0 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NEWS BRIEFS CHICAGO Ike to blame for Midwest flooding Residents of the Midwest faced blackouts affecting more than 2 million homes and businesses and flooded homes yesterday after a weekend of devastating weather caused by the remnants of Hurri- cane Ike. The violent weather in the Mid- west, the latest in a brutal sum- mer that has slammed parts of the region with severe flooding, brought Ike's total death toll to at least 34 in nine states from the Gulf Coast to the Ohio Valley. As Ike faded and headed off toward the northeast, combining with a weather system that arrived from the west, it dumped as much as 6 to 8 inches of rain on parts of Indiana, Illinois and Missouri. It spawned a tornado in Arkansas that damaged several buildings, and delivered hurricane-force wind to Ohio, temporarily shut- ting down Cincinnati's main air-. port during the weekend. Missouri had widespread flooding, and high water on the Mississippi River was expected to close a riverfront street later this week in front of St. Louis' famed Gateway Arch. BAGHDAD Gates, commander disagree over troop withdrawal in Iraq Defense Secretary Robert Gates said yesterday he foresees a shrinking U.S. combat role in Iraq in coming months, while the No. 2 U.S. commander here cautioned that it would be a mistake to push the U.S.-trained Iraqi army and police into a leading security role too soon. "I'm not sure that pushing them forward is the right thing that we want to do. We tried that once before and found that that didn't work," Lt. Gen. Lloyd Austin told reporters, referring to the pre- 2007 U.S. strategy, which focused on handing off security respon- sibility to the Iraqis fast while reducing the U.S. presence. That approach faltered, leaving Iraq on the brink of all-out civil war before President Bush switched strate- gies and put Gen. David Petraeus in charge in Baghdad. Petraeus is scheduled to hand off on Tuesday to his successor, Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno. TBILISI, Georgia NATO asks Russia to leave Georgia Diplomats from every NATO nation demanded immediate Rus- sian withdrawal from Georgia in a show of support from the U.S. ally's capital on yesterday that made no promise of faster mem- bership in the alliance. NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer led 26 envoys in calling on Moscow to comply with a cease-fire deal and withdraw to positions its forces held before fight- ing with Georgia erupted Aug. 7. But the diplomats offered no positive response to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili's call to "accelerate" Georgia's inte- gration into NATO. Saakashvili said Russia's invasion should not keep his country out of its "proper and rightful home" in the alliance. LOS ANGELES Train crash death toll rises Thecoroner'sofficesaysthedeath toll in the Los Angeles commuter train crash has reached 26 with the death of aman in ahospital. The commuter train carrying 220 people rolled past stop signals Friday and barreled head-on into a Union Pacific freight train in sub- urban Chatsworth. Federal investigators have said they want to review cell phone records to determine if the train's engineer may have been text mes- saging just before the crash. - Compiled from Daily wire reports US DEATHS 4,158 4 Number of American service members who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. There were no deaths identified yesterday. WALL STREET From Page 1 former interns, like one senior in the Ross School of Business who asked to remain anonymous because she wasn't authorized to talk to the media about Lehman. A year ago she received intern- ship offers fromLehman, Deutsche Bank and Citigroup. She said she chose Lehman for the internship because it was "one of the more prestigious banks on the Street," but she ultimately rejected its full- time job offer. Now, she's left looking for investment banking jobs in a radi- cally refigured market. "Comingin, I hadalot of options and now it's very, very limited," she said. "No banks are hiring, and it's not as easy as it was in the sum- mer." No longer courted by the major banks, she's using her own con- nections to compensate for stalled recruitment. RUSH From Page 1 each other and will talk toas many as five more sisters during a stay. Sorority members also perform a song and a skit for the rushes. After each set, potential new members rank their house prefer- ences and sorority sisters rank the rushes. The number of houses a student visits declines with each set, as their pool of potential hous- es narrows. Kinesiology junior Chelsie Russ, a "Rho Omega," or sorority recruitment officer who helps the "Now I have to call people I've met myself through the recruit- ing process, and push my resume through, and explain my situa- tion," she said. Shesaid shesent about15ea-mails to Wall Street contacts yesterday alone. An LSA senior and former Leh- man intern who also asked to remain anonymous, said she had already accepted a full-time posi- tion with the bank for next year. She knew her future job was lost when the firm filed for Chapter 11. "We all knew that the situation was pretty bad working through- out the summer," she said. "But there was always kind of a confi- dence that we would work it out and things would end up being OK." She said the risk of collapse is simply part of the job - and it's a risk that helped draw her to invest- ment banking. Business senior Justin Killion said the looming banking crisis was already evident this summer prospective sisters through rush, said her position let her see the process from another angle. "It's just fun getting to meet all the girls," she said. LSA freshman Megan Novak, who participated in the mixer last night, said she was impressed by the houses' dedication to their themes, which range from Alpha Gamma Delta Greek goddesses to a Delta Delta Delta pajama party. "Some houses go all-out," she said. "They dress up, and every inch of the house is covered." Russ said Rho Omegas are in a unique position because they aren't allowed to tell the girls when I JPMor "The my frie iN hir as in t felt, w, come," no telli pen be crashl since tI Al C develol School, kets ha rethink but it from he worked as an intern for internships in financial epicen- gan in New York. ters. feeling that I felt, and that "I think every student who's nds at a lot of other firms interested in banking will take a real serious look at the career, they want and the life they want To banks are and the risks they take with that choice," he said. "But at the same ring... it's not time, I know that there's always going to be an investment banking easy as it was industry and so that's a decision that students will have to make he summer." based on their own risk invest- ment." With $12,500 the standard pay for an eight-to-ten-week intern- as there was still more to ship at companies like Lehman, he said. "There was really Merrill Lynch and Citigroup - ng what was going to hap- often capped off with a post-grad- cause we haven't seen any uation job offer - the competition ike this in history, basically for these positions can best be he Depression." described as fierce. otrone, director of career Until yesterday, Lehman, the pment at the Business 158-year-old bank with a reputa- said the dire financial mar- tion as one of Wall Street's small ve some business students but elite power players, was one king which field to pursue, of the most sought-after employ- hasn't swayed most away ers among students, according to high-paying, high-power Business senior Neal Bhagat. Tuesday, September 16,;2008 - 3 "I know when I was interview- ing, everybody wanted to work for Lehman's," he said. "They're a very prestigious bank and so it was definitely one that was highest on everyone's list." Bhagat spent the summer interning as a financial analyst for Citigroup, while some of his Busi- ness School counterparts opted for the now bankrupt Lehman located further down Wall Street. "I know a few people who took Lehman offers over other banks because of its reputation," he said. "Nobody saw this coming." According to Cotrone, Leh- man's demise was unexpected for both Ross students and for finan- cial analysts closely following the stock market. "Given that shareholders didn't know about it until late, I'm pretty certain that students didn't know either," Cotrone said. "People interview for internships in Janu- ary and February, so nine months ago, I don't think that this was on anybody's radar screen." said. "It's an incredibly intense process. Every house has like a different color, and it has ribbons, and you can't walk inside," he said of the sororities. Fraternity brothers weren't the only ones gawking. One manyelled "It's a dream come true" from his car as he drove past the girls wait- ing outside the houses. Although visiting eight houses in one night might seem over- whelming; LSA freshman Claire Ewing said the sisters make an effort to ease new students' transi- tion to the University. "It's overwhelming and crazy," she said, "but it's fun." Mugabe relaxes grip which sorority they're in. The goal is to let prospective sorority mem- bers ask questions without feeling pressure in one way or the other. As the houses prepared to wel- come the rushes last night, Rho Omegas mingled and answered questions from students. Right as the clock hit 7 p.m., the singing began. Alpha Chi Omega could be heard from streets away belting their rendition of Belinda Carl- isle's "Heaven is a Place on Earth." Wearing white dresses, they wel- comed the girls as they filed into the house singing "At Alpha Chi, sisters come first, Alpha Chi is on power many minds: "Will it hold or will it not? That is the question," he said. Aid agencies welcomed the deal as a hopeful sign they will be able to step up food deliveries to mil- lions of people facing hunger. "The food situation in Zim- babwe has reached crisis point," said Matthew Cochrane of the international Red Cross. "There are already more than 2 million people who don't have food, and that number is going to rise to 5 million, which is about half the country's population, by the end of the year." Mugabe's government restrict- ed the work of aid agencies in June, accusing them of siding with the opposition before a presi- dential runoff. The ban was lifted last month, but aid agencies say it takes time to gear up. heaven on earth." Meanwhile, Kappa Kappa Gamma channeled their tropical theme and sang about the "Kappa Kabana" while wearing lei neck- laces and pounding on the win- dows. A group of Alpha Epsilon Pi brothers gathered outside their house on Hill Street to watch the proceedings. LSA sophomore Adam London, a member of the fraternity, said sorority rush is much different than the fraternity recruitment process. "It's funnier for us, because we practice never for rush," London HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - President Robert Mugabe ceded some power in Zimbabwe for the first time in 28 years yesterday, signing a power-sharing deal yes- terday with opposition leader Mor- gan Tsvangirai amid questions on how the enemies will work togeth- er to fix a collapsing economy. Thousands of supporters of the rival parties threw stones at each other as the ceremony got under way and several hundred broke through the gates of the conven- tion center where it took place. Police fired warning shots and set dogs on the crowd, which calmed and cheered as their leaders left after the signing. Mugabe, Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara, leader of a faction that broke away from Tsvangi- rai's party, all pledged to make the deal work. But long-simmering and bitter differences as well as the nation's economic collapse - inflation is officially running at 11 million percent - have put the deal under intense pressure. It has already been criticized privately by some opposition leaders, who are unhappy that it leaves Mugabe as president and head of the government. They fear Mugabe will exploitthat, especial- ly by playing on tensions between the two opposition groups. Nine African leaders including mediator President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa witnessed the signing in a show of commitment to the deal, which the African Union is underwriting. Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete, chairman of the Afri- can Union, voiced the concern on information Session Tuesday, September 16th 7:00 p.m. Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room 800.424.8580 www.peacecorps.gov Anti-nausea patches for chemotherapy approved New treatment will last for five days WASHINGTON (AP) - Can- cer patients will soon be able to use a medication patch to ease the debilitating nausea that often accompanies chemotherapy. TheFood and Drug Administra- tion said yesterday it has approved the first anti-nausea patch for che- motherapy patients, intended to provide relief for up to five days. The patch, called Sancuso, is worn on the arm and delivers a widely used anti-nauseamedicine,known as granisetron, through the skin. It is expected to be available by the end of the year. "It will be another way that we can address nausea and vomit- ing, coming from a route that we haven't had before," said nurse practitioner Barbara Rogers, who specializes in cancer treatment. "The patch is a nice option." Rogers, who works at Fox Chase .a WANT TO WORK FOR THE DAILY? COME TO OUR MASS MEETING 420 Maynard St., just northwest of the Union TOMORROW, 8 P.M. Cancer Center in Philadelphia, is also a consultant to ProStrakan, the Scottish company that devel- oped the patch. About a million people undergo chemotherapy every year and as many as 70 percent develop nausea. Ifthe problemoccurs atthehospital, it can be dealt with immediately. But many patients suffer from nausea after being sent home. Anti-nausea pills are available, but some cancer patients have difficultyswallowing. "The main benefit will be for people who have difficulty taking oral medications," Rogers said. But other patients could also ben- efit, she added, since a single patch is designed to maintain a steady level of the anti-nausea medicine in the body for several days. These days, medical professionals treat- ing cancer patients are trying to eliminate nausea as a side effect of chemotherapy, believing that will help the patients maintain physical strength and emotional energy. Get' em while they're freshmen. They won't be ripe for long. Advertise your group or organization in the Campus Involvement Page Deadline Published Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Contact a Classified Account Executive at 734-764-0557 or dailyclassified@gmail.com 1Thermal Control fSolutins Through Advanced Technology® 11Energy Conversion WWW.mainStream-engr.com Turbomachinery INEE-M/F/rN-nFWP MUSatizenshiprRequiredChemicalTechnology Engineering Corporation' 0 Materials Science