()NE- HUNtDRE. 1TENTYOriI{ YEARS.h'f EDlITOlIIAL FREElOM Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, December 2, 2013 michigandaily.com PHILANTHROPY 'U'comes out on top in annual blood drive TERRA MOLENGRAFF/Daily Michigan coach Brady Hoke finished the season 7-5, the same record former Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez had in his last season before getting fired. More questions than answers Michigan beats OSU by over 300 pints in 32nd annual competition By TANAZ AHMED Daily StaffReporter Though Team 134 lost The Game Saturday, Michigan claimed one victory against rival Ohio State University. The 32nd annual Blood Battle competition against OSU came to an end Friday with a sanguine win for the University. In 2012, OSU won the Blood Battle, breaking the University's previous record of four con- secutive wins. The University collected 2,575 pints of blood - about 300 more pints than the Buckeyes. The University also won the competition for organ and bone marrow donor signups, beat- ing OSU by more than 60,000 organ donation pledges and 200 more bone marrow donor commitments. Overall, Blood Drives United, a student-run service organization that coor- dinates the Blood Battle, found 103,286 organ donors for Gift of Life Michigan, the state's organ donor list and 300 bone marrow donors for the Be the Match Reg- istry. Blood Drives United began collecting donations on Nov. 4 at stations sponsored by the Ameri- can Red Cross. The drive contin- ued daily at various locations on campus, including the Michigan Union and Michigan Stadium, to meet the goal of 2,550 pints of blood. During the three weeks, more than 30 drives were held around campus. LSA senior Kevin Weiss, the Blood Battle's co-chair, said the group placed a greater empha- sis on recruitment this after last year's loss to OSU. See BLOOD, Page 3A T hey_ played like they had nothing to lose because there wasn't anything else to lose. This was EVERETT already the COOK worst sea- son of Brady Hoke's Michigan coaching career. Athletic Director Dave Brandon was forced to release a statement emphasizing the job safety of his head coach. Before the game, the job of at least one coordinator, offensive coordina- tor Al Borges, was most likely in jeopardy. Ohio State was a 14-point favorite. People were expecting a blowout. At a tailgate before the game, Michigan fans were more concerned with Ohio State coach Urban Meyer potentially running up the score than they were about actually winning the game. So on a Saturday with nothing to lose, the Wolverines played the way they shou yhave all along. Instead of mindlessly handing the ball off-tackle for a one-yard loss, Michigan had reverses to tight ends and a dou- ble pass from a wide receiver to a wide receiver-turned-quarter- back. Michigan's running backs carried the ball just 24 time , and you could count the num- ber of off-tackle runs on one hand. There was no forcing the ball into the middle of the defense behind a raw offensive line, because the Wolverines employed end-arounds and reverses toward the sidelines to spread the field. And most importantly, instead of taking sacks left and right, Gardner took advantage of receiversarunningshorter routes. See QUESTIONS, Page SA CAMPUS EVENT AIDS week to raise awareness across campus BSU and other student groups to host daily events By EMILIE PLESSET Daily StaffReporter In observance of World AIDS Day on Dec. 1, the University's Black Student Union will host its yearly AIDS in Black and Brown Week this week. There will be interactive events throughout the week to spread HIV/AIDS awareness and education on campus. Although BSU organizes the week, events are run by a variety of University-affiliated organi- zations, including the National Council of Negro Women, the Women of Color Collective and the Egyptian Students Associa- tion. LSA senior Tyrell Collier, BSU's president, said the goal of the week is to raise awareness about the HIV/AIDS epidem- ics' impacts on the Black and Latino/a community. LSA senior Ozi Uduma, BSU's Seba - whose task it is to wel- come, both physically and spiri- tually, those present at the mass meetings - and co-coordinator of the week, said the events pro- vide a domestic focus on the HIV/AIDS epidemic in these communities. "Just because the U.S. as a whole isn't talking about HIV/ AIDS or putting it on the fore- front as they did in the 80s and 90s doesn't mean that it's still not prevalent, especially for those who grew up in the Detroit area," Uduma said. The National Council of Negro Women and Images will host the first event of the week Monday in North Quad at 7:00 p.m. Dur- ing the event, participants will play "Sex Games," a game-show contest similar to Family Feud, but the questions pertain to HIV/ AIDS and same-sex practices.. The same day, the Phi Beta Sigma National Pan-Hellenic fra- ternity will host the week's sec- ond event in Palmer Commons where participants will play "Sexas Hold 'Em," - in the place of poker chips, participants will use condoms. On Dec. 4 the Michigan Women of Color Collective and the Egyptian Students Associa- tion are holding a screening of the 2011 film "Asmaa" in North See AIDS, Page 3A LAKESIDE LOYALTY NREAD MORE ONLINE RUBY WALLAU/Daily Ohio State University students jump into Mirror Lake as part of an annual game week tradition in Columbus, Ohio late Tuesday night. KICKER Researchers shed light on black hole e-mission li-mits EXHIBIT PREVIEW 'Fragments' to exhibit 11 centuries of Islamic art UMMA exhibition showcases household objects from past By GIANCARLO BUONOMO DailyArts Writer For the next several months, the University of Michigan Muse- um of Art will exhibit Islamic art that showcases the beauty and complexity of everyday objects from the eighth through the 19th centuries. A collaborative effort. UMMA will host the exhibition of objects from the Kelsey Museum of Archi- tecture in its glass-walled Stenn Gallery. This exhibition is part of the UM Collections Collabo- rations series, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon foundation, where the UMMA showcases the diversity of the University's art collections. "It's an opportunity to do some- thing together," said the associate director of the Kelsey museum, Dawn Johnson. The breadth of this exhibi- tion is impressive: It spans eleven See FRAGMENTS, Page SA Space phenomena exceed previous observations By IAN DILLINGHAM Daily StaffReporter On a desolate, rocky mountaintop in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, one of the world's most advanced ground-based telescopes and a team of University researchers seek to shed light on some of the universe's greatest astro- nomical phenomena. A study expected to be pub- lished Thursday in the journal Nature will challenge the cur- rent understanding of light emissions from black holes, based on the observations of a collaborative global team of researchers at the Gemini Observatory in Hawaii. It was previously believed that light emission, or lumi- nosity, from black holes reaches a threshold called the Eddington limit, at which no more light can be emitted due to the physics of the black hole. Recent research, led by Astronomy Prof. Joel Breg- man, used various properties of the black hole and neigh- See EMISSION, Page 3A WEATHER HI: 42 TOMORROW LO: 39 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail New details in DeWolf murder news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX Vol. CXXIV, No. 37 02013The Michigan Daily michigondailycom NEWS.. . . 2A SUDOKU.....................3A OPINION .....................4A CLASSIFIEDS ............... 6A ARTS ......................6A SPORTSMONDAY......... 1B 4 d A A A A