Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

ACROSS
1 “Mad Men”
productions
4 Bark elicitor
9 Lax
13 Force (open)
14 Close-fitting
dress
15 Powerful dept.?
16 Striking painting
of paddles, net
and ball?
19 Uber
20 Facebook button
21 Truncation abbr.
22 Austin of “Knot’s
Landing”
23 Extraordinary
northern bird?
26 Statistician’s
challenge
28 Plot component
29 “__ thoughts?”
30 Reasonable
32 Purim heroine
34 Mythological
figure who
touched 16-, 23-,
46- and 55-
Across?
36 Available
39 Anthony Hopkins’
“Thor” role
40 Channel for old
films
43 Noodle
44 “I’m not
kidding!”
46 Alaskan insects?
51 Chief Justice
Warren
52 Subjects of some
conspiracy
theories
53 Specks on cartes
54 Enthralled
55 Overdevelop a
high plain?
60 It may be
cautionary
61 “I shall be late!”
speaker of fiction
62 Letter director
63 Narrow opening
64 Indo-__
languages
65 Nixon has two

DOWN
1 Angry Birds, e.g.
2 “Happy Days”
setting

3 Cooperative
action
4 “Dexter” airer, for
short
5 Write
6 Scout rank
7 Top story
8 Uniform material
9 Sprinkling on
French fries?
10 Free sample
limitation
11 Top story
12 Cab driver?
14 One of a pair of
Mad adversaries
17 Off the __
18 Arthur of “The
Golden Girls”
22 Sched.
uncertainty
23 Witness __
24 Sharp feeling
25 Rowing
beneficiaries, for
short
27 Z-zebra link
31 Dashboard
Confessional’s
genre
32 Changes, in a
way
33 Without
34 Rosebud’s owner

35 “Cool, man!”
36 Things
37 __ color
38 Fictional pilot with
the iconic line,
“Laugh it up,
fuzzball”
40 Circus staple
41 Sun block
42 “The Producers”
screenwriter
Brooks
45 Milk dispenser

47 Help
48 Uber
49 “The View” alum
Joy
50 Milk carton words
54 Snitch
56 18th Amendment
opposer
57 Cops’ org.
58 Harvard grad
Jeremy who’s
now a Laker
59 Rises

By Sam Buchbinder
(c)2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
01/23/15

01/23/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Friday, January 23, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

WRITE AN ESSAY on happiness. Win 
$500. 
No 
entry 
fee. 
humanhappinessfoun- 
dation.org (A Non‑Profit Corporation)

WORK ON MACKINAC Island This 
Summer 
– 
Make 
lifelong 
friends. 
 
The 
Is- 

land House Hotel and Ryba’s Fudge 
Shops are looking for help in all areas be- 
ginning in early May: Front Desk, Bell 
Staff, Wait Staff, Sales Clerks, Kitchen, 
Baristas. 
 
Housing, 
bonus, 
and 
discounted 
meals. 
 
(906) 
847‑7196. 
 
www.theisland‑ 

house.com

DOMINICK’S HIRING FOR spring 

& summer. Call 734‑834‑5021.

DO YOU LOVE live music? The Blind 
Pig is looking for interns to help w/ mar‑
keting and research. Great way to learn
the music business, get free entry into
shows. Email zachary.tocco@gmail.com 
with the subject “INTERN” for more info.

DEPENDABLE, HARDWORKING, 
HONEST student to help clean 
Ann Ar‑ 

bor home. Transportation can be pro‑ 

vided. Bi‑weekly. Pay negotiatiable. 
Call Marilyn 586‑504‑5517

4 BEDROOM HOUSE Fall 2015‑16
North Campus: Off Fuller by UM Hospital
2 Baths, Wshr./Dryer, 3 Prkg spaces, Pet 
& Smoke free. $2300 + utilities
1010 Cedar Bend Dr. 734‑996‑1991

! NORTH CAMPUS 1‑2 Bdrm. !
! Riverfront/Heat/Water/Parking. !
! www.HRPAA.com !

COMMERCIAL CLEANERS
Fulltime position in the Ann Arbor area
Must pass drug screen & extensive
background check. Own transportation
required. 586‑759‑3700

2 BED. A
V
AIL. April 1st‑August 21st
Furnished, Heat & Water & Free Internet
734‑761‑8000 primesh.com

THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE,
organization, format. All Disciplines.
734/996‑0566 or writeon@iserv.net 

APT 
SUBLET 
AVAIL. 
immediately. 
Lo- 

cated 1/2 block from Ross School. 
$750/mo, 1bdrm in 2bdrm apt, clean apt. 

Text Matt (734) 546‑4490.

6 BEDROOM HOUSE 511 Linden. 
East of CC Little btwn Geddes&South U. 
2 Bath, Wshr./Dryer, 2 Prkg. spaces, Pet 
& Smoke free. Fall 2015‑16 
$3,995 + utilities. 734‑996‑1991

2,3,4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS
South Campus Fall 2015‑16
1015 Packard ‑ $1370‑$2680 + Utilities
Call 734‑996‑1991 to sched a viewing

2015‑2016 LEASING
Apartments Going Fast!
Prime Student Housing 
734‑761‑8000 www.primesh.com

Efficiencies: 344 S. Division $825/$845
1 Bedrooms: 511 Hoover (1 left) $1025 
508 Division $925/$945

THE 
NEW 
UNIVERSITY 
TOWERS: 
2br special: Pick two from the following 
when 
you 
lease 
a 
full 
2br; 
32” 
Flat 
Screen 
TV, $300 of Security Deposit, $300 off 
first month’s rent. www.u‑towers.com

ARBOR PROPERTIES 
Award‑Winning Rentals in Kerrytown, 
Central Campus, Old West Side, 
Burns Park. Now Renting for 2015. 
734‑649‑8637. www.arborprops.com 
 
 

6 BDRM/2 BATH Bi-Lvl Penthouses
616 Monroe St. near Law School & Ross
May 2015‑2016 $4799. 734‑665‑8825

EFF, 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail Fall 2015‑16
$750 ‑ $1420. Most include Heat and 
Water. Parking where avail: $50‑80/mo. 
Coin Laundry access on site/nearby. 
www.cappomanagement.com 
Call 734‑996‑1991 

SUBLETS

SERVICES

ANNOUNCEMENT

FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

6 — Friday, January 23, 2015
Arts
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

‘Justified’ keeps 
the stakes high

By ALEX INTNER

Daily Arts Writer

Final season of 
FX hit promises 

excitement

After a second season that will 

be regarded as one of the best 
seasons of television of all time, 
“Justified” 
dropped 
in 

quality. 
The 

following 
installments 
never 
quite 

created villains 
or stories that 
reached 
the 

same 
level 

of 
depth 
and 

complexity 
as 

Mags 
Bennett 

(Margo 
Martindale’s 
Emmy-

winning role). However, those 
seasons did a lot well, including 
developing 
the 
relationship 

between Raylan Givens and Boyd 
Crowder and of the setting, Harlan, 
KY. This season of the show is 
starting to use that groundwork 
to pay off its long-running arcs, 
giving confidence that even if the 
final go-around doesn’t reach the 
same height of season two, it will 
be a strong ending for the show.

“Justified” 
continues 
to 

follow the story of U.S. Marshal 
Raylan 
(Timothy 
Olyphant, 

“Deadwood”). This season, the 
Marshal is working to build a 
case against longtime rival Boyd 

(Walton Goggins, “The Shield”) 
before he leaves to join his child 
in Florida. He enlists the help 
of Crowder’s fiancé Ava (Joelle 
Carter, “American Pie 2”) as a 
criminal informant. Meanwhile, 
both of them deal with the arrival 
of new villains with mysterious 
plans for Harlan, played by Garret 
Dillahunt (“Deadwood”) and Sam 
Elliott (“Up in the Air”).

These early episodes focus on 

how Raylan is only doing this 
because of all of the investment he 
has put into the case. This aspect 
is the best of the season because 
of all the legwork that the show 
has put into constructing the 
relationship between Raylan and 
Boyd over the years. It helps that 
every time Olyphant and Goggins 
are on screen together, the scene 
crackles. They’re playing off of six 
years of tension, and it’s wonderful 
to see them on screen together. 

Incredibly, it’s still fascinating 

to watch these actors work; each 
of them has spent the past five 
years forming layered, interesting 
characters, a fact that shines 
in 
smaller 
scenes 
especially. 

Olyphant owns the role of Raylan: 
he wears his cowboy hat with 
charisma and poise. Dillahunt 
has the perfect mix of charm and 
menace in playing a villain, and 
Elliot, while he doesn’t get a major 
scene until the third episode, he 
makes it clear that his character is 
a force to be reckoned with.

The actor to benefit the most 

from this story is Carter. Last 
year, Ava was sent to a prison, 
an arc that didn’t completely 
work, playing out for too long and 
becoming repetitive. Having her 
character be a criminal informant 
gives Carter so much more to 
play with, requiring her to give a 
layered performance as Ava works 
to put away Boyd, which leads to 
some great results.

The amount of work that 

“Justified” has put in to build its 
characters and its world over the 
past five seasons has largely been 
under the radar during its run. 
Now that they’re starting to pay 
it off, it’s really good. The first few 
episodes hint at a final season that 
will be an amazing send-off for 
the show, even if it doesn’t quite 
match the heights of earlier 
seasons.

A

Justified

Season 6 
Premiere

FX

Tuesdays at 

10 p.m.

New Sleater-Kinney

TV REVIEW

By MELINA GLUSAC

Daily Arts Writer

According to Google, a riot grrrl 

(noun) is “a member of a movement 
of young feminists associated with 
aggressive 
punk-style rock 
music.” 

Sleater-

Kinney, 
a 

three-piece, 
all-female band 
at the core of 
this 
move-

ment, 
have 

a 
definition 

that’s 
much 

more their own. Bandmates Corin 
Tucker, Carrie Brownstein (“Port-
landia”) and Janet Weiss put the 
riot in the music, which is all of the 
following in no particular order 
(because disorder is punk): stun-
ningly angry, surprisingly melodic, 
boomingly soulful and downright 
badass. These ladies have been 
spilling jams of the aforemen-
tioned variety since 1994, riding 
and dominating the coattails of 
grunge and all its glory. And after 
a hiatus of nearly 10 years, their 
latest album is just as much of a 
triumph as 2005’s critically-adored 
The Woods. And their new album 
No Cities to Love doesn’t skip a beat.

Few bands can match Sleater-

Kinney’s energy, which is hyper 
and rife on their latest album. 
“Price Tag” is the best way they 
could have kicked off the care-
fully crafted 10-song tracklist. It’s 
catchy and rhythmic, smoothly 
catastrophic at parts, setting lofty 
expectations for its nine sister 
tunes who, actually, get better and 
better as the album continues. The 
brilliant “Fangless” soon follows, 
complete with great back-up vocals 
from Brownstein and a Strokes-
esque riff. It sounds like 

riot grrrl for the 21st century — a 

little more polished, more intricate, 
but still so hard. 

Each song wouldn’t be (and 

couldn’t be) complete, though, 
without lead singer Tucker’s deli-
ciously raw vocals. Her yawp 
devours every chord with the 
juxtaposed essence of grace and 
anger management; such soul can’t 
be taught. On “No Anthems” the 
listener gets her more subtle side 
in the verses, sexy whispers over 
Weiss’s roaring drums, but she 
comes around with that yell again 
and sets the whole track on fire. It’s 
great. Flavors of punk’s past guide 
her on “Bury Our Friends,” her 
slurred Clash-like pronunciation 
enhancing Sleater-Kinney’s street 
cred. And “Hey Darling,” probably 
the most conventional track on the 
album, blossoms into something 
truly melodic by the time Tucker 
hits the chorus. Here, if even for 
a few minutes, she shows us she 
can really sing by society’s work-
ing definition of “singing,” should 
she choose to abide by it. But that 
wouldn’t be very riot grrrl of her, 
now, would it?

As rooted as it is in punk, No Cit-

ies to Love is not lacking in inven-
tiveness. “Gimme Love,” arguably 
the best song on the album, show-
cases staccato guitars and vocals 

to match — its terseness is jarring 
in the niftiest way possible, pro-
gressing and following Tucker’s 
hajj to the pinnacle of lyrical angst. 
“A New Wave” and “Surface Envy” 
have classic-rock vibes and are 
refreshingly upbeat. Marked by 
songs like these, the album seems 
more alive than The Woods, more 
rocking and truer to Sleater-Kin-
ney’s origins — it’s less of them 
trying to fit to the times or mellow 
themselves out in accordance with 
their age. Even the titular track 
creates rad harmonies and prod-
ding drive. Take it from the pros: 
riot grrrls don’t get old.

The album only slows down 

with its concluding song, “Fade”— 
a wicked, eerie, swampy num-
ber that’s Tucker’s last catharsis. 
Heavy guitars and a creepy groove 
make it really cool to listen to, an 
appropriate yet imaginative way 
to end an impressive comeback 
record.

These three gals still sounds like 

a really good girl group jamming 
out in their basement in Olym-
pia, Washington in 1994, but with 
about 10 times more chutzpah, 
musicality and refined punk vigor. 
Is that the secret to success, or, 
moreover, (riot) girl power? Who 
knows. But it works like hell for 
Sleater-Kinney.

SUB POP

Is that an ascot I see?

A

No Critics 
to Love

Sleater-
Kinney

Sub Pop

‘Eye Candy’ 
is MTV trash

By SOPHIA KAUFMAN

Daily Arts Writer

MTV’s 
latest 
show 
“Eye 

Candy” stars Victoria Justice, a 
name familiar to anyone who’s 
watched Nick-
elodeon’s “Vic-
torious,” (or if 
they’re a half 
a decade older, 
“Zoey 
101”). 

After being a 
teenage 
star 

for the past 10 
years, 
Justice 

seems 
to 
be 

trying 
some-

thing new, something different, 
something edgier. In the begin-
ning of the premiere, it is doubt-
ful whether the almost 21-year 
old can pull it off; but by the end 
of the episode, after watching 
her discover two dead bodies 
and hack into databases illegally, 
viewers can have a little more 
faith in her — if not in the show. 

Justice plays Lindy Sampson, 

a young woman who possesses 
exceptional 
technical 
skills, 

which she uses to hack into the 
NYPD’s databases to find miss-
ing persons. While this appears a 
mere obsession to her coworkers 
and best friend Sophia (Kiersey 
Clemons, “Transparent”), this 
peculiarity stems from Samp-
son’s desire to find her kidnapped 
younger sister who was ripped 
from her life three years earlier. 
These illegal hacks get her in 
frequent trouble with the police, 
mediated only slightly by her 

complicated on-again, off-again 
relationship with Ben, an officer. 

When Sophia makes Lindy an 

account on Flirtual, a dating app 
that seems to function like Tin-
der, Lindy (under the name “Eye 
Candy”) draws the attention of 
a serial killer whom we never 
see. The resulting events — hid-
den cameras in her apartment, 
creepy text messages reminiscent 
of those on “Pretty Little Liars,” 
the gruesome murders of Ben 
and another man — strengthen 
Lindy’s resolve to find the psy-
chopath before he finds her. 
Justice still has a long way to go 
before her acting in “Eye Candy” 
can be considered above average, 
or even better than her past ven-
tures. Though she’s predictable 
and lacks in nuance at times, her 
performance is overall solid. 

Many of the plot devices are 

worn and transparent, and the 
lines 
feel 
overly 
illustrative, 

leaving viewers annoyed at hav-
ing explanations and superficial 
backstories thrust upon them. 
What makes this show relatively 
interesting, despite its evident 
flaws, is how it plays on real 
fears of society’s vulnerability 
to predators on the Internet — it 
sometimes feels like it is, as the 
serial killer says in a voice over, 
“God’s gift to psychopaths.” But 
the writers are going to have to 
focus more on depicting a scary 
but believable reality and less on 
unwarranted deaths, gruesome 
shots of bodies and unnecessar-
ily contrived quips if they want to 
hold onto their viewers. 

MTV

“Did you just fart?”

C

Eye Candy

Series Pilot

MTV

Mondays at 

10 p.m.

The first few 
episodes hint 
at an amazing 
final send-off.

ALBUM REVIEW

TV REVIEW

Olyphant owns 

the role of 

Raylan.

