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- Title
- Young women posing for a photograph, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1958
- Date
- 1958
- Description
-
Photograph of young women posing for two cameras in the old Student Union Building (formerly the Armour Mission). They were possibly...
Show morePhotograph of young women posing for two cameras in the old Student Union Building (formerly the Armour Mission). They were possibly candidates for Queen of the annual Integral Ball. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Students looking at paintings on exhibit, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1964
- Date
- 1964
- Description
-
Photograph of students looking at paintings by unidentified artists, potentially other students, at an unknown location. Photographer unknown....
Show morePhotograph of students looking at paintings by unidentified artists, potentially other students, at an unknown location. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Unidentified folk group, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1966
- Date
- 1966
- Description
-
Photograph of an unidentified folk group, possibly a student group or one that appeared in concert at Illinois Institute of Technology. ...
Show morePhotograph of an unidentified folk group, possibly a student group or one that appeared in concert at Illinois Institute of Technology. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- IIT Women's Volleyball Team posing outside Keating Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1973
- Date
- 1970-1975
- Description
-
Photograph of the Illinois Tech women's volleyball team in front of Keating Hall ca. 1973. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph is unknown...
Show morePhotograph of the Illinois Tech women's volleyball team in front of Keating Hall ca. 1973. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph is unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- View from the Commons Building lobby, with Bailey Hall (now Kacek Hall), Carmen Hall, Gunsaulus Hall, and Carr Chapel visible to the northeast, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1962
- Date
- 1960-1964
- Description
-
Photograph looking northeast from the lobby of the Commons Building, with (left to right) Bailey Hall (now Kacek Hall), Carmen Hall, Gunsaulus...
Show morePhotograph looking northeast from the lobby of the Commons Building, with (left to right) Bailey Hall (now Kacek Hall), Carmen Hall, Gunsaulus Hall, and Carr Chapel visible to the northeast. Bailey Hall, Carman Hall, the Commons Building, and Carr Chapel were all designed by Mies van der Rohe, Gunsaulus Hall by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Students studying in Crerar Library, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1964
- Date
- 1963-1965
- Description
-
Photograph of students on the upper level of the recently opened John Crerar Library (now the Paul V. Galvin Library). Photographer unknown....
Show morePhotograph of students on the upper level of the recently opened John Crerar Library (now the Paul V. Galvin Library). Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- Theta Xi fraternity (3340 S. Michigan Ave.), Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, ca. 1974-1978
- Date
- 1974-1978
- Description
-
Photograph of the Theta Xi fraternity (3340 S. Michigan Ave.), including wooden letters posted at ground level. Photographer unknown. Date of...
Show morePhotograph of the Theta Xi fraternity (3340 S. Michigan Ave.), including wooden letters posted at ground level. Photographer unknown. Date of photograph unknown. Date range listed is approximate.
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- Office of Communications and Marketing photographs, 1905-1999
- Title
- TechNews, January 24, 2017
- Date
- 2017-01-24, 2017-01-24
- Collection
- Technology News print collection, 1940-2019
- Title
- TechNews, January 31, 2017
- Date
- 2017-01-24, 2017-01-31
- Collection
- Technology News print collection, 1940-2019
- Title
- Interview with Sean Davis: photos
- Creator
- Nguyen, Ricky, Chionglo, Jeremy, Otgontulga, Khashkhuu, Brekke, Eric, Castellanos, Christopher
- Date
- 2016-12-09, 2016-11-03
- Description
-
Lucky Strike FTW (For the Win) arcade is a bowling alley and arcade located in downtown Chicago. With 130 games that give prizes every time, a...
Show moreLucky Strike FTW (For the Win) arcade is a bowling alley and arcade located in downtown Chicago. With 130 games that give prizes every time, a mini golf course, pool tables, and bowling, it has something for everyone. Featuring fresh made food developed by an in-house chef, private suites overlooking the Chicago skyline, and a variety of party options, it’s a great experience. In charge of all of this is Sean Davis, the Director of Operations at Lucky Strike FTW. Mr. Davis has meddled in all areas of the entertainment business throughout his career, including working as a cook, waiter, bartender, manager, and general manager. He first discovered that he loved working in the entertainment industry when working as a local Massachusetts pizza maker, whose venue housed several bar games like billiards and its own mini golf course. He studied business at Northeastern University, and went on to work at Jillian’s arcade around 1993 in Boston, which featured 52 pool tables, 200 games, and 70,000 square feet of restaurant space. Then, in 2011 he started working at FTW in Chicago. As Director of Operations, Mr. Davis checks on things like making sure the arcade is staffed, ensuring each department has what they need, ordering, scheduling, and generally makes sure that everything in his arcade runs smoothly from day to day. However, as he’ll tell you, “There’s always something going on, there’s always a catastrophe... It’s never ‘Hey everything’s great,’” citing a time when a nearby pipe burst and caused the entire floor to flood, as one extreme case. Mr. Davis plays the games in his arcade as often as possible (his favorite game being Silent Scope), and loves watching other people enjoy themselves. He has said that some of his best days at work are when they bring in groups of less fortunate or handicapped children and let them play and have fun to their heart’s desire. Davis says that FTW is really a place for everyone. The arcade uses large cabinets and displays so that even adults can feel like a kid again when standing in front of the big games, part of the appeal to going to the arcade. “We serve great food, great beer. It really is like the total package. And it’s geared more towards adults than it is kids, because we do have a lot of adults saying, ‘Hey we’re going to bring our kids here,’ and they have their birthday parties here and kids love it. Typically the bigger arcades are more designed for kids and they have to bring their parents, and so we said well why don’t we make it for the parents, and they have to bring their kids. It seems to be working out.”
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- Title
- Interview with Steven Blajeck: Photos 2
- Creator
- Lopez, Ramon
- Date
- 2015, 2015
- Title
- Interview with Todd Friedman: photos
- Creator
- Rao, Xi, Houlihan, Jodi
- Date
- 2015, 2015
- Title
- Interview with Jessica Kent: photos
- Creator
- Wojtowicz, Daniel, Vadakumchery, Tony, Polk, Tamia, Toppel, Dennis
- Date
- 2015-10-01, 2015-10-01
- Description
-
Before video games were invented, people initially played coin-op games like skeeball. The most prominent coin-op game was pinball, and its...
Show moreBefore video games were invented, people initially played coin-op games like skeeball. The most prominent coin-op game was pinball, and its appeal endures to this day. However, the arcade and coin-op scene, including pinball, has a relative lack of women players. This is why Jessica Kent, one of the founders of Down to Flip, has such an interesting story. Her push for diversity and encouragement for female players is making significant changes to the pinball and coin-op community, and her work will continue to make these changes. Jessica Kent is the creator of the Down to Flip pinball group, an all women pinball group. Down to Flip started as a Facebook page but has now grown into a group with over 100 members, and over twenty-five active pinball players. Her inspiration for the group came from observing women groups like LA Bell and Chimes in Los Angeles. From a young age, she was involved in the arcade scene, and she rediscovered her love for arcade gaming during college. Jessica has been an avid gamer for most of her life; before rediscovering her love of arcade games and coin-op games, she was a big at-home gamer. She started playing pinball regularly about two-and-a-half years ago, initially on a laundry room pinball table. She prefers the feel of real life tables over digital ones due to her love of other hands-on arcade games like skeeball. Currently, Jessica plays pinball one night a week, but she travels extensively checking out different arcades and other places with coin-op games. Jessica has done a substantial amount of research on pinball and arcade games. Currently, her favorite pinball table is Attack from Mars. Her favorite arcade is Logan Arcade, and her Down to Flip meetings take place there. Jessica’s favorite parts of pinball is that she can track her progress regularly, the randomness of the game, competing against her personal best scores, and the level of hand-eye coordination required. Additionally, Jessica gets a sense of nostalgia from playing pinball and other arcade games. One of Jessica’s goals for Down To Flip is to promote pinball and arcade games to the younger generation and others who aren’t big gamers themselves. She also feels that Down to Flip as a group promotes pinball and coin-op games to people of all backgrounds, especially women, and wishes to use the reach of the group and her own interests to promote causes she believes in to others. Down to Flip and pinball ties into coin-op and video gaming as a whole since it shows a revival in the coin-op and arcade scene that is especially prominent amongst young adult in their twenties and thirties. Recently, numerous arcades and bars such as Galloping Ghost, Logan Arcade, Headquarters, and Level 257 have opened up and are thriving. Coin-op and arcade gaming can be considered to be the true beginning of the gaming community, and these sort of games have been around since the 1930s. However, in the subculture, there has been a relatively lack in diversity; female players were not very prominent, for instance. Jessica Kent’s group Down to Flip encourages greater player diversity by promoting pinball and arcade gaming for women and attempts to encourage younger children of all sexes and demographics to play pinball and other arcade games, thus promoting a more diverse and varied pinball and gaming community. During the interview, Jessica mentions one interaction in the pinball community where she was competing and one of the male pinball players ridiculed female pinball players. According to Jessica, upon getting a very good high score, the person ridiculing her stopped his actions. Groups and people like this break the stereotypes of gamers, and allow females and minorities as a whole to gain equal respect and opportunity.
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- Title
- Interview with Chaz Evans: Photos
- Creator
- Deanda, Michael
- Date
- 2014-11-14, 2014-11-14
- Description
-
Chaz Evans is the curator of the Video Game Art Gallery (VGA Gallery), a traveling exhibit established in 2013 that displays pieces of art...
Show moreChaz Evans is the curator of the Video Game Art Gallery (VGA Gallery), a traveling exhibit established in 2013 that displays pieces of art from video games. VGA Gallery’s co-directors, Jonathan Kinkley and Chaz Evans, have a deep passion for sharing these artifacts that provide audiences an invitation to enter into discourse surrounding video games through the presentation of art from or inspired by the game. Evans works closely with the designers of the video games featured in the exhibit to ensure that the art pieces they include reflect the designers’ vision of the game. In the time that they have been displaying their exhibit at different events in Chicago, such as Bit Bash, ACTIVATE, Multiples Art Fair, and INTERPLAY Chicago, Evans says that their gallery has been met with much admiration and curiosity from both gamers and non-gamers. Through the process of curating games, he argues that archives and exhibits not only tell a history of video games, but also contribute to the current and ongoing story of video games and provide instances for further discourse and analysis in understanding the video games media. He describes his future aspiration for VGA Gallery to include installations in interactive spaces that contain playable demos of the games alongside the artwork that together provide a threshold for people to experience and appreciate the game.
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- Title
- Interview with Thomas Glenn: photos
- Creator
- Thai, Christopher, Zhong, Franklin
- Date
- 2015, 2015
- Title
- Experimental Design and Analysis data files
- Date
- 2018-07-11
- Description
-
Data files for use with the Experimental Design and Analysis textbook.
- Title
- Interview with Jim Zespy: Photos
- Creator
- Barker, Thomas, Mei, Wei Shao, Elgin, Tobias, Mayorga, Ariana, Moy, Brian
- Date
- 2014-11-21, 2014-11-21
- Description
-
Logan Arcade is a new arcade-bar that opened just February 2014. It features over twenty-five pinball machines and forty-five vintage arcade...
Show moreLogan Arcade is a new arcade-bar that opened just February 2014. It features over twenty-five pinball machines and forty-five vintage arcade-games. Owner Jim Zespy collects and restores arcade games, including those in the arcade. His collection started in 2009; he seeks out games from the mid-1970s through the present. He often buys broken arcade machines and fixes them. Any machine that couldn't be fixed is as spare parts to maintenance other arcade machines. Zespy chooses games to be placed in the arcade based on the games’ popularity with the general public. He first balanced all different eras, and placed different kinds of games to try to have a balance. Afterward he watched to see which games people gravitated to, then took out the games people didn't like and placed more popular games. Zespy’s daily concern is the maintenance of the arcade machines. Logan Arcade has its own Local Pinball League, for which the game changes every week. While the league has scoring, and there is some competition, it's meant to encourage participants to play different games, get to know them, and get to know other people. Some players have made major records in the Logan Arcade. These records are on games including Nibbler, Tron Ice Score, and Tetris.
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