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Championship, investigation and conviction: The year in review

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5. Schmack defeats Campbell for state’s attorney

State’s Attorney Clay Campbell won a conviction in a 55-year-old murder case, but he wasn’t able to win re-election in the most hotly contested race this fall.

Instead, voters chose Democrat Richard Schmack, who argued traffic accidents – and impaired drivers – were the biggest threats to local public safety. During his two years in office, Campbell pursued criminal investigations of Northern Illinois University employees and promised to be personally involved in prosecuting William “Billy” Curl, who is accused in the 2010 slaying of NIU student Antinette “Toni” Keller.

Schmack defeated Campbell, a Republican, by 739 votes. Schmack had 19,895 votes to Campbell’s 19,156.

6. Drought parches DeKalb County

DeKalb County was hit by one of the worst droughts in state history over the summer, being declared a primary natural disaster in mid-August and suffering losses in the local agricultural industry.

Illinois’ corn-crop yield dropped 25 percent from 2011 to 2012 and 71 percent was reported as being in poor or very poor condition. The state’s soybean crop also dropped 26 percent.

DeKalb County had 18 days where temperatures climbed higher than 90 degrees in 2011 compared to 35 days in 2012. The county received only 18.69 inches of rain between January and September, an almost 50 percent drop from 2011.

7. Cole Hall reopens

The NIU academic building where five students were shot to death reopened for classes in January, nearly four years after the shooting.

Shortly after 3 p.m. Feb. 14, 2008, former NIU student Steven Kazmierczak killed Gayle Dubowski, Catalina Garcia, Julianna Gehant, Ryanne Mace and Daniel Parmenter, and injured 21 others, before killing himself. Cole Hall, which housed two lecture halls at the time, was closed indefinitely.

In 2009, a memorial garden was created next to Cole Hall in honor of the victims, as well as a scholarship dedicated to them. In 2011, the university finally received money from the state for the building’s $6 million renovation. The building opened in 2012 with a classroom that features state-of-the-art technology, a lecture hall and the Anthropology Museum.

8. ‘Mr. Pumpkin’ Wally Thurow dies


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