11 / 9
Start: 5:30 pm
End: 7:30 pm
Throughout all of these complex issues, questions emerge: Do we share common values about how these resources are managed in the region? Who controls access to these resources? What are the relationships between policy, access, and use? Where should broader, regional conversations about managing these resources be happening? And, how do we create an environment to discuss the ethical issues that emerge? Panelists: | ||
11 / 10
Start: 10:00 am
End: 2:00 pm
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 October 24 - December 6, 2009. Start: 4:30 pm
End: 7:00 pm
In the Fall of 2009, the Chicago Teen Museum will engage in partnership with the Chicago Children's Museum (CCM) to create a Teen Council made up of Chicago youth from various backbrounds and neighborhoods of Chicago. The Council will engage other area youth and museum professionals in order to advise the CCM on the design of 8-9 future exhibits. The Council will also continue to work with the CCM and an advisory board to comprise the driving force behind the nation's first teen museum. Start: 7:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Mark Pohlad This presentation describes the photographs of Abraham Lincoln as they appear in the history of photography. Lincoln was the first extensively photographed President, and the first for whom the media helped sway an election. The sixteenth President once described his most frequent photographer, Mathew Brady (1823-96), as "the man who put me in the White House." Through vivid, large-scale projected images, art historian Mark Pohlad - a specialist in photo history - will trace the images of Lincoln and his circle while describing the nature and challenges of photography in the mid-nineteenth century. | ||
11 / 11
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11 / 12
Start: 10:00 am
End: 12:00 pm
The Illinois Humanities Council (IHC) invites grant applicants to attend a free public Community Grant Application workshop. Any nonprofit organization or institution is eligible to apply to IHC for financial support of a public project in the humanities. IHC Program Officer Dimitra Tasiouras will field questions about guidelines for the Community Grants Program, as well as about grant support for various kinds of projects -- local and community history projects, oral history projects, documentary film projects, and reading/discussion programs, for example. Registration is required. When registering, please provide your name, the name of the organization you will be representing, and the organization's address and phone number. Start: 10:00 am
End: 12:00 pm
The Illinois Humanities Council (IHC) invites grant applicants to attend a free public Community Grant Application workshop. Any nonprofit organization or institution is eligible to apply to IHC for financial support of a public project in the humanities. IHC Program Officer Ryan Lewis will field questions about guidelines for the Community Grants Program, as well as about grant support for various kinds of projects -- local and community history projects, oral history projects, documentary film projects, and reading/discussion programs, for example. Registration is required. When registering, please provide your name, the name of the organization you will be representing, and the organization's address and phone number. Start: 1:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Penelope Bingham Nine out of ten Americans eat turkey on Thanksgiving, and most do so around a family table. Food and tradition are the heart and soul of this most-loved, most-observed holiday. Thanksgiving has become the origin myth of America and the expression of deeply held American cultural ideals. As it considers the evolution of Thanksgiving, from the "First Thanksgiving" in 1621 to the present day, this program invites the audience to think about what this holiday and its food traditions mean for American culture and identity. Start: 4:30 pm
End: 7:00 pm
In the Fall of 2009, the Chicago Teen Museum will engage in partnership with the Chicago Children's Museum (CCM) to create a Teen Council made up of Chicago youth from various backbrounds and neighborhoods of Chicago. The Council will engage other area youth and museum professionals in order to advise the CCM on the design of 8-9 future exhibits. The Council will also continue to work with the CCM and an advisory board to comprise the driving force behind the nation's first teen museum. Start: 6:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Simon Cordery The saying, "a hog can travel non-stop from coast to coast, but a person must change in Chicago," confirms the Windy City's status as the hub of the American railroad system. But Chicago is only one facet of the fascinating history of Illinois railroads. Simon Cordery, railway historian and historical advisor to the National Railroad Hall of Fame, explains the expansion of the railroad industry in the Land of Lincoln, demonstrates how the Prairie State fits into the pattern of national railroad development, and explores the national political significance of the history of railroads in Illinois. All aboard! Start: 6:30 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Warren Brown Mark Twain said "Inventors are the creators of the world-after God." This presentation is a first-person Chautauqua style program by Warren Brown as Mark Twain. You will journey on water, land, and air sharing insights from the "Diaries of Adam and Eve" to friendships with inventors and thoughts about Galileo and Newton. "I have found out there ain't no surer way to find out whether you like people or hate them than to travel with them."- Mark Twain. Start: 6:30 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Jane Ann Moore In 1836, pro-Slavery mobs attacked and destroyed the presses of the Alton Observer three times. The editor, Elijah Lovejoy, continued to publish the paper until November, when a fourth mob captured the press and murdered the co-founder of the Illinois State Antislavery Society. Elijah Lovejoy's martyrdom rejuvenated the national antislavery movement. In the words of his brother Owen, "I vowed on my knees before God never to forsake the cause for which his blood was sprinkled." In this presentation, Jane Ann Moore presents the story of Elijah and Owen Lovejoy and their tireless work through churches, newspapers, lecture tours, political parties, and other antislavery groups to establish equality for all people in the United States. Start: 7:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Heineman & Marcotte Bruno Bettleheim in The Uses of Enchantment, Jane Yolen in Touch Magic, and other acclaimed writers and psychologists have discussed the power of fright in children as a necessary and useful tool. Listening to narrow escapes and horrible demises in ghost stories and gothic tales strengthen human survival instincts. The imagination is primed to act in reality should these dangerous situations arise, thus justifying the enjoyment shared in hearing a good scary story. This program challenges the popular, modern versions of fairy tales by reinstating the original gothic tales long before the stories were edited in the Victorian era. For example, what happened after Sleeping Beauty is awakened by the Prince's kiss? Most people believe they lived happily ever after, but this was far from the truth or intent of the original tale. Find out more through this innovative program. Start: 7:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Ellie Carlson This was originally presented as a series of four weekly classes but can be produced as a single session. Elizabeth Carlson has researched cooking techniques, period appropriate ingredients, and recipes for four eras in American Homemaking history. She will present each session in costume. Recipes and ingredients reflect the time period, season of the year, and economic climate of the time. Changes in food preparation techniques, the enactment of food laws, and scientific discoveries regarding food safety are discussed. Participants make and consume the food for each session. Cookbooks are provided as take-away. Start: 7:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Lee Murdock
Weaving music with stories, Lee Murdock presents a compelling story of Irish immigrants in Illinois. As they came to America to build their new lives in a foreign land, they were also essential hands in building the canals, railroads, and towns that became Illinois and America. Both traditional ballads and modern historical songs are featured in this illuminating presentation. | ||
11 / 13
Start: 9:00 am
Part of the 20th Annual Literature Conference for Teachers and Lovers of Good Books A lecture by Alexandra Bennett, Associate Professor of English at Northern Illinois University. She brings professional acting experience to classes, summer Shakespeare, workshops for school teachers, and Elderhostel seminars, and in each of these settings she has developed a following of grateful, enthusiastic, and exhausted students. Start: 10:00 am
Part of the 20th Annual Literature Conference for Teachers and Lovers of Good Books A lecture by Don-John Dugas, an Associate Professor of English at Kent State University. His most recent book, Marketing the Bard: Reencountering Shakespeare and Print, 1660-1740, was the subject of a lively hour-long interview on National Public Radio. Start: 10:00 am
End: 2:00 pm
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 October 24 - December 6, 2009. Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm
“Modern man thinks he loses something—time—when he does not do things, quickly, yet he does not know what to do with the time he gains except to kill it.” - Erich Fromm As the holiday season approaches, along with it comes the frantic rush to knock so many items off our to-do-lists, buy so many gifts, attend so many parties, and send so many cards. Americans find themselves in a rush against time. But what if you slow down—a lot? Christine Louise Hohlbaum’s new book, The Power of Slow: 101 Ways to Save Time in Our 24/7 World, addresses our relationship with time and how we might gain more of it by de-accelerating. She writes: “Time defines who we are. It is a reference point upon which everything else is based. Unfortunately, our relationship with time is a one-way street. We need time; it does not need us. Time’s measurement is a construct we created to help us make sense of our world.” Time management, she writes, is contradictory. “How can you manage something as uncontrollable as time?” Start: 5:00 pm
Join us for the opening receptions and conversations for TH!NKArt’s latest exhibition, War & Peace. This exhibit features new paintings and works on paper by David Gista, Dave Sheehan, and Todd Narbey. In addition to the opening receptions and conversations, there will be a poetry reading by Emily Calvo and Stella Vinitchi Radulescu on Thursday. The exhibit runs through Thursday, December 31, 2009. | ||
11 / 14
Start: 8:00 am
End: 4:00 pm
A two-day program to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Cherry Mine Disaster of 1909. The program will include several events designed to educate audiences and maintain the memory of a mining disaster that killed 259 adult and child coal miners. Tours, exhibits, and a concert will be included in the days events. 8am-4pm Saturday 8am-2pm Sunday Start: 10:00 am
A Road Scholar Program by Beth Johnson Daniel H. Burnham was a gifted planner and architect who left a significant mark upon Chicago as creator of the 1909 Plan of Chicago. This year will mark the centennial year of the publication of his plan. Burnham was master planner for the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, where he coordinated the efforts of architects from across the country to turn the dream of the White City into a reality in record time. This presentation will explore Burnham's Plan of Chicago, his plan for the World's Fair, and his architectural achievements in the City of Chicago. Start: 10:00 am
End: 4:00 pm
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 October 24 - December 6, 2009. Start: 2:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by William Iseminger The remains of the most sophisticated prehistoric native civilization north of Mexico are preserved in Illinois, just 8 miles from modern-day St. Louis. This slide presentation features an overview of the Native American cultures leading up to the time of Cahokia, then a specific discussion of Cahokia's culture and primary features, such as Monks Mound, Mound 72, the Stockade Wall, and Woodhenge. The presentation will also cover the site's current facilities, exhibits and programs, and will include views of mounds, excavations, reconstructions, artifacts, maps, and artists' renderings of Cahokia Mounds. | ||
11 / 15
Start: 8:00 am
End: 2:00 pm
A two-day program to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Cherry Mine Disaster of 1909. The program will include several events designed to educate audiences and maintain the memory of a mining disaster that killed 259 adult and child coal miners. Tours, exhibits, and a concert will be included in the days events. 8am-4pm Saturday 8am-2pm Sunday Start: 1:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm
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 October 24 - December 6, 2009. Start: 2:00 pm
A Road Scholar Program by Penelope Bingham Richard Nixon craved cottage cheese with catsup, Ronald Reagan kept his jelly beans handy in the Oval Office, and George H. W. Bush famously refused broccoli. But what would our sixteenth President, Abraham Lincoln, eat? From cornmeal mush in a log cabin on the American Frontier to Charlotte Russe à la Parisienne at the White House, the food on Lincoln's table and the cookbooks of the period shed light on both Lincoln's story and that of the United States. This program invites the audience to celebrate Abraham Lincoln's Bicentennial with the recipe for his Favorite Cake, and to think about this era of unprecedented expansion and turmoil, which set in motion changes in America and to its foodways that continue into the present. Start: 5:00 pm
End: 6:30 pm
Harran Productions Foundation and Rockefeller Chapel present a tapestry of sound drawn from the rich liturgical and cultural traditions of Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. Performed by leading Chicago practitioners including Cantor Alberto Mizrahi, Amir Koushkani, the Salem Baptist Choir, and the Rockefeller Chapel Choir with University Organist Thomas Weisflog, this celebration of diverse sounds of faith will be introduced by journalist Bill Kurtis and filmed for a television broadcast special - Sounds of Faith - Chicago. | ||
11 / 16
Start: 6:00 pm
Discussion of "The Glass Castle: A Memoir," by Jeannette Walls 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
Join Chicago Public Radio as Interfaith Youth Core founder Eboo Patel sits down for a conversation with Krista Tippett, the host of public radio's Speaking of Faith. How does she answer the kinds of questions she asks of others? And how has her sense of the creative dialogue between belief and non-belief in modern life changed? Before the program, enjoy a pre-Thanksgiving reception and help poet/collage artist Krista Franklin lay the foundation for a mixed-media collage entitled “Speaking of Faith.” Guests will be provided a small piece of paper to write one word or phrase that articulates their definition of faith. These writings will serve as the base for a larger mixed-media collage that Franklin will create to commemorate the evening. | ||






