06 / 28
Start: 1:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm
Journey Stories tells how we and our ancestors came to America. From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell.
Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything - families and possessions - to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean.
This exhibition runs from May 30, 2009 - July 11, 2009, at the Engh Farm at 1730 North Main Street in Sycamore. | ||
06 / 29
Start: 5:00 pm
Discussion of "Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith," by Anne Lamott Literature & Medicine: Humanities at the Heart of Healthcare is a discussion-based program that brings hospital staff together monthly to reflect on the larger mission of medicine through facilitated conversations about literature. Start: 6:00 pm
End: 7:30 pm
This program is free and open to the public. Doors open at 5:00 PM. For more information, call 312-747-4050. There will be a booksigning immediately after the event with Dr. Gates' books Lincoln on Race and Slavery and In Search of Our Roots: How 19 Extraordinary African Americans Reclaimed Their Past available for sale.Henry Louis Gates Jr. is an acclaimed scholar, educator, and writer whose work has encouraged people from all walks of life to explore their unique personal stories and the impact of those stories on national history. He was the host of the acclaimed documentary Looking for Lincoln, author of the recent book, Lincoln on Race and Slavery, and serves as Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director at the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University. | ||
06 / 30
Start: 10:00 am
End: 5:00 pm
Exhibition of 42 original works of art on loan from the National Vietnam Veterans Arts Museum This exhibit runs from May 23, 2009 - July 11, 2009. Start: 10:00 am
End: 4:00 pm
Journey Stories tells how we and our ancestors came to America. From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell.
Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything - families and possessions - to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean.
This exhibition runs from May 30, 2009 - July 11, 2009, at the Engh Farm at 1730 North Main Street in Sycamore. Start: 10:00 am
End: 5:00 pm
Exhibition of objects carried by local veterans during their military service This exhibit runs from May 23, 2009 - July 11, 2009. Start: 12:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm
We live between fences. We may hardly notice them, but they are dominant features in our lives and in our history. Built of hedge, concrete, wood and metal, the fence skirts our properties and is central to the American landscape. We use them to enclose our houses and neighborhoods. They are decorative structures that are as much part of the landscape as trees and flowers. Industry and agriculture without fences would be difficult to imagine. Private ownership of land would be an abstract concept.
But fences are more than functional objects. They are powerful symbols. The way we define ourselves as individuals and as a nation becomes concrete in how we build fences. Through an examination of boundaries, place, and space, Between Fences will explore how neighbors and nations divide, protect, offend, and defend through the boundaries they build. This exhibit runs from June 14, 2009 - July 26, 2009 Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
We face a series of critical decisions about managing oil and water resources that have the potential to change our communities for better or for worse. What critical choices will we have to make about managing oil and water resources? Join us as we examine how our perceptions and values have shaped environmental policies and planning, the choices made in Chicago's early efforts to control its water needs, and the legacy that we want to leave for future generations. Writers from the Neighborhood Writing Alliance, publishers of the Journal of Ordinary Thought, will open the program reading their personal stories of how these large, systematic issues affect us as individuals and communities. | ||
07 / 1
Start: 1:30 pm
Asian Human Services AmeriCorps volunteers will discuss 'Fellowship' by Franz Kafka The Meaning of Service (MoS) is a reading and discussion program for Americorps volunteers featuring discussions that use short philosophical and literary texts on the nature of justice, service, and related themes. Meaning of Service presents participants with the opportunity to examine, refine, and regenerate the beliefs underlying their work. Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Four inter-related classes will focus on the urban culture of the Weimar Republic (1919-1933), a period in Germany of extraordinary political and economic turmoil as well as technological and cultural innovation. German artists and intellectuals working at this time confronted issues that are still important to our contemporary experience. Some of the issues we will address in these seminars include the effects of technology and urban environments on individuals and society, the fragmentation and anonymity as well as the freedom and autonomy of life in a metropolis, the longing for nature and unity, the proliferation of forms of mass culture (film, newspaper, radio, illustrated magazine), the role of art in modern life and everyday life in art, the shifting status of "high" and "low" culture, as well as the idea of modern culture as alienating and "decadent." | ||
07 / 2
Start: 8:30 am
PCC Westside AmeriCorps volunteers will discuss 'The Subjective Necessity of Social Settlements' by Jane Addams The Meaning of Service (MoS) is a reading and discussion program for Americorps volunteers featuring discussions that use short philosophical and literary texts on the nature of justice, service, and related themes. Meaning of Service presents participants with the opportunity to examine, refine, and regenerate the beliefs underlying their work. Start: 12:00 pm
The Sycamore History Museum will host a brown bag lunch with local author and editor of "Rural School Journeys: A Legacy of Learning," Marcia Wilson. This history of one-room schoolhouses in DeKalb County was published by the DeKalb County Historical and Genealogical Society.
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07 / 3
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07 / 4
Start: 10:00 am
End: 5:00 pm
Exhibition of objects carried by local veterans during their military service This exhibit runs from May 23, 2009 - July 11, 2009. Start: 10:00 am
End: 4:00 pm
Journey Stories tells how we and our ancestors came to America. From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell. Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything - families and possessions - to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean.
This exhibition runs from May 30, 2009 - July 11, 2009, at the Engh Farm at 1730 North Main Street in Sycamore. Start: 10:00 am
End: 5:00 pm
Exhibition of 42 original works of art on loan from the National Vietnam Veterans Arts Museum This exhibit runs from May 23, 2009 - July 11, 2009. Start: 12:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm
We live between fences. We may hardly notice them, but they are dominant features in our lives and in our history. Built of hedge, concrete, wood and metal, the fence skirts our properties and is central to the American landscape. We use them to enclose our houses and neighborhoods. They are decorative structures that are as much part of the landscape as trees and flowers. Industry and agriculture without fences would be difficult to imagine. Private ownership of land would be an abstract concept.
But fences are more than functional objects. They are powerful symbols. The way we define ourselves as individuals and as a nation becomes concrete in how we build fences. Through an examination of boundaries, place, and space, Between Fences will explore how neighbors and nations divide, protect, offend, and defend through the boundaries they build. This exhibit runs from June 14, 2009 - July 26, 2009 | ||
07 / 5
Start: 1:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm
Journey Stories tells how we and our ancestors came to America. From Native Americans to new American citizens and regardless of our ethnic or racial background, everyone has a story to tell.
Our history is filled with stories of people leaving behind everything - families and possessions - to reach a new life in another state, across the continent, or even across an ocean.
This exhibition runs from May 30, 2009 - July 11, 2009, at the Engh Farm at 1730 North Main Street in Sycamore. Start: 3:00 pm
Local historian and educator, Tom Oestreicher, will share from his research on the 105th Illinois Regiment during the US Civil War. The program will follow the regiment and will include the story of Henry Beard, a slave who joined the regiment and moved to Sycamore following the Civil War. Mr. Oestreicher is a high school history teacher, published author, and is active with the Sons of the Union Veterans. Admission is $5/person.
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