the daily illini: volume 144 issue 53

10
BY ABIGALE SVOBODA STAFF WRITER The Senate Executive Com- mittee moved to postpone a res- olution regarding Steven Salai- ta’s rejected appointment and the importance of shared gov- ernance, in a 7 to 5 vote with 2 abstentions. Two senate committees have been appointed to review how Salaita’s case was handled. Nick Burbules, SEC chair of Gener- al University Policy, said he believes it is important to wait until those groups report back to the senate before the resolu- tion is decided upon to ensure mixed messages are not sent. INSIDE Police 2A | Horoscopes 2A | Opinions 4A | Letters 4A | Crossword 5A | Comics 5A | Life & Culture 6A | Sports 1B | Classifieds 3B | Sudoku 3B THE DAILY ILLINI TUESDAY December 2, 2014 37˚ | 25˚ WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM 5he independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois since 1871 Vol. 144 Issue 53 | FREE @THEDAILYILLINI, @DI_OPINION, @DI_SPORTS THEDAILYILLINI THEDAILYILLINI DAILYILLINI, DAILYILLINISPORTS @THEDAILYILLINI ZIANG XIAO THE DAILY ILLINI The City of Urbana recently completed the $7.9 million Boneyard Creek Improvements Project, bringing a new pathway, bridge, local art and more to a section of the creek between Griggs Street and Broadway Avenue. LAURIE SKRIVAN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE The University discussion centered around the definition of a “white ally” and allowed student to share their opinions. BONEYARD CREEK REVAMPED Urbana’s local creek gets a renovation University holds Ferguson discussion SENATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE SEC defers Salaita case, waits for report from committees Armed robbery hits Urbana gas station BY EDWIN HSIEH STAFF WRITER Emotions were high Mon- day night as students and community members dis- cussed the recent events that took place in Ferguson, Mis- souri, last week and explored the role of the white ally in dismantling racism and violence. Since the Nov. 24 grand jury decision to not indict officer Darren Wilson of the murder of Michael Brown, students across the nation have brought conversations about race to their campuses by protesting and holding dis- cussion forums. The University of Illinois Diversity & Social Justice Education hosted an open discussion, titled “What’s a White Ally to Do,” at the Uni- versity YMCA to address feel- ings about the recent verdict. “Tonight is really to pro- vide a space for people to reflect on the events happen- ing in Ferguson the last four months and to talk particu- larly in terms of race relation and racism,” said Ross Want- land, director of Diversity & Social Justice Education. The discussion focused on the definition of a white ally. “Many of us here are pissed off about what happened in Ferguson, I am not sure even if I want to be here,” said Les- lie Morrow, director of the LGBT Resource Center and Ph.D. student. Wantland led the charge in the discussion and asked the participants to redefine the words “ally” and what it means for race relations and the community as a whole. Amnesty, openness to possi- bility, mindfulness of action and words were among the many things that people said in regard to what one should do. Handouts were given to people in attendance, which listed the five qualities of a good ally: an ally listens, an ally is present, an ally opens doors, an ally takes chances and an ally gets support. People were later broken down into discussion groups and participants shared their perspectives and personal experiences on how Fergu- son or racism has impacted their lives. “I think it’s really impor- tant (that) people, including white people, deal with white BY WALBERT CASTILLO STAFF WRITER Two years and $7.9 mil- lion dollars later, the City of Urbana is celebrating the completion of the first section of improvements to Boneyard Creek. The community gathered for a ribbon cutting ceremo- ny on Nov. 21 held to com- memorate the completion of the Boneyard Creek Improve- ments Project, which rede- veloped parts of the creek between Griggs Street and Broadway Avenue. The city has plans to devel- op five different sections of the creek, spanning from Founders Park in the west to the intersection of Vine Street and University Ave- nue in the east. The recently completed project, section three, cov- ers a distance of approxi- mately 800 feet and is locat- ed in the middle of the four New features of Boneyard Creek park Q An eight feet wide concrete pathway Q Public art depicting the creek’s history Q Renovation of the old wooden railroad bridge into a pedestrian walkway Q Accent lighting on the stairs leading into the park and along the bridge and pedestrian lighting along the pathway Q A public overlook near Griggs and Race streets Q A plaza near the Station Theatre SOURCE: THE CITY OF URBANA SEE BONEYARD | 3A DAILY ILLINI STAFF REPORT An armed robbery was reported around 4 a.m. Sunday at a gas sta- tion in the 1800 block of Philo Road in Urbana. The offender pointed a silver semi-automatic handgun, which he held in his left hand, at a clerk and demanded money and cigarettes, according to a press release from the Urbana Police Department. Prior to the offender entering the gas station, a female came in and was possibly casing the store. The offender is described as a black male, about 6 feet tall with a thin build. He was wearing a navy blue hoodie, black pants, black shoes, a black backpack and a full coverage costume feminine face mask with an exaggerated smile. On Oct. 27, the same female entered the same gas station pri- or to another armed robbery by a similar offender. The offender is the same build, left-handed and wore a different mask in the pre- vious robbery. Urbana Police Sgt. Dan Morgan said that although the suspects’ identities are still unknown, it is a possibility both robberies were committed by the same offender. The female is a juvenile and has been identified and interviewed, but was uncooperative. Jessica Ramos and Miranda Holloway contributed to the report OUTSIDER LOOKING IN ON THANKSGIVING SWITCH FROM EMPANADAS TO BURGERS An American tradition experienced for the first time gives perspective to the holiday Jurassic Grill, formerly The Empanadas House, is reopening with a new focus OPINIONS, 4A LIFE & CULTURE, 6A ILLINI FACE HURRICANES In first road game of the season, No. 24 Illinois will be tested by No. 15 Miami SPORTS, 1B Classified Research Policy The Senate Executive Committee discussed a proposed classified research policy, which will be discussed further at its Dec. 8, Academic Senate meeting. The resolution would allow the University to accept research opportunities and receive funding from organizations that use classified or restricted research, from organizations such as the Department of Defense or national security organizations. The policy would be applied to all three University campuses, a matter that raised concern about binding the units without consent. The policy also could keep students from publishing research findings. Committee members addressed many concerns over how the policy interferes with the University’s educational mission, as it would likely halt international students from participating in classified research. The SEC agreed to form an ad hoc committee to review the policy and report back to the senate before its Feb. 9, 2015, meeting. SEE SEC | 3A SEE FERGUSON | 1A

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Page 1: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

BY ABIGALE SVOBODA STAFF WRITER

The Senate Executive Com-mittee moved to postpone a res-olution regarding Steven Salai-ta’s rejected appointment and the importance of shared gov-ernance, in a 7 to 5 vote with 2 abstentions.

Two senate committees have been appointed to review how

Salaita’s case was handled. Nick Burbules, SEC chair of Gener-al University Policy, said he believes it is important to wait until those groups report back

to the senate before the resolu-tion is decided upon to ensure mixed messages are not sent.

INSIDE Po l ice 2A | Horoscopes 2A | Op in ions 4A | Le t t e rs 4A | Crossword 5A | Comics 5A | L i f e & Cul tu re 6A | Spor ts 1B | C lass i f i eds 3B | Sudoku 3B

THE DAILY ILLINITUESDAYDecember 2, 2014

37˚ | 25˚

WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM 5he independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois since 1871�� Vol. 144 Issue 53 | FREE

@THEDAILYILLINI, @DI_OPINION, @DI_SPORTS THEDAILYILLINI THEDAILYILLINIDAILYILLINI, DAILYILLINISPORTS @THEDAILYILLINI

ZIANG XIAO THE DAILY ILLINIThe City of Urbana recently completed the $7.9 million Boneyard Creek Improvements Project, bringing a new pathway, bridge, local art and more to a section of the creek between Griggs Street and Broadway Avenue.

LAURIE SKRIVAN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICEThe University discussion centered around the definition of a

“white ally” and allowed student to share their opinions.

BONEYARD CREEK REVAMPEDUrbana’s local creek gets a renovation

University holds Ferguson discussion

SENATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

SEC defers Salaita case, waits for report from committees

Armed robbery hits Urbana gas station

BY EDWIN HSIEHSTAFF WRITER

Emotions were high Mon-day night as students and community members dis-cussed the recent events that took place in Ferguson, Mis-souri, last week and explored the role of the white ally in dismantling racism and violence.

Since the Nov. 24 grand jury decision to not indict officer Darren Wilson of the murder of Michael Brown, students across the nation have brought conversations about race to their campuses by protesting and holding dis-

cussion forums. The University of Illinois

Diversity & Social Justice Education hosted an open discussion, titled “What’s a White Ally to Do,” at the Uni-versity YMCA to address feel-ings about the recent verdict.

“Tonight is really to pro-vide a space for people to reflect on the events happen-ing in Ferguson the last four months and to talk particu-larly in terms of race relation and racism,” said Ross Want-land, director of Diversity & Social Justice Education.

The discussion focused on the definition of a white ally.

“Many of us here are pissed off about what happened in Ferguson, I am not sure even if I want to be here,” said Les-lie Morrow, director of the LGBT Resource Center and Ph.D. student.

Wantland led the charge in the discussion and asked the participants to redefine the words “ally” and what it means for race relations and the community as a whole. Amnesty, openness to possi-bility, mindfulness of action and words were among the many things that people said in regard to what one should do.

Handouts were given to people in attendance, which listed the five qualities of a good ally: an ally listens, an ally is present, an ally opens doors, an ally takes chances and an ally gets support.

People were later broken down into discussion groups and participants shared their perspectives and personal experiences on how Fergu-son or racism has impacted their lives.

“I think it’s really impor-tant (that) people, including white people, deal with white

BY WALBERT CASTILLOSTAFF WRITER

Two years and $7.9 mil-lion dollars later, the City of Urbana is celebrating the completion of the first section of improvements to Boneyard Creek.

The community gathered for a ribbon cutting ceremo-ny on Nov. 21 held to com-memorate the completion of the Boneyard Creek Improve-ments Project, which rede-veloped parts of the creek between Griggs Street and Broadway Avenue.

The city has plans to devel-op five different sections of the creek, spanning from Founders Park in the west to the intersection of Vine Street and University Ave-nue in the east.

The recently completed project, section three, cov-ers a distance of approxi-mately 800 feet and is locat-ed in the middle of the four

New features of Boneyard Creek parkQ An eight feet wide concrete pathwayQ Public art depicting the creek’s historyQ Renovation of the old wooden railroad bridge into a pedestrian walkwayQ Accent lighting on the stairs leading into the park and along the bridge and pedestrian lighting along the pathwayQ A public overlook near Griggs and Race streetsQ A plaza near the Station Theatre

SOURCE: THE CITY OF URBANA

SEE BONEYARD | 3A

DAILY ILLINI STAFF REPORT

An armed robbery was reported around 4 a.m. Sunday at a gas sta-tion in the 1800 block of Philo Road in Urbana.

The offender pointed a silver semi-automatic handgun, which he held in his left hand, at a clerk and demanded money and cigarettes, according to a press release from the Urbana Police Department.

Prior to the offender entering the gas station, a female came in and was possibly casing the store.

The offender is described as a black male, about 6 feet tall with a thin build. He was wearing a navy blue hoodie, black pants, black shoes, a black backpack and a full coverage costume feminine face

mask with an exaggerated smile.On Oct. 27, the same female

entered the same gas station pri-or to another armed robbery by a similar offender. The offender is the same build, left-handed and wore a different mask in the pre-vious robbery.

Urbana Police Sgt. Dan Morgan said that although the suspects’ identities are still unknown, it is a possibility both robberies were committed by the same offender.

The female is a juvenile and has been identified and interviewed, but was uncooperative.

Jessica Ramos and Miranda Holloway contributed to the report

OUTSIDER LOOKING IN ON THANKSGIVING

SWITCH FROM EMPANADAS TO BURGERS

An American tradition experienced for the first time

gives perspective to the holidayJurassic Grill, formerly The

Empanadas House, is reopening with a new focus

OPINIONS, 4ALIFE & CULTURE, 6A

ILLINI FACE HURRICANESIn first road game of the season, No. 24 Illinois will be tested by

No. 15 Miami

SPORTS, 1B

Classified Research PolicyThe Senate Executive Committee discussed a proposed classified research policy, which will be discussed further at its Dec. 8, Academic Senate meeting. The resolution would allow the University to accept research opportunities and receive funding from organizations that use classified or restricted research, from organizations such as the Department of Defense or national security organizations. The policy would be applied to all three University campuses,

a matter that raised concern about binding the units without consent. The policy also could keep students from publishing research findings.Committee members addressed many concerns over how the policy interferes with the University’s educational mission, as it would likely halt international students from participating in classified research. The SEC agreed to form an ad hoc committee to review the policy and report back to the senate before its Feb. 9, 2015, meeting.

SEE SEC | 3A

SEE FERGUSON | 1A

Page 2: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

2A Tuesday, December 2, 2014 THE DAILY ILLINI | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM

WPGU 107.1 LOCK-IN

Donate online at wpgu.com/santa or at 512 E. Gree n St., Champaign

OPERATION SANTA

IT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUAL

This Holiday Season marks the 21st Annual Operation Santa Fundraiser! Help make a difference in the lives of local children by supporting the Champaign Crisis Nursery and Parent Wonders in Rantoul!

Donate online at wpgu.com/santa or at 512 E. Gree n St., Champaign

IT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUALIT’S ALMOST TIME FOR THE ANNUAL

Listen to WPGU on December 8th & 9th for the Operation Santa Lock-in!

WEATHERPOLICE

ChampaignQ Burglary was report-

ed at Mia Za’s, 629 E. Green St., around 10:30 a.m. Tues-day.

According to the report, the offender entered the business and stole money from the cash register.

�Urbana Q Theft was reported at

Walmart, 100 S. High Cross Road, around 5 p.m. Sunday.

According to the report, the suspect attempted to steal merchandise from the business.

Q Theft was reported at

Uncle Martin’s Bar, 1104 N. Cunningham Avenue, around 6:30 p.m. Sunday.

According to the report, the reporting person left her wallet at the local busi-ness.

Compiled by Jessica Ramos

HOROSCOPESBY NANCY BLACKTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

Today’s Birthday Spread your wings this year. Jot down your wildest ambitions before 12/23, when a new personal power phase launches (through 12/19/17). Clarify plans over summer. Entertaining travels and adventures arise through August, when your career grows. Domestic changes after 3/20 hold your focus. Love fl ourishes naturally.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 — Separate business from personal. Work smart, not hard. Make the commitment you’ve been considering. Stick to the standards you’ve set. Reinforce your ideology with facts. Keep digging and fi nd what you’re looking for. Pour on the steam and results surpass imagination.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20)Today is an 8 — Study for more options. Think it over before making big decisions. Bring in an expert with practical experience. Complete an emotionally charged project. Work at home if possible, and take advantage for simultaneous lounging and productivity. Get comfortable, and crack those books.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20)Today is a 7 — Handle your end of the business, especially details. Magnify the impact by collaborating with partners and friends. Your discipline is admirable. Clean

up and organize. Refurbish an old piece you can’t part with. Make sure you get what you bargained for. Follow your heart.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22)Today is a 7 — Today’s work leads to career advancement. Fix something before it breaks. Fit short-term tasks to your long-range plans. Stay in close communication with your team. Make sure everyone has what they need to get the job done. Chop wood, carry water.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)Today is an 8 — Work out like you mean it. Greater effort wins greater reward. Get help with the heavy lifting, and get household chores out of the way. An amazing discovery unveils. Set work aside a bit early. Repay a favor. The action is behind the scenes.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)Today is a 7 — It’s smart to work hard now. An older friend provides just what you need. Group effort pays off big. Collaborate to grow family resources. Take care of others and your own needs get met. Disciplined actions get results. Store those nuts for winter.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22)Today is an 8 — Get into action! A collaboration’s red hot. Consider the future result desired, and then look back to get the logical previous step, to the present. You’re gaining notoriety, respect and income. A business opportunity is there for the taking.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21)Today is a 9 — Put your back into your work and a fat haul is possible. Do what you promised, and stick to the

plan. Use a friend’s infl uence to advance even farther. Provide excellent, respectful service. Satisfy your clients. Grasp a business opportunity.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)Today is a 7 — Your desires and effort seem aligned. Find ways to economize. Don’t let go of what you’ve achieved. Let your partner take the lead. Handle business along the way. Action comes easily, and things fall together effortlessly. This could get fun.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)Today is an 8 — The next two days are good for making changes at home. Make household decisions and clean up a mess. Neatness counts. Increase peace with compassion. Take care of business. Get in action on an old project. Then think of the places you can go.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)Today is a 7 — Work smart for career advancement. Keep track of earnings. A business opportunity comes your way. Go by the book, and go for it. Your ability to concentrate seems extra keen for the next two days. Study, without pressure. Find safe places to stash your treasure.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)Today is an 8 — Business takes center stage, and it’s starting to heat up. Let your subconscious mind solve the problem. Your work now pushes your career in an enticing direction. Improve your working environment and increase your family’s comfort. Set your infrastructure up to support everyone.

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THE DAILY ILLINI512 E. Green St.

Champaign, IL 61820

217 • 337-8300Copyright © 2014 Illini Media Co.

The Daily Illini is the independent student newspaper 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.

Periodical postage paid at Champaign, IL 61821. The Daily Illini is published Mondays through Thursdays during University of Illinois fall and spring semesters, and Mondays 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.

Today’s night system staffNight editor: Muriel KelleherCopy editors: Annabeth Carlson, Stephen Bourbon, Kevin Gibbons, Charlotte Carrroll, Leah Freemon, Maggie Pluskota, Sarah Foster, Christina OehlerDesigners: Eunie Kim, Kelsie Trav-ers, Hannah Hwang, Bryan LorenzPage transmission: Franklin Wang

When we make a mistake, we will correct it in this place. We strive for accuracy, so if you see an error in the paper, please contact Editor-in-Chief Johnathan Hettinger at (217) 337-8365.

CORRECTIONS

Editor-in-chiefJohnathan [email protected] editors Hannah Prokop Lauren [email protected] directorAnna Hecht [email protected] editorTorey ButnerNews editorCorinne [email protected]. news editorsEleanor BlackMegan JonesTaylor OdishoNewscast directorTiffany JolleyDaytime editorMiranda [email protected]. daytime editorBryan BoccelliSports editorSean [email protected]. sports editorsPeter Bailey-WellsMichal DwojakTorrence SorrellFeatures editorSarah [email protected]

Asst. features editorsDeclan HartyAlice SmelyanskyOpinions editorNicki [email protected]. opinions editorEmma GoodwinPhoto editorFolake [email protected]. photo editorZoe GrantSupplements editorEmma [email protected] editorAlex Ortiz [email protected] producerCarissa TownsendCopy chiefAudrey [email protected]. copy chiefAlyssa VoltolinaSocial media directorMelissa De LeonWeb editorSteffi e Drucker [email protected] sales managerDeb SosnowskiProduction directorKit DonahuePublisherLilyan Levant

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

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NewsroomCorrections: If you think something has been incorrectly reported, please call Editor-in-Chief Johnathan Hettinger at (217) 337-8365.Online: If you have a question about DailyIllini.com or The Daily Illini’s social media outlets, please email our Web editor Johnathan Hettinger at [email protected]: If you have comments or questions about The Daily Illini’s broadcasts on WPGU-FM 107.1, please email our managing editor, Lauren Rohr, at [email protected]: If you would like to work for the newspaper’s editorial department, please fi ll out our form or email employment at dailyillini.com.News: If you have a news tip, please call news editor Corinne Ruff at (217) 337-8345 or email [email protected]: If you want to submit events for publication in print and online, visit the217.com.Sports: If you want to contact the sports staff, please call sports editor Sean Hammond at (217) 337-8344 or email [email protected] & Culture: If you have a tip for a Life & Culture story, please call features editor Sarah Soenke at (217) 337-8343 or email [email protected]: If you have any questions about photographs or to suggest photo coverage of an event, please call photo editor Folake Osibodu at (217) 337-8560 or email [email protected] to the editor: Letters are 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. The Daily Illini reserves the right to edit or reject any contributions. Email [email protected] with the subject “Letter to the Editor.”

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- First Class Service- Friday & Sunday Service

Page 3: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

BY MEREDITH COHNTRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Hundreds of thousands of times each year in the United States, children go to emergency rooms with bone fractures. But new research from University of Maryland School of Medicine shows that the injuries are almost never splinted properly.

Ninety-three percent of the splints that are used to immobilize fractured limbs temporarily are not put on correctly, according to the study of pediatric patients in the Baltimore area. And that can lead to swelling, skin injuries and other problems — some of them long-term.

“I did the study because I see a lot of splints on wrong, but I didn’t think it would be that high,” said Dr. Josh-ua M. Abzug, the director of pediatric orthopedics at the University of Maryland Medical Center and the lead author of the study. “This is really a baseline study that shows, ‘Hey, there is a prob-lem and we recognize that it exists.’ The next step is education.”

Abzug, who is also an assistant professor in Mary-land’s School of Medicine, studied 275 children and

teenagers who came to a Maryland pediatric ortho-pedist from a community hospital emergency depart-ment or urgent care center in the region. He presented his findings in Washington last month at a conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The splints that are used to stabilize broken bones usually include a strip of rigid material, a wrapping of soft padding and an elas-tic bandage to hold them in place.

Most of the time, Abzug said, the application is good enough for a patient who will see an orthopedist within a few days. The orthopedist can evaluate the patient and put on a cast.

But if that visit is delayed, he said, serious problems can develop. They include wounds that require skin grafts or even surgery to reset a bone.

In 77 percent of the cases Abzug studied, elastic ban-dages were incorrectly put directly on skin. In 59 per-cent, joints were not immo-bilized correctly. In 52 per-cent, splints were the wrong length. About 40 percent of the kids had skin and soft-tissue complications.

Those percentages are

particularly troubling, he said, given the numbers who are splinted. Nearly half of all boys and a quar-ter of girls suffer fractures before age 16, Abzug said. Almost 1 million kids under 15 fracture limbs each year, the Centers for Disease Con-trol and Prevention found in its 2010 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, and millions more get splints for sprains or strains.

Abzug suspects that adults are also not splinted properly.

The researchers could not identify who was apply-ing splints incorrectly most often — doctors, nurs-es, physician assistants or medical assistants — because parents couldn’t reliably tell them. They planned to demonstrate up-to-date techniques to staff in area hospitals and urgent care centers and perhaps provide some post-ers and pocket-size cards for reminders. Abzug said they would redo the study to see whether splinting improved.

BY ARMAND EMAMDJOMEH, LAURA J. NELSON AND JOSEPH SERNATRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

LOS ANGELES — Paul Livingston pressed his left arm to the pavement of San-ta Monica Boulevard and slowly dragged his mangled body out of the street and onto the curb.

A car had just slammed into him at a red light in Bev-erly Hills, throwing him from his bike.

As paramedics lifted him into an ambulance, he heard a man nearby shout that the driver “just took off!” He blacked out.

That was June 2011. The musician, then 35, spent the next three years struggling to recover and to seek account-ability from the woman who hit him and drove away.

Livingston’s case is part of a troubling trend. Hit-and-run collisions involving bicy-clists surged 42 percent from 2002 to 2012 in Los Angeles County, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis of California Highway Patrol crash data.

The increase came as the overall number of hit-and-runs involving cars, cyclists and pedestrians dropped by 30 percent. Between 2002 and 2012, nearly 5,600 cyclists were injured and at least 36 died in crashes in which driv-ers fled the scene.

The rising number of col-

lisions underscores the deli-cate balance on Los Angeles streets, where more bicy-clists are sharing lanes with vehicles. The number of Angelenos who are commut-ing by bike is slowly grow-ing, federal data show. And in the last five years, Los Ange-les has added more than 120 miles of bike lanes to promote safety and encourage more people to get out of their cars.

For cyclists who are hit, a major frustration is how infrequently drivers are caught. The Los Angeles

Police Department closed one in five hit-and-runs from 2008 to 2012, meaning about 80 percent were unresolved, according to data the depart-ment reported last year to the Board of Police Commission-ers. Less than half of those cases were closed through an arrest.

Traffic investigators say that they are faced with thousands of hit-and-run collisions a year involving bikes, cars and pedestrians, and they must focus on cas-es with strong leads, such

as eyewitness reports or the car’s license plate number, and on crashes that kill or maim the victims.

More than three years after the crash, Livings-ton has tried to let go of the anger, pain and frustration of the last three years. Loud noises and heavy traffic still put him on edge, though. And his bike sits unused.

“My life is getting back on track. I know it could be much worse,” Livingston said. “But nothing will ever be the same.”

“I’m certain that the issues are going to look different after those com-mittees have reported out,” Burbules said. “I think we owe it to the senate and to those committees for a chance to make their state-ment before the senate takes any stance on those issues.”

The resolution was co-authored by Ben McCall, SEC member and profes-sor in chemistry, and Kirk Sanders, SEC member and associate professor in clas-sics, and will now be pre-sented to the academic senate at its Feb. 9, 2015, meeting.

“I can’t imagine CAFT (Committee on Academ-ic Freedom and Tenure) comes out with a report that convinces me that aca-demic freedom isn’t impor-tant,” McCall said.

The goal of the reso-lution is to “try to seize middle ground and to try

to bring people together, coming from different per-spectives on the Salaita case,” McCall said.

The proposed resolution states the decision to not forward Salaita’s appoint-ment to the Board of Trust-ees was inconsistent with the University’s princi-ples of shared governance. Additionally, it urges senior administrators to go through appropriate pro-cesses of consulting with academic units when they oppose recommendations.

“The senate ... rejects the notion that a univer-sity should value ‘civility as much as scholarship,’ since the free expression of scholarly opinions is the essence of academic freedom,” the resolution stated.

Calvin Lear, graduate student and SEC member, had reason to agree with McCall’s statement on the unlikeliness that the two committees reports will change the resolution.

“There is a big portion of this campus that believes

that the senate, and the senate executive commit-tee by connection, is either unwilling or unable to help them improve their lot in life; so there is an impetus to try and consider some-thing,” Lear said. “It’s not that we’re tone deaf and we don’t get it, it’s just that we have some concerns.”

Lear suggested present-ing the resolution at the senate’s Dec. 8 meeting, where opposed members could voice their concerns to the whole senate. This way, all members would be given the opportunity to weigh in on the subject and the resolution may still be held until February.

Burbles reminded the SEC that the committee’s purpose is to be “thought-ful and considerate.”

“I’m not very moved by the concern that we have to do something because people want to see the sen-ate do something,” he said.

Abigale can be reached at [email protected].

THE DAILY ILLINI | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM Tuesday, December 2, 2014 3A

MARIAH MATTHEWS THE DAILY ILLINIA faculty member shares the highlights her group discussed and explained their choice not to take notes.

JAY L. CLENDENIN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICEHit-and-run victim Luis Avina on Hope Place, where he was struck by a car that turned in front of him, on Nov. 3, in Los Angeles.

CASSIDY JOHNSON TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICEJessica Ryan plays with her two 1-year-old sons Hayden, left, and Hudson in her home. Hudson broke his leg and the splint ended up giving him a sore.

Hit-and-run accidents with bikes more frequent in LA

Study shows many fracture-setting splints done incorrectly

supremacy and racism, that we work with each other and push each other,” said Joe Minarik, program coordina-tor for the Diversity & Social Justice Education.

The room was filled with a racially diverse group of stu-dents and adults, and many of them said they were interest-ed in what people had to say regarding to the ruling.

“I want to be a part of any kind of campus response to Ferguson,” said Lailye Wei-dman, a graduate student in FAA. “It was a really great beginning, and a nice way to network and open conver-sation that will hopefully be continued.”

Several participants said their main takeaway from the discussion was that white supremacy does exist and that it will be a long process for it to disappear. Discus-sion leaders urged white peo-

ple to acknowledge the exis-tence of race, to listen to what others have to say and to take action against racism.

Wantland urged people to get more involved with diver-sity and race relation-relat-ed activities or workshops on campus to raise awareness.

“This conversation around white allyship are few and far between, and we need to increase the number of dialogue around race in our community,” Wantland said. “I believe tonight’s event will

provide an opportunity to think critically about what a white ally could be and what work we have to do to come together as a community,”

The Central Black Stu-dent Union with hold anoth-er discussion regarding race and race relations on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at Flor-ida Avenue Residence Hall in Oglesby Lounge.

Edwin can be reached at [email protected].

other sections.Alderman Charlie Smyth,

Ward 1, said the bridge at Race and Griggs streets across Boneyard Creek need-ed to be replaced and Race Street needed roadwork and street beautification.

Not only does the $7.9 mil-lion project include a new bridge at Boneyard, but also roadwork and beautification to the surrounding area.

The project provided an eight-foot-wide pathway for bicyclists and pedestrians, art sculptures that depict the history of life forms found underneath the creek, over 20,000 native plants that will sprout in the springtime, an irrigation system to help decontaminate the water supply and redeveloped ani-mal habitats, said Brad Ben-nett, assistant city engineer and project manager for the Boneyard Creek Improve-ments Project.

“On the north side of the channel, we planted a lot of

native vegetation, more so like a prairie mix to provide habitats for animals such as woodchucks, squirrels and ducks; the south side is more park-like with more trees and shrubs planted alongside the creek,” Bennett said.

The construction part of the project was the most dif-ficult, Bennett said, because the city had to work around a railroad that involved a mul-titude of permits, which took time. Bennett said the proj-ect encountered complica-tions with construction near the railroad portion as well as several utility issues, involv-ing the movement of fiber-optic cables underground.

The initial planning stages of the project started in 2008, said Alderman Dennis Rob-erts, Ward 5. However, con-struction did not start until 2012.

The construction project impacted local property own-ers surrounding the area due to streets being closed, Ben-nett said. He expressed his gratitude to them for their patience and support for the project.

Because this was a tax increment financing, or TIF, project, Mayor Laurel Pruss-ing said any increases in the value of development will be sent back to the TIF district.

“This is an area that needed redevelopment, we thought that beautifying the creek would be a huge incen-tive for new businesses and residential construction,” Prussing said.

The money raised toward the project was paid by tax-es from the properties sur-rounding the area, rather than the general revenue col-lected by the whole city, Ben-nett said.

Aldermen Symth and Rob-erts said they hope the recent completion of improvements to the center of Boneyard Creek will drive the city to begin redevelopment of the other four sections in the near future. Specifically, Roberts hopes improvements will begin with section one on the western side of the creek near Founder’s Park.

Walbert can be reached at [email protected].

BONEYARDFROM 1A

FERGUSONFROM 1A

SECFROM 1A

NEWS BRIEFSTRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Obama proposes $236 million for training, body cameras for police

Janay Rice discusses reasoning behind apology on Today show

Bill Cosby gives up seat on Temple University board of trustees

Iraqi leader releases 24 officials after 50,000 ‘ghost’ soldiers arise

Missing Canadian-Israeli woman reportedly captured by militants

Congressional staffer quits after criticizing first daughters online

WASHINGTON — Presi-dent Barack Obama is pro-posing new rules for local police agencies by giving access to surplus U.S. mili-tary equipment, such as the armored vehicles, assault rifles and body armor that police in Ferguson, Mo.,

used in their attempt to qui-et protests this summer.

Obama is also proposing a three-year, $263 million spending package to expand training and increase the use of body-worn cameras for monitoring police inter-actions with the public.

During a lengthy inter-view on NBC’s “Today” show with Matt Lauer, Janay Rice discussed a number of topics, including explain-ing why she apologized fol-lowing her husband’s high-profile domestic violence incident.

The first part of the “Today” interview aired Monday, featuring com-ments from Janay. A sec-ond segment featuring com-ments from Ray Rice, the ex-Ravens running back who was reinstated to the

NFL last week, will air Tuesday.

“I apologized for the part that I took in this,” Janay Rice said in the interview, explaining a much maligned news conference at the Ravens’ facility in May. “And I apologized because, for one, this press confer-ence was something Ray and I put together. I was ready to do anything that was going to help the situation, both help the way we looked in the media, help his image, help obviously his career.”

PHILADELPHIA — Under fire from at least 20 accusations of sexual assault, Bill Cosby on Mon-day resigned from Temple University’s board of trust-ees after for 32 years.

The decision came amid mounting pressure for the Philadelphia university to cut ties, including a change.org petition with more than

1,000 signatures.“I have always been proud

of my association with Tem-ple University,” Cosby said in a statement, released by the university. “I have always wanted to do what would be in the best inter-ests of the university and its students. As a result, I have (resigned) from the Board of Trustees.”

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi dismissed 24 senior Interior Ministry officials Monday in an effort to “reform and rebuild” security institutions in the embattled country, the gov-ernment leader announced via Twitter.

The dismissals, which al-

Abadi described as retire-ments, followed his report Sunday that an investigation of the Iraqi armed forces’ payroll had turned up 50,000 names of “ghost soldiers,” fictitious troops drawing salaries that go to senior officers, Middle East media reported.

JERUSALEM — Mystery surrounds the whereabouts of an Israeli-Canadian wom-an who joined Kurdish forc-es battling the Islamic State in Syria, with unconfirmed reports saying she may have been captured by the terror-ist group.

The governments of Can-ada and Israel were trying

to obtain further informa-tion about the whereabouts of Gill Rosenberg, official statements from both said. According to the U.S.-based intelligence group SITE, a message on a known mili-tant Internet forum claimed Islamic State had captured a “female Zionist soldier” in Kobani, Syria.

WASHINGTON — A Republican congressional staffer, who took Malia and Sasha Obama to task for how they behaved at last week’s White House turkey par-doning, is quitting her job, according to NBC News.

The staffer, Elizabeth Lauten, has been communi-

cations director for Rep. Ste-phen Fincher, R-Tenn.

A firestorm arose when Lauten’s comments about the first daughters, which she posted on Facebook, went viral.

“Try showing a little class,” she wrote in a post addressed to the girls.

Page 4: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

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SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS | [email protected] with the subject “Letter 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.

THE DAILY ILLINI

EDITORIALJames Scholar program gives hefty title but

little else

EDITORIAL CARTOON GARY MCCOY CAGLE CARTOONS

CARLY CHARLES

Opinions columnist

SHIVAM SHARMA

Opinions columnist

To be one the best universities in the nation, you need the best students in the nation.

To recruit these students, universities focus their at-tention on the following: program prestige, the cam-pus, athletics, dorms and Greek life. But The Dai-ly Illini Editorial Board has found that the University lacks one of these aspects — a prestigious academic hon-ors program.

As it currently stands, the University has Chan-cellor’s Scholars and James Scholars. While Chancel-lor’s Scholars have a stan-dard, selective application process, the James Scholars program lacks consistent requirements across differ-ent colleges, and the lack of benefits these programs of-fer make joining the pro-grams not worth students’ time.

The honors program re-quires students to main-tain a specified GPA and complete additional activi-ties, which can include com-pleting extra work in their classes, involving one-on-one projects with profes-sors, or doing research — the activities vary by college. Additionally, the program hopes to make students competitive candi-dates if they decide to apply to graduate school.

The extra work leaves stu-dents with the perk of reg-istering early for classes and a resume boost, accord-ing to the University. But do future employers really know what it means to be a James Scholar? And for that matter, do we really know what it means to be a James Scholar?

Some believe the program allows students to build stronger relationships with their professors through the one-on-one projects. In oth-er instances, smaller classes are reserved specifically for scholars. However, students have the ability to bond with a professor without needing to do special projects.

Some James Scholar pro-grams in different colleg-es offer more than others, so there is no consistency about what it means to be a James Scholar.

For example, the Col-lege of Business offers an MBA scholarship if a stu-dent decides to come back here after receiving an un-dergraduate or graduate degree. There are clear-ly some perks to being the programs, but not all schol-ar students have the oppor-tunity to experience them. The program could be en-hanced by offering more eq-uitable James Scholar perks among all colleges, making it more worthwhile to these students. The University is one of the top schools in the country and offers plen-ty of incentives for future students, but making these changes could help the Uni-versity recruit even more talented students.

A more consistent honors program across the campus, with increased perks, would benefit not only honors stu-dents, but the University as a whole. The University should take the next step to help attract more students.

Journey to the center of the mall

An outsider’s account of the great American Thanksgiving

The month of November bore witness to many cel-ebrated American tra-

ditions: Thanksgiving, No-Shave November and, most importantly, Black Friday.

For anybody who doesn’t follow my weekly columns, two Tuesdays ago, I explored the Black Friday phenom-enon, what it represents to American consumers and my predictions with regard to the anticipated unruly turnout.

This week, I come to you from a different, more worldly vantage point. For now, you see, my opinions and attacks on Black Friday will not come from loose-ly formed hypotheses. No, today, I write to you as a vet-eran of the infamous Black Friday sensation.

As the detailed log of my Black Friday endeavors will show, I was neither the occa-sion’s biggest fan nor its big-gest consumer.

3 a.m.: I woke up from a peaceful and full-to-burst-ing-stomach-aided slumber. I realized that it had been a mere two hours since I fell asleep in the first place. On such an inadequate amount of sleep, pushing through soc-

cer moms and tech-savvy uncles enraged with deter-mination in their quest to secure to-die-for deals did not float my boat. I slipped back into a content slumber.

10 a.m.: I woke up once more, and this time I stayed awake. I laboriously com-pleted the standard wake up, brush your teeth, make your bed, justify-leftover-pump-kin-pie-as-being-an-accept-able-form-of-breakfast type tasks. Then, my Black Friday part-ner in con-sumerism, Robby, and I embarked on what I will refer to as “Journey to the Center of the Mall.”

12 p.m.: Who wants to shop on an empty stomach? It became imperative that we address this concern, so we pulled in to the nearest McDonald’s. Unfortunately, other shoppers — probably a good deal of those perus-ing the IKEA down the road — had similar thoughts. The lines were atrocious and it took Robby approximately seventeen minutes to procure three burgers and a medium order of fries. Things weren’t off to a good start.

1 p.m.: Eventually, we arrived at the mall. The park-ing situation was similar to that of Disney World: Our car was situated hundreds of feet away from the mall’s entrance. Unlike Disney World, however, there was no tram or monorail system to transport us closer to the gates. We walked, and it’s quite possible that I burned off the entirety of my pie-for-breakfast caloric intake.

1:15 p.m.: We made it to the entrance of the mall and began to observe the ambiance and the sales. A woman turned vio-lently toward the face of her infant child and screamed rather loud-ly, “YOU’RE

BEING TOO LOUD.” A mall cop slid by, equipped with a helmet and a Segway. The crowd level, on a loose-ly defined ten-point scale (based on people per square foot, noise level, etcetera), was approximately nine. I grabbed onto the end of Rob-by’s coat, lest we become sep-arated by a family of five car-rying somewhere close to six shopping bags per person, or a Segway-yielding mall cop.

1:45 p.m.: The sales we’d come across by this point were eclectically futile at best. One store sold $55.00 bow ties for roughly $50.00. Another provided the com-pletely useful sales tactic of “Buy Three Life-size Stuffed Rhinos, Get a Fourth Rhi-no Free!” The line at Forev-er 21 appeared longer than the Raging Bull queue at Six Flags, and was dominated by Ugg-adorned tweens, to boot.

3:00 p.m.: We left the mall exhausted and empty-handed. After two long, wearisome hours of weaving through hair-straightening booths, Santaland, and hoards and hoards of equally exhaust-ed shoppers, we decided we were completely Black Friday’d out. Having only spent $5 on McDonald’s for sustenance, we decided the consumer-heavy holiday just wasn’t for us, and mutually agreed to just buy everything on Amazon.

In short, Black Friday was a rather entertaining spec-tacle to take part in, but the overly stupid amounts of road, food court and depart-ment store congestion were simply not an opportunity cost we found necessary to save maybe a few dollars on an already-expensive cash-mere sweater.

Carly is a junior in FAA. She can be reached at [email protected].

Growing up in an Indi-an household, festi-vals have been a con-

stant part of my life. Not just because us Indians happen to have so many of them, but also because each one was celebrated in our house with great preparation and enthusiasm.

As a child, I eagerly looked forward to Diwali (bet-ter known in this part of the world as the Festival of Lights) or Holi (also known as the Festival of Colors). I would wake up to the smell of delicious homemade snacks and sweets and go to bed at night exhausted from the day’s festivities.

It’s been three years now since I had the chance to be with my family on any of our festivals. I never thought that I would miss the festival aspect of my life, but since I moved away to college, that is exactly how I have felt.

I was quite excited then when my roommate invited me to spend Thanksgiving day with his family. I would finally have the opportunity to experience my first tradi-tional American Thanksgiv-ing, in the great American suburbia.

My experiences over the course of the day convinced me that the festivals that peo-ple celebrate, no matter what part of the world they come from, have common threads tying them together, even amongst obvious differences.

I arrived at my friend’s house on Thursday morning, a man on a mission. I was pre-pared to devour that massive deep-fried turkey that had stared me down on television programs over the years — a turkey I had always seen, but never had the chance to taste.

I was also buoyed by a mas-sive sense of irony, consid-ering every festival in our house is strictly meat-free.

I must say the turkey with all its condiments did not dis-appoint — further strength-ening my view that Ameri-cans have barbecuing and frying down to a precise science.

Irony struck again when I was offered a glass of wine after dinner. Alcohol during a festival! I could only imag-ine my mother’s disapprov-ing face as I gleefully sipped the vino.

Following dinner, as I sat in my friend’s living room, deep in that customary food coma, quietly observing the merry scenes around me, it struck me that despite the small dif-ferences, Thanksgiving wasn’t very different from the festi-vals I celebrated back home.

An opportunity for fam-

ily and friends to get togeth-er around terrific homemade meals is a constant during holidays, no matter what part of the world you’re in. Yes, the interactions might differ and the food may change, but the basic concept remains the same.

The fact that I could be sit-ting in an American house-hold and feel included in the celebrations, despite the cultural differences sepa-rating us, helped me realize that people aren’t that dif-ferent after all. I am sure my roommate would feel equally included if he ever gets the chance to experience an Indi-an festival at my house.

People everywhere want to be treated with respect, peo-ple everywhere enjoy humor and, most importantly, people everywhere are just trying to get through life with their families and friends by their side.

As the food coma subsided that evening, we proceeded to the next part of our day: Thanksgiving sales.

Black Friday, in every sense, epitomizes our con-sumerist society. In fact, until this year, I had been convinced that Thanksgiving is a shopping holiday.

While globalization has ensured that this consumer-ist culture has found its way to other parts of the world (certain festivals like Diwali in India now involve buying

gifts for friends and fami-lies), there really is nothing like Black Friday.

In contrast to the calm, festive environment of my friend’s house, I found myself in the frenzy of stores packed with people rushing to fill their shopping carts with the best deals, some hav-ing camped out as early as Wednesday night. These are scenes that are absolute-ly unique to this country, at least in my experience.

I felt sympathy for all those store workers who had been deprived of this friend and family time, almost crush-ing the holiday spirit that had been so real just moments ago. I did not really under-stand this, as back home no stores can be open on a holiday.

As I went to bed that night, I couldn’t zero in on what American Thanksgiving is really about, but I was quite fascinated by the fact that this simple holiday was a rare occasion for people to be with their loved ones, but was also somehow a wacky race for the best shopping deals.

It was an experience that I could connect with my own cultural festivals, because, in the end, holidays aren’t all that different.

Shivam is a senior in Engineering. He can be reached at ssharm16 @dailyillini.com.

Pushing through soccer moms and

tech-savvy uncles in their quest to secure to-die-for deals did not float my boat.

Page 5: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

don’t know if it’s my nature or their nature but I have a great respect for them and their ways,” Foxx said.

He photographed the modest and changing lives of the living Maya and all of the protagonists carry sig-nificance to him now. Some of the people in his photo-graphs are now deceased. Others have grown up, but what remains is a collection of photographs that nar-rates the story of a group of people at a crossroads, he said.

With ancient traditions dying, the art of weaving is something that has fol-lowed and seen gradual change since and during Foxx’s time in Guatemala, he said.

Collecting the textiles Almost simultaneously in

1977, an anthropologist and U.S. Diplomat were putting down roots in Santiago Ati-tlán, Guatemala.

Gerard Lopez, who had just been assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Guate-mala, met Margaret ‘Peg’ Kieffer, an established American anthropologist researching and working with the Tz’utujil Mayas of Santiago Atitlán.

Lopez remembers mak-ing weekend trips with Peg up to the highland towns surrounding Santiago Ati-tlán to buy textiles and pro-vide business to the weav-ing communities. Over the years, they collected thou-sands of textiles, most of which have been donated to the Spurlock Museum.

There was one occur-rence when Lopez was interacting with a young indigenous woman car-rying a bundle of flowers heading to the market when large, government tanks pulled up to the agrarian Maya village and interrupt-ed them. The government commonly used methods like this to keep the indig-enous people in check dur-ing the civil war.

Many aspects of tradi-tional life were maimed during this 36-year period from 1960 to 1996, includ-ing the weaving culture. Along with the scare tac-tics, there was a genocide of an estimated 140,000, mostly indigenous peo-ple, thought to be rebel sympathizers.

As a result, these com-munities no longer weave some of the textiles that can be found in the Lopez-Kieffer collection at the Spurlock Museum. Accord-ing to the museum exhib-it, “With no cofradía there was no need to weave cofradía garments and the weaving of huipils such as the one on exhibit died out in Sacapulas.”

“The Maya also have a similar belief in fatalism (as I) and the ability of the human spirit to weather adversity and survive in the long term,” Lopez said.

In 2006, before Peg Kief-fer had lost her yearlong fight with terminal cancer, she remained, just as she always had, positive the whole way.

That was harder for Lopez to do.

“(I miss) her warm gener-osity of spirit,” Lopez said. “(Her) exceptional ‘genius’ mind, creative and adven-turous spirit, warm smile, and that she was always there to support me regard-less of the situation I was facing.”

When Lopez is at his Napa, Calif., home he is surrounded by thousands of artifacts collected through decades of traveling with his partner and lifelong companion, including the thousands of textiles and garments they collected together in Guatemala.

His two children each

took around 500 pieces. The Spurlock Museum itself claimed over 2,000, and guest curator Margot Blum Schevill selected the tex-tiles on display in “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala” exhibit.

Connecting with the local community

Even though a temporary exhibit, Spurlock Museum’s “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala” is connecting with the local Maya community.

April will mark 12 years since Mateo Diego, a local Maya choral group music leader, made the 2,500-mile trek as an 18-year-old car-penter from the indigenous town of Santa Eulalia, Gua-temala to Champaign.

The country he left behind is a more stable one than the 20th-century ver-sion ridden with war and inequality issues, he said. Diego, unlike some of the first immigrants to settle in Champaign-Urbana from his region, did not leave for war reasons. Diego left his family’s ancestral maize fields to find work; he now works at Fiesta Café, a local Mexican restaurant in Champaign.

As a native speaker of Q’anjob’al, one of the 20 Maya languages of Guate-mala, Diego had no Eng-lish or Spanish speaking community to support him. Instead, he lived a solitary life away from his family with the minimal support of a small concentration of Q’anjob’al speaking Guate-malans who immigrated to the U.S. in the 1980s as part of the sanctuary movement.

“After a year, two years, the loneliness started to go away,” he said.

Now, a community thought to be as big as 300 strong and counting, the Q’anjob’al movement in Champaign-Urbana is growing and diversifying, he said.

However, traditions of

the homeland are being compromised for the North American amenities, Diego said. Many of the children of this Maya community are first generation Amer-icans who no longer like wearing the tradition-al dress of “huipiles” and “cortes,” traditional blous-es of the Maya.

“We want the children to get a good education and better themselves, but we also don’t want to lose our traditions and customs,” Diego said.

Diego, 29, has become an important figure with-in the Champaign-Urba-na Q’anjob’al community. The Maya choral group that he helped start, Coro Universal, was instrumen-tal in bringing a Q’anjob’al mass to St. Mary Catholic Church in Champaign, a place that hosted some of the first Sanctuary Move-ment refugees back in the 1980s.

“In the beginning, there were only about 15 people at mass,” he said. “Now, the entire church fills up.”

With the Spurlock Museum reaching out to the Q’anjob’al communi-ty through its exhibit and hosting events gauged toward the community’s attendance, the spotlight is now shifting.

“I think that there were more people from differ-ent places and different countries that came to the exhibit than Guatema-lans,” Diego said after an event earlier in November where his choral group performed. “It means that these people from different countries and cultures are interested in Guatemalan culture.”

Diego, who now sends money back home fre-quently, says he has found a community where there was once a void, but he doesn’t know where “home” is anymore.

Eliseo can be reached at [email protected].

THE DAILY ILLINI | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM Tuesday, December 2, 2014 5A

EDUMACATION JOHNIVAN DARBY

BEARDO DAN DOUGHERTY

DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU

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or Rio13 Princess topper18 Concerning22 South of France24 Follower of clip or slip25 Not full-price26 Famous

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29 “Frida” star Salma30 Acapulco article31 Hot spot?34 “You betcha!”36 Business card abbr.37 With it39 Lawyers’ org.42 Roman 50643 Turn to pulp44 Subject of a massive statue

in the ancient Parthenon45 Tastelessly showy48 Call at a deli counter49 “Splish Splash” spot50 Gillette brand52 Architect Saarinen53 Cry made with a curtsy,

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informally19 “___ long gone daddy in

the U.S.A.” (Springsteen lyric)

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(seminal rap album)25 Tom Cruise/Nicole Kidman

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confession32 Bad things from sharks?33 Dodgers great Campanella35 It’s attention-getting36 Figure skater Harding37 Scotch ___38 Whiz39 Place for a kiddie hawk?40Elevator innovator41 “That” something in an

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informally59 Add-on60So unhip as to be hip,

maybe61 Gridiron gains: Abbr.62 One of the Coen brothers63 Din-making

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

106 N. Walnut, Downtown Champaign

Tickets: $20 in advance$25 at doorAdvance tickets can be purchased at Esquire Lounge.Quantities are limited. Must be 21 to participate.

12 BeersaX�5Zd[ef_Se

Saturday, December 6 5:00-9:00pm

PRESENTS THE 9th ANNUAL

50% of ticket sales go directly to

granting area children’s holiday wishes

through Operation Santa! 107.1

The 21st Annual Operation Santa is sponsored by WPGU and benefi ts the Champaign Crisis Nursery and Parent Wonders of Rantoul.

4 oz. samplings of 12 seasonal holiday beers

PHOTOS COURTESY JEFFREY JAY FOXXPhotographer Jeffrey Jay Foxx’s captured pictures of the Maya of Mexico and Guatemala for over 40 years. His work is now on featured in Spurlock Museum’s exhibit “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala.”

fries and chicken wings. Also, despite the name-change, empanadas are still available.

“When we opened Juras-sic Grill, a lot of customers came asking for empana-das,” Olarte explained.

The sign for Empana-das House is still in the window, right next to the new Jurassic Grill logo. Five of the most popular empanada flavors will be offered every day, includ-ing the spinach and feta and Bombay hot. They are working on improving their items with a better recipe for dough and new flavors, Olarte said.

Juan’s flair for empana-das comes from Argenti-na, where he started his first two restaurants eight years ago before moving to the United States to be with his wife.

For those looking for the full menu of empanadas, customers can still visit the Empanada House food truck or use their catering option.

Though Jurassic Grill has only been open for a few weeks, they have got-ten great feedback, he said.

Chelsea Fry, junior in Social Work, was one such satisfied customer.

“It was awesome! I’ve always been a fan of quality burgers,” she said. “You’re so used to burger joints where you’re not even sure what their ingredients are.”

Fry, her boyfriend and her roommate have been back at least two times to Jurassic Grill and have plans to fre-quent the grill.

“We’re very happy they’re around, because it’s very hard to find a good burger joint in Campustown,” she said.

She compared the prod-uct to Five Guys, but said it was quicker and much more

affordable. She also said that Olarte

was “so friendly, so excited, and so passionate about what he does and you can tell that he just wants to deliver qual-ity food.”

While she said she would try items from the expand-ed menu, she was content with the small, well-execut-ed menu already available.

“They’ve already won my business,” she said.

Jurassic Grill will be open every day from 11 a.m. until 10 p.m., and Thursday, Fri-day and Saturday until 3 a.m. The entire menu will also be available for delivery from GrubHub and EatCU.

As time goes on, Olarte plans to continue defining the menu and restaurant as a whole, utilizing the opin-ions of students through all of Jurassic Grill’s future evolutions.

Lillian can be reached at lbarkle2 @dailyillini.com.

WEAVERSFROM 6A

JURASSICFROM 6A

Page 6: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

6A | TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2014 | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM

LIFE �CULTURE

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A Lecture Featuring

Charles OgletreeProfessor, Harvard Law School

Wednesday December 3, 2014Noon - 1:30pmBallroom, Alice Campbell Alumni Center601 South Lincoln Avenue, Urbana

Professor Ogletree will share his refl ections on the past 50 years of civil rights activity, and his thoughts about the road ahead, especially in the aftermath of the Ferguson decision.

Event is free and open to the public.

After 50 Years of Civil Rights Laws

ARE WE STILL ON THE RIGHT PATH TO JUSTICE AND EQUALITY?

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BY LILLIAN BARKLEYSTAFF WRITER

Quality burgers in Campustown are not extinct, and The Empanadas House isn’t either.

Jurassic Grill on Green Street offi -cially opened on Dec. 1, with a new menu and plans for the future. The space was previously occupied by The Empanandas House, and though the name has changed, the owner has stayed the same, along with a selec-tion of its menu.

Juan Olarte opened The Empana-das House in September. Though he said the restaurant was doing well, he admitted: “it’s not a very well-known product in the American market. We realized that this location is a great location but that 95 percent of the market of customers are students.”

With that in mind, Olarte began talking to students. He found out they wanted “a very good burger place, they wanted hot dogs – Chicago-style.” he said.

Students provided names of popu-lar restaurants, such as Portillo’s, to give him an idea of the menu they wanted. He then took their input a step further.

“We had several different names, and we made them decide what’s the best, and they said that ‘Jurassic’ is cool, an attractive and catchy name,”

Olarte said. The name also allows Olarte to be

creative with promotions, decorations and menu items.

Most of the menu selections are named after dinosaurs. The classic “T-Rex Burger,” for example, is a dou-ble burger, while the “Compy” is a single cheeseburger, named after the small dinosaur from “Jurassic Park.” The newest item to start selling this week, the “Brontosaurus Burger” lay-ers two 1/4 lb patties, one egg, ham, bacon, and any desired toppings.

The toppings are a large part of the grill’s model: Over 15 free toppings are available, including those which would normally cost extra, such as grilled mushrooms, grilled onions and fresh jalapenos. Different types of cheese, such as gouda and provolone, will also be offered.

With other Green Street competi-tors like Wendy’s and McDonald’s, Olarte says he is using quality to his advantage, with high quality meat, fresh bread and huge portions.

When the restaurant soft opened with a limited menu in early Novem-ber, burgers and fries were the only offerings. But after listening to requests, Olarte plans on adding hot dogs, sandwiches, chili cheese

BY ELISEO ELIZARRARAZSTAFF WRITER

The Spurlock Museum’s “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala ” exhibit, running until Jan. 25, displays the backstories of some members of the Mayan community. Three main people and commu-nities were essential to the creation of the exhib-its’ features.

Capturing the Maya faces

Spending his days now stooped in his Brooklyn home, ethnographic pho-tographer Jeffrey Jay Foxx has time to reminisce

about the faces and stories embedded on his collection of now obsolete fi lmstrips. Sporting a peppered beard, Foxx uses a cane with the same experienced hands he used to push down the shut-ter of his Nikon camera .

The world-renowned pho-tographer, whose work has been featured in The New York Times, LIFE Maga-zine and National Geo-graphic Society, has taken photographs of the Maya of Mexico and Guatemala for over 40 years. Foxx’s work is featured at the Spurlock Museum’s “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala” exhibit .

In the late 1970s, Foxx

and Christiana Dittmann, a young German photo-journalist , embarked on a decade-long journey together to Guatemala that would lead them through winding highland villages, ancient Maya markets and fi nally to the doorsteps of the living Maya.

“She has a hand in virtu-ally any good thing that has happened in my life,” Foxx said of his lifelong friend, Dittmann. “I couldn’t be me if it wasn’t for her.”

Foxx’s vehicle to explore the world became his cam-era. Sometimes, as a “grin-go” snapping pictures, the camera got him into trou-ble, he said. However, it

easily got him out of trou-ble too. He recalls being arrested on one occasion by religious offi cials for tak-ing pictures in a highland town; however, a Polaroid picture would turn out to be his get-out-of-jail-free card.

Foxx said the camera steered both him and Dit-tmann into the lives of the indigenous Maya peo-ple who, over the course of 10 years, would forev-er change the landscape of his life.

“That exposure to those people could not possibly have not affected me, and I

Spurlock exhibit brings Maya culture to Urbana

KEVIN VONGNAPHONE THE DAILY ILLINITOP: Jurassic Grill’s specialty, the Brontosaurus Burger with Cajun Fries. The burger features two 1/4 lb. patties, one egg, ham, bacon, and any desired toppings.BOTTOM: Portrait of Juan Olarte, owner of Jurassic Grill.

PHOTO COURTESY JEFFREY JAY FOXXA selection of Jeffrey Jay Foxx’s photos of the Maya culture is on display at the Spurlock Museum’s exhibit “Artists of the Loom: Maya Weavers of Guatemala,” open until Jan. 25.

SEE JURASSIC | 5A

SEE WEAVERS | 5A

Page 7: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

SPORTS1BTUESDAY'HFHPEHU��������7KH�'DLO\�,OOLQL'DLO\,OOLQL�FRP

Illini faces Miami in top-25 matchupBY NICHOLAS FORTINSTAFF WRITER

Much has changed for No. 24 Illinois since the team lost to Miami in the NCAA tour-nament two years ago.

Last year the Illini fi l-tered in a new class of play-ers, including fi ve freshmen, who matured on the court. This season, Illinois (6-0) has been prolifi c offensive-ly, averaging 90 points per game in its fi rst six games, and has a top-25 ranking to show for it.

If Illinois’ performance last weekend in Las Vegas — where the Illini topped Indiana State and Baylor — showed one characteristic from the 2013 team, it’s the Illini’s defensive ability.

“Our defense is still here,”

senior center Nnanna Egwu said. “That’s really encour-aging. Obviously with the improvements we made offensively, sometimes we’re kind of relaxed defensive-ly. But we’re still the same defensive team.”

Illinois’ defense will face its biggest test of the sea-son Tuesday when it trav-els to Florida to play one of the most explosive offensive teams it will see all season in No. 15 Miami (7-0).

Junior guard Angel Rodri-guez leads a deep Hurricanes team that head coach John Groce said reminds him a lot of last year’s Michigan squad: both teams have a multitude of shooters.

Groce called Rodriguez one of the best, if not the best,

point guard in the nation and said Rodriguez plays with a swagger and an edge that will be hard for the Illini to stop.

Through seven games the Hurricanes, like the Illini, are shooting the ball at an extremely high percentage from behind the 3-point arc. Miami is shooting 45.7 per-cent from three and 50.4 per-cent from fi eld.

“(They have) multiple shooters, passers, drib-blers,” Groce said. “They execute well. Their spacing’s tremendous.

“They’re terrific offensively.”

Illinois has been no slouch on the offensive side of the ball, shooting 43.4 percent from three and 48.2 percent from the fi eld on the year.

While Miami’s varied offense has given opponents trouble this season, for senior guard Rayvonte Rice, the key to beating Miami is simple: Play good defense.

“We just have to get back on defense and try to make it hard for them to score,” Rice said.

Tuesday’s matchup will

No. 24 Illinois at No. 15 MiamiWhen/Where: 8 p.m. Saturday, Miami, FloridaTV/Radio: ESPN2 / Fighting Illini Sports NetworkQuick notes: Illinois faces Miami in a matchup of two high-powered offenses.Hidden stat: Both the Illini and the Hurricanes are shooting over 43 percent from 3-point range this season.

A win at Miami could validate Illini in rankings

Going into the season, Illinois head coach John Groce knew the

fi rst week in December would feature a matchup with Miami in the annual Big Ten/ACC Challenge.

I don’t think he (or any-one else) expected Tues-day’s game against the Hurricanes to feature both teams ranked in the Top 25.

Miami sits at No. 15 in the nation after start-ing the year 7-0, with its banner win so far com-ing against then-No. 8 Florida. And yes, the Illi-ni learned Monday that their 6-0 start, highlight-ed by Friday’s 62-54 win over Baylor, was good enough to squeak into the rankings as well. They checked in at No. 24 in the AP’s weekly poll.

Now, Tuesday’s late game on ESPN2 has become somewhat of a marquee matchup. It’s one of four (out of 14) games in the Challenge that fea-tures two ranked teams squaring off. No matter how you spin it, this is a high-reward, low-risk game for the Illini. Bar-ring an embarrassing blowout at the hands of the Hurricanes, this game won’t hurt the trajectory of Illinois basketball, win or lose.

I fully believe Illinois is a program with the potential to be consis-tently ranked in the Top

25, year after year. But after almost a decade of being largely absent from the polls, Illinois needs to restore its reputation on a national level. When the country sees a num-ber by the name “Illi-nois” on Tuesday night, it will enhance the image of Groce and his program in the nation’s eyes.

It’s a game on nation-al TV as part of a highly publicized battle between two conferences. It’s on the road, so Illinois like-ly wouldn’t have been favored in this game even if Miami hadn’t gotten off to a hot start this sea-son. And at No. 24, newly-ranked Illinois is in the position where it can raise eyebrows with its quick ascent but still not be expected to beat the No. 15 team in the country in its house.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not OK with the Illini losing to Miami, nor do I expect them to. A victory over Miami would add a huge boost of momentum to Groce’s self-described “freight train” that is Illi-nois basketball. If the freight train is already picking up momentum, escaping BankUnited Cen-ter with a win would push Groce’s train full-speed ahead into next Tues-day’s matchup with No. 10 Villanova.

So, how does Miami stack up with Illinois? If you remember the Illi-ni’s 2013 NCAA tourna-ment demise at the hands of the Canes, that game’s fi lm won’t do you much

Football defense shows new strength BY SEAN NEUMANNSTAFF WRITER

It may be shocking to some that Illinois is headed to a bowl game. But it’s how the team got there that’s the most surprising.

The Illini defense strug-gled throughout the year, standing as the worst in the Big Ten heading into must-win games against Penn State and Northwestern.

Then, something changed, and Illinois won back-to-back conference games to reach bowl eligibility.

“I wish I could tell you we were doing something different, but those kids just played hard,” defen-sive coordinator Tim Banks said. “They understood the game plan and exactly what we were trying to get done.”

Illinois allowed less than 200 yards in each of the fi nal two contests. The defense allowed an average of 267 yards in its previous 10 games.

The team forced six turn-overs in its fi nal two wins of the season after forcing just 12 in its fi rst 10 games, including three intercep-tions at Northwestern. Illi-nois had just four on the sea-son heading into the game.

“I think we’re playing well on defense,” lineback-er Mason Monheim said. “The last half of the sea-son, we’ve really turned it up a notch.”

O’Toole giving Illinois an O’ffensive boost

The Illini offense has also seemed re-energized, scor-ing a season-high 47 points in its fi nal regular season game at Northwestern.

Senior quarterback Reil-ly O’Toole has made the most of his opportunity to play in relief of an injured Wes Lunt midway through the season. So much so that he’s taken his starting job.

O’Toole ran for a career-high 147 yards and threw for three touchdowns Sat-urday, leading his team to its fi rst postseason since 2011.

“It’s fun to be playing your best football at the end of the year,” O’Toole said. “I think any team can attest to that.”

A damaged offense line even stepped up while miss-ing two starting lineman — Simon Cvijanovic and Ted Karras.

Illinois didn’t allow a

sack on Saturday for the fi rst time all season.

Going Bowling

The bowl-bound Illini will be the fi rst team to reach a bowl game since 2011 and only the fourth in the past decade.

“I didn’t realize (the pro-gram) was this down, but I think we’re moving in the direction we need to,” head coach Tim Beckman said. “Are we there yet? Heck no. I want to continue to build this thing into being a powerhouse.”

Illinois has improved by two wins each season since Beckman took over as head coach in 2012.

The Illini are likely to go to the Quick Lane Bowl in

Detroit, Mich., or the Zax-by’s Heart of Dallas Bowl in Dallas, Tex., – both games are on Dec. 26.

The team’s improvement late in the season also means Beckman and his staff will remain with the program for another season, according to a vote of confi dence giv-en by athletic director Mike Thomas on Sunday.

“There’s no question this team is a family,” Beckman said. “That to me is what college football is all about, and I get an opportunity to be with the seniors again for another opportunity to play on the fi eld.”

Sean can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @neumannthehuman.

Power rankingsDAILY ILLINI STAFF REPORT Editor’s note: Every week, The Daily Illini football staff ranks the football teams in the Big Ten 1-14 and compiles the lists into its own Big Ten power rankings.

2. MICHIGAN STATE (2)The Spartans won’t be in the Big Ten Championship game this week, losing their spot to No. 6-ranked Ohio State, but only have two losses on the year at the hands of No. 2 Oregon and the Buckeyes .

1. OHIO STATE (LAST WEEK: 1)The Buckeyes outlasted rival Michigan 42-28 , but quarterback J.T. Barrett is out for the season, fueling doubts about the team’s ability to win the Big Ten title game against Wisconsin.

3. WISCONSIN (2)The Badgers clinched a spot in the Big Ten title game with the help of another big game from Melvin Gordon, running for 151 yards .

4. NEBRASKA (4)It took a fourth quarter comeback and overtime for the Cornhuskers to beat Iowa this week, which wasn’t enough for head coach Bo Pelini to keep his job .

6. IOWA (5)Four interceptions hurt the Hawkeyes as they let a win slip away against Nebraska last week, losing 37-34 in overtime .

9. MARYLAND (8)The Terrapins allowed Rutgers 347 passing yards in Saturday’s loss .

11. MICHIGAN (9)Quarterback Devin Gardner’s 233 yards weren’t enough to push the Wolverines past Ohio State and into the postseason, losing 42-28 .

10. PENN STATE (10)The Nittany Lions’ rushing game has struggled this year, gaining just 38 yards on 22 carries in a loss to Michigan State on Saturday .

12. NORTHWESTERN (7)The Wildcats had fi ve turnovers in a 47-33 loss to Illinois, erasing their hopes to reach a bowl game this season .

7. ILLINOIS (13)The Illini are bowl-bound after their defense forced fi ve turnovers and the team put up a season-high 47 points against Northwestern .

14. PURDUE (12)Four turnovers plagued the Boilermakers as they lost to Indiana on a fi nal-minute touchdown drive .

5. MINNESOTA (6)The Golden Gophers’ offense was hurt by a terrible passing game in Saturday’s 34-24 loss to No. 14 Wisconsin . Minnesota was 5-for-18 through the air for just 95 yards .

13. INDIANA (14)Hoosiers’ running back Tevin Coleman reached 2,036 rushing yards on the year as his team beat Purdue for its fi rst conference victory of the year .

8. RUTGERS (11)The Scarlet Knights’ defense allowed Maryland 476 total yards, but outgunned them through the air with 491 total yards of their own in a 41-38 win .

BRENTON TSE THE DAILY ILLINIIllinois' Malcolm Hill converts the fast break layup during the game against Brown at State Farm Center, on Nov. 24. The Illini will face their fi rst road test of the season against Miami on Tuesday.

ALEX ROUX

Basketball columnist

SEE ROUX | 2B

SEE BASKETBALL | 2B

FOLAKE OSIBODU THE DAILY ILLINIIllinois' Reilly O'Toole runs the ball during the game against Northwestern at Ryan Field on Saturday. The Illini won 47-33.

Page 8: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

2B Tuesday, December 2, 2014 THE DAILY ILLINI | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM

Crawford playing smarter, more efficiently in her senior seasonBY JOEY FIGUEROASTAFF WRITER

It’s no secret the Illinois women’s basket-ball team has a plethora of new, young talent. The highly-touted recruits and transfers were the main focus of the preseason, and all eyes remain on those new faces seven games into the regular season.

Among all the hype surrounding Illinois’ roster renaissance, one returning player is easily overlooked. That player is senior guard Ivory Crawford, who has been playing the best ball of her career and is not ready to relinquish the spotlight that has been on her since last season.

Crawford was one of Illinois’ lone bright spots last season, and she proved she could be a go-to scorer when there wasn’t much offense surrounding her. With all of the offen-sive additions around her this season, one would think Crawford’s scoring numbers would decline, but because of a more effi-cient approach, she actually sits at No. 10 in the Big Ten with 16.3 points per game.

Through seven games this season, Craw-ford has attempted almost one less 3-pointer per game than last season. With more shoot-ers around her, Crawford has attacked the rim and gotten to the free throw line much more often than previous seasons. Her field goal attempts have been much closer to the basket this season, which is apparent in her career-best 44.7 field goal percentage, more than a 5 percent improvement on her career mark.

Before the season, Crawford said her main focus heading into her senior year was just playing smarter.

“Foul-wise, I think I just need to keep my hands off,” Crawford said. “But then other than that, I’m really dangerous on the floor, and so are my other players.”

For the most part, Crawford has been able to avoid foul trouble this season while remain-ing aggressive. Crawford’s wiser, yet asser-tive play has her in the top three in the Big Ten in steals per game, as well as in the top-15 in the conference in offensive rebounds per game.

Besides sophomore forward Jacqui Grant,

Crawford is the only returning Illini to play more than 30 minutes total this season, and as the longest-tenured Illini in the rotation, she has embraced a leadership role.

“To lead, I just have to do my part first,” Crawford said. “First you have to look at your-self and prove what you can do, so you can get the respect and the responses you need.”

Crawford has put forward the body of work to be an unquestioned leader on the team, especially after becoming just the 27th Illini to join the 1,000 point club last season. She has been steadily climbing the Illinois scor-ing ranks and currently sits at 20th all time with 1,113 points.

But Crawford said the records aren’t as important as winning.

“That really doesn’t mean anything to me, points-wise,” Crawford said. “I just want to get wins and get where we need to be and make a difference from last year.”

Like past seasons, Crawford has let her per-formance on the court speak for itself and has set an example for all of the young players on the roster. She may have arrived a few years too soon to be a part of a significant program turnaround, but Crawford has already left a notable mark on Illinois women’s hoops and still has a whole season ahead of her.

Joey can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @joeyfigueroa3.

End of an era for Bears without Briggs

The season is over, officially.But then again, it’s really been over

for a while now.After a 34-17 loss to the Detroit Lions

on Thanksgiving, the Chicago Bears have now fallen four games behind the divi-sion-leading Green Bay Packers with only three weeks left in the season, eliminating any hope of a division title or a potential playoff berth.

But a playoff berth wasn’t the only thing that slipped out of the Bears’ grasp on Thanksgiving.

Thursday’s loss signified the end of an era defined by dominating defense and special teams; an era in which the Bears earned the nickname “Monsters of the Midway” due to their tenacious and hard-noised defensive units.

For many years, linebacker Lance Briggs anchored those defenses. Those days are over.

Briggs, the seven-time Pro-Bowler and three-time All-Pro, missed Thurs-day’s game with a groin injury and was placed on the injured reserve list Friday morning.

Briggs is officially done for the season and most likely done with the Bears.

With Briggs’s contract expiring, the Bears are looking to get younger at the linebacker position and on the defensive side of the ball as a whole.

Briggs will surely be missed. For the past decade, defenders like Briggs, Brian Urlacher and Charles Tillman have been the face of the Bears’ organization.

That era is over.Tillman, a mainstay and a cornerstone

of the team for years, was lost way back in Week 2, when he suffered a season-end-ing, and potentially career-ending, triceps injury. It is the second time in as many years his season has been drastically cut short due to injury. Like Briggs, Tillman’s contract will expire at the end of the sea-son, and like Briggs, there is a strong pos-sibility Tillman’s days donning the navy and orange are over.

As a long-time Bears fan, that’s a hard idea to swallow. Harder than the idea of the Bears season being over and complete-ly wasted despite having a roster flooded

with talent.It’s tough to get over because the Bears

players I have grown to know and love for so long are on their way out. However, what hurts worse is the way in which they are going to go out.

They will leave on the sidelines, on a bad, underachieving team.

Players like Briggs and Tillman deserve better than that. They deserve to go out on a high note.

While both of them have seen their over-all skill decline because of age, what they lacked in ability they made up for in lead-ership, locker room presence and other things that do no show up on the stat sheet.

Briggs and Tillman have also had a pro-found effect on the young players on the team, mentoring them and teaching them to be professionals. Their impact will be felt long after they are gone. They are two individuals who can never truly be replaced. Two guys who will undoubted-ly go down as two of the best in franchise history.

So when the Bears take the field Thurs-day night against the Dallas Cowboys with essentially nothing to play for, I will still be watching closely.

I’ll be watching even though Briggs and Tillman will be on the sidelines. I’ll be watching because I know their days are numbered and it’ll be one of the last times I see them within the confines of Soldier Field.

Besides, with the way the Bears have been playing this season, I need some sort of reason to watch the game.

Mubarak is a senior in LAS. He can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @justmubar.

For the past three sea-sons, the Illinois defense has been terrible. The sto-

ry, game after game, was that the defense couldn’t stop anyone. Even louder than the calls for Beck-man’s head were the calls for defensive coordinator Tim Banks to be fired. But back-to-back strong defen-sive outings led to back-to-back Big Ten wins and

a bowl berth. In order for Beckman to continue to keep his job, the defense must improve. At Cincin-nati, Banks led one of the best defenses in the nation. Next year, with all juniors and senior starters, Banks’ unit needs to be better than mediocre.

The biggest improve-ment for Illinois football in 2015 needs to come on the defensive end, specifi-

cally the run defense. Illi-nois ranks last in the Big Ten in rush defense by a wide margin — some 40 yards per game behind the next closest team. The schedule is highly favorable, with Nebras-ka, Wisconsin and Ohio State all at home. A sig-nature upset would really

help Beckman’s staff, but even just staying com-petitive with those teams would be an improvement. Unless quarterback Wes Lunt gets hurt again, the offense shouldn’t be a con-cern. But Beckman has his roots in defense and the Illini defense needs to improve.

The key for Beckman will need to be consistency. He can’t afford to not make

a bowl game next year. Out-side of getting more experi-ence, making two straight bowl games will help build the foundation and draw the interest of recruits.

The big question is whether Lunt can stay healthy. He’ll have a tal-ented receiving corps that

includes standout Mike Dudek. The offensive line should be healthy and run-ning back Josh Ferguson should bounce back from a rough 2014 season. If Lunt stays healthy, the offense can break school records as it was on pace to do before his injury.

Without late-season wins against Penn State and Northwestern, Beck-man would be jobless right

now. Without a doubt, next season he must make a bowl game and establish the Illini as a contender in the Big Ten. That could mean six wins, or it could mean eight, but Illinois has to show consistent play. Beating nonconfer-ence teams by a touch-down isn’t good enough,

and losing to Ohio State by 41 isn’t good enough. With most of the offense returning, the Illini should beat up on ear-ly season opponents and hang around with superi-or Big Ten teams. Beck-man needs to establish that 2014 wasn’t just dumb luck.

Tim Beckman’s going to need offensive consis-tency heading into his fourth year with the Illini. The battle for the start-

ing quarterback position heading into this sea-son unexpectedly lasted all year with the injury to Lunt midway through the season and backup Reilly O’Toole’s surpris-ing performance during his absence. With O’Toole graduating, there’s no doubt next season’s start-er will be Lunt, and the

offense needs to regain the reliable production that made from the beginning of this year that made it one of the most threaten-ing in the Big Ten. And with an entire offseason knowing who will be tak-ing the snaps, next season’s offense should look the best it has since Beckman arrived in Champaign.

It looks like “Timmy B” is here to stay for anoth-er year after defeating in-state rival Northwest-

ern. Within the last two years, Beckman’s win total increased by two. More importantly, the defense showed up in those big games against Minnesota and Penn State. While the defense is a common topic that will remain in discus-sion next season, the spe-cial teams is a concern that

starts first with the kicking game. While special teams doesn’t get as much atten-tion, it can simply make or break a crucial game and shouldn’t be taken lightly. I’m looking forward to the growth and development of receiver Mike Dudek and hopefully attendance num-bers will rise.

It is hard to imagine Illi-nois will ever be a foot-ball school because bas-ketball is, and will always be, king. But it is possible

to build enough success and momentum to at least generate more excite-ment than there has been the past few seasons. It’s understandable that the programs does not sell out every game, but to get to the point of social media laughing at Block I card stunts should not become the norm. For opposing

fans to basically negate home crowd advantage is embarrassing. It should not be acceptable to go to a few bowl games a decade. Illinois does not have to be a football powerhouse, but should at least be able to generate enough excite-ment and respect to not be at or near the bottom consistently.

The Illini took steps for-ward in 2014 but will need to continue to improve in 2015 if Beckman will

remain here long term. It all starts with the defense. The Illini defense fueled the team in each Big Ten victory. They will need to be better on a consis-tent basis to take the next step. I think the sched-ule is manageable for next season, but I want to see Illinois actually compete

in its games against the big boys. With a winnable game on the road at North Carolina, the Illini will have a chance to get off to an early start and be 4-0 before hosting Nebraska on Oct. 3, with a big game looming on Homecoming against Wisconsin on Oct. 24.

There are two areas Beckman should focus on:

recruiting and competitive-ness. It’s time for Beckman to show off those recruit-ing chops he was known for and have his 2015 class ranked in the top 30.

I will also look for the team to be competitive in their games against

Nebraska, Wisconsin and Ohio State. The last three years have seen the Illini blown out in all their meet-ings with those teams. The Illini don’t necessar-ily have to win; rather, keep it close and don’t get embarrassed.

The most important thing Beckman needs to improve on is his pub-lic persona. For the most part, Beckman is kind to

the media, and general-ly answers the reasonable questions. That being said, during his time at Illi-nois, Beckman has found himself receiving nega-tive attention for things he’s said in press confer-ences. If Beckman wants the state of Illinois to take his program seriously, he should watch what he says

from time to time. It’s nev-er a good thing when your football team is receiving negative press for some-thing happening off the field. Everyone makes mistakes, but if Beckman believes the Illinois foot-ball arrow is trending up, he should make sure peo-ple see him as a competent leader on and off the field.

Spotlight will be on Beckman once again DI staff offers what they think Beckman needs to do to stick around

good. Both rosters have almost completely turned over since, with only the Illini’s Nnanna Egwu and the Canes’ Tonye Jekiri as the holdovers still seeing meaningful minutes.

Both teams are simi-lar in that they shoot lots of threes and shoot them well. Miami is fourth-best in the country from deep,

shooting threes at a 45.7 percent rate. If the Canes’ deadly backcourt of Angel Rodriguez (14.9 ppg), Sheldon McClellan (16.7 ppg) and Manu Lecomte (13.3 ppg) get hot from deep, the Illini could be in for a long night.

However, the Illini have a good chance to win, due to the fact that they match up fairly well with the Canes’ backcourt and are playing efficient basket-ball at this point in the

season. Illinois’ turnover rate is low (8.8 per game) and its assist-to-turnover ratio is high (1.85). Com-bine that with a scoring average of 90 points per game, and the Illini seem about as formidable as the Hurricanes do on paper.

Also, with Miami’s big win over 3-3 Florida look-ing less impressive by the day, this really is the perfect opportunity for Illinois to steal one on the road.

Looking back to the big picture, rankings can be arbitrary and even silly until late in the season, but there’s no doubt that the little number boosts the perception of a pro-gram. Recruits and casu-al observers take notice. Nearly every game will have its highlights shown on SportsCenter. Even if coaches won’t admit as much, it legitimizes what your program is working to achieve.

Illinois has now cracked the Top 25 in each of Groce’s first three sea-sons at Illinois. In his first season, the Illini peaked as high as No. 10 before falling out for good ear-ly in the Big Ten sea-son. Last year they were ranked for one week in January at No. 23 before beginning a disastrous eight-game slide.

Groce’s third team looks to be his best yet, and will have to play with

consistency to remain in the national limelight. Beat Miami, Villanova, or both, and the Illini’s nonconference resume could be glistening come March.

They’ve gotten some recognition, and Tuesday is a golden opportunity to prove it’s deserved.

Alex is a junior in AHS. He can be reached at [email protected] and @aroux94.

be Illinois’ first true road game of the season, as the two games in Las Vegas were neutral site games against Indiana State and Baylor. While the team is successful at home, sophomore guard Malcolm Hill said he doesn’t mind going on the road.

“I’m always excited to play road games,” Hill said.

“Those are always some of my favorite games to play, because it’s just me and my brothers against the world.”

For the Illini, the biggest challenge may be not let-ting revenge get the best of them. The last game these two teams played was for a chance to go the Sweet 16, and Groce said the Illini will need to play with emotion, but not get overly emotional thinking about the past.

Egwu echoed his coach’s

sentiment, while pointing out the differences between the two games.

“Tomorrow’s a whole dif-ferent team, whole different challenge,” Egwu said. “This game’s played in December. That game was played in March. Right now we want to get a good road win.”

Nicholas can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @IlliniSportsGuy.

JOHNATHAN HETTINGER

Editor-in-chief

SEAN HAMMOND

Sports editor

SEAN NEUMANN

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STEPHEN BOURBON

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ERIK PRADO

Sports columnist

SAM SHERMAN

Sports columnist

MICHAEL DWOJAK

Assistant sports editor

PETER BAILEY-WELLS

Assistant sports editor

TORRENCE SORRELL

On-air sports editor

MUBARAK SALAMI

Sports columnist

ALEX ORTIZ

Video editor

ROUXFROM 1B

BASKETBALLFROM 1B

SONNY AN THE DAILY ILLINIIllinois' Ivory Crawford attempts a shot during the game against Memphis at the State Farm Center on Thursday. Crawford is 10th in the Big Ten at 16.3 points per game.

NUCCIO DINUZZO TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICEChicago Bears outside linebacker Lance Briggs runs with his interception against the Carolina Panthers on Oct. 5.

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I t’s terribly interesting to talk about football. Some-how I manage to do it

every week in this column, but for a while, I’ve virtu-ally ignored what might be the biggest on-fi eld story of the NFL in 2014.

J.J. Watt is a monster. Actually, I take that back.

He’s a “Manster,” part man and part monster. Off the fi eld, the Houston Texans defensive end appears to be affable: not as nutty as Rob Gronkowski and not as fun-ny as Peyton Manning, but likeable nonetheless.

On the fi eld he’s terri-fying. And that’s why he should be the NFL MVP.

Gronk, who might be Watt’s only competition for most impressive physi-cal specimen in the NFL, has been the Patriots’ MVP because of his ability both as a pass catcher and run blocker. But he’s not Watt. No one is.

Watt’s Texans stand at 6-6, second in the AFC South. Without Watt, the Texans might be among the NFL’s worst teams. Watt leads the team with 11.5 sacks — tied for fi fth in the league. He also leads the NFL in fumbles recovered, with fi ve. Every play Watt lines up on the fi eld, wheth-er on defense or offense

(offense? Keep reading), he’s a threat to make a game-changing play.

This season, Watt was supposed to line up oppo-site the No. 1 overall pick, Jadaveon Clowney. With Clowney on one side of the line and Watt on the other, the Texans’ pass rush was going to be unstoppable. Instead, Clowney has spent much of the season injured and Watt has fl own solo, often drawing double teams.

It doesn’t matter, as the 25-year-old has put up his best season to date, already surpassing his sack total from last season, and recording his fi rst career defensive touchdowns. But Watt hasn’t just scored on defense.

The Texans are 4-1 when Watt has scored a touch-down. He has scored fi ve times this season: once on a fumble recovery, once on an interception return, and three times on receptions. Employed as a goal-line tight end, Watt has rum-bled out of the backfi eld and used his enormous hands (think baseball gloves) to reel in all three of the pass-es thrown in his direction — two of which were caught in spectacular fashion.

But what about Aaron Rodgers? The fi eld general of the NFC’s best team has been seemingly unstoppable since he told the Green Bay Packers’ fan base to “R-E-L-A-X” after the team’s 1-2 start. His team just knocked off the Patriots,

considered the best team in the NFL prior to visiting Lambeau Field.

Rodgers has been good, but the Packers have other weapons. The Texans had the worst record in the NFL last season, and this sea-son, despite the absence of their No. 1 pick (Clowney), the team is at .500 and isn’t out of the playoff hunt. Watt deserves much of the credit for that — his team proba-bly will have zero other Pro Bowlers at the end of the season.

The MVP should be mea-sured primarily by how replaceable a player is. That’s why Gronk or Watt is more deserving of the award than Rodgers, Tom Brady or reigning MVP Manning. Those three quarterbacks are relative-ly interchangeable — put any of them with anoth-er’s team, ignore change of scheme and their team would probably win.

Gronk is semi-replaceable (the Patriots have managed without him), but Watt (who hasn’t missed a single game in his NFL career) doesn’t have an equal in the NFL. No player could fi ll his spot and have a similar impact on the Texans’ season.

That’s why he’s the real MVP. No one can match up with the Manster.

Peter is a sophomore in Media. He can be reached at [email protected] and on Twitter @PBaileyWells.

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Watt should be the NFL MVPPETER BAILEY-WELLS

Assistant sports editor

Th e defensive end does everything for Houston, including play off ense, as the team pushes for postseason

ED SUBA JR. TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Houston defensive lineman J.J. Watt catches a 2-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Ryan Mallett in the fi rst quarter of the Browns 23-7 loss to the Texans on Nov. 16. Watt has caught three touchdown this season, in addition to two defensive touchdowns.

Page 10: The Daily Illini: Volume 144 Issue 53

4B Tuesday, December 2, 2014 THE DAILY ILLINI | WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM

THE PERFECT WAY TO PRESERVE YOUR COLLEGE MEMORIESYearbook

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