


Einstein Bros. Bagels, a campus-loved bagel cafe and restaurant, is set to close all ļ¬ve of its campus locations by the end of the month.
ā Marta NaragThe Planters NUTmobile arrived last Tuesday afternoon and spent Wednesday in the C-U area, but placed a heavy focus on the campus community Thursday. ā Jacob Slabosz
In an Instagram post by the organization, the RSO shared that they received multiple discriminatory and threatening remarks. ā Marta Narag and Jessie Wang
With the recent increase in tuition, incoming students reļ¬ect on the disparities of tuition rates between them and other classes. ā Jessie Wang and Anneliese Cornejo Garcia
The Daily Illini sat down with U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski (D-Ill.) to discuss her ļ¬rst 100 days in ofļ¬ce. ā Aidan Sadovi and Lisa Chasanov
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When she began her freshman year at the University, Aanya Bhatia wanted to start regularly going to the gym. However, she noticed a lack of women in the space, making the experience intimidating.
Now, as a sophomore in LAS, Bhatia and Aneli Unzueta, senior in ACES, have co-founded the Girl Gains chapter at Illinois, working to change the male-dominated gym culture.
Girl Gains is a national organization that promotes female weight lifting and provides women resources and community throughout their ļ¬tness journeys, according to the Girl Gains website. Its chapters organize group workouts and host workshops about overall health and wellness.
ļ¬tness and nutritional information they gave her were all based on the male body.
āI did feel a lack of conļ¬dence,ā Bhatia said. āI noticed all the people (at the gym) were males and it was really intimidating.ā
One day, Bhatia was scrolling on TikTok when she saw a video about Girl Gains.
āThis is something UIUC needs to have,ā she said.
She said she knew a lot of her female friends had the exact same issues of lacking a sense of female support.
Bhatia continued to see more about Girl Gains online and decided to join an informational Zoom call by the organization. On this call, she met Unzueta.
āOn the Zoom call I was like, āThis is such an amazing community,āā Bhatia said. āāI have never seen anything like this in my entire life.āā
Like Bhatia, Unzueta also felt intimidated by her experience at
āPersonally, as a woman of color, I felt out of place in the gym,ā Unzueta said. āIt was intimidating to work out in a male-dominated place.ā
After meeting on that call, the pair decided to go forward and start a Girl Gains chapter at Illinois.
āI wanted to create a home where women of all backgrounds feel safe and empowered in the gym on campus,ā Unzueta said.
The pair decided to send out an interest form. Unzueta was able to recruit girls through her sorority and Bhatia through Illini Powerlifting, which she was a member of.
Bhatia said there was a lot of interest and they had about 30-40 women who interviewed to be a part of the Girl Gains executive board. Now, Girls Gains at Illinois
has over 300 members.
Bhatia said that this organization has had large positive impacts for her, both mentally and emotionally.
āI felt a huge increase in conļ¬dence knowing that there are people who are like me, like girls, obviously, that are just there for continuous support,ā she said.
Girl Gains,ā Bhatia said. āI wanted to be that for other girls who are starting to get on their journeys.ā
Unzueta hopes Girl Gains can continue to āempower women to feel strong and beautiful in a judgmentfree community.ā
The co-founders are conļ¬dent that their chapter will continue growing
Although there are hundreds of girls currently a part of Girl Gains, Bhatia said there are still so many that donāt know about the organization yet. Looking to the future, Bhatia hopes that the group can continue to grow the conļ¬dence of girls in the gym.
āWhen I started off, I wish I had
and supporting its members.
āI feel very proud to graduate knowing Girl Gains is going to ļ¬ourish and impact many members in the future,ā Bhatia said.
āI wanted to create a home where women of all backgrounds feel safe and empowered in the gym on campus.ā
Aayna Bhatia, co-founder of Girl Gains at IllinoisJACOB SLABOSZ THE DAILY ILLINI
While it may come as a surprise to some University students, artiļ¬cial intelligence has uses other than providing homework answers or writing essays. This burgeoning ļ¬eld is projected to help people around the world in areas such as data collection, translation and time saving in general.
In hopes of capitalizing on the massive potential for growth in this ļ¬eld, the University is partnering with Amazon to create its very own conversational AI center. The Amazon-Illinois Center on Artiļ¬cial Intelligence for Interactive Conversational Experience will be led by University professor Heng Ji, an expert on information extraction and natural language processing, and her team of researchers.
According to its mission plan, the AICE Center will seek to answer several unanswered questions in the ļ¬eld of conversational AI. Some of the centerās goals are to create an AI capable of gathering knowledge faster and even picking up on social and emotional cues from its human conversational
partners. This goal will be achieved through the funding of three to ļ¬ve research projects through the AICE Center. Tenured professors, researchers and other faculty may ļ¬le a proposal for their speciļ¬c research with Ji and her coworkers at the project. Once proposals are selected, the authors of the winning proposals will be named as principal investigators, and they may select graduate students to assist
with their research alongside Amazon researchers.
āWe want to focus on knowledgeguided conversational AI, weāll make sure their information is useful and that everything is done in a very fair and democratic way,ā Ji said.
AI that is commonly used today can learn about its users but remembers nothing of their personality or habits. Ji hopes that researchers can ļ¬nd a way to make their programs learn, and remember aspects of their usersā lives, personalities and more. These skills will theoretically allow conversational AI to be far more helpful on a wide range of topics.
āWe want to have this lifelong learning component, we want some system that can learn from conversation and really become your best friend,ā Ji said. āIt will keep updating its knowledge.ā
In addition to her work teaching computer science at the University, she also works as an Amazon Scholar. As an Amazon Scholar, Ji works similar as a consultant for the company. This role involves writing and organizing launch plans for projects and innovations in the next three to ļ¬ve years. Ji has used
her role to uplift some of Amazonās academic publications and even led students towards internships and jobs at the company.
Several universities were in competition to secure the funding for a similar center through Amazon. Amazon Science has cooperated with other academic institutions, such as UCLA and Columbia, to found similar research centers in the past that are still in operation today.
āI was not very hopeful we would get it, but they chose us because we have such wonderful students,ā Ji said.
āThey are very happy with the internship work that our students have done for them.ā
Ji is happy that the AICE Center will mix the academic world with the growing industry of conversational AI development.
āIām hoping to achieve some sort of balance between academic and industry research,ā Ji said. āWe want to do some more solid and deeper research that everyone can build and use, we want to advance this ļ¬eld.ā
liamm4@dailyillini.com
Doctors repeatedly came to his house, checking on his motherās breast cancer condition and constantly reassuring his family.
Adam Wallach, junior in Engineering, said his mother fought breast cancer even though she was frightened.
āAs a high school student, that was scary for me to witness,ā Wallach said. āI almost felt helpless, that there was nothing I could do about it.ā
Fortunately, Wallachās mother survived her cancer.
āItās just hard to wrap your head around what cancer patients have to go through,ā Wallach said. āThatās why Iām so passionate about raising money (through Illini 4000).ā
Each member of the RSO uses their community and social media to raise over $4,000, which goes toward cancer research, Wallach said.
According to the Illini 4000 website, they have raised over $1.3 million since 2006. For the 2023 school year, the team has raised $52,421.
ni 4000 will bike 4,700 miles from New York City to San Francisco, Wallach said. The team plans to bike 60 to 70 miles each day for 77 days, with one rest day every seven to 10 days.
cago, Illinois; Madison, Wisconsin; and State Col lege, Pennsylvania, the Illini 4000 website stated.
way, the team will
work on āThe Portrait Project,ā in which bikers record peopleās experiences with cancer.
Wallachās long-distance journey began at nine years old, when he ran his ļ¬rst 5K race.
He continued running through high school and joined the Illinois Track Club at the University.
āI was kind of overdoing it,ā Wallach said.
āI was pushing 60 miles of running every week.ā
Wallach got shin splints, which stopped him from running for ļ¬ve months. In that time, Wallach took up swimming and biking in preparation for the Illinois Triathlon Club.
Wallach said he did around three miles of swimming, 20 miles of running and 200 miles of biking every week.
However, once Wallach started the school year and joined Illini 4000, he said the training from both RSOs drained him.
āIāve decided, this semester, I am not going to train for triathlon,ā Wallach said. āThe demands of Illini 4000, theyāre just a lot.ā
Every weekend, Wallach said Illini 4000 goes for a bike ride between 30 and 90 miles long. On weekdays, the RSO goes on 20-mile rides.
āSomething I love about (long distance) sports is that thereās no secret formula,ā Wallach said. āIf you do something over and over again, youāll get better at it.ā
Wallach said he sets ambitious goals to keep himself engaged with the process of improvement.
āThe most important thing is motivation,ā Wallach said. āSet the next little carrot for you to get.ā
Beyond the cycle of self-improvement, Wallach said he enjoys the bonds he makes with his teammates.
āWeāll sometimes be like seven plus hours, riding a bike, and youāre all going through the same thing,ā he said. āItās a struggle for everyone, and you get such camaraderie from that.ā
The sun shines bright over a busy Main Quad this afternoon. Moms, daughters and other family members are ļ¬lling campus streets wearing sunglasses and holding refreshing drinks. Their smiling faces indicate the start of the 100th anniversary of Moms Weekend.
Established in 1923, the Universityās Moms Association will host various events for this weekend. In preparation for festivities, Kristen Miller, president of the Moms Association, and Kristin Stiefvater, vice president of Fundraising, handed out pre-ordered apparel in the Illini Union North Lounge until 3 p.m.
According to Miller, there are more events being offered for families to celebrate this year coordinated with the help of the associationās 20 board members. Many of the board members are
alumni. āItās just all hands on deck this weekend,ā Miller said.
Around the corner in the Union Art Gallery, the Moms Association Centennial Celebration Reception will begin at 4:30 p.m.
The Parent and Family Programs Ofļ¬ce will host Miller; Chancellor Robert Jones, who will give the opening remarks; and other prominent members of the University.
Sydney Collins, sophomore in FAA, said she and her mother are visiting Japan House today.
āI like to see everyone out, especially since itās nice out,ā Collins said. āI think itāll be busy.ā
Susan Collins, Sydneyās mother, said she is excited to take advantage of the nice weather and party at Red Lion tonight.
āWhy not? When in Rome!ā she said.
Moria Danko, junior in LAS, said she is celebrating Moms Weekend with her older sister. The sister duo plans to attend a tote bag painting event and Sunday brunch hosted by her sorority, Chi Omega.
āIām really excited to spend some quality time with my sister,ā Danko said.
A warm, spring start to the weekend is sure to kick-off an eventful celebration of Illini moms.
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The time is closer to sunset, the weather is cooling off and Main Quad is becoming more packed, welcoming families for Moms Weekend. People are spending time walking around the campus, having picnics and listening to favorite songs together.
āIām thrilled that itās nice and warm,ā said Lynn Zimmer, Illini and Delta Zeta mom. āSo weāve been just walking around campus, getting coffee, probably doing some shopping ā itās Illini wear.ā
Meanwhile, life in the sororities becomes even more fun during the next three days. New members of the sororities cannot wait to share their experience of sisterhood with their moms.
āIām excited to share with her my sorority,ā said Ali Kessler, freshman in Education and Chi Omega member, about her mom. ā(The sorority) became so special to me, so I canāt wait for her to meet everyone that holds a special place in my heart.ā
Preparing for Moms Weekend, sororities prepared brunches and fundraising activities with their families.
āTomorrow weāre doing a tote bag painting party and a Kendra Scott popup, so itāll be fun and then 20% of that goes to Make-A-Wish,ā Kessler said.
Even though the weekend is called Moms Weekend, the Main Quad is crowded with Illini dads, willing to enjoy this weekend with their children.
ā(My expectations about this weekend are) spending more time with (my daughter) and we are here mostly for the food and for the beverages,ā said Dave Harbaugh, Illini dad.
Some parents coming this weekend are University alumni, wishing to experience college life again ā this time with their kids.
āIn my case, my mom came down for Moms Weekend, so itās pretty surreal to be the mom and not the student,ā said Dawn Barry, Illini mom and University ā97 alum. āI want to get some motherdaughter pictures and do some of the
Moms took over campus and enjoyed a weekend of games, drinks and quality time with their kidsJACOB SLABOSZ THE DAILY ILLINI All weekend long, Illini Pub Cycles ran up and down Greet Street and the surrounding area. JACOB SLABOSZ THE DAILY ILLINI Nora Rafaty, sophomore in AHS, and her mother, Lumi Rafaty, play a game of miniature bags at the Illini Union Board Cra and Vendor Fair on Saturday.
things that I got to do as a student.ā
However, this weekend not all students are expecting to see their parents, especially out-of-state and international Illini.
āMy mom and my family live in Boston,ā said Gina Ren, sophomore in Education. āDuring this weekend I will spend time with my roommate, (and weāll) have dinner together.ā
This weekend has promising evening programs ā both students and their parents canāt wait to see āGreaseā performed by Illini Student Musicals. According to the theaterās website, almost all tickets for todayās show are sold out.
āI am in a musical here, āGrease,ā this weekend,ā said Amanda Barry, freshman in LAS. āThe majority of the time weāll be spending is seeing me perform.ā
After the show today, many Illini moms and students will get a chance to experience real campus nightlife. For more details about bars this weekend, check out The Daily Illini Moms Weekend Bar Preview Guide.
āWe had so much fun last year, and now that Meenah is 21, it should be even more fun!ā said Philomena Harbaugh, Illini and Alpha Omicron Pi mom. āWeāre gonna go to the Red Lion
tonight for āF*ck It Buckets,ā and tomorrow we have block at KAMS.āā
laylin2@dailyillini.com
Thousands of mothers stroll into the annual Illini Union Board Craft and Vendor Fair, bonding with their children while purchasing art supplies.
Katie Storlwel and her daughter, Miranda Storlwel, are ļ¬rst-time attendees at the fair. Miranda wanted her mom to visit because she will be graduating next fall.
Miranda Storlwel said this was her motherās ļ¬rst time visiting her at the University.
āShe is graduating soon so she insisted that I visit her,ā Katie Storlwel said. āItās wonderful.ā
The mother-daughter duo said that they already had a close relationship, but todayās activities had brought them even closer together.
dstew7@dailyillini.com
Dogs pant, lapping up water sprayed from a bottle. The partly cloudy day comes to a close as the sun starts to set.
However, the foot trafļ¬c in Campustown continues to grow as waves of people ļ¬ow through Green Street. At every turn, one can always spot a mother accompanied by her child.
āWe made it like a family weekend, not just Moms Weekend,ā said Peggy Tsevis, a Sigma Nu mom.
Tsevis celebrated the weekend by attending Motherās Day Brunch, walking around the University of Illinois Arboretum and attending Sigma Nu events.
āWe donāt have a lot of time with them anymore,ā Tsevis said. āWhen they get home, theyāre working, theyāre seeing their girlfriends, theyāre doing this and that. Right now, itās all about us.ā
From 10 a.m. until 6 p.m., the UIUC Horticulture Club hosted its 2023 Spring Plant Fair. The event sold household plants, from succulents to ļ¬owering plants.
Danielle Chao, a volunteer at the event, said the RSO had to cart plants back and forth from the Plant Biology Greenhouse to the Plant Sciences Laboratory.
āThere was a lot of prep,ā Chao said. āSome volunteers went from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. yesterday.ā
Chao started buying plants during the COVID-19 lockdown, and became interested in succulents when her mother bought her a succulent kit.
āI mainly have succulents, probably 90% of my collection is succulents,ā Chao said.
Kate Gehrke, senior in LAS, and her
mother, Ellyn Gehrke, also attended the plant fair.
āI love plants, Iāve got more than 20,ā Kate Gehrke said. ā(My mother) indulges me over Moms Weekend in my obsessions.ā
Earlier, Kate Gehrke and her mother participated in the Illini Union Craft Fair and the ARCās Zumba class.
ā(The class was led by) the instructor and her stepmom,ā she said. āSo that was really cute, too.ā
fedczuk2@dailyillini.com
For those who couldnāt get a seat at the Illini Unionās Sunday brunch ā or who declined the $35 ticket price ā off-campus restaurants such as Champaignās Original Pancake House and Urbanaās Courier Cafe served as popular Moms Weekend destinations. Only the earliest patrons skipped long lines for breakfast on Moms Weekend.
At the Original Pancake House, just two miles off campus, moms and their families could expect wait times of nearly two hours at noon. The restaurantās close proximity to the University, along with the arrivals of parents and their cars, brought students in.
A similar effect took place at Courier Cafe, where patrons could expect an hour or more wait if they arrived after 10 a.m.
If students want to skip the wait next year, it will have to come at the expense of sleeping in.
mcbales2@dailyillini.com
On
up
Around
p.m.
Madeline Blair speaks with a sunny demeanor, dressed in all black in a square-cut top with sheer rufļ¬ed sleeves. Her arms have dainty tattoos placed strategically and, at a thinking pause, she stops to play with the golden pendant on her necklace.
She sits upright with her hands in a passionate whirlwind, not unlike the series of events that led her to her ļ¬lmmaking career.
Blair, senior in LAS, is majoring in creative writing and is now directing her second ļ¬lm, āInner Child.ā
In her time in college, Blair became the artistic director of the Penny Dreadful Players, the oldest theater group on campus. She also co-produced her play, āThe Waiting Room, or Eggs in Purgatory,ā for the Playersā annual 10-minute play festival.
Kelo, a University alum. Blair acquainted herself with Kelo and said they were the ļ¬rst person to show her the University campus.
Blair and Kelo are now co-writing a ļ¬lm called āgirl in soil.ā
Blair said her other inspirations fueled her desire to ļ¬ll āThe Waiting Roomā to the brim with motifs, referencing āNo Exit,ā āGrendel,ā āHeathersā and āBeetlejuice.ā
When the Penny Dreadful Playersā festival was canceled, Blair went about showing āThe Waiting Roomā in a new route.
āI wanted to sort of immortalize it and still work with my cast,ā Blair said. āSo I dove into making it a ļ¬lm. And I had on-set experience from acting and ļ¬lms, so I felt pretty conļ¬dent, but I had never directed anything before.ā
Starting production on āThe Waiting Room,ā Blair found collaboration in many places. She reached out to Illini Film and Video and found Baiwen Xu, the ļ¬lmās director of photography, Arjun Panickssery, the ļ¬lmās production assistant, and Daniel Song, the ļ¬lmās audio engineer.
They ļ¬lmed inside Blairās studio apartment, creating a black box theater out of bed sheets for their set.
Entering postproduction, Blair said she ran into trouble ļ¬nding a sound editor.
āA friend of a friend reached out to me, because I posted on Instagram, āHey, I need a sound editor,āā Blair said.
āAnd then a random person emailed me and there was like, āHey, my friend forwarded this to me, and I would love to work on it.ā And he was a U.K.-based ļ¬lm student.ā
million followers under the username @angelknives13.
Blair said her background in acting has largely informed her approach to directing in a ļ¬lm format.
āBeing more actor-driven too as a director ā¦ having all these different creative avenues bleed into each other, I feel like it makes it so much more fulļ¬lling,ā Blair said. āYou can pull from so many more angles.ā
and made me want to be more poetic and stuff in my work,āā Blair said. āI was like, āThis was the biggest compliment in the world.āā
Blair said the narrative structure of āInner Childā is very similar to āThe Waiting Roomā in the sort of emotional crescendos and weird surrealist experimental light.
In both ļ¬lms, Blair ļ¬nds comfort in the surreal.
āThe Waiting Roomā takes place in a waiting room after death and before the beyond, and an unlikely pair sit impatiently in the room.
Writing āThe Waiting Room,ā Blair pulled inspiration from seeing her boyfriendās high school production of a play called āRhynocetus Jubatusā by Ari
Blair said sound editor Will Stephens is the biggest constant between āThe Waiting Roomā and her upcoming ļ¬lm, āInner Child.ā
āInner Childā focuses on Lydia, a girl who enters college without mourning a recent tragedy and ļ¬nds herself stuck in a nostalgia-based nightmare.
Kim Fernandez, who plays Jada Lovato, one of the leads in āInner Child,ā has a popular TikTok account with over a
Blair has also published āHalcyon,ā an amalgamation of her poetry from years past in 2020. The work sold out at the store Art Coop, Inc. multiple times. Blair said her poetry has worked its way into her ļ¬lms as well.
āTwo or more people have talked to me after working on āInner Childā and they said, āIām reading the script, and you directly inļ¬uenced me, made me want to be more creative in my writing
āI think it comes from the poetry thing, like you write from a very abstract, imagistic, metaphorical place when youāre doing poetry,ā she said. āApplying that into a visual medium, having weird dialogue, things that are unsettling, really encapsulates speciļ¬c feelings that are otherwise very intangible.ā
āTwo or more people have talked to me a er working on āInner Childā and they said, āIām reading the script, and you directly inļ¬uenced me, made me want to be more creative in my writing and made me want to be more poeticāā
Madeline Blair, senior in LAS
Illinois softball consists of a great group of student-athletes who, even through highs and lows, have found a way to press on. For sophomore Paige Berkmeyer, this is more than a sport: this is a family.
Berkmeyer has blossomed during her time in Champaign, developing lifelong friendships and positive personal development along the way. Coming from Wadsworth, Ohio, softball was love at ļ¬rst sight. Berkmeyer started playing sports at the age of 4, when she was introduced to Tee-ball. As she got older, more sports began to present themselves in her life, but the same passion never left. Ultimately, she stayed with softball, which, arguably, was a pivotal moment in her life.
āIt gave me a lot of experience in a lot of different things I have had to go through,ā Berkmeyer said. āGrowing up, I thought things were going to be easy, but as I got older, I learned that you are going to hit a lot of battles along the way, but you are going to overcome them eventually.ā
Majoring in animal sciences while also being an athlete is a challenge in its own right, as there are responsibilities from each that pull Berkmeyer every which way. However, Berkmeyer believes she is built for the challenge, with her plan being to earn a masterās degree and a doctorate following her time as an undergraduate student-athlete.
In high school, Berkmeyer was as big name as one can be, racking in awards left and right; some of her most notable accomplishments were being named to the 2019 Suburban League All-Conference, First Team All-Medina Gazette and Best of Greater Akron Preps All-Star.
When it was time to take the next step and transition from high school to college softball, Berkmeyer was more than excited to come play for Illinois, even mentioning that her love for this program was instant.
āWhen I ļ¬rst came for my visit, I committed here a week later,ā Berkmeyer said. ā(The coaching staff) cares more about who you are as a person along
with who you are on the ļ¬eld. All the girls really bring you in and are welcoming as they let you know that these are our standards and this is what we do, and I love it.ā
The hard-hitting catcher was a big name during her freshman year, as she was named to the Big Ten All-Freshman team. Additionally, she was a huge part of the teamās success as she played in 32 games for the Illini, starting 26 games as a catcher.
Berkmeyer pointed out that the culture of constant working and everybody buying into the core values has been essential in her and the teamās growth over the last two years, with her favorite culture builder being the whole team
sprinting off the ļ¬eld every time.
The Illini have had an up-and-down season, with a record of 24-20, that has featured a particularly hard stretch over the last few weeks. Some would fold under this type of pressure to perform, but Berkmeyer is conļ¬dent that Illinoisā camaraderie will help keep the team connected throughout the rest of the year as they look to ļ¬nish the season strong.
Going into her junior year, Berkmeyer looks forward to making more memories with her team as they continue to grow on the ļ¬eld and improve for the future.
āAll the girls really bring you in and are welcoming as they let you know that these are our standards and this is what we do, and I love it.ā
Paige Berkmeyer, sophomore catcher
āAnd then itās same for me, which I was actually denied here three times,ā Kosiek said. āSo, by the time I transferred in, I actually got into the school I originally wanted to get into but got denied. And then also, because I came from community college, this was way more competitive. The classes were way, you know, harder.ā
Murillo was also proud of passing organic chemistry.
āI actually had to retake that course because the ļ¬rst time I took it, I had a concussion,ā Murillo said. āSo then, because I didnāt pass it the ļ¬rst time, I was scared I wouldnāt the second time. But when I passed the class, I was very happy and very proud.ā
freshman in Media.
Two of the students who were interviewed were able to graduate early, which they felt was their biggest accomplishment.
āMy biggest accomplishment is probably graduating this spring in three years instead of four,ā said Olivia Crickman, junior in LAS.
Yamini Bukkaraju, sophomore in Information Sciences, is eligible to graduate this spring after only two years.
āI took a lot of AP classes in high school and my major allowed me to take a lot of courses that I was really interested in ā and a lot of the courses fulļ¬lled a lot of the requirements so that was really nice,ā Bukkaraju said.
By Raphael Ranola & Aaron Anastos Opinions Editor & Assistant Opinions EditorIn keeping with the theme of I on Illini, students out on the Main Quad were asked what they felt their greatest achievement was during their time as a student at the University of Illinois. The responses ranged from academ ic achievement to personal accomplish ments, while some students felt that their greatest accomplishment was being able to transfer to the Univer sity at all.
The University of Illinois is a prestigious institution. Many of the students we interviewed were transfer students whose greatest achievement was successfully transferring in.
āI would say getting accepted because I came from a community college, so the opportunity to trans fer here was really amaz ing,ā said Eugene Lee, junior in LAS, who was sitting with his friend Alyssa Fisher, senior in LAS, when we interviewed him.
Fisher echoed his thoughts as she was also a transfer student.
Another pair of transfer students said something similar.
āI feel like it was just the idea of getting accepted into the
Nabil Mohiudim, senior in Engineering, was also elated to pass a difļ¬cult class.
Fisher, on top of being proud due to successfully transferring, was proud of obtaining a leadership position.
ā(For me, it) would have to be being a part of the club organization Iām in and getting social chair for it,ā Fisher said. āI thought that was a good accomplishment.ā
Kayla Wilson, sophomore in Engineering, was proud of her art being recognized.
āI submitted a bunch of my art pieces to a year of my art show, which I thought was fun because Iām not an art major,ā Wilson said. āHonestly, out of everything, thatās probably my biggest accomplishment so far.ā
Raphael is a freshman in LAS.
rrano2@dailyillini.com
Aaron is a freshman in DGS.
aaronda3@dailyillini. com
MICHAEL CHEW THE DAILY ILLINIThe University of Illinois is a place to create memories, some being more memorable than others. Many students have seen and experienced some things that donāt just happen anywhere ā some things that make you think: Only at Illinois. We asked students, āWhat is the craziest thing you have seen or experienced at the University?ā
āI would say the professor just screaming on the (Main) Quad,ā said Eliana Eng, sophomore in LAS. āI feel like Iāve never seen anything like it. And it just goes on for like 30 minutes. I feel like every week I hear it.ā
The professor Eng refers to is Reuben May, a professor in LAS and head of the Department of Sociology. According
news on Reddit about that squirrel passing away. I used to see her or see him every single day there.ā
āIn February 2022, it had snowed like 10 inches,ā said Colton Johnson, graduate student studying urban and regional planning. āAnd I guess Barstool put out a post saying, you know, meet on the (Main) Quad for a snowball ļ¬ght and then a good 100 people showed up and it was the biggest snowball ļ¬ght Iāve ever been in. It was crazy.ā
āYou get, like, all types of people will go up and sing ā itās a judgment-free zone,ā said Matt Grendzinski, graduate student studying structural engineering. āIt feels like a very safe space.ā
Grendzinski told us his favorite
āI had this one friend who studies in Germany,ā Grendzinski said. āHe was here on exchange ā this, like, short Indian guy, Reshop ā and he went up and did Real Slim Shady and absolutely nailed it. And the whole bar ā everyone ā was standing
friends were telling me to come up to Green Street because it was crazy. And apparently the whole street was packed. There were people doing donuts in the middle of Green Street, (in) their cars.ā
āYeah, (the intersection of Sixth and Green streets) was shut down for like 40 minutes ā they shut down the inter section,ā Galluzzo said. āAnd the guys who owned Illini Pantry popped their tire doing a burnout and I got covered in car rubber. It just exploded and a lot of us had specks on our arms and some on our face.ā
Galluzzo and OāHara agreed that getting covered in car rubber was worth it.
āYeah, I think it was last basketball season,ā OāHara said. āWe won the Big Tenally at work and all my
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