Lakeside honors volunteers

Transcription

Lakeside honors volunteers
Aug. 8, 2015
Vol. 2015, Issue 8
Lakeside honors volunteers
Volunteers are essential
to the quality of the Lakeside
Chautauqua experience.
Lakeside will recognize and
celebrate the service and commitment of volunteers at the Volunteer Recognition Picnic, held
from 12-1 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 8
on the Hotel Lakeside lawn.
Volunteers help in virtually
every aspect of what renders the
Lakeside Chautauqua experience distinctive and unique.
In the spring, they assist with
the beautification of the grounds
during Lakeside Spring Cleanup Day.
Volunteers maintain Lakeside’s many gardens during the
summer months, teach children
to sail for the first time as part
of the Kids Setting Sail program
and lend a hand at the evening
programs and worship services
in Hoover Auditorium.
In the fall, Lakesiders return
to Lake Erie to assist with the
operations of the Lakeside-Mar-
blehead Lighthouse Festival.
These are just a few of the
many ways volunteers make an
impact at Lakeside Chautauqua
all year.
From Saturday, Aug. 8-Friday, Aug. 14, the community
will celebrate the countless
hours and dedication of all the
special volunteers.
In reality, this small gesture
in no way expresses enough
thanks to the volunteers that
give of themselves daily, weekly, monthly and all year.
Lakeside Chautauqua appreciates the time and talent
each individual gives to make a
significant impact on the community.
All are invited to pause this
week and give thanks to the volunteers who make the Lakeside
Chautauqua experience special.
Master Plan: Every voice matters
The Lakeside Chautauqua
staff and Board of Directors are
committed to the five strategic
goals and establishing a clear
road map for the community’s
future.
Lakeside’s five strategic
goals are: 1.) Preserve Lakeside’s heritage, traditions and
culture as expressed in the mission and vision statement, 2.)
Become known as a center of
One of Lakeside Chautauqua’s strategic goals is to develop
the financial resources needed for
sustainability.
Years ago, Lakeside’s leaders
were dedicated to securing the future of the community and decided to begin an endowment.
The endowment is like a
savings account, where the principal remains untouched and a
small percentage of the interest
is used to help fund operations.
Lakeside’s endowment totals
$3.8 million, which is small for
a 142-year-old community. The
vision of building a larger endowment remains extremely imperative for Lakeside’s future and
long-term sustainability.
Each year, a percentage of the
earnings from the endowment is
drawn to support the Chautauqua
program and the preservation of
many historic buildings.
Today, it funds only two
percent of the annual cost of operations, roughly contributing
$120,000 to the $7 million budget. The best way to ensure the
community’s sustainability is to
build an endowment that significantly funds annual operations.
This would improve the
ability to implement emerging
programs, continue to secure
preachers, scholars and researchers, maintain the historic structures and care for the parks and
grounds in perpetuity.
Many Lakesiders have made
it a priority to protect the future
Chautauqua programming excellence, 3.) Assure Lakeside
is a safe, healthy and aesthetically pleasing community, 4.)
Address 21st century guest expectations, and 5.) Develop the
financial resources needed for
long-term sustainability and advancement.
This summer, many Lakesiders have been providing feedback to help plan for Lakeside’s
future. They have participated
in interviews, focus groups,
community forums, surveys,
presidential roundtable discussions and commenting on social
media, as well as on Lakeside’s
blog, The Front Porch.
See PLAN
on page 12
Endowment’s growth imperative to preserve Lakeside
of the community by giving to
the Lakeside Fund annually or
planning a deferred endowment
gift, and Lakeside thanks these
families for their support.
All are invited to join these
generous families by giving to
the Lakeside Fund and planning a
legacy gift for the future. Whether pledging a gift or leaving Lakeside as a beneficiary in an estate,
IRA or life insurance policy, you
can benefit in many ways, including reducing income tax, avoiding capital-gain tax or reducing or
eliminating state or federal estate
taxes.
To plan a deferred endowment gift, contact advancement@
lakesideohio.com or (419) 7985396.
Submit photos for Lakeside Photo Contest
Lakesiders of all ages are
invited to submit photos to be
featured in the 2016 Calendar
of Events brochure, as well as
on Lakeside Chautauqua’s social media pages, website, The
Front Porch blog, Lakesider
newspaper, advertisements and
more.
Photos are needed for the
various panels of the Calendar
of Events brochure, including
nurturing the mind, body and
spirit; family and youth programs; accommodations and
more.
Images should represent people enjoying Lakeside through
photos of families, traditions,
children, religion, education,
cultural arts (special events and
programming), recreation, landscape or architecture.
For full contest rules, visit
www.lakesideohio.com/news.
Entrants should name each
photo by “last name, first
name” and number them each
from 1-5. Send digital copies
as attachments to content@
lakesideohio.com.
Please note that printed or
scanned pictures are not eligible. A limit of five photos per
person may be entered.
The email subject line
should read “Lakeside Photo
Contest.”
Include the name, address,
email address, phone number,
age, photo information and the
date each photo was taken in the
email message.
The deadline for submission
is Thursday, Oct. 1.
Winning photos will be cho-
Preacher of the Week
The Rev. Dr.
Sandra Selby
From corporate America to ministering crisis victims, the Rev. Dr.
Sandra Selby will bring
a diverse message while
serving as Preacher of the
Week from Aug. 9-14.
For nearly 20 years,
the Rev. Dr. Selby worked
as the Vice President of
Strategic Planning for
B.F. Goodrich in Richfield, Ohio.
She later left corporate
America to enter ministry, and since 2004, has
served as the Associate
Pastor and Senior Community Chaplain of the
Furnace Street Mission
(FSM) in Akron, Ohio.
The FSM has been an
integral part of the Akron
and Summit County area,
working closely with victims of crime, abuse and
violence, as well as ministering to the needs of the
community’s fire and police officers.
The Rev. Dr. Selby
earned a master’s degree
in business administration
from the University of
Virginia’s Darden School
in Charlottesville, Va., in
1981. She later completed
her Master of Divinity in
2004 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014, both from
Visit The Front Porch blog at blog.lakesideohio.com for
web-exclusive content not included in this issue.
Resources and FAQs for guests and residents are
available at www.lakesideohio.com/resources.
For more information or with questions, call (419) 798-4461.
See PREACHER
on page 10
Tim Hawkins brings music, laughs
Tim Hawkins, a family-friendly comedian and songwriter known for his witty song
parodies, will perform at 8:15
p.m. Saturday, Aug. 8 in Hoover
Auditorium.
Hawkins began his career as a
stand-up comedian after quitting
his job as a grocery truck driver
in 2002. Now, he performs more
than 120 sold-out shows in more
than 30 states each year.
His following was an overnight success, now having more
than 300 million views and
125,000 subscribers on YouTube
and 450,000 Facebook fans.
Hawkins’ obscure approach
to the comedic stage sets him
apart from others. He combines hilarious, family-friendly
skits with subtle music in every
show, including his notorious
wretched cow impressions.
Each of his pieces is well-timed
and honed into perfection, all
while making a deeper connection with the audience.
“When you connect with a
group of people, they relate to
you,” he said. “If you can latch
onto the truth, then you’re doing
yourself a favor. It’s very fulfilling.”
A self-taught guitarist, Hawkins plays a variety of songs,
note-for-note, from Lynyrd
Skynyrd to Bon Jovi to Prince,
as part of every show. During
his musical parodies, he weaves
in flawless vocal imitations
from artists such as Bono, Jason
Aldean and John Mayer.
See HAWKINS
on page 8
Chautauqua Lecture Series
The Armchair Traveler:
International Art
Lake Erie & the Great Lakes
The Chautauqua Lecture
series will open on Monday
and Tuesday with Carolyn
Putney and Richard Putney,
PhD, who will explore the
art of Egypt, India and Italy.
On Wednesday and
Thursday, the lectures will
sen for the 2016 Calendar of
Events brochure, and the photographer will receive a (oneday) Daily Chautauqua Pass for
the 2016 summer season.
Please direct questions to
content@lakesideohio.com or
call (419) 798-4461, ext. 345.
the Methodist Theological
School in Ohio, located in
Delaware, Ohio.
In her Doctor of Ministry
program, the Rev. Dr. Selby’s
research focused on compassion fatigue in professionals
who work with individuals in
crisis. She regularly visited
areas where churches might
not be present and helped
professionals serving these
communities understand the
context of the community of
the underserved.
She speaks nationally and
regionally about serving people in crisis, including topics
about “Hope in the Wilderness: Facilitating Meaning
Making in Crisis Workers”
and “Cultivating Resilience
in Caregiving.”
focus on historical events
and current topics surrounding Lake Erie and the
Great Lakes.
See “Education” on page
6 for a full description of
this week’s Chautauqua
Lecture Series.
Inside the Lakesider
Community News
Education
Arts & Entertainment
Religious Life
Recreation
Generosity
Classes in the Arts
Children & Youth
This Week in Lakeside
Lakeside Snapshots
.......... Pgs. 2-5
.......... Pgs. 6-7
.......... Pgs. 8-9
.......... Pg. 10
.......... Pg. 11
......... Pg. 12
.......... Pg. 13
.......... Pg. 14
......... Pg. 15
.......... Pg. 16
community news
Page 2
Announcements
NEWS FROM AROUND THE GROUNDS
Light Up Lakeside Winners:
Most Creative Overall:
561 Cherry Ave., Dave & Amy Manzella
Most Colorful Overall:
524 W. Sixth St., Robert & Lisa Schrock
Best Display of White Lights:
215 Vine Ave., Phyllis Belch
Best Use of Lanterns:
325 W. Fourth St., Tom & Lori Hilt
Best Campground Display:
Site #64, Jim & Carol Haines
Best Business Display:
Coffee & Cream
Pirates take to the seas
Children ages 7-11 are invited on the Lakeside Wooden
Boat Society’s Pirate Adventure at 6 p.m. Sunday, Aug.
9. Participants should meet at the Pavilion. Tickets are
available for $5 at the Lakeside Information Center. Parents must sign a permission slip for children to participate.
Space is limited. Children are encouraged to dress as pirates and be prepared to get wet.
Danbury School parking
Please note the last day for Lakeside Chautauqua guests
to park at Danbury School will be Sunday, Aug. 30.
Farmers’ Market
The Lakeside Farmers’ Market is open on Walnut Avenue, between Second and Third Streets, from 9 a.m.-12
p.m. Tuesdays and Fridays.
Annual P.E.O Luncheon
Members of the P.E.O Sisterhood are invited to a buffet
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 12 at the Lakeside Women’s Club Green Gables. The cost is $12 to attend. Reservations are required and can be made by calling
Marilyn Strickler at (419) 798-4778 by Monday, Aug. 10.
P.E.O. was founded in 1869 and is an international philanthropic and educational organization which supports
many projects that help women with higher education.
Lakeside Photography Show hours
Guests may view the Lakeside Photography Show a
half-hour prior to all evening Hoover Auditorium shows,
as well as Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3-5 p.m.
Lakeside Property Owners Association
(LPOA) meeting
The LPOA meeting will take place at 10 a.m. Saturday,
Aug. 8 in Orchestra Hall.
Historic Preservation & Design Review
Board (HP&DRB) meeting
The HP&DRB meeting will take place at 9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 8 at the Train Station.
Hazardous Waste Collection
Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society (LESS)
volunteers will collect hazardous household materials
from 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 5, behind the Lakeside
Schoolhouse.
Items that will be accepted include, all types of paint,
aerosol cans, paint-related materials, motor oil, all household batteries, hand-held propane tanks, antifreeze, fluorescent and compact fluorescent bulbs, household cleaners
and pesticides.
The collected materials will be transported to the Ottawa County Solid Waste Recycling Center in Oak Harbor.
To assist LESS with pick-up and transport of these materials, contact Neil Glaser at (419) 798-9736.
Hazardous household waste may be taken directly to
the recycling center from 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Saturday, Sept.
12, at the Ottawa County Fairground in Oak Harbor.
Youth needed to deliver Lakesider
newspaper
At 9 a.m. on Friday, youth ages 10-15 are invited to
the Legacy House, located at 217 Walnut Ave., to bundle
and deliver newspapers on a first-come, first-served basis.
Please note: the last Friday delivery will take place on Friday, Aug. 14.
On Friday and Saturday evenings, 12 children, ages
6-10, will hand out the Lakesider on the Hoover Auditorium front porch from 7:30-8 p.m. prior to evening performances. If interested, check in on the porch at 7:15 p.m.
Please note: the last evening delivery will take place on
Saturday, Aug. 15.
Photography Show announces winners
Below is a list of the 2015
Lakeside Photography Show
winners. The Lakeside Photography Show can be viewed
30 minutes prior to all evening Hoover performances
and from 3-5 p.m. Sundays,
Tuesdays and Thursdays, until Saturday, Aug. 22.
Best of Show:
“Timeless Reflection”
by Alison C. Humphrey
Color Category Winners
People:
First Place: Lee Flasche
Second Place: Mike Brown
Third Place: Maddie Fleischer
Honorable Mentions: Jeannie
Chaney & Maddie Fleischer
Weather:
First Place: Alison C. Humphrey
Second Place: Mike Brown
Third Place: Betsy Kazee
Honorable Mention: Robin Gill
Nature:
First Place: Allison C. Humphrey
Second Place: Frederick W. Young
Third Place: Matthew Martin
Honorable Mention: Marie
Duellman
Place:
First Place: Frank Jayne
Second Place: Lee Flasche
Third Place: Robin Gill
Honorable Mentions: Sharon
Aunchman & Lee Flasche
Objects:
First Place: John Wanhainen
Second Place: Lee Flasche
Third Place: Maddie Fleischer
Altered Category Winner:
First Place: Alison C. Humphrey
Black & White Category
Winners:
First Place: Drake Williams
Second Place: Drake Williams
Third Place: Tom Faris
Honorable Mention: Drake
Williams
Child Category Winners:
First Place: Marissa Lubowicz
Second Place: Reed Chaudhary
Third Place: Marissa Lubowicz
Honorable Mentions: Morgan Chaudhary, Reed Chaudhary, Alex Schuler (2), Carsen Pirro, Lizzy Bruening &
Marissa Lubowicz
Teen Category Winners:
First Place: Maddie Faris
Second Place: Bridget O’Neal
Third Place: Megan Roth
Honorable Mentions: Lizzy
Voss, Maddie Faris & Bridget
O’Neal
Shirley Stary celebrates 10 years
Before the evening performances at Hoover Auditorium, Shirley Stary is running
from the lobby to backstage,
making sure that everything
is ready for the show.
She is taking care of final
details here and there and preparing her introduction for the
upcoming performance. When
the clock hits 8:15 p.m., Stary,
senior vice president of Programming at Lakeside, heads
out onto the stage.
Even though she talks for
just a few minutes, Stary has
the bright look in her eyes
that somebody has when they
love what they do.
Stary first visited Lakeside
in 2001, when she was going through a very hard time
in her life. She had recently
divorced and was coming to
Lakeside for counseling with
the Rev. Ruth Shannon, a
longtime Lakesider.
Stary was coming to heal
and Lakeside seemed like the
perfect place to do it. It was the
healing grace and peacefulness
of Lakeside that helped Stary
to find herself again.
In 2003, while living in
Ashland, Ohio, she met Bill
Rodwancy, her current husband, who lived on Catawba
Island. She was soon was convinced that the lake is where
she wanted to be.
Then in 2005, a great opportunity was presented to
Stary. Keith Addy had announced his retirement, and
Lakeside was looking for a
Director of Programming.
She knew this was a perfect
position for her, not only because of location, but also because of her experience working at Ashland University and
the San Diego Repertory Theatre. The position required the
skills she had acquired while
working in the field of arts
management and pursuing her
master’s degree. It fit perfectly
with her love for theater and
the arts, as well as education.
Over the 10 years that
Stary has been working for
Lakeside Chautauqua, she has
expanded her knowledge in
the areas relating to all four
pillars and values the way the
programming from each area
inter-relates. But it is clear that
her love for Hoover Auditorium grows a little more with
every performance.
“Hoover has a life all its
own,” said Stary. “There is
something about the energy of
the building, with all the people that have performed on the
stage, the thousands of clergy
ordained there, and all the lectures that have been delivered
there. It has an amazing sense
of place. I’m honored to be
the current ‘caretaker’ who is
holding it steady for the next
generation of audience and
staff.”
A love for Hoover is not
the only thing that has grown
in Stary; she also loves to be
part of such a great team.
“Something that I love the
most is the people that I work
with, they are all in this for the
right reason,” she said. “This
really big team is working this
puzzle together and trying to
make the best outcome happen. We find ways to encourage each other and support
one another.”
Lakeside has proven to be
the fresh start Stary needed,
and the programming has benefitted from her time here.
Gladiolus growers and
exhibitors from Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania will
participate in the Northwestern Ohio Gladiolus Show in
Hoover Auditorium.
The Gladiolus Show,
which has been held at Lakeside for more than 50 years,
will take place from 3-5 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 15 and 12-5
p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16.
Many different and unusual gladiolus arrangements
will be on display. Exhibitors
and Gladiolus Society members promote appreciation of
gladiolus growing and assist
interested persons or groups
in their cultivation and use.
This is an open entry
show. Locals may bring gladioli on the morning of Saturday, Aug. 15 and will receive
assistance in exhibiting.
Special classes for novice,
intermediate and youth are
provided.
Gladiolus is a genus of
flowering plants in the iris
family. Sometimes called the
“sword lily,” the most widely
used English common name
for these plants is simply
gladiolus.
The genus gladiolus contains approximately 260 species, of which 250 are native
to sub-Saharan Africa, primarily South Africa.
Although glads, as they are
commonly called, are used to
a limited extent for landscape
effect, their chief value is for
cut flowers.
Gladioli produce tall
spikes of large blossoms in a
rainbow of colors.
Only clear, true blue is
missing; white, pink, red,
purple, yellow, orange, salmon and even green gladioli are available, along with
many bi-colors.
The wide range of colors,
sizes and flower types make
them particularly useful for
flower arrangements.
The flowers will be distributed to the public, free of
charge, after 8:30 a.m. Monday, Aug. 17, on the Hoover
Auditorium porch.
Martina Baca
Lakesider Co-Editor
Shirley Stary
Flower show gives gladioli center stage
community news
Page 3
Lakeside is Gaiser family’s ‘gathering place’
Noah Manskar
Lakesider Co-Editor
Pavel Fisher did not see
fireworks for the first time
until he was 7 years old.
His parents, Amy Gaiser
and Ken Fisher, adopted him
from Latvia in April 1999.
That July, they brought him
to Lakeside Chautauqua,
where Amy’s family has
gathered for six generations.
Over the Fourth of July
holiday week, he made his
first American friend and
rode his first bicycle in the
Children’s Bike Parade.
When he saw the fireworks
display, his face lit up.
“It was beautiful that
year…,” said Darla Gaiser, Pavel’s adopted grandmother. “But my camera was
aimed at Pavel, this kid with
the huge eyes. He had never
seen anything like it.”
That summer started many
Lakeside traditions for Pavel,
now 23, such as morning donuts and evening ice cream.
It also strengthened his connection with his new family.
“This was the first place
History Highlight:
where I … actually had a
mom, had a dad, had the
grandparents, had the aunts
and uncles to help me out
through stuff and scold
me when I did something
wrong,” he said, “to pick me
up whenever I fell off my
bike and scraped my knee or
bruised myself.”
Lakeside has long served
as a place where all the
Gaisers, who are scattered
across the U.S. from Hawaii
to Georgia, maintain their
strong family bonds.
The tradition started with
Darla’s grandparents and
great aunt and uncle, with
whom she spent summers in
Lakeside as a child. Her husband, Mark Gaiser, also came
when he was young, and the
couple kept Lakeside a tradition after they married.
Mark’s work caused the
couple and their four children
to move often. But, the family
always returned to Lakeside,
making it a “stable zone” for
the children, Darla said.
While the first generation
of Gaiser Lakesiders has
passed away, all five surviv-
The Gaiser family
ing generations return to the
grounds every summer, and
Pavel has not missed one
since his first in 1999.
“This is our gathering
place,” Darla said.
Pavel has lived in his parents’ house on Erie Beach
Road, just outside the Fifth
Street Gate, since graduating
college in May. His uncle,
Matt Gaiser, and his family
also have a house on Erie
Beach Road, near the Second
Street West Gate.
Family members now stay
in the historic farmhouse
rather than renting cottages to house 30 to 40 people,
Matt said. It also allows him,
his wife Hillery and their two
children, whose permanent
home is in Athens, Ohio, to
spend all summer on the lake.
Matt said he bought the
house because he “thought
it’d be a good home for my
family for the next few generations.” The Gaisers gathered there over Memorial
Day weekend to celebrate
Pavel’s college graduation.
Darla’s mother, Cheryl
Rucker, was there, representing the second generation, as
was her great-granddaughter
Alena Hoisington, the sole
member of the sixth.
“We’ve gotta get six
more,” Darla said.
Lowell Thomas holds record for largest crowd
Gretchen Curtis
Lakeside Heritage Society
Director of Operations
Lakesiders are often curious about the largest audiences to attend programs in
Hoover Auditorium. Thanks
to a booklet about the auditorium’s first 50 years, written
by Kenneth Miller in 1978,
the information is readily
available.
Central Auditorium was
built in nine months over the
winter of 1928-1929 with
3,000 seats, 1,800 in front of
the cross aisle and 1,200 behind the aisle.
The building name was
changed to Hoover Auditorium in 1949 after the death of
Arthur L. Hoover, who had
served for 20 years as Lakeside’s General Manager prior
to retirement in 1946.
The largest audience ever
to attend a program in the auditorium was on August 11,
1934 with Lowell Thomas as
the speaker. With chairs at the
rear, front, in the aisles and on
the stage behind the speaker,
the audience numbered approximately 4,200.
As an accredited World
War I correspondent, Thomas
met T. E. Lawrence, a captain
in the British Army in Jerusalem. Thomas shot dramatic
footage of Lawrence and, after the war, toured the world,
narrating his film, “Lawrence
in Arabia,” making Lawrence
— and himself — household
names.
By 1934, when Thomas
spoke at Lakeside, he had been
a radio network broadcaster of
nightly news for four years.
The second largest audience to see an evening program was on July 10, 1940 to
hear then-First Lady Eleanor
Roosevelt. With chairs added
except on the stage, the attendance was about 3,800 with
many people standing outside
at the open windows.
At the time, World War II
had been raging in Europe
for almost a year, but U.S.
citizens were still hoping that
the U.S. could remain neutral.
Roosevelt’s chosen topic was
“The Relationship of the Individual to the Community,”
and she urged citizens to take
an active interest in housing,
health, schools and politics
as a means of preserving democracy.
The largest Sunday morning congregation and second-largest crowd overall was
on July 12, 1970 with the Rev.
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
giving the sermon, “Positive
Attitude toward Problems.”
Approximately 4,000 were
in attendance. The Rev. Dr.
Peale, senior minister at Marble Collegiate Church in New
York City, served four terms
as president of the Council of
Churches of NYC.
The Peninsular News on
July 10, 2015 stated, “No other minister of our time has a
more far-flung pulpit than
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale.
Through his books, radio and
television programs, speeches
and published sermons, he is
reaching millions of people
around the world…”
It is a mystery whether
Hoover Auditorium will ever
again host an audience of
3,800 or more people. The
upholstered seats that have replaced the original seats over
the past 12 years are larger and the distance between
rows is wider, resulting in a
current capacity of 2,472 seats
plus nine wheelchair spaces in
Hoover Auditorium.
Announcements
LESS Poster Project
The 6th Annual Environmental Poster Project,
organized by the Lakeside
Environmental Stewardship
Society (LESS), had 33 individual and family poster
entries.
The purpose of this year’s
project was to create awareness on the importance of
trees. The posters are on
display in Chautauqua Hall
windows. LESS would like
to thank all participants for
making this project a success. LESS would also like to
thank Lakeside Chautauqua
for providing mini-golf passes for each participant.
Historic Tram Tours
Enjoy a historic tram tour
through Lakeside with narration by Carol Murray. Reservations are $5 per person and
are available at the front desk
of the Lakeside Chautauqua
Administration Office. The
75-minute tours take place at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Friday each week of
the summer and begin in front
of Hotel Lakeside. Space is
limited to 11 people.
Lakeside United
Methodist Church
Bookstore &
Library hours
The Bookstore (room
200) of Lakeside United
Methodist Church (UMC),
located at 450 Central Ave.,
is open every Monday from
10 a.m.-12 p.m. The Lakeside
UMC Library summer hours
are 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday
and Friday and 10 a.m.-12
p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday.
Property
Management &
Rental Office
The Lakeside Chautauqua Realty (LCR) Property
Management/Cottage Rental
Office, located at 318 W. Second St., is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Monday-Saturday.
Reach Monak by phone at
(419) 798-4461, ext. 348 or by
email dmonak@lakesideohio.com. Contact Cantu by
phone at (419) 798-4461, ext.
334 or by email at jcantu@
lakesideohio.com.
community news
Page 4
Experience Lakeside Heritage Society hosts Museum, Archives, activities
Visit Heritage Hall Mu- toric Central Lakeside at
and Gift Shop from 10 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays,
wooden boat seum
a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Sat- starting at the museum. Frank
urday and 1:30-4 p.m. Sun- O’Dell and Lynn Woods lead
rides at
day in the original Lakeside the tours.
Every Friday from 10:30
chapel at 238 Maple Ave.
Lakeside
with Carolyn Beears, curator. a.m.-12 p.m., walking tours
The Lakeside Wooden
Boat Society (LWBS) offers a variety of summer
boating events during the
Chautauqua Season.
Wooden boat rides run
every Monday and Thursday until Aug. 27.
The 30-minute rides
begin at 6 p.m. with the
last ride departing at 7:30
p.m. The cost is $20 for
adults and $6 for youth
(ages 4-12).
At 8 p.m. there is an
hour-long sunset cruise.
The cost is $32 for adults
and $10 for youth (ages
4-12).
Each cruise requires a
minimum of four passengers, with a maximum of
six.
Rides and cruises are
conducted on Amazing
Grace, Lakeside’s fully
restored 1937 Richardson Cruiseabout or other
LWBS member boats,
depending on availability and demand. Children
age 3 and under are not
permitted on wooden boat
rides.
The Lakeside Information Center takes reservations for both boat rides at
(419) 798-4461, ext. 266
or infocenter@lakesideohio.com.
Visit the Information
Center for details about
cancellations and inclement weather.
Private Amazing Grace
charters are also available
for special events. Contact
(419) 798-4461, ext. 279
or conference@lakesideohio.com to book a charter.
Weekly pond boat
building workshops for
youth are offered in Central Park.
For more information,
see “Classes in the Arts”
on page 13.
Visitors will discover
new and renovated exhibits.
Children will meet Morris,
the museum monkey, while
completing history scavenger
hunts.
The museum Gift Shop
sells books, toys of a former era, cards, heritage
house markers and memorial
bricks.
View the new ice fishing
exhibit and shanty behind the
museum.
The Archives, located behind the museum at 324 W.
Third St., is open 10 a.m.1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday.
Drop in to learn what valuable Lakeside documents and
photographs are available for
public use.
Make an appointment
with Gretchen Curtis at (419)
798-5519 to research a specific topic or learn about
the proposed new Archives
building.
Join a free 90-minute
guided walking tour of his-
will explore 10 historic areas
of Lakeside for $5.
Space is limited to 15
participants. Those interested should register by 4 p.m.
Thursday at the museum.
The August 14 tour, led
by Phil Dale, will explore
the destruction caused by the
devastating 1929 fire. The
tour schedule is in the Lakeside Heritage Society (LHS)
2015 brochure, available at
the museum, Archives and
Lakeside Chautauqua Administration Office.
Self-guided walking tour
scripts are available for
Central, East and Southwest
Lakeside for $5 each at the
museum.
LHS Sunday lectures are
presented at 2 p.m. in Chautauqua Hall. The lecture on
Sunday, Aug. 9, presented
by Phil Dale, will review the
135-year history of the historic Richard’s Hotel on Maple Avenue.
The full schedule of the
summer’s topics and speak-
History of Epworth Lodge
and today’s Rhein Center
As the C. Kirk Rhein, Jr.,
Center for the Living Arts
celebrates its 16th anniversary on August 8, it is a good
time to tell the extraordinary
story of how Epworth Lodge
became Lakeside Chautauqua’s Center for the Living
Arts.
On July 17, 1996, 43-yearold Lakesider C. Kirk Rhein,
Jr., was killed when TWA
Flight 800, en route from John
F. Kennedy Airport to Paris,
exploded over Long Island.
The resultant outpouring
of support and memorial gifts
inspired the Rhein family to
donate the necessary funds to
begin the restoration of Epworth Lodge and establish a
living memorial, where people of all ages could enrich
their life experience through
the arts.
With additional funding
from Lakeside Chautauqua
and others, Epworth Lodge
came to life as a center for
arts education.
The dedication of the C.
Kirk Rhein, Jr., Center for
the Living Arts took place
on Friday, Aug. 8, 1999. The
new “Rhein Center” was an
immediate success.
This summer, approximately 7,000 seats will be occupied over the course of the
Chautauqua season.
The Rhein Center, as a
function of the cultural arts
pillar, receives oversight
from Shirley Stary, senior
vice president of Programming.
MaryAnn Kelmer, the
eighth and current coordinator of the Rhein Center,
was succeeded by Richard and Shirley Witteborg
(2011-2013), Juliann Breting
Rohn (2006-2010), Chelsea
Meyers (2004-2005), Katie Meyers (2003), Michael
Aboud (2002), Will Honeycutt (2001) and the Rev. Amy
Shaw (1999-2000).
ers is available at the museum, Archives and Lakeside
Chautauqua Administration
Office.
“The Historic Chautauqua Movement” seminar is
presented every Wednesday
from 3:30-4:45 p.m. in the
Fountain Inn Aigler Room as
an introduction to the Chautauqua Movement in the
late 1800s. The presenter is
Gretchen Curtis.
The LHS offers opportunity tickets for the framed
1986 Ben Richmond print,
“The Gathering,” featuring
Amish buggies at a barn in
winter. Tickets are $3 each
or four tickets for $10. View
the print and purchase tickets
at the museum.
The winner will be drawn
at 4 p.m. Monday, Sept. 7, at
the Heritage Society Recycle
Sale in South Auditorium.
The winner does not need to
be present. Proceeds benefit
the museum.
Donations of household
goods, toys, tools and furniture are being accepted for
the Heritage Society Recycle
Sale held over Labor Day
weekend. This major fundraising effort is coordinated
by Carol and Joe Morgan.
Bring items to the porch of
the Archives, 324 West Third
St., or call (419) 798-5217 to
arrange for large items.
Single ($20) and family
($30) LHS memberships support preservation of Lakeside’s history. Membership
forms are available at the
museum and at www.lakesideheritagesociety.org.
There are many ways to
help LHS with volunteer
projects lasting a couple
hours or longer. Discuss volunteering with Gretchen Curtis at the Archives.
Cherry Avenue cottage
models exemplary renovation
The Lakeside Historic Preservation & Design
Review Board (HP&DRB)
would like to thank homeowners Loralee Marsh and
Steve Ruedrich for the excellent renovation to their
1920s cottage, located at
423 Cherry Ave.
The porch suffered tree
damage several years ago.
As a result, the porch is a
newer structure, but was
designed and constructed to
match both the original and
existing structure.
The hip roof with exposed rafters gives the cot-
tage a rustic, early look. In
addition, the double doors,
windows and architectural
details match the original
house nicely.
The use of natural materials, such as wood to finish
the porch, is greatly appreciated by the HP&DRB, as
this feature would have also
been included in the original design and construction.
By keeping true to the
original structure, the cottage has maintained the
spirit of what it would have
looked like when it was
built in the early 1920s.
community news
Page 5
Sing in the Chautauqua Festival Chorus
All Lakeside singers are invited to
participate in a special festival chorus
that will perform alongside the Lakeside
Symphony Orchestra (LSO) and soloist
Joan Ellison on Friday, Aug. 14.
The chorus will perform in a tribute
to America’s Armed Forces and the 70th
Anniversary to the end of World War II.
Join conductors Robert Cronquist
and Michael Shirtz as they celebrate
the music that changed a nation and the
world.
The Chautauqua Festival Chorus will
join the LSO in presenting great American songs such as the “Battle Hymn of
the Republic,” “Hymn to the Fallen,”
“America the Beautiful” and more.
The concert will also include Shirtz’s
orchestral narrative paying tribute to the
greatest generation, entitled, “Gift of a
Generation,” which was premiered at
the Choral Society’s 2014 Holiday Festival.
The program will provide other tributes and remembrances to the servicemen and women who fought around a
globe for the preservation of freedom
for all.
Singers participating in the festival
chorus will be provided with a music
folder.
Concert attire and chorus informa-
tion will be provided upon reserving a
place to sing in the chorus.
The schedule for the Chautauqua
Festival Chorus includes rehearsal from
6:30-9 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 13 in Chautauqua Hall.
On Friday, Aug. 14 a rehearsal with
the LSO will take place from 2-4 p.m.
and warm up rehearsal will be from
6:45-7:30 p.m. Both rehearsals will take
place in Hoover Auditorium.
For those interested in singing with
this special chorus, please contact
Casie Eller by email at programming@
lakesideohio.com or call (419) 7984461, ext. 347.
CLSC Graduation Ceremony held on July 26
The Lakeside Chapter
of the Chautauqua Literary
& Scientific Circle (CLSC)
held its second graduation
celebration of the 21st century on July 26.
The celebration honored
two members of the Lakeside
Chapter, Sandi O’Dell and
Dolly Andler, who earned
post graduate level status as
members of the Guild of Seven Seals.
Both graduates addressed
the gathering, commenting
on the modern history of the
CLSC at Lakeside and on the
meaning of their membership
in the Guild of the Seven
Seals.
The theme for this year’s
graduation was “Truth and
Consequences.”
To illustrate this theme,
several members of the
CLSC, including Detra Bennett, David Blank, the Rev.
Dr. Irwin Jennings, George
Spillers and Karen Weaver, read and commented on
quotations from a variety of
different sources, including
Samuel Johnson, Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle, Oscar Wilde,
William Hazlitt and Mark
Twain.
The invocation and closing remarks were delivered
by the Rev. Dr. Jennings.
Music was provided by Mary
Jones on the dulcimer.
Bonnie Blank and Marsha
Krosnosky provided a celebratory cake and other refreshments for the occasion.
Gretchen Curtis, Lakeside
Heritage Society Director of
Operations, published and
distributed programs for the
event.
The long-term goal of all
members of the CLSC is to
read 12 works from an approved list of books that extends back to 1878.
Those who complete this
task are honored as
official graduates of
the CLSC.
Graduate level
status in the Guild
of Seven Seals is
earned by reading
an additional 14
books from the official reading list of
the CLSC, as compiled by the New
York Chapter of the
organization, for a
total of 26 books.
The Chautauqua
Institute CLSC was
formed in 1878 to
support reading and
learning about na- Sandi O’Dell and Dolly Andler are
ture, art, literature, initiated into the Chautauqua Litphilosophy and sci- erary & Scientific Circle’s Guild of
ence.
Seven Seals.
The New York
chapter
of
the
es two books to read during
CLSC provides a reading the off season for discussion
list each year, from which at round table sessions each
the local membership choos- summer.
Lakeside Women’s Club offers many summer programs
Stop in and visit Green Gables, the
Victorian cottage behind Orchestra Hall
and home of the Lakeside Women’s
Club (LWC). To join the LWC, make
a reservation for the Tuesday, Aug. 18
luncheon or stay overnight, see Resident
Hostess Lois Weller.
Anyone may borrow or return books
from 1-4 p.m. weekdays (closed Thursday) or Saturdays from 9-11 a.m.
At the foot of the stairs are colorful
blankets, each made of 49 knitted rectangles and identified by number. One will
be given away at a drawing on Aug.18.
Tickets are $1 each or six for $5. Entrants should write on the back of the
ticket the number of the blanket they
hope to win. The winner does not need
to be present.
The “Corner Cupboard” is always
open for browsing. Payment is by the
“honor system.” Buyers leave a donation
in a marked box.
Every Saturday at 9:30 a.m., children
ages 4-10 are invited to Children’s Story
Time. Parents of younger children may
stay.
The “Breakfast Bunch” Book Discussion will meet at 8:15 a.m. Monday, Aug.
10, at the home of Carolyn Swanger,
343 Cherry Ave., for a discussion of the
non-fiction book Passages in Caregiving: Turning Chaos into Confidence by
Gail Sheehy.
In her non-fiction book, Sheehy discusses the stages involved in providing
care to chronically ill and dying loved
ones.
Mary Breckenridge will lead the
discussion. Please RSVP at (419) 9670024. Coffee and tea will be served.
At 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 11, the
LWC will hold a short business meeting and elect officers for 2016. Special
guests will be members of the Lakeside
Symphony Orchestra (LSO).
Amy Heritage, Lakeside Symphony
Orchestra member and author of The
Lakeside Symphony Comes to Town,
along with illustrator Eleanor A. Hutton,
will present the afternoon program following the meeting. See “Education” on
page 7 for more information.
Bridge lovers can play at Green Ga-
bles from 9:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Wednesday,
Aug. 12, and again from 1:30-4 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 13.
Also at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, knitters are invited to gather on the Green
Gables porch while the mahjongg group
meets indoors. Instruction is offered for
beginners.
The Lakeside Girls’ Club will meet at
9:30 a.m. (ages 10-14) and 11 a.m. (ages
5-9) on Thursday, Aug. 13.
Gretchen S. Curtis will delight them
with the history of the Green Gables
clubhouse, followed by collage making.
They will end with elegant desserts and
punch. The cost is $2. Please sign up at
Green Gables by Tuesday.
The book review at 1:30 p.m. Friday,
Aug. 14 will feature the non-fiction book
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World
that Can’t Stop Talking.Susan Cain’s fascinating and carefully researched book
exposes the misunderstandings of our
culture that has embraced the extrovert
ideal and turned introversion into a malady. The book will be reviewed by M.A.
Stephens.
Lakeside
Chautauqua
2015 Board of
Directors
Officers
Chairman
Randy Snow
Vice Chairman
Frank Baker
Secretary
Margo Morrow
Treasurer
David Blank
Assist. Treasurer
Jennifer Gehrlein
2015 Board of
Directors
Frank Baker
Steve Bauerle
David Bell
David Blank
Larry Brown
Michael Brown
Paige Shalter Bruening
Dwight Douce
William Drackett
Dan Drew
Jennifer Gehrlein
Kristen Jones
Dale Knobel
Greg Linville
David Martin
Margo Morrow
Jill Oberer
Scott Ocke
Gary Olin
Scott Rosson
Yvonne Rush
Marilynn Schroeder
Vernon Shepherd
Randy Snow
Don Sultzbach
Terry Tomlinson
Ex Officio: Kevin
Sibbring, President/CEO
Lakeside
Chautauqua
Foundation
2015 Board of
Directors
Chair
William Drackett
Vice Chair
Rebecca Smith
Secretary
Salam Chaudhary
Treasurer
Kurt Geisheimer
Directors:
Charles Bond
Carol McKinney
Peter Stephens
education
Page 6
All lectures are scheduled to last 90 minutes.
Chautauqua Lecture Series
The Armchair Traveler: International Art
10:30 a.m. Monday: Miles Up the Nile: Egyptian Travel from Luxor to Abu
Simbel with Carolyn and Dick Putney (Orchestra Hall)
This lecture will portray a photographic visit to the magnificent ruins and
striking landscape of southern Egypt, reached by boat and plane. Sites will
include the region of Luxor (home of the Valley of the Kings, the Tomb of
Tutankhamen and the ruins of the great Temples of Luxor and Karnak). More
southerly sites along the banks of the Nile River will include the region of Aswan and its modern hydroelectric dam and the ancient island of Philae, site of a
magnificently preserved ancient temple. The culminating segment will feature
a flight to the monumental temple of Abu Simbel, built in the 13th century
BCE by Ramesses the Great and saved in the 1960s from the rising waters of
the Nile.
Carolyn Putney recently retired as Chief Curator and Curator of Asian Art
at the Toledo Museum of Art (TMA), where she now serves as a consulting
curator. While at TMA, she curated numerous exhibits, including Princely Pursuits: The Miniature Painting of India (2003), The Lure of Pompeii (2007) and
Mummies to Monet: The Libbeys Collect (2008).
She earned her Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees from Florida
State University with a major in Asian art history and minors in Renaissance
and Baroque art. Putney received the YWCA Milestones Award in the Arts
category in 2013.
Richard Putney, PhD, recently retired from his position as an Associate Professor and the Head of Art Museum Practices at the University of Toledo, a
department he created and cultivated over the last five years. He also served
as a consulting curator for the international exhibition The Art of the Louvre’s
Tuileries Garden (2014) at the TMA.
A graduate of the University of Delaware with his Bachelor of Arts, Master
of Arts and PhD in art history, his studies concentrated in the areas of medieval
art and architecture.
1:30 p.m. Monday: Sculpted Caves of India: Ajanta & Ellora with Carolyn
and Dick Putney (Orchestra Hall)
Two of India’s greatest rock-cut monuments, the one Buddhist and the other
Hindu, will be explored in this lecture. Buddhist monks began a series of 29
cave temples at Ajanta almost 1,500 years ago. By the 8th century, their handhewn, magnificently painted interiors had been largely abandoned and long
forgotten, rediscovered only in 1819 by a British soldier hunting tigers nearby.
Another series of rock-cut caves in the nearby site of Ellora inhabited by
Hindus, Buddhist and Jains were created and occupied from the 6th-10th centuries. The lecture will analyze the unrivalled masterpiece of Ellora, the Kailasanatha temple, created to imitate the abode of Lord Shiva. A freestanding,
multi-storied temple, it is miraculously carved from a single rock.
10:30 a.m. Tuesday: Rome and Romans in the Imperial Age with Carolyn and
Dick Putney (Orchestra Hall)
This lecture will feature an illustrated visit to ancient Rome, where the first
Emperor Augustus “found a city of brick and left a city of marble.” Photographs of the ancient ruins, as well as recent graphic reconstructions and models, will explore magnificent sites like the Republican Forum, the site where
Julius Caesar was cremated and glorified in a temple, the Forum of Augustus,
the Capitoline Hill, the Colosseum and its gladiatorial combats, the Forum and
Market of Trajan and the astounding dome of the Pantheon. Finally, the lecture
will explore the immense impact of early Christians and Emperor Constantine
on the ancient city.
1:30 p.m. Tuesday: Palladio, Venice & the Veneto: A Master Architect in Magnificent Settings with Carolyn and Dick Putney (Orchestra Hall)
The extraordinarily gifted Venetian architect Andrea Palladio (1508-1580)
is considered by many to be the single most influential and important architect
of the Italian Renaissance. The talented son of a stonemason, Palladio received
a classical education from local aristocrat and scholar, Giangiorgio Trissino,
who recognized his intelligence and rich gifts as a designer. Taken by Trissino
to Rome, the young Palladio was exposed to and deeply influenced by the city’s
magnificent architectural ruins and ancient art. Upon his return to northern Italy, he designed original, highly classical villas and palaces for the gentry of the
Veneto, the largely agricultural countryside surrounding Venice and its lagoon.
Recognized for his beautiful and highly functional designs, he was soon called
to the great maritime city of Venice, a world power known for its maritime
empire; among other Renaissance masterworks, there he designed the extraordinary church and monastic complex of San Giorgio Maggiore, still one of the
city’s most famous landmarks. Studied closely in later centuries by English architects, his designs inspired the great movement of Neo-Palladianism, which
was tremendously popular in Great Britain and the American colonies.
Lake Erie & the Great Lakes
10:30 a.m. Wednesday: Life Aboard a U.S. Coast Guard Icebreaker with
Edward Morris (Chautauqua Hall)
The U.S. Coast Guard is charged with federal responsibility to keep shipping lanes open on the Great Lakes so ships, including vessels carrying ore and
essential cargo, can safely navigate these waters all year.
Edward Morris, Public Affairs Staff Officer with the U.S. Coast Guard
Auxiliary, spent time this past winter aboard the Coast Guard icebreaker, Neah
Bay, and experienced life aboard this 140-foot Bay-class icebreaking tug. His
duties included relieving crew of helm duty and interviewing crew members
aboard the ship. In this lecture, Morris will share what he learned from crew
members about the rewards and hardships of working on a ship such as the
Neah Bay, the work performed by crew members, and how crew members
remained connected with their families while at sea.
A native of Louisiana, Morris has had an extensive nautical career. He
served for numerous years as a tall ship crew member on the Brig Niagara and
his work for a small chemical company took him to sea on multiple vessels.
Now in his third year with the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, his role as Public
Affairs Staff Officer is to promote the breadth of programs and services provided by the U.S. Coast Guard and Auxiliary.
1:30 p.m. Wednesday: The Ohio Coastal Management Program: An Introduction with Brenda Culler (Chautauqua Hall)
Lake Erie, one of the five Great Lakes, is a body of fresh water with many
features that are socially, economically and environmentally significant to the
region and the nation. This lecture will explore the significance of Lake Erie to
Ohio and the work that is being done by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Office of Coastal Management through the Ohio Coastal Management
Program to monitor activities that affect coastal resources and ensure resource
protection while balancing economic, cultural and environmental interests.
Brenda Culler serves as a Public Information Officer, as well as an Internet
and Education Coordinator for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Office of Coastal Management in Sandusky, Ohio. As part of her work, she published both the first and second editions of the Ohio Coastal Atlas, Ohio’s Lake
Erie Public Access Guide – Coast Edition and Ohio’s Lake Erie Public Access
Guide – Rivers Edition. Culler earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism and
political science from Kent State University.
10:30 a.m. Thursday: A History of Passenger Travel on the Great Lakes with
James Lundgren (Chautauqua Hall)
This lecture will contain a history of the development of shipping on the
Great Lakes. Starting with the earliest sailing vessels and concluding with the
large steam ships, James Lundgren will tell tales of ships used for immigration,
transportation and enjoyment from the 19th century schooners to the lavish
steamboats of the early 20th century.
Lundgren is the Director of Operations for the National Museum of the
Great Lakes. He has a bachelor’s degree in American history and American
Indian studies and master’s degree in non-profit administration. He has worked
and volunteered for museums and historic sites across the Midwest. Lundgren
has conducted many programs on a variety of Great Lakes topics, ranging from
the fur trade and the War of 1812 to shipping and ship wrecks. He became the
Director of Operations in 2014 as part of the opening of the brand new facility
on the Maumee River in Toledo, Ohio.
1:30 p.m. Thursday: The Status of Lake Erie with Kristen DeVanna Fussell,
PhD (Chautauqua Hall)
Lake Erie is arguably the most important lake in the world, but its ecosystem is severely stressed. The lake’s biggest problems are sediment loading, nutrient loading, harmful algal blooms (HABs), the “dead zone,” aquatic invasive
species and climate change. Addressing and solving these problems requires a
well-organized and coordinated program of research, education and outreach
to a broad array of audiences, such as the business community, farmers, Lake
Erie users and the general public, to identify and implement new resource management policies and behavioral changes within the watershed. This lecture
will analyze Lake Erie’s most critical issues, current research being conducted
and a more in-depth look at what is driving the algal bloom issues in Lake Erie.
Kristen DeVanna Fussell, PhD, earned her bachelor’s degree in zoology
from Ohio Wesleyan University before attending the University of Toledo for
her Master of Science and PhD. She then served as a post-doctoral researcher
at The Ohio State University’s Aquatic Ecology Laboratory. Following a year
as an adjunct professor at Otterbein University, she joined the staff at the Ohio
Sea Grant Program and Stone Laboratory of The Ohio State University. Fussell is a member of the International Association for Great Lakes Research,
American Fisheries Society and the Ecological Society of America.
education
Page 7
Heritage Society Lecture
2 p.m. Sunday: Lakeside’s Historic Richard’s Hotel with Phil Dale (Chautauqua Hall)
What do Byington Boarding House, Richard’s Hotel and Poor Richards Inn
have in common? These were all names in the history of the building located
at 317 Maple Ave., known today as Same Time Next Year. At this lecture, discover which five current buildings were once part of the complex as it evolved
over the years. Join Phil Dale as he travels through time to explore the history
of a building nearly as old as Lakeside itself.
Dale has been a Lieutenant/EMT with the Bedford Township Fire Department in Temperance, Mich., since 2001 and served as a pastor to seniors at Boulevard Christian Church in Sylvania, Ohio from 1995-2009. Dale and his wife,
Kathy, have been married for 46 years. They reside in Lambertville, Mich., and
have owned a home in Lakeside (at Same Time Next Year) for 10 years.
Guided Tree Walk
10:30 a.m. Monday: Guided Tree Walk (Meet at Pavilion)
Lakeside Chautauqua has been designated as a Tree City USA community
for the last two years. This award is presented to communities with a wide variety of trees who are working to maintain and improve their forest. Lakeside
has more than 100 varieties of trees, and on this walk, participants will learn
about 25 of them. The walks are coordinated by the Lakeside Environmental
Stewardship Society (LESS) and led by LESS volunteers Bill Dudrow, Bill
Smith and Frank O’Dell.
Star Gazing
One hour after sunset, Monday: Star Gazing with Bob Sudomir (Meet at Pavilion)
Weather permiting, astronomy enthusiasts of all ages can see stars through
telescopes on Monday evenings, starting one hour after sunset. This program is
led by science teacher Bob Sudomir.
Lakeside Women’s Club Program
1:30 p.m. Tuesday: The Story Behind Our Book The Lakeside Symphony
Comes to Town with Amy Heritage & Eleanor A. Hutton (Lakeside Women’s
Club Green Gables)
The Lakeside Symphony Orchestra Comes to Town, written by Amy Heritage and illustrated by Eleanor A. Hutton, was published in 2014. The book
portrays the lives of the symphony musicians while at Lakeside. In this program, both the author, who is a member of the Lakeside Symphony Orchestra,
and the illustrator will tell the story of how the book came to be.
The book is available for sale at Artists-N-Cahoots (222 Walnut Ave.). Proceeds from the sale of the book benefit the Lakeside Symphony Orchestra.
Symphony Pre-Concert Talk
7 p.m. Tuesday: Symphony Pre-Concert Talk with Jane Hines (Chautauqua
Hall)
Prior to select Lakeside Symphony Orchestra performances this season,
Jane Hines will share an overview of the works to be performed by the orchestra and the composers of those works.
Hines graduated from Bowling Green State University (BGSU) with a master’s degree in music history and music theory, where she recently completed
a thesis on Johannes Brahms. She has also explored film music and historical
keyboard practice. Hines has presented her research at conferences in the U.S.
and Canada, in addition to chairing an annual graduate student conference at
BGSU. She will begin her doctoral studies at Princeton University in the fall.
Guided Bird Walk
7:30 a.m. Wednesday: Guided Bird Walk (Meet at Pavilion)
Judy Sudomir and Joe Sudomir will lead a walk at Meadow Brook Marsh.
Bring binoculars, siting scopes and manuals. Contact Judy Sudomir at (330)
244-5019 with questions. The bird walks are coordinated by LESS.
Lakeside Herb Study
8:30 a.m. Wednesday: Herbs of the Bible with Jeri Hoopes, Sandra Bricker,
Charlotte Nedrich & Rita Williams (Train Station)
Curious about the herbs mentioned in the Bible? Many appear and are worth
looking at again, considering their long, valued and useful history.
Historic Central Lakeside Walking Tour
10:30 a.m. Wednesday: Historic Central Lakeside Walking Tour (Meet at
Heritage Hall Museum)
This tour, led by Lakeside Heritage Society volunteers Frank O’Dell and
Lynne Woods, highlights cottages and buildings in the area from Sycamore to
Central Avenues and the lakefront to Fifth Street.
The Historic Chautauqua Movement Seminar
3:30 p.m. Wednesday: The Historic Chautauqua Movement Seminar with
Gretchen Curtis (Fountain Inn Aigler Room)
This seminar describes the development of the Chautauqua Movement in
western New York in the 1870s, reviews how Lakeside became a Chautauqua
community and highlights remaining active Chautauqua programs in North
America. Please note: this is the last program of the summer.
Special Historic Walking Tour
10:30 a.m. Friday: 1929 Fire Destruction with Phil Dale
(Meet at the corner of Sixth Street & Laurel Avenue) Pre-registration required at Heritage Hall Museum by 4 p.m. Thursday. Cost is $5 per person; limit of 15 participants.
Travel through time to Sunday morning, October 20, 1929
when the shrill sound of the Lakeside fire alarm pierced the air.
By the end of the day, the Lakeside United Methodist Church,
Printing Shop and 26 cottages from Walnut to Central Avenues, between Fourth and Fifth Streets, were gone. Walk the
path of this destructive fire to learn where it started, how it
progressed, the effort to control it and the fire’s aftermath.
Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society Seminar
1:30 p.m. Friday: Blue/Green Algae with Bill Smith (Fountain Inn Aigler Room)
This seminar will review the problem of blue/green algae in Lake Erie and
provide an update on related literature and recommendations for solving the
issue.
Foreign Affairs Forum
2:30 p.m. Friday: Foreign Affairs Forum moderated by Jeff Dieterich (Chautauqua Hall)
This forum is designed to facilitate a free exchange of information and opinions on international events and their impact on the U.S., as well as the effect of
domestic events on the rest of the world. Participants also have the opportunity
to discuss future options for U.S. foreign policy. As moderator, Jeff Dieterich
brings his knowledge of foreign affairs to the forum based on his 35-year career
with the U.S. government.
Additional Community Education Programs
8:15 a.m. Monday: ‘Breakfast Bunch’ Book Discussion: Passages in Caregiving: Turning Chaos into Confidence by Gail Sheehy with Mary Breckenridge
(343 Cherry Ave.) Pre-registration required at (419) 967-0024.
1:30 p.m. Friday: Lakeside Women’s Club Book Review: Quiet: The Power
of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking (non-fiction) by Susan Cain
with M.A. Stephens (Lakeside Women’s Club Green Gables)
A look ahead: Week 9 lecture highlights
Civil War Week
10:30 a.m. Monday, Aug. 17: Pumpkin Slingers & Percussion Caps: Why
was the Civil War so Deadly? with Dana Shoaf, Editor, Civil War Times
1:30 p.m Monday, Aug. 17: Black & White in a Colored World: The Challenge of Selecting Covers for Civil War Times with Dana Shoaf, Editor,
Civil War Times
10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 18: John Brown: The Flame that Sparked the
Civil War with Dennis Frye, Chief Historian, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park
1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 18: Odyssey of a Field Officer: John Nevin of the
93rd Pennsylvania with Dana Shoaf, Editor, Civil War Times
10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19: September Suspense: Lincoln’s Union in
Peril with Dennis Frye, Chief Historian, Harpers Ferry National Historical
Park
1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19: Antietam: America’s Bloodiest Day with
Dennis Frye, Chief Historian, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park
10:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 20: A “Slow” Civil War: Ohio’s Major General Charles Griffin & the Pursuit of Freedmen’s Rights in Texas with Dale
Knobel, PhD, President Emeritus, Denison University
1:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20: The Civil War: Oberlin Perspectives on the
Home Front & War Front with Liz Schultz, Museum Education & Tour
Coordinator, Oberlin Heritage Center
10:30 a.m. Friday, Aug. 21: R.B. Hayes, Religion & the Civil War with
Christie Weininger, Executive Director, R.B. Hayes Presidential Center
1:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21: Freedom’s Friends: Underground Railroad &
Abolitionist History Walk (off-site program held in Oberlin, Ohio and led
by a member of the Oberlin Heritage Center)
arts & entertainment
Page 8
Please remember to bring Chautauqua passes when
attending performances at Hoover Auditorium.
Tim Hawkins
Saturday, Aug. 8
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
HAWKINS,
continued from page 1
Some of his most popular parodies
include, “Pretty Pink Tractor,” “Cletus Take the Reel,” “Short Songs” and
“Smells Like Birthday Cake.”
He develops new material daily,
simply by absorbing the world around
him. Hawkins pokes fun at everyday
life and spoofs hit songs, which takes
him only minutes to complete.
Family Night
in the Park:
Dennis
Stroughmatt et
l’Esprit Creole
Sunday, Aug. 9
6 p.m.
Steele Memorial Bandstand
For this week’s Family Night in
the Park concert, Dennis Stroughmatt et l’Esprit Creole will take the
audience on a journey through Upper
Louisiana’s Creole Culture with a vi-
Hoover
Movie Night:
“The Pajama
Game”(1957)
Monday, Aug. 10
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
This week’s Hoover Movie Night
is “The Pajama Game” (1957) starring Doris Day, John Raitt and Ralph
Dunn.
Directed by George Abbot and
Stanley Donen, “The Pajama Game”
tells the story of a strike at the SleepTite Pajama Factory, where workers
Lakeside
Symphony
Orchestra
Concert
Tuesday, Aug. 11
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
The Lakeside Symphony Orchestra (LSO), under the direction of Robert Cronquist, will present an evening
concert commemorating the 485th
Anniversary of the Augsburg Confession. This LSO season is supported
by the Ohio Arts Council.
To open the program, the LSO will
perform “Overture to Der Meistersinger,” which was composed by Richard Wagner in 1862.
The optimistic, light-hearted tone
of the piece, paired with Wagner’s
“I used to write what I thought was
funny,” said Hawkins. “Now all I do
is live my life and make notes.”
Hawkins recently released his
sixth concert DVD, titled “That’s the
Worst,” which was added to his collection of DVDs that include “Push
Pull Point Pow,” “Rockshow Comedy
Tour,” “Insanitized,” “I’m No Rockstar,” “Full Range of Motion” and
“Greatest Hits & Bits.”
He also finalized the manuscript
for his first book, titled Diary of a
Jackwagon.
The book, released this past week,
tells his stories about marriage, parenting, homeschooling, worship music and food, while keeping true to his
comedic flair. Diary of a Jackwagon
reminds readers that during
life’s struggles, laughter
will always be the best
medicine.
In addition to his DVD
and book releases, Hawkins
has released five CDs since
2002, including Tuna Fish
Sandwich (2002), Extremely Madeover (2004), Cletus
Take the Reel (2009), Rockshow Comedy Tour (2011)
and Pretty Pink Tractor
(2011).
Hawkins lives in St.
Louis, Mo. with his wife,
Heather, and their four children, three sons and one
daughter.
brant blend of music, language and
stories.
The band’s music bridges the gap
between contemporary Canadian and
Louisiana Cajun-style music from a
tradition that has been passed down
for more than three centuries. The
style blends together Celtic, Canadian and old-time music preserved by
families in the Ozark region.
This medley of music, language,
stories and culture stowed away in
the Missouri Ozarks has been given
a voice, in this tapestry of the world,
with concerts by Dennis Stroughmatt
et l’Esprit Creole.
The group has performed at the
New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, Smithsonian Folklore Festival
and The Library of Congress.
They have also been Old Mines
Area Historical Society’s Fête de
L’Automne (Festival of Autumn)
for the past 17 years running.
Stroughmatt has been playing
fiddle for 23 years. He was taught
to play by local Creole fiddlers
Roy Boyer and Charlie Pashia, in
the same Creole tradition as their
fathers.
Stroughmatt has been the featured keynote speaker at the National Association Teachers of
French Conference and the Missouri Folklore Society Conference.
His band members include
Doug Hawf on guitar and bass; and
Jim Willgoose on upright bass.
Hawf is a member of a French
Creole family in Southern Illinois
with a real passion for playing music
from his family’s heritage.
Willgoose is a longtime folk musician from Boston, Mass., who now
teaches at Kaskaskia Community
College in Centralia, Ill.
are demanding a seven and a half cent
per hour raise.
Company owner, Myron Hasler
(Dunn), is oblivious to the fact that
this wage increase would bring the
employees’ wages in line with the industry standard.
Hasler hires a new superintendent,
Sid Sorokin (Raitt), to fill the role of
negotiator with the union and supervisor of the factory workers.
Soon after arriving to the factory, Sid meets Babe Williams (Day),
the union President and Chair of the
Grievance Committee.
Despite their professional struggles between management and the
union, both Sid and Babe become attracted to one another. However, Babe
knows their professional and personal
lives should not intersect, especially
with the union’s outstanding griev-
ance with the pajama factory.
Thus
far,
Hasler has refused
to grant their motion for a wage increase and blames
the
company’s
Board of Directors, who has the
final approval of
all company decisions.
With the trials of the ongoing strike
lingering, it could ruin any chance of
a personal relationship between Babe
and Sid, unless the problem is resolved.
Now, Babe and Sid must work together to end the strike, meeting both
sides’ demands without taking any
drastic measures that could hurt either
party in the end.
The film is based on the hit Broadway musical, The Pajama Game, featuring choreography by Bob Fosse.
It also showcases the same popular
musical selections as the Broadway
show, including “The Pajama Game,”
“Racing with the Clock,” “I’m Not At
All in Love” and “Hey There.” (101
mins)
ability to tap into the revolutions
taking place in the German-speaking
states of central Europe in the 1860s,
meant that the work was a triumph at
its Munich premiere in 1868.
Next, the LSO will play “Symphony No. 39” in E flat major by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The piece
includes four movements, Adagio-Allegro, Andante con moto, Menuetto-Allegro and Finale-Allegro.
Mozart composed the piece in
1788, during the war between Turkey
and the Roman Empire in Vienna.
This particular symphony is unusual, because it is the only composition from Mozart’s adulthood that
does not use oboes. This means the
clarinets are given more prominence
throughout the piece.
To begin the second half of the
program, the LSO will perform Felix
Mendelssohn’s “Symphony No. 5,”
known as the Reformation.
The selection was composed by
Mendelssohn in 1830 in honor of the
300th Anniversary of the Presentation
of the Augsburg Confession.
This symphony was
written for a full orchestra
and was Mendelssohn’s
second extended symphony. It was not published
until 1868, 21 years after
the composer’s death.
It is divided in four
movements, Andante-Allegro con fuoco, Allegro
vivace, Andante and Andante con
moto–Allegro.
Andante-Allegro con fuoco begins
with a slow introduction and is Mendelssohn’s version of the “Dresden
Amen” on the strings.
Allegro vivace, a B-flat major
scherzo, is very different in spirit
from the first movement, being much
lighter in tone.
Andante, in G minor, is a lyrical
piece primarily for the strings. There
are references to the “Dresden Amen.”
Andante con moto–Allegro is a
sonata form and is in 4/4 time. It is
based on Martin Luther’s chorale Ein
feste Burg ist unser Gott (A Mighty
Fortress Is Our God). At the very end
of the coda, a powerful version of Luther’s chorale is played by the entire
orchestra.
The Augsburg Confession is the
primary confession of faith used in
the Lutheran Church and one of the
most important documents of the
Protestant Reformation.
It was created to defend the Lutherans against misrepresentations
and to provide a statement of their
theology that would be acceptable to
the Roman Catholics of the time.
Special hotel promotion price for upcoming Hoover show
From his debut as a jazz and blues artist to becoming a pop icon, A.J. Croce has traveled a long
musical journey that he will share with Lakesiders
at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20 in Hoover Auditorium.
Croce, son of legendary singer Jim Croce, began his career at the age of 18 when he opened for
jazz singer B.B. King while on tour. Since then,
he has headlined festivals, concerts and venues
worldwide.
Just like the countless jazz musicians who
influenced him, Croce continues to create stellar
music with authenticity and truth.
For the A.J. Croce show on Thursday, Aug.
20, Hotel Lakeside and the Fountain Inn are offering a ‘Weekday Gem’ deal with reduced rate
Single Rooms at $89 and Family Rooms at $109
per night.
Make an online reservation by visiting www.
lakesideohio.com/accommodations, and use the
promotional code: GEM 2015.
Reservations may also be made by phone at
(866) 952-5374, ext. 230. Please note that the promotional code must be mentioned over the phone.
arts & entertainment
Page 9
Jonathan
Kingham
Wednesday, Aug. 12
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
Jonathan Kingham, a folk, pop,
country and jazz musician, will perform a special concert for Lakesiders.
He will be joined on stage by
special guest Ryan Shea Smith, and
together, they will take the audience
on a musical ride through a variety
of styles, while holding true to their
songwriting roots.
Kingham wrote his first song, “A
Place Called Home,” in 1996 after
being deployed during the first Gulf
War. Since then, he has been writing
songs for more than 15 years.
Native to Seattle, Wash., Kingham has released five independent albums, his most recent being Smooth
out the Lines, which was released in
2010.
Performing Songwriter Magazine selected his sophomore release,
Hardwood Floors, as one of its top
Do It Yourself Picks.
Robin & Linda
Williams
Thursday, Aug. 13
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
For more than four decades, husband-and-wife
singer-songwriters
Robin & Linda Williams have been
performing a blend of folk, bluegrass,
old-time and acoustic country music
to audiences across the country.
Linda, a native of Anniston, Ala.,
met Robin while she was teaching
school in Myrtle Beach, S.C. At the
time, Robin was a coffeehouse musician from Charlotte, N.C.
The couple met in 1971, and by
1975, they had recorded their first
self-titled album. Over the next 15
years, the duo traveled across the
country performing songs from their
growing record list.
By 1989, the pair had signed with
Lakeside
Symphony
Orchestra
Concert
Friday, Aug. 14
8:15 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium
The Lakeside Symphony Orchestra (LSO), under the direction of Robert Cronquist, will present an evening
concert in Hoover Auditorium celebrating the 70th Anniversary of the
end of World War II.
The concert will feature soprano
Joan Ellison and a special Chautauqua Festival Chorus singing during
several selections. This LSO season
is supported by the Ohio Arts Council.
The Chautauqua Festival Chorus
is a group of singers from the Chautauqua Choir, Terra Choral Society
and regional church and community choirs. They will be performing
alongside the LSO during several of
the pieces featured during the concert. For more information about
joining the chorus, see “Community
News” on page 5.
To open the program, the LSO
will interpret “Overture to Egmont”
composed by Ludwig van Beethoven from 1809-1810. Following the
opening selection, the LSO will play
“American Salute” composed by
Morton Gould in 1942.
“If this is just the beginning,
Kingham is going to be a major
talent in the near future,” says Performing Songwriting Magazine.
Now based out of Nashville,
Tenn., he splits his time between
touring the country and writing, recording and producing.
Taking the music industry by a
storm, he has been touring nationally since 1997. Kingham has shared
the stage with stars such as Shawn
Colvin, Suzy Boguss, Joan Osborne, Michael McDonald, Doug
Stone, Jonathan Brooke and Vanessa
Carlton. He has also toured with Julio Inglesias, Jr.
Kingham is currently a band
member of Toad the Wet Sprocket, a
1990s alternative band, playing keyboard and steel guitar. He also regularly opens for the band as a soloist.
His songs have also been featured
on many T.V. shows and films, including the WB network’s hit show
“Felicity.”
Aside from his success as a touring artist, Kingham has won first
place honors in the National Telluride Troubadour Songwriting Contest, The Unisong International Song
Contest, as well as placing two years
in a row in the top five of the John
Lennon Song Contest.
Kingham received first place in
the USA Songwriting Competition
in the Folk Category and won the
Overall Grand Prize, beating out
more than 33,000 entries. He was
awarded first place in the Gospel
category of the International Songwriting Competition.
Shea Smith is also a veteran songwriter known for his singing voice
and impressive talents on the guitar
and keyboard.
As a Seattle native, he honed his
musical skillset through jazz studies at the University of Washington.
Since then, he has won multiple
songwriting awards and maintains a
steady touring schedule.
Shea Smith has released two albums, titled Guilty and Blue (2006)
and Stay Awhile (2010).
Sugar Hill Records, a label that
helped produce nine albums. Since
then, country music artists such
as Emmylou Harris, Tom T. Hall,
Kathy Mattea and Mary Chapin
Carpenter have covered some of the
duo’s original songs.
Between 1994-2000, Robin &
Linda Williams released an all-Gospel album that received two nominations for Gospel Album of the Year,
three CDs with original material and
an album in 2000, titled Company of
Strangers, which pushed them into an
all new audience of listeners.
Having always sung gospel music, the duo teamed up with their old
friend, Garrison Keillor, and bluegrass songstress Kate MacKenzie to
form The Hopeful Gospel Quartet for
a short time. This sideline ensemble
went on to release two albums and
tour the U.S., British Isles and Europe.
By 2004, the pair accepted a contract with their current independent
label, Red House Records. Together,
they recorded and released several albums, including a Christmas record,
a collection of their best live radio
performances, titled Radio Songs, and
their 22nd, and most recent album, titled Back 40.
Since their start, Robin & Linda
Williams have performed at the Grand
Ole Opry, Music City Tonight, Mountain Stage and Austin City Limits.
They have also toured with Their Fine
Group and Mary Chapin Carpenter.
Robin and Linda currently reside
in Middlebrook, Va., in the heart of
the Shenandoah Valley.
Next the LSO will play a
piece, titled “Gift of a Generation” composed by Michael
Shirtz.
Shirtz is a jazz singer/pianist, composer and conductor
known for his versatility with
jazz, contemporary and classical music audiences.
Following the selection, the
LSO will interpret “The Battle
Hymn of the Republic.” This
piece was created during the
American Civil War, when Julia Ward Howe watched troops
marching off to war singing
“John Brown’s Body.”
“John Brown’s Body” is a song
about a man who had been hung in
his efforts to free the slaves. Howe
was not satisfied with the original lyrics of the song, so she decided to insert her own feelings about the dreadful events of the time.
Next, the orchestra will perform
“Armed Forces Salute” by Robert Lowden and the “Navy Hymn,”
which is traditionally associated with
seafarers.
The original words were written as
a poem in 1860 by William Whiting
of Winchester, England. The poem
was written for a student who was
about to sail for the U.S. Later, the
piece was composed by the Rev. John
Bacchus Dykes.
The hymn is known as the “Navy
Hymn” because it is sung at the U.S.
Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.
Next, the LSO will play the moving “Hymn to the Fallen,” which will
be performed as a memorial to all of
those who perished during the war.
Orchestra Hall
Movies
Ticket Prices:
Adults $7
Children $3
(age 12 & under)
“Minions”
Rated PG, 91 mins
Show Times:
3:30 p.m. & 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug.7Thursday, Aug.13
From Universal Pictures and
Illumination Entertainment, “Minions” follows the story of the small,
yellow disciples of evil before they
found their one true master, one of
the world’s most villainous antiheroes, Gru from “Despicable Me.”
Since the beginning of time, the
Minions have been in search for the
biggest and worst super villain in
the world to serve, but have trouble
keeping a master. From a Tyrannosaurs Rex to Napoleon Bonaparte,
the minions have a long history of
powerful, wicked bosses, but when
they are out of potential employers, they fall into a depression.
To get out of their evil-less
funk, Kevin, Bob and Stewart
(voice of Pierre Coffin) go on an
adventure to find a new leader. On
their journey, they come across the
malicious Scarlett Overkill (voice
of Sandra Bullock), the world’s
first super villainess.
Under the command of their
vile leader, the minion’s embark
on their greatest challenge to date,
saving all of Minion-kind.
“Ant-Man”
The piece will be followed by
“America the Beautiful” and the program will close with “Stars & Stripes
Forever” by John Philip Sousa.
Continuing the 1940s theme, Ellsion will sing songs from the era.
Ellison holds a Master of Music in
teaching and a Bachelor of Music in
voice performance from Oberlin College Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio.
Since 2002, she has been a voice
faculty member at Baldwin Wallace
Conservatory in Berea, Ohio, teaching music and theatre.
She debuted with the Cleveland
Pops Orchestra in 2005. She has also
been featured in theatrical roles, including Eliza in My Fair Lady (in
concert) and Julie in Carousel.
Her debut album, A Date with
Judy! Joan Ellison Sings the Songs of
Young Judy Garland, was released in
2013. She brings her own distinctive
style of freshness, vulnerability and
charm to the songs without mimicking Garland.
Rated PG-13, 117 mins
Show Times:
3:30 p.m. & 8 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 14Thursday, Aug. 20
Inspired by the popular comic
books, Marvel goes deep into the
story of Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), a
recently released ex-con that was
in prison on robbery charges.
Despite trying to live a straight
and narrow lifestyle, Lang hears
of a job fit for his thieving expertise. While on the job, he breaks
into a vault only to find a suit that
he later discovers has obscure
abilities; the abilities to shrink and
obtain superhuman strength.
Seeing the potential in Lang,
the inventor of the suit, and the
original Ant-Man, Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), recruit Lang to assist him in pulling off a legendary
heist in order to save the world.
Coming this season to Lakeside Chautauqua:
Please check future issues of the Lakesider for more details.
Little River Band
Saturday, Aug. 15
Lakeside Symphony Orchestra closing
Concert with violinist Michael Ferri
Friday, Aug. 21
“Summer Serenade” with
Jim Brickman & Pavlo
Saturday, Aug. 22
religious life
Page 10
Lakeside’s Religious Life programs receive title changes
The Rev. Dr. Norman
“Ned” Dewire
Director of Religious Life &
Church Relations
This past off-season, the
Religious Life programs underwent changes in event titles that took effect during the
2015 Chautauqua summer
season.
The first change was renaming Chaplain of the Week
to Preacher of the Week.
The word chaplain denotes “pastoral services” to
someone by the chaplain.
Over the past two years,
Lakeside guest preachers
have asked, “What are my
chaplain duties?,” to which
Lakeside staff says none.
These guest preachers are at
Lakeside to preach and teach
within the community.
A second change was renaming Chaplain’s Hour to
Faith for Living Hour.
Decades ago, there was a
daily hour-long worship service each morning where the
guest chaplains would preach,
hymns were sung and prayers
were offered. This was the
major morning event, prior
to the expansion of religious
and education programs, and
nothing else was scheduled.
Lakeside invites experienced preachers of various
persuasions to share their
faith for living.
This season, Faith for Living Hour is held from 9:1510:15 a.m. Monday-Friday
in Orchestra Hall. For more
information about this week’s
Faith for Living Hour, refer to
the “This Week in Religious
Life” chart below.
Finally, Evening Prayer &
Praise was renamed to Vespers by the Lake. Lakeside
decided to return to the word
“vespers” to the event title.
Vespers by the Lake are
held at 8:15 p.m. Sunday
evenings on the Pavilion
West Deck and at 7:15 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday evenings at the Steele Memorial
Bandstand (Gazebo in Central Park).The services will
start earlier as the sets earlier
in August.
For additional information
about these programs, pick
up a 2015 Calendar of Events
brochure or visit www.
lakesideohio.com.
This week in Religious Life
Join the Chautauqua Choir
Singers age 13 and older are invited to join the
Chautauqua Choir. The choir sings at 10:30 a.m.
Sundays at the Hoover Community Worship Service. The group sings a range of music from choral
works to gospel and contemporary pieces. There is
no fee or audition required, and music is provided.
Members are expected to attend rehearsals,
which are held every Thursday from 6-7:15 p.m.
in Chautauqua Hall. For more information, email
programming@lakesideohio.com or call (419) 7984461, ext. 347.
By the Water’s Edge Devotionals Available
This summer, Lakeside has introduced a
collection of devotionals, titled By the Water’s
Edge. The booklet, produced by the Advancement
& Communications Department, includes 30
devotionals written by Lakeside Chautauqua staff,
past chaplains and community members, as well as
Lakeside photographs.
This year, each hotel room at Hotel Lakeside
and the Fountain Inn has a copy of By the Water’s
Edge for guests to enjoy reading during their stay
on the Lakeside grounds. By the Water’s Edge is
also available for purchase at Artists-n-Cahoots
for $10. All proceeds support the Religious Life
Department.
Online Devotionals
The Front Porch Blog
Lakeside Chautauqua’s blog, The Front Porch,
features weekly devotionals from guest bloggers
at blog.lakesideohio.com.
Temple. Preschoolers are welcome when accompanied by an adult. Parents/grandparents are asked
to have children sit with them. Following the
opening prayer, children may meet Richter in the
aisles. After worship, please pick up children from
Bradley Temple.
Religious Life Music Performance:
Phoenix Project Wind Quintet
3 p.m. Sunday
Lakeside United Methodist Church
The Phoenix Project Wind Quintet is made up
of five members from the Firelands Symphony Orchestra. This wind quintet performs a repertoire of
songs consisting of light classics, pop, Americana
and patriotic music.
The group has been featured at the Firelands
Symphony Gala, Paper Moon Vineyards, Terra
State Community College’s “Music on Sunday”
series and the Hayes Memorial in Fremont, Ohio.
The Phoenix Project Wind Quintet members
include Tamara Kagy, flute; Jesse Martin, oboe;
Sheryl Cawrse, clarinet; Kevin Richards, bassoon;
and Van Parker, horn.
Sunset Vespers by the Lake:
8:15 p.m., Pavilion West Deck
This sunset service along the lake is led by John
and Bonnie Wilkie, leaders of the Middle Grade
Madness program. The praise service will begin at
8:15 p.m., due to the earlier sunset.
Hoover Community Worship:
10:30 a.m., Hoover Auditorium
The Rev. Dr. Norman E. “Ned” Dewire, presiding.
The Rev. Dr. Sandra Selby preaching, “Confronting Incivility,” based on Ephesians 4:25-5:2.
Liturgist: The Rev. David Bell, Lakesider &
Member of the Board of Directors
Music: Chautauqua Choir, Directed by Michael
Shirtz; Phoenix Project Wind Quintet, Guest Musicians; and Dee Dee Gain, Lakeside Organist
Faith for Living Hour:
9:15 a.m. Monday-Thursday, Orchestra Hall
A complimentary Faith for Living Hour Pass
may be obtained, valid from 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
The Rev. Dr. Sandra Selby, Preacher of the
Week
Overall Theme: “Forming Narratives of Hope for
Times of Despair”
Drawing on the Christian tradition, the Faith for
Living Hour will consider life-giving narratives that
challenge the culture’s litanies of fear and despair.
Sunday morning’s sermon will examine ways to
witness to the living Christ in an age of incivility.
During the week, the avenues of exploration will
include finding meaning and hope in the workplace,
navigating times of crisis, honoring God’s creation
and endeavoring to live well before we die.
Together, guests will explore how to live meaningfully in the present while building future stories
of hope.
Monday: “Being Hope-full in Our Work”
Tuesday: “Bearing Witness to Hope in Times of Crisis”
Wednesday: “Living Hope-fully Before We Die”
Thursday: “Claiming Hope amidst a Culture of Fear”
Children’s Church: Sunday
10:30 a.m. (ages 5-11)
Children are invited to join Chip Richter in a
procession from Hoover Auditorium to Bradley
Vespers by the Lake:
7:15 p.m.
Steele Memorial Bandstand (Gazebo)
Tuesday: The Rev. Dr. Sandra Selby preaching,
Sunday Worship Services
Dockside:
8:30 a.m., Pavilion East Deck
The Rev. Thomas Snyder preaching, “Christ
Asleep within My Boat: Whipped Winds, Yet Still
Afloat,” based on Luke 8:22-25.
Lakeside United Methodist Church:
9 a.m., 450 Central Ave.
The Rev. Vernon Shepherd preaching.
PREACHER,
continued from page 1
The Rev. Dr. Selby will
lead the 10:30 a.m. Hoover
Community Worship Service
on Sunday, Aug. 9 in Hoover
Auditorium. Her sermon,
titled “Confronting Incivility,” will center on the story
in Ephesians 4:25-5:2 where
one is called to follow God
with humility and discipline.
For those who wish to at-
tend Sunday worship, a complimentary Church Pass may
be obtained 7:30-10:30 a.m.
Sunday; valid until 3 p.m. The
pass includes admittance to
Lakeside for guests and auto.
The Rev. Dr. Selby will
“Creating Hope,” based on Psalm 104:24-33 and Romans 8:18-25.
Thursday: The Rev. Doug Winner presiding. Old
hymn texts to new tunes with a look at a Psalm. Eucharist will be served.
Men’s Bible Study: Tuesday
8-9 a.m., Pavilion East Deck
Women’s Bible Study: Friday
9-10 a.m., 503 Oak Ave.
Family Picnic: Wednesday
5:30 p.m., Perry Park
This event is organized by the Religious Life
Department and hosted by the Richter and Wilkie
families.
Feast on hot dogs, baked beans, macaroni salad,
chips, watermelon, lemonade and cookies. Guests
should bring their own plates, utensils and a blanket or lawn chair. There is no charge, but a $4 donation is suggested to offset costs. In the event of
rain, the picnic will be cancelled.
God Squad: Tuesday-Thursday
9 a.m. (ages 4-6) & 10 a.m. (ages 7-9)
Bradley Temple
God Squad, led by singer-songwriter Chip
Richter, is a faith-based children’s program. Each
session features live music, lessons, crafts, cookies
and lemonade.
Middle Grade Madness (MGM):
Monday-Thursday
10-11:30 a.m. (ages 10-14)
Life can leave people feeling hopeless, helpless
and exhausted, without solutions or answers. John
and Bonnie Wilkie invite youth in grades 4-8 to
Middle Grade Madness. The group will explore
two of the Bible’s most important words, “But,
God!” to discover how God brings hope, help and
rest along with unexpected outcomes. Participants
will listen to music, meet new friends, compete
in wild and crazy activities and discover the relevance of God’s word in their lives.
Lakeside Underground: (ages 13-17)
The Religious Life Department offers this teen
program, led by Steven Prosser.
Please note: this is the last week for Lakeside
Undergound programs. There will be no Underground Bible Study this week.
Meet & Greet
Sunday 9 p.m., Dockside
Big Game
Monday 8 p.m., Dockside
Dance Party
Tuesday 8 p.m., Dockside
Miniature Golf
Wednesday 7 p.m., Miniature Golf Course
Surprise Game
Thursday 8 p.m., Dockside
also provide the message for
Faith for Living Hour at 9:15
a.m. Monday-Thursday in
Orchestra Hall.
A complimentary Faith
for Living Hour Pass is available from 8:30 a.m.-1:30
p.m. Monday-Thursday. The
pass includes admittance for
guests and auto. At 7:15 p.m.
Tuesday, she will also lead
Vespers by the Lake, held at
the Steele Memorial Bandstand.
recreation
Page 11
Mouse Island Sailing Race rescheduled
The 22nd Annual Mouse Island Sailing Race will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday
Aug. 8, weather permitting.
There will be three classes offered, including Single-Handed Laser. All age
groups will sail together. The course will start at the Lakeside Sailing Center
(LSC), sail around Mouse Island and back to Lakeside. The race is approximately two-three hours. Novice sailors should partner with experienced sailors. Registration is free and will begin at 8 a.m. at the LSC. Trophies will be
presented following the race. This race is organized by the LSC and Society
of Old Salts (S.O.S.)
Lakeside Singles Shuffleboard Tournament
Lakesiders (age 16 & older) are welcome to play in the Lakeside Singles
Shuffleboard Tournament on Thursday, Aug. 13. There is no entry fee.
Sign-up begins at 8:30 a.m. and closes promptly at 9 a.m. Play begins shortly after entries close. Coffee, Patio donuts and water will be provided. There
will be a break for lunch.
There will be separate men’s and women’s divisions. Each entrant will receive a Sloopy’s Buck certificate from Sloopy’s Sports Café. First place winners will be awarded with a Sloopy’s 10 Bucks certificate.
The Lakeside Shuffleboard Club will also award prizes for top performances. For questions, speak with any Shuffleboard staff member.
Lakeside Draw Doubles Shuffleboard Tournament
Lakesiders (age 16 & older) are invited to particpate in the Lakeside Draw
Doubles Shuffleboard Tournament on Thursday, Aug. 20.
Sign-up opens at 8:30 a.m. and closes promptly at 9 a.m. Play begins shortly
after entries close. There will be a lunch break.
The 2015 Lakeside Shuffleboard Club (LSC) members will pay no tournament entry fee. Players who are not 2015 LSC members are asked to pay a $2
entry fee to defer prizes and other costs. For questions, speak with any Shuffleboard staff member.
5k Raccoon Run Results
On July 26, Lakeside welcomed more than 200 runners as they crossed
the finish line in front of Hoover Auditorium to complete the 5k Raccoon
Run through Lakeside. The following are the race results:
Male First Place Finishers:
Female First Place Finishers:
Overall: Michael Simmons 16:29
Age 10 & Under: Abbi Henry 22:50
Ages 11-14: Jeffrey Hitchcock
18:48
Ages 15-19: Paul Garbarino 16:59
Ages 20-29: Michael Simmons
16:29
Ages 30-39: Chris Kelly 18:25
Ages 40-49: Oliver Decker 19:24
Ages 50-59: Steven King 19:27
Ages 60-69: Joe Gerstile 23:24
Age 70 & Over: Lynn App 33:34
Overall: Melissa Rains 20:24
Age 10 & Under: Emma Miller
37:19
Ages 11-14: Isabella Crooks 29:11
Ages 15-19: Melissa Rains 20:24
Ages 20-29: Amy Sullivan 20:45
Ages 30-39: Ashley Kennard 23:16
Ages 40-49: Tracy Bowers 22:39
Ages 50-59: Nanci Jenkins 25:21
Ages 60-69: Kathy Schreiber 30:14
Age 70 & Over: Charlene Gammell
38:43
For a complete listing of individual running times and overall results,
visit the Lakeside Chautauqua Administration Office, front desk of Hotel
Lakeside or Fountain Inn, the Miniature Golf Hut or the website at www.
lakesideohio.com/calendar.
Special thanks to all of the participants and volunteers who helped to
make this Lakeside tradition a success.
Fitness classes offered
Fitness classes for people of all
fitness levels will be held each week
from 8-9 a.m. Monday, Wednesday
and Friday in the Upper Room. All
participants should bring water and
an exercise mat or towel.
Monday’s class, taught by Joanne
Hackett, will be Body Sculpting,
consisting of free-weight work and
core conditioning.
Some resistance work may use
bands, which will be provided by
the instructor. Hackett is a certified
fitness instructor with the American
Council on Exercise.
Laura Tyson will instruct classes
on Wednesday and Friday.
Wednesday’s
class
will
incorporate Pilates-based exercises
for all fitness levels. Through a
series of continuous “mindful”
movements that focus on the core
(lower back, abs and glutes), the
body is challenged through exercises
that improve posture, flexibility
and strength. Participants become
more aware of posture and body
movements, which translate to better
functionality.
Friday’s class will be a Barre
Above fitness class for all levels. The
ballet barre is used as a tool to help
with balance or grip, while practicing
tiny movements and focusing on
deep endurance muscles. Doing
high repetitions of small mindful
movements followed by deep
stretching, leaves participants feeling
a little more lengthened and allowing
them to stand a little taller.
Tyson is a certified personal
trainer through the American College
of Sports Medicine. She is a Bender
BarreTM certified instructor and has
certifications in Pilates and kickboxing through the YMCA.
Danbury swimming pool open
All Chautauqua Pass holders (Season and Daily Passes) may use the Danbury School swimming pool during lap swim and open swim, free of charge.
Pool hours are 7 a.m.-12 p.m. Monday-Friday, with lap swim from 7-8 a.m.
For $5, pass holders may participate in a Water Aerobics class from 8-9
a.m. and 10-11 a.m. everyday. Open swim is closed during Water Aerobics
classes. The Danbury School pool is open until Friday, Aug. 21.
Due to construction at Danbury School, guests are encouraged to enter the
building through the athletic lobby door, located near the football field. The
middle entrance, between the stadium and the school, will be closed.
Guests can purchase Auto Passes to park at Danbury School at the Lakeside
Chautauqua Welcome Center, 5th Street Gate or South Gate entrance.
Hatha Yoga
Yoga classes are held in the Upper Room, located on Second Street
above World Next Door, every Tuesday and Thursday until August 27.
Linda Green, BA, PTP is the certified instructor leading the classes.
She has been teaching yoga classes
for 33 years.
Experienced classes will take
place from 7:15-8:15 a.m. and basic
classes meet from 8:30-9:30 a.m.
Participants in the basic class will
be introduced to a variety of yoga positions and breathing exercises. The
experienced class will participate in
the sun salutation, shoulder stand and
hold postures for longer periods of
time.
Students in both classes need to
bring a floor mat and a beach towel
to put under their mat, should wear
comfortable clothes and should not
eat one hour prior to class. The classes begin on time, so please be courteous of others and arrive at least five
minutes early.
Class size will be limited to room
capacity. For more information, contact Linda Green at (419) 635-2337 or
linda@omnigreen.com.
Youth Tennis Program
The Williams Tennis Campus will offer a Youth Tennis Program for age 10
and under. This Lakeside program is lauded by tennis professionals around the
world and sanctioned by the United States Tennis Association (USTA) and the
International Tennis Federation (ITF).
The youth program introduces children to tennis by teaching the fundamentals. By using slower-moving and lower-bouncing balls, shorter and lighter
rackets and smaller courts, children of all ages will be able to grasp the fundamentals of tennis more easily and develop their skills more successfully.
Read the ‘Weekly Recreation’ table below for dates, times and locations.
Reflexology events
Meet Dawn Cordero, certified reflexologist, at the beach (in front of the
shower area) from 8-8:30 a.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
Cordero will show participants how walking barefoot on the beach is connected to reflexology.
At 9 a.m. Monday in the Upper Pavilion Room, join Cordero for an informational hour about what reflexology is and its benefits. On Monday, each
guest will receive a five-minute hand reflexology demonstration. At 11 a.m.
Friday, each guest will be in a drawing for a chance to have a foot reflexology
demonstration.
A variety of weekly recreation offered to guests and residents of all ages to enjoy
Recreation
Time
Days
Location
More Information
Shuffleboard
9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Monday-Saturday
Central Park
12-9 p.m.
Sunday
Shuffleboard court hours are 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 12-9 p.m. Sunday. Equipment is available at
the shuffleboard courts in Central Park, free of charge. Free lessons are offered at 9 a.m. Tuesday.
Supervised
Playground
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
and 1-5 p.m.
Monday-Saturday
Central Park
The playground will be supervised from 9 a.m. -12 p.m. and 1-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday.
Morning
Recreation
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Monday-Friday
Central Park
basketball courts
Morning recreation is for youth ages 7-12. Monday-Scavenger Hunt (Mini Golf Hut on Monday
and Friday); Tuesday-Shuffleboard or Dodgeball; Wednesday-Capture the Flag; Thursday-Kickball; and Friday-Scavenger Hunt.
Tennis
8 a.m.-7 p.m.
Monday-Saturday
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Williams Tennis
Campus (located
at Peach Avenue &
Sixth Street)
Red clay courts are open 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 12-6 p.m. Sunday. Additional services include
private lessons and racquet stringing. Free lessons are also offered (listed below).
Youth Programs: Level 1 (ages 5-7), 1-1:30 p.m.; Level 2 (ages 8-10), 2-2:50 p.m.; Level 3 (ages 11-18), 3-4
p.m. Monday-Thursday. Levels 1 and 2 will follow the 10 and under USTA Tennis Program.
Adult Programs: ($1 per person): 9-11 a.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday Round Robin; 9-11 a.m.
Wednesday Doubles & Donuts.
10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Monday-Saturday
Central Park
12-10 p.m.
Sunday
Please plan to start evening rounds no later than 9:30 p.m. in order to finish by the 10 p.m. closing time. Cost
for a game is $3.50 per person. A 10-game punch card is available for $30. A weekly tournament is held from
2-5 p.m Thursdays. Admission fee is the price of a game. Participants may arrive anytime after 2 p.m., but must
finish by 5 p.m. Prizes are awarded according to age groups.
Swimming &
Splash Park
Contingent
Daily
Waterfront
Lifeguards at the waterfront and Splash Park will be on duty from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 12-6 p.m. Sunday, weather permitting. Swimming lessons are offered 9:30-10 a.m. Monday-Thursday; free for all ages.
Sailing & Boat
Rentals
Contingent
Daily
Waterfront
Sailing Lessons: The Lakeside Sailing Center offers daily and weekly lessons for $85, which includes
a textbook. Classes consist of time in both the classroom and the craft with a certified instructor. Basic I
Classes meet 10 a.m.-12 p.m. and Basic II Classes meet 8:30-10:30 a.m. Additional time on the water is
required. Visit the Lakeside Information Center or call (419) 798-4461 ext. 266 for more information.
Boat Rentals: Rentals are available 12-6 p.m. daily. Sunfish and kayak rentals are $30 for the first
hour and $20 for each additional hour. Stand-up paddle boards are also be available for rent. Visit the
Lakeside Information Center or call (419) 798-4461 ext. 266 for more information.
Miniature Golf
generosity
Page 12
Lakeside volunteer shares his passion Newly renovated Miniature Golf
Josh Hilgenberg
Course brings smiles to Lakesiders
Advancement &
Communications Intern
Tom Mueller, a long
time Lakesider, found that
he and his family simply
clicked with Lakeside
Chautauqua during their
first visit.
Mueller has served
Lakeside in more ways
than people can count on
two hands.
His experiences include helping with the
Midwest Birding Symposium, Property Owner’s
Manual, Capital Campaign, serving on the Board
of Directors,and even
weeding at the Memorial
Garden, just to name a few.
Volunteering is sacred
to Mueller, and though it
might seem tedious to others, he says that “it is a labor of love.”
Mueller’s wife was the
second loved one placed in
The Memorial Garden at
Chautauqua Park. It is only
appropriate that she has her
ashes in Lakeside because
she “truly embodied Lakeside.”
For the Mueller family, the garden serves as a
Josh Hilgenberg
Advancement &
Communications Intern
spiritual anchor. The family
comes to Lakeside not only
to relax and enjoy themselves, but to reconnect
with each other.
When Mueller’s three
sons visit, they make a
point to go to the memorial
garden.
They bring the dog and
let it drink out of the small
trough; they talk to the other
people there, and celebrate
life at Lakeside. It “helps
the soul,” states Mueller.
Mueller realizes that
these things do not happen
without work. He believes
that “if you sincerely like
something, you do some-
PLAN,
continued from page 1
Through these touchpoints, the
community is identifying critical
needs and opportunities connected
with the five strategic goals. Lakesiders have voiced the importance and
appreciation of the Chautauqua program and the safety and freedom of
all visiting.
One Lakesider commented specifically on Lakeside’s commitment to
the Christian principles of faith, saying “There are so many other places
for families to go stay for vacations,
but only a place like Lakeside is devoted to encouraging spiritual growth.
This makes Lakeside a unique place
for families with young children and
also for adults of any age who want
that environment.”
Lakesiders also feel that the values
and traditions are vital to the Lakeside
thing for it.”
Lakeside does not exist
just because it is Lakeside,
it exists because people
like Tom put so much time
and love into it.
The Chautauqua experience would not be possible
without the help of all of
Lakeside’s volunteers.
Lakeside values people
like Tom Mueller and others who devote their time
and talents.
For more information
about the many ways to
volunteer at Lakeside, contact 419-798-4461, ext.
246, or communications@
lakesideohio.com.
experience. They also identified and
affirmed that the historic buildings
and the beautiful gardens and grounds
are important.
Another Lakesider noted, “Lakeside maintains 47 structures and more
than 10 miles of roads, and it is important that Lakeside preserve the
historic structures and continues to
evolve.”
In addition, Lakesiders appreciate
the transparency. One Lakesider commented, “Transparency is happening
today. For 140 years there was no
transparency. It cuts down the gossip
when there are forums, dessert receptions and round table discussions.”
Lakeside will continue to collect
feedback over the next few months,
as well as the next two years, through
surveys, social media and blog comments, community forums and roundtable discussions to develop a master
plan.
To Carolyn McDaniel, miniature golf at Lakeside is more than
a simple game. She started working at the golf course 14 years
ago, and she has loved it ever
since.
McDaniel is a second generation Lakesider, and her mother
told her she’s been coming since
before she was born. Her parents
brought their church groups to
Lakeside, and even built a cottage
in 1914.
By working at the golf course,
McDaniel carries on the Lakeside
tradition for her parents.
She assigns working hours,
trains workers and ensures they
have all the supplies they need.
McDaniel cherishes the time she
spends with her young workers,
who she calls wonderful.
She loves watching them
grow up, work through college, and sometimes even
bring their own families back
to Lakeside. The progress they
make is exciting to McDaniel,
and she is a constant encourager.
McDaniel admires that the
The Board will review the comprehensive information at upcoming
meetings to begin the development of
a master plan. The master plan will
provide a framework for sustainable
development and preservation within
the Lakeside community, including
buildings, landscape, open spaces and
infrastructure.
The development of a master plan
is a critical component for Lakeside’s
future to ensure that the design of the
grounds and facilities continue to support Lakeside’s mission and five strategic goals.
Lakeside Chautauqua will continue to provide transparency to guests
and residents by posting updates on
the website at www.lakesideohio.
com/news/2023, e-newsletters, The
Front Porch blog and on social media
through the off-season. We invite you
to join these communication channels
to receive these updates.
course serves as a place for families to spend time together with
no interruptions. She said that she
always hears laughter and encouragement from the golfers, and the
renovations have only added to the
excitement. People comment on
how impressed they are by the improvements constantly, according
to McDaniel.
“Nicest improvement to miniature golf in the 45 years I’ve
been playing here. My six year old
grandson even commented on the
updates,” said one Lakesider.
On and off the course, McDaniel loves the things mini-golf does.
She is not only able to watch families grow and spend time together,
but she also cares deeply for her
workers.
Lakeside Chautauqua is thankful for friends like McDaniel who
directly benefit from the Chautauqua pillars and encourage others to
do the same.
EVERY VOICE MATTERS
It is important for all Lakesiders to be involved in the master
planning process. Every voice
matters. There is still time to
participate:
1. Complete an e-survey at www.
lakesideohio.com/news/2023.
2. Follow us on Facebook, www.
facebook.com/lakesideohio,
and Twitter, www.twitter.com/
lakesideoh, to provide comments.
3. Visit www.lakesideohio.com/
news/2023 to read updates about
Lakeside’s future.
4. Sign up to receive our e-newsletter at www.lakesideohio.com/
news.
5. Subscribe to The Front Porch
blog at blog.lakesideohio.com to
read posts and comment.
Lakeside-Marblehead
Lighthouse Festival
Saturday, October 10, 2015
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Vendors • Great Food • Family Fun • Entertainment
No Gate Fees.
lakesideohio.com
www.themarbleheadpeninsula.com
Classes in the arts
Page 13
Discover the arts at the Rhein Center
Lakeside Chautauqua houses a treasure in Epworth Lodge,
located on the corner of Walnut Avenue and Sixth Street,
known as the C. Kirk Rhein, Jr., Center for the Living
Arts.
Arts programming began
there on Aug. 8, 1999, thanks
to a generous gift from the
Rhein family, and their
friends, in memory of their
son, Kirk.
The Rhein Center provides classes across the entire spectrum of the arts,
for Lakesiders of all ages.
Classes are taught by artists
and artisans who share a passion for inspiring creativity.
Every week brings new
instructors and new classes
for youth and adults in areas
such as drawing, painting,
pottery, ceramics, glass, jewelry, crafts, writing, dance,
fiber arts and theatre-based
games. Classes vary in length
and number of sessions.
Online registration and
payment starts at 12 p.m.
Thursday for the following
week’s classes. Those who
need help registering may
visit the Rhein Center from
1-3 p.m. Sunday. Addition-
al registration is available
throughout the week, as
space permits.
Daily drawing and writing
prompts called ARTrageous
Pages are free to pick up
from the Rhein Center porch.
There are also free art challenges through the summer.
Rhein Center Arts Class Schedule: Week 8 (Aug. 10-14)
New classes for the upcoming week are available at 12 p.m. each Thursday prior to the start of that week’s classes. Register online at
www.lakesideohio.com/arts/classes. Rhein Center staff is also available to assist with online registration from 1-3 p.m. Sunday at the Rhein Center.
In the table below, classes with ‘or’ designates those classes are offered multiple times. Classes with ‘&’ designates those classes run for multiple days.
Class Name
Acrylic Evening Paint-Along
Advanced Stained Glass
Animation Workshop with iPad
Beginning Ballet
Bobblehead Animals to Paint
Carved Animal Caricatures
Ceramics Workshop: Cup of Kindness
Decorative Wooden Trays
Duct Tape Wallet
Easel Art: Color Mixing
Easel Art: Doodling Fun
Easel Art: Watercolor
Easel Art: The Dot
Easel Art: “En Plein Air”
Easel Art for Teens
Fairy Garden
Fiction Writing Basics
Fiction Writing II
Flute: An Introduction for Children
Found Object Robot
Fused Glass: Four Pendants
Fused Glass Advanced: Funky Birds
Garden Art: Kokedama
Greek Art and Painted Pots
Intro to Digital Camera Settings
Lakeside Photo Frame
Lighted Glass Block Mosaic
Days
W or Th
M, Tu, W, Th & F
M
M, Tu, W, Th & F
Tu
M, Tu, W, Th & F
M, T &W
W
M
M
Tu
W
Th
F
Tu
Tu
M, Tu, W, Th & F
M, Tu, W, Th & F
W & Th
W
Tu
Tu & Th
Tu
M, W or F
M, W & Th
M
M
Lighted Wine Bottle
Marble Run
Marble Run: Advanced
Marionette Puppet
Needle-Felted Collage
Needle-Felted Landscape
Needle-Felted Scarf
Oil Painting Workshop
Paint-Along
Paper Airplanes: Art Meets Science
Paper Plate Bird
Paper Quilling
Parent/Child Fairy Gardens
Patchwork Bag
Poetry for Beginners
Pond Boats: Jet Balloon Boat
Pond Boats: Super Sailboat
Pond Boats: Puddle Boat
Rock Painting
Rock Painting
Rock Painting
Sculpy Chocolates
Sculpy Magnet
Stained Glass: Freestyle
Sunday Funnies: The Art of Cartooning
Trombone: An Introduction
M
Th
Tu
Tu
W
M, T, Th or F
M & T or Th & F
M, Tu, W, Th & F
M, T or F
F
Th
Tu
Tu
Tu
Tu
Tu
Th
M
M, T, W, Th or F
M, T, W, Th or F
M, T, W, Th or F
M, T or W
Th
M, Tu, W, Th & F
Tu
M, Tu & W or W, Th & F
Time
6-8 p.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
1:30-3 p.m.
1-2 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
11-11:45 a.m.
11-11:45 a.m.
11-11:45 a.m.
11-11:45 a.m.
11-11:45 a.m.
4-5 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
6-7:30 p.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m., 11 a.m.12:30 p.m. or 1:30-3 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
3-5 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
6-7:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
6-7:30 p.m.
6-7:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
1-1:45 p.m.
2-2:45 p.m.
3-3:45 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
6-7:30 p.m.
9-10 a.m.
Ages
14+
18+
12+
7-9
7-14
12+
15+
7-17
10+
4-7
4-7
4-7
4-7
4-7
13-17
12+
13+
13+
7-11
4-8
16+
16+
12+
8+
10+
8+
10+
Seats
20
8
8
6
10
10
10
10
10
16
16
16
16
16
8
5
10
10
5
5
8
8
10
10
8
10
10
Fee
$30
$50
$10
$25
$6
$25
$10
$8
$8
$3
$3
$3
$3
$3
$3
$12
$20
$20
$10
$5
$40
$40
$8
$8
$12
$8
$14
12+
4-8
9-14
8+
10+
12+
12+
16+
9-13
8-12
4-6
12+
5-11
14+
14+
6-9
9-12
4-6
All
All
All
10+
10+
16+
11+
10+
5
5
5
6
6
6
6
6
10
10
6
6
5
10
10
12
12
12
20
20
20
10
10
6
8
3
$12
$5
$5
$10
$12
$12
$14
$40
$20
$2
$2
$5
$12
$10
$5
$10
$10
$10
$1
$1
$1
$8
$8
$40
$5
$8
children & youth
Page 14
Weekly Children/Teen Programs
Program descriptions are organized alphabetically.
Please see the table below for specific days, times and locations.
Bicycle Rodeo & Safety Program (ages 4-12)
Children are invited to this safety class organized by the Lakeside Safety
Services Department to learn about basic bicycle skills. Please bring a bicycle,
helmet and a parent/guardian to sign a permission slip.
Chautauqua Young Readers Program (ages 8-12)
Children who read 15 of the Young Reader books, either from the 2015 summer list or from the historic list, by their 13th birthday will be awarded a Lakeside Chautauqua Young Readers Medal. Book lists are available at The Fine
Print bookstore, located at 202 Walnut Ave.
Chef Stacy Maple shares her recipes and cooking with families as
part of the Family Discovery Program.
Lakeside Girls’ Club (ages 5-9 & 10-14)
Children’s Story Time (ages 4-10)
Organized by the Lakeside Women’s Club and designed for girls, these programs are offered on select Thursdays. Pre-registration at Green Gables and a
fee of $2 is required by the Tuesday before each program.
This week’s topic: The Story of Green Gables
Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Fun with Music and Ring & Sing (ages 4-7 & 8+)
Lakeside Wooden Boat Society Pond Boat Building (ages
4-5, 6-9 & 10-12)
Children’s Story Time on Saturday is organized by the Lakeside Women’s
Club.
Children are invited to learn about musical performance and instruments
from retired music teacher Connie Dieterich. Children are encouraged to attend
all sessions within the week, as there will be a live performance for families and
friends on Friday.
God Squad (ages 4-6 & 7-9)
God Squad, featuring children’s singer-songwriter Chip Richter, features live
music with lessons, audience participation, a fun craft and refreshments.
Junior Naturalist Program (ages 7-12)
Children will be surpervised while building puddle boats (ages 4-5), balloon
powered jet boats (ages 6-9) or super sailboats (ages 10-12) using hammers,
simple saws and a drill press, while wearing safety goggles. Register at the
Rhein Center from 1-3 p.m. Sunday or visit www.lakesideohio.com/arts.
Middle Grade Madness (MGM) (ages 10-14)
This summer, the theme for MGM will be “But, God!” Each session, withJohn and Bonnie Wilkie, includes games, contests and candy.
Nature Exploration (ages 4-6)
Coordinated by the Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society, this program encourages children to learn about nature topics from area experts.
This Week’s Topic: North American Birds with Kate Zimmerman of the
Black Swamp Bird Observatory
Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Join Mikaela Wilmoth to explore a different nature topic each week through
songs, pictures, stories and an art project.
This Week’s Topic: Bears
Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Kids Setting Sail (ages 5-10)
Solar Astronomy (all ages)
The Lakeside Sailing Center (LSC) and Society of Old Salts (S.O.S.) members offer free Sunfish sailboat rides. Participants must be able to swim and
have a parent/guardian sign the liability waiver.
Sign-up from 2:15-4:15 p.m. Sundays at the LSC. Limited instructional
rides are available. Contact (419) 798-4461, ext. 266 for details.
Weekly certified sailing instruction is also available through the LSC for
ages 10 and older. Contact coordinator Bill Maenner at (856) 692-1245 or visit
308 Maple Ave. for details.
Please check the dock for more information about this program.
Stop by the Hoover Auditorium porch to learn about the power of the sun
and view the sun through a solar telescope on Thursday afternoons (weather
permitting). Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Star Gazing (all ages)
Astronomers in the making can see the stars through telescopes on Monday
evenings starting one hour after sunset (weather permitting).
Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Teen Fellowship (ages 13-17)
Please contact Casie Eller at programming@lakesideohio.com for more
information about programs coordinated by the Religious Life department.
Where in the World (ages 3-6 & 7-10)
Travel the globe this summer to learn fun facts about people and places.
A different country will be visited each week. Each trip includes interactive
activities and an art project. This program is led by Mikaela Wilmoth.
This Week’s Topic: U.S. Monuments
Please note: This is the last program of the season.
Chip Richter shares music and fellowship with children during God Squad.
Youth learn how to build
Pond Boats from LWBS
volunteers.
Note to parents: programs are designed for specific age groups. Please be sure
your child’s age matches the age group stated for each program.
Please note: the following programs have concluded for the summer season: Family Discovery Program, Infant/Toddler/Pre-School Story
Time, The Fine Print Bookstore Special Events and Travels to Narnia.
Children & Youth program schedule for Aug. 8-14 (organized by day)
Title
Children’s Story Time
Ages
4-10
Day
Saturday
Time
9:30 a.m.
Rhein Center Class Registration
All ages
Sunday
1-3 p.m.
Location
Lakeside Women’s Club (LWC)
Green Gables
Rhein Center
Kids Setting Sail
5-10
Sunday
2:30-4:30 p.m.
Lakeside Sailing Center
Where in the World
3-6
7-10
4-5
Monday
LWC Green Gables
Monday
9-9:45 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
9-10:30 a.m
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
6-9
Tuesday
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
10-12
Thursday
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
Middle Grade Madness (MGM)
10-14
Monday-Thursday
10-11:30 a.m.
Upper Room
Bicycle Rodeo & Safety Program
4-12
Monday
1-2 p.m.
Bradley Temple
Star Gazing
All ages
Monday
One hour after sunset
Pavilion
God Squad
Tuesday-Thursday
9-9:45 a.m.
10-10:45 a.m.
10:30-11:10 a.m.
Bradley Temple
Fun with Music
4-6
7-9
4-7
Bradley Temple
Ring & Sing
8+
Tuesday-Thursday
Performance at 11 a.m. Friday
11:15 a.m.-12 p.m.
Bradley Temple
Lakeside Girls’ Club**
10-14
Thursday
9:30-10:30 a.m.
LWC Green Gables
Solar Astronomy
5-9
All ages
Thursday
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
Hoover Auditorium Porch
Nature Exploration
4-6
Friday
9-9:45 a.m.
Upper Pavilion Room
Junior Naturalist Program
7-12
Friday
9-10:20 a.m.
Pavilion West Deck
Lakeside Wooden Boat Society
Pond Boat Building**
** pre-registration required
Tuesday-Thursday
Performance at 11 a.m. Friday
Central Park
this week in lakeside
Page 15
Saturday, Aug. 8
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9:30 a.m.
10 a.m.
10 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
12-1 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
7:15-8 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
22nd Annual Mouse Island Sailing Race -- Lakeside Sailing Center
Historic Preservation & Design Review Board Meeting
-- Train Station
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Children’s Story Time (ages 4-10) -- LWC Green Gables
Lakeside Property Owners Association Meeting -- Orchestra Hall
Lakeside Heritage Society Archives Open -- 324 W. Third St.
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Volunteer Recognition Picnic -- Hotel Lakeside Lawn
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Lakesider Newspaper Delivery -- Hoover Auditorium
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Tim Hawkins -- Hoover Auditorium
Sunday, Aug. 9
8:30 a.m.
9 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
12-6 p.m.
12-6 p.m.
1-3 p.m.
1:30-4 p.m.
2 p.m.
2:30-4:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
3-5 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
9 p.m.
Dockside Worship -- Pavilion East Deck
Worship Service -- Lakeside UMC
Hoover Community Worship Service -- Hoover Auditorium
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Rhein Center Class Registration -- Rhein Center
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Lakeside Heritage Society Lecture -- Chautauqua Hall
Kids Setting Sail (ages 5-10) -- Lakeside Sailing Center
Phoenix Project Wind Quintet -- Lakeside United Methodist Church
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Family Night in the Park: Dennis Stroughmatt et l’Espirit Creole
-- Steele Memorial Bandstand
Lakeside Wooden Boat Society Pirate Adventure -- Pavilion
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Sunset Vespers by the Lake -- Pavilion West Deck
Lakeside Underground: Meet & Greet -- Dockside
Monday, Aug. 10
7-8 a.m.
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
8-8:30 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8:15 a.m.
8:30-10:30 a.m.
9-9:45 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-10:30 a.m.
9-11 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9:15 a.m.
9:30-10 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
1-1:30 p.m.
1-2 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2-2:50 p.m.
3-4 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
6 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
One hour after sunset
Open/Lap Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Reflexology Beach Walk -- Lakefront Beach
Fitness Class: Body Sculpting -- Upper Room
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
“Breakfast Bunch” Book Discussion -- 343 Cherry Ave.*
Basic II Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Where in the World (ages 3-6) -- LWC Green Gables
Reflexology Hour -- Upper Pavilion Room
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Pond Boat Building (ages 4-5) -- Central Park*
Adult Round Robin -- Williams Tennis Campus*
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Faith for Living Hour -- Orchestra Hall
Swimming Lessons -- Waterfront
Where in the World (ages 7-10) -- LWC Green Gables
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Middle Grade Madness (ages 10-14) -- Upper Room
Basic I Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Orchestra Hall
Guided Tree Walk -- Pavilion
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Morning Recreation (ages 7-12) -- Central Park Basketball Courts
Pond Boat Building (ages 4-5) -- Central Park*
Level 1 Tennis Lessons (ages 5-7) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Bicycle Rodeo & Safety Program (ages 4-12) -- Bradley Temple
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Orchestra Hall
Level 2 Tennis Lessons (ages 8-10) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Level 3 Tennis Lessons (ages 11-18) -- Williams Tennis Campus
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Wooden Boat Rides (ages 4+) -- Dock*
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Lakeside Underground: Big Game -- Dockside
Amazing Grace Sunset Cruises (ages 4+) -- Dock*
Hoover Movie Night: “The Pajama Game” (1957)
-- Hoover Auditorium
Star Gazing -- Pavilion
Tuesday, Aug. 11
7-8 a.m.
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
7:15-8:15 a.m.
8-8:30 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8:30-9:30 a.m.
8:30-10:30 a.m.
9 a.m.
9-9:45 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-11 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9:15 a.m.
9:30-10 a.m.
10-10:45 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30-11:10 a.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
11:15 a.m.-12 p.m.
1-1:30 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
2-2:50 p.m.
3-4 p.m.
3-5 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
7:15 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
Open/Lap Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Hatha Yoga -- Upper Room
Reflexology Beach Walk -- Lakefront Beach
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Men’s Bible Study -- Pavilion East Deck
Hatha Yoga -- Upper Room
Basic II Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Shuffleboard Lessons -- Shuffleboard Courts
God Squad (ages 4-6) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Adult Round Robin -- Williams Tennis Campus*
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Farmers’ Market -- Pedestrian Walkway on Walnut Avenue
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Faith for Living Hour -- Orchestra Hall
Swimming Lessons -- Waterfront
God Squad (ages 7-9) -- Bradley Temple
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Middle Grade Madness (ages 10-14) -- Upper Room
Basic I Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Orchestra Hall
Historic Tram Tour -- Hotel Lakeside*
Fun with Music (ages 4-7) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Morning Recreation (ages 7-12) -- Central Park Basketball Courts
Pond Boat Building (ages 6-9) -- Central Park*
Ring & Sing (age 8+) -- Bradley Temple
Level 1 Tennis Lessons (ages 5-7) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Women’s Club Program: “The Story Behind Our Book The Lakeside Symphony Comes to Town” -- LWC Green Gables*
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Orchestra Hall
Pond Boat Building (ages 6-9) -- Central Park*
Level 2 Tennis Lessons (ages 8-10) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Level 3 Tennis Lessons (ages 11-18) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Symphony Pre-Concert Talk -- Chautauqua Hall
Vespers by the Lake -- Steele Memorial Bandstand
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Lakeside Underground: Dance Party -- Dockside
Lakeside Symphony Orchestra Concert -- Hoover Auditorium
Wednesday, Aug. 12
7-8 a.m.
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
7:30 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
8:30-10:30 a.m.
9-9:45 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-11 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9:15 a.m.
9:30-10 a.m.
9:30 a.m.-12 p.m.
10-10:45 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
10 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30-11:10 a.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11:15 a.m.-12 p.m.
1-1:30 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2-2:50 p.m.
3-4 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
Open/Lap Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Guided Bird Walk -- Pavilion
Fitness Class: Pilates -- Upper Room
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Lakeside Herb Study -- Train Station
Basic II Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
God Squad (ages 4-6) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Adult Doubles & Donuts -- Williams Tennis Campus*
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Faith for Living Hour -- Orchestra Hall
Swimming Lessons -- Waterfront
Bridge -- LWC Green Gables*
God Squad (ages 7-9) -- Bradley Temple
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Middle Grade Madness (ages 10-14) -- Upper Room
Basic I Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Lakeside Heritage Society Archives Open -- 324 W. Third St.
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Historic Central Lakeside Walking Tour -- Heritage Hall Museum
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Chautauqua Hall
Fun with Music (ages 4-7) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Morning Recreation (ages 7-12) -- Central Park Basketball Courts
Ring & Sing (age 8+) -- Bradley Temple
Level 1 Tennis Lessons (ages 5-7) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Chautauqua Hall
Mahjongg and Knitting -- LWC Green Gables*
Level 2 Tennis Lessons (ages 8-10) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Level 3 Tennis Lessons (ages 11-18) -- Williams Tennis Campus
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Historic Chautauqua Movement Seminar -- Fountain Inn Aigler Room
Wednesday Family Picnic -- Perry Park*
Lakeside Underground: Miniature Golf -- Miniature Golf Course
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Jonathan Kingham -- Hoover Auditorium
Thursday, Aug. 13
7-8 a.m.
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
7:15-8:15 a.m.
8-8:30 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8:30 a.m.
8:30-9:30 a.m.
8:30-10:30 a.m.
9-9:45 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-11 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9:15 a.m.
9:30-10 a.m.
9:30-10:30 a.m.
10-10:45 a.m.
10-11 a.m.
10-11:30 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
10 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30-11:10 a.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
11:15 a.m.-12 p.m.
1-1:30 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
1:30-3:30 p.m.
2-2:50 p.m.
2-5 p.m.
3-4 p.m.
3-5 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
7:15 p.m.
6 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
Open/Lap Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Hatha Yoga -- Upper Room
Reflexology Beach Walk -- Lakefront Beach
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Lakeside Singles Shuffleboard Tournament -- Shuffleboard Courts
Hatha Yoga -- Upper Room
Basic II Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
God Squad (ages 4-6) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Adult Round Robin -- Williams Tennis Campus*
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Faith for Living Hour -- Orchestra Hall
Swimming Lessons -- Waterfront
Lakeside Girls’ Club (ages 10-14) -- LWC Green Gables*
God Squad (ages 7-9) -- Bradley Temple
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Middle Grade Madness (ages 10-14) -- Upper Room
Basic I Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Lakeside Heritage Society Archives Open -- 324 W. Third St.
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Chautauqua Hall
Historic Tram Tour -- Hotel Lakeside*
Fun with Music (ages 4-7) -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Morning Recreation (ages 7-12) -- Central Park Basketball Courts
Lakeside Girls’ Club (ages 5-9) -- LWC Green Gables*
Pond Boat Building (ages 10-12) -- Central Park*
Ring & Sing (age 8+) -- Bradley Temple
Level 1 Tennis Lessons (ages 5-7) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Chautauqua Lecture Series -- Chautauqua Hall
Bridge -- LWC Green Gables*
Pond Boat Building (ages 10-12) -- Central Park*
Solar Astronomy -- Hoover Auditorium Porch
Level 2 Tennis Lessons (ages 8-10) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Miniature Golf Tournament -- Miniature Golf Course*
Level 3 Tennis Lessons (ages 11-18) -- Williams Tennis Campus
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Vespers by the Lake -- Steele Memorial Bandstand
Wooden Boat Rides (ages 4+) -- Dock*
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Minions” (PG) -- Orchestra Hall*
Amazing Grace Sunset Cruises (ages 4+) -- Dock*
Lakeside Underground: Surprise Game -- Dockside
Robin & Linda Williams -- Hoover Auditorium
Friday, Aug. 14
7-8 a.m.
7 a.m.-8 p.m.
8-8:30 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8-9 a.m.
8:30-10:30 a.m.
9 a.m.
9-9:45 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-10 a.m.
9-10:20 a.m.
9-11 a.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
9 a.m.-6 p.m.
10-11 a.m.
10 a.m.-12 p.m.
10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
10:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m.
11 a.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
11 a.m.-12 p.m.
1-5 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
7:15-8 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
8:15 p.m.
Open/Lap Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Hotel Lakeside Dining Room & Cafe Open
Reflexology Beach Walk -- Lakefront Beach
Fitness Class: Barre Above -- Upper Room
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Basic II Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Lakesider Newspaper Delivery -- 217 Walnut Ave.
Nature Exploration (ages 4-6) -- Upper Pavilion Room
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Women’s Bible Study -- 503 Oak Ave.
Junior Naturalist Program (ages 7-12) -- Pavilion West Deck
Adult Round Robin -- Williams Tennis Campus*
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Farmers’ Market -- Pedestrian Walkway on Walnut Avenue
Lakeside Information Center Open -- Pavilion
Water Aerobics -- Danbury School Pool*
Basic I Sailing Lessons -- Lakeside Sailing Center*
Heritage Hall Museum Open -- 238 Maple Ave.
Swimming and Splash Park -- Waterfront
Historic Tram Tour -- Hotel Lakeside*
Special Historic Walking Tour: 1929 Fire Destruction
-- Sixth Street & Laurel Avenue*
Fun with Music and Ring & Sing Performance -- Bradley Temple
Open Swim -- Danbury School Pool
Reflexology Hour -- Upper Pavilion Room
Morning Recreation (ages 7-12) -- Central Park Basketball Courts
Supervised Playground -- Central Park
Lakeside Women’s Club Book Review -- LWC Green Gables*
Lakeside Environmental Stewardship Society Seminar:
“Blue/Green Algae” -- Fountain Inn Aigler Room
Foreign Affairs Forum -- Chautauqua Hall
“Ant-Man” (PG-13) -- Orchestra Hall*
Lakesider Newspaper Delivery -- Hoover Auditorium
Lakeside Photography Show -- Hoover Auditorium Lobby
“Ant-Man” (PG-13) -- Orchestra Hall*
Lakeside Symphony Orchestra Concert -- Hoover Auditorium
*Please refer to announcements and articles found inside the Lakesider regarding these events since a charge is involved.
lakeside snapshots
Page 16
Lakesiders compete in the sack race during Field
Day on the Hotel Lakeside lawn.
Stars of the hit television series "Happy Days," Anson Williams and Donny Most pose for a photo at
Hoover Auditorium. Photo submitted by Wanda Chandler.
Ingrid Sheu from St Paul, Minn. enjoying the Lakeside kiddy pool. Photo submitted by Dick Swanson.
Preacher of the Week, the Rev. Dr. Sergei Nikolaev, lectures about religion in Russia during the combined Faith for Living Hour and Chautauqua Lecture Series.
Lakesiders team up and play a friendly shuffleboard game.
Photographers display work in the Annual Lakeside Photography Show.
Friendships are made during Field Day at the
first Heritage Day.
Mother and son listen closely during Children's
Story Time at Green Gables.
Sailors take part in the annual Lakeside Sailing Regatta. Photo submitted by Beth Sibbring.
Dancers from the Pointe of Departure Ballet
company perfom on stage in Hoover Auditorium.
Lakesiders enjoy horse drawn carriage rides at
the first Heritage Day.
The Ohio Wheelmen perform in front of the Pavilion during Heritage Day.
What is your funniest or best experience at Lakeside?
"Seeing my grandchildren take
to Lakeside life as I have."
-Jim Meyer
"When I was taking pictures and a
man kept getting in my shot and
I later found out it was Eric Clapton." -Brenda Knipp
"Running the Lakeside Sailing Regatta for 29 years and just got a
free tshirt this year." -Joe Caner
Want to see more photos from this past week? Visit our Facebook page at:
www.facebook.com/lakesideohio
"Jake, Natalie, Henry and Michael
trying to fit four people onto one
intertube." -Jane Fudo