Funding your education Perspectives on the financial aid These coaches might take over for the fired Tommy Amaker dilemma Sports, 9 Op-ed, Page 5 PI 1id4igan hatIg.j ,TIE-IlNDREIL-SEVINITEE ,RS OF EL(DITORL 1M . Tuesday, March 20,2007 www.michigandaily.com PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily BTB Burrito co-owner Adam Lowenstein stands next toa baron South University Avenue yesterday in what will become BTB Cantina. The space used to house Charley's Upstairs, a night club. Charley's will reopen its restaurant downstairs. On South, plans for a 'cantina Margaritas and burritos upstairs, Charley's to reopen downstairs By TARYN HARTMAN Daily StaffReporter If all goes according as planned, students will be able to order margaritas with their burritos on South University Avenue. University alumni Adam Lowenstein and Justin Herrick, owners of student hot spot BTB Burrito, purchased Good Time Charley's on South Universi- ty Avenue. They plan to introduce a spin-off of their burrito business in the space above the restaurant. Good Time Charley's, which has been closed since Dec. 22 last year, will reopen on the ground floor. Along with the space, Lowenstein and Her- rick bought the business' liquor license and entire inventory. Lowenstein said he will open a smaller restaurant called BTB Cantina upstairs. In addition to standard BTB fare, it will serve Mexican beers, margaritas and other drinks. The upstairs location will share the liquor license with the bar down- stairs. While Charley's will reopen downstairs next month, BTB Cantina wont open until August. "The upstairs is really the coup de grace," Low- enstein said of his plans. "It's gonna be awesome." See CHARLEY'S, Page 3 CITY COUNCIL Lease law under review City Council, MSA to hold forum to discuss ordinance By KATHERINE MITCHELL Daily Staff Reprter The Ann Arbor City Council approved a motion last night to have a committee review the ordi- nance thatprohibitslandlordsfrom showing or signing properties to prospective renters until 90 days after the current lease begins. The ordinance - passed last April - stipulates that the coun- cil must review the ordinance and recommend changes to it before its first meeting in April 2007. Council members Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3) and Christopher East- hope (D-Ward 5) have partnered with Michigan Student Assembly representatives on the City Coun- cil's student relations committee to review the ordinance. City Council will co-sponsor a public hearing with MSA onoMarch 28 at 7 p.m. in the Michigan Union to gather feedback about the ordi- nance from landlords and students. Greden said the committee has been reviewing the measure. On April 2, it will make recommenda- tions to the full council from infor- mation gathered from MSA and from the public hearing. The ordinance,which was fierce- ly opposed by landlords but sup- ported by MSA, effectively delayed lease signing until Dec. 1 for Sep- tember-to-September leases. Before its passage, supporters of the ordinance argued thatstudents interested in off-campus hous- ing. for the following year would return to campus in the fall and immediately hunt for properties. There is a loophole in the ordi- nance, though, that allows land- lords to show and sign properties if the current tenants sign a waiver saying they don't want to resignothe lease. Supporters said the immediate housing rush put a strain on fresh- men who wanted to move off cam- pus their sophomore year. The ordinance aimed to allow more time for students to research housing options, investigate prop- erties and settle into the new semester. The City Council originally passed the ordinance unanimous- ly. MSA VICE PRSDNILCNIAE DAAP: Sara Barnard. MAP: Mohammed Dar Our party isn't just about affirmative action, candidate says By DAVE MEKELBURG Daily News Editor Sarah Barnard, the Defend Affirmative Action Party's vice presidential candidate in Wednesday and Thursday's Michigan Student Assembly election, doesn't want you to be intimidated by her - or her party. "People think we take ourselves way too seriously," she said of DAAP. "I'm not as serious as people think Iam. Because of that, people are intimidated by me." The LSA senior said she's not the type of person who sits silently through her classes. She said it's her duty to represent a point-of-view she feels would channel the underrepresented minorities she finds absent from her academic life. "I think it's an obligation to speak up for the people not in the class," she said. Barnard wants to model herself after a strong female image that manifests itself in her favorite books and music. In music, there's no question S about who she loves - Corrine Bailey Rae, the strong-voiced British soul singer. Barnard said eh she's going to see Rae in concert, Vote t and Rae's music is one of Bar- open eoverni nard's ring tones. at mid In literature, Barnard fol- They wi lows that same image; one of 11:59 PN her recent favorites is Charlayne VisitI Hunter-Gault's autobiogra- www phy, "In My Place." In the book, Hunter-Gault recounts her experience as See BARNARD, Page 7 tuden lector tonight nfor stu iseet el night to ll be o M on TI http:/ rumici Junior lobbied for lease date ordinance By EMILY ANGELL Daily StaffReporter LSA junior Mohammad Dar 'It sometimes seems a little bit rent older than his Michigan Stu- dent Assembly counterparts. He aS eschews the black North Face . Polls jacket for a long, beige trench dent coat. His brisk, clipped speech tonight. and neatly-combed hair some- pen until times make him seem more like a hursday. senior statesman than a campus /vote. politico. K.edu Still, he's not all business. Dar, the Michigan Action Party's candidate for MSA vice president, is also president of Wolverine Soft, a University videogame club. Dar, who is running against Defend Affirmative Action Party candidate Sarah Barnard, said he has always viewed MSA as a way to improve the community. "There is nowhere else I can have-more of an impact and make life better for stu- dents than on MSA," he said. He said his track record is what won him the MAP vice presidential nomination. When Dar first ran for the position of MSA representative as a freshman in 2004, he ran as an independent and lost. Next semester, he ran with the Students 4 Michigan party and won a seat. Dar then spent three semesters as the co-chair of then-defunct International Student Affairs Commission. Dar has since revitalized the commission. He also spent two semesters as vice chair and then chair of the Executive Relations Commit- See DAR, Page 7 Tax help, pro bono 'U' law clinic seeks to help poor deal with IRS By CATHE SHUBERT For the Daily A woman taking care of a child whose father is in jail finds her- self in a dispute with the Inter- nal Revenue Service over a tax deduction for dependents, which would save her money and allow her to better care for the child. The child's mother is not in the picture, but the woman performs all the duties of a parent. Because she makes less than $30,000, she can't afford legal representation in order to fight for her deduc- tion. It's clients like these that the Law School hopes to help with the low-income taxpayer clinic it opened in January. April 15 is the deadline to file for federal taxes, and many find themselves unsure of how to tackle it or in need of legal assis- tance, which can be expensive. The clinic is designed to offer local, low-income clients legal representation for tax contro- versy cases. Tax-licensed attor- ney and Adjunct Law Prof. Nicole Appleberry supervises the six law students who run the clinic, which is funded by an IRS grant See COURT, Page 7 PRACTICE SHOT ANGELA CESERE/Daily School of Music Junior Amos Wolf, part of the cast of the musical 'Assassins', at Firing Line shooting range in Westland on Saturday morning. Director Ste- phen Sposito took the group there so the cast could feel what it is like to hold and fire an actual gun.Nineof the17 cast members in assassins fire propguns during the tshow. The guns used at the range were chosen based on similarities to those in the musical. TODAY'S HI:39 HAVEANEWSTIP? WEATHER LO: 42 Call 734-763-2459 ore-mail news@michgandaily.cor and let us know. ON THE DAILY BLOGS Davidson College goes loan free MICHIGANDAILY.COM/THEPODIUM INDEX NEWS...... 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