RECORD STORE BLUES ay mamrage ban scary line ofHow Ann Arbor's record stores laws. are hanging on by a thread. PININ PAGE 4A SEE THE B-SIDE, INSIDE Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, November 5, 2009 michigandaily.com CAMPUS PSYCHOLOGICAL SCRVICES CAPS takes on concerns LIGHTS. CAMERA. THE CUBE Renovations, additional counselors and new database part of effort to solve students' criticisms By VERONICA MENALDI Daily StaffReporter For many students, the Counseling and Psychological Services center has been a go-to resource for assistance with issues they're facing on campus, but for some it has been more of a source of stress than relief. Many students have raised concerns about the long waiting time for a sched- uled appointment, long entrance assess- ments - or informational forms - and talk of only being able to meet with a spe- cific counselor three times. CAPS officials said they are aware of these concerns and misconceptions and are working toward improving them by renovating the center, hiring more coun- selors and creating a new database of community providers. Todd Sevig, CAPS's director, saidCAPS is taking on a new approach to helping student mental health issues by thinking in a more campus-wide and community connection mindset. "No one entity on campus is going to be able at any one moment to address every need for every student in the year," he said. "So the new database will really help in that regard." The community providers database, which is expected to go live on Monday, will allow students to look up a provider that fits their needs, has current open- ings, takes their insurance and is within walking distance. "It's a little different than a typical database or obviously looking in a phone book," Sevig said. "It's all geared toward student life." As part of the renovation, four new offices in the center are expected to be completed by the end of the week and appointments there are scheduled for as early as next week. Sevigsaid the increased space and staff to fill the rooms is the "most concrete way" the center is addressing the student See CAPS, Page SA JU SAMANTHA TRAUBEN/Daily Scenes from the movie "Trust" are shot at the Cube yesterday. The movie is being directed by David Schwimmer and will star Clive Owen and Catherine Keener. "Trust" is a dark drama about the damaging effects an online sexual predator has on a family. The movie is scheduled to be released next fall. SER IES: AFTER THEY WALK Laurie Miller, the Beltway lawyer GA M BLING F OR A C A U SE * At Heidelberg, anteing up for local charities Bar has permits from the state to host charity poker tournaments By ELYANA TWIGGS Daily StaffReporter For many nonprofit organizations, the economic downturn has stifled fundrais- ing efforts. However, a local bar is stack- ing the deck to encourage University students and area residents to give back. Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day nights mean charity poker at The Heidelberg - a German bar and restau- rant on Main Street. The smoky upstairs bar converts into a miniature casino, complete with five poker tables, two cash tables and a blackjack table. And though the house always wins at most casinos, at The Heidelberg, charities are the true winners, the program's coordinators say. One week last month, 50 percent of the entrance fees went to benefit Disabled American Veterans. Every week, a differ- ent nonprofit organization benefits, and the poker room is booked with charity events until March of next year. Volunteer Jim Altman calls these char- ity poker nights "millionaire parties." "The reason (the poker nights) have gotten more popular is because with the economythe way it is, less and less people are willing to give a nice share of money to charities," Altman said. "It is an excel- lent way for charities to make money for their.group." With attendees including everyone from Ann Arbor residents to Law School students, the charity poker room can raise anywhere from $50 to $10,000 for a See POKER, Page SA University alum now calls the shots at Washington law firm By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily NewsEditor WASHINGTON D:C. - Though she's sitting in a cool, crisp conference room, perched high above the sultry concrete jungle of downtown Washington D.C., University alum Laurie Miller is very much in the thick of things. As chair of powerful law firm Nixon Peabody's gov- ernment investigations and white-collar defense practice, Miller is charged with defend- ing some of the nation's most powerful and influential fig- ures. Her clients have included multiple Congressmen, presi- dents of Fortune 500 compa- nies and officials in both Bush administrations and the Clin- ton administration. But Miller isn't much of a namedropper. "I can tell if I've done a good job if nobody ever knows that my client is under investiga- tion," she said in an interview in late August. When she's not writing briefs or defending her clients' good name in the courtroom, Miller finds other ways to get involved in the Washing- ton scene. As co-chair of the National Women's Forum for Obama, she held one of the first fundraisers for the then- senator from Illinois. And after becoming presi- dent, Obama didn't forget Miller. She was there when he announced his nomination of Justice Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court. Though Miller has been in Washington for more than 30 years, she wasn't always a power broker. In fact, her rise to the top began with a letter to another University alum that she penned when she was a junior majoring in political science and French at the Uni- versity. "My Congressman at the time was the House (of Rep- resentatives) Minority Leader named Gerald R. Ford," she said, reclining in a board room chair and sipping a can of Diet Coke. "And I wrote a letter asking for an internship." A few months later, Miller moved to Washington for the summer. "I got hooked on it," she said. "Washington was every- thing I had been hearing about and studying about in Ann Arbor." When she got back to the University in the fall, Mill- er continued to pursue her degrees and soon thereafter found out that her former boss was going to become a much larger player in American poli- tics. Carolyn Burgess, Miller's roommate at the Delta, Delta Delta sorority house, remem- bers sitting around the tele- vision with other girls in the house on an October night in 1973, when Spiro Agnew resigned from his post as vice president. As the history goes, Ford replaced Agnew. "My recollection was that (Miller) had had (Ford) write her reference letters. We all said 'Oh my gosh, she's got the U.S. vice president writ- ingherreference letters," Bur- gess said. "Typical Laurie just being herself, she had these amazing people that thought well of her." But Burgess added that she wouldn't have expected any- thing less of Miller, who spent many of her nights staying up late in the Undergraduate Library. "I've got some really stupid pictures of us horsing around the sorority house and she's not in some of them because she was a more serious stu- dent," Burgess said. "But she was never holier than thou about it. She just did what she did." Burgess said she can often remember Miller coming in to the sorority house with stacks of books in her hands and her See AFTER THEY WALK,;PageSA RAIN, RAIN GO AWAY SOCIAL SAFETY Makeup magic: Lip gloss product tests drinks for date rape drugs British product conceals test strip in makeup handle By LINDSAY KRAMER Daily StaffReporter Students entering college are often warned about the dangers of putting their drinks down at par- ties. But thanks to a new product, there's more they can do to protect themselves from date rape drugs. 2LoveMyLips recently devel- oped a lip gloss that comes with a small, portable kit that can be used to test a drink to see if it was spiked with drugs. The kit includes a pink taper slip that, when placed into a drink, will turn blue if the drink contains traces of GHB or ketamine - common date rape drugs. The product was first launched in the United Kingdom and has showed positive sales in beauty salons across the country. The company plans not only to bring the gloss overseas, but also to make it available at bars and in restrooms so it is accessible if someone is concerned that their drink has been tainted. Although the company's owner Tracy Whittaker said she expect- ed sales to focus on women ages 17-35, the product has been sold to men as well as women of all ages. She said men have been buyingthe product for their wives, daughters and girlfriends. Whittaker is looking to bring her product overseas as soon as possible and is seeking a distribu- tor. The largest portion of online sales has come from the United States. "We would love to get it onto the college campuses," Whittaker said, "because that's where there is a lot of (drink) spiking." Aimee Nimeh, Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center assistant director for education and training at the University, said she isn't sure how effective the product would be at the Univer- sity, especially considering it only tests for GHB and ketamine. She added that date rape drugs are not as prevalent on campus in date rape cases. "We don't see very many cases of the date rape drug being used," she said. "Alcohol on its own is more widely used." See LIP GLOSS, Page 7A cHANEL VoN-HA BSBURG LOTHRINGEN/Daly Scott Johnson of Livonia, Mich. (left) and Dwight McCauley of South Lyon, Mich. - both of whom are glazers for Edwards Glass Company - install drip edges to windows in the new wing of the University of Michigan Museum of Art. WEATHER HI: 49 TOMORROW LO 40 GOT A NEWS TIP? NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM INDEX NEWS ............... Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail Former 'M' QB Feagin's court case rescheduled. Vol. CXX, No. 41 SU DOKU........... news@michigandaily.com and let us know. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE P2009 The MNchiNan.a. . OPINION. michigandoilycv .................2.A CLASSIFIEDSF EDA....... ..... .....6A ............3A SPO RTS ............I... ......... 8A ..... ..... 4A THE B-SlDE ... .....................1B