Friday, March 21, 2025
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Under the Gun: We sent a reporter to the #MarchforOurLives. Here’s what she saw.

On March 24th, over 850,000 people gathered in front of the U.S capital for the March for Our Lives, a movement against gun violence and for stronger gun laws, making this march the largest march in American history. The March for Our Lives is a movement started by the survivors of the Parkland, Florida shooting that took place at Marjory Stoneman Douglas (MSD) high school on February 14th of this year, claiming the lives of 17 students and faculty. With this being said, there are people out there who have no intention of using their guns, but carry it with them for safety. No one should have to live like this, but if you or someone you know is adamant about this, ensuring you know all there is to know about carrying a gun is something worth looking into. The use of leather holsters shows that you are considerate about the safety of yourself and others around you.

Photo by Kayla Gross

In the past five weeks a group of MSD students, including Emma Gonzalez, David Hogg, Sarah Chadwick, and Cameron Kasky, have been the faces of the March for Our Lives movement by both confronting politicians involved with the NRA (National Rifle Association) and organizing a march on Washington in hopes of influencing politicians to create more restrictions on purchasing firearms in America. Twitter has played a large role in the movement. It started when there seemed to be an apparent pattern in the way politicians respond to school shootings. The hashtag #NeverAgain was what proved to show how monumental this issue really is and how many people were passionate about it.

After MSD senior Emma Gonzalez gave a speech before the #NeverAgain movement started, she ended the speech with the phrase, “We call BS!”, a phrase targeted towards the politicians who fail to discuss taking action against the gun issue. Her speech went viral, and soon after, she made a twitter and gained more followers than the official National Rifle Association page. This encouraged Gonzalez and the rest of the MSD students to start pushing for a larger movement. Twitter and other forms of social media have been used to spread information about events and their beliefs to capture the attention of students across the U.S.

Video from CNN

The March was the kickoff of the #NeverAgain movement; it was incredibly well organized. Security and volunteers handed out water bottles to everyone who attended, and jumbo-trons were placed all the way down Pennsylvania Ave. Protesters heard from 17 different speakers to represent the 17 students who lost their lives in the Parkland shooting.

The crowd of people who attended ranged from young elementary students there with their parents to high school and college students to senior citizens, all fiery and filled with passion and rage about the issue of gun violence.

Photo by Kayla Gross

The crowd appeared as a sea of posters and banners rather than people. Nearly every person had a homemade poster and held it high as they chanted little slogans like, “Vote them out!” referring to the elected officials in office who haven’t showed clear support for gun restrictions; “We call BS!”, in reference to Emma Gonzalez’s very first speech; and “Hey hey ho ho the NRA has got to go!” and “Hey hey NRA how many kids have you killed today!?”, both of which call out the National Rifle Association for contributing to politicians’ campaigns as a means of lobbying against gun control. I interviewed one of the people passing me in the crowd who said they own a business that was a security camera which can detect when a gun is pulled out. They say this helps her safety but still thinks they still need to do more to improve gun laws.

Among these politicians is Florida senator Marco Rubio, who has been accepting money from the National Rifle Association lobbyists and in return has discussed a few ways to prevent school shootings through “Red Flag Laws” and the “Try and Lie” bill. Rubio has yet to present anything that involves stricter gun laws or anything related to guns for that matter.

Photo by Kayla Gross

A few weeks prior the the March for Our Lives, CNN hosted a Town Hall with NRA spokeswoman Dana Leosch, Florida senator Marco Rubio, and a few of the faces of the #NeverAgain movement. Cameron Kasky, an MSD student asked Rubio if he’d ever stop taking donations from the NRA. Rubio responded with, “people buy into my agenda.”

Since Columbine there have been an estimated 208 fatal school shootings in the U.S., yet nothing has been done to prevent this issue. It has been recently uncovered that the National Rifle Association lobbyists have been paying off politicians, and in return the politicians don’t pass any laws that prevent people from purchasing firearms. In 2016 Donald Trump received $30 million from the NRA for his presidential campaign, and in response he has shown his full support and respect for the second amendment and the NRA when they say that we need to arm teachers with firearms and get rid of gun-free zones. I doubt that many teachers actually want to be armed with a potentially fatal weapon. Instead, I imagine they are looking for other ways to protect themselves, like bulletproof partition shields from Versare. Regardless, I am certain they are all hoping for gun reform.

At the March, Sarah Chadwick, another student of MSD, walked onstage with a little orange price tag with $1.05 on it. “When you take 3,140,167 – the number of students enrolled in Florida schools – and divide by $3,303,355 – the amount of money Marco Rubio has received from the National Rifle Association, it comes out to a dollar and five cents. Is that all we’re worth to these politicians? A dollar and five cents? Was $17.85 all it cost you that day, Mr. Rubio? Well I say, one life is worth more than all the guns in America.”

Video from NBC News

The March was not organized only as a response to the Parkland shooting, however. The MSD student organizers worked with a broad group of gun control activists and victims of gun violence. “We recognize that Parkland received more attention because of its affluence,” Jaclyn Corin, a survivor of the Parkland shooting, said during her speech. “But we share this stage today and forever with those communities who have always stared down the barrel of a gun.”

One of the other speakers was Naomi Wadler, an 11-year-old who organized a walkout for her elementary school. “I am here to acknowledge and represent the African-American girls whose stories don’t make the front page of every national newspaper, whose stories don’t lead on the evening news” said Wadler, and she was the first of many to present an intersectional approach to gun violence.

Photo by Kayla Gross

North Lawndale Prep students and members of student-led non-violence organization the Peace Warriors in Chicago, Alex King and D’Angelo McDade, walked up onstage with colored tape over their mouths and addressed the crowd as their family. “I said family because we are here to join together in unity fighting for the same goals,” McDade explained. “I say family because of all the pain that I see in the crowd. And that pain is another reason why we are here. Our pain makes us family. Us hurting together brings us closer together to fight for something better.”

“Martin Luther King Jr once said that darkness cannot drive out darkness, only light can do that, and hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that, which now leads me to say violence cannot drive out violence, only peace can do that; poverty cannot drive out poverty, only resources can do that; death cannot drive out death, only pro-active life can do that,” said McDade.

Video from NBC News


This piece is part of Under the Gun, a Rambler feature series on gun control & gun culture in the wake of mass shootings and the March for Our Lives. Read the other parts of the series here.

Under the Gun: Guest Columnist Rachel Young on guns and our sense of normalcy

Content Warning: 2017 Attack at Transy


Last April, I was present during an attack on Transylvania’s campus. While I have mostly recovered from the trauma inflicted on me and the campus community eleven months ago (thanks to counselors, incredible friends, and the gift of time), I don’t often share publicly about my experience. It’s uncomfortable; it upsets me; and it often falls upon the ears of those who are unprepared to support me. Today, I am choosing to break that silence in solidarity with students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and their counterparts all over the country who have witnessed unimaginable violence in their schools. The fact is, not a day goes by that I don’t think about the horrific scene I witnessed last spring. On days that the news is filled with stories of survivors of violence (and of those who were not so lucky) on other schools’ campuses, I feel this trauma in new ways.

When I hear of children being gunned down in their schools, chills rush over my body as my mind transports me back to Jazzman’s Café on the morning of April 28th. I situate myself with my blueberry muffin and banana in a booth with some classmates who are working with me on a group project. When I see the door open to my right, I glance up, hoping to see a familiar face. The face that looks back at me beneath an American flag bandana is that of Mitchell Adkins, a familiar face, indeed. It takes all of three seconds for my mind to register that the fact that Mitchell (who had left Transy the year before) is carrying a duffel bag means bad news for all fifty people in the coffee shop that day. My mind running a mile a minute, I glance up at him as I try to covertly dial 911 on my cell phone. Then, as he begins to loudly demand everyone’s attention, he reaches into his duffel bag and pulls out a hatchet and a machete. Though I know I must still escape this situation, a peculiar sense of relief washes over me.

Almost a year later, this sense of relief disturbs me. I recognize it now for its alarming reality: in the midst of my terror, I was relieved that the man threatening me and my classmates was ONLY brandishing massive blades instead of the assault rifle I had come to expect. In a split second, my brain instinctively calculated the possible carnage this man and his weapons were capable of and told me that I would probably be safe. Thankfully, my instincts were right, and I survived with only psychological scarring.

However, as many people chose to point out to me in the aftermath, if Mitchell had been carrying an assault rifle that morning like I thought he was, I would most likely be gone. In recent weeks, I have caught myself wondering why in the hell he wasn’t carrying an assault rifle. Absolutely nothing (aside from, perhaps, finances) was preventing this 19-year-old, notoriously aggressive political extremist from stopping off and buying an AR-15 on his way to campus that morning. Nothing but the grace of God, or luck, or random chance stands between me and the victims of countless school shootings across the US. This fact keeps me awake at night.

Last weekend, I chose to take part in the March for Our Lives to advocate for stricter gun control laws to make it more difficult for criminals who intend to launch an attack (like the one that has deeply affected my life, and the lives of many in this community) to attain deadly assault rifles. In no way do I support a government entity coming to take anyone’s hunting rifles away, but I do believe that common sense gun laws are a non-partisan issue. I must commend the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School for so quickly turning their trauma into action. May the rest of us follow their lead. Enough is enough.


This piece is part of Under the Gun, a Rambler feature series on gun control & gun culture in the wake of mass shootings and the March for Our Lives. Read the other parts of the series here.

Read Under the Gun, our series on gun violence and the March for Our Lives

Under the Gun is a Rambler feature series on gun violence, gun control, and gun culture in the wake of mass shootings and the March for Our Lives.


Reporter Kayla Gross went to the March for Our Lives in Washington, DC. Read about it here.

Senior Rachel Young remembers feeling relieved when she realized an attacker on campus wasn’t armed with a gun. Read it here.

Commentary Editor Isaac Batts processes gun control through a poetic lens. Read their work here.

Editor-in-Chief Tristan Reynolds reflects on the way guns and violence have intersected with his own life, and the national consciousness. Read about it here.

Senior Laura Daley reflects on violence and control in a new poem. Read it here.

Under the Gun: How Much Longer

Another day
Another headline
Another body count
And I can’t keep track anymore.

Too many people
Too many lives
Have been wrenched away
Beaten
Crushed
Stolen

And yet we do nothing

We beg
And plead
And yell
And cry
And still we are ignored

Because the dollars lining
The pockets of Congress
Mean more than
The breath in our lungs

 


This piece is part of Under the Gun, a Rambler feature series on gun control & gun culture in the wake of mass shootings and the March for Our Lives. Read the other parts of the series here.

Rambler Weekly Playlist & Blog: March 30th

While it’s been rainy outside and school has become end-of-the-semester insane, the good news is that we’ve all survived another stressful week. Hopefully this chill playlist of brand new releases from all different genres will get ya through the weekend.

Happy Easter and Passover to anyone who celebrates! Fun fact just in case you all weren’t aware, but this year Easter falls on the same date as April Fool’s day. Could this mean that people might hide eggs without candy in them just to say “Happy April Fools”? Will it really be Easter or is the date all a joke? Stay tuned to find out.

As for Arts Events of the Week

  • Art by Moira Hedrick

    It’s officially General Student Recital season! The first one will be held in Mitchell Fine Arts’ Carrick Theater on Tuesday, April 3rd at 12:30p.m.

  • That same evening at 7:30, the Transylvania University Concert Band will be performing in Mitchell Fine Arts’ Haggin Auditorium!
  • The second General Student Recital will be at 7:30p.m. in Carrick Theater on Thursday, April 5th.

Please go support your talented friends and fellow students!!

Take it easy,

Taylor


TEDx Transy videos now live on TED YouTube Channel

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On February 20, Transylvania University held its first TEDx Event, an independently organized TED talk that that was coordinated by Dr. Adam Evans. The event included a series of three talks, given by Professor Kurt Gohde & Dr. Kremena Todorova, Jason T. Mitchel, and Debra F. Faulk, whose talks were centered around the theme “A Better Look At Ourselves and Those Around Us.” The speakers gave presentations on the “reflection of our own perspectives and ways that we might strengthen that understanding by looking to the world around us,” according to the TED website.

In a previous article, Dr. Evans commented on the process of organizing the event, which involved following strict TED guidelines and working with Transy students and faculty in terms of scheduling. Once the physical recordings of the talks were completed, Dr. Evans and Professor Gohde edited the videos, which are all now live on the TEDx Talks YouTube channel. Following the event, surveys were sent to those who attended the talks; attendees answered a single question that asked how likely the viewer was to recommend the event to a colleague or friend. Out of the 33 participants in the survey, 30 “promoted” the event, while 3 were “passive,” meaning that 91% of survey participants are very likely to recommend the event.



 

Poetry: Necromancer

I am not a necromancer
I don’t talk to the dead
can’t call me on
your ouija board
I won’t resurrect
what I’ve buried
beneath my flowers
I am not clairvoyant
I can’t see you
haunting
you can throw shit all you want
you poltergeist
I don’t do black magic.
I am not a necromancer.
and I won’t talk to you.

Rambler Weekly Playlist & Blog: March 23rd

This week’s playlist is a collective mix of heavy beats and some good ole’ fashioned indie vibes to get you through a chill weekend.

As for our Arts Events of the Week, we have not one but two senior recitals over the weekend. Tim Baker will be performing “A Musical Autobiography” in Carrick Theater on Saturday, March 24th at 7 PM. Baker will perform a mix of recorded and live acoustic pieces along with a video that accompanies a song he produced for a class with Dr. Polashek, and a multi-instrument, live looping piece of a bluegrass classic. Baker said, “every piece in the program is in some way tied to my overall musical journey.” This is a must-see show, folks!

Art by Moira Hedrick

And on that note, we also have organist Allen Fletcher, who will perform his Senior Recital in Haggin Auditorium on Sunday, March 25th at 3 PM. He will be performing a variety of music, including “at least one piece from every major musical period (Pre-Baroque, Baroque, Romantic, and 20th century)” Fletcher said. “There will be a little of everything: trumpet tunes, a Bach prelude and fugue, and the famous ‘Widor Toccata’.” This will be another show you won’t wanna miss!

There will also be the Electronic Music Student Recital in Carrick Theater on Tuesday, March 27th at 7:30p.m. This recital will mainly feature music created by Transy students (myself included)! Please come out and support your fellow music students!

Take it easy,

Taylor


Review: Lavish! layers pictures to create art

February 23, the Morlan Gallery opened it’s new exhibit. “Lavish!” is an exhibit created & curated by Art Professor Zoé Strecker.  Strecker showcases intricate works of embroidery inspired by Pine Mountain located in southern Kentucky.

Photo by Kayla Gross

Pine Mountain is one of the most biodiverse forests in the world, according to Strecker. She spent time in each region of the forest, taking pictures and recording the sounds around her that visually defined each area. Strecker then printed out the images on a screen and hand embroidered over these screen prints to create marvelous works of art.

Strecker’s art pieces are set up in a large circular structure made of wood and screen.  This method of presentation really immerses the audience in the forest art and creates a very minimalistic atmosphere that makes each piece of art stand out.  On the other side of the Morlan Gallery stands the side exhibit, “Inspired by the Wild Places” which showcases the work of artists, Rebecca Allan, Vallorie Henderson, Erika Strecker and Brian and Sara Turner. These pieces of art are inspired by Pine Mountain but are displayed in other forms of art such as painting and photography.

On top of the beautifully displayed art, the exhibit’s opening included an embroidery workshop presented by a local artist. People crowded around him to ask questions about his work or simply watched as he hand embroidered a scenic landscape.

Photo by Kayla Gross

Lavish! is a beautifully put together art exhibit that has transformed the Morlan Gallery into a place of nature and minimalism. The 360 degree display wall created an immersive experience for the audience and made for an overall creative take on the traditional art exhibit.

 

 

 


Arts Editor Taylor Mahlinger spoke with Strecker about her process for creating this exhibit. Read about it here!

Rambler Weekly Playlist & Blog: Langhorne Slim Edition

This week’s blog will be a little different than past ones, since I had the pleasure of speaking with and interviewing the inspiring artist, Langhorne Slim. He’s playing a sold out show right here in Lexington at The Burl on Saturday, March 17th (St. Patrick’s Day!!!) at 9pm.

Langhorne Slim’s charismatic yet laid-back personality have as much depth as his soul-bearing lyrics, and this was easy to tell from the moment I picked up the phone for the interview. This is an artist who not only bleeds pure talent, but is a pure soul as well.

His unique name, Langhorne Slim, (aka Sean Scolnick), was inspired by his hometown of Langhorne, Pennsylvania. He “used to write various band names when I was sitting and feeling a little day-dreamy when I was a kid in school,” Slim said. “When I left Pennsylvania at 18, I didn’t have a band and started playing solo, and was, and still am a lover of old blues and folk music. Kind of as a nod to a lot of the stuff that I was listening to, where guys and gals would take the name of the places they were from and sometimes put ‘slim’ on the end. I just thought that was a cool move, and so I integrated it into what I was doing, and didn’t necessarily think that’s how it would be all these years, but the name just sort stuck and here I am years later with the same name.”

Structure isn’t really Slim’s thing. I asked if he creates his set lists to fit the venue (he does not). “I think in all the years of being on tour, maybe it’s 15 or so, I think we’ve had about two or three set lists which were never followed, and therefore I don’t write set lists. If anything, I write down a bunch of songs that I’ve written over the years so that I have some guide in case I get lost in my brain up there, I can glance down” he chuckled. “If I put out a new record like I just have, I wanna play a bunch of those songs and then I kind of just feel out what the heck is going on, and it’s sort of like a boxing match of love, or a roller coaster ride or something.”

Being spontaneous is something Slim holds dear to his heart. “If there’s no element of spontaneity, it can become rigid, and my worst fear, formulaic, where just like ‘this is my job’. Though there are challenges to anything that anybody does, I never want that sense of freedom or joy or risk-taking taken out of it, because then, I just don’t feel like it would be as fun” said Slim. “I think performing when I was a little kid was just considered misbehaving and I would get sent to the principle’s office, and thankfully now, hopefully people will come and see me and applaud…I mean, most of the time” he laughed.

He then proceeded to turn the tables and become philosophical. “Now here’s a question for you. There’s a worm—I’m outside of a hotel—there’s a worm on the cement, and I just picked it up and put it in the grass because I can’t bear to see the worm squiggle on the cement like that. Do you think I should do that, or that I should not interfere with the wildness?”

He then added, “I feel like we’ve interfered with the wild anyway by building this hotel here, and therefore, the worm is at a disadvantage, and helping it out is okay.”

His free thinking and down to earth nature led us to a conversation about humanity in general. “If I play a concert that children are allowed to be at, it’s usually the children that are dancing and singing freely and often the adults that have a harder time breaking out of that shell, which is fascinating because I think we’re all born, not necessarily to be singers and dancers, but to sing and dance, and I don’t think any of us don’t have that desire.”

When asked about playing for smaller audiences, lots of artists will comment on the idea that it gives them more of a connection to their audiences, but Slim went even deeper with his answer. “I find that when the thing I don’t have any words for happens, it exists on like more of a spiritual dimension or plane. It can happen in front of thousands of people, and it can happen in front of twenty five people, and it can’t happen sometimes in front of whatever amount of people. It’s just an elevated energy that it feels like there’s truly a connection and a feeling of…I don’t know, love is the right word maybe? It’s a broad term. It’s more of an ancient thing that people have been doing probably since people existed and there was anything to bang on or to strum on. I’ve kind of lived for that connection with an audience.”

As Slim said himself, “I ain’t no cookie cutter man.”

His well-wishes for all of you were just like he is: thought-provoking and kind. “I say hello, I look forward to coming back [to Lexington] after a few years, and I’ve got a new record that’s called Lost At Last Volume I that I’m very proud of, and hopefully people can get that wherever they get their music.”

He then added, “Don’t believe the hype. Don’t believe the division and the fear and all that. Human kindness and compassion are not hippie ideals, they are ancient, and they are things that we can practice today, and we can all use a little bit more sweetness in the world.”

There ya have it, folks. With his unique, vintage folk sound, this talented artist is sure to bring an electric energy to the room that cannot be found anywhere else. Be sure to give this playlist that’s made up entirely of my personal favorite Langhorne Slim songs, a listen.

Take it easy,

Taylor.


Weather

Lexington
overcast clouds
47.5 ° F
47.5 °
47.5 °
50 %
2.7mph
100 %
Sat
53 °
Sun
57 °
Mon
56 °
Tue
48 °
Wed
41 °