+ PAGE 6 TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 2015 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN KANSAN PUZZLES H ORDER ONLINE MINSKYS.COM CROSS River through azakh- n y ? n r pon- city peased chuss Neaten eyebrows 2d partner 93 Group of symp- toms 35 Slender 36 Ogled 37 Diver's worry 38 Flood protection 40 Big gulp 42 Rage 43 Hawaiian nut 48 Evergreen variety 49 Blueprint 50 Ripped 51 Supplement, with "out" 52 Have an inclination 53 Actor McGregor DOWN 1 Actress Thurman 24 Spiked club 26 Trudge 27 Abner's old radio partner 28 "Zounds!" 29 Dresses in 31 Bump a TV episode 34 Coloring agent 35 Papal envoy 37 Auction action 38 Biography 39 Estrada or Satie 40 Read cursorily 41 Magic stick 44 Pub order 45 Tend the lawn 46 A Gershwin brother 47 Massachusetts cape FOR MORE CONTENT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 | | | | 13 | | | | 14 | | 15 | | | 16 | | | | 17 | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | | | 18 | | | | 19 | 20 | | | 21 22 23 | | | | | 24 | | | | | 25 | | | | 26 27 | | | | 28 29 | 30 | | | 31 | | | | 32 | | 33 | | 34 | | | | 35 | | | | | 36 | | | | 37 | | | | 38 39 | | | | 40 41 | | | | 42 | | | 43 44 | | | 45 46 47 | 48 | | | 49 | | | 50 | | 51 | | | 52 | | | 63 | | | SUDOKU 3 8 6 7 9 6 1 4 2 5 5 3 4 6 1 1 6 4 3 9 8 1 9 8 3 1 CRYPTOQUIP HJZG XC WHNG GSGYI PVDP Y H W O V W D J Y V X V R P WCJZGNHW, V ECKZT RHI V PHSG HZZ NI TKOGR VW H YCE. Today's Cryptopin Clue: Hequals A. Today's Cryptoquip Clue: H equals A TRENDING Apple Watch, thinner MacBook unveiled at Spring Forward event The next big thing Apple unveiled acts as an extension of your heart and mind, giving the consumer the option to wear their watch, phone, activity tracker, calendar and notepad, all of which can be encased in yellow or rose 18-karat-gold with a polished sapphire crystal screen. The Apple Watch was revealed during Apple's Spring Forward event Monday. There have been no new gadgets in five years and since former CEO Steve Jobs died in 2011. Current CEO of Apple, Tim Cook, said this is a project he has wanted to create since he was 5 years old. According to The International Business Times, the watch has a battery life of 18 hours, but can only make phone calls with an iPhone connection. That can be yours when it is released April 24, if you're willing to spend upwards of $10,000. The least expensive watch comes in at $349. Some of the "lower-end" watches trade the gold encased-screen for aluminum or stainless steel. from the event that the watch allows nearly all the capabilities of a phone, but questioned its accessibility. The watch comes in three different faces, and all have numerous wristbands to switch out. The broadness of what the Apple Watch covers is unlike anything on the market, but this isn't the first A Wall Street Journal personal technology columnist, Geoffrey Fowler, tweeted Smart Watch. ERIC RISBERG/ASSOCIATED PRESS Event attendees get a look at varieties of the new Apple Watch on display in the demo room after an Apple event on Monday in San Francisco. ERIC RISBERG/ASSOCIATED PRESS The new Apple Watch is on display in the demo room after an Apple event on Monday in San Francisco. Pre-orders for the Apple watch start April 10. versatile and stylish Smart Watch. But, if all that isn't enough or you just don't feel like speaking to your wrist, you can always send your mom your heartbeat in real-time to let her know you've survived college midterms. Along with the Apple Watch, Apple introduced the thinnest MacBook yet. The MacBook has an all-metal enclosure, according to Harpers Bazaar. There's more battery capability and no longer a fan within the laptop whatsoever. The new MacBook starts at $1,299. Fowler tweeted photos of the new MacBook, saying it's so thin, it could slice cheese. Researchkit was another announcement at the event. This pulls data from your apps, if you allow it to do so, and shares it with researchers across the world who are working to find cures for diseases. One of the major benefits mentioned was how it tracks a person's gait to look for symptoms of Parkinson's disease. According to AppleInsider other applications to help detect breast cancer, cardiovascular disease and treat diabetes and asthma have been developed. It seems the new watch was the big crowd pleaser and drew the expected "ooohs" and "ahhhs," but until preorders are able to be placed April 10, we won't know how popular the watch and all its features are. — Edited by Valerie Haag High-fashion stylist turns focus to all women with release of new QVC line JENNIFER SMOLA Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio — As Lori Goldstein was beginning her career in the late 1970s, stylists weren't a staple of the fashion industry, home shopping networks didn't exist and a naked and pregnant Demi Moore had yet to bare her belly at checkout counters everywhere from the cover of Vanity Fair. But for Goldstein decades later: Check, check and check. She spent years as a stylist determining just the right look for subjects of award-winning ad campaigns, chart-topping music videos and iconic magazine covers including Moore's. Then the Ohio native sought a change. With her brand, Goldstein hoped to be an authentic fashion guide and give all women — regardless Launched in 2009, it emphasizes layering. including longer tops with asymmetrical cuts as well as leggings of varying length. LOGO and its line extensions, including a jewelry collection and a line for young girls, bring a variety of colors and textures. Goldstein focused on offering style to the masses with an original line on home shopping network QVC and last week started a new one-hour weekly show. of their proximity to a fashion capital — license to express themselves through flattering clothes. Goldstein remembered people complimenting her outfits while growing up in Ohio, but saying they could never pull off her style. "So many women are afraid to wear things because they don't understand fashion the way I do, or they're scared to," Goldstein said. Dubbed LOGO by Lori Goldstein, the brand is less about couture and more about creativity. "There was a whole world out there that wasn't privy to the world that I was in," Goldstein, who continues to work as a stylist and fashion editor-at-large for Elle magazine, said in a phone interview. "I knew that I somehow wanted to tie those two worlds together." "There's a kind of fire. There's a passion between the ladies and their Lori." ISAAC MIZRAHI QVC designer MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS QVC viewer and LOGO shopper Deborah Bonfanti found there is no cookie-cutter way of wearing Goldstein's clothes. "It crosses generations," Bonfanti, 53, said. "Lori gives women my age permission to play." Goldstein worked with Goldstein, 58, was born in Columbus and moved to Cincinnati when she was 8. She worked for retailer Fred Segal after moving to Los Angeles when she was 18, then moved to New York City in the late 1970s. "I can't imagine ever not coming from the Midwest," she said. "There is that normalcy and also that understanding of this great picture of America." Ohio native Lori Goldstein poses for a photograph on Monday at the home shopping network QVC headquarters in West Chester, Pa. Goldstein spent years as a stylist determining the right look for subjects of award-winning ad campaigns, chart-topping music videos and iconic magazine covers. Now she is focused on offering style to the masses with an original line on QVC and she recently started a new weekly show. Over 35 years Goldstein built her fashion career in New York on her knack for pairing garments and accessories for photo shoots and videos, becoming one of the first stylists in the fashion industry. Fellow QVC designer Isaac Mizrahi calls Goldstein's brand democratic and inclusive and says customers gravitate to her. photographer Annie Leibovitz in the 1980s on projects including American Express' award-winning "Portraits" campaign and numerous Vanity Fair covers. She went on to work on dozens of Italian Vogue covers and served in editor roles for that and other fashion publications. She has styled numerous artists and actors, including Madonna in her 1984 "Take a Bow" music video. "It's not just a connection," he said. "There's a kind of fire. There's a passion between the ladies and their Lori." Goldstein, who recently bought a house in Chester County, Pennsylvania, and returns to Ohio occasionally to visit family, is someone fashion hopefuls in the Midwest can look up to, said Gargi Bhaduri, assistant professor at Kent State University's fashion school. "People like Lori can, of course, set examples as to how, if you just have the fashion, and you know what you want to do, you can just go out and make your mark," Bhaduri said. +