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Transy Students Work with Community Outreach Program to Prepare Taxes

In an effort towards community involvement, Transylvania University spent February helping the community of Lexington with tax assistance and preparation through The Free Income Tax Assistance Service (VITA).

This program has helped local individuals who make less than $52,000 per year, and also welcomes faculty and students of Transy. It took place every Wednesday night throughout the month of February from 3:00 to 5:30 p.m. at the Cowgill Center for Business, Economics and Education off Third Street.

The program is currently supervised by Christi Hayne, an alumna of Transy, and Dr. Judy Jones, an accounting professor at Transy. Hayne has been a part of the program for six years, while Dr. Jones has been with the program since its beginning.

Transy has offered this program to the Lexington community since 1981. VITA was created due to the advantageous location of Transy in relation to the surrounding community. It allowed a way to provide a service to the surrounding community who needed it. The program also wanted to give students interested in business and accounting valuable experience working directly with a client, because internships were rarely completed by students before the program began.

According to Christi Hayne, “The reasons for maintaining it, I would say, are largely the same. Our immediate community surrounding us has changed some, but the community at large still has a need. There are people that have been coming to us for 15+ years.”

Those who use this service meet with a pair of current upperclassmen accounting or business students who have completed an income tax preparation training program. These students aid taxpayers by preparing their income tax forms and figuring out factors such as filing status or claims for dependency. Each student that takes part in the program is present on a volunteer basis while earning partial school credit for their efforts. Those who miss out on the service offered by the program may appreciate and benefit from assistance with preparing and filing their taxes from the likes of a CPA like Dave Burton (see here – http://daveburton.nyc/irs-file-tax-extension) who has considerable experience in the field of personal finance management.

In order to take part in this free service, you just need to bring all of the necessary information including W2s, 1099s (interest income statements), state and federal tax returns from last year, the IRS forms you received in the mail, photo IDs, and social security cards. (You must provide documentation, including IDs, for dependents.) All forms are filed electronically.

Transylvania Men Advance to HCAC Tournament Finals

The Transylvania men’s basketball team defeated Franklin on Saturday night in the HCAC tournament semifinals at Hanover College. The team advances finishing with a final score of 89-77. The contest was never in doubt as the Pioneers lead the entire second half in the victory.

Sophomore guard Michael Jefferson was a massive key to the Pioneers’ success throughout the game. He posted a career-high 32 points on an impressive 14-16 shooting from the field. Jefferson also added six rebounds, six assists and four steals to complete his all-around performance.

After the game, Jefferson said: “I am happy about my performance because it helped us move onto the next round. But, I’m more happy about our win as a team. I wouldn’t have been able to play with such confidence without my teammates and coaches having faith in me every minute of the game.”

Another impressive performer was sophomore forward Lucas Gentry. His 19 points and 11 rebounds show that Gentry is a valuable offensive threat for the Pioneers.

This was a much-needed win for the team, not just to keep the season alive, but to win the season series with Franklin. The last time the two faced, Transy traveled to Franklin on Feb. 13 and lost by 20 points. This was after the team defeated Franklin at the Beck Center earlier in the season. This team came into the game with something to prove from the opening tip.

The Pioneers will face Hanover for the HCAC championship today at 2 p.m. The Pioneers have lost the two prior contests against the Panthers by a competitive margin.

Transylvania will have to overcome the home-court advantage Hanover earned with their superior regular season record. However, this team showed offensive promise and defensive intelligence last night in a high-pressure contest. The tide appears to be shifting in the Pioneers’ favor. Should the Pioneers win, they will receive an automatic bid into the NCAA tournament in March.

Theater review: Transylvania University’s Silent Sky

Thursday, Feb. 22, was the opening night of “Silent Sky.” The play tells the story of Henrietta Leavitt, an astronomer who discovered the relationship between period and luminosity of Cepheids.

Over the course of about an hour and 45 minutes, Henrietta (Madison Plucknett) passionately pursues her star “spanking,” disregards her sister Margaret (Paige Barricklow), and resists the urge to declare her feelings for Mr. Shaw (JD Lovell).

Madison Plucknett and Paige Barricklow
Transylvania University
Feb. 19, 2019
Photo by Joseph Rey Au

The only shift in set and props is done during intermission and even that was minimal. Because the focus is on the heavens, the stage is unadorned which suggests that Henrietta is unconcerned with the immediacy of her life. Margaret herself becomes a part of the scenery as she fades into the background and Henrietta distances herself.

The crowning jewel of the set is what I like to call “The-Shopping-for-Dining-Room-Light-Fixtures-at-Home-Depot-Aisle.” Various styles of lights hang over the stage, probably because real stars are too expensive. They twinkle romantically when Henrietta has her major breakthrough. I might steal them when the show ends.

Madison Plucknett, Elizabeth Salamanca, and JD Lovell
Photo by Joseph Rey Au

There is quite a bit of humor injected into the script, often in the form of an incisive quip about the patriarchy. Elizabeth Salamanca is hilarious as Williamina Fleming. The unpredictable strength of her Scottish accent from scene to scene only added to last night’s performance.

The show must go on. And it certainly did, even when Madison Plucknett took a tumble over Henrietta’s star plates and into a coat hanger. She played it off wonderfully by telling Paige that she had been meaning to get those boxes out of the way.

Though the production is about the power of women, the unseen figures of Dr. Pickering and Henrietta’s father remind the audience of the persistence of gender politics. So, that’s kind of a bummer.

Eileen Bunch as Annie Cannon Transylvania University Feb 19, 2019 Photo by Joseph Rey Au

By the end, I found that I was extremely frustrated with Henrietta. She abandons her sister and then does quite a bit of whining when it turns out she needs her. Margaret is a constant in Henrietta’s life, just like the stars she loves. She loves them so much that she sacrifices everything to pursue them. This reminds us to get our heads out of the clouds and live our lives at least some of the time.

“Silent Sky” is definitely worth the money. Or, it would be if the tickets weren’t free. Showtimes are Thursdays through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m.

 

Lit Review: The Transylvanian, 1979

Welcome to Lit Review, where columnist Dominiq Wilson will take apart a series of chapbooks to figure out what works and what doesn’t for the modern reader of poetry. 


In celebration of The Transylvanian, the Transy literary magazine, opening up their submissions for this year’s legacy-themed publication, I’ve decided to review some of the older versions of our literary magazine. It was brought to my attention by Rambler copy editor Makayla Dublin that the construction of these magazines was very similar to the construction of early chapbooks, so I decided to give it a go.

The oldest copy of The Transylvanian I could access was printed in the spring of 1979, and if I could visualize a 15th-century chapbook, this is it. The cover is made of black construction paper, and the title of the literary magazine was printed in a silvery-white color at the bottom of the page. Thankfully, the spine was stapled, but the staples had begun to tear through the construction paper, so I was very careful when flipping through the pages of the book. While I read through, I was surprised to see that the construction of the pages wasn’t properly ordered, which put an extra poem and print near the end of the book. Luckily, for me, I flipped through the whole thing. If you get the chance to check out this chapbook, I suggest you do the same, but handle the book with care as it’s gone through some wear and tear.

Inside were mostly poems as well as smaller drawings. There wasn’t an explicitly-stated theme to connect the works in this collection, but I don’t think its absence dampens my opinion of the works within the book. To be quite honest, I don’t think that any of the chapbooks I’ve read so far have explicitly stated the theme of the collection. The absence of the theme adds a curious mystery to them. While an explicit theme would be helpful, I do think that personal interpretation helps the reader connect to the writing more easily. Without an explicit theme, you’re not really sure what you’re going to read. It’s like an interesting game of hide-and-seek, but you’re not really sure what you’re looking for.

All of this rambling aside, I did find that all of the poetry in this collection did have a loose but present theme of loss. In some poems, like “now ago” by Fred Stocker and “Dolls” by Leslie Baldridge, the theme doesn’t show itself as well. There are others, like “A Poem For My Father” by Richard Taylor and “12-9-72” by Gracie Hale, that showcase the theme a bit more brightly than the others. I find that “A Woman’s Museum” by Chris Lawson showcases the theme semi-obviously but utilizes a metaphor to hide it.

“The woman finds a space,

lays a cloth and

prepares to sell.

She takes each jar and holds it

up to the sun, they glisten.

She takes a certain pride

in her stock.

 

These were her babies-to-be.

The older ones, the more expensive,

are the ones with names:

Sam, to have been like Dad.

Sweet Maybell, the blue-eyed promise.

 

Listen, this is not pickle she sells;

it is craft, fetal and embryonic.

It is her own tragedy:

jar upon jar,

capped and saved.”

This poem, to me, tells the story of a mother who has gone through many miscarriages. In an attempt to let go, she sells her memories in jars to anyone who will buy them. I marked this poem as one of my favorites in this collection, and the metaphor deserves the credit, really. Without it, I have no doubt this poem would’ve been bland.

The other poem that caught my eye was “Jeff Young at Registration” by Harvey O. Davis. Not only is this poem in the middle of the book, almost calling to be read first, but it’s also the only page with printed color. In red lettering is an explanatory note that describes the subject of the poem: Jeff Young. To be honest, there isn’t much interpretation I can do with this poem, but it’s still very impactful without it.

As always, there are poems that I couldn’t interpret as easily, but I found that the two I’d gotten stumped on weren’t complex in nature. However, they didn’t connect to the theme as well as the rest of the poems. “Taking a Bath” by Chris Lawson is the most confusing of them all.

 

“Let me explain the bathroom:

wooden walls and a dangling light, a tin cabinet

full of washcloths, old towels.

 

A cake of soap.

 

A tub on four white legs.

 

I mash the rubber stopper into its plug.

I turn the cold water on.

The hot.

 

I take off my trousers, my shirt, each sock,

the shorts.

 

The water is tepid and ready.

 

So last, I unpeel my skin,

undo my bones and leave them neatly stacked.

Wrap what’s left in a clean tissue.

 

I am taking a bath

and when I go in

 

I go in for keeps.”

 

All I could note about this poem is that it gets a bit morbid and mysterious at the end. What it is referencing is a mystery to me, but I thoroughly enjoy this poem as well.

Another strange poem in this collection is “Unicorn” by Gracie Hale, which shares the spread with the previously mentioned poem. Now, I’m being honest when I say that I’m completely baffled by this poem, as it seems to appreciate and depreciate this mythological equestrian creature, but it piques my interest in a more jovial way than “Taking a Bath” does. I couldn’t resist smiling as I read. 

I really enjoyed the experience of reading the first accessible print of The Transylvanian, and I’ll definitely read the other three that resemble the chapbook construction. If you’d like to read through these books, they are on the lower level of the library in the back periodicals section.


If having your work published is more your speed, I highly suggest that you submit to The Transylvanian that will be printed this academic year. The theme is ‘Legacy,’ and submissions will be closing on March 8th. You can submit visual art, prose, poetry, photography, and a script if you want too! Please send your submissions to transylvanianlitmag@gmail.com with your submissions! —DW

New Dining Hall Floods After Rains

With the weather starting to heat up, the threat of snow has turned to rain. However, with that rain came unexpected consequences for the new dining hall, still colloquially called the Raf. The Lexington Room, in back of the Raf, was closed off on Thursday after rainfall caused minor flooding. The room reopened Friday with only a small portion of the room sectioned off to keep students away from the wet walls and floors.

When asked if this has happened before, the Raf staff was unsure because they originally worked in the old dining hallf. One Raf staff member said, “I’m fairly new to the Raf, but I have heard of lots of minor flooding around campus. So, I wouldn’t be surprised if this was not the first time the Raf flooded.”

First-year Molly Uhls sat in the soon to be flooded portion of the Raf early on the day of the heavy rainfall. “I noticed my sleeve was wet and figured I couldn’t have spilled that much water on myself without realizing, so I touched the wall. And it was soaking wet, and the paint was beginning to peel off. Naturally, I moved tables and kept eating.”

Uhls also explained how the water smelled moldy and flecks of orange bits were coming out of the wall.

Part of the Raf Lexington Room is still closed off and is in the process of being dried.

Photo by Allison Spivey.

Transy SpeakOut hosts a night of “Sex Ed”

On Wednesday, Feb. 13, the Transylvania poetry group SpeakOut hosted one of their open mic nights in celebration of Valentine’s Day. The show, fittingly called “Sex Ed,” was hosted in the Writing Center and featured poems and spoken word pieces primarily revolving around the theme of sex.

There were also a few choice selections of pieces that anyone could come up and read from a jar that got nicknamed “The Glory Hole.” Around 20 people attended, though only a few came with pieces prepared. The selection included poems about 17th-century wet dreams involving vines, redheads, and apologies to the spaying of bunny rabbits.

A good number of the attendees did, however, pull random pieces from the “Glory Hole.” Selections were chosen by members of SpeakOut, and featured an eclectic mixture of dirty jokes, Shakespearean love poems, and Urban Dictionary euphemisms for various genitalia. When we spoke to some of the people who came out to support SpeakOut, the consensus was that the event, while uncomfortable at times, was a lot of fun. “I really like the open, free atmosphere to say what you want,” said first-year Ryan Witt. “I’m having a lot of fun.”

Some of the pieces were indeed fitting with the education part of the theme and did address sexual social issues, specifically one poem centering around the lack of LGBTQ+ representation in public school sex ed.

Gallery Review: The Lexington Public Library Gallery

Hello Arts and Culture readers! Today, we delve into the Lexington Public Library Art Gallery’s exhibition. The featured artist is Bill Berryman whose work is inspired by the Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill. So if you have a passion for watercolor, graphite, or utopian communities, look no further. This show has got ‘em all.

There are also quite a few cats.

The show is nostalgic for a place that feels worlds away from the downtown scene that is visible through the gallery windows. Quaint barns and bonneted women are starkly contrasted with swathes of Kentucky blue and rows of cars zooming past. It is peaceful in a landscape lacking serenity.

Many of Berryman’s graphite pieces feature fabric. Silence depicts a lone coat hanging on a rack. The draping of the fabric is handled delicately, drawing attention to the folds and creases. The blankness of the background enhances the composition and provides a satisfying symmetry.

Summer Bonnet is almost a portrait, but the bonnet shields its wearer’s face from view. It too is delicate and light.

North Lot Dwelling, Snow is a watercolor of a yellow house after a snowfall. The shadows of the trees on the blankets of white almost make me sorry to see winter fade. There is a certain quietude and solace in the out-of-focus brick and spindly branches.

The most expressive is Sister Twana, depicting a bonneted woman. She is throwing up her hands in praise, with her eyes closed, and her face upturned. Berryman also saw fit to give her a background, making the piece even more unique. She seems to be in a place of prayer, judging by the heavy door to her right and the paneled wall behind her. Her dress rivals the coat featured in Silence in terms of detail.

Brother Boomer is not a man but a watercolor cat. He seems to be contemplating the Shaker lifestyle as he stares at the floor with his tail wrapped around himself. It is unclear whether or not he is satisfied with his lot.

Berryman isn’t trying to prove anything or make an overstated point about the human condition; he is simply describing what he loves. He communicates through technique which he does most skillfully. In his artist statement, he writes, “I think the artist Edward Hopper expressed it best when he stated, ‘If I could say it in words there would be no reason to paint.’”

Rambler Blog & Playlist: February 22nd

Hey y’all!

It’s officially the last week in February, and I’m still trying to figure out where midterms went. There’s a long list of music videos that dropped on YouTube this week and can be found here on the trending list l, which I usually include in my blog. But, I decided to change things up this week and compiled two videos (because one just happens to be eight minutes long) that include a brilliant artist named Fkj collaborating with other brilliant artists. Keep scrolling to find out more.

Fkj (French Kiwi Juice) is a French multi-instrumentalist who creates mellow tunes. For this specific song, Fkj collaborated with Masego, who is an American musician known for his unusual, “genre-bending” style that he calls “traphousejazz.” The song “Tadow” is said to have been the product of a jam session where the two musicians were simply improvising. This song is well worth your eight minutes because of it’s versatility and downright smooth composition.

Tom Misch is one of the most brilliant artists I have come across. I’ve only been listening to him for five years, but I can tell you that his ability to capture the listener with his smooth vocals and jazzy guitar chords is unlike anything I’ve heard. In this two year old video, Misch collaborates with Fjk to perform their song “Losing My Way,” which can only be found on YouTube and SoundCloud. The mix of jazzy guitar and bass chords with Misch’s vocals emphasizes how well these two work together. Hopefully, we’ll see more from them in the future.

Stay chill,

Taylor


For this week’s arts events, we have “Silent Sky” and the faculty composer’s recital!

Thursday, Feb. 21-Sunday, Mar. 3, @ Little Theater

Transylvania Theater premiered their latest play, “Silent Sky,” last night! The play, written by Lauren Gunderson and directed by Ave Lawyer, is about women astronomers and their groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of space. “Silent Sky” takes you on a journey from the beginning of Henrietta Swan Levitt’s education at Harvard Observatory all the way to her death. “Silent Sky” will run this Friday thru Sunday and next Thursday thru Sunday. For more information on showtimes and reserving free tickets, click here.

Tuesday, Feb. 26 @7:30 p.m., MFA Carrick Theater

Come support your favorite faculty members Tuesday evening for the faculty composer recital! The recital will features original works by Dr. Barnes. Dr. Polashek, and Dr. Barbara Rogers and more!

Column: Stress, Student Life, and Backpacks

I felt animosity growing within me every time I put the key in the ignition or hopped on my bike to begin my short commute home. My anger would simmer until I would leave my house the next morning, heading back to school. Wash, rinse, repeat.

I was being weighed down by my obsession for complete and utter independence. The closest I could get to the independence I had felt when I was abroad was every time I set foot on campus.

Subsequently, everything that related to campus was liberating, from the people to the classes, the social life, the work, and even the food. People, activities, and things I used to take interest in outside of this environment had lost their value for me. The sole thing that mattered was academic “success.” The one thing I began to carry with me at all times as an incessant subconscious reminder of this was my backpack.

As a commuter, being able to efficiently transport everything I need in a sac on my back is extremely convenient. I carry my backpack to friends’ rooms on campus-even when I do not intend on doing work-simply to present the illusion that I haven’t stopped thinking about school. My friends are very academically driven, so I feel like I need to be just as academically driven, even if it’s an illusion at times.

Spending time socializing and relaxing in my friends’ rooms, however, meant avoiding returning home, where the possibility of running into my parents and engaging in cordial, monotonous, and tedious conversation depressed me.

This is something I have been trying to grapple with for months, and even more so in counseling after having been diagnosed with moderate depression and anxiety. I know I am not alone in this, and until the beginning of last semester, I had never realized how prevalent mental health issues are, especially on college campuses, as well as in the younger generation as a whole. This is why there are many services out there, such as Honey Lake Clinic and more, that are aiming to look after young adults and teens suffering from mental health conditions, so they are able to live happy and fulfilled lives for the future. I presume that my ignorance prevented me from being perceptive to this subject the way I am now.

Throughout this, my backpack had become a symbol of my constant stress.

Cheris Kramarae, author of The Third Shift: Women Learning Online, developed the term “third shift” to build on what sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild’s coined as the “second shift.” The “second shift” describes women who work and take care of domestic tasks. This indicates the duality of their roles and the toll, mentally; physically; and emotionally, that is taken on them. So, the “third shift” is extended to women who work, take care of domestic duties, and attend school. As this theory suggests, education and it’s time consumptive nature takes on a whole new meaning.

The columnist’s omnipresent backpack. Photo by Diaka Savané.

So the presence of my backpack permeates each environment that I transition into throughout the day. When I am at school, I am a student. When I leave school to go to work, I am an employee working on homework. When I leave work to go home, I am an overwhelmed daughter overly preoccupied with being a student. What a vicious cycle.

The constant in every environment is my backpack. At work, homework, responding to school emails, and scheduling myself for events that I don’t necessarily have room for dominates any other priorities. At home, I have gone so far as to schedule a conversation with my dad on a Sunday and a dinner party my parents were throwing in my Google Calendar, regardless of the fact that I would be home. These interactions became nothing but a carefully selected colored slot with a 10 minute notification attached.

My best friend’s 21st birthday dinner was almost tainted by my overbearing teal sac; I contemplated bringing it along, as I would be joining her after work and didn’t have a place to keep it other than at work, a totally viable and convenient option. Psychologically, I felt that if I had dared to bring my backpack to a sit-down restaurant, I would have ruined the aesthetic because my priorities would have clearly been elsewhere.

This subliminal compulsion with school work and the onset of stress when I am disconnected from it is visible even while I am at school. When I’m doing homework, I find it hard to separate myself from my phone. Consciously, I tell myself that in the event of an emergency I should be attentive to someone notifying me. But on some level, I know that I’m actually on my phone to send contorted facial snapchats of myself to friends as a means of connecting since I can’t always find time for them.

Now that I’ve unpacked the immaterial contents of my backpack, I will conclude by saying this: these realizations have only made me more capable of dealing with the stress of being a student because it can be extremely stressful at times. I remember some of my friends using color changing pipes to smoke their marijuana before finals when the stress really set in. They always found that method to be beneficial, especially before exam season. Whilst it wasn’t for me, some students might find that method works for them. However you cope with stress, it’s important to keep doing it at college. It will be stressful, but it will also be one of the best experiences of your life. Thankfully, I am now able to better understand, as I hope other students do as well, that school is just that: school. Yes, it’s been our entire lives up until now, but this time spent on this campus is unique to each of us; the positive and the negative are just symptoms of our individual experiences.

So, instead of allowing the steadily increased weight of my backpack to physically weigh me down, I am able to take it off my shoulders and more importantly off my mind and think about whatever I want.

Weather

Lexington
overcast clouds
40.8 ° F
41.1 °
39.2 °
80 %
3.5mph
100 %
Fri
56 °
Sat
54 °
Sun
63 °
Mon
68 °
Tue
55 °