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The Daily Ilini: Volume 141 Issue 153

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012 - Sunday, Jun. 3, 2012
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INSIDE Weather Page 2 | Police Page 2 | Opinions Page 8 | Sports Page 9 | Classifieds Pages 14-16 | Sudoku Page 16 | Comics 14 Daily Illini The Tuesday, May 29 - Sunday, June 3, 2012 Vol. 141 Issue 153 FREE www.DailyIllini.com Buckeyes stifle Illini at NCAA’s PAGE 9 SPORTS PAGE 8 Editorial: School ab- sence does not warrant arerest OPINIONS Holiday for our heroes PAGE 5
Transcript

INSIDE Weather Page 2 | Pol ice Page 2 | Opinions Page 8 | Spor ts Page 9 | Classi f ieds Pages 14-16 | Sudoku Page 16 | Comics 14

DailyIllini

The

Tuesday, May 29 - Sunday, June 3, 2012Vol. 141 Issue 153 • FREE

www.DailyIllini.com

Buckeyes stifle Illini at NCAA’s

PAGE 9

SPORTS

PAGE 8

Editorial: School ab-sence does not warrant arerest

OPINIONS

Holiday for our heroesPAGE 5

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com2

CORRECTIONSWhen The Daily Illini makes a mistake, we

will correct it in this place. The Daily Illini strives for accuracy, so if you see a mistake in the pa-per, please contact Editor in Chief Samantha Kiesel at 337-8365.

POLICEFIVE-DAY FORECASTTODAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY

of Lincoln Avenue around 1 a.m. Sunday.According to the report, the offenders,

of Urbana and Paxton, were sitting in the common area of an apartment complex consuming alcohol.

University! A 21-year-old female student was

arrested on the charge of driving under the infl uence of alcohol in the 1400 block of West Green Street, Urbana, around 3 a.m. Friday.

According to the report, an offi cer driv-ing east on patrol initially noticed the vehi-cle the suspect, of Champaign, was driv-ing did not have its headlights on. She was pulled over and was found to be under the infl uence.

Complied by Steven Vazquez

ON THE COVERClaire Everett The Daily IlliniFlags line the street leading up to Willard

Airport for the arrival of the veterans on the Central Illinois Honor Flight on Thursday.

Champaign

! A 20-year-old female and a 33-year-old male were arrested on the charge of trespassing in the 1500 block of North Neil Street at Gateway Studios around 3:45 p.m. Tuesday.

According to the report, a couple of sub-jects were issued notices to appear in court for trespassing in a condemned building.

! A 21-year-old female was arrested on the charge of specifi c noise prohibited in the 500 block of South Third Street around 11 p.m. Tuesday.

According to the report, the subject was issued a notice to appear in court for a specifi c noise after she had been previ-ously warned.

! Burglary from a motor vehicle was reported in the 500 block of South Fourth Street around 5 p.m. Wednesday.

According to the report, unknown sus-pects took items from the vehicle, includ-ing the stereo and other accessories.

! A 53-year-old male was arrested on the charge of retail theft in the 2600 block of North Prospect Avenue at Walmart around 5 p.m. Wednesday.

According to the report, the offender carried several empty shopping bags con-cealed as he entered the store. He then fi lled the bags with merchandise and attempted to leave without paying. Sus-pect was arrested.

Urbana! A 39-year-old male was arrested on the

charge of possession of an open liquor con-tainer on public property in the 1800 block of South Cottage Grove Avenue around 1 a.m. Saturday.

According to the report, the subject was seen in possession of an open clear bottle of alcohol in the parking lot. Campus Prop-erty Management security observed the violation and called the police. Subject still had the liquor bottle when police arrived and was issued a notice to appear in court.

! A 19-year-old female was arrested on multiple charges of driving under the infl u-ence of alcohol and resisting arrest in the 2500 block of Combes Drive around 5 p.m. Saturday.

According to the report, the offender admitted consuming alcohol and operating a vehicle. The offender had a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on her breath, slurred speech, poor balance and bloodshot eyes. Offender attempted to retreat into her resi-dence while police were speaking with her and was arrested.

! A 18-year-old male was arrested on multiple charges of aggravated battery and illegal consumption of liquor by a minor in the 1400 block of East Washington Street at Silver Bullet around 11:30 p.m. Saturday.

According to the report, the offender, of Princeville, Ill., battered victim in a public place. Offender was under 21 and admitted consuming alcohol.

! A residential burglary was reported in the 1300 block of North Lincoln Avenue around 4 a.m. Sunday.

According to the report, an unknown offender entered the victim’s apartment without permission and took a television as well as a computer.

! Two 19-year-old males were arrested on the charge of possession and consump-tion of liquor by a minor in the 1300 block

The Daily Illini is the independent student newspa-per at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and 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, fac-ulty 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 repro-duction of all local news printed in this newspaper.

The Daily Illini512 E. Green St.

Champaign, IL 61820217 • 337 • 8300

Copyright © 2012 Illini Media Co.

Editor in chiefSamantha Kiesel 217 • 337-8365 [email protected] editorRyan Weber217 • [email protected] editorEliot Sill217 • 337-8350 [email protected]. assignment editorSteven VazquezPhoto editorMelissa McCabe217 • [email protected] chiefJeff KirshmanDesign editorNora Ibrahim

Web producerKaren ChenSocial media directorKyle MilnamowAdvertising sales managerKate Russell217 • [email protected] Illini/Buzz ad directorTravis TruittProduction directorKit DonahuePage transmissionTodd Rigg PublisherLilyan Levant

Advertising ............................................... (217) 337-8382Advertising fax ........................................ (217) 337-8303Classifi ed .................................................. (217) 337-8337Newsroom ................................................(217) 337-8350Newsroom fax ......................................... (217) 337-8328Production ................................................(217) 337-8320

Periodical postage paid at Champaign, Ill., 61821. The Daily Illini is published Monday through Friday during University of Illinois fall and spring semesters, and on Mondays during the summer. New Student Guide and Welcome Back Edition are published in August. First copy is free; each additional copy is50 cents. Local, U.S. mail, out-of-town and out-of-state rates available upon request.

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Mostly sunny with a high of 89 and a low of 57.

Sunny with a high of 76 and a low of 50.

Showers with a high of 70 and a low of 51.

Cloudy with a high of 67 and a low of 50.

Partly cloudy with a high of 73 and a low of 54.

More online: For more information about the hazardous materials spill at

the Institute for Genomic Biology visit DailyIllini.com»

» » » » » » »

» » » » » »

Hazardous spill at IGB injures individual

At 10:17 p.m. an Illini-Alert message reported that there were hazardous materials at the Institute of Genomic Biology.

According to the University spokeswoman, a shelf collapsed in a room inside the building, causing chemicals to mix and form the hazardous mixture.

Whether the material is hazardous by contact or by inhalation is unknown, but the Urbana fi re department did turn on all the ventilation hoods within the room to remove any potential fumes.

The only person in the room during the collapse was injured but is being treated.

The material was contained to just one room, and the University’s Division of Research Safety is cleaning it up.

A part of Gregory Drive was closed as cars were turned away from entering the area.

At 11:10 p.m., an all-clear was issued.

NATHANIEL LASH THE DAILY ILLINI

Police and other emergency response units set up outside the south entrance facing Gregory Drive around 10:40 p.m. on Monday.

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com May 29-June 3, 20123

BY GEORGE COVENTRYSTAFF WRITER

The House race between Rodney Davis and Dr. David Gill is in full swing as the 2012 congressional elections approach for Illinois voters. Davis was selected as the Republican party’s replacement nominee for the 13th District after Congressman Tim Johnson, R-15, announced his plans to retire in April. Gill defeated Matt Goetten by fewer than 200 votes in a primary election held in March. The Daily Illini caught up with each candidate and asked them about their strategies to solve statewide and district issues if elected.

Rodney Davis, R-13Background Davis is a resident of Taylorville, Ill. He

graduated with a degree in political science from Millikin University (1992). He current-ly works as an aide to U.S. Representative John Shimkus, R-19. This is Davis’ first time running for Congress.

Issues in focus“I think right now we’ve got to make sure

that we cut the wasteful spending in Wash-ington. The national debt is encroaching $15 trillion right now, and Americans can’t afford to continue the wasteful spending policies of Obama and the Democrats. We have to also look at Obamacare. At a cost of $2.6 trillion dollars, it’s just an overwhelm-ing cost to consumers. It’s going to create a system where Americans cede control of when and where to seek medical treatment to faceless bureaucrats.”

Routes of advocacy to solve issues“I want to go to Washington and be a

leader that has the courage to stand up to Democrats and also stand up to Republi-cans when they’re wrong. What we have to do is reprioritize how Congress spends the tax dollars that we send to Washington, and when we do that, we’ll be able to ensure that the tax dollars that are spent in Wash-ington are spent on issues that government should address, like roads, bridges, clean drinking water and sewage treatment ... common sense issues.”

How he plans to be a productive representative“What I’d like to do is ensure that I take

a message of keeping tax rates low, cutting wasteful spending and repealing Obamacare, but in the case of the 13th district, there are more institutions of higher learning in this district than any other district in the state. What I want to do is make sure that I sit down with the presidents of each of those universi-ties and colleges and also community colleg-es and figure out how to make them remain the viable economic engines they are in their communities. The University of Illinois is a prime example of that. (I want to) ensure that the University of Illinois and their research departments have the access to the federal resources that they need.”

Plans to help the economic and financial prob-lems of college students

“Government doesn’t create private sec-tor jobs, but Obama and the Democrats in Washington are doing everything they can to kill them. They’re instituting burdensome regulations from agencies, like the EPA, on farmers and small business. What we need to do is make sure that government reigns in spending, watches wherever it spends all the tax dollars that come in and keeps the tax rates low. Whenever they have that environ-ment for job creation, consumer confidence grows. That’s when you see the unemploy-ment rate go down. It’s not through stimulus spending or other measures that have been tried over the last three-and-a-half years. It’s through a common sense approach that we need to take to Washington, and I intend to be that leader once I’m elected in November.”

Dr. David Gill, D-13Background Gill is a resident of Bloomington, Ill., and

received both his Bachelor’s degree in math-ematics (1982) and license to practice medi-cine (1988) from the University of Illinois. He currently works as an emergency room doctor at Advocate BroMenn Medical Center located in Normal, Ill. This will be Gill’s fourth time running for Congress after three failed bids against retiring Congressman Tim Johnson (in 2004, 2006 and 2010).

Issues in focus “The lack of jobs is bringing a lot of pain to

a lot of people’s lives in this district and the inability to have retirement security. The lack of affordable college education is hurting a lot of families in this district. There’s this over-all cynicism about government and politick-ing, which I think is very appropriate. When people sit back and watch most of these guys in Washington, D.C. funded by the multina-tional corporations and the Wall Street banks, I think the people appropriately become very cynical about the process.”

Routes of advocacy to solve issues“Now we need to invest ourselves in alterna-

tive energy to preserve the health of the planet. It also will provide millions of jobs when we get serious about it,” Gill said. “I’m also a long-time proponent of a national health care plan, an improved Medicare for all, where we stop throwing 40 percent of our health care dollars away by handing them over to the executives who run private health insurance companies. Instead, we should be using that money for health care. When you take that money back, that’s a trillion dollars a year that can be used to grow the economy and create jobs. I also believe that we need term limits for U.S. rep-resentatives and senators, and I believe that we need people in Washington D.C., like myself, who refuse to be funded by the Wall Street banks and the multinational corporations.”

How they plan to be a productive representative“I will be someone who was funded by ordi-

nary citizens. I refuse all PAC funding from Wall Street banks and corporate America, so my whole purpose in going to Washington is because I care about the well-being of my fel-low man and woman. ... When you owe a debt to Shell Oil or United Healthcare or Farm-son Pharmaceuticals, then your No. 1 prior-ity is not the well-being of your fellow man and woman.”

Plans to help the economic and financial problems of college students

“When we get serious about doing some-thing about global climate change, immediate-ly, we create billions of jobs for young people ... jobs in engineering, jobs in business, jobs in construction and manufacturing. When we decide that education should be a priority, we should invest ourselves and once again make more grants available. When I was young and went to the University of Illinois for college and medical school, two-thirds of the money that was distributed was in the form of grants, and a one-third of it was loans. Now that has been completely reversed because we’ve lost sight of the fact that educating our young peo-ple needs to be one of our highest priorities.”

THE CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATESDavis, Gill talk to the Daily Illini about their platform, major issues of 2012 election season

DAVIS

DAVIS GILL

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com4

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Get out. Sound off. Champaign-Urbana.

Looking for something to do on the weekend?

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BY KYLE MILNAMOWSOCIAL MEDIA DIRECTOR

In the past weeks, rumors have swirled around campus claiming Stone Baked Pizzeria , better known as Second Story Pizza, was permanently closing because of health code vio-lations. However, it seems that the student-loved pizza joint is merely in the midst of an ownership transition.

A sign has been placed on the door of Second Story claim-ing it is closed due to health restrictions.

“Their heath permit was suspended, and the sign posted said they failed to renew their health permit by submitting a renewed application and failing to submit health permit fee,” said Jim Roberts, director of environmental health for the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District.

The sign on the door, which caused the rumors of perma-nent closing to start, says “CLOSED by order of the Health District.” The reason isn’t health-related with the pizza place, however.

Instead, Second Story has been completing an ownership change. Sean Ackerson, the old minority owner, is in the process of becoming the new majority owner. He will be taking over John Rinkenberger Jr.’s position.

While Ackerson may have been the old minority owner of the place, he still needed to fill out paperwork and receive a license for the business in order to get the health code back in order.

The process to reopen Second Story should not take too long once the application is turned in. Despite this, the pizzeria will remain closed for the summer. Second Sto-ry will reopen in August for the fall semester, while the Illini Inn will be open in just three weeks, Ackerson said.

“If they would pay the fees and sign the permit, we would reinstate their permit,” Roberts said.

Ownership isn’t the only new change to the place. The Illini Inn and Second Story will both be receiving some renovations this summer. The bar will be renovating the bathrooms and fixing up the floors, while the pizzeria will be fixing its floors as well.

Ackerson said the only year Second Story was open dur-ing the summer was last year. However, with crazy hours and fewer students on campus, Ackerson decided to have the place closed for the summer.

When students reported seeing the closing of Second Story, Facebook statuses and tweets went up instantly. It not only sent shock to the people in Champaign for the summer, but also to people who had just left for home.

When this social media exposure was being sent out, Ackerson said he didn’t even know people had been spread-ing this rumor.

“I left for vacation at the end of the semester,” Acker-son said. “I just got back into town and I just heard the health department put stuff on the door.”

BY NORA IBRAHIMDESIGN EDITOR

Back in the day, the only kind of food joint you could find on wheels was an ice cream truck. Today, Champaign’s newest food truck, Crave Truck, is quickly garner-ing a big customer base, changing the face of food business in Champaign.

But according to Rob Kowalski, Cham-paign assistant planning director, Cham-paign city’s laws on mobile food trucks haven’t been updated since 1995. That ordi-nance has put the up-and-coming business on hold.

“The food truck is considered a peddler,” Kowalski said. “The rule is that it can stay on private property, even if it’s on public rights-

of-way. But you have to keep moving every five minutes (if on public property). Mobile food trucks don’t want to move around every five minutes.”

Zach Ware, owner of the Crave Truck, is pushing to change requirements mandat-ed by the ordinance, specifically where a mobile food truck is allowed to stay and for how long. He said he had talked to the Cham-paign City clerk’s office last year, which granted him permission to park at the pub-lic meters as long as he served his custom-ers, packed up immediately and didn’t feed the city meter. Ware, 18, holds a peddler’s license with the City of Champaign.

This year, however, the city’s ordinance was reinterpreted, forbidding him from

operating his truck at the public meters, according to Ware. The Crave Truck has been off the streets for about two weeks but has moved to Twitter to keep business afloat.

“There’s a lot of support in the community for (the Crave Truck) as a business,” Ware said. “The food truck laws in Champaign are based on peddlers, so there needs to be new ordinances.”

Ware began running the Crave Truck a lit-tle over a year ago, selling waffles and coffee. His business is still new, but Ware said he’s been working to keep it in operation, talk-ing with Champaign Mayor Don Gerard and a number of council members.

The primary counterargument to making

changes to the ordinance is that by allow-ing mobile food businesses to station at a location for a longer duration, they present unhealthy competition against food busi-nesses housed in buildings.

“What you’ll find in cities under the same kind of review is that there is concern that a competitor can come and start selling food across the street,” Kowalski said.

The Champaign City Council will review the ordinance on June 26 at the regularly scheduled study session. According to a press release, the City of Champaign and the Cham-paign Center Partnership will work together to gather input from both mobile food truck and downtown Champaign and Campustown business owners.

Crave Truck owner fighting laws that keep mobile food truck parked

Pizzeria quells rumors of permanent closure

MELISSA MCCABE THE DAILY ILLINI

Stone Baked Pizzeria, also known as Second Story, was recently thought to be permanently closed for health code violations. However, it is only closed for not renewing its health permit. It is also in the middle of an ownership change and will undergo renovations over the summer. It will reopen in August.

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com Tuesday, May 29-Sunday, June 3, 20125

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BY JEFF KIRSHMANCOPY CHIEF

What was supposed to serve as the “big, spectacular welcome home” that many World War II sol-diers never received resulted in a party with everything except the guests of honor.

The 19th Honor Flight from Cen-tral Illinois and second out of Wil-lard Airport was delayed until the early hours of Friday morning despite its expected arrival into Willard Airport at 7 p.m. on Thurs-day due to what Jonathan Drake, operations manager for Illini Radio Group, which led the fundraising for the Honor Flight, said was a faulty airplane part that needed replacing.

Drake announced at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday to those awaiting the plane’s arrival that the plane would be delayed, and an hour lat-er announced that the wait would be even greater than anticipated. The plane wouldn’t depart back for Champaign until 1 a.m. ET. The 144th Army Band, made up of the Illinois Army National Guard, and what Drake estimated to be nearly 3,000 people, waited in anticipation, but the attendance dwindled with each delay.

“They didn’t get much of a wel-come home the first time,” Drake said. “We wanted to provide that for them tonight, but they’re a pretty unassuming group of people. They don’t expect to be treated like rock stars when they get off the plane, but for those of us here, we certain-ly wanted to make that happen.”

Honor Flight Network is a non-profit organization that provides all-expenses-paid trips for military veterans to Washington D.C.to visit the various monuments and memo-rials recognizing the service pro-

vided by those who serve in the armed forces. The inaugural Hon-or Flight flew in 2005 out of Spring-field, Ohio, and the organization has transported more than 81,000 veterans of World War II, Korea and Vietnam by November 2011, according to the organization’s website. Based on recent 2011 sta-tistics, World War II veterans are dying at a rate of approximately 900 per day.

Laura Lansing drove 12 hours from Pennsylvania to surprise her father upon the veterans’ arrival back home.

“He has no idea I’m here. He thinks I’m back home in Pennsyl-vania,” said Lansing, whose father Kenneth was aboard the naval avia-tor Jack W. Wilke in World War II. “I had a choice: I could drive down to D.C. to try and find them, or I could drive the 12 hours and ensure that I’d get to see him.”

Lansing said the plane’s delayed arrival till early Friday wouldn’t spoil the moment. “I imagine we’ll both be crying, to be honest,” she said.

Seventy-two veterans went on the overnight trip to Washington D.C. to visit the World War II Memori-al, Arlington National Cemetery, the Lincoln, Korean War and Viet-nam memorials, the US Capitol, the Smithsonian Institution and the Navy, Air Force and Marine war memorials.

Raymond Buck served in World War II and the Korean War and hopes to be a part of Champaign’s third Honor Flight in the fall. Buck stepped on a land mine while attempting to help carry a fallen soldier, for which he received a Purple Heart, Silver Star and two Bronze Stars.

“It would be exciting, I think, to

see monuments honoring the vet-erans who protected our freedoms here in the United States,” Buck said.

Illini Radio Group conceived and spearheaded the Honor Flight fund-raising after one employee stum-bled upon a viral video last July. They then contacted Central Illi-nois Honor Flight President Don Niehart , who had conducted nearly 20 Honor Flights at the time, about how to conduct one out of Willard

Airport. Drake said that each Hon-or Flight costs around $60,000, and in late August the radio group began on-air announcements and started fundraising in September.

Drake said that the Illini Radio Group will meet in the summer to decide how many more Honor Flights it will take before every World War II veteran in the area has gotten an opportunity to make the trip to Washington D.C. They’ll then look to make similar trips with

veterans of other wars.“When you think about the sig-

nificance of the sacrifices they made, fighting that war changed the world. Literally,” Drake said. “The freedoms we have today that we enjoy are not possible without those guys. And they were a bunch of 18 to 20 year olds. We let a bunch of teenagers save the world, and that’s literally what they did. So our motivation for doing this is to say thank you. It’s the least we can do.”

Honor Flight’s welcome-home celebration delayed

CLAIRE EVERETT THE DAILY ILLINI

Evan, left, Becky, center, and Alana Brown, do crosswords while awaiting the arrival of their grandfather, Don Brown, and his guardian and son, Doug Brown, who were on the Honor Flight Central Illinois, which was delayed until 1 am. Friday.

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com6

BY NATHANIEL LASHSTAFF WRITER

Pressure to keep open the doors of the Police Training Institute, or PTI, at the University has further pushed back its closure date.

A committee of the University board of trustees was scheduled to review a Tuesday proposal sponsored by administrators that would have shut down the PTI, for a final vote by the full board on May 31. However, the plan to close PTI on June 30 was withdrawn Friday afternoon.

University spokeswoman Robin Kaler said the item was taken off the agenda in response to recognition that law enforcement and lawmakers value the PTI. She said the University is “still working on it.”

Two of those lawmakers are local state representa-tives Naomi Jakobsson, D-103, and Chapin Rose, R-110, who have rallied to save the institute. They’ve contin-

ued to support the PTI after a bill proposing a fee lev-ied against criminals never made it out of the House Rules Committee.

Recently, the PTI took a hard hit in March, when the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board (ILETSB) voted against certifying its courses. At that time, Kevin McClain, executive director of ILETSB, said the University had not really changed its position since the plan to close PTI down in 2010.

“The fact of the matter is, there’s a lot of other acad-emies out there, and there are plenty of other seats available at the other academies because right now law enforcement hiring is down, so there wasn’t a real need to certify those courses,” McClain said.

The institute was first slated to close on Dec. 31, 2011, after a Stewarding Excellence report cited the PTI as outside the University’s core mission, as well as costing the University $900,000 annually to operate.

University board of trustees to vote on CUMTD fee increase

Student fees will likely go up after Thursday’s board of trustees meeting.

A fee increase to support the Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, or CUMTD, came up in a student referendum in March. In that election, students voted 2,050 to 943 in favor of increasing that fee $2 next semester, $4 the following year and another $3 the next, raising the CUMTD fee from $100 to $118 per year by Fall 2014. The referendum said that this fee hike would sustain campus bus service at its current levels, as well as increase SafeRides service. The University will vote on the item Thursday when it meets in Chicago.

What the board of trustees won’t be considering at Thursday’s meeting is a $6 per year fee to support the operations of the Illini Media Company, the parent company of The Daily Illini, after the Student Fee Advisory Committee unanimously opposed the fee in an advisory vote. The student body voted 1,809 to 1,212 in favor of that fee.

According to Ed Slazinik,

Associate Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, the student advisory body did not discuss the CUMTD fee increase.

University administrators had previously said that future fees would not move forward after January’s board of trustees meeting where student tuition and fees were finalized. This was part of an effort that also made all student fees nonrefundable at a $10 discount.

Renee Romano, Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs, said the decision to finalize tuition and fees in January — as opposed to later in the spring or summer — makes the University more competitive in recruiting students. She said by the time the student fee referendum came up in March, about 21,000 notices of next year’s student fees had been sent out.

“We’re going to try to make it clear that if folks want any chance of getting a fee for the following year, they have to do it in the fall,” Romano said.

However, Mike Andrechak, Associate Provost for Budgets and Resource Planning, said the campus told the board of trustees at its January meeting that they were expecting an increase in the CUMTD fee, pending the student referendum in March.

Police Training Institute’s closure date pushed back

BY NATHANIEL LASHSTAFF WRITER

The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals punted the question of whether further infor-mation stemming from the University’s clout scandal is prohibited from disclosure under federal law.

The court, one tier down from the U.S. Supreme Court, unanimously decided to vacate a lower federal court ruling from April 2011 that said the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, or FERPA, does not expressly prohibit the University from releasing information on student appli-cations pertaining to the 2009 clout admis-sions scandal. The Seventh Circuit decided not to rule on a suit brought forward by the Chicago Tribune that sought judgement from a federal court on the scope of FERPA.

“The Tribune’s claim of access to these

documents arises under Illinois law, so one would have expected the next step to be a suit in state court,” said Seventh Circuit Chief Judge Frank Easterbrook in his May 24 opinion.

The Chicago Tribune has sought addition-al information in the “Clout Goes to College” series published in 2009 that led to the resig-nation of most of the University’s trustees, as well as former President Joseph White and former Chancellor Richard Herman. While the “public” sponsors of students whose admissions went under “Category I” have been released, the Tribune has sought addi-tional information in the clout scandal that wracked the University several years back.

“(Chicago Tribune reporter Jodi) Cohen does not seek the identity of students and applicants,” said senior counsel for the Tri-bune Brendan Healey in a May 2009 let-

ter to White. “Instead, she seeks data that will broadly shed light on the role of pub-lic servants (legislators and trustees) in the admissions process for the state’s flagship university.”

But additional data sought in December 2009 included the names and addresses of the parents of Category I applicants, which the University has said is information that cannot be produced under FERPA, which forbids the federal government from grant-ing funds to institutions that has the “policy or practice of permitting the release of edu-cation records.”

As an appeal of a denial of public records under the exceptions to the Illinois Freedom of Information Act, the case could now head back to Sangamon County, where the open case has been on hold since the Tribune chose to move forward in federal court. That case,

filed in June 2009, also challenges the Univer-sity’s reasons for withholding the information under other provisions of FOIA, including the “unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

The University has hailed the Seventh Cir-cuit’s decision to vacate the prior ruling “an important victory for the privacy rights of students.”

“The University is gratified that the Appel-late Court has clearly recognized the criti-cal importance of student privacy rights — a contention at the heart of our legal battle to preserve federal protections for students and their families,” said Samuel Skinner, the attorney representing the University in the case, in a press release. “We remain deep-ly committed to protecting students’ priva-cy rights enshrined in federal law — rights acknowledged in this ruling — and we look forward to making our case in state court.”

Scandal ruling vacated by Circuit Court

What: May meeting of the board of trustees Where: Michele M. Thompson Rooms A, B and C of the UIC Student Center West, 828 S. Wolcott Ave., Chicago, Ill.When: Thursday, 8 a.m.

JOSHUA BECKMAN THE DAILY ILLINI

Recruits of the Police Training Institute perform a plyometric routine before dawn inside the indoor track of the University Armory on Jan. 20.

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com May 29-June 3, 20127

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BY STEVEN VAZQUEZASSISTANT ASSIGNMENT EDITOR

From July 1, 2003 through Dec. 31, the University of Illi-nois Foundation, or UIF, raised nearly $2.43 billion for its Brilliant Futures campaign, which is $179.6 million more than its announced goal of $2.25 billion.

According to a press release from UIF, donors set aside $1.671 billion for the Urbana-Champaign campus, $675.9 million for the Chicago campus, $28.7 million for Spring-fi eld and $54 million in support of UIF and University administration. These funds benefi t many facets of the Uni-versity, ranging from student scholarships, fellowships, fac-ulty support, academic program to facilities and research.

The $1.671 billion that was raised for Urbana-Champaign surpassed the original goal of $1.5 billion by $171 million. The other two campuses also surpassed their original goals, making this one of the more successful fundraising cam-paigns in higher education in recent history, according to Michael J. Hogan, the University of Illinois President.

“Thanks to our generous alumni and friends, we exceed-ed one of the most ambitious fundraising goals ever tack-led in higher education — amid one of the worst economic downturns in our nation’s history,” said Hogan in a press release. “It’s a testament to their deep passion for this great university, and the tireless work of our Foundation and University staff.

“Our donors are truly remarkable. Even before Brilliant Futures ended, they were stepping up again to support a new initiative that seeks to raise another $100 million over the next three years, providing scholarships that are so criti-cal to help more students achieve their dreams.”

Currently, there are about 20 campaigns running across the nation with a goal of raising more than $2 billion in efforts of aiding higher education. The campaign is the largest of the three capital campaigns the University has conducted.

Sidney Micek, president of UIF, said that private dona-tions have become much more important when it comes to public higher education, which is why this campaign has been so vital for the University. More than 242,000 donors, including corporations and private foundations, gave a gift during the campaign. Three-hundred and nine-ty-seven donors made pledges and commitments of $1 mil-lion or more.

“Completing the Brilliant Futures campaign is a huge accomplishment for the University,” Micek said. “When we launched the campaign, we talked about the ripple effect: how each gift will impact others. I think we accomplished that. We intentionally established a stretch goal because we wanted to challenge not only alumni, donors and friends of the University, but also the faculty, deans, University and campus leadership, and the fundraising staff of the Foun-dation and the University. It is an incredible accomplish-ment that each campus exceeded its target goal.”

James Benson, member of the UIF Board of Directors, said that “the Board is proud to have taken a leadership role with this strategic initiative.” He said everybody who is a part of the University, no matter which campus have been successors of the campaign. He also made clear that the success of Illinois as a state is related, critically, to the success of the University.

“The University of Illinois has always been a leader,” Benson said. “That is part of our fabric and DNA. We grow and nurture the future entrepreneurs of technology. We develop tomorrow’s captains of industry. We train the future innovators in the health sciences fi elds. Our more than 600,000 living alumni are recognized all over the world for their expertise, their insatiable work ethic and their commitment to make a difference.”

Throughout the 3,106 days of the campaign, an average of $782,140 was raised per day. It is one of the most suc-cessful public university fundraising efforts.

University foundation raises $2.43 billion from donorsBy the Numbers (for all three Illinois campuses)

! $351.4 million raised for student support! $166.2 million raised in faculty support! $482.7 million for research support! $213.3 million for facilities and equipment! 158 chair and professorship funds established

during the campaign! 1,760 fellowship and scholarship funds

established during the campaign! 26 donors made gift commitments of $10

million and above that totaled more than $585.5 million

! 242,689 total donors! 137,374 first-time donors gave $704.9 million! 111,134 alumni donated $894.9 million! 20,936 corporations and foundations who gave

during the campaign! 18,873 current and former UI of I faculty and

staff who contributed during the campaign! 148,992 current Illinois residents who gave

during the campaign! 117,000 online gifts made during the campaign

totaled $34 million! More than 178,000 donors made more than

999,600 annual gifts! $782,140 average raised per day in gifts and

pledges during 3,106 days of the campaign! 1,192,212 total number of transactions

processed during campaign

SOURCE: UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS FOUNDATION

B ucket lists are an important staple to any sum-mer, including this one. My friends and I have written one every year since the seventh grade;

unfortunately, we’ve never had the satisfaction of

crossing off all the items. Granted, some of those summertime goals were a little

far-fetched. Last year’s list included things like toilet-paper our

friend Maddie’s house (and outrun her unbelievably speedy father), sneak into a fancy hotel pool and have a glowstick rave. We never got around to that stuff.

But this year, I’m doing things a little differently. I want a feasible list of personal goals for the next few months here at home. So meet my latest project, aptly named “Mel-anie’s Summer 2k12 Bucket List.”

1. Get buff. I love a good car-dio workout, but show me some weights and I will quiver with fear. This must change. Next year, you’ l l see me walk-ing around cam-pus with huge (or ladylike and lean) muscles.

2. Drink coffee with my parents every morning. They’re two of my best friends, so it’s tough for me to be two hours away dur-ing the school year. I want to squeeze in as much time with good ole Mike and Tina as possible.

3. Wear sun-screen at all

times. My skin is white as snow. And I’ve had enough of the terrible burns and blisters. It’s time for the Summer of SPF 300.

4. Have intentional conversations. Sometimes, it’s so easy for my friends and I to fall into the gossip trap, when we really should be talking about things that actually matter.

5. Be the best intern I can be. I’ll be working for Bon Appétit Magazine in downtown Chicago, and my hope is that I will learn a lot, always go the extra mile and take lots of Instagram food pictures.

6. Redesign all of my websites. I’m a social networking nerd. Judge me.

7. Learn to cook. My mom is better than the Barefoot Contessa, and she dreams of sharing her knowledge with me. This summer, I’m going to let her do just that. They say that food is the way to a man’s heart, so perhaps my new culinary skills will help me in that department.

8. Take too many pictures. Muploads or it didn’t hap-pen, am I right?

9. Save time for the fun stuff. My friends and I will always love our late-night trips to the 24-hour diner, spon-taneous dance parties and Ultimate Frisbee Wednesdays. Plus, it wouldn’t be summer without shaved ice from Trop-ical Sno.

10. Make the most of every single day. This is a cliché, I know, but hear me out: Being away at school is hard for me. Home is the ultimate comfort zone, full of family and friends. Before I know it, I’ll have to return to Champaign for my sophomore year. But until that day comes, I will cherish my summer in the place I know best.

So, that’s my plan for the next three months. Allow my goals to serve as an example for your potential bucket list. Do you want to get into shape? Learn a new skill? Deepen your friendships?

Whether you’re at home or away this summer, use your time wisely. Summer is lovely, but it is also fleeting. We can’t waste a precious second.

Write your own bucket list, and I promise you will always have an answer to the inevitable question in August:

“What did you do this summer?”

Melanie is a sophomore in Media.

EDITORIAL

EDITORIAL CARTOON BOB ENGLEHART, THE HARTFORD COURANT

Reader’s opinions: The Daily Illini reserves the right to edit or 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. Mail: Opinions, The Daily Illini, 512 E. Green St., Champaign, IL 61820. E-mail: [email protected] with the subject “Letter to the Editor.”

Opinions8TuesdayMay 29, 2012The Daily Illiniwww.DailyIllini.com

Over the weekend outrage grew across the Internet over the arrest and 24-hour jailing of 17-year-old honor student

Diane Tran in open court because she was truant beyond Texas’ legal limit for high school students.

Tran takes several dual-credit and advanced-placement courses while work-ing a full-time and a part-time job to sup-port her and her family. According to her employer and her friends, she does not use drugs but stays up late into the night fin-ishing her homework instead. Because she is often tired, she oversleeps her school’s attendance for the day. Her parents are divorced and left town, and she lives with her employer’s family.

Despite all of this, Judge Lanny Moriarty

made no exception for the high-achieving student, saying, “If you let one run loose, what are you gonna do with the rest of ‘em? Let them go too?” This was an opportunity for the judge to set an example, and that he did — an inexcusably poor one.

The truancy laws seem to exist as a way of curbing illegal activity by students who skip school. Their purpose, then, is to hold students responsible to their studies while they are minors. Jailing students for tru-ancy should be reserved for those that are spending their days drinking and vandaliz-ing property, not those who are excelling.

Her academic history doesn’t warrant this extreme sentence, especially for a stu-dent like Tran. Moriarty failed to recog-nize that her absence from school was not

a hindrance to her education nor was it a disruption to the community. If anything, she was only able to keep up her grades by missing school to sleep or complete her homework.

For students like Tran, exceptions should be made, and cases should be judged individually.

The law would still hold its authority had Moriarty made the exception. An arrest can be traumatic, adding more stress to the life of a student who already puts her-self through so much.

Moriarty said, “A little stay in the jail for one night is not a death sentence.” Literal-ly, no, it is not, but it may be one if under-graduate admissions boards see her record and decline to offer a seat at their schools.

Truancy-charged student deserves justice

Summer Survival: Bucket lists get you through the heatMELANIE STONEOpinions columnist

The Daily Illini Editorial BoardEditorials reflect the majority opinion of the board, which comprises:Samantha Kiesel, editor-in-chief; Ryan Weber, managing editor; Eliot Sill, assignment editor; Steven Vazquez, assistant assignment editor; Melissa McCabe, photo editor; Nora Ibrahim, design editor; Jeff Kirshman, copy chief; Karen Chen, web producer; Kyle Milnamow, social media director

Sports 9TuesdayMay 29, 2012The Daily Illiniwww.DailyIllini.com

BY JEFF KIRSHMANCOPY CHIEF

The Illinois men’s tennis doubles team of Dennis Nevolo and Roy Kalmanovich came to a close Friday against Ohio State in the singles and doubles portion of the NCAA tournament.

The Buckeyes’ tandem of senior Chase Buchanan and sophomore Blaz Rola, ranked No. 1 in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association (ITA) polls, continued its dominance with a win against Illinois’ No. 21-ranked duo of seniors Nevolo and Kalmanovich in Friday’s Sweet 16 matchup at the University of Georgia’s Dan Magill Tennis Complex in Athens, Ga.

Illinois won the first set 7-6 before dropping the next two 6-2, 6-1. The win by the Ohio State combo was its 33rd on the season. In singles, No. 7 Nevolo fell to No. 9 Rola of Ohio State in straight sets 6-4, 6-3.

“It was a disappointing end for two great players,” Illinois head coach Brad Dancer said in a press release. “I’m proud of both guys for all of their team and individual accom-plishments. They have represented Illinois with tremendous class and spirit during their time here.”

Nevelo accumulated 116 career singles and 95 doubles wins, good for sixth- and ninth-best in school history, respectively.

His 211 total victories ranks sixth all-time at Illinois. Nevolo’s career-best 32-10 record this season is the 10th-best in Illinois single-season history; he was ranked as the No. 2 singles player in the nation earlier in the year.

The Gurnee, Ill., native finishes his career as the second Illini to earn All-Big Ten hon-ors in all four seasons and the first two-time All-American since Kevin Anderson (’05, ’06, ’07) and Ryan Rowe (’06, ’07).

Kalmanovich won a career-high 15 doubles matches and was 25-15 in singles action in 2011-2012. Illinois as a whole lost on May 18 to No. 1-seeded USC.

Ohio State’s doubles team advanced to Mon-day’s NCAA Division-I Men’s Doubles Cham-pionship final after its 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 win against Oklahoma’s Costin Paval and Dane Webb in Sunday’s semifinals.

The No. 1-seeded Buckeyes defeated Texas Tech’s doubles team of Raony Carvalho and Gonzalo Escobar in Monday’s title match, fin-ishing their championship season with a 36-4

record.On the singles side, USC senior Steve John-

son won his second consecutive NCAA Singles Championships on Monday at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex in Athens, Ga.

The No. 1-seeded Johnson defeated No. 3 seed Eric Quigley of Kentucky 6-4, 6-4 to secure the repeat title. The win was his 72nd consecutive singles victory and helped USC win its fourth straight NCAA Team

Championship.Johnson is the only player to ever win back-

to-back team and individual titles in the same years under the NCAA tournament’s current structure.

DAILY ILLINI FILE PHOTO

Seniors Roy Kalmanovich, left, and Dennis Nevolo played their final regular season doubles match together at senior night against Purdue on April 22 at the Atkins center. Both seniors ended their careers at Illinois on Friday.

BY JAMAL COLLIERSTAFF WRITER

Ten Illini track team members will be heading to Des Moines, Iowa, for the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Championship after record-breaking perfor-mances by the women’s track and field team and a number of near-record-breaking performances by the men.

Ashley Kelly, Ryisha Boyd, Latoya Griffith and Ashley Spencer have all notched their place in Illinois history. The four girls make up the Illini 1600-meter relay team, which during Saturday’s NCAA West Preliminary round broke a 19-year school record in the event with a time of 3 minutes, 30.97 seconds.

Overall, the Illini relay team ranked fourth out of 12 quali-fiers and will advance to next week’s national tournament.

They will be joined by Breeana Coleman and Jesica Eje-sieme in the 100-meter hurdles and 400-meter hurdles, respectively.

The Illinois men’s track and field team will also be send-ing five athletes to the tournament.

Andrew Riley continued his sensational year, leading the Illini by qualifying in the 110-meter hurdles with a time of 13.31. Riley finished second, just 0.02 seconds behind Texas A&M’s Wayne Davis II. It was his second-fastest time of the season and not far from his personal best of 13.28 that he set back in April. It’s the fourth straight time Riley will be

making an appearance in the Divison I Men’s Championship.Riley also joins Stanley Azie, Brandon Stryganek and DJ

Zahn in the 4x100 meter relay team. They finished with a time of 39.29, the second fastest in school history and sec-ond place finish on the day. It’s the third straight season the four runners will head to the NCAA Championships together.

Azie will compete in three events at the Divison I Men’s Championship, advancing in the 4x100-meter and 4x200-meter relays.

Kyle Engnell will also be competing on the men’s side after advancing in the 3000-meter steeplechase.

The NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Championship takes place June 6-9.

Illini senior tandem ends careers at Nationals

Illini track and field team members advance to NCAA Championships

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com10

SUMMER SESSIONS START MAY 21 AND JUNE 4Learn more: E-mail: [email protected] Phone: 847.925.6707

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BY CHARLES ODUMTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA — Tommy Hanson says the Braves aren’t panicking after their longest losing streak in two years reached eight games.

Perhaps not, but the sense of urgency in the clubhouse is growing.

Lance Lynn joined Philadelphia’s Cole Hamels as the major leagues’ first eight-game winners, and the St. Louis Cardinals’ beat the Braves 8-2 Monday to leave Atlanta in its losing funk.

Atlanta is on its worst skid since losing nine in a row from April 21-29, 2010. The Braves have fallen from first place to a last-place tie with the Phillies in the NL East ay 26-24.

“We’ve got to turn this thing around — soon,” catcher Brian McCann said. “We’ve just got to stay afloat.”

Atlanta has given up seven runs or more in four straight games for the first time since five in a row from July 26-30, 2008, according to STATS LLC.

“We’ve always been known for our pitching, and we will,” manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “We’re just going through a stretch right now.”

Atlanta was held to five hits one day after managing only three hits in a 7-2 loss to Washington.

“Two runs a game ain’t getting it,” Gonzalez said. “Get-ting two runs and giving up four and five ain’t doing it, either.”

Hanson (5-4) gave up a season-high six runs and eight hits in 3 1-3 innings.

“I don’t think anybody’s panicking right now. We’re still above .500,” said Hanson, who had given up no more than two runs in his previous four starts.

Lynn (8-1) allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings, striking out eight. While he was dominating the

Braves, Hamels pitched the Phillies to an 8-4 win at the Mets.

Lynn had lost to the Braves 7-4 on May 13 in St. Louis.“They played a great game against me that game in St.

Louis and there was a little added incentive to be sure,” Lynn said.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said Lynn threw “probably his best game.” He said Lynn, who was making his 10th start of the season and 12th of his career, isn’t sneaking up on any teams.

“You figure at this point they’ve seen quite a bit of him and he’s not a secret in the league anymore,” Matheny said.

Daniel Descalso hit a two-run homer as a fill-in starter at third base for David Freese, who was given a day off with a mild sprain of his right hand.

Rafael Furcal had three hits, including a homer, and Matt Adams had three hits with three RBIs for St. Louis.

Marc Rzepczynski and Eduardo Sanchez followed Lynn with hitless relief, completing a five-hitter.

Hanson left the bases loaded in the first and stranded a runner on third base in the second, then fell behind 4-0 in the third.

Matt Holliday singled and scored on McCann’s passed ball. After Carlos Beltran was caught in a rundown between third and home when he broke for the plate on a pitch, Yadier Molina singled in a run and Descalso fol-lowed with his second home run this season.

Furcal’s home run off Hanson and Adams’ RBI single off Kris Medlen made it 6-0 in the fourth.

Juan Francisco had a two-run single in the bottom half. Adams added a two-run double against Medlen in the sixth.

Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman didn’t start for the third straight day due to vision problems.

Freeman said he can’t wear contacts because his tear ducts aren’t producing. He can’t wear normal glasses

when playing because he can’t see when hitting from his closed stance. He said he hopes prescription sports gog-gles will arrive Tuesday.

Atlanta arranged a Memorial Day surprise for the fam-ily of Air Force Sgt. David Sims in the middle of the fifth inning.

Sims’ wife, Robin, and four children were on the field to see his message to the family shown on the Braves video board. Sims, who has been serving in Afghani-stan, emerged on the field after the video and was quick-ly engulfed by a group hug from his children, followed by a long embrace from his wife, as the crowd of 42,426 cheered.

Cardinals sweep, hand Braves 8th straight loss

DAVID GOLDMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

St. Louis Cardinals’ Matt Holliday (7) slides into home plate to beat the tag by Atlanta Braves pitcher Tommy Hanson as he scores from third on a passed ball during the third inning of a baseball game Monday in Atlanta.

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com May 29-June 3, 201211

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — On a windy day at Wrigley Field, the fortunes finally blew in the Chica-go Cubs’ favor.

The Cubs stopped their 12-game losing streak, getting a boost from Alfonso Soria-no’s go-ahead home run to beat the San Diego Padres 11-7 on Monday.

“It’s a big relief,” Cubs manager Dale Sve-um said. “It shows you sometimes how tough it is to win a Major League Baseball game.”

The Cubs’ skid was their worst since they opened the 1997 season with 14 straight losses.

“I think now everybody is more relaxed,” Soriano said. “Now we have to keep doing our jobs and win some games.”

“We have to turn it around. You have to believe in this team because we’re not that bad.”

The gusts were blowing out at 35 mph on a 90-degree afternoon, and the ball was flying. There were eight home runs, including four by each team and two from San Diego’s Chase Headley, and a total of 17 extra-base hits.

Chicago trailed 7-6 in the sixth inning when Soriano launched a drive off Alex Hinshaw (0-1) over the right-field bleachers onto Wave-land Avenue.

Soriano had three hits and drove in three runs. Ian Stewart and Starlin Castro each homered and drove in three for the Cubs. Dar-win Barney also homered, and David DeJe-sus tripled twice.

“We haven’t had a game like that in a while where we have a lot of guys break out and get multiple hits, driving the ball,” said Stewart. “Losing that many in a row was getting old.”

Stewart also had a big day in the field, cut-ting down the potential game-tying run in the seventh when he threw out Headley trying to score on a grounder to third.

“I take a lot of pride in my defense, so when-ever I can make a play out there, it makes me feel good,” he said.

Everth Cabrera and Will Venable connected for San Diego, which lost its fourth in a row.

The Padres hadn’t hit more than two home runs in a game all season and came into the game last in the majors with only 18 overall.

Headley had four hits, including a double.“Right off the bat, I think you knew it was

going to be an offensive game,” Padres man-ager Bud Black said. “It was good see a num-ber of guys swing the bats, get multiple hits. Hopefully, that can carry over — not only tomorrow, but moving through the week.”

Randy Wells (1-1) picked up the win in relief.Barney hit a solo shot in the second, and

Stewart’s two-run shot capped a three-run fourth that put the Cubs ahead 6-4.

Castro hit an 0-2 pitch onto Waveland to pad the one-run lead in the seventh.

Headley hit a tying homer leading off the fourth, then tied it again with a two-run drive in the fifth.

It was Headley’s second multi-homer game of the year. He has seven home runs this sea-son after hitting just four in 113 games in 2011.

“When it’s hot and you come here and the wind’s blowing, you’re going to be rewarded for good swings,” Headley said. “When the conditions are like that, you know you have to put up a good amount of runs to be able to win the game.”

Carlos Quentin hit an RBI double in his Padres’ debut to give San Diego a 1-0 lead and snap their streak of 26 scoreless innings.

Quentin was activated from the 15-day disabled list prior to the game. He had arthroscopic surgery on his right knee in March after being acquired from the Chicago White Sox on Dec. 31.

DeJesus got the Cubs going in the first with a leadoff triple and scored on Castro’s single. Castro stole second and later scored on Bryan LaHair’s groundout.

Cubs starter Travis Wood lasted just five innings. He was tagged for a season-high six runs on seven hits, including four home runs.

San Diego starter Jeff Suppan yielded six runs over five innings.

BRIAN KERSEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chicago Cubs’ Ian Stewart, left, and Bryan LaHair congratulate Alfonso Soriano after Soriano hit a two-run homer to score LaHair during the sixth inning of a baseball game on Monday against the San Diego Padres in Chicago. The Cubs won 11-7.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Chris Sale nearly made White Sox history in a dominating victory.

Sale struck out a career-high 15, Adam Dunn hit a two-run homer and Chicago extended its winning streak to six games with a 2-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Monday.

“A special day ... it was awesome,” said Sale, who is from nearby Lakeland. “It’s nice, especially growing up and being kind of a Tampa Bay Rays fan. My uncle brought me here to the first game. It was the day after my birthday.”

Sale (6-2) gave up one run, three hits and walked two in 7 1/3 innings while finishing one strikeout shy of the team record. Jack Harshman struck out 16 against Boston on July 25, 1954.

“I didn’t know what the record was,” Sale said. “That’s something I’m not really worried about. I knew I had quite a few there late in the game, but it’s the same thing just like any other day. You go out there and you try not to focus on all the external stuff that might get in the way of you doing your job.”

Sale struck out his 15th batter, Jose Molina, with a run-ner on third and two outs in the seventh. He retired his final

batter, Rich Thompson, on a grounder to lead off the eighth.“You know what, that guy could have punched out a lot

of teams 15 times,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “His stuff was that good. The entire package, what he did, was good. A lot of awareness out there.”

The 15 strikeouts was the most ever by one pitcher at Tropicana Field.

“He’s special,” White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. “I think that’s what you’re seeing is him being able to kind of manage the game and go for a strikeout and get ahead and all of those things.”

After Jesse Crain got the final two outs in the eighth, Addi-son Reed pitched the ninth for his fifth save and completed a three-hitter.

Chicago took a 2-1 lead during the sixth when Gordon Beckham singled and scored on Dunn’s 16th homer. Dunn has gone deep 11 times in May.

“You get some guys on, and he can do a lot of damage,” Ven-tura said. “It was just one of those that he hits perfect, and he probably didn’t even feel it. He hit it that good.”

Matt Moore (1-5) allowed two runs and four hits over seven

innings for Tampa Bay. The left-hander, who had given up 19 runs over 19 2/3 innings in his previous four starts, struck out 10 and walked one.

“That’s two of the best young pitchers that have come through in a long time,” Dunn said. “You had to kind of focus and not get caught up in what they were doing. Those two guys are something special, man. For sure.”

The White Sox had scored at least nine runs in each of their previous four games.

Chicago’s Paul Konerko, who had his average drop four points to .395, went 1-for-4. He flared an opposite-field sin-gle to right during the ninth that extended his hitting streak to 14 games.

Ben Zobrist singled, stole second and scored to put the Rays up 1-0 on Jose Lobaton’s RBI single in the fourth. Lobaton was activated from the 15-day disabled list before the game. He was out since April 13 due to right shoulder soreness.

Zobrist, playing in right field, took a hit away from A.J. Pierzynski in the second with a diving catch.

Tampa Bay’s B.J. Upton went 0-for-4, including three strike-outs against Sale, and had his 10-game winning streak end.

Sale pitches 15 strikeouts in White Sox victory

Fortunes finally blow Chicago’s way

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com12

Big Ten eyes new baseball formatBY JAMAL COLLIERSTAFF WRITER

For the first time since 2009, Big Ten baseball will have multiple teams com-pete in the NCAA tournament. Big Ten regular season and conference cham-pion Purdue (44-12) is a No. 1 seed and the first Big Ten team to host a regional since Michigan in 2008.

Michigan State will join Purdue as an at-large selection and a No. 3 seed. It’s the first time the Spartans will appear in the tournament since 1979. The last time a Big Ten team won the NCAA Championship was Ohio State in 1966.

The college baseball season starts in mid-February, and winter conditions force teams to play much of the early season on the road: not ideal for any team in any sport.

The coaches of the Big Ten want a change.

Minnesota’s John Anderson, the win-ningest coach in Big Ten history, made headlines with the idea of playing the conference season in the summer. That idea would likely mean breaking away from the NCAA, which the rest of the Big Ten coaches don’t seem to be in favor of at the moment.

Purdue head coach Doug Schreiber spearheaded a group in favor of play-ing games that count in the fall. This would result in teams playing 10 to 14 games that count toward the spring season and the NCAA tournament selection process.

Playing in the fall has gotten unan-imous consent from Big Ten coach-es, and it’s something Big Ten Deputy Commissioner Brad Traviolia says he will present to the rest of the NCAA this summer.

Here’s what members of the Big Ten had to say about the issue.

Brad Traviolia Big Ten Deputy Commissioner

“If a school wanted to take 12 or 14 of their games and play in the fall to help ease in the com-paction of their games in the springtime, they could do so and have those games count for the NCAA postseason. What we’re looking at doing is seeing if we could get permission from the NCAA baseball committee to adjust their formula for deter-mining RPI and all the NCAA postseason’s formula to count games that are played in the fall.

“We’re not looking to just move Big Ten-Big Ten games in the fall, but we have looked to reach out to other conferences in the north to see if they’d be support-

ive of this. “The initial feedback when I

talk to other conference admin-istrators was, ‘Yeah, this makes a lot of sense.’ Is it easy? No, but is it something that could be done? Yeah.

“I think our coaches realize that the Big Ten and all of our institutions, we’re part of the NCAA and we have to be part of the NCAA postseason events. Imagine walking into a high school kid you’re trying to recruit and say, ‘If we do well, we’re not going to the NCAA Champion-ships, we’re going somewhere else.’ So I think we’re not there at this point, and we’re hopeful this idea of being able to move some games to the fall is less objection-able because it’s not mandatory.”

Dan Hartleb Illinois head coach

“Personally, I don’t think things will change.

“I think we would have to make a radical move and basi-cally jump out of the NCAA and create our own northern league.

“I’m open to listen and see what the possibilities are there, if you look at the NCAA selec-tion, in my mind there’s a lot of things that aren’t fair about it.

“They talk about RPI; they say it’s important, but when it comes selection day, it’s not always important unless they want it to be important.

“You look at this league and look at the parity, and you

look at someone like Nebraska that’s come in. And I think peo-ple thought they’d dominate, and they haven’t dominated.

“By sheer numbers, if you’re getting two, three and four in, you’re going to get teams to advance, and you’re going to start getting teams to the world series.

“And I don’t think to this point the NCAA and people of the selection committee have realized the quality of baseball that we have.

“And if we didn’t deserve more teams in, I don’t think anybody would be (complain-ing), but if you look, a major-ity of the time our guys have gotten in, it’s not been a two-and-out thing.”

Doug Schreiber Purdue head coach

“If you look at the fall, the weather is as nice as it is when it gets beautiful in the spring. That would give us the opportu-nity to play early in the season at home as opposed to playing our first 20 games on the road every year. It’s difficult to build an RPI when the percentages say that 65 or 70 percent of the time you’re going to win at home, well we’re playing our first 20 on the road. We’re not building great RPI and then we’re coming up north to play others who’ve also had their first 20 games on the road. ... So from a competitive equity standpoint, it would help. Right now, our travel budgets

have to be bigger, we get fewer home games and we’re not able to generate as much revenue.

You play in the fall, we get to play at home in good weath-er early in the season just like southern and West Coast schools do, we’re able to build a fanbase because how do you justify mak-ing improvements to your facil-ities when you only playing 16 home games and then 1/3 of them probably in bad weather. ... We’re practicing inside, in venues that don’t resemble our baseball play-ing field.

I don’t believe summer base-ball will ever happen. I think it’s a dead issue. It’s a dream. I understand how people would want to in-vision it but it’s never ever going to happen.”

John Anderson Minnesota head coach

“What happens now is some of the best players in the north go south. For what reason? They tell them, ‘If you wanna go to the Col-lege World Series and play NCAA regionals, you’ve gotta come here. If you wanna play in good weath-er, you’ve gotta come here.’

So I think moving the season, I think what we’ve learned the last 30 years, the current access and the ability to have access in the current setup for the NCAA tour-nament, what we’ve learned is we haven’t done very well. So look at the ACC and SEC and look at some of the schools in the south, they’re drawing record crowds. ... Why? They have great weath-

er, they have great facilities and good matchups, and they have quality baseball teams. So I just don’t think we can continue to sit here and expect us to catch those people here if we’re gonna con-tinue to play the season in Feb-ruary, March, April and May and not have any access to the NCAA tournament.

So we’re knocking our head against the wall here, and it seems like we’re trying, we’re investing, we’re putting money in our pro-grams, we’re trying to get there, but I don’t think the current for-mat’s gonna allow us to gain any ground. ... If you can’t make mon-ey at the gate, or at least have more access to the NCAA tour-nament, based on the format, then you worry about your future.”

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com May 29-June 3, 201213

Class Starts

May 29

YOGAINSTITUTE OF CHAMPAIGN-URBANA

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Sat 11:30am - 12:30pm Moderate (No prereq.) 12:30-1:30pm Intense (Prereq. Intro to Asana)

I fi nd it very important to appreciate nice weather — to mentally encapsulate the feeling of a beautiful day and pocket it

for later. Sure, it’s been above 90 degrees in the C-U area lately, but I rest easy know-ing that a week ago when the weather was gorgeous, I didn’t take it for granted. This is more important in late autumn, when the several-months-long Midwestern winter is knocking at the door. Eventually, the trees let go of their leaves, and every lush fall gives way to a cold, dead winter.

It is likewise important that we appreci-ate the beautiful performances put on by star athletes, who eventually must also lose their leaves, so to speak.

The sun has set for Kobe Bryant this season. The rising Thunder put the tiresome Lakers to rest. When I say the Lakers are “tiresome,” I don’t mean they’re wearing the Thunder out. When you are caught in quicksand and are sinking, they say, it is best not to struggle. The Lakers struggled. They did not sink faster, only more pathetically.

Watching Kobe Bryant sink shot after shot in the second half of last Monday’s game was something we shouldn’t forget because he may never play that well again. As he’s aged, he’s

adjusted his game to fi t his capabilities, which diminish with each passing season. But soon his leaves will fall off.

Having said that, Kobe Bryant will be able to sink beeline jumpers until the day Michael Jordan wins his sixth title as owner of the Bobcats. So he kept on fi ghting, pleading for his teammates to elevate their games and give him something to work with.

They tried, but in their way stood Oklaho-ma City, a team growing in confi dence, ability and experience with every game. The Thunder overpowered the rest of the Lakers.

As for Kobe, he saw no adversary; he was playing for himself.

Superstars can be defi ned by what drives them. LeBron James wants to have titles. Car-melo Anthony wants to be the world’s best scor-er. Derrick Rose wants to win. Michael Jordan wanted to dominate. Kobe Bryant wants to be the greatest.

Kobe Bryant wants to win because he knows that’s what he has to do to be great. That’s what he has to do to get title No. 6. This shows in his play. He shoots more than he passes, which is absurd when you think about it, and he thrusts himself into big moments and is spitting-mad when he gets passed over for Steve Blake dur-ing them. His success rate is, really, not that great. A lot of times Kobe will miss the big shot, and in these cases, no one says anything. The Lakers go as Kobe goes, they’ll reason, and if he doesn’t make the shot, the Lakers don’t deserve it made.

Monday night was Kobe’s night. In his per-sonal season fi nale, he made tough shots, he didn’t miss an inordinate amount and he showed everyone that this series defeat was not his fault. He showed that he is a work-ing engine on a broken machine, and though the Lakers failed to win the race, they have a motor that can get them there.

The Lakers need to retool one last time with a goal of winning now before they enter a post-Kobe rebuilding phase. Until the day Bryant retires, he should have a prominent say in every move the Lakers make. I’m sure his voice carries weight in the front offi ce as is, but something tells me it wasn’t Kobe’s idea to go into the playoffs relying on Steve Blake, Metta World Peace, Matt Barnes, Devin Ebanks and Jordan Hill. Kobe knows who would work best with his skill set, and his window isn’t closed until he calls it quits.

Kobe may be a jerk, but the guy has more pride than anyone in the league right now. He will regroup. His Lakers will make changes accordingly. Kobe will continue to be the face of the Los Angeles Lakers, and the fans will happily ride his career until it comes to rest. Whether a title lies between here and that resting point has become a very poignant and sensitive question. With the sun having set on another season in Los Angeles, you have to wonder if it will ever again shine as bril-liantly for Kobe as it did when the Thunder eliminated the Lakers last Monday.

The day Bryant no longer makes the Lak-

ers a title contender will be a very cold day in paradise. For the fi rst time in Bryant’s career, Lakers fans are wondering if that day might be tomorrow.

I don’t know if I want to see Kobe get his sixth title, but I sure do love to watch him try.

Eliot is a junior in Media.

ELIOT SILLAssignment editor

Lakers, aging Kobe running out of time

SUE OGROCKI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lakers guard Kobe Bryant dunks against the Thunder in the third quarter of Game 5 on May 21.

May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com14

ACROSS!1 Late, as a library

book!8 Sound of an ex-

cited heart15 “-” marks16 Furious17 Surplus’s opposite18 Bring up, as a sub-

ject19 Forget-me-___20 Ruler on a golf

course?21 Yank24 Floppy feature of a

basset hound26 “My country, ___ of

thee”27 Morales of “NYPD

Blue”28 In favor of30 Mushroom cloud

creator, brie!y34 Scrape, as a knee35 Songwriter Berlin37 “___ pasa?”38 Little bell sound39 Electron tube40 Be furious41 Rock music genre42 Heart-shaped item

on a chain, say43 Genie’s home44 Last movement of

a sonata46 Tire "ller47 Stick ___ in the

water48 Atlantic food "sh50 Foreign policy grp.52 Hawaii’s state bird53 Ruler in a vegeta-

ble garden?56 Comic strip cry58 Folded Mexican

dish59 Element used to

make semiconduc-tors

63 Not recognizable by

64 Raw material for a steel mill

65 Figure with 14-Down sides

66 Rainbow mnemon-ic

DOWN!1 Advanced deg.!2 Sailor’s a#rmative!3 Beach lotion letters!4 Ruler after a diet?!5 Art ___ (1920s-’30s

movement)!6 Join!7 Superlative su#x!8 Fine cotton!9 Like krypton10 Ruler on a beach?11 Easel user12 Ache13 Bug-eyed

14 Number of sides in a 65-Across

20 Ruler in a Utah city?

21 Court clown22 Igloo builder23 Spoil, as a parade25 Zimbabwe’s conti-

nent29 Passengers31 Consider the same32 Order to come33 Cone-shaped shel-

ter35 Bachelor’s last

words36 Badminton court

divider40 Ruler with custard

desserts?42 Ruler in a W.C.?45 Where many fed.

employees live49 “Me too”51 Egypt’s capital53 Whine54 Guitarist Clapton55 Midday57 Fill to excess58 Rotten59 Madam’s mate60 Corn on the ___61 “… ___ quit!”62 Las Vegas’s home:

Abbr.

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

PUZZLE BY MICHAEL DAVID

The crossword solution is in the Classified section.

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

2010 Tribune Media Services Inc. Distributed by Knight Ridder-Tribune Information Services.

Today’s Birthday (05/29/12). Write a dream to answer: “What exciting future ex-ists by December 31, 2012?” Put it in pres-ent tense. This year, career and financial goals move forward powerfully. Include diet and exercise in the plan. Relationships and partnerships deepen in richness. Celebrate!

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 a 9 -- Slow and steady does it. There’s a sense of urgency but no need to be impetuous. The same goes for money: slow the flow to a trickle. You’ll get farther faster.

Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is a 7 -- Costs could be higher than expected. Keep digging to find the clue. Stand up for what’s right. Put in the extra effort. Compro-

mise. You can work it out.Gemini (May 21-June 21) -- Today is a

6 -- Finish up old business. Move quickly. Save romance for tomorrow or the next day ... you’ve other things to think about now. Advise a loved one to be patient.

Cancer (June 22-July 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Your team is hot; make sure they know it. Explore and find a place where to stash the treasure. No flirting, or you may be disappointed.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Financial planning comes easier than usual. Figure out how to bring money in. Providing motivation is important. It’s not a good time for traveling.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- You’re super productive and on fire. You get farther than expected. There

could be a romantic misunderstanding or barrier. Money is not required. Don’t get discouraged.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is a 6 -- A boost in confidence helps you figure things out. It may be challenging to see the glass as half full, but keep imagining it that way. Let excitement replace fear.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Accept stern coaching from a partner who stands for you. A busy, fast-paced morning evolves into a slower, more pensive phase. Handle details for the next two days.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Now’s a good time to make busi-ness decisions. Work faster and make more money. Pay bills. Don’t take yourself too seriously. Travel later.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today

is an 8 -- Every little experience makes you richer. You’re not here just to visit but to make a difference. Play the game like you mean it. Take time for someone else.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 7 -- Use the intensity to your advantage to accomplish the seemingly impossible. If romance isn’t working, don’t push it just yet. Take a rest instead.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Don’t take yourself too seriously and avoid conflict. Make changes for a positive outcome. A belly laugh could be the cure. Laugh some more.

HOROSCOPES

!"#$%&&'Check out the DI on 24-7

DOONESBURY BY GARRY TRUDEAU

BEARDO BY DAN DOUGHERTY

MARCO AND MARTY BY BILLY FORE

The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com May 29-June 3, 201215

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HELP WANTED 010Full time

APARTMENTS 410Furnished/Unfurnished

merchandise

HELP WANTED 030Full/Part time

rentalsFOR RENT

APPLIANCES 210

HELP WANTED 030Full/Part time

HELP WANTED 030Full/Part time

APARTMENTS 410Furnished/Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 410Furnished/Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 410Furnished/Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 410Furnished/Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 420Furnished

APARTMENTS 420Furnished

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May 29-June 3, 2012 The Daily Illini | www.DailyIllini.com16

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Parking & laundry availableApartments Furnished

58 E. Armory, C.

201 E. Armory, C.

604 W. Stoughton,C.

1004 S. Locust, C.

$870

$890

$1000+

$805-$850

58 E. Armory, C. $870

2 Bedroom

604 W. Stoughton,C. $1000+

!"#$%&#'%()*++&!"#$!"%$!&&'(')*+,-.'/0*,-.%/0$123%456.%78,39:;/%<=->%4<26?%!2%@.64?%#A)B:2C%DEFG%H.-53353-%I8;?J,3.?%J,7;?%2:%#,-,46>

KKK><<C:.36>L2C%%%%%%%MG/1/NOO

502 E Springfield, C.3 BR from $1,3952 BR from $1,095

10 month lease options and prices at select locations

3BR SPECIALSTHIS WEEK ONLY

502springfield.com 217-351-1800

3BR SPECIALSTHIS WEEK ONLY

Take a virtual tour at www.bankierapts.com Call 217.328.3770 to set up an appointment

Sign a 2BR lease at 505 S. Fourth Street

and get a $500 rent credit*

* o!er expires May 21, 2012 Spotless, spacious apartments

Excellent service

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217-352-1129

Wr

r

rr

.344.fi

Amenities at 51 E. John St., Champaign

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ROOMS 530

HOUSES FOR RENT 510

ROOMMATE WANTED 550

APARTMENTS 430Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 430Unfurnished

APARTMENTS 420Furnished

APARTMENTS 420Furnished

APARTMENTS 420Furnished

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