LOCAL/S TATE chgan Daily - Friday. October 22, 1999 - 3 Martha Cook esident finds n in garbage A student in Martha Cook Residence all reported seeing a man hiding in a arbage closet on the third floor of the uilding early Tuesday morning, accord- ng to Department of Public Safety eports. The resident said that the man ad a "foul odor" DPS officers investigated on charges f unlawful entry, reports state. n urinates rom second floor arking structure A male subject was seen urinating ff JTe edge of the second level of the hurch Street Parking Structure late onday evening, DPS reports state. No report was filed but DPS officers e*oed a description of the man from witness. Officers did not know if the nan uinated on any passersby. ictim is hit in he head by door A 20-year-old male subject was hit n the face by a front door Wednesday norning at the School of Dentistry, 3 reports state, e subject walked to University -ealth Ser ice by himself after being reated by the Ann Arbor Fire )epartment for a cut on the head. uspect steals ough drops at edical library jfemale subject reported a pack of o drops stolen from her desk draw- ,r at the Taubman Medical Library 'ometitne between Monday night and fuesday morning, DPS reports state. There are no suspects in the incident. report was filed. an seen running aked through Arb male subject was seen running hrough Nichols Arboretum on ednesday morning prior to exposing imself, DPS reports state A witness said the suspect was about i-feet tall and wearing gray running horts. uspect borrows iversity vehicle An unknown subject used a psychol- gy department vehicle without per- nission of the department Tuesday ight,.according to DPS reports. The car was one of the vehicles pro- ided by the department to help stu- ents transport themselves to career lacement activities, but the suspect eportedly drove the car for an addi- ional 138 miles before the vehicle and h eys were returned. 3S reported that only a handful of -tudents have access to the vehicle's eys, which are kept in a locked box. Patient allegedly teals from doctor A subject at the University Hospitals eported that a hospital patient alleged- yv stole her electronic organizer, DPS r ' s state. e subject said she left the patient unattended Monday afternoon, and returned to find both the patient and her organizer missing. tudents, delivery man settle dispute DPS officers met Monday evening with subjects at Bursley Residence Hall accused of not paying a delivery pgn for a delivery made the previous evening. The money was paid after the meeting with DPS officers, DPS reports state. - Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Dave Enders. Ave Maria to open temporay campus By Jon Zemke Daily Staff Reporter Ave Maria Law School, the next institution with plans to move into Ann Arbor, expects to open its temporary campus on Aug. 28, 2000, pending, clearance from the Ann Arbor Planning Commission. The temporary facility formerly housed the National Sanitation Foundation and is zoned as a research facility, which could pose problems for the infant school. With close to 400 serious inquires, Ave Maria Dean Bernard Debranski said the school has already begun the process of evaluating it first incoming class of students. Ave Maria officials plan to matriculate 40 to 50 students in its first semester. "We've accepted students," Debranski said. "We've had slight more than 30 applications. We've accepted some students and we've turned some down." Despite its size, Ave Maria could create some competition for the University's Law School "I am not sure it's going to have an ima,.t~ said Ann Arbor City Council member Joe pi (R-Ward 1I). "Many law students come from out- side the Ann Arbor area, so I don't see it hastig any impact" The school plans to open its temporar} campus on the northwest corner of Plymouth and (rcen roads. Under the land's original zoning Ave Mra officials thought they would be able to set up the law school. But if the land is zoned for "oil ice use with a special use exemption" the temporary am- pus can be used. The planning commission tabled the request totr rezoning Tuesday because Orchard ills and Maplewood neighborhood groups argued againsl the rezoning Debranski said concerns raised a the meeting included the use of the rezoned propetny after Ave Maria moves to its permanent campus. "I think there is a general reluctance to do rezoning," Debranski said. "The local neigh- borhood organization has a representatixe the e C ns agcinst the ronig tl.h t oee c pilemenluat about oui pi esenc A\ve Mlaria is a not-lor-proft a-organiiaion bac ked b ounOder and former char f Domino's iias, Thomas Monaghan, Vhe la a hool' mission includes als oeiting the teachings of law and the Catholc fa ith. De brSnski sid. "Certainly we plan to teach the relationship between law and morahtv' Debr'anski said. "I he iegration of faith and reason x ill be a flandamlental part of the context out ofxxhich we ofle. 'The philo- ',phkal questions w ill alwa sbe an important pani of the prognmn and for us to otiier it out of the Catholic intellectual tradition.' In addition to ac,:epting students A:e Mana otlwials haxe also finished the school's curriculum nd ha been submited to the Michiga Statc Board of E ducation he state requires that six "clt memers b on stal in order for a school to receixe aecredia- on Ae Maa has recruited fi efacul members and plans on hax og sexen or eight professors, Debranski said Lonaghan hired Debranski as the frst dean of\Axe Maria ie ired mc a( the dean to put the place togeth- er and run it aod he is lemn me do that, Debrnskt said 'ie essentialy has put the task in But the most notable o Axe \ana's newest staff is Robert Bork ork 'i former nominee for, the Supreme Court, plns on teaching in Ann Arbor while maintining his residency i Washington D.C. Bork "and I are going to team teach a course called moral foundation of lx' Debranski said. The school wi! not receive the same tax breaks and as a state funded schoof because even though it is a notfor-profit-organiza- tion "This is not a ste mntution like Michigan is," pton said. Beaus it's not a state institution t wouldnt enjo the same tax treatment. 's a pri- xate i ""to " ect to the same taxes as any prixate insution Jazzin it up Survey looks at students preferences in workforce By Undsey Alpert er year students spend at the Unixersity brings them one step closer to choosing their fii'st emplox - er and sometimes the choices can seem endless in a economy with loxx unemployment and a multi- tude of job openings for college-educated adults. To determine what students find iost atractive in a first'me emplover. Unixersum. a New ork- based research and consulting firm created The American Undergiaduate Surney 1999. The survey examined what students described as the most ideal employers among engineering, com- puter science and business students. The survey of more than 3.000 students from colleges . nationwide, including the University, placed Microsoft, Walt Disney and PricewaterhouseCoopers as the top employers among computer science, engineering and busi- ness students respectively. Business senior Kelley Ratza, spokesperson for the professional fraternity Delta Sigma Pi said she was not surprised about the survey findings. "I interned at Pricewaterhousecoopers this past summer" she said. "There are a lot of young people employed there and the firm seems to do a lot of recruiting." What may seem an unusual contender in the engi- neering category, Walt Disney, took top honors in the survey. Representatives at Walt Disney said engineers are employed to create rides for all of the Disney amuse- ment parks. Walt Disney officials said Disney probably placed well in the survey because it provides innovation in creating rides and cutting-edge technology. Among the characteristics students seek in an employer include the ability to provide a future career reference, which nearly 29 percent of sur- veyed students ranked as most important. According to the survey, students also want to be surrounded by inspiring colleagues and receive competitix e compensat ion 'Most people are looking for a company that fits them." Ratza said. In terms of compensation, students in the survey expect to receive between 540,000 to $50,000 for their starting salaries. Signing bonuses, a sum of money given to students who sign a contract to work for the company, have become common even among undergraduate students, and nearly 40 percent of sur- vey participants said they expect to receive a bonus. Signing bonuses are on the rise as competition for undergraduate students becomes more intense. "Traditional companies have to figure out how to compete against the more (up-and-coming) compa- nies. They really have to look out for and measure up to what today's start-ups are offering students in terms of development opportunities, compensation and corporate culture," Country Manager U.S.A. spokesperson Michelle Rea said. The survey also found that 82 percent of respon- dents placed having fun at work as their top priority, followed by ongoing opportunities for education, short daily commutes and flexible working hours. "Today's students are looking instead at their work-life situation as a whole, meaning that work in itself is an important contributor to their overall quality of life," Rea said. Music sophomore Randy Aaronson disagrees with this finding. "I don't really care what the job sit- uation is like. I just want to get a job. KIMITSU YOGACHI/Day Da Killer Bees, a jazz ensemble comprised of music students, performs at the Jazz Combos, which invited University students who perform in jazz bands to perform at Rackham Auditorium last night. Tribe seeks injunction to stop Detroit casinos DETROIT (AP) - An Upper Peninsula American Indian tribe filed for a federal injunction yesterday to halt Detroit's planned casinos until its law- suit challenging the city's process for choosing three casino developers is decided. The Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians called the injunction sought in U.S. District Court in Grand Rapids "necessary because (the tribe) continues to suffer irrepara- ble harm" by Detroit's foray into gam- ing. At issue is whether Mayor Dennis Archer's giving preferential status to the Atwater Casino Group - partner- ing with Mandalay Resort Group in the MotorCity Casino - and to Greektown Casino LLC interfered with the rights of other groups that vied for a casino. No hearing dates for the injunction request or the lawsuit have been set, tribe spokesperson Robert Kolt said. Archer spokesperson Greg Bowens said the tribe's injunction request was expected and called it "a lot of hogwash" "We believe that the city is on solid ground," he said. In April, a federal appeals court in Cincinnati reinstated the tribe's lawsuit - filed in February 1997 - and remanded it for a rehearing by U.S. District Judge Robert Holmes Bell, who had dismissed the suit last year. It alleges the bidding process for casinos violated the First Amendment and ual-protection rights of the tribe, which runs a casino near Watersmeet in Gogebic County just north of the Wisconsin border. "The intention of our lawsuit was to guarantee a fair and open licensing process for everyone," Richard Williams, the tribe's spokesperson, said in a statement yesterday. "And this pre- liminary injunction will stop the casi- no-licensing process until the case is resolved." MGM Grand Inc. opened its new temporary Detroit casino in July. The temporary MotorCity Casino - the focus of a Nov. 18 public hearing by the Michigan Gaming Control Board -- could be christened here as early as December. And planners of the Greektown Casino hope to open that site early next year. State regulators still are investigat- ing that casino group's backgrounds and could hold a public hearing some- time between January and March, said Nelson Westrin, the gaming board's executive director. Under a ballot measure passed statewide in 1996, the Greektown group and then-Atwater/Circus Circus were granted preferences. Detroit vot- ers had backed their plans in a 1994 ref- erendum. FRIDAY J "Down the Pikunikku What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend I Drain - Hadashi No ." Soonsored by the Auditorium C, 7-9 p.M- J "Charity Bowl Flag Football Tournament for the Children's Leukemia Society of Michigan," SERVICES Q Campus Information Centers, 764- INFO. info@umich.edu, and i