e fid gan Baijj Ann Arbor, Michigan p THE SATELLITE CAMPUSES Enrollment at U-M Flint Dearborn at all-time high Campuses add new programs, on-campus housing in effort to lose commuter-school image ByKELLY FRASER Daily News Editor In recent years, the University's satellite cam- puses in Flint and Dearborn have tried to rein- vent their commuter-college images by expanding recruitingefforts,offeringnew academic programs and developing on-campus housing options. And with both campuses reporting record freshman class sizes this year, the effort seems to be paying off. Enrollment for the freshman class at the Uni- versity of Michigan-Flint has surged by almost 50 percent this year. According to estimates from a 10-day head count, there are 909 first-year stu- dents enrolled this fall, a 45.2 percent increase from last year's class of 626 students. The surge in numbers bumped up the campus's overall enrollment by about 5.5 percent. Freshman enrollment at the University of Mich- igan-Dearborn is up about 7 percent and 3 percent overall, according to estimates from Dearborn See CAMPUSES, Page 7 SATELLITE GROWTH Freshman enrollment at both of the University's satellite campuses climbed sharply this year. U-M FLINT FRESHMAN CLASS SIZE,2004-2008 1000 500 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 U-M DEARBORN FRESHMAN CLASS SIZE, 2004-2008 1000 500_ 0 ' Tuesday, September 16, 2008 michigandaily.com FROM CAPITAL MARKETS TO THE JOB MARKfT Wall Street shake-up jolts student career plans After Lehman Brothers collapse yesterday, some students scrambling for another job Ross School of Business MBA student Vlad Negrut studied in the school's newly unveiled building yesterday. Business schools building unvebled By LINDY STEVENS C Daily StaffReporter T Across campus yesterday, R some aspiring investment bank- t ers lost their dream jobs beforeV they even began. The prospect t of post-graduation employment with financial giant Lehman Brothers dissolved for them when the investment bank filed for bankruptcy early Monday. Lehman's collapse is only the latest addition to the turmoil that has gripped the American financial industry over the past. year. left many business-mind- ed students worried about their futures. Merrill Lynch announced yesterday it would sell itself to Bank of America for $50 billion, effectively spelling the end of the venerable brokerage. And in March, Bear Stearns, another Wall Street mainstay, accepted an offer from JPMorgan Chase- to be sold for $10 a share - about a tenth of what it once was worth less than a year ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Aver- age yesterday posted its sharpest decline since the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. For - some business-bound University students, includ- ing at least four undergraduates and four graduate students who interned at Lehman this summer, the nosedive in the American financial markets means they're plunging into one of the worst Wall Street job markets in recent history. It also means that those for- mer Lehman interns can't return to the Manhattan-based bank where they often put in upwards of 90 hours a week, all in hopes of securing a coveted job offer. Lehman was hit hard by the DIMINISHING RETURNS Though investment banking drew more Ross School of Business undergraduates han any other financial field last year, Wall Street's struggles might change hat. Students get first taste of $145-million building, slated to open late this year By KYLE SWANSON Daily StaffReporter Stephen M. Ross School of Business stu- dents, faculty and staff got their first glimpse of the school's new $145-million new home yesterday afternoon. The school opened up a small section of the building, which included a student lounge, two conference areas and a medita- tion room. Much of the funding for the new building comes from a $100 million donation from real estate developer and business school alum Stephen M. Ross in 2004. The gift, of which $75 million was used in the con- struction project, is the largestin University history and is the largest ever given to a busi- ness school in the United States. Since the spring of2006, when the school's old building was torn down to make room for the new facility, Business school faculty and students have been using classroom space in Mason Hall and other building around cam- pus. Classes in the new building are slated to begin next semester. The 270,000-square-foot building will include twelve classrooms with stadium seating, an auditorium, faculty offices, offic- es for advisers and tutors, a fitness center, space for team based learning projects and a food court. See BUSINESS, Page 7 KEY °Investment bankingt-49.7% Inoestment management - 8.9% Corporatefinance - 22.7% Salestrading -9.7% Other finance - 8.7% OUCE:iRnOSSCHOOL OF BUSINESS aftershocks of a decline in U.S. home prices that startedlastyear. That led to defaults on loans and caused the value of assets backed by mortgages to plummet. Those woes spread throughoutthe glob- al financial system, causing firms like Lehman to post massive loss- es and writedowns on assets. Yesterday morning, the firm filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Though it's in talks to sell parts of its business and most employees haven't officially been" laid off, one thing is clear: Leh- man Brothers will soon cease to exist in any recognizable form. Along with the thousands of former Lehman employees now looking for work are the firm's See WALL STREET, Page 3 2004 2005 2( Note: Theenrolmentfiguresfor2008and Dearborn in 2006 are based on estimates. SOURCE:UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LSA THEME SEMESTER * Keynote speaker urges students to live 'green' For campus sororities, this week's a rush Former CEO calls for increased focus on environment By ELAINE LAFAY Daily StaffReporter To kick off the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts's Fall 2008 "Energy Futures" theme semester, the former CEO of Physicians for Social Respon- sibility stressed yesterday that environmental issues needed to figure more prominently in today's political discourse. In a lecture titled "Hope for a Heated Planet," Robert Musil told an audience of about 200 at the Rackham Graduate School auditorium that grassroots mobi- lization and individual action were necessary to curb climate change. Noting that environmental activism "doesn't necessarily make the big national media," he encouraged grassroots student campaigns, claiming activism will eventually make its way up the ranks to powerful legislators. He said students should pres- sure University President Mary Sue Coleman to sign the Presi- dents Climate Commitment, a national coalition of 540 presi- dents of colleges and universities to make their campuses carbon neutral. "That's the kind of thing that should be a goal here at Michi- gan," he said. He also encouraged students See KEYNOTE, Page 7 Prospective sisters visit all 15 Pan-Hel houses to find a fit By JILLIAN BERMAN Daily StaffReporter Don't be alarmed by any loud chanting or singing coming from large houses near campus this week - It's just the start of rush. During the Panhellenic Associa- tion's sorority recruitment, usually called "rush," University students participate in events that let them learn about the houses in four rounds. "Rushes" rank their top choices for a house throughout the process, while sisters in the house simultaneously rank the rushes they think would best fit in the sorority. Sorority recruitment may seem like a song and dance to onlookers, but to both sisters and rushes, the process can be grueling. "I had no idea what a huge pro- duction it was," said LSA freshman Maya Massing-Schaffer, who was amongthe groups of students wait- ing outside the sorority houses on Hill Street last night. She also walked through the pouring rain on Sunday to meet the sisteres and be wooed by the elabo- rate decorations and boisterous singing offered at each house. Sunday and last night comprised the first round of the rush process. Rushes are divided into groups and as they approach a house - they visit all 15 for the first set - the sis- ters greet them with shouting and singing. Each visitor is then paired with a sister so they can getto know See RUSH, Page 3 A group of students gathered outside Alpha Delta Pi for Fall Rush last night. The sorority's sisters chanted and cheered for several minutes before inviting them in. TOMORROW'S HI: 67 WEATHER LO 47 GOT A NEWS TIP? 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