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Events for Feb. 13 - 27

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'Not About Nightingales'

Time: 7:30 p.m. weeknights and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday

Dates: Feb. 21 – 24

Place: Stevens Building, Northern Illinois University

Tickets: Adults $16, seniors $13, students $8

More information: www.niu.edu/theatre

Based on events that rocked the nation in the 1930s, this play recounts a hunger strike by prison inmates protesting their poor conditions, spoiled food and general mistreatment.


Caring for the Caregiver

Time: Noon – 1:30 p.m.

Date: Friday, Feb. 22

Place: The Cancer Center at Kishwaukee Community Hospital

More information: 815-748-2958 or www.kishhospital.org/programs

Souses, partners, relatives and caregivers of people living with cancer are invited to learn new insights, practical steps and effective coping strategies. Share your experiences and hear from others. Box lunch provided. Registration is required and closes three days before the program date.


High School A Cappella Midwest Semifinal

Time: 7 p.m.

Date: Saturday, Feb. 23

Place: DeKalb High School auditorium

Tickets: $10

More information: www.varsityvocals.com or 815-754-2120

Six Midwestern high school a cappella groups will compete for a spot at the Varsity Vocals International Championship of High School A Cappella finals in New York City. A DeKalb High School group will compete against groups from Niles, Port Washington, Wis., De Moines, Iowa and Madison, Wis.


Kishwaukee Symphony Orchestra

Time: 7:30 p.m.

Date: Saturday, Feb. 23

Place: Boutell Memorial Concert Hall, Northern Illinois University Music Building

Tickets: Adults $15, students and seniors $10, children younger than 12, $5

More information: 815-756-3728 or www.kishorchestra.org

High School junior Kelly Talim, the winner of the Arthur D. Montzka Young Artists Concerto Competition, will perform with the orchestra as a guest soloist on violin.


Stephanie Coontz Lectures

Time: 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Date: Tuesday, Feb. 26

Place: Northern Illinois University

Stephanie Coontz, an award-winning author and nationally recognized expert on gender, family and the media, will deliver an informal seminar, "How to Talk to the Media About Your Scholarship (and Get Them to Listen)," on how to get academic scholarship into the media and how to talk to the media about academic research, at 10 a.m. in the Capitol Room South of the Holmes Student Center. She will give a lecture, “50 Years After the Feminine Mystique: How Far Have We Come?” at 6 p.m. in Room 100 of the Visual Arts Building.


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