The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Mayor John Hieftje presides over the City Council meeting yesterday. Originally scheduled to go before the Council yesterday, the planners of the controversial 601 Forest complex, planned for the current home of Village Corner, are now slated to speak Oct. 20. The proposal was tabled after the developers revised the plans to cut the building's size roughly in half. HIGH-RISE From Page 1 outcry from area residents, but that cost probably also played a factor in their decision. Ketalaar declined to comment about the cost of the new plan, saying the project was still in the beginning stages. Engineering senior Brian Russell spoke in favor of the proposal dur- ing last night's meeting, saying it would add more housing options for students and increase competition in the campus housing market. "If someone can offer nice hous- ing to students closer to campus, I don't see why MSA would be against it, I don't see why students would be against it, I don't even see why Ann Arborites would be against it," he said in an interview. Michigan Student Assembly Vice PresidentArvindSohoni,who introduced an MSA resolution last ARTIFACTS From Page 1 Saginaw Chippewa tribe's request. According to a University Public Affairs website, the University has not repatriated the artifacts to any tribes because NAGPRA requires museums to retain possession of the artifacts until NAGPRA regu- lations are changed or the Secre- tary of the Interior recommends the University to act otherwise. At the SACUA meeting, Frost month against the proposal, com- mended councilmembers for con- sidering student input and urged them to continue to incorporate it during the project's revisions. Nearby residents have vocally opposed the project since it was first proposed last January, argu- ing that the building's height and scale would be a mismatch for the surrounding neighborhood. Some have said the development would add too many cars to the already- congested area. Due to a rule prohibiting speak- ers from addressing Council multiple times during the same public hearing, residents who had opposed the project during past meetings were not permitted to speak Monday night. After the proposal was post- poned, a crowd of about a dozen residents from the South Uni- versity, Forest Court and Burns Park Neighborhood Associations gathered in the lobby of City Hall suggested that the committee ask University lawyers whether the University could repatriate certain artifacts deemed culturally uniden- tifiable by Museum officials if there was consent from both the Univer- sity and the tribe involved to do so. Frost also said the committee should examine repatriation poli- cies at other universities. "It would be nice to know what practices in peer institutions in par- allel museums might be," he said. Frost stressed to SACUA mem- bers the need to continue dis- to discuss their displeasure about the scaled-down plan. Betsy Price, a member of the North Burns Park neighborhood association, said she was unsatis- fied with the revisions. "No. I don't think it's enough," she said. Peter Nagourney, co-chair of the North Burns Park Neighborhood Association, said that among that among the residents' contention with the projectis whether therevi- sions should be considered amend- ments to the original proposal, as it is currently being treated, or whether it should be considered an entirely new proposal. If the proposal were treated as new, it would have to be sentback to the city's Planning Commission for another review rather than coming directly back to City Council. - Daily Staff Reporter Trevor Calero and Nicole Aber contributed to this report. cussions on finding an agreeable solution for the both the University and the Native American tribes. "This is an issue of some major importance to the citizens of the state of Michigan, to Native Americans within the region, to people in the University and I think it's important that the University faculty to at least be informed on what the state of' play is," he 'said. "Not necessar- ily that anything happened, but it would be really good to know what's going on." ENTREPRENEURS From Page 1 "ZLI helps reduce the risk for students who want to learn what it takes to be a successful entrepre- neur," Parke said. "As an academic institute, ZLI is investing in stu- dents' education, and that way stu- dents can learn and make mistakes that would normally cost a lot more in the business world." He said his team gained a lot of experience through the pitch com- petitions, grant applications, men- toring, workshops and internships that ZLI offers. Robart said the programs offered by the Institute provide more than just monetary compensation. "These programs force students to think deeply about the business- es they are proposing and provide validation for the business con- cept," Robart said. "Although the grants don't provide enough money to launch a company, they help off- set the substantial expenses asso- ciated with starting a company." He said students come up with the ideas, but as part of the pro- grams they're required to think through -how their business model and determine if their idea will actually work. "There are lots of great ideas out there, but not every great idea is a great business," Robart said. "A great business is different from a great idea because it has a sustain- able business model. A sustainable CANCER From Page 1 LSA junior Arielle Jones, one of the event's organizers and a mem- ber of SDT, said the yoga marathon was one of the many ways Go Blue Think Pink is uniting the Universi- ty with the Ann Arbor community. "There were three-year-old babies next to 20-year-old boys in pink T-shirts, both of them just so excited to do yoga on the Diag," she said. "It gets people's atten- tion. Part of it is raising money and part of it is raising aware- ness." LSA junior Max Friedman, phi- lanthropy chair of Sigma Alpha Mu, said he came up with the idea for the fundraiser his freshman year when he realized that there was no major philanthropy event on campus during October, which is National Breast Cancer Aware- ness month. Friedman's initial idea was to wear pink shirts to a football game, business model is one that can drive revenues, pay for the costs associated with running the busi- ness, and support the growth of the business." Robartsaid he began planninghis business about a year ago. He and his business partners spent the first six months creating a visual model before taking the steps to create the website this summer. He willlaunch the website with nightlife informa- tion for Barcelona, Madrid, Paris, Florence, and Rome in a few weeks time. He hopes to target university students studying abroad. The Zell Lurie Institute also hosts the Michigan Business Chal- lenge - an annual competition with a grand prize of $40,000. The contest requires students to pres- ent their business plans in front of a panel of judges. This year, DTE is providing a Clean Energy Prize, providing additional money for the best plan promoting energy effi- ciency, Kirsch said. RPMVentures,astartuy business from Zell Lurie Institute in 2000, also provides money and assistance for entrepreneurs to start and build their companies. RPM Ventures is based in Ann Arbor and has many non-profit programs affiliated with the University for students, and also functions as a profit venture capital firm thatinvests in avariety of companies. RPM Ventures has a 10-week summer internship program called RPM Ten that aims to help stu- dents start their businesses. Each Tuesday, October 7, 2008 -7 team participating in the intern- ship is given $25,000. Through the University, the company also offers a class open to all students called Engineer- ing 490 that helps students get the fundamentals of their businesses all planned out. Marc Weiser, managing direc- tor of RPM Ventures, said the class is a "a business development class where students come in and get framework for their business." RPM Ventures is also a sponsor for many categories of "1000 Pitch- es," an entrepreneurship contest through the University granting top business ideas from University stu- dents, faculty and staff with $1,000. Many business ideas around Ann Arbor were made a reality through RPM Ventures. Arbor Photonics, which develops fibers and compo- nents for short-pulsed fiber lasers, and Campus Roost, a local net- working website for Michigan stu- dents to keep in touch with their neighbors to announce parties, study sessions, pickup games, and other events. All the nonprofit programs RPM offers are run through the Univer- sity and the amount of money given ranges from $1,000to $25,000. The professional profit side of RPM not run -through the University gives up to millions of dollars to poten- tial businesses. "It's much more selective. We look through thousands of appli- cations and only select a few and invest in those," Weiser said. but the idea soon expanded to a weeklong "blitz" on campus. "I felt it was very important to me and it was one of those things where I wanted it- to get done, so why not do it?" he said. "The slo- gan took off, and the success. is an example of how important the cause is to the student body here at Michigan." Jones said it wasn't hard to get other members of her sorority on board, because the cause is a famil- ia- one. "It's the sase reason that all these sponsors are so eager to help us out, because this is a cause that affects everyone," she said. "If it's not your mother, it's your mother's friend." Friedman said the success of last year's campaign helped increase involvement in the event this year. "There's a big sense of pride that it's a great cause and to be able to say that it's our event, people get excited about that," he said. "Non- Greek people, people of all differ- ent ages, have come up to me and asked how can they have a larger role in this event." Friedman said University alum and New York Mets owner Fred Wilpon visited with organizers over the weekend and made a large contribution. Jones said that she enjoyed giving alumni returning to campus a chance to see an active student body. "It was really nice that this year it was on alumni weekend," Jones said. "It's nice for people to come back to campus and to see that it's still alive and that students are still passionate about the cause." Although last year's event was a success - it raised more than $12,000 - Friedman said he thinks this year's campaign could be bet- ter. "(Last year) we could only do so much - we could show up, and then after that it was up to the stu- dents to jump on board;" he said, "This year there was no reason to not think big, and I think we've pretty much matched almost any expectation so far." y AI IA,--"s MEOW **'******** ON, q. sFd R C'". aPO1NSORED NVM RErAT~C