P iC i1 an4,.llatlg Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, November 6,2009 michigandaily.com CITY COUNCIL CVS gets OK for State St. location JED MOCH/Daily University President Mary Sue Coleman talks with the consul-general of China's Chicago consulate at an event launching the University's Confucius Institute yesterday U opens Confucius Institute To bui w Stu prescr will fi: Villag a 14,0 macy. Last Counc a plan pharm of Stat The io previo Street Yes after Arbor sion aY missio The $8 mil rent I June 2 Cou (D-W, preser preserve historic she backed the building proposal. I appreciate work to restore ding, pharmacy the fa ade of the structure," Smith told the council last night. ill keep facade Councilmember Tony Derez- inski (D-Ward 2) added that the By DYLAN CINTI construction team plans to build Daily StaffReporter from the top down to leave the fagade intact. Derezinski said the dents -looking to pick up- Planning Commission was also iptions or buy toothpaste pleased with the construction sally havean alternative to team's willingness to keep the ;Apothecary in the form of building's facade. 00-square-foot CVS/phar- Both Derezinski and Smith emphasized that no large phar- night, Ann Arbor City mary currently exista for down- :i1 unanimously approved town residents and CVS will fill to construct a new CVS/ that void. acy near the intersection Smith said though she would e Street and LibertyStreet. prefer a local business to a large cation, 209 S. State St., was chain like CVS, the store's size uslyoccupiedbySava'sState will better accommodate the Cafe and atattoo parlor. downtown community. terday's resolution came "There's a lot of new residents approval from the Ann coming into the area and this Historic District Commis- really fills a piece that's much nd the City Planning Com- needed," Smith said. "I'd like to n in May. say this is going to be an indepen- project, estimated to cost dent local store, but we don't see lion, will preserve the cur- those in existence anymore." building's front facade, a Construction will take about 1 Daily article reported. six months to complete, John tncilmember Sandi Smith Baumann, director of the con- ard 1) cited the fagade's struction team representing CVS, vation as one of the reasons See CITY COUNCIL, Page 7A New center furthers University effort to develop relations with China By LINDSAY KRAMER Daily StaffReporter Chinese dignitaries and Univer- sity leaders came together at the University of Michigan Museum of Art yesterday to hear and see ethnic Chinese music and performances to commemorate the official open- ing of the University's Confucius Institute. The opening of the institute comes during a recent push by University officials to strengthen the University's relationship with China. University President Mary Sue Coleman traveled to the coun- try in 2005 as part of the effort, and the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts picked China as the semester theme for the 2008-2009 school year. The institute, one of more than 60 in the United States, aims to develop educational cooperation between the two countries and increase Chinese language educa- tion. The University's institute will serve as the national leader of insti- tutes across the country. In addition, the opening cul- minates two years of efforts by a Confucius Institute planning com- mittee. The institute began as an effort to pursue Coleman's Task Force on China, which she began in 2005 to help increase ties between China and the University. "We will showcase Chinese art and culture," Coleman said at the event. "We will collaborate with organizations throughout south- east Michigan. We are going to share the depths of China's rich culture." The all-day event began yes- terday morning with a lion dance performed by students from the Chinese Ensemble of Renmin Uni- versity of China. It was followed by speeches by both members of the Confucius Institute committee from the University and directors and consuls from China. While there are more than 300 Confucius Institutes worldwide, the University's is unique in that it draws specifically upon the musi- cal and arts culture in China rather See CONFUCIUS, Page 7A 0 CAMPUS HEALTH New study shows mental health issues on the rise at universities PENNE A LA PROTEST Since 2000, students seeking depression help has increased 10 to 15 percent By VERONICA MENALDI Daily StaffReporter LSA senior Emily Cepla has been dealing with depression ever since the seventh grade, but it didn't really affect her schoolwork until she reached the University her freshman year. "My grades started to suffer because I couldn't get out of bed," she said. "I wasn't going to classes and I wasn't doing my homework. It also affected my social life because since I wasn't getting out of bed, I wasn't going out." Cepla's struggle with the depression continued and by the time she reached her junior year she had tried 15 different kinds of anti-depressant medication and none of them seemed to work. And Cepla is not alone. A recent study by a University researcher confirms what many have suspected for some time: many college students suffer from mental illness and a sizable por- tion of them don't seek help. In an article that has yet to be published in the Journal of Ado- lescent Health, Public Health Assistant Prof. Daniel Eisenberg writes that 95 percent of campus psychological counseling centers surveyed in 2008 reported a sig- nificant increase in mental health issues among students. The article goes on to say that the proportion of students report- ing to have been diagnosed with depression has increased between 10 to 15 percent since 2000. "Whether that's because stu- dents are more likely to seek help than they used to be as opposed to the possibility that there are just more students with mental health See MENTAL HEALTH, Page 7A UNIVERSITY REEARCH MAX OLLtIS/Daiiy Members of the Restaurants Opportunities Committee, which is comprised primarily of University students, walk to the first of four restaurants they plan on protesting this month. The roughly 100-person group walked into Andiamo's Italian restaurant in Dearborn, Mich. last night to drop off papers that stated if an agreement between the employees and management wasn't met in the next two weeks, alawsuit would be filed against the restaurant. Business School community remembers Robert Koonce Four'U'researchers win Awards given for through the Exceptional, Uncon- ventional esearch Enabling research projects Knowledge Acceleration (EURE- KA) program. The program aims that are usually to promote studies examining unproven hypotheses that would swept aside not usually receive financial sup- port. By JOSEPH LICHTERMAN Dr. Jon-Kar Zubieta, profes- DailyStaffReporter sor of psychiatry and radiology at the University Medical School, Four University researchers who received a EUREKA grant of have been awarded prestigious $1.2 million, said the NIH uses the grants totaling $4.7 million from grant to support projects that are the National Institute of Health often overlooked. for completely outside the box "They were basically looking research projects. The grants were for what they call high-risk, high- awarded for medicine, chemistry impact grants that are maybe, and engineering, because of complexity or because The NIH awarded the grants they are more bold, don't typically NIH grants (receive) usual funding mecha- nisms," Zubieta said. Zubieta researches how the placebo effect influences patients suffering from substance abuse and depression's neurobiological mechanisms. He hopes to further his research by' honing in on the neural systems that cause placebo effects to occur. Dr. Joseph Holoshitz, professor of internal medicine and associate chief for research in the Division of Rheumatology at the University Medical School, also received $1.2 million in EUREKA grants. Over the past few years, Holoshitz has been researching the occurrence of arthrosclerosis See GRANTS, Page 7A At tearful memorial, friends and family celebrate Ross administrator's life By OLIVIA CARRINO Daily StaffReporter As jazz music played and a photo montage cycled through, people were ushered into Blau Auditorium late yesterday afternoon for a cere- mony to celebrate the life of Robert Koonce, director of Undergraduate Student Affairs at the Ross School of Business. During the memorial, Koonce, who died Sunday morning, was commemorated as a "selfless" man who believed in each of his stu- dents. Koonce's colleagues, friends and students took to the podium, describing him as a truly "larger than life man." Koonce graduated from the University in 1994 with a Masters of Arts degree in higher educa- tion administration and began his career at the University in 2004 as a student advisor. He pioneered MREACH, a pro- gram that connects high school students in Detroit and Ypsilanti with the Ross School of Business. Koonce also started the Prepara- tion Initiative, which tutors Univer- sity students interested in applying to the Business School at the end of their freshman year. Scott Moore, BBA Program Faculty Director, spoke about his favorite memories of Koonce at the event. He said though Koonce was "a pain in the behind" at times, he was always a caring, thoughtful and kind individual. With tears in his eyes, Rackham See MEMORIAL, Page 7A WEATHER HI: 58 TOMORROW LO 47 GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILYCOM New website fills Juicy Campus's gossip void. MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS/THE WIRE INDEX NEWS......2A CLASSIFIEDS .....................6A Vol. CXX, No. 42 OPINION ..........................4A SPORTS.. . . . 8A '2009Th MichiganDaily ARTS... . . . 5A FOOTBALL SATURDAY..........1B michivuoduilycow