I think the reference is probably to the "Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle" (SLSC), a course of reading. This is mentioned in histories of Chautauqua such as Theodore Morrison's "Chautauqua: A Center for Education, Religion, and the Arts in America" (Univ. of Chicago, 1974). It was the focus of a dissertation by Charles R. Kniker c. 1969 (Teachers College, Columbia and/or Union Seminary; he also published a book on the subject. The New York Times had an article on CLSC in July or August 1998 - may have been an anniversary year. Natalie Naylor, Hofstra University