Ann Arbor, Michigan Ann Arbor .

Ann Arbor, Michigan Nickname(s): A2 ("A" Squared), A2 ("A"-two), Tree Town, The People's Republic of Ann Arbor Ann Arbor is positioned in Michigan Ann Arbor - Ann Arbor Ann Arbor is a town/city in the U.S.

State of Michigan and the governmental center of county of Washtenaw County. The 2010 census recorded its populace to be 113,934, making it the sixth biggest city in Michigan. The city's populace was estimated at 117,070 as of July 2015 by the U.S.

Enumeration Bureau. The Ann Arbor Metropolitan Travel Destination (MSA) includes all of Washtenaw County, which had a populace of 344,791 as of 2010.

The town/city is also part of the larger Detroit Ann Arbor Flint, MI Combined Travel Destination (CSA) with a populace of 5,318,744.

Ann Arbor was established in 1824, titled for wives of the village's framers and the stands of Bur Oak trees. The University of Michigan moved from Detroit to Ann Arbor in 1837, and the town/city interval at a rapid rate in the early to mid-20th century.

Ann Arbor became a focal point for political activism and anti-Vietnam War movement, as well as various student movements.

Ann Arbor is home to the University of Michigan, one of the foremost research universities in the United States.

The college shapes Ann Arbor's economy decidedly as it employs about 30,000 workers, including about 12,000 in the medical center.

Main article: History of Ann Arbor, Michigan Ann Arbor was established in 1824 by territory speculators John Allen and Elisha Walker Rumsey.

A view of Ann Arbor looking east toward Liberty and State streets, showing the Burton Memorial Tower, Michigan Theater, the former Borders bookstore No.

Ann Arbor became the seat of Washtenaw County in 1827, and was incorporated as a village in 1833. The Ann Arbor Land Company, a group of speculators, set aside 40 acres (16 ha) of undeveloped territory and offered it to the state of Michigan as the site of the state capital, but lost the bid to Lansing.

Since the university's establishment in the town/city in 1837, the histories of the University of Michigan and Ann Arbor have been closely linked. The town became a county-wide transit hub in 1839 with the arrival of the Michigan Central Railroad, and a north south stockyards connecting Ann Arbor to Toledo and other markets to the south was established in 1878. Throughout the 1840s and the 1850s pioneer continued to come to Ann Arbor.

While the earlier pioneer were primarily of British ancestry, the newer pioneer also consisted of Germans, Irish, and African-Americans. In 1851, Ann Arbor was chartered as a city, though the town/city showed a drop in populace during the Depression of 1873. It was not until the early 1880s that Ann Arbor again saw robust growth, with new immigrants coming from Greece, Italy, Russia, and Poland.

Ann Arbor saw increased expansion in manufacturing, especially in milling. Ann Arbor's Jewish improve also interval after the turn of the 20th century, and its first and earliest Jewish church, Beth Israel Congregation, was established in 1916. Ann Arbor also became a locus for left-wing activism and anti-Vietnam War movement, as well as the student movement.

The first primary meetings of the nationwide left-wing ground group Students for a Democratic Society took place in Ann Arbor in 1960; in 1965, the town/city was home to the first U.S.

Alongside these liberal and left-wing accomplishments, a small group of conservative establishments were born in Ann Arbor.

Following a 1956-vote, the town/city of East Ann Arbor consolidated with Ann Arbor to encompass the easterly sections of the city. In the past a several decades, Ann Arbor has grappled with the effects of sharply rising territory values, gentrification, and urban sprawl stretching into outlying countryside.

On 4 November 2003, voters allowed a greenbelt plan under which the town/city government bought evolution rights on agricultural parcels of territory adjoining to Ann Arbor to preserve them from widespread development. Since then, a vociferous small-town debate has hinged on how and whether to accommodate and guide evolution inside town/city limits. Ann Arbor persistently rates in the "top places to live" lists presented by various mainstream media outlets every year.

In 2008, it was ranked by CNNMoney.com 27th out of 100 "America's best small cities". And in the year 2010, Forbes listed Ann Arbor as one of the most liveable metros/cities in the United States of America. The Huron River runs through Ann Arbor.

Ann Arbor is about 35 miles (56 km) west of Detroit.

Ann Arbor Charter Township adjoins the city's north and east sides.

Ann Arbor is situated on the Huron River in a productive agricultural and fruit-growing region. The landscape of Ann Arbor consists of hills and valleys, with the terrain becoming steeper near the Huron River.

The altitude ranges from about 750 feet (230 m) along the Huron River to 1,015 feet (309 m) on the city's west side, near the intersection of Maple Road and Pauline Blvd. Generally, the west-central and northwestern parts of the town/city and U-M's North Campus are the highest parts of the city; the lowest parts are along the Huron River and in the southeast.

Ann Arbor Municipal Airport, which is south of the town/city at 42 13.38 N 83 44.74 W, has an altitude of 839 feet (256 m). Ann Arbor's "Tree Town" nickname stems from the dense forestation of its parks and residentiary areas.

The town/city contains more than 50,000 trees along its streets and an equal number in parks. In recent years, the emerald ash borer has finished many of the city's approximately 10,500 ash trees. The town/city contains 157 municipal parks ranging from small neighborhood green spots to large recreation areas.

It is on the city's east side, near the university's Central Campus. Located athwart the Huron River just beyond the university's North Campus is the university's Matthaei Botanical Gardens, which contains 300 acres of plant nurseries and a large tropical conservatory.

The Kerrytown Shops, Main Street Business District, the State Street Business District, and the South University Business District are commercial areas in downtown Ann Arbor.

Three commercial areas south of downtown include the areas near I-94 and Ann Arbor-Saline Road, Briarwood Mall, and the South Industrial area.

Other commercial areas include the Arborland/Washtenaw Avenue and Packard Road merchants on the east side, the Plymouth Road region in the northeast, and the Westgate/West Stadium areas on the west side. Downtown contains a mix of 19th- and early-20th-century structures and modern-style buildings, as well as a farmers' market in the Kerrytown district. The city's commercial districts are composed mostly of two- to four-story structures, although downtown and the region near Briarwood Mall contain a small number of high-rise buildings. Ann Arbor's residentiary neighborhoods contain architectural styles ranging from classic 19th-century and early-20th-century designs to ranch-style homes.

Tower Plaza, a 26-story condominium building positioned between the University of Michigan ground and downtown, is the tallest building in Ann Arbor. The 19th-century buildings and streetscape of the Old West Side neighborhood have been preserved virtually intact; in 1972, the precinct was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and it is further protected by town/city ordinances and a nonprofit preservation group. Ann Arbor horizon looking northeast from Michigan Stadium.

From left to right a several Ann Arbor landmarks may be seen: The Tower Plaza condominium building, the tallest building in Ann Arbor; the Burton Memorial Tower on the Central Campus of the University of Michigan, a clock fortress and carillon; the Michigan Union (flying a maize-and-blue flag); and the Central Power Plant, directed by the university.

Ann Arbor, Michigan Ann Arbor has a typically Midwestern humid continental climate (Koppen Dfa), which is influenced by the Great Lakes.

Climate data for Ann Arbor, Michigan (UMich, 1981 2010) Average snowy days ( 0.1 in) 14.7 11.4 7.6 2.5 0 0 0 0 0 0.5 4.5 12.1 53.2 In 2013, Ann Arbor had the second-largest improve of Japanese people in the state of Michigan, numbering 1,541; this figure trailed only that of Novi, which had 2,666 Japanese nationals. In addition, as of 2005, Ann Arbor has a small populace of Arab Americans, including a several students as well as small-town Lebanese and Palestinians. Ann Arbor Property Crime Statistics, 2004 The University of Michigan shapes Ann Arbor's economy decidedly .

High tech companies have positioned in the region since the 1930s, when International Radio Corporation introduced the first mass-produced AC/DC radio (the Kadette, in 1931) as well as the first pocket radio (the Kadette Jr., in 1933). The Argus camera company, originally a subsidiary of International Radio, produced cameras in Ann Arbor from 1936 to the 1960s.

Current firms include Arbor Networks (provider of Internet traffic engineering and security systems), Arbortext (provider of XML-based publishing software), JSTOR (the digital scholarly journal archive), Media - Span (provider of software and online services for the media industries), Truven Health Analytics, and Pro - Quest, which includes UMI. Ann Arbor Terminals produced a video-display terminal called the Ann Arbor Ambassador amid the 1980s. Barracuda Networks, which provides networking, security, and storage products based on network appliances and cloud services, opened an engineering office in Ann Arbor in 2008 on Depot St. and recently announced it will move downtown to occupy the building previously used as the Borders headquarters. Ann Arbor is the home to Internet2 and the Merit Network, a not-for-profit research and education computer network.

Both are positioned in the South State Commons 2 building on South State Street, which once homed the Michigan Information Technology Center Foundation. The town/city is also home to the command posts of Google's Ad - Words program the company's major revenue stream. The recent surge in companies operating in Ann Arbor has led to a decline in its office and flex space vacancy rates.

Tower Plaza, Ann Arbor's tallest building Pfizer, once the city's second biggest employer, directed a large pharmaceutical research facility on the northeast side of Ann Arbor.

On 22 January 2007, Pfizer announced it would close operations in Ann Arbor by the end of 2008. The facility was previously directed by Warner-Lambert and, before that, Parke-Davis.

In December 2008, the University of Michigan Board of Regents allowed the purchase of the facilities, and the college anticipates hiring 2,000 researchers and staff amid the next 10 years. The town/city is the home of other research and engineering centers, including those of Lotus Engineering, General Dynamics and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Other research and development offices sited in the town/city are the United States Environmental Protection Agency's National Vehicle and Fuel Emissions Laboratory and the Toyota Technical Center. The town/city is also home to National Sanitation Foundation International (NSF International), the nonprofit non-governmental organization that develops generally accepted standards for a range of enhance health related industries and subject areas. Borders Books, started in Ann Arbor, was opened by brothers Tom and Louis Borders in 1971 with a stock of used books.

The Borders chain was based in the city, as was its flagship store until it closed in September 2011. Domino's Pizza's command posts is near Ann Arbor on Domino's Farms, a 271-acre (110 ha) Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired complex just northeast of the city. Another Ann Arbor-based business is Zingerman's Delicatessen, which serves sandwiches and has advanced businesses under a range of brand names.

Zingerman's has grown into a family of companies which offers a range of products (bake shop, mail order, creamery, coffee) and services (business education). Flint Ink Corp., another Ann Arbor-based company, was the world's biggest privately held ink manufacturer until it was acquired by Stuttgart-based XSYS Print Solutions in October 2005. Avfuel, a global supplier of aviation fuels and services, is also headquartered in Ann Arbor. Aastrom Biosciences, a publicly interchanged business that develops stem cell treatments for cardiovascular diseases, is headquartered in Ann Arbor. Many cooperative enterprises were established in the city; among those that remain are the People's Food Co-op and the Inter-Cooperative Council at the University of Michigan, a student housing cooperative established in 1937. There are also three cohousing communities Sunward, Great Oak, and Touchstone positioned immediately to the west of the town/city limits. Main article: Culture in Ann Arbor, Michigan Since 2001 Shakespeare in the Arb has presented one play by Shakespeare each June, in a large park near downtown. Regional and small-town performing arts groups not associated with the college include the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre, the Arbor Opera Theater, the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra, the Ann Arbor Ballet Theater, the Ann Arbor Civic Ballet (established in 1954 as Michigan's first chartered ballet company), The Ark, and Performance Network Theatre. Another unique piece of creative expression in Ann Arbor is the fairy doors.

The Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum is positioned in a renovated and period historic downtown fire station.

Multiple art arcades exist in the city, prominently in the downtown region and around the University of Michigan campus.

Aside from a large restaurant scene in the Main Street, South State Street, and South University Avenue areas, Ann Arbor rates first among U.S.

Cities in the number of booksellers and books sold per capita. The Ann Arbor District Library maintains four branch outlets in addition to its chief downtown building.

Several annual affairs many of them centered on performing and visual arts draw visitors to Ann Arbor.

One such event is the Ann Arbor Art Fairs, a set of four concurrent juried fairs held on downtown streets.

Scheduled on Thursday through Sunday of the third week of July, the fairs draw upward of half a million visitors. Another is the Ann Arbor Film Festival, held amid the third week of March, which receives more than 2,500 submissions annually from more than 40 countries and serves as one of a handful of Academy Award qualifying celebrations in the United States. Ann Arbor has a long history of openness to marijuana, given Ann Arbor's decriminalization of cannabis, the large number of medical marijuana dispensaries in the town/city (one dispensary, called People's Co-op, was directly athwart the street from Michigan Stadium until zoning forced it to move one mile to the west), the large number of pro-marijuana residents, and the annual Hash Bash: an event that is held on the first Saturday of April.

Until (at least) the prosperous passage of Michigan's medical marijuana law, the event had arguably strayed from its initial intent, although for years, a number of attendees have received serious legal responses due to marijuana use on University of Michigan property, which does not fall under the city's progressive and compassionate ticketing program. Ann Arbor is a primary scene of college sports, most prominently at the University of Michigan, a member of the Big Ten Conference.

Several well-known college sports facilities exist in the city, including Michigan Stadium, the biggest American football stadium in the world. The stadium was instead of in 1927 and cost more than $950,000 to build.

Ann Arbor is represented in the NPSL by semi-pro soccer team AFC Ann Arbor, a club established in 2014 who call themselves The Mighty Oak.

A person from Ann Arbor is called an "Ann Arborite", and many long-time inhabitants call themselves "townies".

The town/city itself is often called "A " ("A-squared") or "A2" ("A two") or "AA", "The Deuce" (mainly by Chicagoans), and "Tree Town". With tongue-in-cheek reference to the city's liberal political leanings, some occasionally refer to Ann Arbor as "The People's Republic of Ann Arbor" or "25 square miles surrounded by reality", the latter phrase being adapted from Wisconsin Governor Lee Dreyfus's description of Madison, Wisconsin.

In A Prairie Home Companion broadcast from Ann Arbor, Garrison Keillor described Ann Arbor as "a town/city where citizens discuss socialism, but only in the fanciest restaurants." Ann Arbor sometimes appears on citation indexes as an author, freshwater a location, often with the academic degree MI, a misunderstanding of the abbreviation for Michigan. Ann Arbor has turn into increasingly gentrified in recent years.

See also: List of mayors of Ann Arbor, Michigan Ann Arbor has a council-manager form of government.

The current mayor of Ann Arbor is Christopher Taylor, a Democrat who was propel as mayor in 2014. Day-to-day town/city operations are managed by a town/city administrator chosen by the town/city council. In 1960, Ann Arbor voters allowed a $2.3 million bond copy to build the current town/city hall, which was designed by architect Alden B.

Ann Arbor is part of Michigan's 12th congressional district, represented in Congress by Representative Debbie Dingell, a Democrat.

On the state level, the town/city is part of the 18th precinct in the Michigan Senate, represented by Democrat Rebekah Warren.

In the Michigan House of Representatives, representation is split between the 55th precinct (northern Ann Arbor, part of Ann Arbor Township, and other encircling areas, represented by Democrat Adam Zemke), the 53rd precinct (most of downtown and the southern half of the city, represented by Democrat Jeff Irwin) and the 52nd precinct (southwestern areas outside Ann Arbor proper and Washtenaw County, represented by Democrat Gretchen Driskell). As the governmental center of county of Washtenaw County, the Washtenaw County Trial Court (22nd Circuit Court) is positioned in Ann Arbor at the Washtenaw County Courthouse on Main Street.

Ann Arbor also has a small-town state precinct court (15th District Court), which serves only the City of Ann Arbor.

The Ann Arbor Federal Building (attached to a postal service) on Liberty Street serves as one of the courthouses for the U.S.

Voters allowed charter amendments that have lessened the penalties for possession of marijuana (1974), and that aim to protect access to abortion in the town/city should it ever turn into illegal in the State of Michigan (1990). In 1974, Kathy Kozachenko's victory in an Ann Arbor city-council race made her the country's first openly homosexual candidate to win enhance office. In 1975, Ann Arbor became the first U.S.

Adopted through a ballot initiative sponsored by the small-town Human Rights Party, which feared a splintering of the liberal vote, the process was repealed in 1976 after use in only one election. As of May 2016, Democrats hold the mayorship and nine out of the ten council seats. Nationally, Ann Arbor is positioned in Michigan's 12th congressional district, represented by Democrat Debbie Dingell.

In 2015, Ann Arbor was ranked 11th safest among metros/cities in Michigan with a populace of over 50,000. It ranked safer than metros/cities such as Royal Oak, Livonia, Canton and Clinton Township.

The level of most crimes in Ann Arbor has declined decidedly in the past 20 years.

Ann Arbor's crime rate was below the nationwide average in 2000.

Public schools are part of the Ann Arbor Public Schools (AAPS) district.

In September 2008, 16,539 students had been enrolled in the Ann Arbor Public Schools.

There were 21 elementary schools, five middle schools (Forsythe, Slauson, Tappan, Scarlett, and Clague) three traditional high schools (Pioneer, Huron, and Skyline), and three alternative high schools (Community High, Stone School, and Roberto Clemente) in the district. The precinct also operates a K-8 open school program, Ann Arbor Open School, out of the former Mack School.

Ann Arbor Public Schools also operates a preschool and family center, with programs for at-risk infants and kids before kindergarten.

Ann Arbor is home to a several private schools, including the Rudolf Steiner School of Ann Arbor, Clonlara School, Michigan Islamic Academy, and Greenhills School, a prep school.

The University of Michigan dominates the town/city of Ann Arbor, providing the town/city with its distinct ive college-town character. Other small-town universities and universities include Concordia University Ann Arbor, a Lutheran liberal-arts institution; a ground of the University of Phoenix; and Cleary University, a private company school.

Washtenaw Community College is positioned in neighboring Ann Arbor Township.

In 2000, the Ave Maria School of Law, a Roman Catholic law school established by Domino's Pizza founder Tom Monaghan, opened in northeastern Ann Arbor, but the school moved to Ave Maria, Florida in 2009, and the Thomas M.

The Ann Arbor News, owned by the Michigan-based Booth Newspapers chain, is the primary daily journal serving Ann Arbor and the rest of Washtenaw County.

Another Ann Arbor-based printed announcement that has ceased manufacturing was the Ann Arbor Paper, a no-charge monthly. Ann Arbor has been said to be the first momentous city to lose its only daily paper. The Ann Arbor Chronicle, an online newspaper, veiled small-town news, including meetings of the library board, county commission, and DDA until September 3, 2014. Current publications in the town/city include the Ann Arbor Journal (A2 Journal), a weekly improve newspaper; the Ann Arbor Observer, a no-charge monthly small-town magazine; and Current, a no-charge entertainment-focused alt-weekly. The Ann Arbor Business Review covers small-town business in the area.

Car and Driver periodical and Automobile Magazine are also based in Ann Arbor.

The University of Michigan is served by many student publications, including the autonomous Michigan Daily student newspaper, which reports on local, state, and county-wide issues in addition to ground news. Four primary AM airways broadcasts based in or near Ann Arbor are WAAM 1600, a conservative news and talk station; WLBY 1290, a company news and talk station; WDEO 990, Catholic radio; and WTKA 1050, which is primarily a sports station. The city's FM stations include NPR partner WUOM 91.7; nation station WWWW 102.9; and adult-alternative station WQKL 107.1.

Freeform station WCBN-FM 88.3 is a small-town improve radio/college airways broadcast directed by the students of the University of Michigan featuring noncommercial, eclectic music and public-affairs programming. The town/city is also served by enhance and commercial radio broadcasters in Ypsilanti, the Lansing/Jackson area, Detroit, Windsor, and Toledo. Ann Arbor is part of the Detroit tv market.

WHTV channel 18, a My - Network - TV-affiliated station for the Lansing market, broadcasts from a transmitter in Lyndon Township, west of Ann Arbor.

Community Television Network (CTN) is a city-provided cable tv channel with manufacturing facilities open to town/city residents and nonprofit organizations. Detroit and Toledo-area radio and tv stations also serve Ann Arbor, and stations from Lansing and Windsor, Ontario, can be seen in parts of the area. The University of Michigan Medical Center, the only teaching hospital in the city, took the number 1 slot in U.S.

News & World Report for best hospital in the state of Michigan, as of 2015. The University of Michigan Health System (UMHS) includes University Hospital, C.S.

The area's other primary medical centers include a large facility directed by the Department of Veterans Affairs in Ann Arbor, and Saint Joseph Mercy Hospital in close-by Superior Township. The city's water department also operates four dams along the Huron River, two of which furnish hydroelectric power. The town/city also offers waste management services, with Recycle Ann Arbor handling recycling service. Other utilities are provided by private entities.

The streets in downtown Ann Arbor conform to a grid pattern, though this pattern is less common in the encircling areas.

Highway 23 (US 23), which primarily runs along the easterly edge of Ann Arbor; and M-14, which runs along the northern edge of the city.

Several of the primary surface arteries lead to the I-94/M-14 interchange in the west, US 23 in the east, and the city's southern areas. The town/city also has a fitness of bike routes and paths and includes the nearly complete Washtenaw County Border-to-Border Trail. The Ann Arbor Area Transportation Authority (AAATA), which brands itself as "The Ride", operates enhance bus services throughout the town/city and close-by Ypsilanti.

Since April 2012, route 787 (the "Air - Ride") joins to Detroit Metro Airport a dozen times a day. There are also limited-stop bus services between Ann Arbor and Chelsea as well as Canton.

Ann Arbor Municipal Airport is a small, city-run general aviation airport positioned south of I-94.

Detroit Metropolitan Airport, the area's large global airport, is about 25 miles (40 km) east of the city, in Romulus. Willow Run Airport east of the town/city near Ypsilanti serves freight, corporate, and general aviation clients. The town/city was a primary rail hub, prominently for freight traffic between Toledo and ports north of Chicago, Illinois, from 1878 to 1982; however, the Ann Arbor Railroad also provided passenger service from 1878 to 1950. The town/city was served by the Michigan Central Railroad starting in 1837.

The Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti Street Railway, Michigan's first interurban, served the town/city from 1891 to 1929. Amtrak, which provides service to the town/city at the Ann Arbor Train Station, operates the Wolverine train between Chicago and Pontiac, via Detroit.

Ann Arbor has seven sister cities: The schools in Ann Arbor and Hikone have regular exchanges. Ann Arbor staging List of citizens from Ann Arbor a b "Ann Arbor".

Population of Michigan Cities, Villages, Townships, and Remainders of Townships.

"Quick - Facts: Ann Arbor city, Michigan".

"Ann Arbor: Introduction".

Michigan State Historical Society, Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society (1964).

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824 1974".

Ann Arbor District Library.

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824 1974".

Ann Arbor District Library.

State of Michigan.

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824 1974".

Ann Arbor District Library.

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824 1974".

Ann Arbor District Library.

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor: 1824 1974".

Ann Arbor District Library.

"The Building of a New Left Conglomerate in the City of Ann Arbor: VOICE, Action Movement and the Human Rights Party (1965 1975)" (PDF).

"Inside the Eastside: History of East Ann Arbor, Michigan (MI)".

"Ann Arbor Parks and Greenbelt Proposal".

Friends of Ann Arbor Open Space.

"Ann Arbor seeks grants for greenbelt land".

The Ann Arbor News.

Ann Arbor.

Ann Arbor News.

"KARB Ann Arbor Municipal Airport".

Ann Arbor Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau.

The Ann Arbor News.

Ann Arbor City Government.

Ann Arbor City Government.

"Ann Arbor Farmers' Market".

Ann Arbor City Government.

Ann Arbor City Government.

"Tower Plaza, Ann Arbor".

"Station Name: MI ANN ARBOR U OF MICH".

Pictorial History of Ann Arbor.

Ann Arbor District Library.

"Ann Arbor (city), Michigan".

"Ann Arbor city, Michigan fact sheet".

"Ann Arbor city, Michigan, 2006 2008 American Community Survey 3-Year Estimates".

"Ann Arbor, MI".

"Michigan Information Technology Center dissolving after Ann Arbor nonprofit lost $4.6 - M over 3 years".

"Swisher Commercial's Annual Ann Arbor Office/Flex Space Vacancy Report-2012".

The Ann Arbor News.

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Plans Ann Arbor HQ expansion".

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"Ann Arbor Civic Ballet".

Sylvia Studio of Dance Ann Arbor Civic Ballet.

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"Ann Arbor Guide 2003 4".

Ann Arbor Street Art Fair.

Ann Arbor Film Festival.

"40 years of Hash Bash: Marijuana festival started in 1972 in Ann Arbor stands test of time".

"University of Michigan Athletics Facilities".

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Booth Newspapers The Ann Arbor News.

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"Charter for the City of Ann Arbor, Michigan" (PDF).

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"Guy Larcom's name peeled from exterior of town/city hall, but building will remain titled in his honor".

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The other areas of Washtenaw County are served by other precinct courts: District 14-B court serves the Charter Township of Ypsilanti, District 14-A, based in the City of Ypsilanti, serves all other areas of Washtenaw County.

"The Ugliest Building in Ann Arbor? | Ann Arbor District Library".

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Our International Visitor Leadership Program coordinator also serves as the University of Michigan's official representative to the City of Ann Arbor's Sister City Program, which manages relationships with six sister cities: Tubingen, Germany; Hikone, Japan; Dakar, Senegal; Juigalpa, Nicaragua; Peterborough, Canada; and Belize City, Belize.

Ann Arbor City Council Minutes (2003-11-06).

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Ann Arbor, Michigan Ann Arbor Public Schools Alumni Association Ann Arbor Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau Arbor - Wiki A wiki for Ann Arbor Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, Michigan

Categories:
Populated places established in 1824 - Ann Arbor, Michigan - Academic enclaves - Cities in Michigan - County seats in Michigan - Cities in Washtenaw County, Michigan - Metro Detroit - 1824 establishments in Michigan Territory - University suburbs in the United States