Greg Boyer, Director, Great Lakes Research Consortium, Professor of Biochemistry SUNY- College of Environmental Science and Forestry The Bird, Tree & Garden Club’s Brown
Every year, gifts to the Chautauqua Fund have an immediate impact on the innovations to the full range of programs discovered at Chautauqua Institution. The community’s
Like many aging industrial cities, Erie, Pennsylvania, grapples with great challenges. Blight, poverty, deteriorating infrastructure and an eroding tax base are the opening lines of a
Chautauqua Institution administrators led the first of nine information sessions, allowing Chautauquans to engage with the 150 Forward strategic plan — a series of objectives
Students from Fletcher Elementary School in the Jamestown Public Schools, under the direction of their music teacher Mary Crandall, practice recorded in preparation to join
With the first pitch thrown, the 2019 season of Chautauqua’s slow-pitch softball began for the men’s league this week. The match-up: Arthritics v. Pounders. The Chautauqua
Last weekend, the Chautauqua Foundation Board of Directors hosted its annual dinner in the Athenaeum Hotel. During the dinner, past and present directors and current
Cathy Nowosielski and Jeff Lutz, shown Monday, June 24 2019, at the Catholic House, underwrote the June 28 performance by Postmodern Jukebox. DAVE MUNCH/PHOTO EDITOR
Just a few minutes down the road from Chautauqua Institution, landscaper and gardener Adrienne Ploss manages a multi-faceted operation on 96 acres at Hickory Hurst Farm.
Geof Follansbee In January 2020, the Chautauqua Foundation will be undergoing a transition when the majority of the Foundation staff will become employees of Chautauqua Institution.
Hutzpah, said Rabbi Sharon Brous, means embarrassingly nervy behavior, unencumbered audacity, overentitledness and shamelessness “as in ‘there are not enough lox at a free lunch.’ ”
Chautauqua Institution is ready to reach new heights. As the Institution increasingly depends on the annual Chautauqua Fund for its financial sustainability and programming, following
Racine-Johnson Aquatic Ecologists gathered plants from the bottom of Chautauqua Lake as part of its 2019 report on the presence and abundance of aquatic