Day Twelve – June 29, 2018 – Chautauqua
Day Twelve – June 29, 2018 – Chautauqua
The first thing on today’s agenda is a lecture on
codes; but it starts at nine!! Betsy, Roddy, and I are up early enough to
have breakfast (delicious leftovers!) and Myra comes down, too, before we
leave. We decide that the advantage of
staying upstairs, in the “dormitory”, is that we get first dibs on
breakfast! That done, we head to the United
Methodist House for our lecture.
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| Cool clock in the United Methodists house. |
The speaker, Chaz Kerschner, is a retired cryptanalysist
from the NSA! He takes offense at my NPR
shirt! Apparently there was a time when the NSA and NPR were enemies!! He’s being facetious (I think). His lecture is entitled, “”Codes – from
Caesar to the 21st Century” and begins with Egyptian hieroglyphics,
moves on to the Rosetta Stone, Caesar’s Shift and all the other stages of code
development, including the Enigma Machine, the Purple Code, Jefferson’s wheel
cipher, and Navajo Code Talkers. The
newest development is the private/public key, which we all use in things like
our iPhones and communicating with our banks.
He tells us that some encrypted messages are simply
disguised. One example from ancient
times was a rich man who shaved his slave’s head and had the message written on
his scalp. When his hair grew back, the
slave was sent to the message’s recipient!
Not very timely, but effective!
The lecture’s final slide is “UIF FOE” with a note - Caesar
s1 or “THE END”, in a Caesar shift, one step.
Giggle!
After the lecture, Betsy and I have coffee on the porch of
the Methodist House. When I ask where
the kitty is, a lady smiles and tells us there isn’t one! Once, sometime in the past, someone made a
stink of the asking of a donation, and they did away with it! Now, each church takes turns providing coffee
and sweets!
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| It even has a dial tone! |
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| Lucas and Kate |
From there, Roddy returned home and Betsy and I went next
door to the amp to listen to the 10:45 lecture.
This is always based on the theme of the week, which, this week, is
“words”. Today’s speakers come from the
theater world. Michael Kahn is the
director of the Shakespeare Theater Company and was the first director of the
Chautauqua Theater Company. Kate Hamill
is an actor and playwright, most known for her adaptations of Sense and Sensibility
and other Jane Austen books, featuring strong female characters. The third participant was Lucas Hnath, a
playwright best know for his play, “A Doll’s House, Part II”.
They discussed the craft of writing plays, including how
they construct a play, how the actors influence their rewrites, and why they
are playwrights. Both playwrights said
that they write nearly every day and are awful at taking vacations. Kate said that she has a border-collie brain
and after a few days off she begins chewing the table legs!
Kate describes her process as a collaboration between two
people, herself and an author who is currently dead! Lucas’s written plays used to have pages that
might just say “silence” or “Charles shifts in his chair”, but he found that
when they were doing read throughs, that just resulted in a lot of page turning
and defeated the purpose! Now he might
have a page and a half of just dots!
Lucas described plays as “empathy gymnasiums”!!
After that lecture, Betsy and I are going to learn how to
bake Challah, but the directions we got are to the wrong location and by the
time we figure that out, it is kind of late and we decide to just head back
home for lunch. And I get a chance to
finish yesterday’s blog post.
The plan is to head back to the Noble Winery for the view
and one last tasting, before our last dinner and 8:15 extravaganza.
People drift back in from their morning’s activities and
soon we decide there is enough time for a wine tasting or two. We take two cars since all eight of us are
going. We go to Noble Winery first and
there is a reason that they say, “Come for the view”. The view is quite pretty but the wine is not
quite up to its standards. We give it
the old college try, and sample ten or eleven, and none of them appeal to
anyone!
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| That's Lake Erie in the background. |
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| Thanks, Betsy, for people pictures!! ... |
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| ... and a different shot of the view from their patio. |
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| Peek-a-boo! |
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| The seven deadly sins! |
We all stop at KISS BBQ to pick order and pick up
dinner. Our carful waits for the order
to be ready while the other group goes to Haff Acre Farms to pick up two
three-berry pies. That’s Pete’s favorite
and he, Kris, and Elliott are coming for dinner before tonight’s concert.
The BBQ is tender and tasty and everyone cleans their
plates! And there’s pie and ice cream
for dessert! We clean up the kitchen and
are off to the amp for Voctave, an A cappella group. Everyone sets off at their own pace, and
Betsy, Roddy, and I wind up sitting in pretty much the same seats we’ve had all
week. There are eleven singers in the
group and they have magnificent voices.
The performance, however, isn’t exactly what any one expected. There’s no choreography and little humor, not
much like Rockapella or Straight, No Chaser.
Still, it was pleasant and it is a nice night for walking.
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| Waiting |
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| "Anything you can do, I can do better!" |
Back home everyone is making plans for departure in the
morning, packing, and straightening out our finances. I’m going home with cash money! Of course, I’ll have the credit card bills to
match it! There’s just time to blog
before bed. Oh – 11, 340 steps!





































Really nice week and I so enjoyed sharing Chautauqua!
ReplyDeleteIt's truly a unique and magical place - and the company was superb!!
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