Around town Discover the three main areas for dining in Ann Arbor. Find out where to go for a quick lunch or nice dinner. PAGE IOF Fall 2005 clbr Alicrigttan t1 u ANN ARBOR Kerrytown Northwest side of Ann Arbor offers fresh and famous food to those willing to walk beyond campus. PAGE3F SECTION F w NEW STUDENT EDITION Welcome, freshmen, to Ann Arbor A city of hidden treasures I I IA )N N IVI. F I Y ou've heard great things about Ann Arbor: It's suppos- edly a diverse, culturally rich, socially enlightened urban oasis in an otherwise dull Midwestern state. It has several embarrassing and inane nicknames. So far, kthough, your experience of the city outside your dorm is limited to traditional Welcome Week pursuits: a night of tramping up and down Washtenaw and Hill with a dozen of your closest hall-mates, looking for a frat party that will let in a throng of desperate freshmen. Or, if you're reading this before move-in, all you know is what you've seen in East Quad and summer orientation, neither of which resemble anything else you'll experience here again. Either way, you're eager to get the full "A-squared" experience. Luckily, your first taste of the real Ann Arbor will come early: If you're like most students, you'll want to move into a house or apartment after freshman year. And, in "Treetown," that means a frantic search for housing around mid-October - 11 months before the lease begins, and right around the time of your first midterms. Around this time, everyone suddenly becomes a real-estate expert, and it's common knowledge that the housing market in Ann Arbor is as cutthroat as the curve in an Orgo class: If you don't sign a lease before Hallow- een, you can plan on spending $600 a month on a broom closet in Ypsilanti. The reality of student housing in Ann Arbor is that the perfect lease everyone is looking for - affordable, spacious, clean and located in the thick of Central Campus - doesn't exist. Whether you sign your lease on the first day of classes or (God forbid) after fall semester, you're going to pay near Manhattan-level rent for a fairly small place somewhere near campus. Each house and apartment building you look at will have its own unforeseen problems - poor insulation or plumb- ing, leaky roofs, spotty Internet service - so prepare for surprises. If that still sounds appealing, you haven't met your landlord company yet. Why, then, is housing in Ann Arbor so expen- sive? If you've ever heard of supply and demand, you should have a pretty good idea: A lot of people want to live here, and there isn't much housing available. Unfortunately, the best ways to increase the housing supply in a densely popu- lated area - like building taller apartment com- plexes downtown - are considered antithetical to Ann Arbor's small-town atmosphere. Remem- ber, Ann Arbor is charming above all else. Once you move out of the dorms, real Ann Arbor life begins. For the first time in your life, you'll start living (though probably on your parents' money) like an adult: paying electric bills, using a laundromat and buying your own groceries. Only in Ann Arbor. there are no grocery stores within walking distance of your apartment or house. So unless you want to pay five dollars for a gallon of milk at a party store, you'll need to find a way to get to Kroger or Meijer. You will begin to feel you need a car. Good luck with that. Parking in Ann Arbor, like in any urban area, is scarce. And if you ever park where you're not supposed to for more than a few minutes, you can expect to pay at least $200 to get your car back from a local towing company. Because Ann Arbor's towing compa- nies are virtually unregulated by the city, most of them will charge you whatever they want and will only accept cash. lot of the problems you'll find as a student in Ann Arbor - like abu- sive landlords, an unchecked towing industry and overpriced housing - could be addressed by the city government. In most cases, though, they're not interested. Because University students, even though they make up nearly a third of Ann Arbor's population, have almost no influence in city politics. The trouble isn't just student apathy. Ann Arbor's city council is selected through a system of five wards, each of which is shaped roughly like a slice of pie. The five slices meet on Central Campus, where most of the students are con- centrated, effectively dividing the student vote among them and ensuring that students don't rep- resent anything close to a majority in any of the wards. On top of that, Michigan's voter registra- tion laws make it confusing and inconvenient for college students to register to vote at their cam- pus addresses, so many University students reg- ister to vote in their hometowns rather than Ann Arbor. As a result, the people with nearly all the influence here are permanent residents - people who park in their driveways, cringe at the sight of couches on students' front porches and would just as soon maintain the high property values of very fall, thousands of students flock to this small city. They come and prowl around State Street and South University Avenue, but often they spend their college days unaware of the wide range of attractions this city has to offer. In 1823 John Allen and Elisha Rumsey settled on the banks of Huron River. By May 1824, the settlement had been recognized as Ann Arbor, named for the wives of its original settlers, Ann and Mary Ann, according to the Ann Arbor Visitor's Bureau website. As seen in the sign above, the name was first recorded on May 25, 1824 as Annarbour. It remains the only city in the world with the name. Ann Arbor is an eclectic mix of people that have made this city grow in many different directions. But hidden amongst the new buildings and ever-changing scenery, there lies a bit of history and reminders of what has passed. John Hieftje re-electedAn Arbor may.1.or By Anne Joling and Ekjot Saini NOVEMBER 3.2004 Daily Staff Writer Last November's Ann Arbor City Council elections resulted in the re-election of all incumbents, including Mayor John Hieftje and 3rd ward representative Jean Carlberg, the only two members who faced challengers. The council, currently made up of 10 Democrats and one Republican, will remain unchanged for the next two years. Hieftje - who won the mayoral race with 38,067 votes, almost 69 percent of the vote- now faces his third term. His opponent, Republican Jane Lumm, received 17,285 votes. Hieftje was ill and unable to comment on his victory, but his wife, Kathryn Goodson, made a victory speech on his behalf at the Demo- cratic headquarters on South Fourth Avenue. "We're very excited about our victory - there will be a great team on the council," Goodson said. "The mayor had a strong opponent, and they both ran a very serious campaign." Goodson also said Hieftje will continue working on his major tenets of fiscal responsibility and nurturing and protecting the environment. Among Hieftje's main accomplishments was the passage the Greenbelt Initiative to preserve parks and reduce urban sprawl in Ann Arbor. Lumm, who served on the council for three terms during the 1990s, said she felt good about her campaign, despite the loss. "I want to congratulate Mayor Hieftje on running a successful cam- A2 votes to legali~ze medicinal marijuana By Leslie Rott NOVEMBER 3,2004 Daily Staff Writer Ann Arbor residents passed a ballot proposal to allow the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes on Nov. 2. Proposal C will waive fines for medical marijuana patients and their caregivers who receive the recom- mendation of a physician or other qualified health pro- fessional to use marijuana for medical treatment. The proposal also changes the current law in Ann Arbor to lower the fine for the third and all subsequent marijuana offenses for non medical users to $100. These fines include possession, control, use, giving away or selling of marijuana. Although medical marijuana users would avoid fines under the law, the police are not required to return any marijuana that they may seize from patients. Gov. Jennifer Granholm has spoken out against the use of medical marijuana, warning it will still be illegal to use, possess or sell marijuana under state and federal law. In response to the passing of Proposal C, Dan Sola- no, a retired Detroit police officer and medical mari- juana user, said the vote sends a positive message to the state Legislature. "It does symbolize that the public is behind amend- DAVID TUMAN/Daily Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje was elected tohis second term in the November elections. paign. This election really wasn't about winning or losing, though. I feel I accomplished a lot, and through the various debates and forums we created a lot of good dialogue. I feel very positive. We did one for democ- racy," Lumm said. Carlberg, who faced two challengers, Green Party candidate Marc See HIEFTJE, page 8F Bus usage rises due to MRide Rv Kim Tnmlln of the A ATA - n nnnnrnfit nnit of the I g A rnnhmreTac-.RiLhev saichi- I