The Daily Illini: Volume 147 Issue 36

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SPRING CAREER GUIDE SEE INSERT

THE DAILY ILLINI

MONDAY January 29, 2018

The independent student newspaper at the University of Illinois since 1871

WWW.DAILYILLINI.COM

Vol. 147 Issue 36

Second arrest made for Urbana shooting

Alleged kidnapper’s lawyers move to delay trial further

BY ANDREA FLORES

THE DAILY ILLINI STAFF REPORT

ASSISTANT DAYTIME NEWS EDITOR

A second arrest has been made following the house party shooting in Urbana on Jan. 21. Wayne A. Colson was charged with armed robbery and aggravated battery with a firearm. He was arrested without incident Friday around 9:30 a.m. on the 100 block of Kenwood Road in Champaign, according to a press release. He was then transported to Champaign County Jail. Two people, including a University student, suffered non-life threatening gunshot wounds at the party on the 800 block of West Springfield Avenue. Police believe there were at least five offenders who attempted to enter the party, but they were denied entry. Two witnesses were then robbed of their personal property. This is an ongoing investigation with the Urbana Police Department, which urges anyone who attended the party to contact the police if they have videos or photographs. aflore14@dailyillini.com

PHOTO COURTESY CORI LIPPERT

The Plumbers Shop in the University of Illinois Facilities & Services building, 1501 S. Oak St. in Champaign. The Illinois Student Government passed a resolution on Wednesday to remove Chief Illiniwek symbols from all University buildings.

ISG calls for removing Chief symbols BY CORI LIPPERT STAFF WRITER

Over a decade after the banning of using the likeness of Chief Illiniwek, the University continues to face resistance regarding its presence on campus. Student Body President Raneem Shamseldin, senior in Business, is confident in saying almost every building on campus

has a Chief symbol somewhere in it, whether it is in storage rooms or in private offices. “Images of the Chief in University buildings have been constantly being sent to me throughout my term as president,” Shamseldin said. “I’ve seen some myself, and it really just doesn’t make sense that we are allowing people to keep

them when they’re working for this University and in University space.” Shamseldin said the main resistance to removing the Chief will come from issues about freedom of speech and freedom of expression. “Employees are private citizens and have freedom of speech when they are acting as private citizens,

not when they are working for a university in a university space and paid for by the University,” Shamseldin said. Senator Walter Lindwall, junior in LAS, said in an email that the most opposition to this issue comes from alumni who have not been on campus in years SEE CHIEF | 3A

BY HEATHER SCHLITZ STAFF WRITER

Rob Tichenor started mining cryptocurrencies in 2014 from his house in Champaign, stacking servers on top of each other until the noise and heat from hundreds of computers mining bitcoins and altcoins became too much to handle. With his company now based in a separate mining facility in Champaign, Tichenor is part of a growing cohort of investors and miners from the Champaign-Urbana area who believe cryptocurrencies will shape the future of money. The popularity of altcoins, which are decentralized digital currencies that aren’t bitcoins, has grown at a breakneck pace, eating away at bitcoin’s market share and providing investors with opportunities for eno — mous growth - or failure — that bitcoin likely won’t

see, according to cryptocurrency entrepreneur Tom Sun. With growth propelled primarily due to a flood of speculation and usage in the criminal underworld, some of the biggest altcoins like Ethereum, Ripple, Monero and Zcash could fill crucial gaps in the cryptocurrency market that bitcoin has been unable to satisfy. Although the majority of the hundreds of altcoins existing today are likely doomed to fail, cryptocurrency advocates like Sun believe the survivors could pose a serious threat to the status quo and could disrupt millenia-old industries. Sun, a University alumnus, former software engineer for Facebook and founder of a cryptocurrency soon to be released, believes privacy coins such as Monero and Zcash are SEE ALTCOINS | 3A

DAILYILLINI, DAILYILLINISPORTS Police

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PHOTO COURTESY JIEJIE WANG

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Letters

Gymnasts get justice

Members of the College of Engineering staff pose for a picture. The college has begun a new program to bring University engineers to Chicago.

College of Engineering launches City Scholars program in Chicago BY JIEJIE WANG STAFF WRITER

The College of Engineering started the City Scholars program in January and sent 37 juniors and seniors to intern at 16 companies in Chicago while continuing to take classes. Andreas Cangellaris, vice chancellor for academic affairs and provost, initiated the 16-week program while he was the Dean of Engineering. Stu-

dents are supposed to work 20 hours per week and are paid $25 per hour. To balance their work and study, students work on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and take classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays. They live in University of Chicago housing and have the choice to take classes taught by engineering faculty members in the Illini Center or online. Some

@THEDAILYILLINI, @DI_OPINION, @DI_SPORTS Opinions

Brendt Christensen’s law yers have filed a motion in court to delay the trial in order to investigate reported sightings of Yingying Zhang, whose body has yet to be found. Christensen is accused of kidnapping Zhang in June 2017. The FBI presumes she is dead. Christensen’s defense aims to delay the trial until next October to investigate possible sightings of Zhang “across the country ” and to investigate “suspicious individuals” who had been lurking around Zhang’s apartment on the day of or the day before she disappeared. Prosecutors had agreed to a delay only if Attorney General Jeff Sessions decides to seek the death penalty, but the defense is arguing for a delay either way due to these new developments. Sessions is seeking the death penalty against Christensen. Christensen is currently set to go to trial on Feb. 27 in front of U.S. District Judge Colin Bruce. The Court has until Feb. 2 to decide whether or not the trial will be delayed. news@dailyillini.com

Altcoins may shape the future of money

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students are taking general education courses at the University. Amy Fruehling, director of Engineering Career Services and member of one of the committees that developed the pilot program, said the reason they launched this program for these particular majors was they had companies that were interest-

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Sports

Davis runs subfour-minute mile

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