333 West 35th Street
Chicago, IL 60616
MUSIC-EVENTS-POLITICS-COMMUNITY-CONCERTS-POETRY-INTERVIEWS & MORE!!! Featuring Special Guest Host DAVID VICTOR PAVON
WIIT — the radio station for Illinois Institute of Technology — is one of the oldest continually operating radio stations in the country. Our completely student-run, noncommercial station is located in The McCormick Tribune Campus Center in the heart of Illinois Tech's Main Campus. WIIT offers a variety of programs, each with its own theme and genre. Our volunteer DJs are encouraged to express themselves creatively on air, through their music. This creativity differentiates WIIT from most closed-format radio stations. While carefully balancing professional attitudes with ingenuity, our DJs offer a fresh sound that doesn’t come off as forced or commercialized. Because our listeners know that we play our shows from the heart and not from the pocket, we have a very dedicated listenership. Additionally, since we are not a commercial station, our music selection is not governed by demographic research or a single restrictive theme. This allows us to represent diverse musical selections. We increase our market share by offering material that goes beyond the Top 40 rotation. WIIT truly offers something for everyone.
BrilliantlyMad was founded in 1998 with the intention of promoting a philosophy built on love and our oneness with the universe through art, spirituality and well-being. We want to enhance people's life experiences and provide a beacon of light in a world with much darkness. Through social events, web presence and print publications we have been uniting humanity, spreading positive vibrations and embracing the theory of balance and equilibrium in the universe. Knowing both your Brilliance and Madness is the key to opening compassion and harmonizing your life. As we draw into 2015, continue to be aware of and draw from lessons learned over your life time. Integrate these into your existence. Whatever you would like to become, this is your opportunity to make that a reality. Don't let old patterns lead you. Instead be gold and set yourself on the path most true for your divine potential. Let's continue to release what does not serve us and expand the perspectives that open creative dialogue and awareness through wisdom. In the coming year we will unite our visionary senses so that together we become teachers of the grandest kind, shaping the communities we live in and changing the world one voice at a time. ~~~~~> BE LOVE
Guaranteed Rate Field, previously known as U.S. Cellular Field, is a baseball park located in Chicago, Illinois. It serves as the home ballpark for the Chicago White Sox, a Major League Baseball club competing in the American League (AL) Central division. The park is owned by the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, but operated by the White Sox. The park opened for the 1991 season, after the White Sox had spent 81 years at the original Comiskey Park. It also opened with the name Comiskey Park but was renamed in 2003 after U.S. Cellular bought the naming rights at $68 million over 20 years. The ballpark was renamed again to Guaranteed Rate Field on October 31, 2016, as Guaranteed Rate, a private residential mortgage company located in Chicago, purchased the naming rights to the ballpark. On August 24, 2016, owner Jerry Reinsdorf announced a name change for the stadium, removing the U.S. Cellular Field name and replacing it with Guaranteed Rate Field beginning on November 1, 2016, and valid for thirteen years. The name change began on October 31, 2016.The stadium is situated just to the west of the Dan Ryan Expressway in Chicago's Armour Square neighborhood, adjacent to the more famous neighborhood of Bridgeport. It was built directly across 35th Street from old Comiskey Park, which was demolished to make room for a parking lot that serves the venue. Old Comiskey's home plate location is represented by a marble plaque on the sidewalk next to Guaranteed Rate Field and the foul lines are painted in the parking lot. Also, the spectator ramp across 35th Street is designed in such a way (partly curved, partly straight but angling east-northeast) that it echoes the contour of the old first-base grandstand.