THe Lantern 10-12-10

8
the student voice of The Ohio State University www.thelantern.com the lantern year: 130 No. 85 Tuesday October 12, 2010 1A More students boarding ‘drunk bus’ NICK HILTBRAND Senior Lantern reporter [email protected] More students — many of them bar-bound — are turning to a late- night bus route created last year to shuttle passengers from Clintonville to the Arena District. When the No. 21 bus route, dubbed the “Night Owl” by the Central Ohio Transportation Authority, launched in September 2009, about 10 percent of its riders were students, COTA spokeswoman Beth Berkemer said in an e-mail. Now, students make up about 60 percent of the riders, she said. University ofÿcials worked with the transportation authority last year to create a route students would use. The result was a shuttle frequented by bar-bound students, running from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. Peter Koltak, Moritz law student and former president of OSU’s Undergraduate Student Government who helped develop the route, said the project stemmed from students’ complaints that they were required to pay $9 every quarter for a bus service they didn’t use. “We heard that students were complaining and saying, ‘Oh, well I TYLER JOSWICK / Lantern asst. photo editor Riders take COTA’s Night Owl bus, No. 21, south to the Arena District on Oct. 1. The route starts in Clintonville and runs through campus, stopping at various locations, including the intersection at 15th Avenue and High Street. Local businesses prep for president ALLY MAROTTI Lantern reporter [email protected] As White House and university ofÿcials sort out the details of President Barack Obama’s visit to Ohio State on Sunday, many local businesses are gearing up for an exceptionally busy day. “I can’t imagine what will happen,” said Alex Abejuela, assistant manager of Red Mango, a frozen yogurt shop on High Street. “I’ve never been in this type of situation.” Abejuela, who was unaware of the event, said that a presidential visit to OSU is exciting, regardless of political beliefs. Other business owners were more open about their thoughts on politics. “We lean a little Democrat here,” said Jimmy Barouxis, owner of Buckeye Donuts. “If you see ’em, tell ’em to come here.” Barouxis expects business to “blow up” at the 24-hour shop following the event. Other businesses, such as Conrads College Gifts, plan to extend hours. “On Sundays, we are usually only open until 6 (p.m.), but we are going to play it by ear on Sunday,” said Bennett Cohen, manager of Conrads. “If we get busy, we are going to stay open.” Businesses were already prepared for an unusual business day Sunday because of the Columbus Marathon, which runs from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and takes runners north on High Street along campus. “We are excited for the president’s visit and the marathon,” he said. “If Obama stops into Conrads, we will give him a free T-shirt.” Some streets will close during the rally and marathon, but some business owners aren’t worried that the closures will keep customers away. “I don’t think the trafÿc aspects affect us as much,” said Liam Van Vorhis, general manager at Eddie George’s Grille 27. “Fifty percent of business is college kids that walk and ride bikes anyway.” Van Vorhis said he plans to increase the sports-themed restaurant’s staff by 20 percent Sunday night. “Any time a major politician or a major sport- ing event is on campus, people come from all the suburbs,” Van Vorhis said. Although football games draw the most business to Eddie George’s, Van Vorhis said he could not compare Obama’s visit to a Buckeye game. The Blackwell, a hotel and restaurant run through the Fisher College of Business, is always fully staffed on weekends and will make no changes Sunday. “We do have game-day trafÿc every weekend,” said John Clark, accounting manager at the Black- well. “It’s pretty much business as usual.” Businesses on OSU’s campus also plan to conduct business as usual. “We are not changing any of our services at this time, so I have nothing to report,” said Karri Benishek, marketing manager for Campus Dining Services. Kathy Grant, operations manager of Berry Cafe Cold weather no match for bed bugs JUSTIN CONLEY Lantern reporter [email protected] Ohio residents will likely continue to battle bed bugs through the winter, experts say, when most other insects are halted by the cold. “I don’t think (the weather) will have any impact at all. They’re domesticated,” said David Denlinger, a professor of evolution, ecology and organizational biology at OSU. “They don’t have to survive outside.” Although both extreme heat and cold can be used to rid homes of bedbugs, Denlinger said heated homes will offer plenty of shelter to bedbugs as the seasons shift. A nationwide surge in bed bug population has left Ohio ofÿcials scrambling to mount a defense against the bloodsuckers in what is now the most bed bug-infested state. In 2009, Columbus suffered from 4,400 building infestations of bed bugs, a number Paul Wenning, special projects coordinator of the Franklin County Board of Health, said has tripled since health department ofÿcials began tracking bed bugs in 2007. The increase in bed bug popula- tion is thought to be a result of several factors, including increased inter- national travel and limits placed on pesticides effective against bed bugs. The Ohio Department of Agricul- ture requested that the United States Environmental Protection Agency exempt Ohio from the ban on in-home use of Propoxur, an effective pesticide against bed bugs. But the EPA denied the petition in June based on the hazardous effects on children, opting instead to meet with state ofÿcials and create an alter- native strategy. In response to the pest invasion, the Ohio Department of Health and Franklin County Board of Health, along with several school districts and pest control companies, formed the Central Ohio Bed Bug Task Force to inform citizens of central Ohio about ways to identify and treat infestation. According to a fact sheet by Susan Jones, an associate professor of entomology at OSU, bed bugs are ° at, brownish-red insects about half- an-inch long. Indicators of a bed bug infestation include “blood stains from crushed bugs and rusty (sometimes dark) spots of excrement on sheets and mattresses, bed, clothes and walls.” Bed bugs feed at night and their bites are painless for one in three adults, according to the fact sheet. Bed bug bites look like mosquito bites, and the two are often confused. Despite the growing problem in Columbus, the OSU campus has been largely unaffected by the pests, ofÿcials said. There was one conÿrmed case of bed bugs on campus in 2009, in Drackett Tower. But university ofÿcials aren’t taking chances. Between July 1, 2009, and June 30, 2010, the Ofÿce of Student Life spent $41,912 on pest control for the Columbus campus, including monthly inspections and preventative treatments. Still, experts warn that an increas- ing number of complaints about bed bugs in Ohio might not be indica- tive of an explosion in the bed bug population. “There are not necessarily more bed bugs than before,” said Chad Gilbert, a spokesman for Terminix, a Memphis, Tenn.-based pest control company. Students living in the dorms are asked to call 2-HELP if they see signs of a bed bug infestation. The frightening reality of bed bugs EMILY COLLARD / Lantern designer 57% Increase in bed bug exterminator calls since 2005 in the U.S. 80° F Temperature at which bed bugs grow fastest and lay the most eggs 1 out of 3 People who don’t feel bed bug bites 550 Number of days a bed bug can survive without food Source: http://theweek.com continued as COTA on 3A continued as Obama on 3A OSU student to help Haiti schools 2A campus 2 2 sports Ohio State is ranked No. 1 in the polls, but BCS projections have the Buckeyes below several other teams. 8A No more No. 1? www.weather.com high 79 low 48 W 75/50 mostly sunny R 63/45 few showers F 60/42 partly cloudy SA 62/44 sunny partly cloudy weather Go ‘like’ The Lantern on Facebook and find out how to win Blue Jackets tickets! Facebook Who will be the next CW Star? 5A arts & life Day one and you’re in the know Text EY Edge to 58592 for insights into who we are, what we do and how you can get in on the fun. © 2010 Ernst & Young LLP Up to 2 msgs/mo. Message and Data Rates May Apply. Text HELP for questions or STOP to quit. Visit mms.us/ey for full terms. Ernst & Young refers to a global organization of member firms of Ernst & Young Global Limited, each of which is a separate legal entity. Ernst & Young LLP is a client-serving member firm located in the US.

description

THe Lantern 10-12-10

Transcript of THe Lantern 10-12-10

the student voice of

The Ohio State University

www.thelantern.com thelanternyear: 130 No. 85

Tuesday October 12, 2010

1A

More students boarding ‘drunk bus’NICK HILTBRANDSenior Lantern [email protected]

More students — many of them bar-bound — are turning to a late-night bus route created last year to shuttle passengers from Clintonville to the Arena District.

When the No. 21 bus route, dubbed the “Night Owl” by the Central Ohio Transportation Authority, launched in September 2009, about 10 percent of its riders were students, COTA spokeswoman Beth Berkemer said in an e-mail. Now, students make up about 60 percent of the riders, she said.

University ofÿ cials worked with the transportation authority last year to create a route students would use. The result was a shuttle frequented by bar-bound students, running from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. Peter Koltak, Moritz law student and former president of OSU’s Undergraduate Student Government who helped develop the route, said the project stemmed from students’ complaints that they were required to pay $9 every quarter for a bus service they didn’t use.

“We heard that students were complaining and saying, ‘Oh, well I

TYLER JOSWICK / Lantern asst. photo editor

Riders take COTA’s Night Owl bus, No. 21, south to the Arena District on Oct. 1. The route starts in Clintonville and runs through campus, stopping at various locations, including the intersection at 15th Avenue and High Street.

Local businesses prep for presidentALLY MAROTTI Lantern [email protected]

As White House and university ofÿ cials sort out the details of President Barack Obama’s visit to Ohio State on Sunday, many local businesses are gearing up for an exceptionally busy day.

“I can’t imagine what will happen,” said Alex Abejuela, assistant manager of Red Mango, a frozen yogurt shop on High Street. “I’ve never been in this type of situation.”

Abejuela, who was unaware of the event, said that a presidential visit to OSU is exciting, regardless of political beliefs.

Other business owners were more open about their thoughts on politics.

“We lean a little Democrat here,” said Jimmy Barouxis, owner of Buckeye Donuts. “If you see ’em, tell ’em to come here.”

Barouxis expects business to “blow up” at the

24-hour shop following the event. Other businesses, such as Conrads College Gifts, plan to extend hours.

“On Sundays, we are usually only open until 6 (p.m.), but we are going to play it by ear on Sunday,” said Bennett Cohen, manager of Conrads. “If we get busy, we are going to stay open.”

Businesses were already prepared for an unusual business day Sunday because of the Columbus Marathon, which runs from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and takes runners north on High Street along campus.

“We are excited for the president’s visit and the marathon,” he said. “If Obama stops into Conrads, we will give him a free T-shirt.”

Some streets will close during the rally and marathon, but some business owners aren’t worried that the closures will keep customers away.

“I don’t think the trafÿ c aspects affect us as much,” said Liam Van Vorhis, general manager at Eddie George’s Grille 27. “Fifty percent of business is college kids that walk and ride bikes anyway.” Van Vorhis said he plans to increase the sports-themed restaurant’s staff by 20 percent Sunday night.

“Any time a major politician or a major sport-ing event is on campus, people come from all the suburbs,” Van Vorhis said.

Although football games draw the most business to Eddie George’s, Van Vorhis said he could not compare Obama’s visit to a Buckeye game.

The Blackwell, a hotel and restaurant run through the Fisher College of Business, is always fully staffed on weekends and will make no changes Sunday.

“We do have game-day trafÿ c every weekend,” said John Clark, accounting manager at the Black-well. “It’s pretty much business as usual.”

Businesses on OSU’s campus also plan to conduct business as usual.

“We are not changing any of our services at this time, so I have nothing to report,” said Karri Benishek, marketing manager for Campus Dining Services.

Kathy Grant, operations manager of Berry Cafe

Cold weather no match for bed bugsJUSTIN CONLEYLantern [email protected]

Ohio residents will likely continue to battle bed bugs through the winter, experts say, when most other insects are halted by the cold.

“I don’t think (the weather) will have any impact at all. They’re domesticated,” said David Denlinger, a professor of evolution, ecology and organizational biology at OSU. “They don’t have to survive outside.”

Although both extreme heat and cold can be used to rid homes of bedbugs, Denlinger said heated homes will offer plenty of shelter to bedbugs as the seasons shift.

A nationwide surge in bed bug population has left Ohio ofÿ cials scrambling to mount a defense against the bloodsuckers in what is now the most bed bug-infested state.

In 2009, Columbus suffered from 4,400 building infestations of bed bugs, a number Paul Wenning, special projects coordinator of the Franklin County Board of Health, said has tripled since health department ofÿ cials began tracking bed bugs in 2007.

The increase in bed bug popula-tion is thought to be a result of several factors, including increased inter-national travel and limits placed on pesticides effective against bed bugs.

The Ohio Department of Agricul-ture requested that the United States Environmental Protection Agency exempt Ohio from the ban on in-home use of Propoxur, an effective pesticide against bed bugs.

But the EPA denied the petition in June based on the hazardous effects on children, opting instead to meet with state ofÿ cials and create an alter-native strategy.

In response to the pest invasion, the Ohio Department of Health and Franklin County Board of Health, along with several school districts and pest control companies, formed the Central Ohio Bed Bug Task Force to

inform citizens of central Ohio about ways to identify and treat infestation.

According to a fact sheet by Susan Jones, an associate professor of entomology at OSU, bed bugs are ° at, brownish-red insects about half-an-inch long. Indicators of a bed bug infestation include “blood stains from crushed bugs and rusty (sometimes dark) spots of excrement on sheets and mattresses, bed, clothes and walls.”

Bed bugs feed at night and their bites are painless for one in three adults, according to the fact sheet. Bed bug bites look like mosquito bites, and the two are often confused.

Despite the growing problem in Columbus, the OSU campus has been largely unaffected by the pests, ofÿ cials said.

There was one conÿ rmed case

of bed bugs on campus in 2009, in Drackett Tower.

But university ofÿ cials aren’t taking chances. Between July 1, 2009, and June 30, 2010, the Ofÿ ce of Student Life spent $41,912 on pest control for the Columbus campus, including monthly inspections and preventative treatments.

Still, experts warn that an increas-ing number of complaints about bed bugs in Ohio might not be indica-tive of an explosion in the bed bug population.

“There are not necessarily more bed bugs than before,” said Chad Gilbert, a spokesman for Terminix, a Memphis, Tenn.-based pest control company.

Students living in the dorms are asked to call 2-HELP if they see signs of a bed bug infestation.

The frightening reality of bed bugs

EMILY COLLARD / Lantern designer

57% Increase in bed bug exterminator calls since 2005 in the U.S.80° F Temperature at which bed bugs grow fastest and lay the most eggs

1 out of 3 People who don’t feel bed bug bites550 Number of days a bed bug can survive without food

The frightening reality of bed bugs

1 out of 3

The frightening reality of bed bugs

1 out of 3

Source: http://theweek.com

continued as COTA on 3A

continued as Obama on 3A

OSU student to help Haitischools 2A

campus

22

sports

Ohio State is ranked No. 1 in the polls, but BCS projections have the Buckeyes below several other teams.

8ANo more No. 1?

www.weather.com

high 79low 48

W 75/50 mostly sunny

R 63/45 few showers

F 60/42 partly cloudy

SA 62/44 sunny

partly

cloudy

weather

Go ‘like’ The Lantern on Facebook and fi nd out how to win Blue Jackets tickets!

Facebook

Who will be the next CW Star? 5A

arts & life

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Day one and you’re in the know

Text EY Edge to 58592 for insights into who we are, what we do and how you can get in on the fun.

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2A

campus

Tuesday October 12, 2010

Doctoral student to help Haitian schools raise moneyJAMIE MORGANLantern [email protected]

Ohio State student Chris Sutter has traveled around the world with a mission to alleviate poverty, and Haiti is next on his list.

“I have an interest anywhere there is poverty across the globe,” said Sutter, a doctoral student in international business. “I’ve always been intrigued by Haiti, but the opportunity had never come before.”

When Terri Bucci, director for the Haiti Empower-ment Project, approached Sutter’s adviser, Geoff Kistruck, with the opportunity to join her team, he recommended Sutter for the job.

According to its website, the project, operating for the past four years, brings OSU students and faculty together with Haitian counterparts to assist in professional training.

The team of eight students and faculty members will return to Haiti on Sunday through Oct. 24 and needed someone with experience in entrepreneur-ship in developing countries.

“Chris will meet a very speciÿ c need that no one else that is going with us can meet,” said Bucci, associate professor for mathematics education at OSU’s Mansÿ eld campus. “He is the perfect person for this and he will play a very important role in the next step these communities need to take.”

She said Sutter will be working with the leaders of ÿ ve tent communities in Croix-des-Bouquets to help communities develop sustainable revenue for volunteer teachers at their schools.

Sutter said he hopes to assist the communities of 500 to 3,000 people in formulating revenue plans.

“My main objective is to point them in the right direction to begin this process,” Sutter said.

Working with developing nations is not a new endeavor for Sutter. Before coming to OSU, he earned an undergraduate degree in Latin Ameri-can studies from Brigham Young University, taught

English as a second language for Oklahoma City Public Schools and returned to BYU for a master’s degree in business administration.

Throughout the years, his passion has led him to several places, from Bangladesh to Nicaragua, for research and practice in poverty alleviation.

But his trip to Guatemala made a long-lasting impression, he said.

Sutter spent three months consulting for an urban school there, working on organizational and ÿ nancial issues. He said he recently learned the school has gone two years without debt.

“That was a really rewarding project, and I realized that our concept in a lot of these countries is that we need to just give them things, and there is certainly a place for that, but there are incredible things these people can do,” Sutter said.

His ability comes as no surprise to his colleagues.

“He’s great at building relationships, and not just in the professional area,” said Kistruck, assistant professor for human resources and management. “He really cares, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he makes some friends there.”

Sutter said he hopes to help some of Haiti’s ÿ nancial problems but isn’t sure how much of a difference he can make.

“Certainly a week is not enough time to start a big project and get things going the way you’d hope,” Sutter said. “To be honest, I hope we can have a positive impact, but I think, realistically, it’s going to take a lot more time.”

Bucci said there will be future trips to Haiti involv-ing more students and faculty from several depart-ments, including food sciences, business and art.

Depending on the outcome of the trip, Sutter might join their efforts.

“I really hope to go back because I look at it more as an investment in terms of learning,” Sutter said. “If there is a good ÿ t between their needs and the skills that I’ve got, and also opportunities to do research, I am certainly very interested in actually having an impact in Haiti.”

OSU student travels to Haiti

EMILY COLLARD / Lantern designer

Florida

Mexico

Guatemala

El Salvador Honduras

Nicaragua

Costa Rica

CubaCubaCubaCuba

Haiti DominicanRepublic

Jamaica

Columbia Venezuela

Ohio State student Chris Sutter will travel to Haiti to help communities manage money for education.

Have you been abroad for service opportunities? Tell us about it on thelantern.com

2

The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates

7 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 13Campus Reading Room, 11th floorThompson Library, 1858 Neil Avenue MallCo-sponsored by the Todd A. Bell National Resource Center on the African American Male

Despite a troubled childhood, Wes Moore went on to become a youth advocate, Rhodes Scholar, Army combat veteran, promising business leader and author. At the same time he received the Rhodes Scholarship, The Baltimore Sun newspaper was running stories about the murder of an off-duty police officer during an armed robbery. One of the men convicted lived in the same neighborhood and, in an uncanny turn, was also named Wes Moore. After many visits with the other Wes in prison, he realized in their two stories the tale of personal responsibility and importance of education and community for a generation of boys searching for their way.

Wes Moore

For further information, visit Ohio State’s Diversity Web site at osu.edu/diversity/lecture.php, or contact Ms. Edie Waugh at (614) 688-3638 or [email protected].

If you have questions concerning access or wish to request a sign language interpreter or accommodations for a disability, please contact Ms. Waugh.

osu.edu/diversity/lecture.php

2010–11Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series

2010–112010–112010–11Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts Series Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture & Cultural Arts SeriesDiversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &Diversity Lecture &

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don’t use the bus that much, so why do I have to pay the fee?’” he said. “The rationale there was, well, you have to pay the fee, so why don’t we look at services that make you more likely to use the bus?”

But the service, which isn’t exclusive to OSU students, has earned a reputation as a free ride for alcohol-fueled students.

“Oh yeah, the party bus, the drunk bus,” said Adrian Lawson, a Night Owl bus operator. “We’re just taking (students) down there to have some fun and blow off steam.”

Some students said the Night Owl is worth the $9 quarterly fee by itself — even though it gives students free access to any COTA bus route with their BuckIDs.

Aaron Ward, a ÿ rst-year in communication and Night Owl rider, said part of the bus’ appeal is that it keeps students from drinking and driving.

“It’s also cheaper on a bus than it is a cab,” he said.

Some students riding the bus questioned whether student fees should pay fare for their weekend adventures.

“I mean, Ohio State tends to lump a bunch of stuff into a lot of fees anyhow, so a lot of people don’t even know that they are paying for the right to use it,” said Chris Belcastro, a ÿ fth-year in architec-ture and construction systems management.

He contends that many students will still call cabs to make the trek to the Arena District because they’re quicker and don’t operate on a schedule.

There are two buses on the Night Owl route that stick to a strict schedule, reaching each stop about once every half-hour. Riders unfamiliar with the schedule can text a number listed at certain bus stops to see when the next shuttle will arrive.

Koltak said the COTA route is safer than alterna-tive buses, such as a privately operated bus that carries students for free from the Gateway area to the Arena District, commonly known as “the party bus.”

“The bus drivers in COTA won’t let the buses get too crowded or rowdy. They don’t have a proÿ t interest in it. They are just interested in getting you from one point to another,” Koltak said. “With public transportation, you kind of have some assurances that you are going to have a safe, prepaid way to get where you want to go.”

He said the route is part of a broader realization by COTA that catering to students is different than catering to other Columbus residents.

“What I think COTA is realizing is that students’ lives tend to operate way differently compared to the average person in terms of when they get up in the morning, what they do socially, to when they get to bed at night,” Koltak said. “I think COTA is sort of recognizing that ‘hey, we’re charging everyone this fee, and then because of that we’re going to shape our services to better ÿ t our customer base.’”

COTA from 1A

Night Owl routean attempt to accommodate students

in the William Oxley Thompson Library, said she has not heard of any changes there.

“We rely on the library’s needs and, as of now, nothing has changed with our hours,” Grant said. “We think it will be busier. We welcome (Obama’s) visit.”

Lauren Hallow and Nathan McCullough contributed to this story.

Obama from 1A

Rally’s effectswill be minimal, professor says

Please recycle

Student requests inspire new degreesNICOLE FRIELantern [email protected]

Ohio State’s Columbus campus is offering four new degrees this fall, and the list is expected to grow.

On the undergraduate level, students can now pursue a Bachelor of Science in constructions systems management and a Bachelor of Arts in public affairs.

The Bachelor of Science in construction systems management has been a long time coming.

In the late 1980s, the commercial industry started to “grab students,” said Ann Christy, associate professor in the Department of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering.

As a result, the agricultural mechanization and systems major was split into two: agricultural systems management and construction systems management.

Though construction systems management was offered as a major in the early 1990s as part of the Bachelor of Science in agriculture degree, only about a dozen students enrolled. By 2004, the program had grown to 195 students.

Today, the program has 423 students. “I was in political science and I wouldn’t have enjoyed it, sitting

in an ofÿ ce all the time. I ÿ nd this a lot more interesting,” said Matt Minneman, a third-year in construction systems management.

The push for a degree program was driven by students. “Our students were saying, ‘We’d like to have our own identity,’”

Christy said. “The industry wanted it, too,” she said, citing AEP as a company

that loves the department’s students. “It was a lot of little pieces coming together.”

The Bachelor of Science in construction systems management was approved in December 2009 and had its ÿ rst three graduates in March 2010.

Christy said the three students quickly fulÿ lled the new major’s requirements, as there were overlaps from their previous majors.

The recent re-design of the curriculum will make the quarters-to-semesters switch a “pretty straight transition,” Christy said.

Christy expects success from the students who have chosen to pursue a degree in construction systems management, she said.

Though the construction industry has experienced a downturn, she said the students in the program are above the university’s average in terms of ÿ nding employment after graduation, particularly in the commercial and industrial sectors of construction.

A Bachelor of Arts in public affairs is now offered through the John Glenn School of Public Affairs.

Like the construction systems management degree program, the public affairs degree program was largely student-driven.

“The folks that were most instrumental in getting the program up and off the ground were students,” said Trevor Brown, associate director for academic affairs and research and an associate professor at the John Glenn School of Public Affairs.

The new degree program was approved in May and has 32 students enrolled.

Chris Adams, coordinator of undergraduate programs at the John Glenn School of Public Affairs, has also seen growth in Baker Hall East’s John Glenn Institute Living Community, which has existed for about 10

years. The living community has nearly tripled in size during the past three years. In 2008, it consisted of 25 students. Now it houses 70.

“Public affairs is a pretty fast-growing ÿ eld at the undergraduate level across the country,” Adams said. He named Indiana University and the University of Michigan as two schools with similar programs.

Adams said that although few high school students likely are aware of the major, there are many students interested in leadership and government service.

“With the resources we have here — with (former Sen. John) Glenn and the Glenn School … and the state capital — it just made sense for the next step to be to have a public affairs undergraduate program,” Adams said.

On the graduate level, a master’s degree in environmental and natural resources was introduced in the fall.

According to the School of Environment and Natural Resources’ website, the program “provides an applied graduate degree for practic-ing professionals and others who want to enhance their professional competency in environmental and natural resource science and management.”

The program differs from a Master of Science in that it is a non-thesis degree that requires 55 credit hours and no GRE if the student’s cumulative undergraduate grade point average is 3.0 or higher.

As of Sept. 14, seven students were enrolled in the program, and 11 more were expected to begin Autumn Quarter.

A doctoral-level program for translational science is now open to students who are enrolled in or have completed the doctorate of pharmacy program.

Combining the two degree tracks allows students to earn both degrees in less time.

According to an OSU news release, the program’s goal is to “trans-late research from the laboratory to the patient.”

The University Senate met Thursday to discuss a new education specialist degree in teaching and learning and a new master’s degree in plant health management.

Both degrees were approved by the Graduate Council and were reviewed and approved by the Council on Academic Affairs at its Friday meeting.

New degrees at Ohio State

— Bachelor of Science, Construction Systems Management

— Bachelor of Arts, Public Affairs— Master’s, Environmental and Natural

Resources— Doctoral-level program in Translational

ScienceSource: Department of Food, Agricultural, and Biological Engineering John Glenn School of Public Affairs

3

IF YOU’RE REGISTERED TO VOTE IN FRANKLIN COUNTY

WWW.COLLEGEPOLLWORKER.COM

YOU CAN EARN $160

4A Tuesday October 12, 2010

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

Brewster Rockit: Space Guy! by Tim Rickard

diversions

ACRoSS1 See 4-Across4 With 1-Across, fix à la Mac-Gyver8 “__ Bovary”14 Suffix with stamp15 “Lonely Boy” singer16 Hypothetical primate17 “Vicious Circle” stand-up guy19 Explosion sound20 Spiral-shelled mollusk21 Uncover, in verse23 River inlet24 Whit or bit25 Stand-up guy who played Tobias Fünke on “Arrested Devel-opment”29 Carpenter’s fastener31 Regis and Kelly, e.g.32 Big initials in nutritional supplements33 Hot day coolers35 Clear the chalkboard36 Stand-up guy with his own sitcom, 1995-200439 Horrendous42 NYSE debuts43 Enzyme suffix46 Predicting a market decline49 Husky, e.g.

51 Stand-up guy with multiple “SNL” personas53 Start from scratch54 The Trojans of the Pac-1055 Luggage-screening gp.56 __ Lama57 Platitude60 “Superman” publisher, and this puzzle’s title63 Little laugh64 Large-scale work65 Rebellious Turner66 Iraqi neighbor67 Loser to paper and winner over scissors68 USN rank

Down1 Joe Louis Arena hockey player2 Pocatello resident3 Like some fingerprints4 Tire-changing aid5 Game with Draw Two cards6 “King Kong” studio7 Comedian Smirnoff8 Just about manage9 Therapists’ org.10 Society newcomer11 Loving, to Luisa12 “Little Red Book” adherents

13 How stadium crowds move18 Mideast carrier22 Photo25 “Bro!”26 From the start27 Word preceding a 22-Down28 Golfer Sabbatini30 Marinara clove34 Lab subj.36 Commercial battery prefix with “cell”37 Semicircular recess38 __-poly39 Kidnaps40 Potter’s friend Ron41 More decorative43 “Sweet” girl in a barbershop song44 Recycled item45 Ones with I-strain?47 Glossy fabric48 Noon and midnight: Abbr.50 Wee weight52 Skywalker’s nemesis56 Pier58 T’ai __59 “Isn’t __ riot?!”: “Funny guy!”61 Naval noncom: Abbr.62 Pres. title

TODAY’S BIRTHDAY You achieve balance this year as you pursue social and career objectives, while managing household issues imaginatively. Practical and ethical considerations occupy your thoughts and could detract from pursuing romantic interests. Don’t let that happen!

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 7 -- Secrets have a way of becoming public information. Tell no one. Instead, remain open and friendly on every other topic of conversation.

TAURUS April 20 – May 20 Today is a 5 -- Although you’d like to maintain privacy within the family circle, good fortune arises from sharing feelings with others around you. Let go of fears.

GEMINI May 21 – June 21Today is a 7 -- Your favorite person has a dream or intuition that challenges you to explain exotic sym-bols. An Internet search produces great information.

CANCER June 22 – July 22 Today is a 6 -- You discover something about the way people work together when you sit back and watch. People naturally pair off to get the job done today.

LEO July 23 – Aug. 22 Today is a 6 -- Spread your arms wide enough to enfold both logic and passion. Others need your sensitive touch. Create a natural balance between comfort and energetic movement.

VIRGO Aug. 23 – Sept. 22 Today is a 5 -- Get both genders on the same page for maximum creativity. Combined efforts produce the change you desire. An associate points out an obstacle.

LIBRA Sept. 23–Oct. 22 Today is a 6 -- Personal effort overlaps with group activities. Schedule time for your own projects, separate from the pack. That way you meet your own needs, too.

SCORPIO Oct. 23 – Nov. 21 Today is a 5 -- If you were by yourself, you’d enjoy getting your work done without stress. Others want you to play now. Get them to help with the work first.

SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22 – Dec. 21 Today is a 6 -- The stagecoach races with you at the reins. Make haste without tiring the horses or over-turning the carriage. Slow down to get there faster.

CAPRICORN Dec. 22 – Jan. 19 Today is a 7 -- A dream provides a new philosophical perspective. You see beyond the obvious to identify idealistic potential. Don’t force the issue.

AQUARIUS Jan. 20 – Feb. 18 Today is a 6 -- You lead in an independent direction today. When others pose questions, your answers re-veal this. Wait until tomorrow for a peaceful resolution.

PISCES Feb. 19 – March 20 Today is a 6 -- Don’t take no for an answer. Maybe it’s workable, so go with that and revise details along the way. You’ll get a yes soon enough.

Horoscopes by Nancy Black and Stephanie Clements, ©2010 Tribune Media Services Inc.

Sudoku by The Mepham Group ©2009

octo by Doug Gardner ©2009 Patent Pending

See solutions to sudoku, octo & crosswords online at thelantern.com

Instr uct IonsPlace the numbers 1 to 8 in each of the octa-gons such that the num-bers are not repeated in any octagon, row, column, or diagonal. The sums of the minor diagonals (diagonals that contain either four or six numbers) are provided at the begin-ning and end of each minor diagonal. The sum of the four numbers that border a diamond are provided in that diamond. The numbers that border diamonds do not have to be unique.

FOR MORE OCTOs, go to www.home.comcast.net/~douglasdgardner/site Number of numbers provided = 61 (Easy)

US2-21

Solution for Puzzle US2-21:

4

Having grown up with two sisters and no brothers, I am well-versed in the “chick flick” movie genre. The term chick flick usually incites eye rolling and sarcastic comments from men, while prompting a guilty affec-tion in many women, but I feel no guilt about my knowledge of the genre. And that’s because I know the empty shells of today’s chick flicks were not always the movies that defined the genre.

Flash back to Oct. 5, 1961 — the release date of possibly the most famous chick flick of all time, “Break-fast at Tiffany’s.” The effervescent yet troubled Holly Golightly, played by Audrey Hepburn, wooed audiences and critics alike, earning the film nominations for Best Actress and Best Screenplay at the 1962 Oscars.

It’s hard to imagine any chick flick today getting nods at the Academy Awards, and it’s partly because more recent films of the genre have taken the basic plotline of the chick flick — girl meets boy, drama ensues, girl ends up with boy — and eliminated the complexity of character and smartness of screenplay that filled it out.

Holly Golightly’s story wasn’t really about her happy romance at the movie’s end. It was about the “chick” herself who had deep-rooted problems that kept her from success-ful relationships, not just with men, but with people in general. Part of the film’s success should be credited to Truman Capote, whose book the movie was based off of, but the entire production of the film, as well as its

acting and Oscar-winning musical score, contributed to the creation of a super-chick flick.

Today’s popular chick flicks, such as “27 Dresses” (2008) and “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days” (2003), might be thoroughly entertaining, but their protagonists, usually workaholics or cynical women who reluctantly “fall” in love, are not memorable.

Take Katherine Heigl’s character, Jane, in “27 Dresses” — a pathetic embodiment of the always-a-bridesmaid-never-a-bride cliché. The movie’s sole purpose is to advance the love story, which is why plain Jane becomes a one-dimensional charac-ter, and the movie becomes another stain on the chick flick label.

To avoid over-referencing my favorite Audrey Hepburn movie, I’ll move on to another great Hepburn of the chick flick genre, Katharine Hepburn.

“The Philadelphia Story” (1940) is

another shining example of a chick flick propelled by a complex female lead, Tracy Lord (Hepburn). Tracy is a rich socialite with high standards and a low tolerance for imperfection, such as her ex-husband’s slight drinking problem. However, her ex-husband, C.K. Dexter Haven (Cary Grant) is charming and kind, something Tracy eventually steps off her pedestal to realize by the end of the movie. The story is not about their romance so much as the drunken blunders and realizations Tracy makes before accepting Dexter with his flaws.

The difference between Heigl’s simplistic character in “27 Dresses” and Hepburn’s haughty portrayal of Tracy in “The Philadelphia Story” is

obvious: One character is bland and the other is actually interesting.

Chick flicks have become known as movies catered to the romantic fantasies of women but they origi-nated as films that centered on well-developed female characters who also happened upon romantic endings. And that’s what made it possible for a chick flick like “The Philadelphia Story” to win the 1940 Oscar for Best Screenplay.

Mallor y Trelea venLantern [email protected]

Eleven Ohio State students are taking part in a contest to be the next CW Star.Three of the students have already moved to the final round, and the other

eight are battling it out for the 10th finalist spot. The three finalists are Jessica Brohard, Alyssa Hayman and Angela Quach. The eight semi-finalists include Becca Brudzynski, Stephanie Carpenter, Katie Denlinger, Rachel Jacklin, Kristina Keck, Kory Kubasek, Amber Robinson and Brea Spencer.

The local CW television station held open auditions at Polaris Mall on Sept. 19 and at Buck-i-Frenzy on Sept. 21.

Ouach, a finalist and fourth-year in marketing, heard about the opportunity while she was watching the CW.

“They asked, ‘Could you be the next CW star?’” Quach said. “I immediately said, ‘Yes, I can totally do that.’”

After completing a written application and submitting a birth certificate and three photos, statio representatives interviewed the Hollywood hopefuls and they pled their case for one minute.

Jacklin, a semi-finalist and fourth-year in journalism, said contestants were thrown in front of a green screen in the middle of Polaris Mall and instructed to talk about why they should be the next CW star.

“They asked a couple questions about ourselves and our goals and then we were put on the spot for a one-minute plea for votes,” Jacklin said.

After the open audition, the CW chose nine finalists. To fill the 10th finalist spot, producers selected 25 semi-finalists. The semi-finalist with the most votes by Thursday will be given the final spot.

Jacklin said she has been doing a lot of self-promoting on Facebook, Twitter and through family and friends.

“My ultimate goal would be to end up reporting on E!,” Jacklin said. “This is just like E! but in a smaller market. Being the CW Star would be a dream job.”

Another semi-finalist, Kubasek, a third-year in exercise science educa-tion, said he didn’t plan on auditioning until he got to Buck-i-Frenzy, but feels confident.

“I have a lot of humor in my video,” Kubasek said. “And my dad works in the broadcast industry, so if I continue on, I will be able to get a lot of feedback.”

Brohard, a fifth-year in computer science, is one of the nine finalists. As an intern for a video game company during the summer, Brohard said she has plenty of experience with promotions and people.

“I’m very enthusiastic and outgoing, and that’s a huge part of this role,” Brohard said.

Voting for the 10th finalist ends Wednesday at 11:59 p.m. The 10th finalist will be announced Thursday during the CW show “Vampire Diaries.”

Charles Penzone salon will provide makeovers to the 10 finalists. Finalists will also have a second audition in front of a celebrity panel.

“I’m most excited for the celebrity interviews,” Quach said. “I am all about entertainment and fashion.”

The public will choose the CW Star based on the combination of their second interview, public appearances and promotion and votes.

The winner will receive a yearlong contract. The contract includes television and radio appearances, meet-and-greets with fans and celebrities, and a key role on the marketing team.

“The ideal CW Star is the fresh face of the network,” Jacklin said. “They connect the CW to the younger demographic.”

To vote for a semi-finalist, the viewer must watch the contestant’s video from beginning to end. All submitted videos and a list of finalists can be found at cwcolumbus.com.

arts&life www.thelantern.com

Tuesday October 12, 2010

thelantern

5A

OSU could hold CW’s new star

‘Chick flicks’ not up to par with classics

Buckeyes in the running

eMil y CollarD / Lantern designerSource: www.columbuscw.com

Jessica BrohardBrohard, a fi fth-year in computer science, is already a fi nalist. She hopes to work in marketing for a video game company.

Kory KubasekKubasek, a third-year in exercise science education, is from Akron but said ‘unlike Lebron James, I won’t leave you.’

Rachel JacklinJacklin, a fourth-year in journalism, said she ‘loves the entertaniment indus-try,’ and her ultimate goal is to work on the E! network.

releases

Splinter Cell: Conviction (Xbox 360)

Lead and Gold: Gangs of the Wild West (PC)

Music for Everyone (Wii)

Music

Movies

“The Rock and the Tide,” Joshua Radin

“Write About Love,” Belle and Sebastian

“I’m Not a Human Being” Lil Wayne

releases

“Charleston, SC 1996,” Darius Rucker

“Metallic Spheres,” The Orb

Jonah Hex

I Am Love

Leaves of Grass

Video games

Medal of Honor

Just Dance 2 (Wii)

Lucha LIbre AAA: Heros of the Ring

Sonic the Hedgehog 4 (PS3)

Chris Tian PeregrinaLantern [email protected]

Giving back to the community is something to sing about for choir members of the Harmony Project — one of the recipients at the Bridge Build-ers Awards tonight at Lincoln Theatre.

The Center For Healthy Families will formally introduce itself to Columbus by holding the first Bridge Builders Awards ceremony, recognizing the Harmony Project and Michael G. Morris, chairman, president and CEO of AEP, for their community work.

A live conversation with Ramona “Sapphire” Lofton, author of the novel “Push,” which inspired the 2009 film “Precious,” is planned during the program from 7 to 8 p.m.

The Harmony Project is a nonprofit service

organization that uses art to bring people together to strengthen the Columbus community. David Brown directs the project.

The Center for Healthy Families “attended our concerts, saw diversity and breaking of social barri-ers,” Brown said, “which is what they’re all about.”

Project Harmony is known for its diverse 150-voice choir, in which members are required to complete community service.

“If you don’t serve, you don’t sing,” Brown said.Megan Stevens, director of volunteer services

at Franklin County Children Services, will work with Brown this holiday season for the Harmony Project’s Hope for the Holidays toy drive to benefit Children Services’ Holiday Wish program.

“David is high energy, enthusiastic and excited to be part of something positive that gives back to the community,” Stevens said.

Weekly rehearsals aside, this time of year the

Harmony Project is working on Project Hope, an effort to connect under-served children in Colum-bus who lack music resources at their local schools and communities with of community-funded arts programs.

“Today the kids will be learning to be chefs,” Brown said. “Photographers will be visiting tomorrow so they will all get their own disposable cameras.”

On Nov. 21, the Harmony Project will host a dinner where a priest, imam and rabbi will represent their religions — a different take on Thanksgiving. All the proceeds will go to the Mid-Ohio Food Bank.

The Center For Healthy Families will recognize Morris during the reception alongside the Harmony Project for being a community leader.

Sapphire’s keynote speech is open to the public for $20.

The fundraiser for the Center for Healthy Families

includes the reception at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are avail-able at the Ohio Theatre box office for $100.

Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures

audrey hepburn plays socialite holly golightly in the 1961 film ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s.’

Charitable choir receiving award at Lincoln Theatre

arTs Colum

nist

l eah WynalekCopy [email protected]

Praise, complaints ... we listen to all comments at www.thelantern.com

5

6A

classifi eds

Tuesday October 12, 2010

61

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sports

7ATuesday October 12, 2010

we took a photo of the kids and me,” said Joe Germaine, 1997 Rose Bowl MVP. Reynolds “had it PhotoShopped and put me in a Sun Devils shirt. Naturally, I did the same to him, only putting him in a Buckeyes jersey.”

Germaine played in the NFL for ÿ ve seasons and has had multiple stints in the Arena Football League since graduating from OSU in 1998.

In his ÿ rst season as coach, Germaine is 5-1, with a triple-overtime victory over the defending Arizona Class 4A Division II state champions.

“I’ve always had a passion for the game,” Germaine said. “I loved practicing. I loved going to meetings. I just loved learning the game.”

Hired by Reynolds in March, Germaine was a quarterback coach at Basha High School in Arizona for three years and an assistant at Mesa Commu-nity College for two years before coming to Queen Creek.

“I got into coaching once I started playing Arena Football,” Germaine said. “The schedule was differ-ent from the NFL, and I had the time to do it.”

The Arena Football League plays its games from April to August instead of September through January, as the NFL does.

“It’s a thrill, being a head coach,” he said. “I’m seeing the game from a different vantage point.”

Germaine played for OSU from 1996–1998. Known for his proliÿ c passing and un° appable composure, he threw for 6,370 yards, third-most in OSU history, and 56 touchdowns, second-most in OSU history.

Reynolds said the un° appable composure is still there.

“In the triple-overtime win, he didn’t look nervous for one second,” he said. “He has such a calm demeanor.”

Queen Creek won the triple-overtime thriller 49-42, securing the game with a goal-line stand in the third extra period.

“The kids deÿ nitely take after their coach,” Reynolds said. “They’re high school kids, you know. You expect them to make mistakes, but no one lost their composure and they held on for the win.”

Germaine said he holds high expectations for his players.

“We have very high standards on and off the ÿ eld,” Germaine said. “We teach accountability, and the kids have just been great.”

Against Illinois on Oct. 2, OSU quarterback Terrelle Pryor passed Germaine for seventh on the “all-time total offense” list at OSU. Germaine had 6,094 yards of total offense as a Buckeye.

“I think Terrelle is a terriÿ c talent,” Germaine said. “I expect him to be one of the all-time greats at Ohio State once it’s all said and done.”

He said some of the criticism Pryor faced last season as a sophomore was unfair. Germaine said everyone has to mature and credited the OSU coaching staff for helping Pryor develop his game.

“Great coaches make great players,” he said. Jim “Tressel and quarterbacks coach Nick Siciliano are great teachers of the game. It’s easy to see why Pryor is where he’s at with coaches like that.”

Germaine said his coach at OSU, John Cooper, taught him a lot about the game.

“He was fair and treated his players with respect,” he said. “I try to do those same things for my players.”

Understandably, many of Queen Creek’s players are Arizona State fans. Queen Creek is only about 30 miles from the ASU campus.

“It’s funny,” Germaine said. “We have an ASU-OSU thing going on. They razz me a little bit and I razz them a little bit, but they know that I’m a Buckeye, and there’s no changing that.”

Reynolds said Germaine is a great coach and is only going to get better.

“He’s been doing a great job,” he said. “I don’t think the kids realize what they’ve got, but I sure do. Hopefully, we can get him to stick around here a while.”

It might be tough for Reynolds to keep the former OSU star at Queen Creek. Germaine said he would love to coach at the collegiate level. He even hinted at the possibility of coaching at his alma mater.

“Who knows?” he said. “Maybe a few years down the road, Tressel will be hiring and I’ll come back to Ohio State. OSU has a special place in my heart and that’d be something.”

Although he said he loves coaching, he still has a desire to play.

“I wish more than anything to get an opportunity to play again,” he said. “I keep in shape, hoping that chance will come — you never know.”

As for the rest of Queen Creek’s season, Germaine said they’ve got one of the tougher sched-ules in the state, but that doesn’t mean his goals aren’t set high.

“You can imagine how we want to ÿ nish,” he said.

offensive linemen, not only because of his size, but also because of his deceptive speed.

Hankins can run, OSU defen-sive coordinator Jim Heacock said.

Perhaps just as important as his physical skills is Hankins’ understanding of the importance of taking advantage of every opportunity he has on the ÿ eld.

“You can’t take off because if you take off one play, anything can happen,” Hankins said.

Playing with intensity every play will be crucial for not only Hankins, as well as the rest of the football team, as the Buckeyes

are ranked No. 1 in every major college football poll. Hankins understands OSU will play with a target on its back the rest of the season.

“It’s going to be tough,” he said. “Teams are going to be coming out ÿ ghting, ready to knock us off, but we have to hold our ground.”

JOE PODELCO / Lantern photo editor

Johnathan Hankins forces his way past the Indiana offensive line during OSU’s 38-10 win Saturday.

steamroll nearly every team in their path so far this season, save for a hiccup in Champaign, Ill., I saw no reason as to why OSU wouldn’t sit atop the rankings.

When I turned on ESPN’s “BCS Countdown” on Sunday night, the Buckeyes holding down the projected BCS No. 1 spot was a foregone conclu-sion in my mind.

Shame on me for thinking a ranking system more messed up than Lindsay Lohan could actually get something as simple as this correct.

Instead, the crack system enlisted by the BCS has Boise State and TCU hailing from such “perennial powerhouse” conferences as the “highly

feared” Western Athletic Conference and Mountain West Conference ahead of the Bucks.

That is absurd. Some of the top Ohio high school football

teams might stand a chance against the likes of Utah State (WAC), New Mexico (MWC) or any of the other cupcake, sub-par schools Boise State and TCU play week in and week out. This is not to discredit the aptitude of the WAC or Mountain West, but top to bottom, there is a reason the Big Ten is a BCS conference and those other two aren’t.

Now, I am not saying there is a perfect system out there that will be the answer to all of the problems the BCS presents. What I am suggest-ing is, if there is such a big discrepancy between fantasy (BCS) and reality (all other polls), it appears as though now is as good a time as any for the NCAA to kick the BCS to the curb and look elsewhere to solve ranking issues.

Germaine from 8A

Hank from 8A

BCS from 8A

Terrelle Pryor

BCS projections

Freshman

passed Germaine for seventh on Ohio State’s all-time total offense list on Oct. 2

place Ohio State fi fth despite No. 1 rank in polls

taking advantage of playing time

Year Com. Att. PCT Yards TD INT

1996 80 147 54.4 1,193 15 4

1997 129 210 61.4 1,847 16 9

1998 230 384 59.9 3,330 25 7

Joe Germaine, OSU career

EMILY COLLARD / Lantern designer

7

First Year Distinguished Speaker Series Undergraduate Admissions and First Year Experience

Tuesday, October 12, 7:30 p.m. Ohio Union, Archie M. Griffin East Ballroom

Do you know what you want to be when you grow up? Do you know how to find happiness in your future career and work environment? Attend this lec-ture from bestselling author Dan Pink geared specifically towards college students to learn about how to find satisfaction in the working world.

Daniel H. Pink is the author of four provocative, bestselling books on the changing world of work. In his latest book, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, Pink shows us that the secret to high perfor-mance and satisfaction in today’s world is the deeply human need to direct our own lives, to learn and create new things, and to do better by ourselves and our world.

Distinguished Speaker SeriesEach year FYE invites distinguished individuals—those who have risen to the highest levels of achievement in politics, activism, and the arts and sciences—to address the first-year class. Visit fye.osu.edu/speaker.html to find out who else is visiting campus this year.

Dan PinkWelcomes

TicketsThis lecture is a ticketed event. First-year students can sign up to attend via the Success Series web site: fye.osu.edu/successseries.html. Other members of the campus community and the public can pick up free tickets in 120 Enarson Hall while supplies last.

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sportswww.thelantern.com

Tuesday October 12, 2010

thelantern

8A

AARON GREENFor The [email protected]

Arizona State linebacker Paul Reynolds stepped onto the ÿ eld for the ÿ nal drive of the 1997 Rose Bowl against Ohio State as conÿ dent as could be.

The Sun Devils had just scored a touchdown to go up 17-14 with

less than two minutes to play, and the Buckeyes were sending out an unproven sophomore quarterback to lead them on their ÿ nal drive.

“Pat Tillman (Reynolds’ ASU teammate) and I saw this baby-faced guy with big ear pads come running onto the ÿ eld,” Reynolds said. “We looked at each other and said, ‘We’ve got this in the bag.’ Unfortunately, we know how that turned out.”

Joe Germaine led a 65-yard game-winning drive, culminating with a 5-yard touchdown pass to receiver David Boston, to beat the Sun Devils, 20-17.

Thirteen years later, Reynolds, the athletic director at Queen Creek High School in Queen Creek, Ariz., hired the “baby-faced” quarterback with “big ear pads” to be his varsity football coach.

“My ÿ rst day in the weight room,

Ironic reunionFormer OSU quarterback Joe Germaine is coaching football in Arizona, where he made enemies after leading the Buckeyes to victory in the ‘97 Rose Bowl over Arizona State

Photo courtesy of the Ohio State department of athletics

Joe Germaine played quarterback for Ohio State from 1996-98, earning MVP of the 1997 Rose Bowl.

KENNY SMITHLantern [email protected]

With his 6-foot-3-inch, 335-pound body frame, it’s easy to see why Ohio State defensive tackle Johnathan Hankins goes by the nickname “Big Hank.”

Hankins, a native of Detroit, is six games into his freshman campaign and has already made his presence felt, recording 10 tackles and a sack. As Hankins continues to give OSU productive minutes, his role in the defensive line rotation will only increase.

“You’re going to start hearing his named called a little bit more because he’s going to get a few more reps as the year goes on,” said ESPN analyst and former OSU linebacker Chris Spielman on 97.1 WBNS’s ”Sunday Sports Brunch,” following the Indiana game.

Hankins presents a tough matchup for opposing

‘Big Hank’ having sizeable effect on Ohio State line

Ohio State’s Brad Smith recovers from the bunker on the 18th hole during the Jack Nicklaus Invitational held at Scioto Golf Club on Monday. After two rounds, OSU is in sixth place out of 10 teams.

BEACH DAY

AUSTIN OWENS / Lantern photographer

SPORTS Columnist

TRAVIS [email protected]

1. Terrelle Pryor 2. Denard Robinson 3. Cam Newton 4. Kellen Moore 5. LaMichael JamesQB, Ohio State QB, Michigan QB, Auburn QB, Boise State RB, Oregon

334 -19 3 0 0

1349 354 15 3 3 Season

vs Indiana

Pass

yrd

Rush

yrd

Pass

TD

Rush

TD

Int

269 6 3 0 0

1336 -15 14 0 1 Season

vs Toledo

Pass

yrd

Rush

yrd

Pass

TD

Rush

TD

Int

136 87 2 1 0

712 9 7 1 0 Season

vs Washington State

Rush

yrd

Rec

yrd

Rush

TD

Rec

TD

Fum

bles

Heisman Watch: The Lantern’s weekly Heisman trophy race update

215 86 1 1 3

1223 991 8 9 4 Season

vs Michigan State

Pass

yrd

Rush

yrd

Pass

TD

Rush

TD

Int

210 198 0 4 1

1138 672 12 9 5

Season

vs Kentucky

Pass

yrd

Rush

yrd

Pass

TD

Rush

TD

Int

HANNA KLEIN / Lantern designer

Heavily scrutinized since its inception more than a decade ago, the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) has proved once again to the college football nation why it would be more accurately named if the ‘C’ were removed from the acronym.

Although the ÿ rst ofÿ cial BCS rankings will not be released until next week, projections released Sunday show what the BCS rankings would look like if they came out this week.

With previously No. 1-ranked Alabama surrendering its unblemished record, because of a loss at South Carolina on Saturday, the Crimson Tide left the door wide open for Ohio State to roll into the top spot.

And being dubbed the No. 1 team in the nation by the Associ-ated Press, Harris and USA Today polls, one would ÿ gure it’s safe to assume the Buckeyes would ÿ nd themselves claiming that rank.

However, thanks to the ever-perplexing BCS, OSU checks in at No. 5 in this week’s projected BCS standings.

After witnessing the Buckeyes

BCS unkind to Buckeyes

continued as Germaine on 7A

continued as Hank on 7A

continued as BCS on 7A

Check out thelantern.com for a photo slideshow from the Jack Nicklaus Invitational

big ten standings

1. Ohio State 6-0 Michigan State 6-03. Wisconsin 5-1 Michigan 5-1 Northwestern 5-16. Iowa 4-17. Indiana 3-2 Illinois 3-2 Purdue 3-210. Penn State 3-311. Minnesota 1-5

FOOTBALL

upcoming

Women’s Golf: Rd. 3 Lady Northern

Invitational

All Day @ Chicago, Ill.

Men’s Soccer v. UIC

7pm @ Chicago, Ill.

Field Hockey v. Michigan State

3pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Women’s Hockey v. St. Cloud State

7pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Women’s Volleyball v. Iowa

7pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Women’s Soccer v. Wisconsin

7:30pm @ Columbus, Ohio

SATURDAY

Men’s & Women’s Cross Country: NCAA

Pre-Nationals

All Day @ Notre Dame, Ind.

Men’s Cross Country: Bowling Green

Invitational

11am @ Bowling Green, Ohio

Pistol v. US Military Academy

TBA @ West Point, N.Y.

TUESDAY

Men’s Golf: Rd. 3 Jack Nicklaus

Invitational

All Day @ Columbus, Ohio

WEDNESDAY

Fencing: Division I NAC

All Day @ Cincinnati, Ohio

FRIDAY

Men’s Hockey v. Robert Morris

7:05pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Fencing: Division I NAC

All Day @ Cincinnati, Ohio

Rifl e v. West Virginia

TBA @ Morgantown, W.V.

Women’s Hockey v. St. Cloud State

4pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Women’s Volleyball v. Minnesota

6pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Football v. Wisconsin

7:15pm @ Madison, Wis.

SUNDAYWomen’s Soccer v. Minnesota

12pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Fencing: Division I NAC

All Day @ Cincinnati, Ohio

Field Hockey v. Penn State

1pm @ Columbus, Ohio

Men’s Soccer v. Valparaiso

2:30pm @ Chicago, Ill.

8