Illinois
This month in Illinois State University history: May
From Abram Lincoln’s first reference to the founding of Illinois State University to the demise of Old Main, historian Tom Emery explores this month in Illinois State University history.
May 7
One of the most iconic moments of NBA history happened on this date in 1989, as Chicago Bulls superstar Michael Jordan hit a floating jumper from the free throw circle in a deciding Game 5 of a first-round playoff series against Cleveland. The moment forever became known as “The Shot.”
The head coach of the Bulls was Doug Collins ’73, who is widely considered the best player in the history of Illinois State University men’s basketball.
Doug Collins, right, coches Michael Jordan Doug Collins, right, coches Michael Jordan six days before “The Shot” (Photo/Chicago Tribune).Collins and Jordan first came together in 1986, just as Jordan was establishing himself as one of the greats of American pro sports history. Collins, the No. 1 overall pick in the 1973 NBA draft, had seen his career cut short by injuries in 1981, after eight seasons. He then was an assistant at both Penn and Arizona State before joining the CBS broadcast booth.
Jordan broke into the NBA in 1984 and was an immediate impact player. But the Bulls continued their string of mediocrity and were a combined 68-96 with a pair of first-round playoff exits in Jordan’s first two seasons in the league.
Though he had a thin coaching resume at the time, Collins was hired as Chicago’s head coach in May 1986. He was just 13 years removed from his on-court glory at Illinois State.
In Collins’ second season, the Bulls improved to 50-32, with the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. In the postseason, the franchise advanced past the first round for the first time since 1981.
The 1988-89 edition of the Bulls were somewhat disappointing in the regular season, going 47-35 and finishing as the No. 6 seed for the playoffs. Their first-round opponent was Cleveland, which had set a then-franchise record for victories at 57-25. The teams had also met in the first round in 1988, but Cleveland won all six regular-season meetings in 1988-89.
Chicago proceeded to snap that streak with a 95-88 road win in Game 1, but Cleveland tied the series with a win in Game 2. The Bulls came back home and took Game 3 101-94 behind 44 points from Jordan, but the Cavaliers stayed alive with a 108-105 overtime victory in Game 4, overcoming a 50-point night from Jordan.
That forced a deciding Game 5 in Cleveland on Sunday afternoon, May 7, 1989. Like the rest of the series, the game was back-and-forth, with six lead changes in the final minute alone.
Chicago trailed 98-97 with six seconds remaining when Jordan nailed a clutch jumper for a one-point lead. A Cavaliers timeout followed before guard Craig Ehlo inbounded the ball, then received a pass and drove the lane for a layup with three seconds left and a 100-99 lead.
To no one’s surprise, Jordan got the ball at the end, fighting for the inbounds pass before gaining possession. He then headed crosscourt toward the free throw line and put up a hanging jumper over Ehlo at the buzzer. The shot was good, and Jordan soared toward the opposite sideline, pumping his fist as he was mobbed by teammates in a 101-100 Chicago win to end the series.
It was the first buzzer-beating shot to end a winner-take-all playoff game in NBA history, and it would not happen again until the 2019 postseason.
Though the moment is considered one of the most memorable in NBA history, Jordan’s legendary celebration was not shown in real-time on the CBS broadcast. Rather, the network showed Collins, running off the bench to join the celebration.
Chicago advanced to the conference finals in 1989, losing to eventual NBA champion Detroit. The Bulls then won three-straight NBA titles, a streak that ended with Jordan’s surprise retirement in October 1993. He returned late in the 1994-95 season, which sparked another run of three-straight world championships from 1996-98.
Collins, though, was there for none of them. Just weeks after “The Shot,” he was fired in the summer of 1989 by Chicago. Collins later served as head coach in Detroit from 1995-98.
In 2001, Collins returned to head coaching in Washington and was reunited with Jordan, who famously had come out of his second retirement. This time, the pairing was less successful, as the Wizards posted identical 37-45 records in 2001-02 and 2002-03, missing the playoffs each time. Jordan, who was an NBA All-Star in each of his two seasons in Washington, retired for the final time in 2003.
Collins later was the head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers from 2010-13, and he was named senior advisor of basketball operations in Chicago in 2017. In 2009, a statue of Collins and his head coach at Illinois State, Will Robinson, was unveiled on the campus.
May 15
Abraham LincolnToday is the anniversary of the first known reference to Abraham Lincoln of his role in the founding of Illinois State University. The reference, on May 15, 1857, was part of Lincoln’s most lasting contribution to the history of Illinois State—that the university would be located in present-day Bloomington-Normal.
Of Lincoln’s many connections to Illinois State, none are more significant than his role in helping with the financial documents, enabling the university and securing it for Bloomington.
When Illinois State was founded in early 1857, four Illinois cities bid for the right to host the campus—Bloomington, Peoria, Washington, and Batavia. The top-two contenders, however, were Bloomington and Peoria, and both cities jockeyed for the privilege of having Illinois’ first public institution of higher learning.
In 1907, university President David Felmley succinctly wrote that “several prominent residents of McLean County,” such as business powerhouse Jesse Fell, “were determined to have the school located near Bloomington.” To make that happen, though, required money—and plenty of it.
McLean County raised $50,000 from the sale of lands, while Fell went to work. With his usual indomitable spirit, he persuaded area residents to pledge money and land to strengthen Bloomington’s proposal to the state Board of Education. Initially, Fell raised some $50,000 in individual subscriptions.
Fell even engaged in some cloak-and-dagger activity, sending a spy to Peoria “to ascertain, if possible, what that county was going to bid.” The clandestine information revealed that Peoria might outbid McLean County.
As a result, Fell and his subscribers increased their proposal to $71,000, while the county added another $20,000. With subscriptions from the county and individuals, the entire Bloomington proposal was $141,000.
At a meeting on May 7, the Board of Education examined the proposals. Washington and Batavia were not competitive, while Peoria’s total bid came in at $80,032. That was much less than the offer of Bloomington, which was given the university.
That honor, however, came with a hitch. Charles Hovey, who would become the University’s first president, preferred that the University should be located in Peoria. He presented an amendment, adopted by the board, that required the Bloomington proposal to be guaranteed within 60 days. If not, the location of the university would move to Peoria.
The requirement was particularly applicable to the McLean County portion of the Bloomington bid. There was no certainty that the county commissioners would honor the request, and if county government should change, any future commissioners might renege on the deal.
Lincoln would ultimately handle many of the tasks to prevent any default, including the drafting of a guaranty to support McLean County’s bid. Meanwhile, Fell and his friends again went to work, pledging money to ensure the guaranty of the county’s subscription.
On May 15, the Executive Committee of the Board of Education met in Bloomington, as the reports stated, to “discharge the responsible duties assigned to them” and “secured, by a guarantee, the McLean County subscription.”
This action was “according to a bond drawn by A. Lincoln, Esq., of Springfield, who acted as counsel for the committee.” This mention of Lincoln is the first to the future president in the official minutes of either the Board of Education or the Executive Committee.
The guaranty was critical to keeping the campus in Bloomington. Had the guaranty not been prepared, signed, and presented in a timely manner, the university would likely have been awarded to Peoria. Lincoln’s pivotal role in the founding of Illinois State Normal is indisputable.
That significance is echoed in an 1879 history of McLean County, which declared that the guaranty “was of great value at the time, and is one of the important steps taken to secure the Normal University” not only for its mere existence, but also for the city of Bloomington. Indeed, Lincoln’s actions in the spring of 1857 shaped the course not only of the university, but the city itself.
May 17
Dr. Jenny Pan-Yun TingOn this date in 1975, Illinois State held its annual commencement. Among those receiving degrees was Dr. Jenny Pan-Yun Ting ’75, who earned a bachelor’s in medical technology. Ting is now one of the nation’s most accomplished microbiologists.
For the last 40 years, Ting has been on the faculty of the University of North Carolina, where she has published dozens of studies on genetics, microbiology, cancer research, infectious diseases, inflammation, and vaccines.
A native of Taiwan, she came to the United States after receiving a foreign student scholarship from Illinois State. She then earned her doctorate from Northwestern University before post-doctoral research appointments at the University of Southern California and Duke University.
In 1984, Ting was named assistant professor at North Carolina, ascending to associate professor in 1990 and full professor in 1993. She was named the Kenan Professor in 2009.
Ting has headed the immunology program at the university’s Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center since 1991. In 2008, she was named director of Lineberger’s Center for Translational Immunology, as well as co-director of the Institute of Inflammatory Diseases.
In 2015 and 2016, she was named a Thomas Reuter Highly Cited Researcher, followed by honors as a Clarivate / Analytics Highly Cited Researcher in both 2017 and 2018. She was named a Highly Cited Researcher of the Web of Science, Clarivate Analytics, a recognition given to the top 1% in the field, each year from 2020-23.
Ting was the vice president of the American Association of Immunologists in 2019-20, and served as the organization’s president in 2020-21. She was the first woman of color to serve as the association’s president.
In addition, Ting earned the NCI Outstanding Investigator Award each year from 2016-19, and received the Hyman L. Battle Distinguished Cancer Research Award in 2017. In 2013, she was the recipient of the University Award for the Advancement of Women at North Carolina.
In 2022, Ting was elected as a member of both the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Her remarkable skills as a researcher are also seen in the myriad of editorial boards she has served on, including the Journal of Immunology, Molecular and Cellular Biology, and the Annual Review of Immunology.
In 2010, Ting was inducted into the Illinois State University College of Applied Science and Technology Hall of Fame.
May 22
On this date in 1946, the bell tower was removed from “Old Main,” the original campus building of Illinois State.
The removal of the tower was, in many ways, the beginning of the end of Old Main, which had served the campus since 1860. The venerable building, an anchor of the campus for generations of ISU students, was finally demolished in the summer of 1958.
Old Main as it appeared without its bell tower (Photo/Milner Library’s Dr. Jo Ann Rayfield Archives).For decades, Old Main had been the sole campus building at Illinois State. The three-story structure was topped by a striking bell tower, whose tones had become a signature of daily life at Illinois State. The cornerstone of Old Main had been laid on September 29, 1857, and the building was first used at the inaugural commencement in university history, on June 29, 1860.
But even then, there were concerns about the building’s design. Charles Hovey, the first president of Illinois State, took issue with the architectural plans of “Old Main,” especially the placing of the bell tower which, he said, “had nothing to roost on.” Hovey labeled the difficulties with the architectural design as “blunders” and blamed the Board of Trustees for its desire to “conform to local humor, prejudice, or taste.”
Hovey’s words may have been haughty, but they were proven accurate decades later, as the University struggled with the physical integrity of the beloved old building. As the campus grew, Old Main remained the centerpiece; one source wrote that “other buildings came to dot the campus, clustering around the original building like chicks about a hen.”
However, the bell tower continued to deteriorate and by 1932, it was actually leaning to one side. As a result, steel beams were installed for support from the basement to the attic. The improvements, though, proved inadequate, and in the postwar years, the structural deficiencies of Old Main had reached alarming levels.
The problems reached a head in a sudden development on February 21, 1946 when longtime ISU President Raymond Fairchild, who was on his way to Cleveland for a speaking appearance at the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education, was called to Springfield. There, he was summoned to a briefing by the Division of Architecture and Engineering, which reported that Old Main was unsafe.
That afternoon, Fairchild appeared before the faculty at Capen Auditorium to deliver the news. University historian Helen Marshall writes that a shaken Fairchild stood “tall and pale, his voice somewhat affected by the gravity of the occasion.”
An evacuation of the 24 classrooms of the second and third floors of Old Main was ordered within 48 hours. Students were informed at an assembly on February 22. By February 25, Marshall writes that “there were padlocked gates on all stairs leading up from the first floor.”
The move created an emergency need for space. Classes and offices were shuttled around the remaining campus facilities, as well as churches and other landmarks in the city.
Still, there was a bright spot that reflected the University’s academic strength. On April 27, the Vidette’s news story “Old Main Unsafe and Classes Removed” from the February 27 edition earned first place as best news story at the Illinois College Press Association.
The impending doom of Old Main became obvious to everyone, particularly as protective fencing was erected around the building. University administration made the decision to remove the bell tower and the third floor, keeping the lower two floors intact. A flat roof was planned, replacing the sloping roof that had defined the building since its inception.
At the time, many feared that the building would soon be demolished. The senior class of 1946 was especially concerned, as a longtime commencement tradition was the walk-through of Old Main by the graduating class to close the ceremony. An editorial in the Vidette lamented that “students will not walk [the] last mile from Old Main.”
On May 22, 1946, the bell tower was removed from Old Main. Students and faculty gathered to watch the removal, which signified the loss of a signature piece of the University’s history. The removal is remembered as one of the sentimental moments in the story of Illinois State.
The sight of the revamped Old Main, missing a story and with a mundane roof, was startling to the campus community. The August 1946 edition of the Alumni Quarterly sadly wrote Old Main was “flat-roofed and with only two stories…no longer towers over the campus…it’s the size and shape of a barracks.”
There were loud calls to restore the building, and the bell tower, among the alumni base. On June 17, 1946, a letter to the Bloomington Pantagraph related the “indignation and dismay upon seeing the disappearance of the tower on Old Main…a desecration of a venerable and beautiful building.”
A 1900 graduate also wrote of “the shock I got when I drove through the Normal campus a few days ago and saw the Old Main building…Normal can never be what it was without this old landmark.”
Discussions of a replica of Old Main, possibly five stories high, were also considered. But the difficult decision to raze the building was finally made. The demolition began on June 17, 1958, another emotional moment for the campus community.
The sweeping impact of Old Main and its tower on everyday life at Illinois State was captured in the July 10, 1946, edition of the Vidette, which reported that ISU students “have been surprised at their dependence on the bell for setting their watches and getting to class on time.”
The bell itself was placed in a memorial on the north end of the Quad in 1955 to honor Old Main, an anchor for thousands of Illinois State students, a legacy that lingers on the campus today.
Tom Emery is a freelance writer and historical researcher who, in collaboration with Carl Kasten ’66, co-authored the 2020 book Abraham Lincoln and the Heritage of Illinois State University.
Illinois
Historical Corn versus Soybean Returns in Illinois – farmdoc daily
Average per acre returns to soybean production have exceeded those for corn production in 10 out of the 13 crop years from 2013 to 2025. The opposite was true over the prior 13 crops years from 2000 to 2012. Acreage trends in Illinois indicate farmers are responding to the shift in relative profitability by planting a smaller percentage of their acres to corn.
Corn versus Soybean Returns in Illinois
Figure 1 shows average corn minus soybean returns for central Illinois grain farms with high-productivity farmland enrolled in Illinois FBFM from 2000 to 2025, with projections for 2026 based on the latest Illinois crop budgets (see farmdoc daily from May 19, 2026).
From 2000 to 2012, average per acre returns to corn production exceeded returns to soybeans in 10 years with an average advantage for corn of $59 per acre. The latter half of this period includes the years of high returns and farm incomes during the biofuel boom resulting from the Renewable Fuel Standard.
The large increases in use of corn for ethanol production largely came to an end by 2013. Since 2013, average returns to soybeans have exceeded those for corn. Soybean returns exceeded corn returns in 10 out of the 13 years from 2013 to 2025, with an average advantage for soybeans of $53 per acre. The 2013 to 2025 period has been characterized by lower returns due to low commodity price levels relative to production costs, which have increased consistently through time. Exceptions include the 2020 to 2022 crop years when a significant amount of ad hoc assistance was provided in response to the pandemic (2020), and corn and soybean prices saw significant increases (2021 and 2022) due in part to supply chain issues associated with the pandemic and the start of the Russia-Ukraine War. The largest return advantage for soybeans in the last 25 years occurred in 2023 when average soybean returns exceeded corn returns by $237 per acre. Notably, average farmer returns to both corn and soybeans were negative in 2023 but the average loss for soybeans was less than that for corn acres.
Acreage Allocation Trends
Figure 2 shows the percentage of total tillable acres planted to corn by grain farms enrolled in FBFM in the northern (upper panel), central (middle panel), and southern (lower panel) regions of Illinois from 2003 to 2024. The percentage of acres planted to corn has trended down slightly in all three regions over the past 12-15 years, a period which corresponds with the greater relative returns to soybean acres. This indicates a response from farmers in adjusting their crop rotation decisions to the shift in relative profitability.

Historically, a higher percentage of acres have been planted to corn in northern Illinois. This is due to continuous corn rotations being more common in the northern region of the state, which can be linked to greater feed demand from beef and dairy operations in that region of Illinois among other factors. Corn and soybeans are by far the primary crops planted over the past 25 years in both northern and central Illinois, with both typically accounting for 95% or more of total planted acreage. Thus, reductions (increases) in corn acreage are typically offset by corresponding increases (reductions) in soybean acres. The proportion of corn acres in northern Illinois has dropped back under 60% in recent crop years after exceeding that level from 2007 to 2018 with a peak of just over 69% in 2011. The share of corn acres in central Illinois has dropped down to around 50%, trending down from a peak of nearly 60% in the 2007 crop year.
Southern Illinois has historically had the smallest percentage of acres planted to corn. While planted on a small percentage of total acres, wheat more commonly enters farmers’ crop rotations in southern Illinois, often with wheat followed by double-crop soybeans. The percentage of corn acres has trended down from around 47% in 2012 to around 40% in 2024.
Discussion
The shift towards higher returns to soybeans over the last 13 crop years can be linked to a number of factors.
- Since the 2012 drought, both corn and soybean yield performance has, on average, been relatively good across Illinois. Average soybean yields in particular have been strong, exceeding trend levels in all years but 2019. Anecdotal evidence suggests that farmers are improving management decisions and practices on soybean acres, moving to earlier planting dates and adopting new technologies such as seed treatments which can improve yields particularly in stressful conditions (see the Illinois Soybean Management Guide for more information).
- Except for the three-year period from 2020 to 2022, market returns have been relatively poor for corn and soybean producers since 2013. The non-land costs to produce soybeans are smaller than those for corn. Fertilizer costs have been volatile and machinery costs have been on the rise, particularly since the pandemic and 2020 crop year – both of which are lower for soybeans than for corn.
- While trade policies over the past decade have negatively impacted export markets for U.S. agricultural commodities, and in particular for U.S. soybeans, trade aid payments have helped to partially offset those losses.
- The RFS was a rising tide that tended to lift all boats in the form of higher commodity prices in the latter half of the 2000s. The initial impact of U.S. biofuel policy was arguably more beneficial to corn, but over time the role of biodiesel has increased resulting in greater demand for feedstocks, primarily soybean oil (see farmdoc daily from April 12, 2024). The share of acreage planted to corn in Illinois rose to meet the increase in demand for ethanol and has declined back to levels similar to the early 2000s. In contrast, the share of acres planted to soybeans declined and then increased as relative returns have shifted.
- The planting flexibility provision of the 1996 farm bill has provided farmers a better ability to respond to return conditions through acreage adjustments (see farmdoc daily article from March 3, 2025).
A key question is whether returns will continue to favor soybeans over corn for grain farms in Illinois and across the Midwest. If so, will producers continue to shift towards more soybean acres in their crop rotations? This would imply some farmers moving to planting soybeans to the same land in consecutive years (i.e. soybeans on soybeans). Agronomists tend to advise against planting multiple years of soybeans in a row due to concerns over disease, weed, and other pest pressures and the potential for the development of pest resistance to existing tools (Illinois Soybean Management Guide). However, research is being done on continuous soybean rotations in the Midwest (see here for an example of a recent study in Iowa).
Over the next few months we plan to provide a short series of articles which take a closer look at the shift in relative profitability of corn versus soybeans over the past 25 years. These will include more analysis of the factors that have contributed to the shift and whether we should expect the trend to continue.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to acknowledge that data used in this study comes from Illinois Farm Business Farm Management (FBFM) Association. Without their cooperation, information as comprehensive and accurate as this would not be available for educational purposes. FBFM, which consists of 4,900 plus farmers and 80 plus professional field staff, is a not-for-profit organization available to all farm operators in Illinois. FBFM field staff provide on-farm counsel with recordkeeping, farm financial management, business entity planning and income tax management. For more information, please contact the State FBFM Office located at the University of Illinois Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at 217-333-8346 or visit the FBFM website at www.fbfm.org.
References
Gerveni, M., T. Hubbs and S. Irwin. “FAME Biodiesel, Renewable Diesel, and Biomass-Based Diesel Feedstock Trends over 2011-2023.” farmdoc daily (14):71, Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, April 12, 2024.
Illinois Soybean Management Guide, 2025. University of Illinois Extension.
Paulson, N., G. Schnitkey, C. Zulauf and B. Zwilling. “Spring Revision to 2026 Illinois Crop Budgets.” farmdoc daily (16):88, Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, May 19, 2026.
Zulauf, C., J. Coppess, G. Schnitkey and N. Paulson. “US Corn, Soybean, and Wheat Acres in the Planting Flexibility Era.” farmdoc daily (15):40, Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, March 3, 2025.
Illinois
Unincorporated Bensenville residents say ‘nightmare’ rat infestation threatens their health, safety
UNINCORP. BENSENVILLE, Ill. (WLS) — People living in a neighborhood in unincorporated Bensenville say a rat infestation is a threat to their health and safety.
Those in the White Pines neighborhood say they know the source of the problem, but they feel like elected officials are not doing enough to help them.
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Multiple homeowners say the issue goes back at least two years. They believe one particular property is ground zero and that there have been no significant measures to eliminate what they are calling a rat infestation.
“It’s just a nightmare right now,” said White Pines resident Jim Brill.
Brill says for two years, he and his neighbors have dealt with rats running around their property.
“It’s impacting every house that surrounds that house. The rats come out when we put our trash cans out. They literally swarm out of the yard, that house’s yard, go in our trash cans,” Brill said.
Another neighbor says his home security picked up the rodents after they tripped the camera’s motion sensors, sharing at least a dozen videos with ABC7 showing them scurrying around the side of his house.
And pictures show multiple rats on the windowsills on the home that neighbors believe is the root of the issue.
“We have to, you know, take huge measures to maintain our property, and we’ve done that, but when your neighbor isn’t doing that, and then creating housing for these vermin, right, that carry disease, and can, you know, be troublesome and problematic, it’s quite frustrating,” said White Pines resident Kristin Henri.
Henri says her parents have lived there for more than 50 years, never with a rat problem, until 2024. She says the rats are a hazard to their health and safety.
“We’ve had rats on our property, running through in broad daylight, so it’s unnerving. I can’t let my dog out. I worry about my neighbor’s child across the street, who’s a toddler,” Henri said.
Henri and Brill say living in an unincorporated part of Bensenville has complicated matters. At this point, they believe it is in the county’s hands, but still the problem persists.
“We contacted the county. They keep telling us they’re going to take care of the problem, and they don’t,” Brill said.
“We need somebody to help eliminate this. It’s not fair to us. We maintain our properties, and we want to live in a safe environment,” Henri said.
The DuPage County Building and Zoning Staff told ABC7 they been working on this problem since 2024.
They are working with the owner of a single property to clean the home’s interior.
Once that’s done, the county says, it will have an exterminator come in and set traps in the area.
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Illinois
Fireball sightings reported in at least 8 states including Illinois
Sightings of a fireball were reported across Illinois and at least eight other states on Monday night.
The American Meteor Society received nearly 200 reports of a fireball seen over Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, New York, Ohio, and Wisconsin around 10 p.m.
Some of the reports out of Illinois came from Chicago, Aurora, Carpentersville, Warrenville, Addison, Waukegan, Oak Lawn, Shorewood Westchester, and Glen Ellyn. There were also reports from Indiana, including Valparaiso and Fort Wayne.
There was also a report out of Ontario, Canada.
Home camera footage, posted by the American Meteor Society, shows a flash across the sky in Michigan about an hour Northwest of Detroit.
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