The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, September 28, 2011- 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, September 28, 2011 - 5A LAW From Page 1A the program is necessary as the legal field evolves. "I think America is all about entrepreneurial activity in one form or another, and I think the legal profession, myself included, has been the creator of a lot of entrepreneurs," Zell said. "I would hope this kind of a program would make the idea and the concept much more real for potential law students to look at as a different kind of an option than just the practice of law." Caminker also said he thinks an entrepreneurial background will put the students involved in the program at an advantage after they graduate. "I think (the ZEAL pro- gram) will allow them to hit the ground running faster," Caminker said. "There's a high- er premium being paid right now on students who not only know how to be great lawyers but who also understand some- thing about the business world, and who understand how busi- ness people think and what they want out of their lawyers." Law School student Brian Flaherty, a former Daily colum- nist, said he thinks acceptance into the program will be com- petitive, since the program will only offer one course during its first semester. "I think there's been a void between the entrepreneurial community at (the University) and Law students, and the void's been there for a long time," Fla- herty said. "I think hopefully this program will help students who are interested in entrepre- neurship have a venue to get experience in that area and also to form connections with entre- preneurs on campus." Flaherty is also one of the founders of the Entrepreneur- ial Law Association - a student group started this past sum- mer that now has 97 members. Flaherty.,said he and the other founders didn't know about the ZEAL program when they start- ed the Entrepreneurial Law Association. Caminker said the ZEAL program will strive to maintain a low student-to-faculty ratio and that the class's enrollment will be limited until more fac- ulty members are added. At the moment, no faculty member has been assigned to the program, but Caminker said he expects the program will have two fac- ulty members in its first semes- ter. He added that several Law School faculty members already work with the University's Center for Entrepreneurship in the College of Engineer- ing. Caminker also said he also hopes to expand class offerings after the program's first semes- ter. Moses Lee, an academic pro- gram manager and lecturer in the Center for Entrepreneur- ship, said he thinks he will see an increased number of students in his class because of the pro- gram. He added that the ZEAL program will be a resource for his students by helping them move forward with their pro- spective businesses. "Many of our student entre- preneurs here have legal ques- tions, and obviously legal services can be very expensive for a new start-up," Lee said. "So the fact that the Law School is providing the resource for student entrepreneurs is really going to help push our students in the right direction." Flaherty said he believes the program will give Law School students an experience they otherwise wouldn't have had in the school. "I think it really makes it a lot easier for a lot of students to achieve their career ambitions because there are definitely a lot of students who are interested in entrepreneurship," he said. Patrick Fleming was a trumpet player in the Michigan Marching Band. FLEMING From Page 1A known to have a constant smile on his face and to be dedicated to hard work on the practice field. In addition to being a student and member of the band, Flem- ing also worked the night shift at a retirement home. During summer training he worked all night prior to the band's 9 a.m. practices. Scott Boerma, director of the Michigan Marching Band and an associate professor in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, wrote in a statement to The Michigan Daily that Fleming's dedication and commitment served as an inspiration to the band and the entire University community. "Patrick had an infectious smile at all times and was a devoted member of our fam- ily," Boerma wrote. "He worked the midnight shift, went to his classes at UM-Flint, and drove back for marching band practice every day. His dedication to liv- ing life fully was inspiring, and he had a positive impact on all of us." In honor of Fleming, the band will dedicate its Saturday performance at Michigan Sta- dium to Fleming, Boerma wrote. Members of the band will wear armbands and trumpet pins in memoriam. The band will also leave Fleming's place in the field formations unoccupied on Sat- urday, according to a blog post Athletic Director Dave Brandon wrote on MGoBlue.com yester- day. "Patrick Fleming will be missed by us all," Brandon wrote. "The Michigan Marching Band was an important part of Patrick's life, and he was an important part of what makes our band special." In the blog post, , Brandon expressed his condolences on behalf of the Athletic Department and praised Fleming for his com- mitment to the marching band. "This. young man wasn't on scholarship; he had to work to make it through school," Bran- don wrote. "Between perform- ing, practicing and studying he had to work full time at a retire- ment home to raise the funds necessary to realize his dream," Brandon wrote. "Every week- day, Patrick drove 112 miles back and back to Ann Arbor for the 90-minute band practice." MSA From Page 1A assault on Sept. 13 on the 400 block of South First Street near William Street is connected to the others. "Now at this point, we don't know how many are actually related," O'Dell said. "It looks like there's a fair chance that the six maybe related. It's really unknown as far as this last one whether it is going to be related or not." O'Dell stressed that despite the large amount of media atten- tion the summer cases received, assaults by strangers are anoma- lous in Ann Arbor. "There are a lot more sexual assaults that take place between people who know each other," he said. "In fact, it is estimated that 90 percent of sexual assaults are between people where the vic- tim knows the offender." O'Dell said DPS would like to maintain an active relationship with students. "I'm a big believer in doing this and us being out in pub- lic and being available for your questions," he said. "If things come up during the school year, After hearing the news of Fleming's death Monday after- noon, band officials first contact- ed the band's student leaders as well as the University's Division of Student Affairs. They subse- quently told all the band mem- bers before practice, according to Boerma. Engineering senior Jeffrey McMahon, the marching band's drum major, was among one of the first members of the band to hear the news of Fleming's death. McMahon received a phone call from Boerma on abus ride home from class and was shocked by the news. He said his first thought was how to help the rest of his teammates cope with the tragedy. "It really took everybody off guard," McMahon said. "It kind of was like a lightning strike that hit home rather than a few miles away.... It was hard for me to take it in because I think my first reaction as a drum major was to wonder how we're going to handle everyone else and how everybody else is going to be." McMahon recalled Fleming's unwavering optimism, noting that even when Fleming made a mistake during a rehearsal or performance, he would never falter or be deterred. "I've just never seen the kid not smile," McMahon said. "There would even be times where he would mess up something in the drill, and in the tower the direc- tors would call him out for what- ever it may be - maybe being a step off or playing a wrong note - and he would just smile." McMahon added that Flem- ing's passion for the Michigan Marching Band and the art of the trumpet could be seen in everything he did - on and off the field. "There'd be a lot of times when I'd go out just to hang out at Elbel, and he'd be there sitting up in the stands just playing his trumpet," McMahon said. At Pioneer High School, where Fleming graduated in 2009, Fleming was known by his peers and teachers as a "wonder- ful humorful spirit," said David Leach, director of bands and chair of the Performing Arts Department at Pioneer High School. Leach directed Fleming in symphony and jazz bands. Leach recalled Fleming's abil- ity to connect with younger band members and serve as a men- tor to students who felt unsure about their place in the school. "Oftentimes, - middle school students think band is a bunch of nerdy kids that talk about notes," Leach said. "And out comes Pat- rick ... an engaging young man who said, 'Look, you can be as cool as you want to be and be a student here in this band pro- gram.' And he made that kid feel comfortable instantly. And that's very much what Patrick was to everybody." LSA senior Kevin Smith, the Michigan ' Marching Band's trumpet section leader, echoed McMahon's sentiments and said Fleming had a "swagger" about him and exuded confidence that put other band members at ease. Smith recalled Fleming's enjoy- ment of everything trumpet and band-related, right down to the minute details. Smith described Fleming's gusto for his equip- ment, in particular his vast col- lection of mouthpieces. "He was really into his mouth- piece collection, and so every single show he would come up to someone to say, 'Hey, check out this crazy mouth piece,"' Smith said. "He always had a barrage of equipment. He had a different mouthpiece for every situation." Despite the effect . of Flem- ing's death on the band, McMa- hon said his focus as a leader must be to help the band move forward in the aftermath of the tragedy. "One of the things I thought on the bus ride home is: I have a bunch of different manuals," McMahon said. "There's a lead- ership manual for being a section leader, a drum major and I'm just thinking, this is not in one of those. There's no way to prepare yourself as a leader for some- thing like this to happen." McMahon noted the impor- tance of the band remaining united in the wake of Fleming's death and continuing to practice in preparation for Saturday's halftime performance, as Flem- ing himself would want the band to do. "We have to continue to push forward for 110,000 peo- ple, many of whom don't know about this, and put a new show out onthe field for the Minne- sota game," McMahon said. "So hopefully that will be a healer for people to get back on the field and keep busy and do what Pat- rick loved doing." - Taylor Wizner contributed to this report. EARTHFEST From Page 1A said she thinks EarthFest has a different feel than Festifall - the annual fall event when tables for student groups line the Diag to recruit new members. The difference between the events is that the student groups at EarthFest were asked to refrain from making paper handouts or pressuring students to join their organizations, she said. LSA sophomore Gabby Trupp, a member of the Taking Respon- sibility for the Earth and Envi- ronment Subcommittee, or TREES - a subcommittee of the LSA Student Government - said the success of EarthFest lies in its ability to get students to focus on environmental issues. She added that she was pleased the pleasant fall weather and free food helped increase attendance at the event. "Students seem genuinely interested in what's going on," Trupp said. "Our main goal is to show conservation is actually doable." LSA junior Megan Pfeiffer, another member of TREES, discussed some of the group's upcoming goals for the 'year. These include a zero-waste tail- gate, installing more water refill stations around campus and expanding the tray-less dining initiative. New and updated campus dining halls will go tray-less as part of the University's new sustainability initiatives, which University President. Mary Sue Coleman announced yesterday. Pfeiffer emphasized the importance of collaborations on campus and throughout Ann Arbor on environmental issues. She encouraged all studentswith an interest in the environment to consider joining the LSA-SG subcommittee. Also at yesterday's event were University-sponsored booths where campus officials discussed recent green initia- tives. Grant Winston, associate director of customer service for University Parking and Trans- portation Services, was at EarthFest to encourage car- pooling and to administer sur- veys to gauge student interest in a bike-sharing program similar to Zipcar. If student response is substantial enough, the Uni- versity may look into starting its own bike-sharing program, Winston said. "So far (we've had) very strong support from students," he said. Marines find order from combat zones Afghanistan camaraderie offers meaning and rewards for soldiers FORWARD OPERATING BASE JACKSON, Afghani- stan (AP) - An American in uniform stands near a landing zone at about 2 a.m., moonlight framing his features, and talks about dead and maimed men he knows. His flight out isn't until next month, and he is counting the days. Then he says he will miss Afghanistan. "It's just life or death: the simplicity of it," said Cpl. Rob- ert Cole of the 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, which ends a seven-month deployment in the southern region of Sangin in October. "It's also kind of nice in some ways because you don't have to worry about anything else in the world." The dominant narrative about war in a foreign land says its practitioners yearn for home, for the families, the comforts, and the luxury of no longer worrying about imminent death or injury. It applies to young American troops in Afghan combat zones, but it's not the whole truth. Combat can deliver a sense of urgency, meaning, order and belonging. There is the adrena- line-fueled elation of a firefight, and the horror of rescuing a comrade wounded by a bomb on patrol. It is magnified, instanta- neous experience. An existence boiled down to the essentials mocks the mundane detritus, the quibbles and bill-paying and anonymity, of life back home. Building on the costly inroads of a previous unit, the Marine battalion has seen a decline in Taliban attacks in Sangin, a southern Afghan area where the insurgency battled British forces to a stalemate for years. Now the troops have more time to build bridges and sluice gates, and sit cross-legged at meetings with Afghan elders in hopes of stripping the insurgency of pop- ular support. Early on, the going was hard. Cole said his platoon suffered close to 30 percent casualties, mostly from bombs hidden around its patrol base. He described how one Marine on patrol triggered a bomb that severed his legs. Another Marine rushed forward to apply tourniquets, knowing his friend would bleed to death if he methodically checked, as training dictated, for more boo- bytraps in his path. The second Marine started dragging the first toward safety when he set off another bomb, severing his own legs, according to Cole. But he saved his comrade in the pro- cess. "He didn't lose his legs for his country, he lost his legs for his brother," Cole, of Klamath Falls, Oregon, said bluntly. He ges- tured to another Marine in the dark at the landing zone at For- ward Operating Base Jackson, the battalion's headquarters. "The only shred of sanity that keeps us going out here is that I have to protect his ass and he has to protect my ass," said Cole, who is confined to the base after suffering concussions in two explosions. Cole, 22, is not bitter. He treasures the fierce loyalty, born of bloodshed. Politics, the debate about the wisdom of the decade-long U.S. involve- ment in Afghanistan, the plan to withdraw international combat forces by the end of 2014, seem irrelevant to young Marines. I'm very happy to return here I'm happy to come in (MSA meetings) and address things. It's a much better way to operate instead of hearing rumors and not know what's going on." In an interview after the meeting, MSA President DeAn- dree Watson said he appreciated that O'Dell came to the meeting to address students. "It's really important to con- tinue the conversation about people's safety, and that's really looking to the sexual assaults that occurred near campus and staying updated on what the University's response is and what's going on in the investiga- tion," Watson said. NURSING REP. TALKS MNA CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS Toward the end of the meet- ing last night, Nursing junior Hayley Mandell, a Nursing School representative in MSA, announced that nurses at the University are happy to see stu- dents supporting the Michigan Nurses Association's position in its contract dispute with the University's Board of Regents. The nurses have not had a solidi- fied contract since July 1. At the MSA meeting on Sept. 13, the student government passed a resolution to support the nurses union. Last night, Mandell explained the current situation to the assembly. "Basically, the University Hospital is re-contracting the nurses and changing some things like reducing the health benefits, and the nurses are con- cerned that if this starts, other things will happen that will impact the people who work below them," Mandell said. Watson added that MSA's sup- port stems from the assembly's desire to see the nurses receive their contractual benefits, and that students aren't negatively affected by the negotiations. "The reason behind (MSA's support of the nurses) is that we really want to ensure that students are not harmed in this process," Watson said. "We understand that these conces- sions are possible, and we just want to make sure that the. quality of care of students isn't reduced as a result of these con- tract negotiations." - Peter Shahin contributed to this report. FOLLOW THE DAILY ON TWITTER @Michigan Daily, @MichDailyArts, @MichDailyFBall, @MichDailySports, @MichDailyOpEd, @Mich DailyNews &