Weajjiar Wednesday November 5, 2003 @2003 The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan Vol. CXIII, No. 45 One-hundred-thirteen years ofeditorialfreedom TODAY: Y .. . 'Yl., Rain expect- ed in the morning with HI: 57 clouds all afternoon LOW: 33 and cool temperatures Tomorrow: at night. 50/28 I wwwmichigandaily.com I - oters welcome Greenbelt DAVID TUWA/Daily Mike Garfield, director of the Ann Arbor Ecology Center, celebrates after voters approve Proposal B. Proposal changing eligibility requirements of city candidates narrowly fails By Alison Go and Mona Rafeeq Daily Staff Reporters Turning out in unusually large numbers for an off-year election, Ann Arbor voters approved the Greenbelt proposal aimed at curbing urban sprawl by a two-thirds margin. They rejected by a smaller spread Proposal A, which would have relaxed eligibility restric- tions for City Council candidates. The Greenbelt plan was the key issue on the ballot and passed with 67 percent of the vote. About 25 percent of Ann Arbor registered vot- ers went to the polls to weigh in on the hotly contested Proposal B. The vote gave city officials approval for using money raised from a 0.5-mill property tax to preserve parklands and other green, open spaces in and around Ann Arbor. The proposal extends for 30 years a property tax already in place, which charges an average homeowner $45 to $50 a year. "I believe we should take measures to curb urban sprawl, and even though I was con- cerned about affordable housing, the mayor said he would ensure that it continues in Ann Arbor," said LSA sophomore kamya Ragha- van. Sporting a green streamer around his shoul- ders, Mayor John Hieftje, an enthusiastic sup- porter of the proposal, celebrated with other Democrats last night at Ann Arbor Brewing Company Restaurant. "The city will be working on an ordinance to make use of Proposal B and will protect Huron River watershed and parklands," Hieftje said. Because the lands that would be affected are not limited to Ann Arbor, its implementation would require cooperation with other munici- palities, said Councilman Robert Johnson (D- 1st Ward), who was re-elected last night. "Ann Arbor can't solve its problems itself," he added. Hieftje said the controversial proposal See GREENBELT, Page 7 CITY COUNCIL SEATS 1st Ward: Robert Johnson (incumbent, Dem.) 1,545 ... 60.8 % Rob Haug (Green) 316% 371 ... 14.6 % Rick Lax (Ind.) 618 ... 24.3% 2nd Ward: Michael Reid (incumbent, Rep.) 2,363 ... 53.95 % Amy Seetoo (Dem.) 2,017 ... 46.05% 3rd Ward: Leigh Greden (Dem.) 2,667 ... 73.35 % Rich Birkett (Lib.) 521 ... 14.33 % Donna Rose (Ind.) 443 ... 12.18 % 4th Ward: Marcia Higgins (incumbent, Rep.) 1,885 ... 51.83 % Dan Sheill (Lib.) 209... 5.75 % Scott Trudeau (Green) 1,082 ... 29.75 % John Kinsey (Ind.) 445 ... 12.24% 5th Ward: Wendy Woods (incumbent, Dem.) 3,928 ... 74.54 % Jason Kantz (Lib.) 587 ... 11.14 % Adrianna Buonarropi (Green) 752 ... 14.27 % PROPOSALS Proposal A: City Council Eligiblity Failed, YES: 8,540, NO: 11,369 Proposal B: Greenbelt Passed, YES: 14,524, NO: 7,270 Despite efforts, students fail to gain council seats By Mona Rafe.q e Daily Staff Reporter Voters reelected four City Council incumbents yesterday, while denying spots on the council to three Universi- ty students and an alum. Democrat Leigh Greden will be the only new face on the council. Democ- rats Robert Johnson and Wendy Woods and Republicans Michael Reid and Marcia Higgins successfully defended their seats. Each of Ann Arbor's five wards is represented by two council members. Wards one and four include most of the campus community. In the 1st Ward, Johnson won with 61 percent of the vote, defeating LSA senior Rick Lax and Rackham student Rob Haug. Lax had 24 percent while See CITY COUNCIL, Page 7 Ann Arbor Mayor John HeiftJe accepts a symbolic green belt while celebrating the victory of Proposal B at the Ann Arbor Brewing Company yesterday. JOEL FRIEDMAN/Daily Engineering freshman Mark Rundle fills out a form in order to vote in Ann Arbor's 1st Ward at Bursley Residence Hall yesterday. I Device to make illegal parking more difficult One year later, art school still adjusting to new curriculum By Ev McGarvey Daily staff Reporter For some students, the free ride may be over. Parking, already a strained campus resource, will become even tighter as parking structures across campus will not let illegally parked vehicles leave without a new parking device. University lots are currently switching to the Automatic Vehicle Identification system, replacing the old permit system. "Blue" parking structures on campus will begin a five-month conversion period Nov. 17, bringing all University structures under the system. In lieu of the new AVI device, students may swipe their Mcard to gain access to the structures. Previously, drivers could leave their car in some parking areas for indefinite amounts of time with no parking pass after paying an entrance fee. Under the new system, the exit gate of a structure will not Shake it down open during enforcement hours without a device. ; yAYdiCS j If a vehicle does not leave the structure before the start of enforcement hours, the student and their p a car will be unable to leave without calling for assis- ; tn youdtoPwlS tance -and risking a ticket.a "Students will need to get their vehicles out ofy the parking system before 6 a.m. if they park during s the day without a device. The exit gate won't go up' without a device," said University Facilities and T U of jfl Operations spokeswoman Diane Brown.f Brown said security problems prompted the t'ai t change.4 "The AVI system has been in the works for a few years. A history of complaints made the University hire actual monitors - 'a staff to ensure the securi- ty of the parking structures," she said. The plan for the program was formed before the JOEL FRIEDMAN/Daily current economic downturn and the University's A sign outside of the Forest Street parking structure Informs See PARKING, Page 7 users of the new Automatic Vehicle Identification system. Fluent students use classes to fine-tune language skils By Adhiraj Dutt Daily StaffReporter Students at the School of Art and' Design have had more than a year to adjust to a revamped curriculum. Though some art students say they find the new curriculum to be improving in its second year, the student body has accepted the changes with mixed feel- ings. The modifications have even prompt- ed some, like sophomore Elizabeth Van Loan, to leave the art school. "I found the new program more pre- scriptive than what I looked for. There was very little freedom to pick classes;' said Van Loan, who transferred this graduated with a Bachelor of Fine.Arts degree. About 50 percent of courses are designed for freshmen and sophomores under the current program. In the pre- 2002 program, about 25 percent of courses catered to them, said Mary Schmidt, Art and Design associate dean. "Pre-2002 students are being well served," Schmidt said. "We are making sure that courses they want to take are still being offered." Art and Design senior Lee May said professors are making efforts to accommodate students under the new curriculum. "Some professors are lenient, like if you have good drawing skills, you can Y By Andrew Kaplan Daily Staff Reporter Although many students enroll in foreign lan- guage courses to become fluent in a second dialect, others speak fluently before even attending their first day of class. From Spanish to Russian to Arabic, many Uni- versity students say they have registered for pro- grams in languages they already speak. They add that while they may speak fluently, their previous experience has not prepared them for upper-level language courses. "I can speak pretty fluently, but my writing and reading are pretty weak and my grammar is even weaker," said LSA junior Basil Mossa-Basha, who is taking Arabic 101. "It was necessary for some- one like me who already speaks Arabic fluently to start off at a low level." also went to Syria about five or six times, so that helped me learn street Arabic." When fluent speakers place into introductory courses, students said, they gain an upper hand over others who may not have had a lifetime of exposure to a second language. "I definitely think I have some kind of advan- tage" Mossa-Basha said, adding that he is fluent in Aami, an informal version of Arabic. Attending class with experienced speakers can alienate students who are less advanced, said LSA sophomore Fatima Makhzoum, also an Arabic 101 student. "I do get the sense from people who know a lot more that I need to catch up to be on the same level," she said. Makhzoum added that while she is a proficient speaker of the Lebanese dialect of Arabic, she is less acquainted with Fus'ha, the classical version =.- semester to the Residential Col- lege. She said most of her friends transferred as well. "I suppose I could have sucked it up for the first, two years and taken the required classes," she said. The new cur- riculum, which debuted in the 2002-2003 school "I found the new program more prescriptive than what I looked for. There was very little freedom to pick classes.' - Elizabeth Van Loan RC sophomore skip design drawing 1 and take design drawing 2," May said. The new program also emphasizes being involved in the broader community. "Art can be a hermit- ically sealed environ- ment," Schmidt said. "(The students) all speak (the same) lan- guage." Schmidt said the year, consists of a highly structured environment in a student's first two years followed by a flexible one in the last two years. Freshmen and sophomores now take a common core of studio and academic classes. All students are now required to go through four sequences of courses that expose them to many fields of art. In the pre-2002 curriculum, all stu- dents had to complete academic and new program encourages students to study abroad, to get internships and to share their art with non-art students. The school recently hired a career development coordinator and encour- ages students to look into career plan- ning beginning in their freshman year. Changes in the curriculum went into effect after two years of faculty discus- sion. In the first year, theoretical issues were discussed in an effort to determine