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Our Hateful Heritage
White columns cast long shadows. As they reach up to the roof—angular, straining towards the sky—they cast beams of darkness over the bleach-white doors. Stone steps, massive to view and unrelenting to walk, lead to the main entrance of the central building of Transylvania University. It’s referred to, sometimes with affection and sometimes with exasperation, as Old Morrison.
The promotional packets for the University and the historical plaque planted in front of the steps of the building itself both refer to the style of the building as a Greek Revival. It is usually called a masterpiece of the style. With its washed-white walls, the Doric columns supporting a roof above the entrance, the architect must have imagined a new Parthenon for a new Academy, fitting for the Athens of the West. Maybe those great intellectual aspirations were at the forefront of Gideon Shryock’s mind when he designed and oversaw the construction of Old Morrison. And yet, shadows linger.

Shryock, like many men of his day, owned slaves. Like most slave-owners, he probably beat them. He probably whipped them or had them whipped. Under the laws of Kentucky, as under the laws of most states in America, he denied them, on pain of mutilation or death, the power to read, to write, to engage in any of the lofty intellectual pursuits that students and professors so readily undertook in the very building he designed for that purpose. He denied them their freedom, their humanity. And, because he was a white man, because he had the pleasures of his caste and class, it is his building that stands on Transylvania’s campus, and it is his name, and not the names of the human beings he so abused, that is engraved on metal and stone monuments. And so, despite the classical allusions and pretensions, it is that history, the history of human cruelty and white supremacy that is sunk deep into the bones of Old Morrison. It is not a coincidence that at least one alumna has referred to the building not as a new Parthenon, but as “the Big House on an antebellum plantation.”
The history of white supremacy at Transylvania is hardly limited to architecture. As with the rest of the antebellum aristocracy, many students, administrators, and faculty in Transylvania’s first 80-odd years held slaves. Transylvania, as one of the most prominent colleges in the South, educated entire generations of Southern statesmen who went to Washington, to Congress and the Supreme Court, and to the White House, where they defended and further entrenched the white supremacy that under-girded their power and prestige. And while the institution of slavery was abolished at the bayonet point of Northern armies, the system of white supremacy persisted. Emancipation came packed between the bullet and the gunpowder of Union rifles. But Transylvania, like the rest of the South, never took to it.
Transylvania remained a white-only institution. Lexington, the city Transylvania sits at the geographic and cultural center of, remained a segregated city. In 1891, during the height of white backlash to Reconstruction, Transylvania chartered a chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order. The order was founded in part by a former Confederate soldier, and to this day venerates Robert E. Lee, the marshal of the armies of slavery and white supremacy.

(Photo courtesy of Transylvania University)
Progress has been slow. The first black student in Transylvania’s history, Lula Morton Drewes, is still alive. Jim Crow is well within living memory. The original generation to fight for integration, and those who opposed them, are still alive. Massive dorms, named for two infamous champions of slavery, who respectively taught and studied at Transylvania, Henry Clay and Jefferson Davis, were only razed a few scant years ago (Clay was a faculty member and Davis an alumni). The power of history can ebb and flow, but the waves still wet the shore of our present.
Transylvania is now an integrated campus, drawing students from a mix of racial, national, ethnic, and linguistic backgrounds. It is officially committed to diversity as a value (though there is not currently a director of diversity & inclusion). There are Gender Studies
programs and classes. Many of the faculty teach the history of white supremacy, of the patriarchy, and the other forms of oppression so traditional that, to many, they are simply part of the social fabric. There are discussions, some louder than others, about the challenges the university still faces, and there are many at the university who are willing, able, and eager to face the beast head-on.
White students remain the overwhelming majority, as they do of the faculty. The university hardly stands as a beacon of enlightened cosmopolitanism in a world that has renewed its periodic turn away from openness and justice. Still, progress has occurred over the last half of a century.

That progress is now threatened by a backlash. As Transylvania has proved itself willing to correct, to a degree, the mistakes of the past, specters of the old order have arisen to defend it. White supremacy, while not the immovable monolith of yesteryear, has made its presence known on campus over the past twelve months.
That presence has ranged from subtle to overt. Of course, most of the old buildings still stand. The history is still mostly glanced over, not uncovered and examined. Some of these signs are so ingratiated into the fabric of the institution that they can seem a part of the tapestry. But occasionally, the defense of white supremacy, the latest in a line of battlefield maneuvers stretching back to the slave trade itself, becomes so overt and jarring that not even the most oblivious observer can avoid taking notice.
Last spring, a former student—Mitchell Adkins—strode into the campus café and attacked students with a machete. The details sound so ludicrous—‘a machete? Really?’ But the motive was precise and recognizable. Adkins’ attack, a politically motivated act, targeted those he perceived as liberal or progressive. Adkins had previously written—in lurid terms—about the supposed discrimination that conservatives suffered on Transylvania’s campus. To him, the inclusion of different voices—black voices, women’s voices, the voices of the marginalized or oppressed—was not a step forward into a more just society, but a threat to his cherished system, the system that promotes the mediocre-at-best white man over all others, regardless of merit or moral. And he was willing to commit atrocities to defend that system. He has that conviction in common with many of Transylvania’s alumni, going back to 1791.
Nor was he alone. Over the past several months, another former student—Taylor Ragg—had directed a targeted harassment campaign against another student here. His victim had committed the cardinal sin of being born on the wrong patch of ground, on the wrong side of the border, at least to his mind. She was protected in this country under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals executive order. She had come to this country when she was two years old. That made her, to his mind, nothing more than “this illegal.” And this made her a deserving target of months’ worth of racist and bigoted abuse.
Both of these cases are outliers. The average Transylvania student is no more likely to pick up a machete than they are to design a rocket propulsion engine in their dorm room. The campus is hardly awash in swastikas and the stars-and-bars or Confederate battle flags.

Credit where credit is due: in both of these cases, the university’s administration acted as well as could be expected. In the case of the attack, campus police quickly neutralized the attacker; President Carey personally held him down. In the case of the racist harassment campaign, the administration opened a disciplinary inquiry. (The student who instigated the harassment campaign has withdrawn from the university, though it is not publicly known whether he withdrew voluntarily or was expelled by the university).
And yet. These cases cannot be considered completely foreign to the university. While today’s students, today’s faculty, today’s administration are so rightly horrified by them, none of us can deny the ropes of history that connect these two men to Transylvanians who came before. Mitchell Adkins and Taylor Ragg share one vital, all-important link with the Jefferson Davises, the Henry Clays, the Gideon Shryocks who stood on the same grounds. They share the history of white supremacy.
Transylvania itself shares that history. We, as students, share that history. So does the faculty, so does the administration. We do not want it, we loathe it, we despise it. Yet it insists on us. It is not merely our history, but our hateful heritage that demands our attention. This heritage sits under our feet, on land conquered by the white man with a gun. This heritage sits in the same bank accounts and wealth funds where the university places our tuition dollars, and from where it draws our various salaries and scholarships; those funds can trace their lineage back to the stolen labor of the antebellum slave state. This heritage looms up over us in the walls and columns of Old Morrison.
These two most recent incidents—terrible but unavoidable—draw our attention to the whole of that history. And so it comes to us to make the choice: do we look away? Do we quietly update our official diversity pledge and think little more of it? Do we insist, not just to the outside world for the purposes of public relations, that hate does not have and has never had any place here?
We could. We certainly could. But to glance away from the question is only to invite it to return, at some later date. This history of white supremacy will not leave us; it will not let us be, to quietly and meekly carry on about our studies without a care for the wider world.

We have not merely an opportunity but an obligation to make the opposite choice. This history has been presented to us. We have the obligation to examine it, to try and understand it. We have the obligation to critique it. We have the inescapable obligation to ask ourselves in what ways we carry it with us to this day. We have, in other words, the same obligation we fulfill from day to day: to educate ourselves and to use that education to improve the world we find.
This effort cannot come from students alone. The university, as an institution, must face itself. And the university must, as it always strives to do, use its power and prestige to educate its students. When the first-year students arrive, have them read not only about problems in ‘the world,’ but about the problems of history here at their new home. When the guest lecturers are invited, invite illustrious professors to discuss their expertise, but invite also the local community organizer, the local historian, and the local politician to grapple with our heritage. When we ask ourselves who we are, we must answer with not just who we are today, but what we have been before.
It is not likely that we will find easy answers. The plumbing of our past is not often pleasant. But the past is there. Its columns cast shadows that we walk in. Some days, the shadows grow so long and so deep that you have to light a lantern to walk through them. It is our shared and solemn responsibility to foster and grow that light, so that we may see our way forward.
Correction: an earlier version of this article mistakenly referred to Henry Clay as a student who attended Transylvania. He was at various points a faculty member and patron of Transylvania, but he did not complete his studies at the University.
Weekly SGA Update: September 27, 2017
Treasurer’s Report—NanHao Chen
- Current budget for the year is $9501
- $7388 for operations.
- For use on things outside of the realm of SGA, for those who come to SGA seeking funds.
- Conferences, academic trips, academic activities.
- Ideally: use only an allotted amount of money per meeting.
- Funding requests
- From NanHao Chen—Conference in Boston, MA—$578
- Important conversation about constitutional interpretation
- SGA has a clause in the constitution that states: SGA cannot fund travel or lodging unless it is for a service trip at which point up to 75.00 can be allotted per person
- Funding request did not pass
- From Cassidy Wheeler—Ohio Valley Shakespeare—$244
- Can only fund registration, of which she is asking $75
- Approved.
- From NanHao Chen—Conference in Boston, MA—$578
Student Affairs Committee—Mark Siriano
- Toilet paper is now provided in all new dorms on the first floor of each building
- Multiple doors around campus have been fixed
- Recycling bins are now in all residence halls
- You are now welcome to bring your own cup to fill up with coffee in Jazzmans
Academic Affairs Committee—Lauren Gilbert
- Looking for feedback particularly from first-years about the first engagement experience
- CPC
- Looking at GE review
- Working on getting federal election dates off
- Working on moving special topics courses to be counted as Area V
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy a “breakthrough” treatment for PTSD
More than 50% of all people experience trauma at least once in their lives. In a given year, 8 million adults suffer from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). PTSD comes on after a traumatic event and can leave a person reliving the event, avoiding similar situations, feeling negative, having negative beliefs, and feeling hyperarousal. Treatment centers around psychotherapy, which attempts to help patients face and reconsider negative thoughts and process the traumatic event, and antidepressant medications, which affect the serotonin or norepinephrine levels in the brain. These treatments can get rid of symptoms or lessen them, but they can also be ineffective.
The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) has been conducting studies on a new treatment with promising results. This treatment uses 3,4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine, also known as MDMA, alongside existing psychotherapy methods. This is a source of controversy, though, as MDMA is the principal ingredient in the illegal drug Ecstasy. Despite this and its categorization as a Schedule 1 drug by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Food and Drug Administration has designated the study a “breakthrough therapy.” This is a significant development for the treatment, as it means that the FDA believes that the evidence shows that some kinds of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy lead to significantly better outcomes than current treatments. Getting this distinction means that the FDA will expedite the development of the drug and the review of it. Currently, there are two approved drugs for PTSD treatment, Zoloft and Paxil. The issue with these medications is that they are often ineffective in veterans due to their continued and repeated exposure to trauma. Even with these two drugs being ineffective for some time, there are still substances that have been left unexplored, like psilocybin mushrooms. Some individuals have purchased shrooms from sites like http://mushroomz.co but they are yet to be explored by the FDA. Many other psychedelic substances, namely MDMA, Psilocybin, LSD, and also somewhat ketamine could be proven to have outstanding long-term impacts on patients that suffer from a mental illness. At the moment there are some dispensaries such as this buyshroomsonline.org/ and others over in Canada only (due to the legality of psychedelics in the USA) that can allow for the sale of small doses of Psilocybin (the psychoactive chemical found in magic mushrooms) to treat patients that suffer from PTSD and depression
The way MDMA-assisted psychotherapy works is by using the effect of the MDMA. MDMA in Ecstasy gives users the feeling of intense joy while reducing fear and also making them feel love and acceptance toward themselves and others. In the study, participants took MDMA before eight-hour therapy sessions; this was done three times, and it was believed that this would help the patient be able to process their trauma and work through it.
The clinical trials were closely monitored by the FDA. They involved 107 patients that suffered from PTSD and all were given the MDMA before their therapy treatments. Of the 107 patients who began with PTSD, 61% of them reported major decreases in symptoms, enough to not even fit the diagnosis of having PTSD after the study. A year after the study was done, they were re-examined, and it was determined that 67% of the participants no longer fit the criteria for having PTSD.
Getting to this point was no easy feat for MAPS, and the idea, in fact, came to the founder, Rick Doblin, 30 years ago. In a story he told to the Washington Post, Doblin discussed how he began using LSD in the 1970’s when he started college. When he decided that he wanted to become a psychologist and use LSD to open people’s minds like his mind was opened, LSD had already been banned. This caused him to give up his dream until he discovered MDMA, but the DEA moved to make it illegal too in 1984. This is what prompted the creation of MAPS and their lawsuit against the DEA that would fail. Doblin realized he could not fight against culture and public opinion; he had to change it. He got his PhD in public policy from Harvard University and decided that the best approach would be a scientific one. Using the same scientists that suggested that MDMA was toxic to rats only, Doblin bought monkeys to do more testing. This determined that there was far less risk than what was originally believed. Going on, he flew psychedelic users to Stanford University and Johns Hopkins University where they, and Doblin himself, underwent two spinal taps.
MAPS continued to grow over the next 20 years, getting millions in donations from software companies, soap companies, a professional poker player, and anonymous donors. This money funded small clinical trials leading up to the last step, “Phase 3.” This included large-scale clinical trials in 14 locations and between 200 and 300 patients. A similar result in these trials to previous ones could see MDMA treatment for PTSD approved by the FDA in 2021 at the soonest.
The main concern that many people have with the idea of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy is the safety of MDMA as a medication. What also must be analyzed, with the risk of taking it, is the risk of not taking it. With current treatment methods, the suicide rate among veteran VA users was 38.3 per 100,000 for males and 12.8 for females, compared to 19.4 among males and 4.9 in females in the US population. This shows that the suicide rate among veterans is twice as high in males and over twice as high in females. These statistics add a question of ethics: should the suffering of these patients continue, or should they get a treatment that carries some risk?
Plantory and Community Partners Raise Funds for DACA Recipients
The Plantory, a local 501c3 non-profit has partnered over the last few weeks with Bluegrass Community and Technical College’s Latino Outreach Office (BCTC) and Kentucky Dream Coalition (KDC) in order to raise over $4,300 to aid Lexington DACA recipients with their DACA renewal fees.
Angela Baldridge, executive director of The Plantory, explained that the idea to start a donation campaign came through BCTC and KDC. The collaboration between these three organizations made since and worked effectively because BCTC and KDC are both directly affected by the recent legislation involving DACA recipients and have knowledge within the system to see where need is, but The Plantory already had the correct infrastructure in place to support the logistics of the fundraiser. The Plantory already had a donation system in place and a larger social media platform to spread the word about their fundraising efforts.
Baldridge describes The Plantory as a “non-profit incubator”, meaning their goal is to help organizations grow. “We have co-working space, people kind of started by thinking how can we cut the costs that make it hard to get a business [and non-profits] to survive. So the things that make it hard for these organizations to make it, usually is a lack of capitol to pay for overhead.”, Baldridge says about the services that are offered at the non-profit.
Some services that The Plantory provides services that help get socially-minded projects off the ground; whether that’s providing affordable office space to house each project, giving support through a “Help Desk” to aid in things like grant-writing, legal issues (involving 501c3 organizations), and web design.
Baldridge explains, “Historically non-profits are started by people of the same socio-economic class, which unfortunately is then correlated with the same racial class, same sort of religious affiliations.” This lack of diversity creates a disconnect between the non-profits and the communities/groups of people that they are working to help because oftentimes they simply do not have the insider knowledge of the system in which they’re trying to change.
The Plantory works to try to minimize this disconnect by giving those who would otherwise not have the chance to implement change in the systems they are a part of. Baldridge demonstrates this point by saying, “One of the things we’re trying to do is equalize that playing field a little bit, so we have some fundraising initiatives where we’ve helped groups that meet different factors of diversity, essentially people with different perspectives about the way systems operate that have experienced those systems.”
With this mindset, The Plantory was able to collaborate with BCTC and KDC to raise such a large amount of money in such little time. Baldridge says, “we didn’t come up with this idea, this was from people that are experiencing the fallout of this legislation that said ‘we want to do something about this, let’s try to help as many people as we can’.” Working with organizations that are directly related and affected by the recent DACA legislation gave them the knowledge to help facilitate change with their available tools.
Baldridge also explains her drive to help DACA recipients as an effort to protect an important and vital part of the Lexington community. DACA youth are “the people that make me feel tired when I look at all the things they do, so I feel like just to lose that kind of passion and that kind of drive and that kind of commitment is just super unfortunate for a community. These are the kinds of people in theory that we should be wanting to attract, and it would be a huge loss in the fabric of our community if they’re gone.”, says Baldridge.
DACA renewal costs each applicant $495. With the over $4,000 raised, 8 DACA recipients out of the 1,000-1,500 up for renewal will have their application fees covered. Speaking of the DACA recipients, Baldridge says, “These are actually people that have gone through a legal process, they have the right to be here legally and this just enables them to renew that process.”
To apply for DACA support or make a donation to the cause, visit The Plantory’s DACA page. All donations must be made by Friday, September 29th in order to ensure that applicants can receive their funds in time to meet the application deadline.
Where’s our campus community?
Regardless of whether we transferred here or started our college career at Transylvania, many of us have had experience with first-year orientations. Much of the focus of orientation is fostering a community among the incoming class before the academic year really kicks off.
However, as the year progresses, students dedicate less and less time to campus-wide community-building, and the focus shifts to smaller groups, such as student organizations and those who live in residence halls. Despite the fact that we are a small campus, we students tend to be self-segregated from one another. Because we are so involved within the subcommunities of campus, there isn’t much of an underlying community that includes everyone at Transy. We are so separated from each other by our friend groups and activities that there doesn’t seem to be any ‘Transy pride’ that can unite all of us students. Now that orientation is behind us, it’s time to challenge the obstacles to our ability to build a strong community. There are physical and social barriers alike that prevent us from reaching our full potential as a campus community.
Just as a community is defined by its people, community is also shaped – literally – by the physical space it occupies. The school’s latest residential additions, for example, lack a sense of a certain inviting, social feeling. The suite-style rooms offer the privacy of a hotel room at the expense of a shared living space. These buildings do contain common areas, but they are immediately sold as being study spaces, not social areas – the furniture in these spaces has to be rearranged in order to socialize in a more natural manner. They feel like places to go when you need a quiet place to get things done, rather than places to go to hang out with your fellow dorm-mates. But most of the time, as some of you may have noticed, these spaces are just empty – few people use these areas to study or socialize.

This is not just true of the newest buildings, however. Most existing spaces on campus seem to lean much more heavily toward being academic rather than social. Alumni Plaza is a beautiful outdoor space that can be one of the coolest places to hang out in. Most of the time, however, it has maybe three or four tables occupied, spaced out as far as possible from each other, with people looking for a place where they can do homework outside without being bothered by others. It’s almost unthinkable to go up to someone who you don’t know and sit down to try to talk with them. What if they’re working on homework and need to focus? What if they’re just trying to enjoy the weather and have some time alone? This kind of dilemma exists for most every space on campus – we don’t have any areas that are recognized as designated social spaces.
This seems to be a fundamental problem we face – socializing anywhere on campus requires already having your own friend group. Possible exceptions include the Campus Center and Front and Back Lobbies in Forrer, but even those are questionable at times. For example, several events that are not open to students take place in the Campus Center, like admissions events. Even in the Caf, arguably the largest space on campus where many students go at once, it’s rare to sit with someone you don’t already know, unless it is the very beginning of your first year, and you are in the process of making new friends. We’ve all seen the same groups of people sitting in the exact same tables during both lunch and dinner, day in and day out. This is true of those who wear Greek letters and those who don’t. For those who do not have friends sitting at these tables already, joining them is out of the question. It seems like the greatest communities to which we belong are limited only to factions of the student population.
Because the student population is fragmented into cliques, there is only a vague idea of the Transy identity as a whole. Aside from the fact that we all attend Transylvania, what is it that unites us as students? Arguably, by choosing to be students at this school, we have all dedicated ourselves to a liberal arts education as defined by the university’s mission statement. How many of us would be able to tell what exactly that mission is without looking it up? What kind of values do we strive to uphold? And for someone looking in from the outside, how would they be able to tell?
In recent years, we have had a noticeable lack of indicators of those values on campus. The only places on campus that feature Transylvania’s seal is the staircase outside Haupt Humanities Building, which is currently covered up while the building undergoes renovations, and behind the information desk in the William T. Young Campus Center. Beyond that, there are very few – if any – prominent symbols of the university’s values around campus. A step in the right direction is the latest addition of the Unlearn Fear + Hate halos outside the library. Not only does it nod to the fact that the community project originated on Transy’s campus, but the project’s statement has resonated with much of the campus population. Campus could benefit from the addition of more meaningful artwork and symbols around campus. Such features are not just selling points for admissions, but they are visual reminders for everyone about the university’s mission.

Similar to the lack of symbolism, there is hardly any physical context for where exactly campus is located. What is the larger community we are a part of? Once again, looking around campus, you’re hard-pressed to find any answers to that question. The ‘Transy Bubble,’ as it has come to be called, is very real, and it’s thick. It doesn’t have to be as thick as it is right now – nor should it be. We’re not letting Lexington’s rich culture make much of an impact on campus. Having some representation of Lexington culture on campus could go a long way in solidifying our sense of being a part of the even greater Lexington community. There are plenty of examples of urban art throughout the city that could be integrated into campus. There are the stenciled quotations on the sidewalk of North Limestone; there are the banners outside Third Street Stuff that proclaim “unlearn fear and hate”; and there are also several murals on the sides of buildings downtown. Lexington has a rich culture of art that doesn’t have to be kept off campus.
The Transy Bubble has a tendency to contain its students to campus and the immediate surrounding area. There is the sense that students are discouraged from walking in local neighborhoods – specifically, the low-income communities in the surrounding area. There is a stark difference between the demographics at Transy and that of the immediate area. Truthfully, many of us come from wealthier, privileged backgrounds, and we are taught to stay away from anything different in that regard. Many are convinced that because these neighborhoods are areas of poverty, they must also have high crime rates. In actuality, these neighborhoods are not any more dangerous than any other part of town and are home to several local businesses and organizations. Using the Community Crime Map provided by the LexisNexis, one can see that various crimes are spread throughout town, with a particular concentration within the very heart of the city – quite a few blocks away from Transy. Granted, depending on the crime, there is another concentrated area to the east of Transy – but this area is also outside of the immediate surrounding area. The businesses and programs in these very places need local support. Students have the belief that these parts of town are ‘dangerous’ to visit. This impression doesn’t have to last. The notion that these areas and the people who live there are threatening because they do not have the same privileges of liberal arts students only divides us students from the Lexington community.
Division between the campus community and the city community is just one issue; there’s also the matter of division within the campus community. If we as students truly want to be responsible members of this community, it is up to us to create an inclusive community that all students belong to. This campus community we are building should encompass all organizations; we cannot allow our membership in organizations on campus to take precedent over this. We are students of Transylvania before we are Greek students, student athletes, newspaper writers, etc. Yet this all-encompassing community has been fragmented by a need to commit to a handful of organizations. While commitment to these organizations is not a problem in and of itself, when we start to identify with these groups before we identify as students, we limit our potential as a campus community. If a student falls out in one of the organizations to which they belong, reintegrating into a different group can be difficult if that person doesn’t have a connection to any of the other students on campus.
This doesn’t mean we must stop being so committed to our respective organizations and start being friends with literally everyone else and sing Kumbaya in back circle every night. Instead, we should try to foster a greater willingness to break down invisible barriers between organizations. The most blatant example of this divide is the tension between Greek-affiliated and unaffiliated students. Many students on campus have both unaffiliated and affiliated friends, regardless of whether or not they are a member of any of these organizations. However, there is still a divide between these two groups. For example, in past years, many unaffiliated students feel as though they are not welcome at philanthropy events hosted by Greek organizations, despite these events being open to everyone. Part of this issue is that Greek letters are plastered on every kind of advertisement for these events. Because these events are so heavily associated with Greek life, unaffiliated students can feel out of place at these events, particularly if they do not have any close Greek friends who invite them.
There doesn’t seem to be a bigger rallying point for students, something that can unite students campus-wide. What is it that keeps us at Transy and binds us as a student body? It has to do with the community and subcommunities we find ourselves in. This campus has a tendency to divide itself into smaller groups, which in and of itself is not a bad thing, but only when these smaller groups are not more important than the campus community as a whole. We do not need to limit our involvement in these groups, but if building a greater campus community is something we students want, it’s up to us to do it.
All this being said, where do we go from here? We could re-purpose existing open spaces for socializing. We could collaborate with local artists to bring more art onto campus. We could have more campus-wide events where no one is allowed to wear Greek letters but encouraged to wear Transylvania gear. The purpose of this essay is not to provide the student body with all the answers, but to start a campus-wide discussion about this issue and what should be done next. We would like to hear from others how they feel about the current state of our community. It is our hope that through this discussion, we will be taking the first steps toward building a campus community that will make all of us proud to be Transylvanians.
Written jointly by Megan Schandel, Commentary Editor, and Brandon Trapp, Process Editor.
Campus Conversations: Dr. Bethany Packard
Tristran Reynolds ’19 chats with Dr. Bethany Packard about her focus on early modern English literature.

The After Party: Misunderstood Fox Edition
Bruh we gotta lotta stuff to talk about today bruh. Lots of new things to laugh at bruh.
http://soundcloud.com/user-700281148/the-after-party-the-misunderstood-fox
Why You Need to Visit the Lexington Farmers Market

In this day and age, where our food comes from is just as important as how we prepare it. And nothing says ‘healthier choices’ quite like a farmers’ market. Fortunately, here in Lexington, there are great opportunities to visit and get involved with local farmers’ markets.
Picture this: you wake up on Saturday sometime between 7:00 AM and noon, and take a walk down to Cheapside Park in Downtown Lexington. Part of West Short Street is blocked off to accommodate all the vendors at the Saturday Farmers’ Market. You grab a coffee from either Cup of Commonwealth or the Cherry Seed Coffee Roastery, both of which have stands of piping hot coffee (and sometimes pastries). You tour the booths. You try some free samples.
The Farmers’ Market has a bit of everything for everyone. Even if you’re not into your standard green vegetables, you can buy some potatoes and make some homemade potato chips in your microwave. Just slice the potatoes really thin, drizzle with olive oil for a healthier alternative to butter, and stick them in the microwave for 3-5 minutes. Sprinkle with salt and whatever spices strike your fancy. It makes a great snack and tends to be healthier than options at the store. (Just remember, they are still potatoes, and therefore they are packed with sugar and starch.)
If you’re looking for snacks you don’t have to prepare, the farmers’ market has plenty of those too, especially as we move into autumn. Peaches are popular, and apples of multiple varieties will start arriving to the Farmers’ Market in the next couple of weeks. They have apple types you have probably never even heard of, along with standards such as Golden Delicious and Pink Lady. If you have questions about the different varieties and what you can do with them, vendors are almost always happy to share their expertise. Some vendors, such as Quarles, sell over 20 kinds of homemade breads and several jams. Others, such as Green Acres of Paris, sell pre-made meals and seasonings. Their absolutely scrumptious pasta salads require no preparation, and they sell homemade dips and dressings for any occasion.
For the non-vegans among you, local-made cheeses are a year-round treat at the Farmers’ Market. If you feel up to making scrambled eggs or something with meat, there are vendors who sell anything from eggs to prime cuts of beef. Many advertise grass-fed livestock, whose meat is free of antibiotics, steroids, hormones, and lactose. This meat is natural, and fresh— it’s perfect for cooking.
You’ll have to keep in mind that allergy season is coming up. A great way to lessen and even stave off allergy attacks is to buy local honey. Since local honey is made by bees who pollinate local flowers, the honey exposes your immune system to some of the natural allergens around you. This way, your body is prepared for when your allergies attack in full force. Putting a bit of honey in your tea or using it as a condiment is a great way to prepare yourself while also being a little bit healthier.
However, a concern that many people express, and that I share, is the fact that the Farmers’ Market food might be more expensive than at the main brand grocery stores. While this can be the case, the Lexington Farmers’ Market is able to help those with unstable financial situations. They can double the amount on shopper food stamps, up to $20, and they also process SNAP benefits from EBT cards. And if you are low on cash, the Farmers’ Market can also give you spendable tokens by taking money off of credit and debit cards.
The Lexington Farmers’ Market offers so many opportunities for so many people. Buying fresh, local food is a great way to stay healthy and support your community. The Farmers’ Market is open four days a week in varying locations. On Tuesday/Thursday it is at 399 South Broadway. On Wednesday it is at The Summit. On Saturdays it is at Cheapside Park, the only year-round location, and on Sundays you can find it at 398 Southland Drive.
Try it, and see for yourself how it tastes.
Learn more at www.lexfarmmkt.com.