10
BY ILYA GUREVIC STAFF WRITER The Quad’s paths were aglow with tealights Tuesday night as the Indian Grad- uate Students Association held a ceremony in observation of Diwali, an Indian celebra- tion marking the triumph of good over evil. Students and community members lit candles along the paths on the Quad throughout the night. A major tradition of the Hindu holiday is to light candles as a symbol of welcoming home an Indian king. As the story of Diwali goes, the demon king Ravana kidnapped the wife Sita of Lord Rama while the couple was in exile. Diwali celebrates Rama killing Ravana, symbolizing “the victory of light over darkness,” said group member and grad- uate student Ashish Khetan. Indian stu- dents who celebrate Diwali shared the meaning of the candles and other tradi- tions with non-Indian students who attend- ed the event. Group members served Indi- an desserts such as gulab jamun — fried dairy dough balls in flavorful syrup to represent the sweetness of the occasion. Attendees traveled from as far away as India to celebrate Diwali in Champaign. Suranjana Sur Mukherjee traveled from Calcutta, India, to visit her son at Illinois and came to the celebration. “It was a very beautiful ceremony,” Sur Mukerjee said. “All castes, all creeds, all communities (are) coming together to cel- ebrate. It’s a universal brotherhood.” Sur Mukherjee added that as Rama and Sita returned to his hometown, the com- munity lit candles to illuminate their way home. The candles on the Quad recreated that scene. “We celebrate Lakshmi, the goddess of money... When we light all our lamps and ... leave the door open the belief is that Laksh- mi will look at all the lighting in your house, and she will come and bless you with mon- ey and prosperity,” said Varun Goel, grad- uate student. “We all get together; there’s worship (and) there’s food. My parents take special care in cleaning their house.” Kavya Gundavaram, freshman in Engi- neering, said she valued the opportunity to celebrate on campus. “I’m from India, so Diwali is a large part of my life, kind of like Thanksgiving here,” Gundavaram said. “It’s the first year I’ve been away from my family (for Diwali).” Aside from the significance of the event, attendees also enjoyed the aesthetic appeal of the celebration. “(The candlelight) makes it beautiful at night ... The fact that we live in this place and can come together and have something like this is really nice,” said Rhea Matar , senior in Education. For some, the event was not just a reli- gious festival but a symbol of acceptance on campus. “The candlelighting is something that they do in most Indian households, so it’s kind of cool that the University is embrac- ing it and kind of celebrating the holiday along with the Indian culture,” said Vidhan Desai, senior in Business. “I think it brings some diversity and culture to the campus.” Ilya can be reached at [email protected]. INSIDE Police 2A | Corrections 2A | Horoscopes 2A | Opinions 4A | Crossword 5A | Comics 5A | Health & Living 6A | Sports 1B | Classifieds 3B | Sudoku 3B The Daily Illini Wednesday November 14, 2012 High: 46˚ Low: 28˚ The independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois since 1871 www.DailyIllini.com Vol. 142 Issue 58 | FREE Thankful: Student counts her blessings after live-changing surgery FEATURES 6A More than a number Barrera dons No. 73 in honor of Curtis Speed SPORTS, 1B Solar farms to boost University’s use of renewable energy Students light up Quad for Diwali BRIAN YU THE DAILY ILLINI The Indian Graduate Student Association lit up the Quad with candles for the Indian Festival of Light, Diwali on Tuesday. RSO celebrates Festival of Light with ceremony LAS to offer dual degree with computer science in Fall Computer skills in high demand for jobs Senate considers trip to Springfield over veto session BY CLAIRE EVERETT STAFF WRITER A 20.5-acre solar farm may provid the University with 1.8 percent of its energy by this time next year. The solar farm comes as part of a $15.5 million plan approved Thursday by the board of trust- ees to move the University clos- er to its goal of having at least 5 percent of its power grid run on renewable energy by 2015. Installation on the 20.5 acres of land near First Street and Windsor Road will begin this summer after the land-lease and power-purchase agree- ments are signed in March. The project is slated to be done in fall 2013. While the majority of fund- ing will come from campus administration, about $1 million will be covered by the Student Sustainability Committee and roughly $85,000 will be covered by the University’s Facilities and Services unit. “It is going to be, if not the largest, one of the largest solar projects on any campus in the country,” said Jack Dempsey , executive director of Facilities and Services. “I think it shows the University of Illinois and their students believe in renew- able energy, and they’re willing to put the resources (behind it) needed to make it happen.” The panels purchased from Phoenix Solar Inc. will be lined in rows and tilted at a 20-degree angle for maximum sunlight absorption. “For every kilowatt the solar farm generates, that’s one less the University has to buy from the electricity grid,” said Mor- gan Johnston, sustainability coordinator for Facilities and Services. BY CORINNE RUFF STAFF WRITER The Illinois Student Senate may add another trip to Spring- field during veto session in addi- tion to their annual Lobby Day trip. The senate will discuss the resolution Wednesday at its regu- lar meeting. The resolution calls for the trip to be co-sponsored with the Civic Leadership Pro- gram, a University political sci- ence program connected to its Cline Center for Democracy . “With this being an election year, and with a bunch of impor- tant issues up right now, we want- ed to make sure we gave students the opportunity to go to Spring- field and meet the legislators,” said Jordan Hughes, chairwom- an for the community and gov- ernmental affairs committee, which is sponsoring the resolu- tion, and senior in AHS. Joseph Moseley , senator and sophomore in ACES, said there are hundreds of issues to be dis- cussed from education to agri- culture but said he believes the most prominent issue is the need for bipartisan efforts. “I think both sides need to answer the call to work togeth- er from the president,” he said. “It speaks volumes when (legisla- tion) passes with a good number of Democrats and a good number of Republicans.” Moseley said he also believes the trip would be a great experi- ence for himself as well as many other student senators consider- ing careers in politics. “I’d like to see how it is like to be a state senator, given the nature of politics, given that some of us are aspiring politi- cians and are using ISS as a tri- al stage for the future,” he said. The resolution proposes a $580 allocation to cover the cost of a bus to transport senators to the capital. Kevin Seymour , ISS trea- BY MADDIE REHAYEM STAFF WRITER The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is set to offer a new degree program for students who want to pursue degrees in LAS and computer science. Students will soon be able to receive a degree from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in a discipline such as psychology or biology and computer science, which is offered by Engineering. Rob Rutenbar, computer science department head, said the department pro- posed the program in Jan- uary 2010, and it will be available for the Fall 2013 semester after it is approved by the Illinois Board of Higher Education. “The idea of this degree is that you could do comput- er science plus anthropolo- Source: iCAP 2010 UIUC BRYAN LORENZ Design editor 2015 2020 2025 Solar farm will add to UI’s renewable energy plan The Illinois Climate Action Plan sets a goal of 5 percent of campus energy coming from renewable sources by 2015. The new solar farm is expected to generate 2.1 percent of campus energy by then. 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Projection for renewable energy Projection for non-renewable energy 5% 17.5% 25% Hampers filled with something other than dirty laundry ILLINOIS STUDENT SENATE See SOLAR FARM, Page 3A See LAS, Page 3A See ISS, Page 3A ROCHELLE WILSON THE DAILY ILLINI The Office of Volunteer Programs collected laundry baskets filled with different non-perishable items to help families in need prepare for a Thanksgiving dinner at the Union on Tuesday . Other goals in the 2010 Climate Action Plan Energy conservation: A 30 percent reduction in total building energy use by fiscal year 2020. Coal use at Abbott Power Plant: End all investments in the operating of coal-fueled sources at Abbott by 2017. Building standards: All new buildings and renovations are required to meet Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Gold Standards. Procurement and waste: The University will make more than 30 percent of food purchases from local sources — within 100 miles — by 2015. It will also commit to a “zero waste” campus policy by 2012 and a large-scale food-composting project.

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Page 1: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

BY ILYA GUREVICSTAFF WRITER

The Quad’s paths were aglow with tealights Tuesday night as the Indian Grad-uate Students Association held a ceremony in observation of Diwali, an Indian celebra-tion marking the triumph of good over evil .

Students and community members lit candles along the paths on the Quad throughout the night. A major tradition of the Hindu holiday is to light candles as a symbol of welcoming home an Indian king.

As the story of Diwali goes, the demon king Ravana kidnapped the wife Sita of Lord Rama while the couple was in exile . Diwali celebrates Rama killing Ravana, symbolizing “the victory of light over darkness,” said group member and grad-uate student Ashish Khetan . Indian stu-dents who celebrate Diwali shared the meaning of the candles and other tradi-tions with non-Indian students who attend-ed the event. Group members served Indi-an desserts such as gulab jamun — fried dairy dough balls in fl avorful syrup to

represent the sweetness of the occasion.Attendees traveled from as far away as

India to celebrate Diwali in Champaign. Suranjana Sur Mukherjee traveled from Calcutta, India, to visit her son at Illinois and came to the celebration.

“It was a very beautiful ceremony,” Sur Mukerjee said. “All castes, all creeds, all communities (are) coming together to cel-ebrate. It’s a universal brotherhood.”

Sur Mukherjee added that as Rama and Sita returned to his hometown, the com-munity lit candles to illuminate their way home. The candles on the Quad recreated that scene.

“We celebrate Lakshmi, the goddess of money... When we light all our lamps and ... leave the door open the belief is that Laksh-mi will look at all the lighting in your house, and she will come and bless you with mon-ey and prosperity,” said Varun Goel , grad-uate student. “We all get together; there’s worship (and) there’s food. My parents take special care in cleaning their house.”

Kavya Gundavaram , freshman in Engi-neering, said she valued the opportunity to celebrate on campus.

“I’m from India, so Diwali is a large part of my life, kind of like Thanksgiving here,” Gundavaram said. “It’s the fi rst year I’ve been away from my family (for Diwali).”

Aside from the signifi cance of the event, attendees also enjoyed the aesthetic appeal of the celebration.

“(The candlelight) makes it beautiful at night ... The fact that we live in this place and can come together and have something like this is really nice,” said Rhea Matar , senior in Education.

For some, the event was not just a reli-gious festival but a symbol of acceptance on campus.

“The candlelighting is something that they do in most Indian households, so it’s kind of cool that the University is embrac-ing it and kind of celebrating the holiday along with the Indian culture,” said Vidhan Desai , senior in Business. “I think it brings some diversity and culture to the campus.”

Ilya can be reached at [email protected].

INSIDE Pol ice 2A | Correct ions 2A | Horoscopes 2A | Opinions 4A | Crossword 5A | Comics 5A | Health & Liv ing 6A | Spor ts 1B | Classif ieds 3B | Sudoku 3B

The Daily IlliniWednesdayNovember 14, 2012

High: 46˚ Low: 28˚

The independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois since 1871 www.DailyIllini.com Vol. 142 Issue 58 | FREE

Thankful: Student counts her blessings after live-changing surgery FEATURES 6A

More than a numberBarrera dons No. 73 in honor of Curtis Speed SPORTS, 1B

Solar farms to boost University’s use of renewable energy

Students light up Quad for Diwali

BRIAN YU THE DAILY ILLINI

The Indian Graduate Student Association lit up the Quad with candles for the Indian Festival of Light, Diwali on Tuesday.

RSO celebrates Festival of Light with ceremony

LAS to offerdual degree with computer science in FallComputer skills in high demand for jobs

Senate considers trip to Springfi eld over veto session

BY CLAIRE EVERETTSTAFF WRITER

A 20.5-acre solar farm may provid the University with 1.8 percent of its energy by this time next year.

The solar farm comes as part of a $15.5 million plan approved Thursday by the board of trust-ees to move the University clos-er to its goal of having at least 5 percent of its power grid run on renewable energy by 2015.

Installation on the 20.5 acres of land near First Street and Windsor Road will begin this summer after the land-lease and power-purchase agree-ments are signed in March . The project is slated to be done in fall 2013.

While the majority of fund-ing will come from campus administration, about $1 million will be covered by the Student Sustainability Committee and roughly $85,000 will be covered by the University’s Facilities and Services unit .

“It is going to be, if not the largest, one of the largest solar projects on any campus in the country,” said Jack Dempsey , executive director of Facilities and Services. “I think it shows the University of Illinois and their students believe in renew-able energy, and they’re willing to put the resources (behind it) needed to make it happen.”

The panels purchased from Phoenix Solar Inc. will be lined

in rows and tilted at a 20-degree angle for maximum sunlight absorption.

“For every kilowatt the solar farm generates, that’s one less the University has to buy from the electricity grid,” said Mor-gan Johnston , sustainability coordinator for Facilities and Services.

BY CORINNE RUFFSTAFF WRITER

The Illinois Student Senate may add another trip to Spring-fi eld during veto session in addi-tion to their annual Lobby Day trip.

The senate will discuss the resolution Wednesday at its regu-lar meeting. The resolution calls for the trip to be co-sponsored with the Civic Leadership Pro-gram, a University political sci-ence program connected to its Cline Center for Democracy .

“With this being an election year, and with a bunch of impor-tant issues up right now, we want-ed to make sure we gave students the opportunity to go to Spring-fi eld and meet the legislators,” said Jordan Hughes , chairwom-an for the community and gov-ernmental affairs committee, which is sponsoring the resolu-tion, and senior in AHS.

Joseph Moseley , senator and sophomore in ACES, said there are hundreds of issues to be dis-

cussed from education to agri-culture but said he believes the most prominent issue is the need for bipartisan efforts.

“I think both sides need to answer the call to work togeth-er from the president,” he said. “It speaks volumes when (legisla-tion) passes with a good number of Democrats and a good number of Republicans.”

Moseley said he also believes the trip would be a great experi-ence for himself as well as many other student senators consider-ing careers in politics.

“I’d like to see how it is like to be a state senator, given the nature of politics, given that some of us are aspiring politi-cians and are using ISS as a tri-al stage for the future,” he said.

The resolution proposes a $580 allocation to cover the cost of a bus to transport senators to the capital.

Kevin Seymour , ISS trea-

BY MADDIE REHAYEMSTAFF WRITER

The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is set to offer a new degree program for students who want to pursue degrees in LAS and computer science.

Students will soon be able to receive a degree from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in a discipline such as psychology or biology and computer science, which is offered by Engineering.

Rob Rutenbar , computer science department head, said the department pro-posed the program in Jan-uary 2010, and it will be available for the Fall 2013 semester after it is approved by the Illinois Board of Higher Education.

“The idea of this degree is that you could do comput-er science plus anthropolo-

Source: iCAP 2010 UIUC BRYAN LORENZ Design editor

2015

2020

2025

Solar farm will add to UI’s renewable energy planThe Illinois Climate Action Plan sets a goal of 5 percent of campus energy coming from renewable sources by 2015. The new solar farm is expected to generate 2.1 percent of campus energy by then.

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

Projection for renewable energy Projection for non-renewable energy

5%

17.5%

25%

Hampers fi lled with something other than dirty laundryILLINOIS STUDENT SENATE

See SOLAR FARM, Page 3A

See LAS, Page 3ASee ISS, Page 3A

ROCHELLE WILSON THE DAILY ILLINI

The Offi ce of Volunteer Programs collected laundry baskets fi lled with different non-perishable items to help families in need prepare for a Thanksgiving dinner at the Union on Tuesday .

Other goals in the 2010 Climate Action PlanEnergy conservation: A 30 percent reduction in total building energy use by fiscal year 2020. Coal use at Abbott Power Plant: End all investments in the operating of coal-fueled sources at Abbott by 2017. Building standards: All new buildings and renovations are required to meet Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Gold Standards. Procurement and waste: The University will make more than 30 percent of food purchases from local sources — within 100 miles — by 2015. It will also commit to a “zero waste” campus policy by 2012 and a large-scale food-composting project.

Page 2: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

2A Wednesday, November 14, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com

HOROSCOPES

POLICE

BY NANCY BLACKTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

Today’s Birthday This year, make your mark on the world. Consider how to apply your talents in service of making the greatest impact toward a cause that inspires you. Money and attention come naturally. Align head and heart to your purpose.To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) Today is an 8 -- Watch what you say for the next three weeks. Listening is extra profi table, and actions speak louder than words. You can take new ground.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) Today is a 6 -- Stay in close contact with partners for maximum benefi t. Let them know what you need. Go over the paperwork carefully before choosing.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) Today is an 8 -- Your mind is more on enlightenment than work. Streamline procedures for awhile; know exactly

what you’re spending. Accept an unusual, lucrative assignment.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) Today is a 7 -- Grasp a fast-breaking opportunity; the pace is picking up. You’re exceptionally creative and persuasive. Clean up. Monitor liquid intake. Love fi nds a way.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) Today is a 9 -- Openly state your ideas without sarcastic criticism. Get clear before speaking. Use your network. Let your partner set the schedule. Take another approach.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) Today is a 9 -- Your ability to concentrate is enhanced. Get into a good book, or investigate a new invention. Focus on home. There’s genius in the chaos.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) Today is an 8 -- Concentrate on your studies. Use imagination, not work, to profi t. Discuss the situation with a co-worker. For about three weeks, fi nd ways to work smarter.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) Today is a 7 -- Take a romantic

adventure. Watch your words as you make personal decisions. Gather information, and listen to all considerations. Fill orders and rake in money.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) Today is a 9 -- Commune with your inner muse. Don’t abandon an idea just because it’s too expensive. Launching is good. Tone down the celebration. Embrace a surprise.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) Today is a 6 -- Your imagination goes wild over the next two days. Take care; it could get expensive. Meet to work out strategy. Intensive team effort is required.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)Today is an 8 -- Friends offer comfort and advice. Follow a hunch and dig deeper for an interesting discovery. Explore the possibilities. Choose your path after consideration.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) Today is an 8 -- Review the backstory this week. Get organized, and keep track of cash. You’ll gain spiritual understanding for the next three weeks. Social events capture your attention. Follow your intuition.

HOW TO CONTACT USThe Daily Illini is located at 512 E. Green St., Champaign, IL 61820. Our offi ce hours are 9a.m. to 5:30p.m. Monday through Friday.

General contacts:Main number ...........(217) 337-8300Advertising .............. (217) 337-8382Classifi ed ...................(217) 337-8337Newsroom................(217) 337-8350Newsroom fax: ........ (217) 337-8328Production ................(217) 337-8320

NewsroomCorrections: If you think something is incorrectly reported, please call Editor in Chief Samantha Kiesel at 337-8365.News: If you have a news tip, please contact Daytime editor Maggie Huynh at 337-8350 or News Editor Taylor Goldenstein at 337-8352 or e-mail [email protected] releases: Please send press releases to [email protected] Photo: For questions about photographs or to suggest photo coverage of an event, please contact Photo Editor Daryl Quitalig at 337-8344 or e-mail [email protected]: To contact the sports staff, please call Sports Editor Jeff Kirshman at 337-8363 or e-mail [email protected]: Please submit events for publication in print and online at the217.com/calendar.Employment: If you would like to work in the newspaper’s editorial department, please contact Managing Editor Reporting Nathaniel Lash at 337-8343 or email [email protected] to the editor: Contributions may be sent to: Opinions, The Daily Illini, 512 E. Green St., Champaign, IL 61820 or e-mailed to [email protected] with the subject “Letter to the Editor.” Letters are limited to 300 words. Contributions must be typed and include the author’s name, address and phone number. UI students must include their year in school and college. The Daily Illini reserves the right to edit or reject any contributions.

Daily Illini On-air: If you have comments or questions about our broadcasts on WPGU-FM 107.1, please call 337-8381 or e-mail [email protected]: Contact Managing Editor Online Hannah Meisel at 337-8353 or [email protected] for questions or comments about our Web site.AdvertisingPlacing an ad: If you would like to place an ad, please contact our advertising department.! Classifi ed ads: (217) 337-8337 or

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Employment: If you are interested in working for the Advertising Department, please call (217) 337-8382 and ask to speak to Molly Lannon, advertising sales manager.

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Copyright © 2012 Illini Media Co.

The Daily Illini is the independent student news agency at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The newspaper is published by the Illini Media Co. The Daily Illini does not necessarily represent, in whole or in part, the views of the University of Illinois administration, faculty or students.

All Illini Media Co. and/or Daily Illini articles, photos and graphics are the property of Illini Media Co. and may not be reproduced or published without written permission from the publisher.

The Daily Illini is a member of The Associated Press. The Associated Press is entitled to the use for reproduction of all local news printed in this newspaper.

Editor-in-chiefSamantha Kiesel

[email protected] editor reporting Nathaniel Lash

[email protected] editor onlineHannah Meisel

[email protected] editor visualsShannon Lancor

[email protected] editorDanny WicentowskiSocial media directorSony KassamNews editorTaylor Goldenstein

[email protected] editorMaggie Huynh

[email protected]. news editorsSafi a KaziSari LeskRebecca TaylorFeatures editorJordan Sward

[email protected]. features editorAlison MarcotteCandice Norwood

Sports editorJeff Kirshman

[email protected] Asst. sports editorsDarshan PatelMax TaneDan WelinPhoto editorDaryl Quitalig

[email protected]. photo editorKelly HickeyOpinions editorRyan Weber

[email protected] Design editorsBryan LorenzEunie KimMichael Mioux

[email protected] chiefKevin [email protected]. copy chiefJohnathan HettingerAdvertising sales managerMolly [email protected] ed sales directorDeb Sosnowski

Daily Illini/Buzz ad directorTravis TruittProduction directorKit DonahuePublisherLilyan J Levant

Periodical postage paid at Champaign, IL 61821. The Daily Illini is published Monday through Friday during University of Illinois fall and spring semesters, and Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday in summer. New Student Guide and Welcome Back Edition are published in August. First copy is free; each additional copy is 50 cents. Local, U.S. mail, out-of-town and out-of-state rates available upon request.

Night system staff for today’s paperNight editor: Johnathan HettingerPhoto night editor: Melissa McCabeCopy editors: Crystal Smith, Lauren Cox, Kaitlin Penn, Kirby Gamsby, Chad Thornburg, Ilya Gureic, Designers: Nina Yang, Rui He, Hannah Hwang, Sadie TeperPage transmission: Harry Durden

CORRECTIONSIn the November 13, 2012

edition of The Daily Illini, the caption for the article “Veterans honored at Parkland” incorrectly stated that Jose Gomez is a veteran and president of the Student Veterans Association at Parkland College. It should have stated that Gomez is a current member of the military and a past president of the Student Veterans at Parkland.

When The Daily Illini makes a mistake, we will correct it in this place. The Daily Illini strives for accuracy, so if you see an error in the paper, please contact Editor-in-Chief Samantha Kiesel at 337-8365.

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Buzzyour entertainment weekly

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To Oakbrook Mall, Woodfi eld Mall, Woodridge, Tinley ParkFriday November 16TH

TURKEY DAY RIDES $25 free wifi

Visit website for departure times:

www.peoriacharter.com

Now celebrating more than 60 years in Student HousingHENDRICK HOUSEHENDRICK HOUSE Green & Lincoln

Urbana, IL 61801(217)365-8000 (217)356-3344

www.hendrickhouse.com

Now celebrating more than 60 years in Student HousingNow celebrating more than 60 years in Student HousingHENDRICK HOUSEHENDRICK HENDRICK HENDRICK HENDRICK HOUSE HOUSE HOUSE HOUSE Green & LincolnGreen & Lincoln

Urbana, IL 61801Urbana, IL 61801(217)365-8000 (217)365-8000 (217)356-3344(217)356-3344

www.hendrickhouse.comwww.hendrickhouse.com

Champaign! A 20-year-old male and a

19-year-old male were arrested on the charge of damaging property in the 300 block of East Green Street just after midnight Friday.

According to the report, the suspects damaged the property of the apartment complex. The suspects were issued notices to appear.

! Criminal damage to property was reported in the 1800 block of Crescent Drive around 3:30 p.m. Saturday.

According to the report, an unknown offender damaged the windshield of the victim’s vehicle. !

Urbana

! A 26-year-old male was arrested on the charge of trespassing property in the 2000 block of Vawter Street around 7:30 a.m. Monday.

According to the report, the suspect was previously banned from the property. He disobeyed the ban and went onto the property and was arrested.

! Theft and credit card fraud were reported in the 100 block of West Washington Street around 11 a.m. Monday.

According to the report, an unknown offender stole the victim’s debit card and has used it to make two unauthorized purchases.

University! Theft was reported at

Noyes Laboratory, 505 S. Mathews Ave., at 3 p.m. Monday.

According to the report, a University student reported that an unknown offender stole a bike that was locked to a railing near the location. The bike is valued at $300.

! Theft was reported at Grainger Library, 1301 W. Springfi eld Ave., at 5 p.m. Monday.

According to the report, a University student reported that an unknown offender stole a computer that was left on a table at the library. The student left the computer unattended during a restroom break. The computer is valued at $1,200.

Compiled by Klaudia Dukala.

New York Times Crossword Puzzle

Every Thursday in the Daily Illini and atdailyillini.com

RSO

Weekof the

Page 3: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

BY THOMAS J. SHEERANTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND — A Cleve-land woman puffed on a cig-arette, wore headphones and ignored passers-by and crowds of reporters as she stood for an hour Tuesday under a judge’s order holding a sign that said, “Only an idiot would drive on the sidewalk to avoid a school bus.”

A Municipal Court judge had ordered 32-year-old Shena Har-din to serve the highly public sentence Tuesday and Wednes-day for the Sept. 11 citation after she was caught on camera driving on a sidewalk to pass a Cleveland school bus that was unloading children.

She arrived bundled up against the 34-degree cold at the intersection near downtown Cleveland as passing vehicles honked. Satellite TV trucks streamed the event live.

Hardin refused to comment, as did her mother, who watched from a parked car. A message seeking comment was left for Hardin’s attorneys.

Hardin’s license was sus-

pended for 30 days and she was ordered to pay $250 in court costs.

Lisa Kelley, whose 9-year-old daughter boards the bus that Hardin had been passing on the sidewalk, said the sentence fi t the crime.

“She’s an idiot, just like her sign says,” Kelley said as she watched Hardin lean against a fence, her head down and her eyes hidden by dark glasses.

“She did this almost every day last year,” Kelley said. “She won’t stop laughing. She’s not remorseful, she laughed at every court appearance. She’s still laughing, so she needs to be humiliated like this.”

Kelley said she was only sorry the woman was standing in the cold and not the rain or snow.

Bill Lipold, 37, who works nearby in the blue-collar neigh-borhood of older homes and fac-tories, yelled to Hardin: “Why do you hate kids?” He hopes the punishment works.

“How else are you going to stop her from doing it again?” he said. “She really didn’t show remorse for her action after being caught, so you’ve got to try something.”

With two schools located within two blocks of the location and busy commuter traffi c, the area can be risky for youngsters walking to class, Lipold said.

surer and graduate student, said the total cost of the trip would be $1,200, but the student senate would be splitting the cost with the Civic Leadership Program.

Max Ellithorpe , senator and graduate student, said unlike oth-er ISS events, such as the funding of a haunted house, it is the sen-ate’s duty to advocate for students by visiting the capital and lobby-ing for student issues.

“One way to advocate for stu-dents is to travel and meet with our elected offi cials,” he said. “It’s a great way to fi ght for what we represent.”

If the resolution passes, sever-al senators said they would take the opportunity to question cur-rent legislators about the pressing issue of funding for the University.

Matt Gold , senator and senior in LAS, said he believes senators need to push elected offi cials to pay back the University the mon-ey it is owed.

“Too often I feel like the state government ignores the concerns of our fl agship university,” he said. “They owe us a ton of money, and it really puts us in a diffi cult situ-ation every year when we budget.”

Corinne can be reached at cruff2@ dailyillini.com.

Some students aren’t happy with the project’s cost.

“Investing $15.5 million in a new energy source that replaces only 2 percent of (campus power plant) Abbott’s resource usage seems like an ineffi cient allo-cation of scarce funding,” said Mitch Hiett, senior in ACES.

But Johnston and other back-ers say the project will recoup some of that money. She said that over the next 20 years, the solar farm will generate enough ener-gy that the University will save about $10.2 million.

The University was prompt-ed to create the Illinois Climate

Action Plan ,which set the Univer-sity’s energy goals, after signing the American College and Uni-versity’s Presidents’ Climate Commitment . These steps have led the University to set a goal of carbon neutrality by 2050 .

Marika Nell , junior in Engi-neering, said that while costs of renewable energy are high, the implications nonrenewable ener-gy have on health and the envi-ronment can create even more expenses.

“The price of nonrenewable energy like coal does not include the environmental costs to it,” Nell said. “It doesn’t include the cost to human health. It seems more expensive, but when you look at the overall costs to our society, it’s not that different.”

Student trustee David Piles-ki said he wanted to stress solar panels weren’t the only way the University was going to meet the University’s energy goals. He said the University is also looking into wind technology and more effi cient or sustain-able combustibles, such as nat-ural gas or biomass, as well as other technologies.

“I think the solar farms are a good symbol of what the Uni-versity stands for,” Pileski said. “To see that blend of agriculture, technology and renewable ener-gy, to me, is a bright beacon for the future, and the innovation that is occurring at Illinois.”

Claire can be reached at [email protected].

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com Wednesday, November 14, 2012 3A

Four decades worth of rock ’n’ roll hits Assembly Hall

MICHAEL BOJDA THE DAILY ILLINI

Chicago, the self-described “rock and roll band with horns” formed in 1967 , returned to Assembly Hall on Tuesday night . One of the longest-running and most successful rock groups in history, Chicago performed hits spanning four different decades, much to the delight of the large crowd.

TONY DEJAK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Shena Hardin smokes a cigarette as she holds up a sign to serve a highly public sentence Tuesday in Cleveland .

BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINSTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LUCASVILLE, Ohio — Ohio on Tuesday executed a con-demned killer who calmly went to his death still claiming he was innocent of stabbing a woman 138 times, slitting her throat and cutting off her hands.

“I’m good, let’s roll,” Brett Hartman said in his fi nal words.

He then smiled in the direction of his sister and repeatedly gave her, a friend and his attorney a “thumbs up” with his left hand.

“This is not going to defeat me,” Hartman then said to war-den Donald Morgan, who didn’t respond.

The effect of the single dose of pentobarbital did not seem as immediate as in other executions at the state prison in Lucasville, in southern Ohio. Four minutes after Hartman fi rst appeared to be reacting to it as his abdo-men began to rise and fall, his abdomen rose and fell again, he coughed and his head shifted rhythmically for a few moments.

His sister, Diane Morretti, dabbed at her eyes during the process. The warden declared Hartman’s time of death as 10:34.

Both Hart-man’s attorney, David Stebbins, and prisons sys-tem spokeswom-an JoEllen Smith said the gap between Hart-man’s movements was not out of the ordinary.

Hartman was the 49th inmate put to death since Ohio resumed executions in 1999.

Hartman acknowledged that he had sex with Winda Snipes early on the morning of Sept. 9, 1997, at her Akron apartment. He also says he went back to Snipes’ apartment later that day, found her mutilated body and panicked, trying to clean up the mess before calling 911. But Hartman said he didn’t kill her, a claim rejected by numerous courts over the years.

A former co-worker and friend of Snipes who witnessed the exe-cution said afterward that the family was relieved the case was over and that the continu-ous rounds of appeals and media reports about the case were at an end. Jacqueline Brown of Doylestown in northeast Ohio also fl atly dismissed Hartman’s

innocence claim.“He’s very, very, very guilty,”

she said afterward. “Now Winda can be at peace, and that’s what it’s all about.”

Stebbins read a statement from Hartman’s family in which they professed his innocence and asked for additional testing of scene evidence.

“We hope that the taking of Brett’s innocent life might serve as a wake-up call to the fl aws in our legal system,” the statement said.

Hartman came within about a week of execution in 2009 before federal courts allowed him to pursue an innocence claim. When that claim failed, Hartman had a new date set last year, but that was postponed because of a federal lawsuit over Ohio’s exe-cution policy.

The Ohio Parole Board had unanimously denied Hartman’s requests for clemency three times, citing the brutality of the Snipes’ slaying and the “over-whelming evidence” of Hart-man’s guilt.

Hartman’s attorneys long said that crucial evidence from the crime scene and Snipes’ body had

never been test-ed, raising ques-tions about Hart-man’s innocence. The evidence included fi nger-prints allegedly found on a clock and a mop han-dle. Hartman also argued the evidence could

implicate an alternate suspect.The attorneys argued that

if Hartman’s innocence claim wasn’t accepted, he should still have been be spared because of the effects of a “remarkably chaotic and nomadic early child-hood,” including being aban-doned by his mother.

His lawyers also said Hart-man’s behavior in prison was exemplary and showed he was a changed man. They cited his devotion to religious studies, his development as an artist and community service projects in prison.

The state opposed those argu-ments, citing the strength of the evidence and the fact that courts have repeatedly upheld Hartman’s conviction and death sentence. The state also said Hartman refused to take respon-sibility and show remorse.

gy, which would be really inter-esting if you wanted to study social networks, or you could do computer science plus chem-istry. There’s very interesting stuff going on with computa-tional chemistry today,” said Charles Tucker , associate dean of engineering.

Rutenbar agreed that such combinations, such as the com-puter science and anthropology major, would allow students to examine platforms such as Twit-ter “from a very professional, human society point of view.”

The degree is aimed at stu-dents who are not pursuing

computer science degrees but still have to meet the growing demand for computer skills from employers.

“Lots of people who aren’t going to do IT for a living still need to do computational kinds of stuff,” Rutenbar said.

He added that dealing with data and analytics is important in many professions but does not require a computer science degree.

Programs like this have not previously been offered to Uni-versity students. Double major-ing in computer science and LAS is rare because of sched-uling and differences in the programs, and majoring in one while only taking a few class-es in the other does not provide

suffi cient knowledge, Rutenbar said.

He said administrators gauged student interest by not-ing the increasing amount of students from different academ-ic backgrounds opting to minor in informatics.

“We’re constantly seeing some of our colleagues in oth-er places doing really exciting things, like at the intersection of sociology and computing or the intersection of anthropology and computing,” Rutenbar said. “Anything that gets the engi-neers south of Green is good, and anything that gets the LAS guys north of Green is good.”

Maddie can be reached at [email protected].

FROM PAGE 1A

LASFROM PAGE 1A

SOLAR FARM

FROM PAGE 1A

ISS

GEO garners undergrad support for negotiations

Man executed, accused of slaying woman in 1997

Woman ordered to carry sign in publicUnusual sentence given for driving on sidewalk to avoid bus

Another general linked to, under investigation in Petraeus affairBY ROBERT BURNSTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ABOARD A U.S. MILITARY AIRCRAFT — In a new twist to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scan-dal, the Pentagon said Tuesday that the top American commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, is under investigation for alleged “inappropriate communications” with a woman who is said to have received threatening emails from Paula Broadwell, the woman with whom Petraeus had an extramari-tal affair.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a written statement issued

to reporters aboard his aircraft, en route from Honolulu to Perth, Aus-tralia, that the FBI referred the matter to the Pentagon on Sunday.

Panetta said that he ordered a Pentagon investigation of Allen on Monday.

A senior defense offi cial travel-ing with Panetta said Allen’s com-munications were with Jill Kel-ley, who has been described as an unpaid social liaison at Mac-Dill Air Force Base, Fla., which is headquarters to the U.S. Central Command. She is not a U.S. gov-ernment employee.

Kelley is said to have received

threatening emails from Broadwell, who is Petraeus’ biog-rapher and who had an extra-marital affair with Petraeus that reportedly began after he became CIA director in September 2011.

Petraeus resigned as CIA direc-tor on Friday.

Allen, a four-star Marine gener-al, succeeded Petraeus as the top American commander in Afghani-stan in July 2011.

The senior offi cial, who dis-cussed the matter only on con-dition of anonymity because it is under investigation, said Panetta believed it was prudent

to launch a Pentagon investiga-tion, although the offi cial would not explain the nature of Allen’s problematic communications. The offi cial said 20,000 to 30,000 pag-es of emails and other documents from Allen’s communications with Kelley between 2010 and 2012 are under review. He would not say whether they involved sexual mat-ters or whether they are thought to include unauthorized disclosures of classifi ed information. He said he did not know whether Petraeus is mentioned in the emails.

“Gen. Allen disputes that he has engaged in any wrongdoing in this

matter,” the offi cial said. He said Allen currently is in Washington.

Panetta said that while the mat-ter is being investigated by the Defense Department Inspector General, Allen will remain in his post as commander of the Interna-tional Security Assistance Force, based in Kabul. He praised Allen as having been instrumental in making progress in the war.

The FBI’s decision to refer the Allen matter to the Pentagon rath-er than keep it itself, combined with Panetta’s decision to allow Allen to continue as Afghanistan commander without a suspension,

suggested strongly that offi cials viewed whatever happened as a possible infraction of military rules rather than a violation of federal criminal law.

Allen was Deputy Command-er of Central Command, based in Tampa, prior to taking over in Afghanistan. He also is a veteran of the Iraq war.

In the meantime, Panetta said, Allen’s nomination to be the next commander of U.S. European Command and the commander of NATO forces in Europe has been put on hold “until the rele-vant facts are determined.”

BY TYLER DAVISSTAFF WRITER

The Undergraduate-Graduate Alliance held its fi rst meeting of the school year Tuesday at the University YMCA. This is a group sponsored by the Uni-versity Graduate Employees’ Organization in order to encour-age and facilitate communica-tion between GEO members and undergraduates.

Communication is particular-ly important to the GEO espe-cially during their contract negotiations with the Univer-sity, said Juan Bernal, meet-ing organizer and graduate

student. Bernal will be on the strike working committee if the GEO’s strike authorization vote passes Friday.

Bernal said the purpose of the meeting was to reach out to undergraduate students for their support.

“If we stand together, we can put a lot more pressure on the administration since we are all students on this campus and (striking) will affect us all,” he said.

He said the GEO needs under-graduate support in the coming weeks to keep negotiations with the federal mediator moving or

to make an effi cient strike if negotiations aren’t successful.

Natalye Tate, graduate stu-dent, was the first speaker at the meeting, explaining the process of contract negotia-tions and how long the GEO has been negotiating with the administration. Tate explained the frustration felt among GEO members regarding the Univer-sity’s lack of communication at the bargaining table, citing the example that the GEO chose 57 hours within three weeks for possible mediation meetings while the University selected 16 of those hours, cancelling one

meeting out of those 16 hours.“We only have three bargain-

ing sessions left, and we’ve still yet to talk about the big (issues) — tuition waivers, some big issues with healthcare and wag-es,” Bernal said. “I was there last Friday, and it took them all day to talk about an issue that is not huge.”

Tuition waivers remain an issue of concern for the GEO, Tate said.

“If we don’t receive waivers, a lot of us cannot be here teach-ing you...because we cannot pay our tuition,” she said.

The University is searching

for a contract agreement that “reflects difficult economic times we are in, and that appro-priately refl ects the rights and interests of each side,” said cam-pus spokeswoman Robin Kaler.

“The University remains optimistic that we can reach an agreement with the GEO, with-out a strike occurring,” Kaler said in an email Saturday. “It was helpful to work with the fed-eral mediator Friday.”

GEO spokeswoman Stephanie Seawell said in an earlier inter-view that the GEO also wants to reach a fair agreement.

“We want to settle this in the

bargain room,” she said. “We want to stay in the classroom.”

But as Bernal noted during his presentation, a strike is the last resort in the GEO’s efforts to negotiate a fair contract.

“If we say yes (to a strike), our membership does believe it’s the only option left,” Bernal said.

The next mediation session will take place Wednesday, and the GEO’s strike authorization vote will run until Thursday. The votes will be counted on Nov. 16.

Tyler can be reached at [email protected].

“I’m good, let’s roll. .... This is not gong

to defeat me.”BRETT HARTMAN,

moments before being executed in the state prison in Lucasville, Ohio.

Page 4: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

Opinions4AWednesdayNovember 14, 2012The Daily Illiniwww.DailyIllini.com

P resident Barack Obama’s re-election last week offi-ciated his controversial

Affordable Care Act on the federal level, but the wheels are still turning for state-lev-el aspects of the law on health care reform.

One of the key tenets of Obamacare to be adopted by every state is the development of a health insurance exchange program, an online market-place for all citizens to pur-chase insurance, compare rates and learn whether they qual-ify for federal subsidy. The Obama administration extend-ed the deadline for all states to submit their plans for such an exchange from this Friday to mid-December, to allow for lag-ging states to make final calls.

As of publication, Illinois is one of a few states that has decided that it will build a state-run health insurance exchange, not run jointly with the federal government. It is 1 of 15 states processing and developing some form of an exchange. Since the exchange was signed off via legislation, Illinois has been reviewing five potential online vendors to build the exchange.

“We do it ourselves, we do it right,” said Claudia Lennhoff, executive director of Cham-paign County Health Care Con-sumers. “Because the exchange will have the authority to reg-ulate the health insurance products that are sold in the

exchange, from the consumer’s perspective, we want to see it in consumer’s control.”

The benefits of a state-run exchange will be readily seen for Illinois residents. Accord-ing to Illinois officials, the exchange is projected to insure roughly 800,000 in 2014 and over 1 million residents by 2020. Additionally, the easy access of the market smoothes out troubles inherent in the search for private or group insurance. This is especially true for uninsured University students looking to graduate soon.

“Students are very familiar with using that (online) technology. It will be a very natu-ral way to shop for insurance,” Lenhoff said.

As much as there is to celebrate, there are a number of things to chew off Illinois’ plate before it can reap the ben-efits of the exchange in 2014 — namely, how it decides to appoint its govern-ing body and how it funds the site.

In 2011, a legislative commit-tee was formed to make recom-mendations on the governance, board membership and avenues of revenue for the exchange, but since the end of 2011, it has not made any conclusive effort or push toward finalizing these details, according to the Com-monwealth Fund. Though they had released a thorough report on its suggestions in October 2011, they are quickly losing

time to put those policies in place. In this proposed draft on how to appoint health insur-ance exchange board members, it suggested that the governor, general assembly and attorney general include representatives of insurance companies. Addi-tionally, the exchange board would have the power to form a technical advisory committee, whom insurers would be among.

The primary issue with this would be that it raises a clear conflict of interest; very eas-ily and very often, “consumer

advocacy agencies and big insurance companies butt heads,” Lenhoff said. This effec-tively would stall the progress such a board would make.

The state may have until the end of the month to submit its draft of plans for the exchange, and it may be well ahead of several oth-er states. But the Legislature can-not delay address-ing the govern-ing and funding

of such a large project. States like California, Maryland and Oregon have already both iden-tified a source of revenue and prohibited representation from insurance companies on their boards. It’s time for the state to take the next steps and define the grounds on which we tread, before contracting a bid to start building the exchange.

Nora is a senior in LAS. She can be reached at [email protected].

NORA IBRAHIMOpinions columnist

What do companies

owe society?

GIF is word of the year over YOLO

EDITORIAL CARTOON JOHNIVAN DARBY THE DAILY ILLINI

Illinois needs to advance health care

The Daily Illini

E!"#$%"&'Illinois residents deserve progress with Democratic

supermajority

E lection 2012 brought a decisive victory for Democrats in Illinois. With a supermajor-ity in the state Senate

and House supplementing the Democratic governor, there is little doubt that the next few years will be marked by dis-tinctly Democratic policy.

Besides its obvious impact on Republicans, Democrats won five out of the six con-tended congressional seats and now outnumber Repub-licans 71-47 in the House and 40-19 in the Senate. This reveals just how powerful a role redistricting played last Tuesday.

In 2010, a Democrat-con-trolled governor’s office and Legislature redrew political boundaries that significantly limited competition for Demo-cratic candidates in many dis-tricts. As a result, the sweep-ing seat gains will enable the Democratic congress to over-ride Gov. Pat Quinn’s veto power.

House Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton are now argu-ably the real muscle behind the Illinois political machine. With less Republican resis-tance, Democrats will likely be able to push policies more quickly and easily through the legislative process. This may prove to be beneficial for a state that urgently needs reform in its spending.

Without Republican opposi-tion, the blame for any legis-lation that doesn’t get pushed through or any that fails will rest with the Democrats.

Yet without opposition, one of the key mechanisms to moderate and balance the state’s political policy has taken a major hit. Now, the responsibility lies even more heavily on the people to hold their representatives account-able for passing legislation and creating programs that meet their needs.

Democratic leaders need to take extra precaution to strike a balance between tax hikes and spending cuts. Shortly after the 2010 elec-tions, unpopular tax hikes passed, which increased the income tax by 67 percent and corporate tax by 46 percent. That gives Illinois the fourth-highest corporate tax rate in the nation.

These taxes are certain-ly intended to drag the state of Illinois out of its econom-ic crisis, but the government has a responsibility to also observe frugality and achieve balance.

Especially in a presidential election year, it’s easy for the local elections to be drowned out by all of the press and publicity swirling around a competitive race to the White House — yet some of the most significant legislation to our everyday lives comes from our state Legislature.

We often look to the Oval Office and Capitol Hill for reform, but voters and citi-zens must remain vigilant to what is happening on the state level.

There needs to be a collec-tive consciousness of Illi-nois’ political process given the current fragility of the Illinois economy, and state residents must hold their leaders — Democrats and Republicans alike — account-able to their promise to move forward.

Freshmen Business students know all too well about the concept of profes-sional responsibility: What do I owe

to myself, my company and the world at large? The final third of the semester-long course is dedicated to the question of what companies owe society. This ques-tion, once the topic of theoretical debate, is becoming reality, not just in the class-room but in greater happenings around the world and here in the states.

The reality is seen in the likes of the once-relevant Occupy movement or the impending capital gains tax increases that are likely to be a part in any grand bargain to avert the fiscal cliff.

Never before has such a frontal attack on the pure profit motive of business been attempted since the populist move-ment that rode on the United States on the backs of farmers set against the busi-ness world in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Now the buzzword of social responsibility has transcended the gap between politics and business and popu-list ideals of accountability to the “great-er good,” and a “social conscience” is becoming ever more popular, even on Wall Street.

But what is society if not the summa-tion of individuals with differing ideals and preferences? It is impossible to fully respond to the concerns of everybody in society because everybody is different. The values of someone are inherently dif-ferent from the values of another, and these values have to be ranked in order of preference. Corporations cannot do that and instead are forced to rely on — and are only responsible to — shareholders and customers.

These two swaths of the public are a far more effective representative sample to showcase the interests of society than the aggregate of the entire population because both groups already have a vest-ed interest in the future of the company and their own individual interests. The best way corporations and individuals serve the interests of society is by serv-ing their own individual interests.

When I walk into a store as a customer, I expect certain things. Before I purchase anything, I am finding the answers to several questions that matter as much or more than the price of my desired item.

How are the employees treated? How are the employees treating me? Are the aesthetics and arrangements done so in a desirable way? Do they have this in my size? The importance of these questions and many others will vary for each indi-vidual, and these differences play a tre-mendous role in market-based decisions.

While I have been subconsciously ask-ing these questions only upon entry, the owners of the store have already been asking themselves for sometimes weeks or months in advance how I as a consum-er would answer these questions. If I buy their product, they know they have been successful. If I and enough others refrain, their business will have to change to meet society’s expectations or leave the marketplace.

This is the beauty of the profit motive and the free market. Corporations are forced to respond to changes in custom-er behavior and preferences. If they do not, they lose and another organization will rise to meet the challenge. Customers are ultimately responsible for the actions of the company, as businesses can only respond to situations with any real effec-tiveness. The money that flows through consumers’ pocketbooks dictates where the company will go and how it values scarce goods.

Like a loyal pet, corporations’ true allegiances lie with that of their owners. Shareholders provide the direct vehicle for any real social change, with the cus-tomer always in the driver’s seat.

So what do corporations owe society? Better yet, what do they owe me? The pur-suit of their own selfish interests. If I am a customer, I provide the testing grounds for corporations. If their practices or pro-cedures are not meeting an acceptable standard, then their venture will fail by me. The corporation continually works on my behalf to improve the quality of my visit or product in the tried-and-true hope that they will be monetarily rewarded. If I am a shareholder in the corporation, the company owes me the flexibility to ensure the customer is getting a fair deal and returns on my investment.

If I am in neither of these two groups, the business owes me nothing but to follow the law. I am making my statement and choice by willfully not being in either group, and I am not enti-tled to make others’ choices for them.

The Occupy movement and the increase in capital gains tax repre-sent different facets of the greater corporate social responsibility move-ment. With the fiscal cliff looming, and a governmental branch-and-a-half in favor of promoting this agenda, there is a possibility that the profit motive of business will be blunted. In effect, the greatest social catalyst of change will be damaged in the name of social change.

Dylan is a freshman in Business. He can be reached at [email protected].

DYLAN HOYEROpinions columnist

W ith each passing year, popular culture welcomes the heavy usage of new

words and phrases for an indefi-nite period of time. Eventually, these terms go from daily men-tions to casual references to reminisce-about-when-it-was-“big” nostalgia.

It also seems that with each passing year, these societal inside jokes for a given year are becoming more and more com-mon. This is in large part due to the rise of the Internet and social media sites that promote hashtagging, meme production and so much more.

Although there is no official start or finish to when these words are relevant, Oxford American Dictionary somewhat catalogues these short-lived cul-tural icons by annually induct-ing a “word of the year.”

This year, the term GIF, short for graphics interchange for-mat, took home the top prize.

The word deserves the recognition.

In use since the ’80s, the Internet became a playground for these flashing images throughout the year of 2012. As a result, GIF will always be remembered by Oxford Ameri-can Dictionary.

What happens to the other 2012 terms though?

Do they float off into irrele-vance, only to be remembered when looking through old Face-book posts between you and your friends?

The reason I ask is because one my favorite and least favor-ite words of 2012 lost out to GIF — YOLO.

This acronym-turned-word swept into the American pop culture lexicon within the last year.

YOLO, short for “you only live once,” is most common-ly used by teens and 20-some-things in situations where they are about to do something that they might not normally do like take a spontaneous road trip or spend money on an extrava-gant night out. Other times, it is used in inconsequential situa-tions such as ordering an extra shot of espresso or watching TV instead of going to the gym for a work out.

The beauty of YOLO is that it can apply to any situation and carry the same core meaning.

In its early days, I used YOLO somewhat frequently as it became second nature and ines-capable on a college campus. Overall, though, the use of the word has become tired, and it appears to be entering its twi-light as a go-to phrase for Inter-net users and friend groups alike.

No matter how it is used, its temporary relevance to our cul-ture is undeniable.

Past words of the year include LOL, OMG and Nom Nom. LOL means “laughing out loud.” OMG means “oh my gosh.” Nom nom is just a fun way of talking about food and eating.

While past words are sim-ply interjections, YOLO has meaning.

For example, earlier this year I intended to spend a Fri-day night studying for the sev-eral exams that were coming

up in the next week. On this same night, my good friend Tom was planning to attend the Best Coast concert, which was part of the Pygmalion Music Festival.

About a half hour after tell-ing him I had to study that night, the term I had somewhat frequently used in much less important situations entered into my mind and would not leave.

YOLO. You only live once. In 30 years, when my own

kids are going to college, I won’t be telling them about the time I studied for exams on a Friday, I will tell them about the fun memories I made on campus. Studying right then and there was not a life-or-death situation, and I still had time to study on Saturday and Sunday. So, I went to the concert.

This scenario likely doesn’t sound like a life lesson moment, but it is a perfect example of how reminding yourself that you only live once can open your mind and heart to living life to its fullest.

Unfortunately, this 2012 pop-culture-staple-turned-life-les-son will fade into obscurity once our societal ADD kicks in and new words are created.

Before YOLO fades, soak up its true meaning and live life accordingly. This might mean skipping a class to catch up on “Breaking Bad.” It might mean ordering that extra shot of espresso. It might mean finally committing to study abroad.

No matter what it means to you, just remember — YOLO.

John is a junior in Media. He can be reached at [email protected].

JOHN BUYSSEOpinions columnist

According to Illinois officials, the exchange is projected to insure roughly

800,000 in 2014 and over 1 million residents

by 2020.

SHARE YOURTHOUGHTSEmail: [email protected] with the subject “Let-

ter to the Editor.”The Daily Illini reserves the right to edit for length, libel,

grammar and spelling errors, and Daily Illini style or to reject

any contributions. Letters must be limited to 300 words. Contributions must be typed

and include the author’s name, address and phone number.

University students must include their year in school and college.

Page 5: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

ing to the school’s vegan and veg-etarian students. Huling said the University is setting an example for schools around the country.

“Something that the U of I does quite well and that we’ve encouraged other schools to fol-

low ... is offer options that appeal to nonvegetarians,” Huling said. “These are foods that all students could enjoy, regardless of wheth-er they’re vegetarian or not. We encourage schools looking to break into the contest to follow the example of the U of I and oth-ers like them.”

Huling said that by choosing a vegan option over a meat-filled

dish, students can significantly reduce animal cruelty and glob-al warming.

The 2012 winners of PETA’s Most Vegan Friendly College Contest will be announced Thurs-day. For more information about the contest, visit peta2.com.

Bailey can be reached at [email protected].

an hour or so and let some calorie-burning fun bring the family together. According to LIVESTRONG’s fitness page, you can burn about 526 calo-ries per hour playing flag or two-hand touch football. Notice the words “friendly” and “flag” in front of football. A visit to the Emergency Room would certainly put a damper on all the festivities.

Do the dishesYep, loading the dishwash-

er for 30 minutes can burn 105 calories, according to Fit-Day.com. It’s the best revenge on the lazy family members parked on the couch.

Lose the chairIt’s no secret that the amount

of calories shoveled into your body will far outweigh the meager work of lifting the fork to your mouth. But if you let dear old Aunt Agnes take that last chair, or bite your tongue when cousin Joe snags that last cozy space in front of the TV, you will burn 50 calories more standing than sitting per hour, according to LIVESTRONG’s weight management webpage. And they’ll think you’re just being polite.

Enjoy the day Ultimately, Turkey Day is

about a whole lot more than just the turkey. The number one travel day of the year is meant for just that: making the journey to see family and

friends and pausing for that one day to remember just how much we have to be thankful for. So don’t stress yourself about one day of indulgence; the Boston Globe said the aver-age American will consume over 3,000 calories (almost the equivalent of one pound) dur-ing their Thanksgiving Day feast, and I don’t know anyone who would be willing to spend six hours playing flag football with the family to burn it off. So enjoy the company, the food and the holiday atmosphere, and remember to laugh — a study from Vanderbilt Univer-sity found that you can burn 50 calories with just 10 to 15 min-utes of sustained laughter.

Maggie is a junior in LAS. She can be reached at oconno36@ dailyillini.com.

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com Wednesday, November 14, 2012 5A

MARCO AND MARTY BILLY FORE

BEARDO DAN DOUGHERTY

DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22

23 24 25 26 27

28 29 30 31 32

33 34 35

36 37 38 39 40

41 42 43

44 45 46 47 48

49 50 51 52 53

54 55 56 57

58 59 60 61

62 63 64

65 66 67

DOWN  1 Terror-struck  2 Greased the palm of  3 Thickets  4 Foot problem  5 Manhattan film festival

locale  6 ___ Solo (Ford role)  7 Defib operator  8 Sing like Tom Waits  9 Playwright Fugard10 Hits the “Add to Cart”

button and then continues, say

11 Elicitors of groans12 Actress Jolie13 Bug repellent

18 Stewart in the “Wordplay” documentary

22 Action hero’s underwater breathing aid

25 Body part that may be deviated

26 Nightwear … or a hidden feature of 17-, 21-, 33-, 41-, 54- and 59-Across?

29 Clouseau, e.g.: Abbr.30 Defensive excavation32 PIN requester33 “Casablanca” pianist34 Needle-nosed swimmers35 Ed.’s workload36 Work the aisles,

informally

37 Put on, as pants38 Like some Turks and

Georgians42 Give the raspberry43 Basic orbital path46 Tases, say47 Bygone Wall Street

device48 Refuses50 Spirit of Islamic myth51 Like a blowhard53 “The Bourne Supremacy”

org.54 Eject from the game55 Dirty Harry’s org.57 Handled the music at a

rave60 DiCaprio, to pals61 Escort’s offering

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The crossword solution is in the Classified section.

ACROSS  1 1970 #1 hit with the lyric

“Easy as …”  4 Last option, often  9 Equally poor14 Miracle-___15 Soap genre16 Macbeth or Macduff17 Surgically replaceable body

parts19 With 49-Across, jumble20 Sop up21 Many a corporate plane23 On videotape, say24 Supposed skill of some

hotline operators27 The sun, in Spain28 Some INTs result in them29 When mammoths roamed31 Sedona automaker33 On-the-spot appraisal36 “___ directed”39 Sun-kissed40 Tea-growing Indian state41 Classic mountain bikes44 H.R.H. part45 Alternative to texts46 Manhattan’s crosstown

arteries: Abbr.49 See 19-Across52 Cards, on scoreboards53 Green “pet”54 Bar musicians may put

them out56 Total nonsense58 “___ the loneliest number”59 Serving with syrup62 Lee and Laurel63 As such64 Merry Prankster Kesey65 The hotheaded Corleone66 Protected from rainouts,

say67 Sellout sign

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FROM PAGE 6A

O’CONNER

FROM PAGE 6A

VEGAN

BY ROHAINA HASSANSTAFF WRITER

Fear is an emotion that arises out of response to physical and emotional danger. When Nev-ille Longbottom was faced with Severus Snape in “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban,” time slowed down and his heart started racing. Lupin stepped in and told him to focus, and all of a sudden Snape was dressed in Longbottom’s grandmother’s clothes.

Although Simona Buetti and Alejandro Lleras did not aim to prove J.K. Rowling right, they did find some inspiration from ’70s literature that talked about time-perception and control.

This is why Lleras, associ-ate professor in psychology, and Buetti, postdoctoral research associate, worked together to uncover the secrets behind how we perceive time and how that changes with good or bad events.

Lleras had previously worked on time perception, and Buetti worked with arachnophobic indi-viduals, and they brought their respective expertise together to create this study.

“I started, I was interested in neuropsychology. I was really interested in the brain and how

the brain could predict some types of behavior,” Buetti said.

Before joining the field of psy-chology, Lleras was on the path to become an engineer. He took a cognitive psychology class as a general education requirement and said he was transformed by it.

“I don’t really think there’s anything more captivating than the mind, the human mind. I dropped everything and switched my major to psychology,” he said.

Over the course of a year, Lle-ras and Buetti used a basic pre-screening questionnaire to test a sample group of voluntary par-ticipants until they whittled down the subject pool. They performed five individual experiments dur-ing which the participants were shown a variety of images based on the level of emotional arousal it might generate. Some of these images included mops, roller coasters and spiders.

There was a nonanxious group and a arachnophobic group, and each group was asked to report how long the images were display after viewing them. While the spi-der-fearful participants reported that the images lasted longer, all of the images were displayed for the same time for both groups.

Spider-fearful participants got anxious throughout the study, especially closer to the end.

“The only thing that mat-tered to them was if it was posi-tive or negative. They saw the world in black-and-white,” Lle-ras explained.

Their research demonstrates that in the human mind it appears when something that is both highly arousing and neg-ative, we perceive the experi-ence to last longer. If it is highly arousing and positive, however, we imagine that it was short and quick.

When the circumstances are inverted — low arousal and nega-tive or low arousal and positive — the results were completely opposite.

While many of their original questions were answered, Buetti and Lleras found they had anoth-er group of questions lined up already. They hope to delve deeper into the mechanisms that force us to act, or how person-alities might shape our percep-tions. They are in the process of creating another study to refine their current results.

Rohaina can be reached at [email protected].

Perception of time can change, researchers say

JEFF ROBERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Patient Joe Logsdon holds $5 in his hand to pay for his office visit as Dr. Russell Dohner, right, walks past on Tuesday. When Dohner started practicing medicine in Rushville in 1955, he charged $2, but has since raised it to $5.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RUSHVILLE — Patients line up early outside his office just off the town square, waiting qui-etly for the doctor to arrive, as he has done for nearly 60 years.

Dr. Russell Dohner is, after all, a man of routine, a steady force to be counted on in uncer-tain times.

Wearing the fedora that has become his trademark, he walks in just before 10 a.m., after ris-ing early to make rounds at the local hospital. There are no appointments. He takes his patients in the order they sign in — first come, first-served. His office has no fax machines or computers. Medical records are kept on hand-written index cards, stuffed into row upon row of filing cabinets.

The only thing that has changed, really — other than the quickness of the doctor’s step or the color of his thinning hair —

is his fee. When Dohner started practicing medicine in Rushville in 1955, he charged the going rate around town for an office visit: $2.

Now it is $5.This in an era when the cost

of healthcare has steadily risen, when those who don’t have medi-cal insurance often forgo see-ing a doctor. But not Dohner’s patients. He doesn’t even accept medical insurance — says it’s not worth the bother.

“I always just wanted to be a doctor to help people with their medical problems and that’s all it’s for .,” the 87-year-old fami-ly physician says. “It was never intended to make a lot of money.”

Being a doctor, helping and providing a service — that has been his goal since he was a boy.

One of seven children, Doh-ner grew up on a farm just north of Rushville, outside the little town of Vermont, Ill. His father had hoped he’d take up farming, too. But young Dohner had other ideas, inspired by the town doc-tor who’d treated him when he had seizures as a child.

“I remember waking up and seeing the doctor there and thinking, ‘THAT is what I want to do,’” he says.

After serving in the Army in World War II, Dohner went to Western Illinois University, paying for his education with funds provided by the G.I. bill. In the early 1950s, he attended Northwestern University’s med-ical school.

He had his sights set on becoming a cardiologist and thought about staying in the big city. But when a doctor in Rushville asked him to put off his heart specialist studies to practice medicine back at home, he agreed to do so, at least for a little while.

Then that doctor left town.“So I couldn’t very well leave,”

Dohner says. “That’s just the way it worked out.”

It was a sacrifice, yes. His young wife didn’t want to stay in such a small town, he says, and so their marriage ended. He never remarried and instead dedicated his life to his work, only leaving this small central Illinois town for medical con-ferences over the years, never taking a true vacation.

Even when the medical pro-fession changed around him, he was always on call, ready to drop everything for a patient.

Ill. doctor charges $5 for visitsDohner on call despite rising health care costs

Page 6: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

BY BAILEY BRYANTSTAFF WRITER

In addition to supporting animal rights issues, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals holds an annual Most Vegan-Friendly College Contest, currently in its fi nal round .

In early October, PETA’s youth divi-sion peta2 launched the seventh annual contest, which has two divisions, large and small.

Thirty-two schools were chosen to enter each division and then pitted against each other in a single-elimina-tion tournament. The University of Illi-nois was one of the schools included in the large division. The end of the con-test will result in one victor from each

division holding the title of PETA’s Most Vegan-Friendly College.

The contest has four rounds and a fi nal matchup. In each round, schools must defeat a predetermined opponent in order to advance. The winner of each round is determined by the number of votes a school receives, the quality and quantity of different vegan dishes offered, the school’s enthusiasm about vegan options and student feedback, according to the PETA website.

“We decided to start the contest in response to the overwhelming demand on college campuses for delicious and cruelty-free dining options,” said Ryan Huling, PETA’s manager of College Campaigns and Outreach.

A PETA news release reported that, according to Bon Appétit, the amount of college kids who are vegetarian has doubled and the number of vegan stu-dents has increased by more than 50 percent since the Vegan-Friendly Col-lege Contest began in 2006.

The University was ranked as PETA’s eighth-most-vegan-friendly college in last year’s contest.

This year, PETA called Illinois a “standout school” because of the vari-ous vegan options in each dining hall. However, the University advanced to the third round before falling to the University of North Texas.

Although the University of Illinois didn’t win, many vegetarian and veg-

an students say they are still proud to attend a school that accommodates their lifestyles.

“It means absolutely the world to me (to go to a school so accepting of my lifestyle) because outside in the ‘real world,’ it’s sometimes diffi cult to go out with friends and fi nd places that have vegan and vegetarian options,” said Katherine Rola, freshman in DGS.

Jamie Zouras, sophomore in ACES, said dining even played a part in her residency. She said she chose to live in Ikenberry Commons because she knew the dining hall had several clearly marked vegetarian options.

“It’d defi nitely be harder (if the din-ing hall didn’t have vegan options), and

I think it’d impact my health,” Zouras said. “Without having these options, I’d probably resort to less healthy snacking and it’d be really inconvenient if I had to go buy protein substitutes.”

Swaminath Srinivas, Ph.D. student in Engineering, said the vegetarian accommodations at the University are especially helpful to international students.

“Coming from India, most of us are vegetarian, so it’s really great that there are so many options here,” Srini-vas said.

With its vegan dining options, the University is doing more than cater-

6A | Wednesday, November 14, 2012 | www.DailyIllini.com

Health Living

BY ALICE SMELYANSKYCONTRIBUTING WRITER

T hanksgiving is a time to rejoice and appreciate family, friends and deli-cious seasonal food assembled on the dinner table. But for some, the smell

of pumpkin pie and turkey stuffi ng doesn’t stir up the usual warm festive feelings asso-ciated with this holiday. They only produce powerful, sharp stomachaches.

For fi ve months, Kristin Goffi net, senior in LAS, opened her eyes every morning to an instantaneous surge of pain. Beginning last October, each day was a battle against her body and coming out victorious seemed like a distant goal. No matter what Goffi net attempt-ed to eat, she simply could not keep it down. Her days were fi lled with persistent nausea, horrible upper abdominal pain and constant exhaustion from not eating — all leading to a rapid weight loss of about 20 pounds.

“You get so hungry. You think, ‘Okay, maybe I’ll just have a cracker.’ But then it didn’t mat-ter what it was, because you would still feel that pain,” she said. “It would last for hours. It’s debilitating.”

With no energy to get up in the morning to go to class, Goffi net began searching for the cause to her incapacitating pain. She became a frequent patient at McKinley Health Cen-ter, Provena Covenant Medical Center and the emergency room as doctors took blood samples and ran CT scans and MRIs.

“They ran every test in the books. They did everything they could think of,” Goffi -net said. “But no one could give me a solid answer. And it wasn’t getting better — it was only getting worse.”

It was only after a visit to the University of Chicago Medical Center in early Decem-ber that Goffi net fi nally found herself in the

right hands. The man who saved her life was Dr. Donald Liu, section chief of pediatric sur-gery and surgeon-in-chief at the University of Chicago Medicine’s Comer Children’s Hospi-tal. He diagnosed her with having a condition called median arcuate ligament syndrome, or MALS.

MALS is a medical condition in which the median arcuate ligament compresses the celi-ac artery, causing pain and compromising blood fl ow that is vital for digestion. One of Liu’s specialties was diagnosing and perform-ing surgery on patients with this disease.

Liu was “internationally recognized for his expertise in pediatric minimally invasive surgery, a type of surgery that is performed through small incisions, rath-er than large, open incisions,” according to the University of Chicago Medicine website. He was the fi rst surgeon in the greater Chicago area to pre-form these procedures.

Though she was nervous for the surgery Liu scheduled, Goffi net was relieved to know that the symptoms were not all in her head, as many doctors she visited claimed.

“I needed something to hap-pen one way or another. I just couldn’t live like that any-more,” she said.

Goffi net felt instantly bet-ter when she awoke from the surgery. Even with all of the surgical pain, she could feel the change that had occurred in her body.

“When she had several days in a row with no pain, it was like a miracle,” said Cindy Gof-fi net, Kristin’s mother. “I truly felt as happy that day as I did the day she was born — it was like a new life was given (to) us.”

Now, months after the surgery, Kristin can live a happy, normal college life.

“I am very grateful to have her healthy again,” said David Myers, senior in AHS and Kristin’s boyfriend. “I am thankful that her and I can visit our families over break, see every-one and just enjoy time with our families.”

Though her life is completely different from how it was a year ago, Goffi net hasn’t forgotten about the hard times. The support of her friends, her boyfriend and her family — including her mother, brother and sister — helped her cope during those days when she couldn’t picture a life without pain. They consistently reminded her the doctors would fi nd a cure, it wouldn’t be much longer and she would be able to live her life again.

And she will never forget the man that gave her life back to her.

While relaxing in southwest Michigan with his family this August, Liu saw two children drowning in Lake Michigan.

He went out into the water to save them, and while the children made it safely back to shore, Liu nev-er made it out.

“He was a terrifi c doctor, a sweet person, and super smart and skilled. We knew all that. But the more I have learned about him since his passing, it is even clearer how lucky we were,” Cindy Goffi -net said.

Kristin is grateful that she met him when she did. Yet she feels sorrow for all of the chil-dren who were on the wait-ing list to see him and the patients just like her that fear they may never fi nd the right diagnosis.

“I just couldn’t understand why he died. Why of all peo-ple?” Kristin Goffi net said. “I

think I held onto that thought for a long time — that it just wasn’t fair. He was the least likely deserving of that fate.”

About two weeks after her surgery, Kristin had a checkup with Liu. With a big smile on her face, she seized the opportunity to shake his hand and say thank you.

This Thanksgiving, she will be thinking of all the loved ones around her, the abundance of food before her (which she no longer has to restrict herself from), and of course, Dr. Liu.

Alice can be reached at [email protected].

New lease on life

There’s no doubt about it: When we think Thanks-giving, we think food.

Period. We dream of tables heaped high with golden turkey, mounds of mashed potatoes, savory stuff-ing and baskets piled high with warm bread rolls. And then there’s a lot of sitting — sitting around the table, around the TV as foot-ball teams charge across the screen, maybe going to see that movie that was released Thanksgiving day or paging through the ads for Black Friday deals. The result?

We let those countless calories sit and melt onto us like the spoonfuls of gravy that drown our plates.

So if you’re considering going to the movie theater, instead of adding 1,000 cal-ories of salty movie theater popcorn drenched in butter to the already-overwhelm-ing amounts of turkey pro-truding from your stomach, get up and get moving.

Haul out the holiday decorations

Nobody likes climbing through the dusty crawl space or digging through heavy boxes to fi nd those buried decorations from last year, but you will usu-ally fi nd something inter-esting and the physical activity will hopefully bring you out of your post-turkey coma. Of course, this is reserved for those who are at home for the holiday — but maybe you could spread some Thanks-giving cheer by helping your grandparents haul out their decorations. ‘Tis the season.

Gear up for Black Friday shopping

Use those stored-up cal-ories for the rush of the Black Friday crowds. A typical shopper can walk up to 2.96 miles and burn about 150 calories per hour — but depending on the urgency of the deals, the dash for the last product on the shelf, not to mention the many bags to carry, can signifi cantly increase that number. Put on your walk-ing shoes, my friends, and let the holiday shopping begin.

Organize a friendly family game of fl ag football

Whether you want to believe it or not, profes-sional football will go on without you watching. Peel your eyes off the TV for

Give thanks to a healthy lifestyleWays to shed some calories on ! anksgiving Day

Time Warp

See O’CONNER, Page 5A

See VEGAN Page 5A

MAGGIE O’CONNERStaff writer

Illinois one of nation’s most vegan-friendly universities

“He was a terrifi c doctor, a sweet

person, and super smart and skilled. We knew all that. But the more I have learned

about him ... it is clear how lucky we were.”

CINDY GOFFINET,mother of Kristin Goffi net

Uncover the secrets behind how we perceive time, and how that changes with good or bad events. Turn to 5A to fi nd out more on why an anxiety-producing situation may seem to last longer than a pleasant experience.

PORTRAIT BY KELLY HICKEY THE DAILY ILLINI

UI student thankful for doctor who cured her mysterious pain

Page 7: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

BY STEPHEN BOURBON AND PATRICK KELLEYSTAFF WRITER

The metallic blue Buick careened down the cold South Side Chicago streets. Sus-pects in a drive-by shooting, Jerry Dean and Joseph Chambers were not focused on anything but escaping the law. With their minds elsewhere, they didn’t see Curtis Speed crossing the street on his way from a dance at Robert Black South Elementary School. Without slowing down, the Buick struck the 11-year-old, dragging him half a block into an almost empty school bus. No skid marks were left.

Curtis Speed was killed on Feb. 18, 1995. When Scott Barrera, forward for the Illinois hockey team, dons the No. 73, he is representing much more than himself.

Although he never played hockey with Speed — Barrera is five years younger than him — he wears Curtis’ number to commemorate his life.

But the tribute began with Barrera’s

older brother, Joe, in mourning of Cur-tis’ passing.

Joe was the captain of the hockey team that Speed played for in 1994-95. Joe said the leadership position was a big deal at the time, so he took it upon himself to take Speed’s number the following sea-son to keep the memory of his late team-mate alive.

“When you’re at that age and you’re appointed captain, it’s a big deal and you try to be a leader in different ways,” Joe said. “Everyone respected my decision.”

Five years older than Scott, Joe was the first Barrera to lace up the skates and play hockey. Looking up to his brother, 5-year-old Scott would tag along to Joe’s 8 a.m. practices, piquing his interest in the sport.

“Growing up, for a little while, I was better than (Scott) mainly because I was older,” Joe said. “It quickly became apparent that he had a special talent. ... He basically took it and ran with it.”

Scott escalated through the hockey ranks, eventually playing for travel squad Team Illinois at 16. It was at this time he joined his brother, in dedication to Curtis’ memory, in wearing 73 for the first time.

The number never left. Scott took the number with him while playing junior hockey in Wasilla, Alaska, and back to Springfield where he played on the Junior Blues.

While uncommitted to a university

while playing for the Junior Blues in 2008-09, then-Illinois assistant coach Nick Fabbrini, who had known Joe since his freshman year of high school, reached out to his Fenwick High School acquain-tance, Joe, about his brother’s future plans.

Using his family connection, Fabbri-ni contacted Scott and encouraged him to con-sider playing for Illinois.

“When I was playing juniors, you talk to what-ever schools,” Scott said. “I had never thought of Illinois as an opportunity because of my grades.”

Needing to improve his academics, Scott’s path to Illini hockey started at Parkland College.

While attending the community college, Scott approached then-Illinois head coach Chad Cas-sel about his desire to continue to hon-or Curtis’ memory — something that had become a family tradition. Cassel’s custom with numbers was to have one through 32 in stock and not make excep-tions on a whim. This was the first time wearing No. 73 had been in jeopardy for Scott.

After explaining the story to the coach, Cassel offered Scott a deal.

“I said, ‘Yeah, that wouldn’t be a prob-lem as long as he got straight-As at Park-land,’” Cassel said. “And he did, so he was able to get the number. He also told me the story on why he wanted the number as well, but I threw that back at him and he was able to do it.”

Scott has made the most of his oppor-tunity playing in orange and blue. He posted 20 and 32 points in his first two years, respectively. As a senior this year, he is an assistant captain and is tied for the team lead in points.

Scott has worn No. 73 for the majority of his playing career at Illinois, the only exception being earlier this season. With Fabbrini taking over as the new head coach, the team ordered new jer-seys. Unfortunately, they

were stuck on backorder, and the replace-ment orange jerseys didn’t have Barrera’s No. 73. From the beginning of the season, Scott wore 28 until the toughest game of the year against No. 2 Ohio.

“It felt better, it felt like myself,” Bar-rera said. “It felt weird putting on a num-ber that you know isn’t yours.”

Sports1BWednesdayNovember 14, 2012The Daily Illiniwww.DailyIllini.com

BY CHARLIE MANIATESSTAFF WRITER

When the Illinois soccer team began practicing penalty kicks, one thing was clear: The postsea-son was about to start.

In collegiate soccer, postseason games can’t end in a tie; following two overtime periods, teams com-pete in best-of-five penalty kicks with the hopes of advancing to the next round, which ride entirely on just a few 12-yard strikes.

The practice has paid off for the Illini, as they have compet-ed in penalty kicks twice in just four postseason games so far. Both resulted in wins: The first was an opening-round victory of the Big Ten Tournament against Minneso-ta, with a 3-2 score in penalty kicks, while the second was a 3-0 sweep against Missouri in the first round of the NCAA tournament on Satur-day. Senior goalkeeper Steph Pan-ozzo saved both shots that were on target, leading the Illini to the sec-ond round at North Carolina, head coach Janet Rayfield’s alma mater.

“Penalty kicks right now, Steph Panozzo owns,” Rayfield said in a Monday press conference. “When you start a penalty kick shootout on the road with a save by your goalkeeper, it certainly gives you confidence, and you could see in the body language of the Missouri team (that) there was dejection sort of right from the get-go.”

Missouri had a number of chanc-es in the overtime periods to grab the win, so advancing to penalty kicks was a relief for the Illini.

“The overtime was more chal-lenging on my heart than the PKs were, to be honest,” Rayfield said.

One would think that going into a tough situation like this, the pres-sure is on the goalkeeper to keep her team in it. Panozzo, however, takes a different mental approach when she steps into the penalty box.

Following the victory against Missouri, Panozzo said she feels that the weight of the team is on the shooters. She said she simply stays loose and makes the saves that she knows she can, rather than worry about the ones that are out of her reach, something that can be com-mon when opponents are striking from 12 yards out.

“I think we have a goalkeeper who has the right mindset going

Penalty kicks lead to victories

So far, so good for the John Groce era of Illinois basketball.

It’s dangerous to attempt to glean much meaningful informa-tion about the potential of this Illinois team from its two wins against Colgate and St. Fran-cis to open the season. Colgate is a bottom-feeder in the Patri-ot League, while St. Francis is in the middle of the pack in the Northeast Conference. Their talent level is simply not repre-sentative of the rest of Illinois’ schedule. It would be premature to draw too many conclusions from either game.

We can, however, learn plenty about the Illini’s personnel and style of play in the few glimpses of the team thus far, and in the early going, much of it is positive.

The first, and perhaps most gratifying sight, is that at long last, an Illinois head coach val-ues “special teams,” which is what Groce labeled out-of-bounds situations after the vic-tory over Colgate (for the pur-poses of this column, I’ll ignore the atrocity that is Illinois foot-ball special teams and focus on basketball).

For the better part of Bruce Weber’s tenure, Illini fans watched the team run one fruit-less out-of-bounds play after another. The players often appeared so listless and without direction that my friends and I simply labeled every play “The Tornado.” I can probably count the times Illinois scored in those situations during my time here on one hand.

Groce’s philosophy that every play, every moment matters, meanwhile, extends to these situations, and the evidence is already apparent. No more tor-nadoes, no more launching a Hail Mary into the backcourt to avoid

a five-second call. Instead, the Illini consistently inbound the ball in the frontcourt and actual-ly score off many out-of-bounds situations.

Illinois’ newfound commit-ment to winning special teams is even more obvious on defense. Groce used situational substi-tutions, sometimes bringing in 6-foot-11 center Nnanna Egwu solely to attempt to deny the inbounds pass, and often imple-mented a zone defense when Col-gate and St. Francis inbounded the ball. The new head coach’s focus on these seemingly minor, yet critical areas of the game are refreshing after years of watching Illinois slog through them.

Groce’s impact can also be seen and felt in the Illini’s style of play through their first two games. The up-tempo style he wants to employ is still a work in progress, but the effects are already finding their way onto

Illini fans should have cautious optimism after 2-0 start

BY JOHNATHAN HETTINGERSTAFF WRITER

Illinois women’s basketball forward McKenzie Piper ran out of the tunnel in Assembly Hall for an actual Division I NCAA basketball game for the first time Sunday. Following a parade of cheerleaders, the freshman was greeted by the school song and an above-average sized crowd of 1,625. Just three minutes and 25 seconds into her first game, Pip-er was taken off the bench and thrust into the action. She didn’t get a rest until seconds were left in the first half.

“As a freshman, there’s a lot thrown at you,” head coach Matt Bollant said.

In addition to playing 17 min-utes in her first half of college

basketball, Piper was forced to play an unfamiliar position.

“Sometimes today, Piper was playing the five (center),” Bol-lant said after Sunday’s 84-52 win over Evansville. “She hasn’t played any five yet, so it’s time to learn and it’s time to step up.”

The freshman from Iowa City stepped up when it counted. Because of early foul trouble to starters Kersten Magrum and Karisma Penn, Piper was called on for 25 minutes in her career opener, and she took advantage, scoring 14 points and grabbing seven rebounds.

“I’m proud of her,” Bollant said. “You could tell she was tired at times, but she kept fighting.”

Piper is listed in the program

as a guard, but the 6-footer has cracked into the frontcourt rota-tion along with Penn, Magrum and Nia Oden.

The former guard showed that she isn’t afraid to make her pres-ence known outside of the paint, converting two of six 3-point attempts and finishing 4-for-4 at the foul line.

Defensive adjustmentsFor the first time this sea-

son, Illinois got into foul trou-ble Sunday.

With four starters commit-ting at least two first-half fouls, Bollant decided to switch the defense from man-to-man to the “buzz” defense, which Bollant described as a 2-1-2 zone that

plays the passing lanes.“It’s unique to women’s bas-

ketball,” he said. “There’s a lot of teams trying to run it, but not many teams will run it as aggressively as our players. Not many teams will play as hard in it as we do.”

Bollant said he didn’t know where the name for the defense came from, but some other teams who run it call it the “twilight” defense.

“It needs to be called the “buzz” because nobody runs it as well as we will,” he said.

“It’s a style of defense that most teams don’t see. It’s unique to Illinois and it’s going to give people fits.”

The Illini ran the “buzz” and their man-to-man defenses well

on Sunday, holding the Purple Aces to 25.5 percent from the field, including 15 percent from behind the arc. Illinois also forced 26 turnovers and out-rebounded Evansville 52-36. Illi-nois’ 25 fouls allowed Evansville 38 free-throw attempts.

Starting off strongBollant became the fourth

head coach in program history to win his first game at Illinois. He joined former head coaches Laura Golden, Theresa Grentz and Jolette Law. Both Golden and Grentz lost their second games, while Law didn’t lose until her third.

Sunday’s 32-point margin of victory was the most by any of

the coaches. Law won her first game by 30 points.

Illinois’ new head coach also won his first game at Wisconsin-Green Bay and Bryant College. Bollant never lost a season open-er at Green Bay.

None of the players on the cur-rent roster had won their season opener at Illinois until Sunday, suffering defeats to Temple, Illi-nois State and South Carolina, respectively, in the last three seasons.

Illinois was one of 10 Big Ten schools to win its season open-er. Indiana and Ohio State lost to Valparaiso and Notre Dame, respectively.

Johnathan can be reached at [email protected] and @jhett93.

Freshman forward plays big role in women’s basketball opener

The legacy of No. 73, the honoring of Curtis Speed

The legacy of No. 73, the honoring of Curtis Speed

PORTRAIT BY BRENTON TSE THE DAILY ILLINI

BRENTON TSE THE DAILY ILLINI

Illinois coach John Groce talks to his team during the Illini’s 75-55 win over Colgate at Assembly Hall on Friday. Groce has won his first two games as head coach at Illinois.

DANIEL MILLER-MCLEMOREBasketball columnist

See MILLER-MCLEMORE, Page 4B

See HOCKEY, Page 4B See SOCCER, Page 4B

“It felt better; it felt like myself. It felt

weird putting on a number that you know isn’t yours.”

SCOTT BARRERA,Illinois forward

Illinois forward Barrera details the signi!cance of what his jersey stands for

Page 8: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

2B Wednesday, November 14, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com

Utilize waivers, trades as season comes to an end

FANTASY DOCTOR

ILLINI ATHLETES SOUND OFF

Hoodies or Crewnecks?

Favorite Thanksgiving

food?

Favorite place to go for away game/meet?

Who is most likely to be president on

the team?

Jackie WolfeSenior, volleyball

Jordan BlantonSenior, wrestling

Tony DallagoJunior, wrestling

Ginger-bread man Annie Luhrsen

Matt Ruettiger

Matt Ruettiger

Sarah Coady

Editor’s note: Every Thursday, the Daily Illini sports department will ask four Illinois student-athletes questions pertaining to life off the fi eld. More online: Video available at www.DailyIllini.com

Compiled by Alex Roux

Alison MengSophomore, swimming and diving

Hoodies

Hoodies Sweet potatoes

Hoodies Stuffi ng

Hoodies Stuffi ng

Penn State

Northwestern

Penn State

Minnesota

Best Halloween costume seen?

Mashed potatoes, gravy and green bean

casserole

Phil from Duck Dynasty

Duck Dynasty brothers

Cow

Believe it or not, the fan-tasy season is rapidly approaching the end. It’s

almost playoff time. Start managing like it.

If you’re near the bottom of the standings or on the outside looking in at the playoff pic-ture, make some moves. But don’t be reckless. Be sensible.

There are two routes for acquiring players: trades and waivers. Utilize both. If you decide to take the trade route, then you need to think about week-by-week performances, taking into consideration late-season production. Who can you rely on when it matters most, Week 14 and later? You can’t rely on teams coasting through the end of the season with playoff berths already wrapped up (Falcons and Tex-ans). If the team has nothing to play for, the players don’t play.

Example: Don’t trade for Roddy White. Excellent receiver, yes, but come fantasy playoff time, he’s on the bench drinking Gatorade and chatting with Julio Jones (don’t trade for him, either) about the Saturday night Atlanta bar scene. He’ll be having a great time. You’ll be losing.

An infi nitely wiser decision would be to trade for players in the NFC East and NFC North. Percy Harvin, Aaron Rodgers, Brandon Marshall and others will be fi ghting to the bitter end for the division title, so their effort will be at top level. Perfect for fantasy production. Leech off that effort for a title of your own.

On the waiver wire, the players to look for are those with high ceilings. A Michael Bush-type player — someone who bruises defenses and gets goal-line touchdowns — isn’t the player you want at this time of the season. They’re solid but not special. Instead, you want game breakers. You want a speedster running back who’s just now realizing his potential. You want the big-

play receiver who’s moved up the depth chart and now gets eight targets a game. You want 25-point potential players. These two players bring that type of promise.

Jacquizz Rodgers (running back, Falcons, 11.4 percent owned in ESPN leagues) — Michael Turner is done. Completely done. Turner the Burner and I go way back (2010), so I’ve had a hard time coming to terms with it. In fact, I’ve been in denial. But it’s true. He hit that devastating “30 years of age” threshold for running backs and lost all his talent. A running back over 30 is like a horse with a broken leg.

Rodgers is the young stallion who is waiting in the stable for trainers to clear Turner’s broken-down body off the track. The Falcons haven’t let him run free yet, as evidenced by his zero rushing touchdowns this year, but Rodgers has all the tools. And they’ll let him run soon enough. How do I know? See “don’t trade for Falcons” section above. Just when Turner hits the bench to rest for the postseason, Rodgers fi nally gets his chance to shoulder the load of the Atlanta backfi eld. I’m expecting a monster performance from him in the fi nal weeks of the season.

Danario Alexander (wide receiver, Chargers, 0.1 percent owned) — Alexander has a long history of knee troubles, which led to him being a free agent for a large portion of this season. But midway through October, he signed with the Chargers. Then he began working his way up the depth chart. Now, he’s the No. 2 receiver in San Diego and the No. 1 target of quarterback Phillip Rivers. And to fi nally prove his return to fantasy prominence, he caught fi ve passes for 134 yards and one touchdown last week.

Someone in your league is going to take a chance on Alexander. Make sure it is you.

Jack is a senior in LAS. He can be reached at cassidy8@ dailyillini.com. Follow him on Twitter @JCassidy10.

Illini offensive line will have hands full with Purdue’s ShortBY SEAN HAMMONDSTAFF WRITER

Despite the 17-3 loss to Minne-sota on Saturday, senior offensive lineman Graham Pocic thought he saw some improvements from the front fi ve. But when the Illinois football team takes the fi eld for this week’s senior day matchup with Purdue, it may be facing the best defensive lineman the team has seen all season.

At 6-foot-3, 315 pounds, senior defensive tackle Kawann Short is an unmistakable presence at the front of the Purdue defense. Short’s 13 tackles for loss are more than double the number any of his teammates have reached. He also has fi ve sacks. To put that into perspective, not a single Illini defender has double-digit tackles for loss, or more than 2.5 sacks on the season.

“He’s probably the best defen-sive lineman we’ll play all year,” Pocic said. “Watching fi lm, he def-initely causes trouble for oppos-

ing teams to block. We’ve played against him the last two years, and we expect a dogfi ght against him.”

The Illini will spend a lot of energy trying to contain Short, but he is not the only threat on the Purdue defense. The Boilermak-ers give a lot of different looks and play a multitude of defen-sive backs. Sixteen Boilermaker defenders have played in all 10 games and have double-digit tack-les on the season.

“They’re going to be tough to move,” Illinois co-offensive coordinator Billy Gonzales said. “They’ve rotated six backers con-sistently. That’s the one thing that they’ve done a good job of, they’ve rotated their players a ton. They’ll play four corners.”

The only two defenders who Gonzales expects to be on the fi eld the entire game are safeties Landon Feichter and Taylor Rich-ards. Feichter leads Purdue with 61 tackles. The offensive staff

expects to see a lot of man-to-man coverage from Purdue.

Despite the Boilermakers’ weapons on the defensive side, Purdue ranks second to last in the Big Ten in total defense. That would seem to be a reason for optimism for Illinois, but the Illini offense ranks dead last in the Big Ten.

“I think that’s one of our biggest issues is that we just haven’t had enough big plays,” co-offensive coordinator Chris Beatty said. “When we get opportunities, it’s like I told our guys, ‘You can’t hit long foul balls.’ When we get our shots, we’ve got to make them count.”

Beatty said the Illinois offense is frustrated at this point in the season. He said Illinois running backs need to stop trying to make a big play on every down, settling for a four- or fi ve-yard gain when appropriate, which will eventually open up the fi eld a little bit more.

With a last-second fi eld goal to

beat Iowa 27-24 last week, Purdue broke a fi ve-game losing streak and picked up its fi rst conference victory. If the Boilermakers win their fi nal two games, they would become bowl eligible for the sec-ond straight season for the fi rst time in 10 years.

But with Saturday’s matchup being the fi nal game in Cham-paign for the Illinois seniors, the Illini want to send them off on a high note. And to do that, they will have to keep an eye on Short.

“They’re a heavy blitz team, they defi nitely get after it up front,” quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase said. “They throw a lot of different looks at you to try to get you confused. You have to be able to know the keys and certain tendencies that they have with what they do. They are defi -nitely a team that likes to throw a lot of different looks at you.”

Sean can be reached at sphammo2@ dailyillini.com and @sean_hammond.

Volleyball’s seniors remember how they changed Illini cultureBY DANIEL MILLER-MCLEMORESTAFF WRITER

Heading into the season’s penultimate week of competi-tion, the Illinois volleyball team (11-15, 5-11 Big Ten) is fi ghting for its life to make the NCAA tournament.

With wins in their fi nal four games, the Illini will become eli-gible for postseason play. A tough schedule and strong RPI makes it a potential bubble team, but for the fi rst time since 2007, Illinois will not host the fi rst- and second-round tournament games.

So when the Illinois volley-

ball team takes the court against Michigan and Michigan State this weekend, it will be the fi nal two times the team’s fi ve seniors — Jackie Wolfe, Annie Luhrsen, Erin Johnson, Taylor Onion and Jessica Jendryk — play under the lights of Huff Hall.

“I’m gonna be really sad,” Wolfe said. “I can’t believe that senior night came. Oh, I’m gon-na cry, it came so fast. It’s prob-ably going to be really emotional. Everyone’s just been joking, ‘We should just get a bucket to pick up Jackie’s tears on Saturday.’ So it’s really sad. It’s been an amazing

four years and I just don’t want it to end.”

The fi ve seniors have been a part of some of the most success-ful teams in the program’s his-tory. They entered the program at the same time then-assistant Kevin Hambly took over the head coaching position from Don Har-din in 2009. Since that time, the fi ve seniors have helped the Illini to a 93-35 record, three appear-ances in the Sweet 16 and the lone national championship appear-ance in the program’s history, fi nishing second to UCLA in 2011.

But Hambly said their mark on

the program was felt more signifi -cantly elsewhere.

“People are gonna look at the wins and losses and the runs we had,” Hambly said. “To me, it’s more about the culture that they have helped develop. When they came, the culture was established, but it needed to keep evolving. And where it’s evolved to is a place that I’m proud to be a part of, real-ly, and they had a lot to do to that. They’re very strong people.”

“It’s kinda been special because our coaches are so willing to decide what we want the pro-gram to look like,” Luhrsen said.

“And because our class has stayed together from freshman year all the way through, I think we have been able to make a lot of chang-es that we’d like to see, mostly in the culture.”

The most mentioned evolu-tion in the program relates to the culture the seniors have put in place, which is one that does not recognize or differentiate between classes, from freshmen all the way up to seniors. Fresh-men are not hazed, forced to tote gear or clean the bus, and every-one shares an equal voice in team matters. Case in point: Luhrsen,

a redshirt senior and the most seasoned veteran on the team, is almost always the fi rst player to arrive at practice to set up the nets and court.

Despite the Illini losing 10 of their last 13 matches, that culture is what has helped Illinois main-tain its unity and positive chemis-try. And while Hambly said team culture is always evolving based on the personnel and personali-ties, Wolfe and Luhrsen both hope their mark is one that sticks.

Daniel can be reached at [email protected] and @danielmillermc.

JACK CASSIDYFantasy doctor

DARYL QUITALIG THE DAILY ILLINI

Illinois' Graham Pocic guards Nathan Scheelhaase during the game against Penn State at Memorial Stadium on Sept. 29.

Page 9: The Daily Illini: Volume 142 Issue 58

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A B C O T H E R A S B A DG R O D R A M A T H A N EH I P J O I N T S H O D G EA B S O R B P R O P J E TS E E N E S P E L S O LT D S I C E A G E K I A

S N A P J U D G M E N TU S E A S T A N A S S A MS T U M P J U M P E R SH E R E M A I L S S T S

P O D G E S T L C H I AT I P J A R S I D I O C YO N E I S F L A P J A C K SS T A N S P E R S E K E NS O N N Y D O M E D S R O

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4B Wednesday, November 14, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com

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into penalty kicks,” Rayfield said. “When you’ve got a team and you see that kind of attitude from your goalkeeper, I think it’s certainly a situation that we go into with some confidence.”

The Illini’s faith when it comes to penalty kicks speaks to their change in mentality in the latter

half of the season. The wins have piled up since they began focus-ing on the things they are good at, and the results are prevalent in penalty kicks. In fact, fresh-man midfielder Taylor Peter-son and junior defender Kassidy Brown have recorded penalty-kick tallies in both matches.

Illinois will need to change things up, though, to avoid get-ting into a routine now that the scouting report is out there. But

Rayfield said the team is not concerned.

“Now that we’ve done it a cou-ple of times, I’m sure the video is out there,” Rayfield said. “So we’ve got to now make sure we have more players that are will-ing and ready to step up and do that, and I think we’ve got that in our squad.”

Charlie can be reached at [email protected].

Along with the comfort of wearing his own number, Barrera was comfortable on the ice, scoring two goals in front of the home crowd in a 5-0 upset victory over the Bobcats.

Scott isn’t the only Barrera still wearing 73. His dad and Joe both sport the number for their respective Chicago Police hockey teams. While the Barrera family has never forgotten about Speed, the number has taken on a significant meaning within the family.

Separated by 150 miles of Illinois corn-fields, the family is connected by the com-mon number they all represent. Taking the lesson from Speed over 17 years ago, Joe and his dad patrol the same dangerous streets that prematurely claimed the life of the 11-year-old. It represents a hard truth that life is fragile, especially for those constantly in the line of fire.

“It encompasses a lot of feelings such as how we might not be here tomorrow,” Joe said. “Life is very precious. It also just rep-resents family. It is kind of like our family crest now.”

That symbol isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. Both Joe and Scott plan to continue the tradition with their future families by pass-ing the number to their children.

“If they didn’t want to wear it, well we’ll have to have a talk,” Joe said. “I think it is something that I will hold in importance, and they will see that as they grow up.”

“I’ll force my son to wear it,” Scott said. “He won’t have a choice.”

Stephen can be reached at [email protected] and @steve_bourbon. Patrick can be reached at [email protected] and @_PatrickKelley_.

the court. Illinois isn’t running the floor like a Roy Williams-coached North Carolina team yet, but the pace of its offense, both the fullcourt and the halfcourt, has picked up significantly. Gone are the days when every other possession came down to Demetri McCamey dribbling the shot clock down to its waning seconds before hoisting up a contested jump shot.

In Friday’s win against Colgate, the shot clock dipped below 10 seconds only a few times all game. In Monday’s victory over St. Francis, it dropped under 10 just four times and never fell below seven. The Illini scored more than 40 points in the first half against Colgate and in both halves against St. Francis, a feat they achieved only once all last season. This is a team that gets shots up early and often, an exciting style of play for both players and spectators.

It would be easy to criticize Illinois for taking too many threes, as the Illini have hoisted up 55 in two games, but almost all of those were good looks that Groce encourages his players to let fly. And as the first-year coach openly admits, this is primarily a jump-shooting team. The person-nel left by Weber requires it. Six players hit a 3-pointer against Colgate and seven knocked one down against St. Francis. The slashing and post game needs to develop, but there’s no doubt this team will live and die by the jump shot.

Yes, it’s early. The competition is as want-ing. But it’s pleasantly surprising to see the Illi-ni already fixing some of the most frustrating aspects of the last few years’ shortcomings. It gives cause for cautious optimism and bodes well for this team’s long-term prospects.

Daniel is a senior in Media. He can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @danielmillermc.

FROM PAGE 1B

SOCCER

MICHAEL BOJDA THE DAILY ILLINI

Illinois goalie Steph Panozzo reaches for the ball on a cross attempt during Sunday’s match against Iowa. The Illini held on to win 2-1. Panozzo has helped the Illini to two victories on penalty kicks this offseason.

FROM PAGE 1B

HOCKEYFROM PAGE 1B

MILLER-MCLEMORE