 BDRM 2 BATH 3rd Floor Suite w/ bath, walk-in, study, Fenced Yard, Double Garage $1580 (614)267-8631 (614)670-1824

86 WEST Lane Ave. Furnished one bedroom efficiency. Refrigerator, microwave, community kitchen. No pets. $500 deposit. $500 rent. Available Fall. 614-306-0053.

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 OSU AVAIL. NOW

750 RIVERVIEW DR.

SPECIAL $100 DEPOSIT 1 B.R. apts. stove, refrig., Gas heat, laundry Carpet and air cond. available NO PETS PLEASE $365 268-7232

Unfurnished 1 Bedroom 1 BDRM Apt. East 13th & N. 4th water included, A/C, disposal, Off street parking, Pets Negotiable, $490/mo. Sunrise Properties Inc. 846-5577

1 BDRM Apts. 15th & N. 4th GAS, ELECTRIC & WATER included in Rent! Off street parking, Pets Negotiable,. Sunrise Properties Inc. $610/mo. 846-5577 1 BEDROOM for rent- 240 W. Lane Brand New! You will love the renovations in this beautiful 1 bedroom apartment. New countertops, appliances, tile floors, and new baths highlight this amazing location across the street from Fischer College of Business. Access to laundry, workout facility, game room, and more. $850.00 per month. Call (614)294-1684 for a tour!

2103 IUKA Ave. 2BR unfurnished, kitchen, stove, refrigerator, carpet, air. $700/mo. $700 deposit. Laundry available, off-street parking. No pets. Available Fall. Call 614-306-0053 322 E. 20th Ave--2 bedroom townhouse for fall. $750.00. www.buckeyeabodes.com. 614-378-8271.

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. NO PETS. Call 614-306-0053

AFFORDABLE 2 Bedrooms. Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Realty 429-0960

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

QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD Setting; NW - Reed & Henderson Area; 10 Min From Campus; 2BR 1 1/2BA; Finished Basement with W-D Hookup; Beautifully Renovated; Storage Galore; Walk to Grocery, Post Office, 1909 WALDECK. 9 Bedroom, Banks, Restaurants; $800/mo. Call Owner Now: 614.459.9400; 2 Kitchens, 2 1/2 Baths, Ready for Fall $2,250/mo. Call Robin Pets Considered. 614-846-7863

Unfurnished 3 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

2587 INDIANOLA Recent Remodel, Wood floors, Parking, Laundry $925/mo Commercial One 614-324-6717 #1 2 BR, 194 King Ave. Utilities www.c1realty.com included, LDY, OFF STREET PARKING, CENTRAL A/C, 3 BEDROOM WITH FINISHED BASEMENT. Clintonville/North Phone steve 614-208-3111 Campus. Spacious townhouse shand50@aol.com overlooking river view, walkout 1957 SUMMIT St. (Corner 18th patio from finished basement to & Summit). 2 large bedroom backyard, low traffic, quiet area, with closets along one wall. Ce- off-street parking, 1 1/2 baths, ramic tile bath. New vanity and W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. fixtures. Kitchen with gas range, Steps to bike path and bus lines. fridge, microwave, diswasher, $850/month. 105 W. Duncan. disposal, tile floor. Living room 614-582-1672 15’ x 13’ with large picture windows. Gas heat, gas hot water AFFORDABLE 3 Bedrooms. heater. New gas furnace. Cen- Visit out website at tral A/C. 2 free reserved parking www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place spaces. Laundry facilities on Realty 429-0960 site. Water paid. Available Fall. LARGE NORTH Campus apartCall David 614-571-5109 ment with finished basement. 2 BDRM Apt. 13th & N. 4th, Twin single, 3 off-street parking Water included. $565/mo., A/C, spaces, 2 baths, DW, ceiling Water included, Off street park- fan, W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. ing, Pets Negotiable, Sunrise $1050/month. 55 W. Hudson. 614-582-1672 Properties Inc. 846-5577 2 BDRM Apt. 15th & N. 4th Water Included, A/C, dishwasher, Disposal, carpet, Pets Negotiable, off street parking, $615/mo. Sunrise Properties Inc. 846-5577

Roommate Wanted Female

Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom

Unfurnished 2 Bedroom

Unfurnished 4 Bedroom

2 BEDROOM for rent-49 E. Norwich Beautifully renovated 2 bedroom offers new appliances, new countertops, new tile floors and more! Townhomes and 2 flats still available for August 2013! Great location just one block from High! Call today (614)294-1684.

# 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 http://www.northcampusrentals. com

Unfurnished Rentals

Unfurnished Rentals

116 WOODRUFF. 1 Bedroom apartment. Available Fall 2013. $595-660/mo. 846-7863

$300 ROOM for rent (OSU/ Lennox/Grandview) 1 bedroom downstairs with bathroom, walking distance from campus, extremely quiet neighborhood, safe, washer/dryer, smoke-free home, no pets, split utilities. 740-215-7934

AVAILABLE NOW 14th Ave. student group house. Kitchen, laundry, parking, average $280/ 398 W. King near Belmond 3 or mo. Paid utilities, 296-8353 or 4 bdrm + 2 bath TH avail for fall. 299-4521. Spacious, completely remld w/ newer carpet, A/C, DW, blinds & ROOM: 92 E. 11th Ave. Clean. FREE lndry. Close to med. schl Cozy. Parking available. Short off st. prkg. Call 263-2665 term okay. Free internet. $375/ www.gasproperties.com mo. plus utilities. (614)457-8409, 4 BDRM, 2 baths, recently re- (614)361-2282 modeled, new windows and Central A/C, Dishwasher and disposal, back deck and front porch, great north campus neighborhood $1600/mo 614-457-6545 www.crowncolumbus.com FEMALE OHIO State stu4 BEDROOM, 2 Bath. Super dent wanted for 3-bedroom Nice Townhouse located at E. apartment at Harrison Apart13th Ave. Just right for 4 girls/ ments (222 W. Lane, by Neil boys that want low utilities & a Ave). Apartment is furnished, very nice place to live & study! close to campus and utilities Call Bob Langhirt for an appoint- included. Share with 2 Ohio ment to view 1-614-206-0175, State Sophomores. Non-smok1-740-666-0967. Slow down er please. Rent is $700 per month. Please reply to when you leave your phone #. CKJ23@comcast.net 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitchens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, basement, very nice. 273-7775. www.osuapartments.com

BRAND NEW 2 bed 2 bath condo w/attached garage. New appliances, granite countertops, washer & dryer in unit, new hard wood floors, fireplace, must see! Call or email for more photos. Available immediately $1300/ 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitchmonth. Call 614-373-4984 ens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, very nice. 273-7775. CLINTONVILLE/NORTH CAM- basement, PUS. 2 bedroom apartment with www.osuapartments.com newer cabinets, granite counter- 4 PERSON, Huge, new kitchtops, off-street parking, AC, no ens, D/W, w/d, carpet, parking, pets, $520/month. 95 W. Hud- basement, very nice. 273-7775. son. 614-582-1672 www.osuapartments.com CLINTONVILLE/NORTH CAM- AFFORDABLE 4 Bedrooms. PUS. Spacious townhouse with Visit our website at finished www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place basement in quiet location just Realty. 429-0960 steps from bike path and bus lines. Off-street parking, AVAILABLE FOR fall. 4 Bedroom half of duplex located at 1 1/2 baths, W/D hook-up, AC, no pets. $720/month. 109 137 E. Norwich. $1500 per month. 2 blocks from High W. Duncan. 614-582-1672 Street. Great location. Please KENNY/HENDERSON ROAD, call 614-486-8094 for more de2 bedroom, 1 1/2 baths, town- tails. house apartment. Ideal for graduate students. A/C, basement COUNTRY HORSE FARM’S with W/D hookup. Near busline, HOUSE & 5ac yard. 28min. offstreet parking, enclosed patio. OSU, plant an organic garden, $675/month, board your horse, gaze at the 614-519-2044. nighttime star-filled sky (you brunopropertiesllc@yahoo.com can see all of it). No pets, 1yr LOOKING FOR somewhere to lease, $1200/mo. 805-4448 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.

SPACIOUS 2 BDRM Apts. and Townhouse, excellent condition, AFFORDABLE 1 Bedrooms. new carpet, A/C, off street parking $585-615 Visit our website at www.my1stplace.com. 1st Place Please call 718-0790 Realty 429-0960 VERY NICE, Large 2 BDRM, AVAILABLE NOW or Fall. Updated 1 or 2 Bedroom on 15th Recently completely remodeled, or Woodruff. North Campus. Large deck, front porch Laundry in unit $800/mo With Parking. 614-457-6545 614-296-8353 www.crowncolumbus.com

Rooms

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

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted Child Care

PART TIME marketing job with CertaPro painters. Earn $15 per hour or $10 a lead, whichever is greater, by canvassing in neighborhoods around Columbus. Immediate openings. No sale required. Flexible work schedule. Must have good communication skills and transportation. Bring a friend and earn a $50 bonus. Contact dgoodman@certapro.com Some gas reimbursement.

PARTTIME AFTERNOON Teacher needed for Toddler class at northwest Christian School. M-F, 3-6pm, Requires hs diploma plus experience working with kids, college courses in early childhood or education pref.

PART-TIME/FULL-time: Office help\needed in downtown Columbus real estate title company. We are seeking individuals who are detail oriented & fast learners, can multitask and have general computer knowledge.. Hours can be flexible to your schedule with hours available M-F from 9am-7pm. Starting pay from $8-10/hour. Parking provided, and benefits available. Great experience for students interested in real estate/ finance/business. Possibility of long-term placement. Email your resume to jobs@meymax. com

SALES FT/PT. Cousins Army/ Navy Store. 1453 N. High Street. Corner of 8th ang High. Campus Tradition since 1970. Apply between 2-6

Help Wanted Clerical

Help Wanted Medical/Dental

$500 ESSAY Contest. Details at www.abortionpoliticians.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

7 BR 43 West Maynard. Completely remodeled. 3 bathrooms, lots of parking, on-site laundry, central air. $3000/mo. Call Adam 419-494-4626 or Sean 614-915-4666

HOME CITY Ice Company is currently looking for students to work locally at our Columbus and Delaware locations and our other locations throughout Ohio and the Midwest if you are heading home for the summer. We have AFFORDABLE 5 bedrooms. lots of part-time local and sumVisit our website at mer positions available and roswww.my1stplace.com. 1st Place ters fill up quick so apply now!! Realty 429-0960 Route Delivery, Loading and Production positions available check us out www.homecityice. com and apply online.

Unfurnished Efficiency/Studio

LOOKING FOR a student to live with widow man to assist with the care of 2 teenage boys, look afEFFICIENCY AVAILABLE $490 - High speed internet in- ter the house and dog. Location in Powell, Ohio. If interested, cluded. No Application Fee! please contact Tracy Parsons at Fall Units Available. Greif, Inc.-740-549-6039. Call Myers Real Estate 614-486-2933 or visit NEED A strong college male to www.myersrealty.com provide maximum care for our son at 17.80/hr on Saturdays 3 to 11pm. Lifting is required. LOOKING to rent an apartNeed own transportation. ment or house? Call The Close to OSU. Please call Jean Lantern at (614) 292-2031. 284-7276.

Unfurnished Rentals

THE MAYFIELD Sand Ridge Club Grounds Department is seeking dependable, hard working individuals who enjoy working in an outdoor environment. MSRC is located on the east side of Cleveland and is looking for summer time Cleveland area residents. Job duties may include but are not limited to mowing greens, tees, fairways and rough. 40 hours a week and uniforms are provided. Please apply in person at The Mayfield Sand Ridge Club Grounds Department, 1545 Sheridan Road South Euclid. For directions call 216-658-0825 or 440-226-9052.

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. Contact hangnguyen.1971@yahoo. com� BABY-SITTER needed 9am-5pm, once/week Victorian Village. One infant. Email resume to vvbabysitter@gmail.com

FULL-TIME INFANT/TODDLER TEACHER NEEDED for daycare in Hilliard, OH. Hours would be 7:30-6 four days a week. Applicants must have experience working with children or currently enrolled/ have degree Early Childhood Education. Please e-mail you resume to brooksedgehilliard@yahoo.com

LOOKING FOR child care for this summer in my Dublin home. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, 10:00am to 5:00pm. 11 year old girl and 9 year old boy. please contact gretchen.williams@ hotmail.com MAKE A difference this summer. Help a 12-yr-old girl w/ disabilities improve communication and self-care skills, and engage with peers at camp/pool/etc. Start 3:40-6:30 p.m. some days in April/May, and add hours in early June. Reliable car required. You’ll drive girl & her 7-yr-old brother to camp/park/pool/etc. Must like to have fun & be active. Must complete PDP provider training through the county, pass background check. Pay $12-$14 per hour. 20 min north of campus. Email susanlps@ gmail.com.

Unfurnished Rentals

CLINICAL SCHEDULER/REHABILITATION Aide w/ Ohio Orthopedic Center of Excellence in our Physical Therapy department. Fulltime M/W/F 8am to 6:15pm and T/TH 1pm to 6:15pm. Responsibilites include greeting patients, answering phone calls, checking patients out, disinfecting physical therapy equipment, assist patients with movement around clinic. Pay is $12.65 to $14.50 per hour. To apply, please email your resume to humanresources@ohio-ortho. com

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

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!

Furnished Rentals

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Thursday March 28, 2013

Help Wanted Restaurant/ Food Service

SERVERS AND Hosts: Our staff often tell us that this is the best job they’ve ever had. Positions available at Figlio, a casual, upscale gourmet pizza and pasta restaurant close to campus with locations in Grandview and Arlington. Meet new friends while Please fax resume to Anna working with our fun, attractive at 614-336-8485 or call staff. Part time. Flexible sched614-336-9559. www.linworth- ule. Will train the right person. (Also hiring buspersons and cc.org EOE cooks). Apply in person at 1369 PLEASE HELP DISABLED Grandview Ave or 3712 RiverAND TERMINALLY ILL YOUNG side Dr. Find out why this job will be your dream come true. PEOPLE. You are needed as Care Providers to work with and encourage young people with disabilities in family home settings. Bring joy to the life of these young people by caring for them, helping them to participate in their communities and enjoy life. If you have play skills or encouragement gifts please apply. This job allows you to learn intensively and can accommodate your class schedule. Those in all related fields or who have a heart for these mis- SERVERS: MAD MEX (1542 N sions please apply. Training pro- High St, S Campus Gateway) vided. Competitive wages and benefits. For more information, We’re looking for fun friendly call L.I.F.E Inc. at (614)475-5305 servers. We offer benefits including shift meals, paid vacaor visit us at tion and company matched www.LIFE-INC.NET 401(k). EOE Go to bigburrito.com/jobs and SUMMER BABYSITTER need- click on MAD MEX COLUMBUS ed for UA family. 3 children. for the link to our online applicaEmail resume to ptmulford@ tion. sbcglobal.net Mad Mex and big Burrito Restaurant Group are Equal Opportunity Employers

SCP DISTRIBUTORS is looking for a summer warehouse associate starting in April. Previous warehouse/forklift experience $$BARTENDERING$$ UP preferred. Send resume to: jeremy.svitana@scppool. com To $300/ Day. No Experience Necessary. Training available. STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid 800-965-6520 ext 124. Survey Takers needed in Columbus. 100% free to join. Click on PHONE FANTASY Actresses. 16-40 hours available. Safe ensurveys. vironment. Woman owned/operTHE CACHET salon of ated. Excellent earning potential. Worthington Hills seeks part Call 447-3535 for more info. 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.

GOURMET COFFEE shop inside OSU Hospital (Doan Hall) is seeking Baristas!Fun and fast-paced environment.Competitive pay plus tips. Apply in person at EspressOasis inside 6 BEDROOMS, 3 bath, NEW Doan Hall 293-4323 for direckitchen w/ granite counter- tions. tops, huge rooms, dishwasher, GROCERY STORE: Applicalaundry, A/C, parking. (614) tions now being accepted for 457-6545 Full-time/Part-time employment. $2000 per month Produce Clerk, Cashier, Deli www.crowncolumbus.com. Clerk, Stock Clerk, and Service 6 BR. 14th and Summit. Near Counter. Afternoons, evenings. Greek houses. W/D provided Starting pay (free). Central AC. Front/ $8.00/Hr. Enjoyable work atmoback porch. $2800/mo. sphere. Must be 18 years or Adam 419-494-4626 or Sean over. Great personalities only! Apply in person Huffman’s Mar614-915-4666 ket, 2140 Tremont Center, Up65 WEST Maynard near Neil per Arlington (2 blocks north of 5Bedroom +2 full baths town- Lane Ave and Tremont). house available for fall. North Campus. Very spacious & modern with huge living room, newer carpet, D/W, FREE W/D in basement, AC, blinds, front porch. Call 263-2665 www.gasproperties.com

Unfurnished Rentals

Help Wanted General

BRENEN’S CAFE at the Biomedical Research Tower is hiring now and for Summer. Apply in person at 460 W 12th Ave. 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 COOKS NEEDED!!! Location: Points Birsto @ Four Points by Sheraton Hotel Columbus Airport. 3030 Plaza Properties Columbus, Ohio 43219 Description: We are looking for hardworking individuals looking to prepare made to order food. Competitive Pay Awesome Perks Flexible Hours for Students

SUMMER & FULL TIME POSITIONS BEAUTIFUL LAKEFRONT YACHTING CLUB SEEKS OUTGOING, MOTIVATED INDIVIDUALS. WILL TRAIN QUALIFIED CANDIDATES AS: SERVERS BUSSERS HOST/HOSTESS BARTENDERS DOCK ATTENDANTS LIFEGUARDS LINE COOKS/BANQUET PREP SAILCAMP COUNSELORS SNACK BAR ATTENDANTS INCENTIVE PROGRAMS/ FLEXIBLE HRS EXCELLENT PAY INTERVIEW NOW FOR THE BEST POSITIONS WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY 200 YACHT CLUB DR. ROCKY RIVER, OH 44116 (440)333-1155 ASK FOR KATHY

Help Wanted OSU 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 Sales/Marketing CANVASSERS Needed:Part-Time Work, Full-Time Pay. Average $600 a week. Call 614-459-2885 or email columbusadmin@novadirectsales.com 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. HP STUDENT Sales Associate Intern position at the OSU Bookstore. $10 an hour. 10-20 hrs/wk flexible schedule. Sales oriented, Tech savvy. Send Resume and why you would be a great candidate for this position to mmuntz@cmai.com

TEXTBOOK BUYERS WANTED Seeking dynamic, self-motivated students to buy textbooks from fellow students on their college campus. Responsibilities include marketing the textbook sellback program using social networks, scheduling appointments and purchasing textbooks. Earn 20% commission on the textbooks you purchase. We will provide you with the tools to make you successful. If interested please email UBBInfo@ ubuybooks.com.

Help Wanted Volunteer #1 CORNER of King and Neil. Security Building. 2BR, CA, LDY, OFF STREET PARKING. $750/ month Phone Steve 614-208-3111. Shand50@aol.com

Help Wanted Landscape/ Lawn Care

General Services

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE PT, Temp., M-F, start pay $9.00-$10.00/hr. Must have own transportation. Call Susan @614-581-5991

Help Wanted Interships FLOWERS ON Orchard Lane is looking for interns to fill two paid positions. This work requires a great deal of physical labor. ~ a sophomore or junior from a local college ~ someone able to work through November 2013 ~ flexible scheduling weekends are a must

BEST PRICES on Certified Diamonds & Engagement Rings CDI Diamonds & Jewelry Dublin www.cdidia.com 614-734-8438

Send your resume with a cover letter to Flowers on Orchard Lane 18 Orchard Lane Columbus, OH 43214 Or email fool@columbus.rr.com Please NO phone calls or third party contacts.

TWO MEN And A Truck/Columbus is now hiring a part-time Marketing Intern to help implement our marketing plan. Responsibilities include but are not limited to: -Researching competitors -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 -Coordinating community service involvement and activities

MAINTENANCE SERVICES For Landlords & Tenants www.campushandyman.com

ResumĂŠ Services

EMERGENCY WHILE you wait!!! Last minute!!! Saturdays. Sundays. Resumes. Biographies. Typing. Copies. Dictation. Secretarial. Filing. Organizing. Mailing projects. Christmas giftwrapping services. Sewing buttons. Pric**Applicants must be able to ing negotiable. drive company car and qualify Cash only. 614-440-7416. under our insurance require- FAST, ACCURATE, professional ments. Must be 21 or older, proofreading and copy editing. valid driver license, acceptable Will edit papers, term papers, driving record. thesis, dissertations and manuSchedule is Monday-Friday. Up scripts. 27 years of to 20 hours per week. Days and experience in publishing. Call hours may vary. 614-204-4619 or email Compensation: Minimum wage tcunning53@gmail.com. Please contact us if you are RESUMES. BIOGRAPHIES. Autobiographies. interested: kurt.baker@twom- We write. Histories. Memoirs. en.com Obituaries. Eulogies. Public speaking. 614-440-7416. http://www.twomenandatruck. com 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.

Typing Services NEED AN experienced typist, proofreader, editor, and/ or transcriptionist? Call Donna @937-767-8622. Excellent references. Reasonable rates.

Tutoring Services

A MATH tutor. All levels. Also Physics, Statistics and Business Qualifications: The HR intern College Math. Teaching/tutoring must have good organizational since 1965. Checks okay. Call skills, excellent communication anytime, Clark 294-0607. abilities, and good time/task prioritization. Basic math skills and problem solving skills are necessary. The intern will need working knowledge of Microsoft Windows, Excel, Word and AcARE YOU facing thousands cess Programs. in student loan debt? What if Work Schedule would be : you could reduce how much Monday 8am-5pm, Tuesday you borrow? Sharing this video www.GBGWebinarNow.com and 3pm-7pm, Friday 8am-5pm about $50 a month now could Pay: $7.85/hour help you avoid massive debt Start Date: March 2013 Qualified Candidates should later! www.Eva333.com Eva email cover letter and resume to Baez 310-221-0210 the above email.

Business Opportunities

Help Wanted Tutors COLLEGE TUTORS is currently recruiting in Powell and New Albany for high school ACT/ SAT tutors. If you have achieved academic success and have the skills to help others achieve the same success, we have the tutoring job for you. Must have scored 30/1350. Flexible schedule. Part-time. Email resumes to rzoky@collegetutors.com or call 614-761-3060.

HIRING CARE providers for 17 JOIN OUR Team as a Camp year old male with high functionCOSI Teacher!! ing autism. Work on HS level homework;social/independent Prepare and facilitate develop- living/ behavioral skills. 2 shifts mentally appropriate science per week/10 hours minimum. summer camp programs for Training provided. Contact Josie children, ages 5 through 14, in Ulrey 614-282-6760 week-long and half-day sessions. Temporary position with STUDENT TUTORS and study training, planning, and meetings hall monitors needed for the mid-May; and programs running 2013-2014 school year for OSU June to August 2013. Daytime student-athletes. Tutors: Junior hours Monday thru Friday, with standing and minimum A- in occasional Saturdays, Sundays, courses you tutor. Proctors: Jutravel and evening hours. nior standing, must be comfortable enforcing rules. Available Stipend pay of $100 per full-day for a minimum of 10 hrs/wk, insession, $50 per half-day ses- cluding Sundays and evenings. sion. Courses: Math, Chemistry, Physics, Accounting, Economics, StaVisit www.COSI.org for full job tistics and other GEC courses. descriptions and to apply. $8.65/hr for tutoring, 8.05/hr for proctoring. We do not offer full SALES LEADER wanted to de- GAA appointments. To apply, go velop and lead a sales team for to www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/ wellness and weight loss prod- sasso and scroll to the tutor or ucts. Must bust be self moti- proctor application. Return to vated. Part time or full time, set 350 Younkin Success Center by your own hours. Commission April 8. and cash bonuses. For more information contact: fitworksfindlay@gmail.com

COMMERCIAL MOWING crews and landscapers needed. Full time. Call 614-457-8257. www.satlandscape.com MOZART’S BAKERY AND VI- satlandscape@aol.com ENNA ICE CAFE - Looking for DAN’S LANDSCAPE. part- time/full-time reliable coun- Landscape person needed. Full ter help, server help, kitchen or Part Time. help. High Street location, a mile Call 614-264-6952 north of campus. Email resume GENERAL LANDSCAPING in to Powell. info@mozartscafe.com Part Time--$9-10/hr NOW HIRING experienced Weeding, edging, mulching and servers, hosts, cooks, and dish- trimming. Reliable transportation, washers at Bravo Crosswoods. driver’s license and car insurDay and weekend availability is ance. www.MoreTimeforYou. required. Please apply in person com or 614.760.0911. at 7470 Vantage Dr. Columbus. Apply at the Front Desk. We hope you join us soon!

Help Wanted Landscape/ Lawn Care

BIG IDEA Mastermind $$ Jump on Board the Money Train $$ This Business is on-track to create 25 to 30 Millionaires in 2013. www.DiamondBIM. 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 www.garyacampbell.acndirect. com garyacampbell@acnrep.com

General Miscellaneous GARAGE FOR rent (11x20) with opener. $105.00 per month. Located near Lane and Kenny. Call Ingrid for details (614)487-9008

Announcements/ Notice

For Sale Miscellaneous

BOOKS: HYSTERIA Molt echoes the great writers in Clumsy Hearts, a slightly misguided romance. They may never forgive her for it. Some people cannot take a joke. Available via Amazon.com.

For Sale Real Estate HORSE FARM /5+ acre 3 fenced pasture 6 stall horse barn home 3BR 2.5 ba WBFP 2car garage basement deck w pool large work shop with elec. 20 min S.DT Cols FSBO call 614-801-1974 $342,500

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

VACANCIES? VACANCIES? VACANCIES? Let our leasing services pay for themselves. For your leasing, property management, or sales needs Call 1st Place Realty 429-0960. CAMPUS PARTNERS is seekwww.my1stplace.com ing 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 Part$199 FLIGHT from Colum- ners, 1534 N High St, by April bos to NYC, direct round trip 1st, 2013. Contact prosser.20@ info@roselawntravel.com or osu.edu call 347.770.2488 Discount CONTRACEPTIVE RESEARCH code:Lantern STUDY Would you like to use an IUS (Levonorgestrel-Releasing Intrauterine System) as your method of contraception over the next 5 years? If you are a healthy, sexually active woman, age 16-35 and in a mutually monogamous relationship you may be eligible The help you need... to participate in a research study. to get the job you want You will receive study-related exams, an IUS at no cost and be www.jobexpertsonline.com/ compensated for time and travel. osu If you are interested, please contact GenOBGYNDept@osumc. 40% student discount edu or 614-293-4365.

Travel/ Vacation

General Services

5B


[ a +e ] Grandview Heights boasts live music, boutiques, Buckeye spirit Rose Davidson Lantern reporter davidson.347@osu.edu Columbus is brimming with interesting neighborhoods beyond the borders of Ohio State. Each week, The Lantern will spotlight an area in or around Columbus.

Courtesy of Funny or Die

Jim Carrey plays a lead singer of a country band in Funny or Die music video ‘Cold Dead Hand.’

Mr. Feeny’s return, Carrey’s gun control spoof highlight week Halie Williams Asst. arts editor williams.3948@osu.edu Jim Carrey takes fire at gun owners In light of the recent spotlight that has been shined on the issue of gun control, actor Jim Carrey is speaking, well singing, out. In a new sketch video for the comedy website Funny or Die titled “Cold Dead Hand,� Carrey mocks actor Charlton Heston, who died in 2008, and his enthusiasm for guns. The title and lyrics of Carrey’s spoof relate back to Heston’s speech to the NRA in 2000, in which he states gun control supporters would have to pry his firearm from his “cold, dead hands.� “It takes a cold dead hand to decide to pull the trigger / It takes a cold dead heart and as near as I can figure / With your cold dead aim you’re trying to prove your (junk) is bigger / But we know your chariot may not be swinging low,� Carrey sings as he plays the role of a lead singer for a country music band (he also plays an angry Heston in various parts of the clip). In hopes of expressing more of his

gun control views, Carrey has also turned to Twitter. “‘Cold Dead Hand’ is abt u heartless motherf%ckers unwilling 2 bend 4 the safety of our kids. Sorry if you’re offended by the word safety!� he tweeted Sunday. Love it or hate it, offended or not, you have to admit it’s pretty interesting satirical material. But as you can imagine, this video has created some backlash for Carrey. However, after some serious verbal abuse, and probably a few threats, it’s no surprise the most absurd criticism came from Greg Gutfeld, a co-host on Fox News Channel’s “The Five.� “He is probably the most pathetic tool on the face of the earth — and I hope his career is dead, and I hope he ends up sleeping in a car the way his life began,� he said. “This video only made me want to go out and buy a gun.� Ouch. Tell us how you really feel, Greg. Leaving my views on gun control completely out of the conversation, it’s refreshing to see such bravery and passion from the Carrey. And although it was undeniably a risky choice for Carrey, it’s a brilliant assault on the issue. “I find the gun problem frustrating and

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‘Cold Dead Hand’ is my fun little way of expressing that frustration,� Carrey said in a press release. Well, good for you, Jim Carrey! Mr. Faheeeeeeny In much lighter, uncontroversial news, William Daniels, who played George Feeny on “Boy Meets World,� is set to appear on the spinoff show “Girl Meets World,� according to “Entertainment Weekly.� Last week photos of the 85-year-old actor appearing on set surfaced, and it’s now been made clear that he wasn’t just visiting. Daniels played an essential role on “Boy Meets World,� as a teacher and mentor, but it is still unknown what role he will take in the new story. Ben Savage (Cory Matthews) will be following in Daniels’ footsteps by teaching at the same school his daughter Riley (Rowan Blanchard) attends, so we can only hope the two will be working side by side. Rider Strong (Shawn Hunter) and Will Friedle (Eric Matthews) also appeared in photos “visiting� the set. Maybe they will follow in Daniels’ footsteps and return because it’s safe to say the show won’t be the same without them.

Sure, it has a great public library and a pretty impressive Giant Eagle grocery store, but what else does Grandview Heights really have to offer? Its calm, quiet charm gives the impression of a sleepy residential town, but the area actually has many hidden attractions that are begging to be discovered by Columbus’ youth. Shop Lining Grandview Avenue are a number of small boutique shops that have interesting, often local items for sale. Objects for the Home, located at 1392 Grandview Ave., sells a range of furniture and home dÊcor items but also showcases jewelry, stationery and organic personal care products made by Columbus artisans. The store has ties to Ohio State as well, as the owners are alumni. Thread on Grandview, located at 1306 Grandview Ave., also sells locally handmade jewelry, as well as an assortment of clothing and shoes. The items are casual, yet sophisticated, making them perfect for college women on the go. The shop also holds some special events from time to time, including trunk shows for various clothing and jewelry brands. Dine There are plenty of great restaurants along Grandview Avenue to accompany the great shopping, but the Buckeye Hall of Fame Grill at 900 Goodale Blvd. is by far the best place in the neighborhood for an enthusiastic Buckeye to grab a bite. Situated inside the recently constructed Grandview Yard, this restaurant airs many OSU sporting events on its many large TVs. Though the food itself is not that impressive, offering mostly traditional American

dishes such as burgers and pastas, the atmosphere makes up for what the menu lacks in creativity. The walls are lined with historic Buckeye memorabilia, including trophies, jerseys and autographed photos from former players. On days with home football games, Buckeye Hall of Fame Grill will even provide transportation to and from campus, though diners must purchase a $20 gift card in exchange for a ride. Explore The true entertainment in Grandview Heights can be found in low-key taverns around the neighborhood. The Tree Bar at 887 Chambers Road is the epitome of a dive bar, but it has an endearing quality to it. At the corner of two alleyways, the bar looks rather sketchy from the outside, but has actually hosted a number of familiar names in music, including Kyle Gass from Tenacious D. The interior is small, but still large enough to hold frequent musical performances, including open mic nights on Wednesdays. In fact, the bar’s website rightfully calls itself an “unassuming DIY music club,� though the “club� part is a bit misleading. A very large, very real tree stump protrudes from the floor of the bar’s back room, explaining the establishment’s name. Woodlands Tavern is another exciting spot to catch some great music acts. In a more visible location at 1200 W. Third Ave., this bar, with its 300-person capacity, is more spacious and lately has been bringing in some bigger names than The Tree Bar. Recently the bar has hosted acts such as Tea Leaf Green and Devon Allman, son of The Allman Brothers Band’s Gregg Allman. Woodlands Tavern also holds open mic nights on Wednesdays and regularly spotlights local musicians, including Columbus-based girl band The Salty Caramels. On April 13, the bar is scheduled to host an event called “William the Accountant’s Back Tax Musical Festival� at 7 p.m., which includes performances by Columbus-based artists William the Accountant, Karate Coyote, The Saturday Giant and Post Coma Network. Admission is $10.

2013 Ross Heart Hospital Wellness Series Join The Ohio State University in a series of wellness events to end heart disease

Upcoming EvEnts: Long John Run march 30 at 8:30 a.m. ohio state campus Wear your PJs, or long johns, and run a 5K around campus to raise awareness for fitness and heart health. Heart and Sole Run April 13 at 8:30 a.m. sharon Woods metro park The Heart and Sole Run (or Walk) is an opportunity for the entire family to participate in a heart-healthy activity. The distances include 2 miles, 5K (3.1 mile) and 5 miles. Tri Fit Challenge June 30 Antrim park, ohio state campus Swim, bike and run in this triathlon event to prevent heart disease. Choose from three distances and participate as an individual or on a two- or three-person relay team. Visit go.osu.edu/series to register for these events and to learn more about the Ross Heart Hospital Wellness Series.

Thursday March 28, 2013

6B


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