Im 2A - Monday, October 22, 2012 MONDAY: TUESDAY: SOther Towers :This Week in History WEDNESDAY: THURSDAY: FRIDAY: Campus Clubs Professor Profiles Photos of the Week The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 www.michigandaily.com JOSEPH LICHTERMAN RACHEL GREINETZ Editor in Chief Business Manager 734-418-4115 ext. 1252 734-418-4115 ext. 1241 tichterman@michigandaily.com rmgrein@michigandaily.com FALL FOODS Online class sets enrollment records Enrollment in Public Health 207x, the online adaptation of a Harvard University School of Public Health class in epide- miology and biostatistics, sur- passed 30,000 students when it went live Monday, The Harvard Crimson reported Tuesday. "This is the biggest course in public health ever offered in the world," E. Francis Cook, one of the Public Health 207x profes- sors, told the Crimson. The class is one of seven free online courses offered by Har- vard University, the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, the University of Texas and the University of California, Berke- ley as part of edX - a virtual CRIME NOTES learning program developed by Harvard and MIT last spring, according to the Crimson. Computer Science SOx also saw record enrollment numbers. PRINCETON UNIVERSITY STORES STUDENT DATA WITHOUT POLICY The information of students at Princeton University is being recorded without rules or regu- lations by university databases each time an individual uses his or her student ID card, The Daily Princetonian reported Thursday. Beginning next year, stu- dents' dorm room information will be streamed in real time over a secure campus Wi-Fi net- work, according to the Princeto- nian. Princeton spokesman Martin Mbugua told the Princetonian there is currently no explicit policy regarding the use of data recorded from students' IDs, adding there is no stated policy for the length of time the data will be kept. Data gathered from the cards of students presently dates as far back as June 2010, the last time a new system was installed, according to the Princetonian. -LYDIA KOEHN Nensronm 734-4i8-411i opt.3 Corrections corrections@michigandaily.com Arts Section arts@michigandaily.com Sports Section sports@michigandaily.com Display Sales display@michigandaily.com Online Sales onlineads@michigandaily.com Seas Tips news@mihiegadaily.com Letters to thelEditor tothedaily@michigandaily.com Editorial Page opinion@michigandaily.com Photography Section photo@michigandaily.com Classified Sales classified@michigandaily.com Finante finance@michigandaily.com KATHERINE PEKALA/Daily LSA freshman Jen Chen sells produce at the Brassica food cart on Friday outside the Michigan Union. CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES Qur'an lecture 'War on Foam party WHERE: West Quad WHEN: Friday at 7:50 a.m. WHAT: The contents of a fire extinguisher were released sometime Thursday eveing or early Friday morning, University police reported. There are no suspects. UGo, backpack gone WHERE: Michigan Union WHEN: Friday at 2:15 p.m. WHAT: A bookbag was reported stolen from the UGo's store office, University Police reported. Officers located a similarly described suspect at the Ann Arbor library, but did not find the backpack. Crime stats from Michigan vs. Michigan State Game WHERE: Michigan Stadium WHEN: Saturday WHAT: The University's Department of Public Safety and its partners made four arrests at Saturday's football game, two for disorderly conduct, one for possession of marijuana and one for resisting and obstructing a police officer. Twenty six people were ejected from the game: 13 for disorderly conduct, 9 for alcohol in the stadium, 3 for possession of another's ID and 1 for violation of stadium rules. WHAT:Angelika Neuwirth, a professor at the Free University of Berlin, will give a speech about the Qur'an as part of LSA's Translation Theme Semester. WHO: Department of Near Eastern Studies & LSA Translation Theme Semester WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. WHERE: South Thayer Building, room 2022 Observatory viewing night WHAT: Visitors will be able to gaze through the famous Fitz telescope if the weather permits. WHO:Department of Astronomy, Bentley Historical Library WHEN: Today at 7 p.m. WHERE: Detroit Observatory women' panel WHAT: Jezebel.com founder Anna Holmes will lead a panel of female journalists from The Nation and Salon.com in discussing the perceived Republican "War on Women." WHO: Campus Information Centers WHEN: Today at 4 p.m. WHERE: Hatcher Graduate Library Celtic music WHAT: RUNA, a Philadelphia-based Irish- Canadian-Japanese band, will put a spin on the typical Celtic music repertoire by fusing modern material with traditional songs. WHO: Michigan Union Ticket Office WHEN: Tonight at 8p.m. WHERE: The Ark An English bulldog puppy was stolen at gunpoint from its two owners, NBC News reported. After the Oregon couple initially refused to give up the pup, the suspect grabbed the dog and ran to a car with a driver waiting inside. With a win over MSU, the No. 20 Michigan football team became the first college football program to win 900 games. >> FOE MORE, SEE SPORTSMONIAY, INSIDE Sesame Street's legal team has issued a cease- and-desist order to a website selling a "sexy" Big Bird Halloween costume, Yahoo! News reported. There is no news of whether or not a sexy "Binder full of women" costume is in the works. EDITORIAL STAFF AndrewWeiner ManagingEditor anweiner@michigandaily.com Bethanylin nManagigNewstHdito y biron@mihigandaily.com 0ENI05 NEWS EORS: HaOley Glatthrn, Haley Goldber, sRya oldmith, ASITN EWS EIORS: Giacomo Bologna, Anna Rozenberg, Andrew Schulman, PeterShahin,K.C.Wassman Timothy Rabb and opinioneditors@michigandaily.com Adrienne Roberts EditorialPagetEditors SENIOREDITORIALPAGEEDITORS:MelanieKruvelis, HarshaNahata,VanessaRychiinski ASSISTANT EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Jesse Klein,Sarah Skaluba Stephen Nesbitt ManagingSports Editor michigandaily.com SENIOR SPORTS EDITORS: Everett Cook, Ben Estes, Zach Hefand, Luke Pasch, Neal Rothschild, Matt Slovin ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORS: Steven Braid, Michael Laurila, Liz Nagle, ColeenT homas,,Lz Vukeli,DanielOWserman Leah Burgin Managing Arts Editor burgin@michigandaily.com OSNORoARTS IORS: Elliots5rn, David Tao,Kala Upadhyaya ASSISTAARTSEDTORS:Jacob td, LarenCasrtaMaiEston,KellyEtz, A""aSadovskaya,ChloeStachowiak Erin Kirkland and photo@michigandaily.com Alden Reiss Managing Photo Editors SENIOR PHOTO EDITORS: TerraMolengraff,Todd Needle ASSISTANTPHOTOEDITORS:AdamGlanzman,Austen Hufford, AllisonKruske Alicia Knoaltheckand design@michigandaily.com Amy Mackens Managing DesignEditors Dylan Cinti and statement@michigandaily.com JenniferXu Magazine Editors DEPUTY MAGAZINE EDITOR:Zach Bergson,Kaitlin Williams Hannah Poindexter CopyChief copydesk@michigandaily.com SENIOR COPY EDITORS: Josephine Adams, Beth Coplowitz BUSINESS STAFF Ashley Karadsheh Associate Business Manager Sophie Greenbaum Production Manager Sean Jacksonspecial Projects Manager Connor Byrd Finance Manager Meryl HultengNational Account Manager The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. One copy is available free of charge toallireaders.Addiitio opis epickediptthetilsoffiefort$.Ssriptins for fall term, starting in september, viaU.S. mail are $110 Win term(Jianuary through Apriis $115, yearong (September through April) is $19. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscriptionite.tO-cimpussusciptionsfor falltermare35.Subscriptionsmust bepepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 6 The xx wows fans in Chicago I Ban Th 0 The xx performed in Chicago's Congress Theater this past Saturday. CH began Congr of yell of fogI sheet after t hazy s as the opene Coexi Soo movin the Cc the The o thoug id shook Congress the xx - dark, quiet, but full of surprises. eater with tracks The sheet suddenly dropped, )ff latest album revealing three figures dressed in all black, softly murmuring about love or lack thereof for By KATIE STEEN the next ninety minutes. Oliver DailyArts Writer Sim and Romy Madley-Croft, _ -- the respective king and queen of emotional monotone, alternated ICAGO - Before the show and paired vocals throughout , the atmosphere of the the show. The two created an ess Theater here consisted interesting dynamic at the front owish smog, a thick fusion of the stage, at times inches away machine and dust. A white from each other, simultaneously shrouded the stage even moving in exaggerated sways he xx began to play, their with their guitars. The drum- silhouettes slowly rocking ming was meticulous but warm, y began with "Angels," the a welcome pulse to Madley- r off their newest album, Croft's cool voice. st. The show began to loosen n, the sheet featured a up a little with "Basic Space," ig rainbow blob mimicking an oldie that gets pretty funky oexist album art, covering pretty fast. "Night Time" start- British trio completely. ed off slowly, sounding like bscurity was appropriate, pretty much every other song, h, given the nature of but quickly shifted into a rapid flurry of clubby beats, the drum- mer now working the DJ booth. This was when the spinning blue lights started - spinning blue lights, who thinks of that? - but they became painfully bright after a few minutes; funny, given the subsequent song, "Shelter," asks "Can I make it better with the lights turned on." The xx audience was quite enthusiastic, far different from the expected stoney-faced hip- ster mob. There was clapping, there was shrieking, there was the middle-aged man who stood next to me singing along to every song, loudly. A few songs were truly guided by the DJ's fingers, the crowd breaking out into dancing at times - yes, people actually danced to the xx! At times the floor of the Congress, a lovely but decrepit building, would shudder with every beat. The show's pre-encore ending involved lingering ambient noise as the band walked off the stage, making room for the giant three dimensional "X" that was slowly revealed against the stage wall. Glowing smoke leisurely filled the oversized letter, and then of course the group reappeared after letting the X have its time in the limelight. Later, the "X" art morphed into floating stars, finishing as shifting rainbow blobs. At some point, Sim offered some deep-voiced mumbles of gratitude, an audience member turning to me and asked, "Do you have any idea what he just said?" No, and I didn't really understand much of anything that was sang either. But staring at the beaming cosmic "X" and rippling lights against the archaically beautiful dome ceiling, I realized, damn, the xx knows how to create a mood. --U,0 Campus Mind Works Groups FREE drop-in education and support groups for any U-M student with Depression, Bipolar, or Anxiety Managing Stress to Relieve Anxiety & Depression When: Tuesday, October 23 5:30-7:00 p.m. Where: Angell Hall, Room G228, Central Campus ex 6 6 Visit www.campusmindworks.org for more info. Presented by the U-M Depression University of Michigan Center in collaboration with Depression Center the College of Engineering