68The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, Aprill11 2007 m The activists, athletes, artists and organizers who have left their mark on campus this year The artistic scientist SA senior Lia Min stood in don't want to be the one drawing front of a massive 10-foot-tall the discoveries." banner with a large, circular In the fall, Min will attend mirror close to the bottom. She Harvard in pursuit of a doctorate looked into the engraved mirror, in neuroscience. For her, it never removed a small cube from its ends. center and regarded it with a con- "Lia is the most amazing stu- templative smile. dent inthis graduatingclass of Art "This was originally supposed and Design," said Mary Schmidt, to be my whole project," she said an associate dean for the School of the 3-inch square cube. "It got of Art and Design. "She's driven. bigger." When she sets a goal for herself, Min said the installation, her she reaches it." senior project, was designed to But there are =two Lia Mins. give a sense of DNA's biological In person, she is easygoing and processes through textures of understated. She swerves light Eastern philosophy. No idea what conversation from her fellow biol- that means? She thought so. ogists' attitudes toward her art to "I wanted this to be a person- talk of ancient Chinese philoso- al experience," she said. When phy in the same breath. viewers remove the cube from "She's very quiet and unassum- the center of the mirror, Mm said ing, but inside, she is very tena- it gives them the illusion they are cious," Schmidt said. inspecting a part of themselves. Born in Ohio, Mm moved to This ambitious vision comes her parents' native Korea at 6 and from a student who came to the returned when she was a high University with the modest aspi- school sophomore to pursue her ration to become an illustrator art. Her father remained in Korea for science textbooks. Just two while her mother alternated years later, Min was pursuing an homes; when her sister came to intense duel degree in art and Michigan, she was her guardian. biology with a research intern- Listening to Min put her intri- ship and consecutive year-end cate research and art into novice honors from the art school rec- terms, you get a glimpse at the ognizing her work as some of the profound scope of her ambi- best in her class. tion. By fall Mm will be deep in So what of those plans to research at one of the world's pre- becomea technical artist? miere institutions for it, but she'd "I decided I want to do the never, not for a second, let you discovery myself," she said with know it. easy, unconscious confidence. "I - Jeffrey Bloomer The olympiad "Personally, I'm kind of blown breaking the records he set in Ath- away, but I sort of expected it, just ens by whole seconds would have watching him train," said Jamie been laughable. Martone, a swimmer on Mich- Amid the lingering press in the igan's varsity team. "He's been months following the Olympics pouring his heart and soul out in and his arrival at the University, the pool." there was that unfortunate DUI Each time people have said in November 2004 and an irksome Phelps is on the verge of plateau- back injury. ing, he's consistently been able But it looks like Phelps has to prove them wrong, said Chris made more than a full recovery, DeJong, another Club Wolverine and his performance at the world swimmer. championships might only be the "He's had some amazing per- beginning. formances," said DeJong. "He has "I would not be surprised (if) an uncanny ability to convince the world champs were a great himself, despite anything that's forecast of how he's going to do in going on in his environment, that 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in Lon- it's his day to swim fast." don," Martone said. "He's just set- Of course, there have been ting himself up for excellence." times when the idea of Phelps -Kimberly Chou t may not seem like LSA junior Ryan Fantuzzi, campus's most well-known conservative, takes politics very seriously. When Democratic U.S. senator Debbie Stabenow was running for reelection last November, Fantuzzi protested at a rally by carrying a giant poster of his own face and shouting, "No! No! No!" at Stabenow's supporters. When the University and its Coke-peddling shops and vending machines were caught up in a sticky debate over the Coca-Cola Company's alleged humanrightsviolationsoverseas at the same time Fantuzzi was running for Michigan Student Assembly president, he took dramatic sips from a 20-ounce bottle of Coke while debating the other candidates. And when MSA lost $20,000 in one night by hosting the rapper Ludacris at Hill Auditorium in 2005, Fantuzzi said the money would have been better used by any hypothetical campus group, even the "Wolverine Fart Club." Fantuzzi is vocal, inventive and funny. His love of humor, he says, is what keeps him going through long campaigns. But there's something to Fantuzzi that sets him apart from other campus activists, and it's notthathe doesn'ttake politics seriously. It might be the opposite. Fantuzzi says he really cares about the issues. He soldhis SonyPlayStation to finance his bid for the MSA presidency last spring. He finished in third place in the election, and his party, the Student Conservative Party, fizzled after that. This year, he brought three ex-terrorists to campus, sparking a widespread outcry and debate. And perhaps his crowning achievement has been serving as the chair of the Washtenaw County Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, coordinating local efforts to pass Proposal 2, which banned affirmative action in public institutions in Michigan. He says he cried tears of joy when Prop 2 passed. But Fantuzzi says his political future is uncertain. An issue like MCRI comes around only so often, and Fantuzzi wants to focus on issues. He has grown weary of the infighting and corruption in both major political parties and says he doesn't think he'll run for office again. But don't fret, a presence as vibrant as Fantuzzi's can't stay away from the spotlight for long. - Anne VanderMey with reporting by Forest Casey Following Andrew Yahkind foraweek duringhis college career could lead you to the line for drinks at Alpha Epsilon Pi, a high school classroom in st d n Detroit or the meetings of The Order of Angell. You'd see a couple study spots too, though. On top of his vari- ous activities, Yahkind gradu- ated a semester early with a double major in organizational studies and public policy as well as a 3.86 grade point average. Yahkind plans to study law at either Harvard or Stanford in the fall. This semester, dur- ing the time he took off between the University and law school, he spends much of his time teaching an ACT prep course in Detroit and keeping tabs on the goings-on of the student groups A he's been involved with. He still participates in The Order ofAngell, the senior honor society for which he acted as the regular spokesmanduringayear of reform for the group. for students during his ter Yahkind didn't hold an offi- president of LSA Student{ cial public relations position in ernment last year. the group at first, but he came to Yahkind tried out worki fill the role as the group's transi- a few commissions for the iv tion moved forward, The Order igan Student Assembly earl of Angell President Sirene Abou- his career but decided to Chakra said. LSA-SG instead. "It became evident that he "I wanted to see more was the right person for the job," gible results from my work she said. "He had a great reputa- said. tion on this campus." Yahkind has changed Yahkind also helped move himself over his years at along projects like improving University. study-abroad opportunities He said he's now muchr RACHAELTN t hit Rachael Tanner on a rainy Wednesday in November. She had lost the fight. Pro- posal 2, the ballot initiative thatw banned affirmative action ina public institutions in Michigan, had passed. After dedicating much of the r past year to the group Students- Supporting Affirmative Action, most visible anti-Prop 2 student leaders on campus was watch- ing University President Mary Sue Coleman stand on the steps of the Hatcher Graduate Library and reassure students of the University's commitment to diversity. Tanner was forced to ask her- self a question: Now what? A year before that day, Tanner didn't consider herself political- ly active. Since becoming a core leader of Students Supporting with a bullhorn to coordinati Affirmative Action - which had with country and state ca been dormant since the Supreme paigns. Court rulings in 2003 on the LSA senior Kristen Purdy University's affirmative action former SSAA member, describ programs - Tanner immersed Tanner as "tirelessly passional her self in all aspects of the cam- "I don't know of anyone tI paign, from standing on the Diag has more passion and energy ZACHARY MEISNER/Daily m as open and appreciative of diver- that he said is available to people Gov- sity than freshman year, when who are willing to seek it. he arrived on campus from Yahkind is first-generation ng on the predominantly white West American. His parents grew up Mich- Bloomfield. in Eastern European countries . ier in As a freshman, he stuck close while they were controlled by join to people like himself the Soviet Union. His mother is "I made the mistake of falling from the Ukraine and his father tan- into that because it's comfort- is from Russia. ," he able hanging out with people He said having parents who who look like you, act like you, have experienced persecution a lot have the same background as and adversity has pushed him t the you." to work hard in every aspect of He said he loves the Univer- his life. more sity for its "amazing diversity" -Jessica Vosgerchian MICHAELPHEP It'd be a lot easier for detrac- tors to dismiss all that "greatest of all time" talk if kinesiology junior Michael Phelps would sim- ply stop breakingrecords. An eight-time Olympic medal- list and Club Wolverine swim- mer, Phelps eclipsed his own world record when he won the 400-meter individual medley at the world championships in Mel- bourne two weeks ago. Even more impressive than the race that won him his seventh gold medal dur- ing the weeks' events - equal- ing Mark Spitz's medal record of seven golds at the 1972 Olympics - was how he won it. His time in the medley, 4 minutes, 6.22 sec- onds, lowered the record he'd set at the 2004 Athens Olympics by more than two seconds. And in a sport where athletes win or lose by hundredths of a second, that's an eternity. "It was definitely incredible, maybe one of the greatest sports performances of all time," said Peter Vanderkaay, a Club Wol- verine teammate and one of the swimmers who won the 4x400- meter freestyle relay gold with Phelps at the 2004 Athens Olym- pics. "I'm sure a lot of people don't realize how special this is, but it's an incredible achievement." Although Phelps himself wasn't available for an inter- view (he's currently in China, Vanderkaay said), other varsity and Club Wolverine swimmers echo Vanderkaay's praise. The anti-Prop 2 crusader Since SSAA refocused its mis- sion to addressing inequalities on campus through alternatives to affirmative action in January, Tanner said she has tried to step back her role in SSAA to make room for younger student lead- ers. "If I am so worried about what's going to happen when I graduate, then I should focus my time on making sure the new leaders are ready," she said. As for the question "Now what?" in her own life, Tanner says she'll stay in grassroots organizing. After graduating with a major in political science later this month, Tanner will work at the Harriet Tubman Center in Detroit, an organization found- ETER SCHOTTENFELS/aiiy ed in December 2006 that trains prospective community orga- they do," Purdy said. nizers. Lescribes her leader- "Working on a campaign and id approach to diver- having the energy of people was pus as pragmatic. very hands-on, and I know that the word," she said. was really instrumental in shap- does (diversity) real- ing the way I wanted to work," a question that isn't Tanner said. answered enough." -Kelly Fras ing everythingt m- Tanner d ship style ai , a sity on camp ed "We sayt :e." "But whatd hat ly mean isa in asked - ora