Students
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Creative Writing Club Information Session
November 11, 2025 -
Don’t Wait to Get Help with a Research Assignment
November 11, 2025 -
Community Desk Assistant Role Hiring for Spring 2026
November 11, 2025 -
Celebrate International Education Week 2025 at Illinois Tech
November 11, 2025 -
Communication Courses for International Students
November 06, 2025 -
Presenting Complex Ideas with Clarity and Confidence
November 04, 2025 -
SoReMo Letters of Intent for Spring 2026
October 30, 2025 -
Domestic Violence Awareness Month — Love Is/Isn’t: Understanding Healthy Relationships
October 28, 2025
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Creative Writing Club Information Session
Athletics
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Men’s Varsity Soccer Tryouts
August 18, 2022 -
Women’s Tennis To Hold Tryouts August 20 Through August 26
August 18, 2022 -
Men’s Tennis To Hold Tryouts August 20 Through August 26.
August 18, 2022 -
Men’s Tennis Takes Home 2021 NACC Tournament Title with 5-2 Win Over Concordia (Wis.)
May 11, 2021 -
Illinois Tech Athletics Announces Advisory Board
December 10, 2020
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Men’s Varsity Soccer Tryouts
Research
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Community-Engaged Research Seminar for Health Researchers
November 11, 2025 -
IFSH Releases Annual Report of Research
October 07, 2025 -
Grapeseed Extract (MegaNatural BP) Study at Clinical Nutrition Research Center Seeks Volunteers
September 04, 2025 -
Welcome Week Student Research Showcase Winners
August 21, 2025 -
Participate in a Study on Factors Impacting Student Interest and Career Intentions in the Analytics Domain
August 21, 2025
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Community-Engaged Research Seminar for Health Researchers
Illinois Tech In the News Archive
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Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Daniel Martin Katz speaks to Legal IT Insider about recent tech trends in the legal industry
February 15, 2018"eDiscovery retrospectively was the first thing through the wall. If you said we need to review 10 million emails, just as an example, the existing business model and economics around that weren’t rational. It was a problem created by and solved through technology," says Daniel Martin Katz. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Anthony Michael Kreis speaks to the Columbus Dispatch about whether passing local laws protecting LGBT rights could help attract businesses to a state
February 13, 2018“When people feel comfortable in their workplace ... that makes for a better workforce,” Anthony Michael Kreis says. “The legal protections are incredibly important.” -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Anthony Michael Kreis speaks to the Providence Journal about a bill before the Rhode Island legislature that would ban criminal defendants from using the gay panic defense at trial
February 8, 2018“It’s the prerogative of the legislature to safeguard civil rights whenever they can — not punting things to the judiciary just because it might be politically easier,” Anthony Michael Kreis says. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Christopher Schmidt writes an op-ed for USA Today titled “What Trump-era protesters can learn from the lunch counter sit-ins of 1960”
February 8, 2018"Bold protests that attract attention, even if most of it is condemnatory, can play a critical role in creating the conditions for political change," writes Christopher Schmidt. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Richard Gonzalez comments on a cat custody case for the Chicago Tribune
February 6, 2018Richard Gonzalez and Mariana Karampelas (LAW '11), a graduate of Chicago-Kent's Solo and Small-Practice Incubator Program, spoke to the Chicago Tribune about a cat custody dispute between an artist and a pet shelter. -
College of Science Professor of Computer Science Shlomo Argamon comments on the 600-year-old Voynich manuscript for The Verge and the Times of Israel
February 6, 2018Shlomo Argamon says recent claims that researchers cracked the 600-year-old code in the Voynich manuscript are “perhaps slightly questionable, but not more so than many other results often published in the scientific literature.” -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Anthony Michael Kreis speaks to several news outlets for various stories about LGBT rights
February 1, 2018"While this case doesn’t go as far as overruling some bad precedent about sexual orientation claims, it cracks open the door in a way that’s important," Anthony Michael Kreis says in a Bloomberg Law article about the First Circuit's ruling in Franchina v. City of Providence. -
Lewis College of Human Sciences Department of Psychology Chair and Professor Michael Young discusses seasonal affective disorder with the New York Times
January 30, 2018Michael Young advises setting specific times for mood-boosting activities. “If you don’t put it on the schedule, you’ll get to the end of the day and somehow it didn’t happen. Have a plan,” he suggests. “Life gets in the way, even if you’re highly motivated.” -
Armour College of Engineering Distinguished Bodine Chair Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Mohammad Shahidehpour discusses power outages, pollution, and cyber security breaches with the Northwest Indiana Times
January 30, 2018“The integrated smart-city solution will enhance services, reduce costs and ultimately improve security, reliability, resilience and sustainability in large metropolitan regions,” says Mohammad Shahidehpour. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Richard Kling comments for the Chicago Sun-Times on the confirmation of the new U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois
January 30, 2018“I’m very pleased he’s the U.S. attorney,” Richard Kling says of the confirmation of John Lausch as U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.





