Chiu’s ‘Classical Smackdown’ pits Debussy vs. Prokofiev, Page 5 The Chautauquan Daily Seventy-Five Cents Chautauqua, New York The Official Newspaper of Chautauqua Institution | Wednesday, July 3, 2013 Volume CXXXVII, Issue 10 Mogahed analyzes divide between US, Muslim world john ford Staff Writer

Dalia Mogahed was pressed for time. Speaking to the Daily on a sat- ellite phone from , she hadn’t seen her husband in a couple of weeks. He was just landing at the airport and MOGAHED INSTRUMENT would be with her ries and soon. So time was limited. Russell tickles ivo That’s life these days for Mogahed, who r will present her provocative views on U.S. funny bones in popula engagement with the Islamic world at 10:45 r act est a.m. today in the Amphitheater. Her appear- political humo of j ance will highlight what certainly appears to be one of the most critical challenges facing “The Next Greatest Generation,” and she will join this week’s other speakers in a Friday morning Amphitheater panel to review the week and look ahead. Mogahed became widely known in the U.S. five years ago with the publication of her book Who Speaks for Islam? What a Billion Mus- C Had M. WEISMAN lims Really Think. Well, what do they really Staff Writer think? Mogahed laughs, easy and relaxed. “That title was designed to draw readers to omedian Mark Russell the subject,” she said. “I started at the bottom and worked “When you are talking about so many peo- will be dropping the my way down,” Russell said. ple, dispersed from Malaysia to Morocco and C“F-bomb” during his The political commentator laughed beyond to the corners of the world, no gener- 8:15 p.m. performance tonight when he considered the rich tradition alization can apply,” she said. “But by using in the Amphitheater. of political satire in the . scientific research and the resources of the “Mark Twain made stuff up” as a re- Gallup poll organization where I worked at “Filibuster.” Chautauquans porter in Las Vegas, he said. It was so the time, we found trends and realities which That is about as dirty as it gets for have the energy of boring, Twain had to invent the news. were then and are now significant.” the political satirist, who came out of Of course, he “was such a good writer 20-year-olds. If I … nobody cared.” See MOGAHED, Page 4 retirement last year after learning of can appeal to an Rep. Kevin Yoder’s decision to go skin- “I have 535 writers,” Russell often ny-dipping in the Sea of Galilee. audience like that, says. “100 in the Senate and 435 in the When asked if that event had actu- that’s wonderful. House of Representatives.” He was quick to contrast Twain’s ally taken place (it did), Russell threw They keep up falsehoods with the mess of inaccurate Orenstein grounds up his arms like the boy who cried with you.” content lurking on the Internet. wolf and said, “That’s my curse! I Today, “you have a million political make stuff up.” — MARK RUSSELL humorists. They’re called bloggers,” progressivism in Long before “Weekend Update” on Russell said. “Saturday Night Live” and “The Daily Russell made his Chautauqua debut Show with Jon Stewart,” Mark Russell in 1979, when former Institution President Bob Hesse Jewish tradition performed regularly in the heart of Capitol Hill. expanded programming beyond the traditional fare. Like the acts that followed, he borrowed headlines nikki lanka for his very own brand of “fake news.” See RUSSELL, Page 4 Staff Writer

Rabbi Debra Orenstein could boast of her impres- sive resume. She’s supported progres- sive movements such as LGBT rights and is an alumna of the first entering Emmy Fox | Daily File Photo Provided photo ABBY FISHER | Daily File Photo class at the Jew- Above left and right, political satirist and pianist Mark Russell engages the audience during his most recent two appearances on Chautauqua’s Amphitheater stage, on July 14, 2010, and July 2, 2008. ish Theological ORENSTEIN Seminary to include women. But when ap- proaching Judaism in the 21st century, Oren- stein wants to go back to the basics. “In a sense, my lecture is very radical,” she said. “And in a sense, it could have been given 500 years ago.” Orenstein, the spiritual leader of Congre- gation B’nai Israel in Emerson, N.J., will speak ‘Ivan’ teaches Young Readers about animals, habitats at 2 p.m. today in the Hall of Philosophy about the promise and limits of tradition and kelly tunney at 4:15 p.m. today in the Hall of to the zoo, she implores Ivan to the promise and limits of change. She sees it Staff Writer Christ’s Campbell Room. think about his real home. With all starting with a return to the essential val- Written as a diary, the book her enthusiasm, Ivan attempts a ues of the Hebrew Bible. What happens when a gorilla describes Ivan’s struggle to re- plan to restore Ruby to a more “Although society changes a lot over time, assumes responsibility for a baby member his life outside of the natural environment. basic humanity and human needs don’t elephant? In Katherine Apple- zoo. He has been there for 27 Representatives from the Erie change a lot,” she said. gate’s The One and Only Ivan, Ivan years and can barely recall his Zoo will attend the discussion to An increased reliance on technology has the gorilla treats Ruby, a baby el- natural habitat. All he knows is present a program called “Home created a constant itch for interactivity and ephant, like a younger sibling. the small cage he lives in, the ani- Sweet Home.” Employees will encourages constant productivity. The Chautauqua Literary and mals he lives with and the people discuss ecosystems, biomes and Scientific Circle Young Readers who take care of him. habitats with the readers and See orenstein, Page 4 will discuss Applegate’s book But when Ruby is brought how they fit together.

Visual Arts community RELIGION Lecture

Keeping faith Modern relevant to Renaissance A topical young people Saving Africa’s man BTG history Bishop Sutton elephants Hauth keeps Daily reporters delivers week’s Kahumbu lectures School of Art combine efforts opening Tuesday on shipshape on book Interfaith Lecture conservation Page 2 Page 4 Page 7 Page 11

High 79° Low 70° High 76° Low 68° High 75° Low 69° Today’s Weather Rain: 40% thursday Rain: 30% friday Rain: 30% Sunset: 8:58 p.m. Sunrise: 5:47 a.m. Sunset: 8:57 p.m. Sunrise: 5:48 a.m. Sunset: 8:57 p.m.

Join the Daily on Instagram at @chqdaily for upcoming story previews and a behind-the-scenes look at our 2013 staff learning their way around the grounds. www.chqdaily.com Page 2 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 News Modern Renaissance man Hauth Briefly keeps School of Art shipshape news from around the grounds paige cooperstein The Briefly column appears on Page 2 daily and is intended to Staff Writer provide space for announcements from Institution-related organi- zations. If a meeting or activity is featured that day in a story, it Paul Hauth is the guy you should not be repeated in Briefly. Submit information to Gavin call when you need a wasp’s Higbie in the Daily’s editorial office. Please provide name of orga- nest removed from the cor- nization, time and place of meeting and one contact person’s name ner of the drawing studio. with phone number. Deadline is 5 p.m. four days before publication. He’s also the guy you call when you want to learn your The Chautauqua Prize Dinner way around the welding pad The Athenaeum Hotel will host The Chautauqua Prize out back. Dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 9. The dinner is a five-course, Hauth, who has worked farm-to-table dinner inspired by the 2013 Chautauqua as the general assistant at the Prize winner, Short Night of the Shadow Catcher by Timothy School of Art since 2007, also Egan. The prize will be presented during the dinner. Call spends Tuesday and Friday the hotel (1-800-821-1881 or 716-357-4444) for reservations. evenings in the back of the Price is $109 per meal, or $129 per meal with wine pair- Hultquist Center; he mans ings. Tickets must be purchased by Saturday, July 6. the audio visual equipment the Visual Arts at Chautau- CLSC news qua Institution uses to put • CLSC Class of 2013 holds a meeting from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. on its Visual Arts Lecture Se- today at Alumni Hall to make plans for Aug. 7 graduation. ries. Hauth jokes he likes his • CLSC Class of 2003 will begin its 10-year reunion by A/V duties best because it’s meeting for a Brown Bag at noon today at Alumni Hall. one of the few times he gets • CLSC Class of 2006 organizational meeting will be held to sit in one place for 45 min- from 4 to 5 p.m. Sunday, July 7, at the Alumni Hall Garden utes at a time. Katie Mclean | Staff Photographer Room. Please enter through the rear door. For questions “The idea of [Hauth] work- or more information, please contact Sandi Stupiansky at ing in any one room is laugh- Paul Hauth has been the general assistant for the School of Art since 2007. His jobs include giving 269-2003. able,” said Brian Giniewski, a safety demos, running errands and maintaining equipment. He also produces his own artwork such co-coordinator of the school’s as jewelry and sculpture. Annual Women’s Tennis Round Robin/Luncheon ceramics program. “He’s like myself as very organized ter’s in metalsmithing from something like 10 tables and The Annual Women’s Tennis Round Robin/Luncheon is a vapor. He gets here in the morning and just dissemi- and disciplined,” Hauth Cranbrook Academy of Art. 100 chairs in there. He puts from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. today at the Chautauqua Tennis said, “but I’m a big believer He often makes jewelry by his heart and soul into what Center. Sign up at the tennis center or call 716-357-6276. nates through the campus.” Hauth describes his work in chaos theory — and this heating up metal and twist- he’s doing.” ‘Who Really Wrote as Will Shakespeare?’ as a reactionary kind of job. place can be very chaotic.” ing it into interesting shapes. Hauth has a great sense Around the School of Art, He likes working with metal of humor about his job. He Ron Song Destro, a Shakespeare producer and award-win- He carries a black spiral notebook in his back pocket students and faculty often for its chameleon-like quali- spends the off-season teach- ning playwright, will examine “Who Really Wrote as Will see Hauth running at full ties; for example, metal can ing sculpture and three- Shakespeare? “ at 2 p.m. today at Smith Memorial Library. and creates a list every oth- er day of things that need tilt from task to task. He’s look very light or very heavy. dimensional design at Mott Beatles seminar to be taken care of around developed an unofficial uni- As part of his job with the Community College in Flint, form: fraying jean shorts, a School of Art, Hauth has ac- Mich. Although the general Greg and Jeff Miller and Tim Renjilian will be hosting the the school: everything from welding a new handle to the cut-off T-shirt with sayings cess to a studio space, where assistant position is nor- last two days of a four-day Beatles seminar today and Fri- he sneaks away to craft met- miter saw in the woodshop such as “Chautauqua Black mally filled by a young guy day from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Anybody interested in the classes al jewelry and some sculp- to hanging VACI banners Out” or “School of Art 100th straight out of grad school, can sign up for the whole seminar or for individual classes ture. (Since the early days around the grounds. New Anniversary” on them and a Hauth turned 40 this year. through the Chautauqua Foundation, by phone at 716-357- of his career, he said, he has tasks are always popping brown leather rancher’s hat. “I was already a bit older 6220, by email at [email protected] or in person at the thought of jewelry pieces as up for the general assistant, Hauth said he would never coming in,” Hauth said. “I Colonnade. miniature sculptures.) He such as emergency errands be caught without his knife, thought, ‘You know, maybe tries to log at least 10 hours Chautauqua Women’s Club news to The Home Depot in Lake- a notebook or a pen. three or four years is going to a week of studio time, but it be the end.’ But Lois [Jubeck] wood, N.Y. Hauth said he has Hauth earned his Bachelor • French and Spanish circles will meet on the Clubhouse depends how hectic things and Don [Kimes, VACI’s ar- to be ready to roll with what- of Fine Arts in jewelry-mak- porch on Wednesdays at 1:15 p.m. for informal conversa- become at the school. tistic director] said, ‘No, no, ever happens. ing from Buffalo State Uni- tion. Other circles meet on request. “There are plenty of come back please.’ ” “I would like to think of versity, followed by his mas- • The Contemporary Issues Dialogues will be held at 3:30 things I could leave off to an- Nathan Trevino, one of the p.m. today at the Women’s Clubhouse. This week’s pre- other time,” Hauth said, “but galleries’ interns, said it’s the senter is Dalia Mogahed, president and CEO of Mogahed I kind of like the idea of, ‘Oh, little things that make Hauth Consulting, a Washington, D.C.-based executive coaching that’ll only take me a few such a great guy to have and consulting firm specializing in Muslim societies and minutes.’ And then it’s done. around. The Strohl and Fowl- the . Admission is on a first-come basis. I’m as much to blame for my er-Kellogg art centers have de- • The Women’s Club is accepting donations of household schedule as anything else. veloped an unofficial system: goods, décor items, linens, adult and children’s clothing But I love it. I love the work.” “You need help, I’ll help you. I and accessories in good condition, toys and books. Do- Last week he had to think need help, you help me.” nations may be dropped off behind the Colonnade or by on his feet to make sure the It has become a routine for calling the Women’s Club at 716-753-7846 to schedule an annual “Sponsor an Art Stu- Trevino, Hauth and Giniews- appointment. The deadline is Friday. dent” picnic would go off ki to wake up early the week without a hitch. Lois Jubeck, before students arrive and Artists at the Market VACI’s managing director, work together on the initial Artists at the Market is open from 1 to 4 p.m. Wednes- and Hauth usually set up setup of the school and gal- days and Thursdays at the Farmers Market. Artists and the tables and chairs out- leries. vendors bring a variety of unique items. Artists change side, but the forecast called Trevino, who studies stu- daily, so visit often. for rain all day. dio art and human computer “He knew come five interaction at Carnegie Mel- Everett Jewish Life Center at Chautauqua news o’clock we had to be ready to lon University, wants to cre- • The Jewish Film Festival presents “Jews and Baseball” go,” Jubeck said. “He took it ate a “Life of Paul” video this at 3:30 p.m. today at the Everett House, 36 Massey. Free upon himself to clean out a summer. With a GoPro cam- admission. studio and managed to get era attached to the back of • Deb Pines, an award-winning headline writer for The Hauth’s signature hat or his New York Post, will discuss her debut mystery novel, In the golf cart, Trevino wants to Shade of Death: A Chautauqua Murder Mystery at 12:15 p.m. create a time lapse composi- Thursday at a Brown Bag at the EJLCC. tion of all the things Hauth does in a day. CLSC Alumni Association news “I would put in on the • At 12:15 p.m. today on the Alumni Hall porch, Jean Bad- Internet,” Trevino said, “so ger will review Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers. everyone can see: This is • Join CLSC members at 6:45 p.m. tonight in the Hall of what this man does, and we Christ to hear Jeanne Wiebenga discuss “Namibia: A Pho- couldn’t do anything with- to Journey to Africa’s Last Wild Place.” out him.” Benefit trunk show Sandy D’Andrade’s 11th Annual Trunk Show and Sale, which benefits Chautauqua Opera’s Young Artist pro- gram, will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the Main Gate Welcome Center. Bring your gate pass. Wednesday, July 3, 2013 The Chautauquan Daily Page 3 News An unlikely friendship, and preparing for Chautauqua

met Judy Carter, the comedian, at a women’s leader- appearance becomes a barrier rather than a bridge.” ship conference in Omaha, Neb., last spring, where She said I needed to be more exposed — emotionally, that we were both speakers. She was there to be funny, is — and let people see who I really was. I and I was there to be serious. I liked Judy immedi- But I’m a serious analyst. The idea of being funny, or get- ately because she pulled no punches. ting personal was terrifying. What if instead of connecting, “I’m excited to hear your talk,” she declared almost immediately after I introduced myself. “I’ve never heard a I alienate? What if I tell a joke and no one laughs? Muslim woman speak in public before. I guess I associate “Don’t worry,” Judy comforted me, “it’s not like it’ll be Muslim women with being silent and submissive.” the first time they see a Muslim bomb.” Come on, Judy, tell me how you really feel. And so our unlikely friendship developed. Judy offered After we’d gotten that small talk out of the way, she told From Today’s Lecturer to coach me on my big upcoming Chautauqua talk where, me that some of her relatives in New York cover like me. I Guest Column by Dalia Mogahed for the first time, I’d integrate humor and stories into my asked what her background was. facts and figures. She said, “Come on, I’m a comedian, I’m from New York, We worked together to prepare. As I traveled in the what do you think? I’m Jewish.” Dalia Mogahed is chairman and CEO of Mogahed Consulting. She is former executive director of the Gallup Center for Muslim This was about three minutes into our first conversa- Middle East over the past six weeks I got on Skype calls, Studies and co-author of Who Speaks for Islam? What a tion ever, as I stood with my sparkling water and she with from Cairo, Doha and Marrakech, to talk to Judy in L.A. We Billion Muslims Really Think. President shared Google documents and sent each other ideas and her cocktail, at a reception the conference was holding for appointed Mogahed in 2009 as a member of his Faith-based and pictures of what were doing and thinking. the speakers. She then casually veered into another benign Neighborhood Partnerships Advisory Council. topic of polite chitchat, “Can a Muslim be gay?” We needed one more call, which meant Judy had to work And so went my first encounter with Judy Carter. The had some feedback for me. I had bought her book, The Mes- on her vacation with her partner, Gina, in Maui. next day I delivered my talk to an auditorium of 2,000 sage of You, about speaking and telling your story. She was a “Do Muslims do guilt like Jews?” she inquired. women leaders. It went OK, or so I thought. I basically speech and comedy coach. I emailed her to find out what I “Yes, we’re great at guilt,” I assured her. “I feel absolutely spoke in public for a living and had even given a TED Talk, horrible you have to do this call on your vacation.“ a fulfillment of a lifelong dream, so I was pretty confident in had done wrong. my ability. Yet, I had to admit that day I just didn’t feel I had She graciously offered me a complimentary coaching “Well, as long as you feel guilty, it’s OK.” truly connected with the audience. session. She called me from the beach, “Don’t wienie out on me Judy thought I could do better. She caught me as I was Judy was clear: “You need to acknowledge what the and not do the jokes.” coming off stage and on my way to the airport and said she audience is thinking when they see you. If you don’t, your “Don’t worry, Judy. I’ll do them all.” Haiti sanitation activist Pomerantz to present Thursday for Women’s Club maggie livingstone Women’s Club Chautauqua waste that can be recycled Staff Writer Speaks series. and reused in agriculture Pomerantz identified to make the land more fer- While traveling to Haiti sanitation as the key to solv- tile,” she said. “Trying to re- in 2006 as part of a medical ing many of Haiti’s medical plenish the soil is one of the mission, Gigi Pomerantz wit- woes. After returning home other things Youthaiti does, nessed the devastating ef- to Milwaukee, she assessed because that will tie into im- fects of disease on rural Hai- the feasible changes she proving nutrition.” tian communities. Though could make. One problem Pomerantz decided to she treated more than 1,000 she noticed was the cleanli- have young Haitians help patients for worms and mal- ness of toilets. Because Haiti to implement her ideas. She nutrition during her one- is an island nation, toilet fa- recruited community lead- week stay, her first instinct, cilities cannot be built too ers between the ages of 18 as a nurse practitioner, was close to the coastline; there is to 30 to carry out her vision prevention. a risk of hitting water during of new sanitation facilities “We provided a great ser- digging. Also, most toilets, and to administer valuable vice, but all of the problems Pomerantz observed, had nutritional and hygienic pro- still remained,” she said. been constructed in close gramming to local schools. “Sanitation was one of the proximity to water sources, “Our program is unique things that people in the vil- causing sewage leakage into lage were asking about.” rivers and other supposedly because all of our projects Pomerantz brought home sanitary sources. are led by young Haitians,” a renewed purpose and in “I started to explore more she said. “They were educat- 2008 launched Youthaiti, a ecological methods to ad- ed in Haiti, are literate and nonprofit organization that dress these issues,” she said. want to see change in their raises money to build ecolog- Pomerantz built her first communities.” BTG ical sanitation facilities for Haitian toilet facility in May Pomerantz’s current fun- Haitian villages. The group 2007 and has since construct- draising campaign will be Bat Chat also provides hygiene edu- ed 17 public toilets and 150 funneled into the completion cation programs to Haitian household units. She also of a center for sustainable de- GREG FUNKA | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER schools and communities. works with Haitian farmers velopment, which will serve Naturalist Caroline Van Kirk Pomerantz will discuss to efficiently create fertile an immediate population of Bissell will present a Bird, Tree the organization at 9:15 a.m. land. 22,000 Haitians and will also & Garden Club-sponsored Thursday in the Women’s “There’s a lot of nutrients be used as Youthaiti head- Bat Chat at 4:15 p.m. today in Clubhouse as part of the in what people consider quarters. Smith Wilkes Hall.

» on the grounds Questions?

A group of Chautauquans has volunteered to help answer questions from visitors to the Institution and will be available at different locations around the grounds on weekends and at the beginning of the week. “Drive through” stations at the two Main Gate entrances 2–5 p.m. Saturdays will be set up to assist those searching for their on-grounds accommodations. Assistance is available from volunteers, wearing green aprons, stationed around Bestor Plaza from 12 to 4 p.m. Sundays and 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. and 12 to 2 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays.

Book Signing Wednesday, July 3 Rev. Otis Moss III will sign his book Preach at the Author’s Alcove at 12:15 p.m. Rabbi Debra Orenstein will sign her book Lifecycles at the Hall of Missions fol- lowing her 2 p.m. lecture Thursday, July 4 Chris Hayes will sign his book Twilight of the Elites at Author’s Alcove at 1:15 p.m. Hugh Martin will sign his book The Stick Soldiers at the Alumni Hall following his 3:30 p.m. CLSC program. Friday, July 5 Shane Claiborne will sign his book The Irresistable Revo- lution at the Hall of Missions following his 2 p.m. lecture. Dan Ariely will sign his book The Honest Truth About Dishonesty in the Hall of Phi- losophy following his 4 p.m. lecture. Page 4 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 News

INTERFAITH tion to the ancient texts of FROM PAGE 1 the Hebrew Bible. Much of Reporters combine efforts, produce topical BTG history her focus as a rabbi centers on applying those tradi- lori humphreys short subchapters. This for- The Sabbath mental- tions to everyday life. Staff Writer mat allowed and perhaps de- ity, dedicating one day each “I don’t think [those tra- manded the snappy, conver- week to rest, is one of many ditions] can go away,” she Usually it’s Chautauquan old traditions forgotten in sational writing style, which said. “I just don’t want peo- Daily reporters Mary Lee makes the history an engag- today’s fast-paced world that ple to miss out.” Talbot and Beverly Hazen ing read. That also allowed Orenstein hopes to recall. Orenstein plans to fight who do the interviewing. On for the inclusion of an eclec- “Rest is a value in and back by returning to tradi- a warm June morning, the tic collection of graphics: of itself,” she said. “That in tional Jewish teachings. She tables — or in this instance, photos, illustrations, letters many ways is still as radical wants people of her faith the table — were turned. and poems which punctuate an idea today as it was when to understand their impor- They drew up chairs around it was first introduced.” tance as individuals and the round table on the Logan the prose, add visual interest She fears how communi- appreciate their history. Hall porch for an interview and capture what Talbot de- ties may change when mo- Not that she wants the and a description of their scribes as “the fun activities” rality is no longer based on “religion of dear old Dad” experiences authoring and of the BTG. the Bible or its long history that includes animal sacri- BRIAN SMITH | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Chautauquan Norman editing 100 Years of Beauty: A Mary Lee Talbot, writer of 100 Years of Beauty, stands with Beverly of teachings. fice or misogyny. History of the Chautauqua Bird, Karp, the BTG’s History Book “When that chain of “I don’t want that kind Hazen, the book’s editor, outside Smith Wilkes Hall. The book Tree and Garden Club, which chronicles the history of Chautauqua’s Bird, Tree & Garden Club, Project chair and president transmission gets frayed of rigidity, or that sense celebrates the 100th anniver- from 2008 to 2012, is pleased enough, I’m not convinced which is celebrating its centennial during the 2013 Season. that I can only do exactly sary of the BTG. with the finished product. that people are still going what was done before me,” Talbot and Hazen worked “I was afraid at the be- to have an agreement about Orenstein said. “But I do martins was published in mately had to make the fi- together on the book, Tal- ginning the book might be what it means to be a good also want to make sure that the Spring 2011 issue of Pur- nal decisions on the scope bot doing the writing and chronological and go from person,” Orenstein said. we go back and look at the ple Martin magazine. She has and style of the book. What Hazen, the editing. The two Since early in her life, amazing legacy that our edited doctoral dissertations would be the organizing president to president,” Karp have been Daily colleagues Orenstein has felt a connec- ancestors have left us.” and uses her communica- idea? What to include, what said. “It was Mary Lee’s ge- for the past three years, and tions and English degree to to exclude? What was the nius to organize it topically.” their combined knowledge uncover grammatical and balance between informing Current BTG President can appeal to an audience of the Bird, Tree & Garden spelling errors that are easy and entertaining? Margery Buxbaum said that RUSSELL Club and the Institution FROM PAGE 1 like that, that’s wonderful. to overlook. After two years of re- the book is beautiful, befit- strengthened the synergy … They keep up with you.” “I enjoy the tediousness,” search, Talbot found the an- ting its title. which develops between au- Hazen said. “I also enjoy just swers. “It’s inspiring to learn that Until Russell’s arrival, co- Russell also said that thor and editor. Talbot, an working at making the writ- “As I was sorting through over the last 100 years BTG medians had been seldom performing in the Amp is ordained Presbyterian min- ing more tight and making it the marvelous, voluminous boards and members have called upon to perform here. “just a total exhilaration. It ister, covers morning wor- records and minutes, I be- flow.” never shied away from speak- He quickly fell in love can be very intimate. The ship for the Daily. A lifelong Talbot is appreciative of gan to identify topics that ing truth to power, never shied with his newfound sum- sound system is enough to Chautauquan, she has writ- Hazen’s contributions. In the emerged,” she said. “A topi- mer audience, which seems make or break you.” ten magazine and journal ar- book’s acknowledgements cal history would show the away from raising environ- a perfect fit for his well-in- The comedian, who ticles and edited Chautauqua: she wrote, “Beverly took on breadth of the work of the mental issues,” she said. 100 Years of Beauty formed wit. once appeared annually on The Streets Where You Live the job of editing a very scat- BTG better than a chrono- is “There are people who available at the Chautau- NBC’s “Meet the Press” and and The Banner Encyclopedia. tered bunch of words and logical history.” are vegetating on a beach qua Bookstore. It will also performed on PBS more Hazen is beginning her made these words into a man- Choosing a topical history somewhere or on a yacht ninth season covering the be available at the 12:15 p.m. than 100 times between uscript and pushed the man- as the book’s organizing idea or on a golf course or just BTG for the Daily. Her 2010 uscript toward being a book.” allowed Talbot to divide the BTG Brown Bag lecture Tues- 1975 and 2004, called Chau- sitting at home watching Daily article about purple It was Talbot who ulti- history into 13 chapters with days at Smith Wilkes Hall. soap operas, and [Chautau- tauqua Lake “a wonderful quans] have the energy of place to spend the twilight 20-year-olds,” he said. “If I of a mediocre career.” MOGAHED Our Gallup polling revealed just settling in to our grad- ry Council’s working group FROM PAGE 1 that exactly the same pro- uate school duplex. The on countering violent ex- portion — 82 percent — of events swirling around the tremism; and contributed to Americans and Egyptians U.S. and the world were just the composition of President Mogahed and her associ- favored the protesters.” so shocking, so traumatic. Obama’s seminal speech to ates tried to “democratize Originally from , We were scared about the the Arab world in Cairo. the debate” between the Mogahed immigrated to the American public reaction, Through the wars and U.S. and the Muslim world. U.S. with her family when how it would affect the the jihadists and the terror They wanted to “move she was 4 years old. She suc- world, how it would affect and the hatred, Mogahed away from the vocal ex- ceeded in America, earning us as Muslims.” said she’s “still an optimist” tremes on both sides” and a bachelor’s degree in chemi- It was an unsettling expe- about relations between the to look more objectively at cal engineering and working rience, Mogahed said. Her U.S. and the Muslim world. the divide between Western as a market researcher with family did not know wheth- “Muslims hate and fear and Islamic civilizations. Proctor and Gamble. Like er or not they should go to U.S. foreign policy,” she The Chautauquan Daily “The things Muslims many rising business execu- Friday prayers; some people said, “but they really like Celebrating 137 Years of Continuous Publication most admire about America, tives, she paused after a few were saying mosques would the American people, whom www.chqdaily.com especially things like tech- years to pick up an MBA be targeted. But they decided they feel they know through nology and democracy, we from the University of Pitts- to go anyway and were sur- the movies and television. It Editorial Staff found to be exactly the same burgh. She was on her way to prised by what they found. was once said that ‘policy Matt Ewalt Editor things Americans them- living the American dream. “Fully half of the con- demonizes, but art human- Jordan Steves Managing Editor selves felt best about their But along the way, 9/11 gregation that day were not izes.’ I absolutely believe Gavin Higbie Office Manager Anthony Dominic Copy Editor country,” Mogahed said. happened. Muslims, they were other that is true.” Victoria Wolk Copy Editor “In early 2011, for example, “On exactly September Americans who came to When she spoke to the Josh Austin Theater, Family Entertainment Series protests in Egypt against 12, 2001,” Mogahed recalled, show their solidarity and Daily, Mogahed was in Cai- Kelsey Burritt Literary arts George Cooper Archives the regime of former presi- “my husband, young son support,” Mogahed said. “I ro anticipating quite a bit Paige Cooperstein Visual arts, bookstore, library dent Mubarak were making and I were moving from am still amazed at what we of excitement around the John Ford Features headlines around the world. Cincinnati to Pittsburgh, witnessed nearly 12 years upcoming June 30 anniver- Devlin Geroski Development, special afternoon programs ago. It showed me the pow- sary of Egyptian President Mark Haymond Recreation, Sports Club, Boys’ and Girls’ Club Beverly Hazen Bird, Tree & Garden Club THE ATHENAEUM HOTEL er of communication and Morsi’s inauguration. Rec- Lori Humphreys Features dialogue to bring people ognizing Egypt’s endur- Nikki Lanka Religion: Interfaith Lecture previews, together.” ing status as Middle East sacred Song Services, choir, organs Maggie Livingstone Chautauqua Women’s Club, During graduate school, bellwether, Mogahed saw Contemporary Issues Forum Mogahed became involved silver linings in the clouds Natalie Mayan Dance, Institution administration, board of in outreach efforts at the Is- of Morsi’s plummeting ap- trustees, property owners association lamic Center of Pittsburgh proval ratings. Kaitrin McCoy Symphony, Logan Chamber Music Series, Pier Club and has been a part of that “He is the first modern Jess Miller Morning lectures cause ever since. She has civilian president of Egypt, Mary Lee Talbot Religion: Morning Worship served as an adviser to Presi- and the publicity around Kelly Tunney school of Music, Young Readers dent Barack Obama in the his lower ratings show how Meg Viehe Interfaith News Stay Fredo Villaseñor Religion: Interfaith Lecture Series, Mystic White House Office of Faith- things are looking better in Heart, Abrahamic Program for Young Adults Based and Neighborhood terms of democracy in the 2013 Ernest Cawcroft Journalism Fellow Partnerships; testified before country,” Mogahed said. Chad M. Weisman Opera, Children’s School Greg Funka Features Photographer the Senate Foreign Relations The audience in the Amp Benjamin Hoste Photographer Committee; advised the should get a first-hand up- Katie McLean Photographer Homeland Security Adviso- date this morning. Roxana Pop Photographer Brian Smith Photographer Don’t let your P CRodU TION STAFF

Raymond Downey Production Manager Katherine Armstrong Design Editor Chautauqua Kelsey Bell Design Editor Sean Philip Cotter Web Editor Mikaela Longo Design Editor Andrew E. Mitchell Multimedia Editor experience end Amanda Tuthill Design Editor BUS INESS OFFICE this week! Stacy Hathaway Advertising Manager Ryan Spink Advertising Assistant Mac McShane Business Office Manager Greg Delahoy Circulation Manager Book an Bed and Breakfast Tammy Shaffer Business Office Associate all-inclusive Bed Package includes: and Breakfast Package • Lodging at the Business telephone 716-357-6235 Athenaeum Hotel Advertising telephone 716-357-6206 for Weeks Eight and Circulation telephone 716-357-6235 • Parking and Fax number 716-357-9694 Nine this summer. gate passes Editorial telephone 716-357-6205 or 357-6330 Email address [email protected] • Breakfast for two

Published by Chautauqua Institution, P.O. Box 1095, Chautauqua, N.Y. 14722, daily, Monday through Saturday, for a period of nine weeks, June 22 through August 24, 2013. The Institution is a not-for-profit organization, Available incorporated and chartered under the laws of the state of New York. $ 349 Entered at periodical rate, July 11, 1907, at the post office at Chautauqua, N.Y., per couple/ August 11–24 under the act of 1870: ISSN 0746-0414. per night minimum of two nights 55 issues; home delivery by carrier, $46.50; mail, $65. Postal regulations require that mail subscriptions be paid in advance. * Offer based on availability. Chautauqua Institution is a non-profit organization, dependent upon your gifts to fulfill its mission. Gate tickets and other revenue cover only a portion of the cost of your Chautauqua experience. For availability and reservations, visit Athenaeum-Hotel.com or call 800.821.1881 Wednesday, July 3, 2013 The Chautauquan Daily Page 5 The Arts Waterman helps CTC actors learn how to speak, all over again josh austin dialect. ents and his grandparents follow the information and For the professor, speech are not used to using lan- Staff Writer And with more than 300 because they had all had hear the information?” she and voice training was not guage. I’ll go to the mov- Southern dialects, making Memphis accents. She also said. “Flow is a big thing. a career she was planning to ies and it will be blaring, Don’t do an imperson- sure that each actor is speak- encouraged them to watch We understand groups of fall into. but I can’t understand what ation in front of Wendy Wa- ing with the correct accent Rue McClanahan from “The syllables a lot easier than “It was something that people are saying and it’s be- terman. Or if you do, make takes a lot of research. Golden Girls” and to listen understanding little pieces. I knew, with my singing cause there’s nothing mov- sure it’s a dead ringer. “The hardest part for this to Morgan Freeman because So that’s my job, to get peo- background and my work ing. There’s no definition Waterman, the voice and show is not feeling like ev- he has an “elegant Memphis ple to do that.” in school, that I was good to words, they’re not being speech coach for Chautau- erybody’s all over the place,” accent.” She said that Tennessee with text and I was good used.” qua Theater Company’s Cat she said. “But in fact, there “That’s one of the advan- Williams often drops clues with voice,” Waterman said. The Kennedy family’s on a Hot Tin Roof, can tell are very different back- tages of our computer age — and repeats a number of “I figured it was something Massachusetts accent was when someone’s caricature grounds up there and differ- that you can search around words that are important I could do in between jobs. among the most challenging is a bit off. ent cities. There are people and find interviews of peo- to the play. She tracks those ‘Let me see if I like this, let character voices that Water- “I find it funny,” she said. from Memphis, [Tenn.], there ple from that location,” she clues and makes certain the me see if I like teaching.’ ” man has taught to actors. “My ear is pretty good … are people from Nashville said. audience is able to hear and Waterman can easily “To do the Kennedy men sometimes when people [Tenn.], and there are people Waterman said that good understand the words. point out an incorrect dialect was very hard because they think they are doing some- who we don’t know their ex- speech work goes unnoticed, Although Waterman or when an actor isn’t speak- are men, and men and wom- one, I’m like, ‘No, you’re act origin.” usually wrapped into the il- doesn’t consider herself a ing properly. Oftentimes, she en’s timbres are so very dif- not.’ ” When it came to prep- lusion with the scenic and dialectician, she has worked can’t hear what is happening ferent,” she said. “At one This sharp ear comes ping for Cat, Waterman lighting details. The oft-un- with off-Broadway theaters in a film because the actor point, I just threw my head from years of teaching voice watched films and YouTube sung job is making sure that such as the Guthrie, Hart- isn’t speaking properly, not back and said, ‘I give up.’ and speech to students and clips and conducted inter- the story flows, that the audi- ford Stage and George Street using the mouth and tongue Then it sent my voice up into professionals; Waterman is views with people living in ence can follow the dialogue Playhouse. She also worked correctly. a nasally twang and I sud- a professor at The Juilliard the region where the play without struggling or miss- with the Broadway and tour- “I cringe because people’s denly was landing in it.” School and Barnard Col- takes place, specifically in ing key plot details. ing companies of Mamma voices are so far back and Though Waterman said lege. Her mission for Cat is Clarksdale, Miss. She had “Are you really making Mia! She has been coming they’re not really using lan- she doesn’t do imperson- to make sure that there is the cast listen to interviews all the points along the way to the Institution as a speech guage,” she said. “I think ations, her John F. Kennedy consistency in the Southern with Elvis Presley, his par- so that people really can coach since 2002. that’s the sad news, people was pretty spot on. Chiu’s ‘Smackdown’ pits unplugged Debussy vs. Prokofiev kelly tunney and your ability to Staff Writer distinguish details is heightened.” Two composers Chiu chose De- stand at opposite bussy and Proko- ends of a boxing fiev as the first of a ring. In one corner, series of matchups Claude Debussy, a because they are dif- French Impression- Chiu ist composer known ferent in some ways, for his quiet, classical works, yet similar in others. and in the other, Sergei Pro- “Debussy is much more kofiev, the lively Russian subtle than Prokofiev, composer who introduced searching for the really tiny percussion to piano. nuances of color and touch, In Frederic Chiu’s “Clas- kind of pushing the piano sical Smackdown” program, pieces,” Chiu said. “Proko- each composer’s music will fiev was the first composer have a chance to win over to write percussion music the audience at 4 p.m. today for the piano. So they’re re- in Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall. ally on opposite ends of any Chiu, who is visiting kind of aesthetic scale you Chautauqua for his guest might think about, and yet recital and master class, they were alive at the same views his program as a time exploring the piano “taste test” of sorts. with the same intensity.” “With wine, I’ll taste Chiu developed this one and I’ll love it, but I won’t remember the taste,” program to benefit classical music enthusiasts and new- BR IAN SMITH | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER he said. “When somebody Nathan Pritchard, 19, of Parkersburg, W.V., strums his guitar on the porch of Bonnie Hall on a rainy Canada Day. comes and we do a taste comers to the genre. test, we have two wines “It gives people an intro- and we’re actually tasting duction to classical music,” with the specific question he said. “And it’s a good way in mind of, ‘Which do I for people who are familiar Students perform Gordon’s songs of life, love, loss like better?’ I tend to re- with classical music to have kelly tunney member the details better a different perspective and weaving through the joy and the most accurate way to “He’s writing for the Staff Writer [that way]. Things become to come at it fresh.” sorrow that comes with liv- describe the piece and the voice, and using every color much clearer when you’re After the performances, ing. recital. and ability in the human in- asked to compare and con- Chiu enters the voting into Chautauqua Institution “It’s reflecting on our “It’s very much speaking strument in order to bring trast.” a Microsoft Excel spread- will experience an intimate childhood and then grow- to the human experience,” he the story across,” Ford said. story of family, love, life and said. “It’s very intimate and Chiu will perform works sheet and graphs the re- ing up and falling in love “It’s vocally challenging to loss at 7:30 p.m. tonight in really pulls at the human from both composers sults to determine a win- with different people,” Ford sing his music, but at the over the course of several McKnight Hall, as the Voice said, “and those relation- condition.” ner. He also examines the same time, the way he uses rounds. Audience members Program presents “Once I ships falling apart and the Ford said he is grateful to demographics of the audi- the voice, it’s perfectly bal- are given a scorecard and Was: Songs of Ricky Ian Gor- pain of that, and the recon- be able to perform Gordon’s ences to look for trends. choose which composer don.” ciliation and joy found in composition and especially anced with the piano and “There was a different they enjoyed more. They Tenor Ryan Ford, soprano life.” enjoys Gordon’s focus on the how everything needs to be also fill in some demo- feel in each different venue, Rachel Sterrenberg and clar- Ford said “intimate” is voice in his pieces. said in the story.” graphic information. and the results were very inetist Kevin Schaffter will “I’m putting the audi- different,” he said. “That join faculty member Donald ence up to something that was very enlightening.” St. Pierre as he plays piano they’ve never been asked Chiu will also lead a for the recital. to do,” Chiu said. “I think public master class at 2 p.m. The narrative follows Ford with that kind of challenge, Thursday in Sherwood- and Sterrenberg as siblings, your senses are heightened Marsh Studios. Page 6 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 religion ‘The mind is about love, compassion and truth’

eighbor, Oh neighbor, there is an enemy he never had a mother to love him who could change his within us all. We cannot be conformed to mind and spirit so there is no room for hate. Sentence him this world but transformed to discern the to be loved by me for three months.” “Nwill of God, that which is acceptable, good She gave the police officer a hug and he fainted. and perfect,” said the Rev. Otis Moss III at the 9:15 a.m. “She made the choice to renew her mind,” Moss said. Tuesday devotional service. His sermon title was “The En- “We need people in this country with boldness and tenacity emy Within Me” and his text was Romans 12:1-2. to choose another way, to speak life.” Moss began by giving thanks. He thanked Chautau- Morning Worship A woman came up to Moss after one of the services at qua Institution President Tom Becker, George Wirth, who Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago and thanked presided over the service, and the two Scripture readers, Compiled by mary lee talbot him. He thought it was the kind of thanks he usually re- Nathan Pritchard and Lydia Gyori. He particularly thanked ceives after a service, but the woman said, “You don’t know “the Cardinal of Chautauqua,” the Rev. Joan Brown Camp- why I am thanking you. bell, for her work to establish the Martin Luther King Jr. “Those who represent Jesus do not reflect him,” Moss “I sat in the balcony for the last six months,” she said. “I House at the Institution. said. “The church’s greatest opponent is inside. suffer from depression and I had to force myself to come to Moss said King was the embodiment of the Chautauqua “Every day we live with the hero and villain of our own church. I hoped you would say a word that would keep me ideal in that he embraced an interfaith perspective. Among story. It may depend on what part of the day you catch here — to not kill myself. I have heard a word and I have his friends were Abraham Heschel and Malcolm X; he also someone, whether you see the villain or the hero.” chosen to stay on this side.” embraced the teachings of Gandhi. King worked to trans- We are bound to our past, he said, but the good news is Moss was interrupted, and when he turned back she was form the world. that we do not need to let the external circumstances affect gone. Paul, in his letter to the Romans, is talking to a people the internal conditions of our lives or limit the options of “An angel had spoken to me,” he said. “Words can speak who are under pressure. It is not internal pressure, Moss our future. life or death to someone. So how do you know when your asserted, but the struggle of Jews and gentiles living under We can choose to do great things, Moss said. We can mind has been renewed? … A new mind does not ask what the same roof. choose joy and love, and we can choose to renew our minds is in it for me, but what can we do together. Instead of send- Paul asks them to transform their minds. everyday. ing everyone to hell but me, we know that all have fallen “Gnos, in Greek, is all about the mind, insight and think- During the hearings of the Truth and Reconciliation short. We want to learn more about the word of God and we ing,” Moss said. “The brain is not the mind; the brain is a Commission in South Africa, a police officer was brought to find our security in Christ.” biological control. It is the mind that links us to the spirit. the commission. The police officer confessed to participat- Moss suggested America needs a new mind. Right now, The mind is about love, compassion and truth.” ing in the beating and burning of a man years earlier. He he said, Americans are small-minded and don’t have the The enemy of the church is inside, Moss said. said that before the man died, he had called out, “Tell them will to change. He believes the Abrahamic traditions have In polls, when people are asked to describe Christians, and tell my wife I forgive them.” the power to change the evolving nation by speaking good they describe them as judgmental, conservative, anti-gay The man’s wife heard the police officer’s confession. She and not evil. and mean. But when people are asked to describe Jesus, looked him in the eye and said, “I forgive him. I want you to “I bid you good day,” he said. “Change your mind. God they describe him as loving, compassionate and peaceful. sentence him to three months living with me. It is obvious has called you to change your mind.” The Rev. George Wirth presided. Lidia Gyori and Nathan Pritchard from the International Order of The King’s Daughters and Sons’ Scholarship Program read the Scripture. Gyori is from Debrecen, Hungary, and is studying to be a teacher at the Peto Institute. Pritchard is from Parkersburg, W.Va., and studies me- chanical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The Motet Choir sang “Come, Join the Dance of Trinity,” by Roy Hopp under the direction of Jared Jacobsen, organist and worship and sacred music coordinator. The Geraldine M. and Frank E. McElree, Jr. Chaplaincy Fund and the William N. Jackson Religious Initiative Fund sponsor this week’s chaplain in residence. Wednesday, July 3, 2013 The Chautauquan Daily Page 7 Religion

Bishop Sutton offers four Proposals Benjamin Hoste | Staff Photographer The Right Rev. Eugene Taylor Sutton, Episopal Bishop of Maryland, delivers the Monday afternoon to keep faith Interfaith Lecture in the Hall of Philosophy. relevant to younger generation

fredo villaseñor | Staff Writer he Right Rev. Eugene Sutton started “You have to actively pur- modern world,” he said. Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi. sue the first kind of knowl- Then Sutton gave his “People of faith must re- his Monday afternoon lecture with the edge,” Sutton said. “The fourth and final recommen- pent of individually and col- facts: Christian churches throughout the second kind of knowledge, dation: “Faith in the 21st lectively believing that vio- United States are losing membership. faith, is given to you. But I still hold out the century will have to show lence and killing is the only T both are valid.” hope that Albert that it can heal divisions and way to peace,” Sutton said. What the church needs “With fewer and fewer thing, Sutton argued, he save an ailing planet,” Sut- “And who’s going to say to do is catch up with scien- Einstein was onto notable exceptions, people would have made the tenets ton said. that, if not us? If not people tific knowledge, he said. To — especially young people, Faith must speak to the who believe in Jesus, then of that one faith self-evident catch up with, for example, something when the next greatest generation to all. world’s problems of envi- who’s left?” the idea that sexual orienta- he once said, ronmental degradation, Sutton concluded his — are staying away from our “Could it be that God tol- tion is not simply a matter of churches,” said Sutton, Bish- erates and celebrates more violence, poverty and inter- lecture with a challenge to choice. ‘Science without religious conflicts, he said, those of the younger genera- op of the Episcopal Diocese diversity than human beings “I still hold out the hope of Maryland. can get their minds around?” religion is lame, because many young people tion who are trying to make that Albert Einstein was believe that religion caused their way in the realm of re- Sutton opened Week Two’s Sutton asked. onto something when he and religion without Interfaith Lectures, themed There are no perfect re- these problems in the first ligion and spirituality. once said, ‘Science without place. “Don’t give up,” he said. “Religion and Spirituality” ligious institutions, he ex- religion is lame, and religion science is blind.’ ” by discussing what church- plained, because they are “But I wouldn’t be stand- “Don’t give up on faith. Faith without science is blind,’ ” he — THE RIGHT REV. ing before you today as a is what you know to be true es ought to be doing to stay all composed of imperfect said. EUGENE SUTTON relevant to young people in people. In order to approach representative of faith if I whether you believe it or not. Sutton’s third recommen- thought that that was the “How much faith you the 21st century. He had four truth, people have to learn dation: “Faith in the 21st appeal, churches must inte- whole story,” Sutton said. have doesn’t matter right recommendations. from each other and from century will have to make grate the wisdom inherited He claims that what faith now. What matters is putting “Faith in the 21st century those of other faiths. And the case that ancient wisdom has at its disposal is “soul your faith, your heart, soul will have to be humble, not if that truth divorces peo- matters.” from traditions with modern force” — the force of non- and yearning in something claiming to have in its tenets ple from loving others, he Sutton believes that the ideas. violent resistance that can — or better, someone — who all truth,” Sutton said. added, then it must be ques- reason most young people “Faith in the 21st century It’s nonsense, he ex- tioned, because God is a god are not going to church is must find a way to keep that bring about great changes in has stood the test of time. plained, for churches to of love. because they no longer think door open to the ancient past, society, much like the move- Then, who knows — your claim they have an exclusive Sutton’s second recom- that God can be found in while at the same time keep- ments of Martin Luther King beliefs may come later.” relationship with God. mendation: “Faith in the 21st their churches. In order to ing open another door to the “What kind of God would century will have to make an reject most of the world’s accommodation with science population that has ever and technology.” lived because they belonged Science and religion are TONIGHT to the wrong religion?” Sut- much more similar than ton asked. “And thus subject they are different, he said. these billions and billions of However, the most obvious Wednesday, July 3 • 6–8 p.m. people to eternal torment in difference is that science de- hell?” pends on observation while If God had wanted ev- religion depends on revela- eryone to believe the same tion.

» on the grounds

NEW IN 2013 — Bestor Plaza VISITORS CENTER

The Visitors Center located in the Post Office Building on Bestor Plaza provides first-time visitors with general information about Chautauqua programming, history and accommodations, plus help with getting acclimated to the LIVE Institution’s grounds. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. ACOUSTIC MUSIC by Kev Rowe

Location: Deck at the Brick Walk Cafe

Hours of operation Friday and Saturday 8 a.m.–11 p.m. Sunday–Thursday 8 a.m.–10 p.m. Page 8 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 opera prepping for ‘peter grimes’

benjamin hoste | staff photographer TOP: Kevin Ray, playing the title role, performs one of the final numbers during a dress rehearsal of Peter Grimes Saturday at the Jane A. Gross Opera Center. Chautauqua Opera Company presents Peter Grimes at 8:15 p.m. Saturday in the Amphitheater. LEFT: Maestro Steven Osgood makes notations to his conductor’s score during an intermission. ABOVE: The rehearsal included full costumes, props, and most of the set. Wednesday, July 3, 2013 The Chautauquan Daily Page 9

“The Best Kept Secret on Chautauqua Lake” The village of Mayville is the closest village to the Mayville Chautauqua Institution Mayville 9 8 7 6 Mayville /Chautauqua Chamber of Commerce 2013 Events 5

4 July 4: Chautauqua Coun- site: www.mayvillechau- center/bathhouse, basket- The Chautauqua Belle – Chautauqua ty July 4th Celebration, tauqua.org for information. ball court, infield area, pic- Steamship Cruises aboard Lake Lakeside Park, Mayville, Bring your own seating. nic areas, boat launch, ga- this 98 foot long steam-pow- 10 a.m. parade, activities zebo and pavilion on site. ered paddle boat, docked at Lakeside Park, ending July 14: Safe Boating Class Village of Mayville Office at at Lakeside Park, Rt. 394, with fireworks at 10 p.m., 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., held (716) 753-2125. Mayville, NY, (716) 269- (716) 753-2280 or cc4th.com at Chautauqua Marina, 104 Chautauqua Rails to 2355 or www.269belle. W. Lake Rd., Mayville, 716) Trails, 16 Water St., May- 3 2 753-3913, email boatsafe- com (for cruise months, July 6: 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. ville (office located in the [email protected] or go to the web times and pricing) – Garden Tour, Red Brick old train deposit next to site: www.chautauquamari- Farm, 5031 W. Lake Rd., Lakeside Park). Trails in na.com for more information Mayville, northlakeg- the area feature hiking, Boat Rentals/Launch 1 (for ages 16 to adult, meets Chautauqua rowers.com or (716) 753- walking, bicycling, bird Ramp – Chautauqua Mari- Institution all requirements for the NYS 3242/2013 for information watching, horseback riding, na, 104 W. Lake Rd., Village Safe Boating Program). cross country skiing. Rec- of Mayville. Open 7 days a reational trails for all to July 11: 6:30 - 8:30 p.m week during the season from Every Saturday & Sunday enjoy, call (716) 269-3666. – Jackson Rohm, Enter- 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Power/Pon- ( 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.) – Flea Mar- Exit the Chautauqua Institution main gate, turn right. tainment in the Park free toon/ Pedal Boats/ Kayaks, ket, Dart Airport, Mayville, Summer Concert Series, Webb’s Miniature Golf, – www.ChautauquaMarina. Shop, Play & Dine all within 3.5 miles. NY (Hartfield area), outdoor Lakeside Park, Mayville. located on Rt. 394 in May- com, (716) 753-3913 flea market. (716) 753-2160 Rainbow the Clown--- if ville, NY, at Webb’s Year- 9 rain at Carlson Community Round Resort (115 W. Lake Center at Lakeside Park, Lakeside Park, Rt. 394, Rd.), open June – Sep- Mayville, (716) 753-3113, Mayville –Life guards on tember 7 days a week – 10 email to dmarsala@chau- duty, tennis courts, play- a.m. – 11 p.m. – for infor- tauquachamber.org or web ground area, community mation call (716) 753-1348 Great Gift Shops•Restaurants •Boating •Candy Shoppe •Shopping •FREE Shuttle

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1 4 6 Page 10 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 Classifieds

2013 SEASON FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALEsale TRANSPOserviRcTATIONes Former MSFO violist seeking 2 remote-controlled Twin EXECUTIVE HOME for sale by piano accompanist and musicians XL Craftmatic I adjustable mas- owner, North end of grounds. for chamber music July 6-20. sage beds with hardware to com- For Private showing 716-969- Mozart, Faure, Bach, Beethoven bine them into one king-sized 2621 etc. Walter: 215-407-1236. bed. Excellent condition. $3895/ each new. Asking $4000 for the WESTFIELD HOME FOR SALE: NORTH SHORE Townhouse, full pair or $2200 each. No personal 2 story colonial, 4 bedrooms, 2.5 kitchen, 2.5 baths, sleeps 6. checks. Located in Westfield. baths, hardwood floors, wood Available week 3. $1,250. William 716-969-3372 burning fireplace, attached 2 car Campbell, 812.336.7082 garage. Beautifully landscaped 2002 TOYOTA Land Cruiser - 3/4 acre village lot. $195,000. 16 WILEY Week 9, Spacious Full time 4WD, navigaion, gold 3-story house near lake and 716-326-3781 or see with tan interior, just serviced, ForSaleByOwner.com Children’s School, 6+ bedrooms, $9,000. 357-3561 5 bathrooms, W/D, cable, wireess internet, no pets, no smoking, REAL ESTATE 212-563-6557 ext 293 Happy ads CHAUTAUQUA AREA REAL [email protected] BOAT RENTALS, Pontoon, ESTATE: Office - St.Elmo #101 TRANSPORTATION Power, Kayak, Fishing and Pedal Chautauqua, Ny 14722. 716- Boats for rent. Chautauqua Announcements 357-3566. Toll Free 800-507- AIRPORT TRANSFERS. Marina, Mayville. 716.753.3913 5005. www.chautauquaarea. Pick AA/ALANON open meeting com, care@chautauquaarea. up and return. Lowest prices on Hurlbut Church Parlor Sundays HELP WANTED com lake. Phone Greg 814-598- and Wednesday 12:30 p.m. 6071 716-581-3202 Needed: Japanese tutor for my SERVICES high school son. Weeks 5,6,and 2014 SEASON BOATS FOR SALE 7 or any combination thereof. One hour daily during week. HOW CAN I Help? Airport BOATS FOR Sale, New and Transportation, Off Season Adorable cozy apartment, Please call Judith Lee at 202- ground floor, 1 bedroom gem, Used- Best Boat Buying 320-3079 House Sitter, or any other Packages at Chautauqua Marina errands. Availability Friday- AC, cable, WiFi, W/D, full kitch- 716.753.3913. www. PHOTOGRAPHER WANTED for Monday By Appt. Reasonable en, recent construction and fur- ChautauquaMarina.com Chautauqua wedding July 21, Rates. Please call Diane at 716- nishings, on plaza and tram 1:30 References/Sample photos 679-6281 route, level short walk to Amp. 7 M-YACHTS MX-RAY sailboat for requested. Contact Cherie at jon- Roberts. Season/Half Season sale. 12 ft length, 4 1/2 ft wide- [email protected] 32 DIFFERENT Excercise class- ONLY. Contact Frances Roberts fits well on small dock ramp. es are offered in Chautauqua. at 716-357-5557 or francesr@ Wicked fast single-handed boat HOUSES FOR RENT Only one deals exclusively with optonline.net with carbon mast, clear mylar pain and weakness. Tasso main sail and jib, and winged hull Available 2013 - Weeks Spanos’ “Feeling Better” thera- 16 WILEY Weeks 2,3,8,9. for hiking out. $2,900. On the 2,3,6,7,8,9. Also available 2014. putic stretch class teaches you Spacious 3-story house near grounds at 18 Gebbie. Joe Charming Victorian. 5 BR. Sleeps how to get rid of your pain. M-F, lake and Children’s School, 6+ 216.342.1525 10-13. 4 full baths. 2 kit. 2 LR. 2 4pm, Hurlbut church, every week bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, W/D, DR. 2 W/D. 6 porches. Grill. of the season except Week 4. cable, wireless internet, no Cable. DVD. High-speed wire- Info, 716.357.3713 pets, no smoking, 212-563- condos for rent 6557 ext.293 lnewman@feilorg. less internet. AC. Parking. 83 PRATT a charming guest Excellent location. Near Amp. com house for the 2014 season. Sleeps $2,900. Scarwin@peoplepc. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, modern, two. Newly Remodeled, park-like com. 412-818-7711. setting, patio, on-site parking, on well furnished, fully equipped, tram & bus route. W/D, A/C, cable, Packard Manor huge sleeping and dining porch, wireless internet, D/W, pet friendly. Gatehouse, 30 Elm. Weeks A/C, heat, DW, W&D, cable, wifi, Season/Part-Season 954-673- 3,5,6,9. Upscale 3BR (King, parking, weeks 1, 2 and 3, 42 3602 [email protected]. Week 5 Queen, 2-Twins) 2.5 Baths, AC, foster. [email protected], available 2013. W/D, WiFi, Cable, Pool, large (716) 490-1659 porch/patio, 2-parking. $2,500. Historic Point education 716-357-4583. Chautauqua. A charming BOAT SAFETY Class, July 14 Weeks 4&5: Gorgeous Lakefront 3BR-2Ba Cottage w/lg deck and 9:30 am. N.Y. State Approved at home. 4+ Bedrooms, all ameni- shed. Tennis court, beach, play- Chautauqua Marina. 716.753.3913 ties, onsite parking. $5,000/wk. ground. Dock available. or 716.753.0409 Course fee $39 + 716-357-2695. 8lakechq@gmail. $172,500. 330-714-3095, 330- Materials Fee $5 com 877-9426 McCarthy Lectureship funds Mogahed lecture

The Louise Roblee Mc- (Mrs. G. Kenneth Robins), ceived a citation for notable Baptist Convocation from Carthy Lectureship pro- Carol Louise (Mrs. H. Rich- achievement and service 1948 to 1954. vides funding for today’s ard Duhme, Jr.) and Mr. Ro- from the Bradford Junior Mrs. McCarthy donated 10:45 a.m. lecture featuring blee McCarthy. College in 1961 and from the Roblee Garden, situated Dalia Mogahed. A well-known philan- the Women of the Press, St. behind the Smith Memorial The Louise Roblee Mc- thropist, McCarthy served Louis, in 1964. Library at Chautauqua. Both Carthy Memorial Lecture- as vice president of the McCarthy was selected of McCarthy’s daughters, ship was created by gifts world YWCA with head- Ecumenical Woman of the the late Marjorie Robins and to the Chautauqua Founda- quarters in Geneva, Swit- Year by the Metropolitan Carol Duhme, have been ac- tion made by the Joseph H. zerland, from 1955 to 1959. Church Federation of St. tive at Chautauqua. Duhme and Florence (Allen) Roblee She also served as a trustee Louis in 1959. Among other has served as a trustee of Foundation as a memorial of Vassar College from 1955 organizations she served, the Institution and contin- tribute to Mrs. McCarthy. to 1961 and as a member of McCarthy was tapped act- ues to spearhead the Bell Born in St. Louis in 1888 the Mayor’s Race Relations ing president of the Ameri- Tower Scholarship program to Joseph H. and Florence Committee in St. Louis can Association of Universi- at Chautauqua. (Allen) Roblee, Louise Ro- from 1943 to 1949. She was ty Women’s St. Louis chapter If you would be interested in blee McCarthy received the first woman elected as from 1924 to 1926. She was discussing the possibility of es- her bachelor’s degree from vice president of the Na- a member of the League of tablishing an endowed lecture Vassar College in 1912 and tional Council of Church- Women Voters, the National or supporting another aspect of a degree from Springfield es. McCarthy received Society of Colonial Dames Chautauqua’s program, please College in 1953. She mar- the Woman of Achieve- of America and the Missouri contact Karen Blozie, director ried Eugene Ross McCarthy ment citation for national Historical Society. She also of gift planning, at 716-357- on Dec. 13, 1913. The couple service from the St. Louis was a member of the edito- 6244 or email her at kblozie@ had three children: Marjorie Globe Democrat and also re- rial board for the American ciweb.com.

Stahl Lectureship Sports Club Sunday Evening Duplicate Bridge supports Orenstein JUNE 23, 2013 North/South 1st Rolene Pozarny/William Sigward 59.52% Interfaith Lecture 2nd Bill/Peggy Blackburn 56.77% The Rabbi Samuel and experience presenting semi- 3rd Nancy/Paul Theado 51.65% Lynn Stahl Lectureship for nars and workshops and is a 4th Barbara/Herb Keyser 39.07% the Understanding of Juda- longtime family life educa- ism helps underwrite today’s tor with organizations such East/West Interfaith Lecture by Rabbi as Jewish Family Service. 1st Gail/Grant Hennessa 55.86% Debra Orenstein. She regularly teaches Spe- Established in 2010 by cial Studies classes at the 2nd Sol Messinger/Nancy Russell 55.18% Sam and Lynn Stahl, the Institution. Lynn has been 3rd Bruce Burr/Ben Hawkins 53.82% Fund is a permanent en- a founder and president of 4th Bruce Levine/Bob Hauser 51.02% dowment fund held within ThriveWell Cancer Founda- the Chautauqua Foundation tion. Its mission is three- Sports Club thursday to support speakers for the fold: provide free exercise Ev ening Duplicate Bridge Department of Religion’s In- and nutrition classes for terfaith Lecture Series who anyone who has had breast JUNE 27, 2013 advance the understand- cancer; offer financial as- North/South ing of Judaism. Sam, Rabbi sistance for co-payments Emeritus of Temple Beth-El 1st Barbara Keyser/Herb Keyser Rolene 67.42% and transportation to che- in San Antonio, served as 2nd Ted Raab/Jeff Posner 62.25% motherapy and radiation Chautauqua’s theologian- treatments; and finally, fund 3rd Bill/Peggy Blackburn 61.00% in-residence during the 2003 4th Sol Messinger/Ben Hawkins 46.58% Season and is the author of cutting-edge, targeted can- Making the Timeless Timely, as cer research in San Antonio. well as Boundaries, Not Barri- Since 2003, they have re- East/West ers. He is the immediate past sided on the grounds during 1st Tom Roantree/Jim Wheeler 59.88% the summer with visits from chairman of the Institution’s 2nd Franz/Madeline Delahan 57.79% daughters Heather and Alisa Religion Advisory Commit- 3rd Dent Williamson/Sandy Nolan 53.39% tee and was one of the archi- and their families. At Chau- tects of the Institution’s first tauqua, they are involved 4th Pat/Jay Hudson 51.33% Interfaith Service for Peace, with Friends of Chautauqua demonstrating a strong Theater and support the Please come enjoy our friendly, non-intimidating games. commitment to building the Opera Guild, Dance Circle, 1:10 p.m. Thursdays and 6:50 p.m. Sundays at the Sports Club. You are welcome with or without a partner. Abrahamic Community. Symphony Patrons, Women’s Lynn has over 23 years Club and VACI. Wednesday, July 3, 2013 The Chautauquan Daily Page 11 LECTURE KAHUMBU SHARES EFFORTS TO SAVE AFRICA’S ELEPHANTS JESS MILLER | Staff Writer

When Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi set fi re to 12 tons of illegal ivory in 1989, conservationists like Paula Kahumbu thought the end of elephant slaughter was in sight. And it was — until now. Following that demon- stration, poaching numbers PAULA KAHUMBU dropped for nearly 20 years. executive director, But recently, worldwide Kenya Land Conservation Trust demand for ivory has in- creased, which means that exeutive director, WildlifeDirect African elephants are in National Geographic Emerging more danger of becoming ex- Explorer tinct than ever before. chairman, Friends of Kahumbu, the executive Nairobi National Park director of WildlifeDirect in Nairobi, Kenya, delivered Tuesday’s morning lecture cracking down on crime, by in the Amphitheater, the eliminating ivory supply second under the week’s and demand and by creating theme of “The Next Greatest awareness, engagement and Generation.” WildlifeDirect mobilization. works to save elephants and The organization has re- endangered species living cruited Kenya’s fi rst lady, in Kenya’s forests, savannas Margaret Kenyatta, as well as and plains. a number of Kenyan celebri- “When we think of the ties and sports stars. To show next greatest generation, they their support, the celebrities are only going to be great be- are wearing black armbands cause we make them great,” that read “H.O.O.E.,” which Kahumbu said. “As grown- stands for “Hands Off Our ups, we inspire younger gen- Elephants.” erations.” WildlifeDirect has also en- When Kahumbu was ROXANA POP | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER gaged communications com- young, she and her brother Paula Kahumbu, the Nairobi-based executive director of WildlifeDirect and of the Kenya Land Conservation trust, lectures on “The Crisis panies, the tourism industry were outside playing when Facing Elephants in Africa” Tuesday morning in the Amphitheater. and major corporations. they spotted an animal they “We’ve partnered with all didn’t recognize in a fi g tree. ecology, eventually earning quencies too low for humans ing, she showed black and luxury goods. the major media houses to do A man drove by and editorials every week about rolled down his window. her doctorate from Princeton to hear. Their large ears can white images of mutilated “While in Kenya, if you’re University. also identify sounds up to elephants on the Amp’s pro- wealthy, you might buy a the carnage of that week,” “He asked us what we Kahumbu said. “We’re going were doing, and we said, “I did my Ph.D. studying six miles away. And they can jection screens. Since tusks Mercedes-Benz,” Kahumbu elephants because I thought smell water from a distance recede into the elephant’s said. “In China, what you’ll to be naming and shaming ‘There’s this amazing animal the [poachers] who get re- up in the tree!’ And the man that was going to be how I of 12 miles or more. mouth to connect to a socket buy is ivory.” leased with these small fi nes was Richard Leakey,” Ka- made a diff erence,” she said. In addition, scientists are in the skull, poachers must Kahumbu asked the audi- [instead of going to jail].” humbu said to applause. “I was going to use science to interested in the striking kill the elephant and then ence to raise their hands to The group plans on brand- Leakey gave Kahumbu make a diff erence.” similarities between humans cut into the animal’s mouth indicate whether they either ing restaurant restrooms, and her brother a standing But she soon discovered and elephants. Elephants to extract all of the ivory. owned ivory or knew some- grocery stores, cigarettes, invitation to visit his house if that most government of- travel in family herds, stay- Last year, poachers one who did. A large number they ever had any questions. fi cials “don’t give a damn” ing together for life. They gunned down 30,000 ele- raised their hands. beer, airplanes and highways (Leakey went on to found about science. grieve over dead family phants in Africa, Kahumbu “Whether we like it or not, to capture the attention of all WildlifeDirect and persuade “They don’t understand members and will even re- said. This number is greater owning ivory makes us con- passers-by. President Moi to burn the it,” she said. turn year after year to pay than the entire number of el- sciously or unconsciously “We want people to re- millions of dollars’ worth of Kahumbu decided to take respects to the bones of their ephants in Kenya. a part of the demand,” she ally wake up to what is hap- ivory.) elephant conservation eff orts kin. Behind the rise of the said. “And it’s the demand pening,” she said. “As indi- “I spent my whole child- into her own hands. Even Poachers often kill the poaching industry is the that is leading to the slaugh- viduals, we have personal hood catching everything though elephants are one of matriarch, the largest and economic rise of another ter of the animals.” responsibility. We are each that walked, crawled, fl ew, the most-studied animals in the leader of the herd, leav- country. In China, ivory is a Those at WildlifeDirect individually responsible for swam, and going to his the world, Kahumbu said ing the rest of the family vul- luxury often used to carve are trying to end animal saving the world’s most mag- house and asking him what that more fascinating details nerable. Six thousand years religious fi gures and other poaching in three ways: by nifi cent species.” it was,” she said. are uncovered with each ago, there were 25 million After graduating from new study. For example, sci- elephants in Africa. Today, high school, Kahumbu want- entists have learned that el- there are less than half a mil- ed to be a park ranger. She ephants can communicate lion. went on to study biology and by projecting sounds at fre- As Kahumbu was speak- Page 12 The Chautauquan Daily Wednesday, July 3, 2013 Program

10:00 Piano Master Class. (School of 4:00 THEATER. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof 12:10 Catholic Mass. Chapel of the Good 6:45 Pre-Chautauqua Symphony Music.) Fee. Sherwood-Marsh (Reserved seating; purchase tickets Shepherd Orchestra Concert Lecture. Lee Studios at Main Gate Welcome Center or 12:15 Knitting. “Women4Women– Spear. Hurlbut Church Sanctuary 10:15 Service of Blessing and Healing. Colonnade lobby ticket offices and Knitting4Peace.” UCC Reformed 7:00 Devotional Services and UCC Chapel 45 minutes before curtain at the House Porch Programs. Denominational Houses Bratton kiosk.) Bratton Theater 10:45 LECTURE. Dalia Mogahed, pres. 12:15 Brown Bag. 7:15 (7:15 7:45) Mystic Heart In the Shadow of – and CEO, Mogahed Consulting 4:00 (4-5:30) Guest Artist Recital: Death: A Chautauqua Murder. Deb Meditation: Spiritual Practices W Amphitheater Frederic Chiu, piano. (Benefits Th Pines, author, headline writer for New of World Religions. Leader: Carol WEDNESDAY THURSDAY the Chautauqua Women’s Club York Post. Everett Jewish Life Center McKiernan. (Centering Prayer). JULY 3 12:00 Women in Ministry. Hall of Scholarship Fund.) Elizabeth S. JULY 4 Missions 12:15 Brown Bag. “The Actor’s Life Today: Donation. Bring gate pass. Main Gate Lenna Hall Welcome Center Conference Room 12:15 Brown Bag Book Review. Theater, Film and TV.” Chautauqua 4:00 Public Shuttle Tours of Grounds. Theater Company. Bratton Theater 8:00 CHAUTAUQUA SYMPHONY (Programmed by the CLSC Alumni Fee. (Purchase tickets at Main Gate INDEPENDENCE DAY 7:15 (7:15 8) Mystic Heart Meditation: ORCHESTRA. Pops Concert: – Association.) Jean Badger, Stiff: 12:30 (12:30 1:55) Mystic Heart Welcome Center.) Leave from Main – Independence Day Celebration. Spiritual Practices of World The Curious Lives of Human 7:00 (7–11) Farmers Market. Meditation: Meditation Seminar. Gate Welcome Center Religions. Leader: Subagh Singh Cadavers by Mary Roach. Alumni “What We Rally Need to Know: Stuart Chafetz, guest conductor; 7:15 (7:15 8) Mystic Heart Meditation: Khalsa. (Sikhism/Kundalini Yoga Hall Porch 4:15 Bat Chat. (Programmed by the – Discovering the Spiritual Heart, Tony DeSare, piano/vocals. Spiritual Practices of World and Meditation.)Donation. Bring gate Chautauqua Bird, Tree & Garden Part 2.” Subagh Singh Khalsa Amphitheater 12:10 Catholic Mass. Chapel of the Good Religions. Leader: Subagh Singh pass. Main Gate Welcome Center Club.) Caroline Van Kirk Bissell. (Sikh Dharma/Kundalini Yoga and • Liberty Fanfare “The Star Shepherd Khalsa. (Sikhism/Kundalini Yoga Conference Room. Smith Wilkes Hall Meditation.) Donation. Hall of Missions Spangled Banner” 1:00 (1-4) CWC Artists at the Market. and Meditation.) Donation. Bring 7:45 Episcopal Holy Eucharist. Chapel 4:15 Young Readers Program. The John Williams Farmers Market gate pass. Main Gate Welcome 12:45 Chautauqua Catholic Community One and Only Ivan by Katherine • The High School Cadets of the Good Shepherd Center Conference Room Seminar Series. “Catechumenal 1:15 Chautauqua Literary and Applegate. Hall of Christ, Campbell John Philip Sousa 8:00 Morning Meditation. (Sponsored Spirituality.” Rev. Ray Kemp, Scientific Circle Alumni Room 7:45 Episcopal Holy Eucharist. Chapel • (arr. Robert by Unity of Chautauqua.) Hall of Senior Research Fellow, Woodstock Victory At Sea Association Docent Tours of of the Good Shepherd Russell Bennett) Missions 6:00 (6-8) Brick Walk Cafe Concerts. Theological Center, Washington, DC.

Alumni Hall and Pioneer Hall. Kev Rowe. Brick Walk Cafe 8:00 Morning Meditation. (Sponsored Methodist House Chapel Richard Rogers 8:45 Catholic Mass. Chapel of the Good Almuni Hall, Pioneer Hall by Unity of Chautauqua.) Hall of •The Captains and the Kings Shepherd 6:30 Unity New Thought Lecture 1:00 (1-4) CWC Artists at the Market. 1:15 French, Spanish, Missions Leroy Anderson Language Hour: Series. (Programmed by Unity of Farmers Market 8:55 (8:55 9) Chautauqua Prays For • Far and Away: Excerpts from – German. (Programmed by the Chautauqua.) Main Gate Welcome 8:45 Catholic Mass. Chapel of the Good Peace Through Compassion. Hall 1:15 Duplicate Bridge. Fee. Sports Club the film score Chautauqua Women’s Club.) Center Conference Rooms (bring Shepherd of Missions Grove John Williams Women’s Clubhouse gate pass) 2:00 INTERFAITH LECTURE SERIES. 8:55 (8:55 9) Chautauqua Prays For • FM Classics Overture 9:00 (9-10:30) CLSC Scientific Circle. 2:00 INTERFAITH LECTURE SERIES. – Chris Stedman, humanist 6:45 Eventide Travelogue. (Programmed Peace Through Compassion. Hall arr. Larry Moore (Programmed by the CLSC Rabbi Debra Orenstein, author, chaplain, Harvard University. Hall of by Chautauqua Literary and Scientific of Missions Grove • I Love a Piano Alumni Association.) “The JOY of From Generation to Generation and Philosophy Circle Alumni Association.) “The Inuit 9:15 DEVOTIONAL HOUR. The Rev. Irving Berlin TEACHING – A Peripatetic Professor LifeCycles. Hall of Philosophy 2:00 National Bell Ringing Ceremony. of Alaska & Russia.” Daniel Johnson. Otis Moss III, pastor, Trinity United • Kiss of Chemistry in Search of Students.” “Let Freedom Ring.” In celebration 2:00 Lecture. “Who really wrote as Donation. Hall of Christ Church, Chicago. Amphitheater Prince Doug Neckers, Research Professor of Independence Day, the William Shakespeare?” Ron Song • New Orleans Tango (emeritus), Bowling Green University. 7:00 Christian Science Service. 9:15 Chautauqua Speaks. Chautauqua bells will be rung 13 Destro, producing director, Oxford Tony DeSare Hall of Christ Christian Science Chapel (Programmed by the Chautauqua times. Miller Bell Tower Shakespeare Theater, NYC. Smith • Just in Time 7:00 (7-7:45) Metropolitan Community Women’s Club.) “Youthaiti Making 9:15 DEVOTIONAL HOUR. The Rev. Memorial Library second floor 2:00 Public Shuttle Tours of Grounds. Julie Styne/Comden & Green Otis Moss III, pastor, Trinity United Church Vespers Service. UCC a Difference.” Gigi Pomerantz. 2:00 Public Shuttle Tours of Grounds. Fee. (Purchase tickets at Main Gate • How Sweet It Is Church, Chicago. Amphitheater Chapel Women’s Clubhouse Fee. (Purchase tickets at Main Gate Welcome Center.) Leave from Main Holland-Dozier-Holland 9:15 Maimonides–A Guide to the 9:15 Ethics In Everyday Life. Welcome Center.) Leave from Main 7:30 (7:30-9:30) Voice Concert. Gate Welcome Center • Great Balls of Fire Perplexed. (Programmed by (Programmed by Chabad Lubavitch Gate Welcome Center “‘Once I Was’ - Songs of Ricky 2:00 (2-3:30) Piano Master Class. Otis Blackwell Chabad Lubavitch of Chautauqua.) of Chautauqua.) Rabbi Zalman Ian Gordon.” Donald St. Pierre, Frederic Chiu. (School of Music.) • Armed Forces on Parade 3:30 (3:30-5:30) Jewish Film Festival. Rabbi Zalman Vilenkin, Alumni Vilenkin. Alumni Hall Library director. (Benefits the Chautauqua Fee. Sherwood-Marsh Studios. arr. Robert Lowden (Programmed by the Everett Jewish Hall Library Women’s Club Scholarship Fund.) • Op. 49 9:30 Chautauqua Institution Trustees Life Center.) “Jews and Baseball.” 3:30 CLSC ROUNDTABLE/ LECTURE. 1812 Overture, McKnight Hall 10:00 Concert. Thursday Morning Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Porch Discussion. “Family & Everett Jewish Life Center Hugh Martin, The Stick Soldiers. Colonnade Youth Experiences and Programs.” 8:15 An Evening with Mark Russell. Brass. 10:00 3:30 Contemporary Issues Dialogue. Hall of Philosophy Fourth of July Bell Tower Sherra Babcock. Hultquist Center (Community Appreciation Night.) 10:00 Children’s School Independence Concert. Carolyn Benton, bell (Programmed by the Chautauqua 4:00 THEATER. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Porch Amphitheater Day Parade. Bestor Plaza ringer. Coincides with lighting of Women’s Club.) Dalia Magahed, (Reserved seating; purchase tickets 10:00 Voice Master Class. (School of President and CEO, Mogahed 10:15 Service of Blessing and Healing. at Main Gate Welcome Center or flares around and fireworks over Music.) Marlena Malas. McKnight Consulting. Women’s Clubhouse UCC Chapel Colonnade lobby ticket offices and Chautauqua Lake. Hall 10:45 LECTURE. Chris Hayes, host, “All 45 minutes before curtain at the 10:30 Musical Theater Revue #1. In,” MSNBC. Amphitheater Bratton kiosk.) Bratton Theater Cabaret/Musical Theater Revue with Chautauqua Opera Studio Artists. 12:15 Chautauqua Community Band 4:00 Public Shuttle Tours of Grounds. Elizabeth S. Lenna Hall 23rd Annual Independence Fee. (Purchase tickets at Main Gate Day Concert. Jason Weintraub, Welcome Center.) Leave from Main conductor. Bestor Plaza Gate Welcome Center 4:15 Artsongs. Chautauqua Opera » on the grounds Young Artists Recital #2. Hall of Christ 6:00 (6 7:45) Chautauqua Choir Motor Vehicles – Rehearsal. All singers welcome. (Two rehearsals required to sing at Chautauqua is a Sunday worship services.) Smith walking community, Wilkes Hall and driving is limited 6:00 Concert. Thursday Morning Brass. Athenaeum Fountain to travel to and 6:30 Porch Chat. (Programmed by the from the gate and Abrahamic Program for Young designated parking Adults) Chris Stedman, author of spaces. To make Fath. All young adults (ages 14-24). Alumni Hall the grounds safer and more enjoyable for pedestrians, there are certain restrictions on the use of motor vehicles. The speed limit for motor vehicles is 12 mph. Parking permits must be displayed and vehicles must be parked only in designated locations. Motorcycles are not permitted on the grounds during the season.