'Religulous': Bill Maher hates your god. Students deserve a voice on tuition hikes Arts, Page 5 I Opinion, Page 4 Ifei Mi an B.a Im Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, October 7, 2008 michigandailycom 601 FOREST COMPLEX Council tables plans for student high-rise JENNIFER KRON/Daily Bruce Springsteen thrilled his fans and Barack Obama supporters at Eastern Michigan University yesterday, which marked the voter registration deadline in Michigan. BOSS M AKES FAPU Developers scaled back plan, cutting building's proposed size to 14 stories By KELLY FRASER Daily News Editor Plans for the controversial 601 Forest student high-rise were tabled Monday night after the project's developers submitted revised plans last Friday that cut the project's size nearly in half. At the request of the proj- ect's developers, Ann Arbor City Council voted to postpone the proposal until the Council's next scheduled meeting Oct. 20. In the next two weeks, city planners will review the revised proposal for the complex, planned for the corner of South University Avenue and South Forest Street. At the beginning of the meet- ing, Dan Ketalaar, one of the project's developers, gave a brief slide show presentation compar- ing the previous proposals to the new scaled-down plan. The new proposal is roughly half the size of the previous plans. It calls for asingle 14-story building instead of an L-shaped building with a maximum height of 25 stories. This will decrease the number of units from 1,200 to between 550 and 650 units, Ketalaar said. "We've taken to heart a lot of the comments that we've received," Ketalaar said of the revised plan, noting that most were regarding the building's height. Under the revised proposal, the building would occupy about half of the land purchased for the development, where the Village Corner convenience store and the now-closed Bagel Factory now stand. The proposal still calls for underground parking, but the number of spaces has been cut from about 250 to 90, accord- ing to Councilmember Stephen Rapundalo (D-Ward 2). Some have speculated that cost may have played a factor in the developers' decision to downsize the project. During a pre-meeting caucus Sunday night, Rapundalo said the developers' main reason for revising their proposal was the See HIGH-RISE, Page 7 On registration deadline, Howard Springsteen talk up Obama By BENJAMIN S. CHASE, JULIE ROWE AND CAITLIN SCHNEIDER Daily StaffReporters .YPSILANTI - In a last push to register voters before the state's registrationdeadline,whichpassed last night at midnight, celebrities converged on southeast Michigan yesterday to encourage people to sign up to vote. At Eastern Michigan Univer- sity's Oestrike Stadium yesterday, Bruce Springsteen performed to a younger crowd ofabout10,000. The concert was in support of Demo- cratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, and was the last of a series of Obama campaign events meant to get register people to vote before the Monday night deadline. Tickets to the concert were free, available on a first come-first serve basis. Concertgoers were met by volunteers with registration forms as they entered the stadium. Most said they were already registered, but several people stopped to take their last opportunity to add their name to the voter rolls. Springsteen; who endorsed Obama in April, played an eight- song acoustic set to a crowd that was evenly mixed between college students and middle-aged Spring- steen fans. "The Boss," as his fans know him, implored audience members to register to vote sev- eral times during the 45 minutes he spent on stage. After playing "Devils and Dust," a song he dedicated to United States troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, Springsteen explained his support for the Democratic presidential nominee. "I've spent most of my creative life measuring the difference between American promise and American reality," Springsteen said. "The distance has never been greater or more painful. Obama has taken a measure .of that distance and he understands in his heart the cost of that distance. As president, he will work to restore it." After a five-minute speech to the crowd, Springsteen launched See CAMPAIGN, Page 3 ENTREPRENEURSHIP ON CAMPUS Campus resources fuel spate of student start-up companies Grants, Zell Institute help 0 ventures get off ground By VERONICA MENALDI For the Daily Though the social networking website now has over 100 million users worldwide, Facebook was once run out of a single Harvard University dorm room. Helping to launch site were venture organiza- tions and start-up funding. For University students with similar business aspirations, the University offers them the chance to develop their budding business and start building it into potential- ly the next big thing - maybe even the next Facebook. The University's Zell Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Stud- ies offers several programs that connect students looking to start their own business with funding and training. With the help of the Zell Lurie Institute, MBA student Chris Robart will soon launch Dusoto. com, a travel website focusing on international nightlife. He said the money from the Zell Lurie Institute went toward web development. "Without the money from the Zell Lurie Institute, we still would have been able to start our busi- ness, but we would've had to com- mit more of our own money and it might have taken a bit longer to get things moving," Robart said. "When a business is self-funded, like ours, every little bit of money helps." In the Dare to Dream program, interested students apply to the program with their business idea. There are three different stages a student can apply to: the desire stage, which provides $500; the assessment stage, which $1,500 dollars; and the integration stage, which provides $10,000. The Zell Lou n aInstituterhas helped launch many Ann Arbor businesses, including B.A. Maze Inc, Bubble Island, Caliente Grille, GetOutdoors.com, Spirit Shop Inc. and Wolverine Real Estate. Business School senior Michael Parke said Zell Lurie provided him and the other members of his busi- ness with more than just money. He said that even without the Dare to Dream grant of $1,500 dollars, his company, Project Freestyle - an online platform with tools and applications for sports communi- ties - still would have started. But the insurance the grant provided, he added, was priceless. See ENTREPRENEURS, Page 7 Greeks team up to fight cancer Think Pink effort uses colors, yogato garner attention ByJILLIA4 BERMAN Daily Staff Reporter The Diag played host Thursday to a carnival-style dunk tank, where passersby could soak members of Go Blue Think Pink, a student organization raising money for breast cancer awareness. The event kicked off a weeklong effort coordi- nated by Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity, Sigma Delta Tau sorority and Hillel. The fundraiser culminates tonight in a Pink Party at Necto nightclub, and all the money raised will go to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. Organizers are also selling T-shirts and water bottles, and held a "yogathon" that was featured during ABC's coverage of Satuday's football game against Illinois. KRISTA BOYD/Daily See CANCER, Page 7 [SA Zakary Belisle (left) donates $10 for breast cancer research in exchange for a "Think Pink" T-shirt. MUSEUM OF ANTHrROPOLOGY Talks on return of Native American remains go on Sad wa gil ginaw Chippewa regional Native American tribes. Committee member Bob Frost, nts University to a professor in the School of Infor- mation, said he asked SACUA to ve back artifacts discuss the issue because of con- versations he had with Native By ANDY KROLL Americans while conducting his Daily News Editor own research. __ --"I often hear from them the executive committee of the question: Why is U of M being so sity faculty'sgoverningbody annoying about all of this stuff?" ed discussions yesterday Frost said. "They are, shall we say, Native American artifacts less than happy about U of M repa- the University's Museum of triations." pology and the ownership The Museum of Anthropology to those artifacts made by owns about 1,300 Native American artifacts, many of which are human remains. The Native American Graves Protection and Repatria- tion Act, passed in 1990, requires the University to report all artifacts to the U.S. Departmentof Interior. Discussions between the Uni- versity and regional tribes have deadlocked over Native American artifacts currently held by the Uni- versitythat MuseumofAnthropolo- gy officials have deemed "culturally unidentifiable." This means that an artifact does not have a "cultural affiliation" - defined by NAGPRA as "a relationship of shared group identity which can be reasonably traced historically or prehistorically between a present day Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization and an identifiable earlier group" - with a specific tribe. In March, members of the Sag- inaw Chippewa tribe spoke before the University Board of Regents at the board's monthly meeting. They asked that the University's cul- turally unidentifiable artifacts be returned to their tribe because they claimed ownership of them. No action was taken in response to the See ARTIFACTS, Page 7 The Univer revisite about held in Anthro claims WEATHER HI: 65 TOMORROW 'QLO: 54 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Integrating video games and reading THEFILTER.BLOGSMICHIGANDAILY.COM/ INDEX NEWS...... . . . 2 CROSSWORD,.,.. Vol. CXViii,No.26 OPINION.............................4 CLASSIFIEDS... Q2008The Michigan Daily ARTS.. . . ..5 SPORTS............ michigandaiiu.com""" '" ' 4