
Chinese students flocked to Central Illinois. Their food followed.
Surrounded by miles of flat, green fields of soy and grain corn, the cities have a combined population of about 127,000 people and a skyline that rarely pokes above 15 stories. The area isn't anybody's idea of a major metropolitan center. It certainly isn't the first place you'd think to look when you are in the mood for serious Chinese food.
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After a quick walk from the university's main quad, though, you can sit down to a faithful rendition of spicy bullfrog hot pot in a Sichuanese broth studded with green peppercorns. A nearby restaurant serves yangrou paomo, a Shaanxi lamb soup with floating scraps of flatbread that is a favorite in Xi'an. If you are struck by a late-night craving for stinky tofu in the style of Changsha, you can get it after 8:30 p.m. from a chef who dresses fried black cubes of fermented bean curd in a glistening orange chile oil, the way vendors do on the streets of Hunan's capital city.
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You'd have to hunt to find these dishes in a major city like Chicago, 135 miles away, but they have become a fixture of life in Champaign and Urbana. At least two dozen Chinese restaurants, bakeries, bubble-tea shops and Asian grocery stores are clustered close to the campus. Along a five-block stretch of Green Street, the main commercial strip in the part of Champaign known as Campustown, window posters and sidewalk sandwich boards advertise dumplings, noodles and stir-fries in larger-than-life color photographs captioned in Chinese and usually, but not always, English.
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The Golden Harbor restaurant, which has more than 1,000 items on the menu, in Champaign. Like many college towns, the area around the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has been transformed by a surge of foreign students, but visa clampdowns could threaten that.
ANJALI PINTO/NYT
Most of these places are quite new. Almost all have opened in the past 15 years. Dai Shi, a local pastry chef originally from Fuzhou, first visited Champaign in 2010, when her parents owned a Chinese restaurant in town. They had only a handful of competitors, she said.
At the time, about 1,100 students from China attended the university. Now there are more than five times as many, and the campus area has become a little Chinatown on the prairie.
New York University enrolls more Chinese students than any other school in the United States. But the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is in a virtual tie for second place with the University of Southern California, according a New York Times analysis of 2023 visa data from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Related
:
Urbana and Champaign are not the only places where the surge in international students has changed the local culture and economy. But the area's rural isolation and unusually large population of Chinese students make it a striking example of that change.
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In the coming months or years, they may also make it something of a laboratory for the effects of the Trump administration's cuts to research budgets and clampdowns on visas for international students, especially those from China.
Feast in a cornfield
College-age students in China have a nickname for the University of Illinois:
yu mi de
. It means the Cornfield. The university is better known there for its surrounding farmland and its strengths in STEM fields like engineering and computer science than for its proximity to crunchy Northern-style stir-fried pork intestines. Each August, hundreds of new Chinese students show up with no inkling that the Cornfield is full of foods they grew up on.
More than 270,000 students from China attended American colleges and universities last year. Restaurants catering to them represent a new wave in Chinese dining in the United States. In Manhattan, the blocks around NYU and Columbia, which 20 years ago held little appeal to fans of Chinese food, have become troves of Shanghai drunken crab and Hong Kong-style barbecue pork buns. You can find high-level Chinese cooking near campuses in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Iowa City, Iowa.
They are more cosmopolitan than the linoleum-floored joints in the old urban Chinatowns that started out feeding home-style cooking to villagers from Guangdong in the early 20th century. They are more up-to-date than the palaces of aristocratic Chinese cuisine overseen by highly trained chefs who fled the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and '70s. Aimed at younger customers whose memories of China are still fresh, they tend to be informal, fairly inexpensive if not rock-bottom cheap, and faithful in recreating true regional cuisines.
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Dishes at Northern Cuisine include crispy pork in sweet and sour glaze, stewed pork belly in a toasted bun and wok-fried crispy pork intestine with dry chili, in Champaign.
ANJALI PINTO/NYT
Students in Urbana and Champaign trade intel on regional dishes in group texts in Chinese on the social-media apps RedNote and WeChat. The most useful sources for exploring menus around the Cornfield are the Asian-food-delivery apps Hungry Panda and Fantuan, whose vehicles, bearing a logo of an anthropomorphic dumpling, are as common on the streets as red-and-blue Domino's cars are in other American college towns.
The drivers 'are all Chinese people,' Qian said. 'When they reach my apartment, they call me and speak Mandarin right away.'
'Everyone is buckled up'
A year ago on the campaign trail, President Donald Trump proposed that all international students who graduated from U.S. colleges be granted green cards 'automatically.'
After taking office in January, Trump chose a different path. His administration froze applications for student visas in May. When the process started up again a month later, the State Department put out new orders for stricter vetting of applicants' 'online presence' — looking for, among other things, signs of 'hostility' toward the United States.
Consulates were told to give priority to applicants bound for schools where international students make up less than 15% of the total. That statistic at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is above 20%.
Chinese nationals, who made up more than a quarter of the 1.1 million international students in the United States last year, face extra scrutiny. In May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the government would 'aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students.'
Whether tighter screening and delays will cut into the number of international students at the University of Illinois in the coming academic year won't be clear until September, said Robin Kaler, an associate chancellor.
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Until then, faculty, administrators and local businesses are bracing for the impact. A significant drop could have a major economic effect on college towns like Urbana and Champaign. International students in Illinois spend $2.4 billion a year and support more than 23,000 jobs in the state, according to a 2024 analysis by NAFSA, a professional association for international educators. Tuition is the biggest expenditure, but real estate, car dealerships and other businesses also benefit.
Diners at Northern Cuisine in Champaign. New York University enrolls more Chinese students than any other school in the US, but the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is in a virtual tie for second place with the University of Southern California.
ANJALI PINTO/NYT
As more Asian businesses crowd in, the struggle for survival becomes increasingly Darwinian. Restaurants along Green Street can come and go in the span of a year. Now, their owners are anticipating fewer students from other countries, especially China, said Tim Chao, who owns three cafes with his wife, Shi.
Until recently, Chao said, many restaurateurs aimed their offerings squarely at those students. If significant numbers of them aren't allowed into the United States, or decide to study in a country that feels more welcoming, 'the general consensus is that they'll need to change the flavors, change the menu and how they present themselves,' he said.
For instance, the noodle shop that sells Changsha stinky tofu just added grilled meat skewers and other, more entry-level items to its late-night menu.
'Everyone is buckled up right now,' Chao said.
Many long-term residents are hoping that their favorite restaurants stick around and stay interesting.
'This cultural richness enhances us all,' said Leslie Cooperband, a retired cheesemaker who lives in Champaign, after we shared some very good three-cup chicken at Golden Harbor, a Taiwanese and Chinese landmark so celebrated that an indie-rock band wrote a song about it.
Advertisement
'It's like, wow, look at what we have here in this town of 100,000 people,' she said. 'And we're all better for it.'
This article originally appeared in
.
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Forbes
2 hours ago
- Forbes
NYT Connections Today: July 17 Hints And Answers (#767)
Find the links between the words to win today's game of Connections. Each day's game of NYT Connections goes live at midnight local time. Before we get to today's Connections hints and answers, here are Wednesday's:Hey there, Connectors! I hope your week is off to a most wonderful start. tktktktkt Before we begin, we have a great little community on Discord, where we chat about NYT Connections, the rest of the NYT games and all kinds of other stuff. Everyone who has joined has been lovely. It's a fun hangout spot, and you're more than welcome to hang out with us. Discord is also the best way to give me any feedback about the column, especially on the rare (or not-so-rare) occasions that I mess something up. I don't look at the comments or Twitter much. You can also read my weekend editions of this column at my new newsletter, Pastimes. Today's NYT Connections hints and answers for Thursday, July 17 are coming right up. How To Play Connections Connections is a free, popular New York Times daily word game. You get a new puzzle at midnight every day. You can play on the NYT's website or Games app. You're presented with a grid of 16 words. Your task is to arrange them into four groups of four by figuring out the links between them. The groups could be things like items you can click, names for research study participants or words preceded by a body part. There's only one solution for each puzzle, and you'll need to be careful when it comes to words that might fit into more than one category. You can shuffle the words to perhaps help you see links between them. Each group is color coded. The yellow group is usually the easiest to figure out, blue and green fall in the middle, and the purple group is usually the most difficult one. The purple group often involves wordplay. Select four words you think go together and press Submit. If you make a guess and you're incorrect, you'll lose a life. If you're close to having a correct group, you might see a message telling you that you're one word away from getting it right, but you'll still need to figure out which one to swap. If you make four mistakes, it's game over. Let's make sure that doesn't happen with the help of some hints, and, if you're really struggling, today's Connections answers. As with Wordle and other similar games, it's easy to share results with your friends on social media and group chats. If you have an NYT All Access or Games subscription, you can access the publication's Connections archive. This includes every previous game of Connections, so you can go back and play any of those that you have missed. Aside from the first 60 games or so, you should be able to find our hints Google if you need them! Just click here and add the date of the game for which you need clues or the answers to the search query. What Are Today's Connections Hints? Scroll slowly! Just after the hints for each of today's Connections groups, I'll reveal what the groups are without immediately telling you which words go into them. Today's 16 words are... And the hints for today's Connections groups are: One Word For Each Connections Group Need some extra help? Be warned: we're starting to get into spoiler territory. Let's take a look at one word for each group. Today's Connections word hints are… What Are Today's Connections Groups? Today's Connections groups are... What Are Today's Connections Answers? Spoiler alert! Don't scroll any further down the page until you're ready to find out today's Connections answers. This is your final warning! Today's Connections answers are... I was delighted to see a reference to Super Mario World, one of my top five games of all time on the top line. POKE and PAC could have been references to Pokémon and Pac-Man, respectively. The rappers/rap-group references caught my eye too -- WU-TANG (Clan), BIGGIE (Smalls), (Tu)PAC (Shakur) and SNOOP Dogg. But it became clear very quickly that those were a red herring of sorts. HARD FEELINGS had to be preceded by "no," and I found three other words that fit the bill. That took care of the greens. Here, BIGGIE means "big deal." I figured that the spying words/phrase would be the yellows and that assumption proved to be correct. At that point, the purples seemed abundantly clear to me. (DRUM AND) BASS, (CAMI)SOLE and (CAPE) COD all stood out as types of fish. I vaguely remembered that "tang" was a type of fish too, so that took care of the ostensibly most difficult group of the day. That left the blues. Of course, Super MARIO WORLD was my key to figuring out that connection. A super PAC is a type of political committee that helps fund election campaign advertising. That was a more straightforward game than I first suspected. A perfect game today extends my streak to 142 wins. Here's my grid for today: 🟩🟩🟩🟩 🟨🟨🟨🟨 🟪🟪🟪🟪 🟦🟦🟦🟦 That's all there is to it for today's Connections clues and answers. Be sure to check my blog tomorrow for hints and the solution for Friday's game if you need them. P.S. It's gonna have to be a song by one of the artists referenced in today's grid for our recommendation. I'm going with "Gravel Pit" by Wu-Tang Clan. I've liked that song for a long time. It has such a catchy beat: Have a great day! Stay hydrated! Be kind to yourself and each other! Call someone you love! Please follow my blog for more coverage of NYT Connections and other word games, and even some video game news, insights and analysis. It helps me out a lot! Sharing this column with other people who play Connections would be appreciated too. You can also read my weekend editions of this column at my new newsletter, Pastimes.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Woman Finds Perfume in the Apartment After Signing Her New Lease. How She Honors the Late Tenant Goes Viral (Exclusive)
After moving into a rent-stabilized apartment in Queens, Jesse Lynn Hart found two vintage perfume bottles left behind by the late tenant who had lived there for more than four decades, and she asked her landlord to let her keep them She captured the moment of spraying the scent in the empty apartment on TikTok, reflecting on the shared experience of girlhood The response deepened Jesse Lynn's sense of community and connection, inspiring her to engage more with her neighbors and cherish the small ways we honor those who came before usWhen Jesse Lynn Harte moved into her new Astoria apartment, she wasn't expecting to inherit a legacy. But as she stood in the quiet, freshly painted space, alone for the first time, she sprayed a vintage perfume into the air — and felt an invisible bond with the woman who lived there before her. 'I once tried to run away, but I was like 4 and we lived on a cul-de-sac off of a dirt road,' Jesse Lynn tells PEOPLE, recalling her childhood dream of moving to New York. Growing up in a tiny New Hampshire town, her life has been shaped by a deep desire to make it to the city that never sleeps — and now, that dream has finally become real. Jesse Lynn had lived in the building for years before moving into the unit, often crossing paths with the elderly woman who had called it home for over four decades. 'She was fairly old and didn't speak too much English, but we got along and I would help her carry up her groceries and her bags and everything like that,' she says. When the tenant passed away, Jesse Lynn was offered a rare opportunity to move into a rent-stabilized apartment in one of New York's most competitive neighborhoods. The moment was filled with conflicting emotions, a mix of gratitude and solemn reflection. 'When I did the math, it made me emotional to think about and realized she'd been here for over 40 years,' Jesse Lynn shares. 'She was probably a little bit older than me when she moved in... it was a full circle moment to be like, wow, she lived such a long and beautiful life in this apartment, and I hope I get to do that too.' As she toured the vacant unit, Jesse Lynn noticed something unexpected — two vintage bottles of perfume still sitting on a shelf. 'I think they were using it to cover the smell of construction because most of her belongings had been tossed,' she says. 'But I didn't want them to toss her perfume. I thought that it would be special to have something of her here forever.' It was that simple but deeply sentimental request to keep the late tenant's perfume that sparked a viral moment on TikTok. The video, which shows Jesse Lynn misting the perfume in her empty apartment, is overlaid with her own words: 'She was just a girl here once, too.' In that quiet moment, her act of remembrance resonated with thousands of viewers who saw in it something universal. 'The internet helped me figure out what the scents are actually,' Jesse Lynn says, laughing as she describes the detective work that followed. 'One of them is an Amway perfume... it was discontinued in 1983. The other one had the label on it, and that one actually smells really good.' She filmed the video just after signing the lease, standing alone in the space that was no longer someone else's, but not yet entirely hers. 'That was actually moments after I signed the lease and the realtor had left, and I was alone for the first time in this new apartment,' she tells PEOPLE. 'I felt, I mean, it sounds so cheesy, but I really felt like she was there with me.' It was a moment filled with reverence due to the perfume's symbolism. 'I'm so sentimental and I'm such a girlhood kind of girl that it felt really special to bring a piece of her back into the apartment before bringing anything of mine in here,' Jesse Lynn says. For her, honoring that invisible thread of girlhood was at the heart of it all. 'We as a society talk about girlhood so much right now, but I don't know what it's defined as other than a feeling between girls,' she reflects. 'It really is the girls that get it, get it, and it's a bond that you share with other women in your life.' Even something as simple as perfume can carry that feeling across generations. 'We all have our scents, we all have our perfumes, we all have our favorite nail polish color,' Jesse Lynn says. 'Not to trivialize what it means to be a woman, but those are special aspects of being a woman that I cherish.' Though she doesn't have a signature scent herself, Jesse Lynn marks each chapter of her life with a new one. 'Every time that I go through something like a life change or an exciting step or a birthday or when a contract ends, I buy a new scent,' she shares. Now settled into the space, Jesse Lynn says the apartment has come to mean more to her than she ever expected. 'This is the first time that I've moved into somewhere and said, this is the last time I will ever move within New York City,' she says. 'Like, I will have this apartment for the rest of my life.' She imagines her future unfolding in the same rooms that once belonged to a stranger who became a quiet part of her story. 'I hope I have a daughter and I hope she'll take it over,' she says, tearing up at the thought. 'And the only time that I'll ever move out of this apartment is like, if my kids need it to live here with their kids, you know?' The moment has changed how Jesse Lynn sees her neighborhood, too. 'I have always thought that the community in my neighborhood is very special,' she says. 'I know everyone at my coffee shop by name. I know the local flower guys at the deli. They are obsessed with my dog.' That sense of connection has only deepened since moving into the apartment. 'They'll know my babies too,' Jesse Lynn says. 'They'll know my kids.' Still, Jesse Lynn admits she feels a tinge of guilt for not knowing more about the woman whose life she now honors. 'It makes me wanna engage more with my direct neighbors and know more about them,' she says. 'It's so crazy to me. Like people are living entire lives feet away.' She laughs at her own curiosity, but it's that same openness that made this story possible. 'There's someone on that side of that wall that can be living an entirely unique experience from anywhere in the world that moved to New York City,' Jesse Lynn says. 'And like everyone has such unique stories, and I just wanna know them all.' Her boyfriend, a lifelong New Yorker, doesn't quite share her enthusiasm. 'He and his New Yorker friends, they mind their business,' she says, laughing. 'And I'm the one from the middle of nowhere. I'm like, I'll sign something on the street, do you have a clipboard? I'll put my name down.' Still, it's that friendliness that allowed Jesse Lynn to build a bond with her elderly neighbor in the first place. 'I knew the neighbor who lived here because I was always helping her with her bags and talking to her and getting her mail for her,' she says. 'And so I think even more so now I'm gonna be battling against my boyfriend. He's going to have to be dragging me down the street as I talk to everyone.' When her TikTok went viral, Jesse Lynn didn't expect such a wave of kindness. 'It has been so nice that people have been nice to me on the internet for a change,' she says. 'Like the internet is the wild, wild west, and people can be so cruel.' But this time, the reaction was something else entirely. 'This is the first time ever where something has gone viral and the overwhelming majority is people having the same sort of sentimental experience that I am,' she tells PEOPLE. 'Recognizing the beauty of life and the sentimental full circle nature of it all.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. She's still amazed at the reach of the story, often clicking on commenters' profiles just to see who's out there. 'Everyone from every different walk of life is celebrating the moment that I shared with my previous neighbor,' Jesse Lynn says. For her, the moment has always been about something small but deeply meaningful. 'It's recognizing that we're all human and we're all on this planet together and just trying our best,' she says. 'To take a second and appreciate a small moment — that's all it was.' Jesse Lynn didn't set out to go viral. She just wanted to remember someone. 'Let's think about her. Let's pay respect to her,' she says. 'I think we all want someone to do that for us. I think we all want to be remembered and celebrated when we leave this planet and have our legacy carried on.' Read the original article on People


Boston Globe
20 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Chinese students flocked to Central Illinois. Their food followed.
For the more than 6,000 students from China in Urbana and Champaign, the wealth of products and dishes from back home can make the two cities seem like a mirage rising from the plains of central Illinois. Surrounded by miles of flat, green fields of soy and grain corn, the cities have a combined population of about 127,000 people and a skyline that rarely pokes above 15 stories. The area isn't anybody's idea of a major metropolitan center. It certainly isn't the first place you'd think to look when you are in the mood for serious Chinese food. Get Winter Soup Club A six-week series featuring soup recipes and cozy vibes, plus side dishes and toppings, to get us all through the winter. Enter Email Sign Up After a quick walk from the university's main quad, though, you can sit down to a faithful rendition of spicy bullfrog hot pot in a Sichuanese broth studded with green peppercorns. A nearby restaurant serves yangrou paomo, a Shaanxi lamb soup with floating scraps of flatbread that is a favorite in Xi'an. If you are struck by a late-night craving for stinky tofu in the style of Changsha, you can get it after 8:30 p.m. from a chef who dresses fried black cubes of fermented bean curd in a glistening orange chile oil, the way vendors do on the streets of Hunan's capital city. Advertisement You'd have to hunt to find these dishes in a major city like Chicago, 135 miles away, but they have become a fixture of life in Champaign and Urbana. At least two dozen Chinese restaurants, bakeries, bubble-tea shops and Asian grocery stores are clustered close to the campus. Along a five-block stretch of Green Street, the main commercial strip in the part of Champaign known as Campustown, window posters and sidewalk sandwich boards advertise dumplings, noodles and stir-fries in larger-than-life color photographs captioned in Chinese and usually, but not always, English. Advertisement The Golden Harbor restaurant, which has more than 1,000 items on the menu, in Champaign. Like many college towns, the area around the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has been transformed by a surge of foreign students, but visa clampdowns could threaten that. ANJALI PINTO/NYT Most of these places are quite new. Almost all have opened in the past 15 years. Dai Shi, a local pastry chef originally from Fuzhou, first visited Champaign in 2010, when her parents owned a Chinese restaurant in town. They had only a handful of competitors, she said. At the time, about 1,100 students from China attended the university. Now there are more than five times as many, and the campus area has become a little Chinatown on the prairie. New York University enrolls more Chinese students than any other school in the United States. But the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is in a virtual tie for second place with the University of Southern California, according a New York Times analysis of 2023 visa data from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Related : Urbana and Champaign are not the only places where the surge in international students has changed the local culture and economy. But the area's rural isolation and unusually large population of Chinese students make it a striking example of that change. Advertisement In the coming months or years, they may also make it something of a laboratory for the effects of the Trump administration's cuts to research budgets and clampdowns on visas for international students, especially those from China. Feast in a cornfield College-age students in China have a nickname for the University of Illinois: yu mi de . It means the Cornfield. The university is better known there for its surrounding farmland and its strengths in STEM fields like engineering and computer science than for its proximity to crunchy Northern-style stir-fried pork intestines. Each August, hundreds of new Chinese students show up with no inkling that the Cornfield is full of foods they grew up on. More than 270,000 students from China attended American colleges and universities last year. Restaurants catering to them represent a new wave in Chinese dining in the United States. In Manhattan, the blocks around NYU and Columbia, which 20 years ago held little appeal to fans of Chinese food, have become troves of Shanghai drunken crab and Hong Kong-style barbecue pork buns. You can find high-level Chinese cooking near campuses in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Iowa City, Iowa. They are more cosmopolitan than the linoleum-floored joints in the old urban Chinatowns that started out feeding home-style cooking to villagers from Guangdong in the early 20th century. They are more up-to-date than the palaces of aristocratic Chinese cuisine overseen by highly trained chefs who fled the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and '70s. Aimed at younger customers whose memories of China are still fresh, they tend to be informal, fairly inexpensive if not rock-bottom cheap, and faithful in recreating true regional cuisines. Advertisement Dishes at Northern Cuisine include crispy pork in sweet and sour glaze, stewed pork belly in a toasted bun and wok-fried crispy pork intestine with dry chili, in Champaign. ANJALI PINTO/NYT Students in Urbana and Champaign trade intel on regional dishes in group texts in Chinese on the social-media apps RedNote and WeChat. The most useful sources for exploring menus around the Cornfield are the Asian-food-delivery apps Hungry Panda and Fantuan, whose vehicles, bearing a logo of an anthropomorphic dumpling, are as common on the streets as red-and-blue Domino's cars are in other American college towns. The drivers 'are all Chinese people,' Qian said. 'When they reach my apartment, they call me and speak Mandarin right away.' 'Everyone is buckled up' A year ago on the campaign trail, President Donald Trump proposed that all international students who graduated from U.S. colleges be granted green cards 'automatically.' After taking office in January, Trump chose a different path. His administration froze applications for student visas in May. When the process started up again a month later, the State Department put out new orders for stricter vetting of applicants' 'online presence' — looking for, among other things, signs of 'hostility' toward the United States. Consulates were told to give priority to applicants bound for schools where international students make up less than 15% of the total. That statistic at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is above 20%. Chinese nationals, who made up more than a quarter of the 1.1 million international students in the United States last year, face extra scrutiny. In May, Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that the government would 'aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students.' Whether tighter screening and delays will cut into the number of international students at the University of Illinois in the coming academic year won't be clear until September, said Robin Kaler, an associate chancellor. Advertisement Until then, faculty, administrators and local businesses are bracing for the impact. A significant drop could have a major economic effect on college towns like Urbana and Champaign. International students in Illinois spend $2.4 billion a year and support more than 23,000 jobs in the state, according to a 2024 analysis by NAFSA, a professional association for international educators. Tuition is the biggest expenditure, but real estate, car dealerships and other businesses also benefit. Diners at Northern Cuisine in Champaign. New York University enrolls more Chinese students than any other school in the US, but the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is in a virtual tie for second place with the University of Southern California. ANJALI PINTO/NYT As more Asian businesses crowd in, the struggle for survival becomes increasingly Darwinian. Restaurants along Green Street can come and go in the span of a year. Now, their owners are anticipating fewer students from other countries, especially China, said Tim Chao, who owns three cafes with his wife, Shi. Until recently, Chao said, many restaurateurs aimed their offerings squarely at those students. If significant numbers of them aren't allowed into the United States, or decide to study in a country that feels more welcoming, 'the general consensus is that they'll need to change the flavors, change the menu and how they present themselves,' he said. For instance, the noodle shop that sells Changsha stinky tofu just added grilled meat skewers and other, more entry-level items to its late-night menu. 'Everyone is buckled up right now,' Chao said. Many long-term residents are hoping that their favorite restaurants stick around and stay interesting. 'This cultural richness enhances us all,' said Leslie Cooperband, a retired cheesemaker who lives in Champaign, after we shared some very good three-cup chicken at Golden Harbor, a Taiwanese and Chinese landmark so celebrated that an indie-rock band wrote a song about it. Advertisement 'It's like, wow, look at what we have here in this town of 100,000 people,' she said. 'And we're all better for it.' This article originally appeared in .