IV . w: lw w IW 1w Wednesday, April 17, 2013 // The Statement 0Wdnsdy, prl 7,201 / Te Satmet 3 or LSA seniors Josh Booy and Stephanie Hamel, their film endeavors began in middle school, with a class project entitled "The Afren- chists," which depicted French kings in the style of the television series "The Apprentice." This was the first of Buoy and Hamel's many film projects. As a freshman, Buoy developed an interest in filmmaking, creating Filmic - the University's go-to source for promo- tional and educational videos. After Buoy asked Hamel to work as the producer, Filmic launched. When approached by the 'University administration to create videos for the University, the team began with four PSAs for the Office of Student Affairs. With the help of their Filmic team, Buoy and Hamel created iconic Univer- sity videos like "The Bus Musical" with Billy Magic, "The Letter 'M' " and "Stay in the Blue" with Heisman trophy win- ner Desmond Howard. "We just really wanted to produce high quality, student-produced stuff," Buoy said. "We are now responsible to ensure that the student experience is maintained and preserved." Filmic serves as only one of their co- founded organizations. After serving on the Student Safety Commission for two years, Buoy and Hamel helped cre- ate Beyond the Diag - an organization dedicated to defining and creating a com- munity for off-campus housing. The duo defined different neighborhoods for the program and created community ambas- sadors to promote safety and connection. "The trust and opportunities we've been given as undergraduate students is really incredible," Hamel said. "We've been doing things that graduates and professionals would be doing so we've really been challenged and pushed. Michigan puts a lot of faith in us to do this." While the longtime friends work col- laboratively in almost each of their orga- nizations, Buoy aspires to be a filmmaker and Hamel plans to continue her studies in pharmaceutical sciences. Before attending the University, Buoy and Hamel did not expect to create - let alone get involved with - these spe- cific organizations. As the opportunities came, the two took full advantage. "We're here, and we might as well become very well-versed," Buoy said. "We constantly think how we can do this at the level that will earn respect from peers, administration and the commu- nity. We never want to half-ass anything. It's amazing how that's led from oppor- tunity to opportunity." While Buoy and Hamel carried their friendship from middle school to high school to college, the two said they are pleased with their legacy left at the Uni- versity. "As we're leaving this campus, leaving a legacy is very important to us," Buoy said. "We've been given the opportu- nity to share the story of Michigan that hasn't been shared before. This campus is so big, and everything that we've done makes this place smaller, connected and more safe." inec the mioment Trey Burke, an LSA sophomore, committed to playing one more season April 2012, the ensuing 12 months seemed toicomeiout of a fairytale. There was his sweep of the National Play- er of the Year awards, the program-record- tying 31 wins and the NCAA Final Four. It was easy to forget that on the opening page of this season, in an exhibition against Northern Michigan, Burke was sidelined by a suspension stemming from off-the-court behavior that remained undisclosed - at least until felklw teammates, coaches and Burke himself began talking in the lead up to the Final Four about how that incident shaped the sophomore's magical season. "It was something that definitely allowed me to grow up from," Burke said. Burke not only grew into Michigan's second-ever AP National Player of the Year winner - the first since 1966 - but into the team's unquestioned vocal leader. Just a few months into the season, Beilein named him a team captain. "Being that guy's teammate is an honest- to-God blessing," senior co-captain Josh Bartelstein said. On college basketball's biggest stage at the NCAA National Championship game, Burke scored the Wolverines' first seven points en route to his 24-point performance, but it was a play on the defensive end - a seemingly-clean block, called for a foul, that could've sparked a miraculous comeback in the game's final minutes - that will live on in infamy. While, his title-game heroics ultimately resulted in a loss, fans will never forget his game-tying 3-pointer in the final moments of regulation in a win over Kansas the week- end before. The shot, which left Burke's hands more than nine feet behind the 3-point line, was summed up best by Bartelstein, who called it "an iconic shot from an iconic player." Though Michigan fell short of its first title since 1989, Burke will forever be engrained in Wolverine basketball history. When the Wolverines were expected to bea fringe top- 25 team before the start of last season after Darius Morris decided to forgo his final two years and depart for the NBA, Burke instead led Michigan to its first Big Ten Champion- ship since 1985-86. This season, Burke aver- aged 18.6 points and 6.7 assists per game while playing in the one of the country's strongestconferences in years. Almost immediately after announcing his plans to forgo his final two seasons at the University, talks swirled about retiring his number by raising the No. 3 to the rafters - a move endorsed by Beilein. If the school retires his number, Burke - who pledged to complete the remainder of the semester rather than jumping into draft preparation - hopes that when fans see his name in the rafters, they'll remember more than just Burke the athlete. "Just a guy that left it all out there on the court, 100-percent effort at all times. A guy that wanted to represent the University the right way not only on the court, but off the court," he said. On June 27, Burke will almost assuredly be a lottery draft pick, putting a cap on a sto- rybook path that wound through Atlanta and will end with amulti-million dollar contract. But after calling his life at the moment "surreal," the All-American shifted his attention to the cynics - perhaps the same ones that said he'd never be a high-caliber, Division I athlete, or win at Michigan, or have a shot at being drafted. "A lot of people are doubting me now," he said, pausing as he shook his head and cracked his boyish smile. "Just like they doubted me coming into Michigan. It's just goingto make me work harder to become the best player I can be." Attracting other lead- ers is what I've done the best." Anxious, restless and disarmingly mod- est in manner and speech, Public Policy senior Kevin Mersol-Barg does not resem- ble your typical political figure. Whereas some great orators have relied on theatrics to get their point across, Mersol-Barg's speech patterns are completely and utterly drama-free. Yet this lack of drama might in some sense be Mersol-Barg's greatest strength. "He doesn't need to be at the center in order to be a leader," said LSA senior Amy Navvab, who ran alongside Mersol-Barg in the 2012 Central Student Government elections. "Kevin really works to bring out the best in the people around him." Mersol-Barg's resume boasts an impressive collection of experiences. To name a few: College Democrats, Human Rights Through Education, a columnist for the Daily and presidential candidate for Central Student Government. His greatest achievement, however, is the cre- ation of the Coalition for Tuition Equality, a group of affiliated human rights organi- zations whose mission is to extend in-state tuition towards undocumented stude ts in Michigan. Over the past year, CTE has become widelyknown across campusfortheincen- diary nature of its political message. The organization's efforts to change Univer-' sity policy for undocumented immigrants culminated at a breathtakingly emotional Regents meeting last December. More than 150 students with red tape plastered over their mouths huddled in the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union, calling attention to the 29,000 undocumented students residing in the state of Michigan deterred from attend- ing the University due to the steep price of tuition. CTE is a youthful organization. Its offi- cial birth date, October 2011, roughly cor- responds to the time Mersol-Barg began his tenure as an LSA student government representative. One of his platforms was "diversity," but Mersol-Barg admitted, "I didn't real- ly know what I was talking about at the time." After talking with various students from minority backgrounds, Mersol-Barg found tuition equality for undocumented immigrants to be an important issue. "It just kind of struck me at a time when I was looking to do something meaning- ful," Mersol-Barg said. Perhaps one of Mersol-Barg's great- est virtues is his eagerness to collaborate. CTE's website bears little mention of Mer- sol-Barg's name, and he modestly credits the leaders of other progressive organi- zations like Migrant Immigrants Rights Advocacy and the American Civil Liber- ties Union for the success of the coalition. "Instead of imposing my rule on this group, I've kind of broughit together a lot of other brilliant people and found a way for all of us to work toward this common cause," Mersol-Bargsaid. Mersol-Barg expressed a desire to push against the inertia of the status quo. He believes in actions rather than speeches, an attitude not unlike that of the progres- sive student activists of the 1960s. "You can go day in, day out, and not really develop a new approach," he said. "That kind of static feeling doesn't feel "cWhat can I do now, in my four years here, that's going to cre- ate something impactful?" Sripriya Navalpakam isn't just an entre- preneur: She's an activist. A Business sophomore, Navalpakam knew she wanted to go to business school when she was in eighth grade. She joined the University's MPowered Entrepreneurship program her freshman year - to work on social justice issues - and was given the tools and training to become an action-based person in the world of business. "I've always had this love for microfi- nance in the developing world," Naval- pakam said. She came across Lend for America, an organization that seeks to empower upcoming social entrepreneurs to build business and communities through inno- vative microfinance. Navalpakam took what she learned from her fellowship with that organization in Rhode Island and brought it back to Ann Arbor, where she and Business sophomore Niranjana Kannan started ReSource Fund. "My passion personally for ReSource Fund comes from the fact that I go to an elite business school - where we learn so much about business and its effect on communities and things. like that - but I've always thought: How can I use that to empower the community members in my area?" Navalpakam said. "This is the perfect solution for it: providing financial resources to a low-income community member to help them develop a toolkit of skills to lift them out of poverty." At the center of Navalpakam's work is the intersection of business and activism. To her, social entrepreneurship means the work she's doing should always'be action- based. A large part of ReSource Fund is con- nectingwith the community. Navalpakam and Kannan sit down with people in the Ypsilanti area and talk about what keeps them up at night, what they want and then try to design their product around these needs. In addition to Navalpakam and Kan- nan, ReSource Fund is made up of a team of financial coaches, who are all University students. The coaches work one-on-one with clients on issues like banking, debt management, credit building and other personal financial services. ReSource Fund charges a program fee of $120 to the client, spread across $10 monthly pay- ments, and then uses that money to facili- tate a conversation with the credit bureaus to show that the client is making time efficient payments to help increase their credit score. "So the cool thing about the program is that not only are we working on financial issues with the client, but we're also at the same time increasing their credit score," Navalpakam said. "It's a really unique model." Her feverish passion to fight preda- tory lending is what drives Navalpakam's desire to help low-income families with their financial problems. She's confi- dent that ReSource Fund can grow, and between her classes and other commit- ments as a University student, she's still looking for ways to improve the organiza- tion's services and touch more members of the community. "That's what social entrepreneurship is at its heart: doing something that has purpose, and at the same time, creating a sustainable way to go about it."