1780 – The Official Blog of Transylvania University

1780 | The Official Blog of Transylvania University

National Book Award winner Nikky Finney to address Transylvania convocation on Sunday, Sept. 9, at 7 p.m.; free and open to the public

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Poet and professor Nikky Finney, winner of the 2011 National Book Award for Poetry, will deliver the convocation address for the beginning of the academic year at Transylvania University on Sunday, Sept. 9, at 7 p.m. in Haggin Auditorium. Her presentation is entitled “The Art of Being Taken With Yourself.” Finney is Guy Davenport Endowed Professor of English at the University of Kentucky. Her 2011 collection of poems, Head Off & Split, was published by Northwestern University Press and won the National Book Award. The collection caused critics to hail Finney as “…one of the most eloquent, urgent, fearless and necessary poets writing in America today….” (Kwame Dawes, author of Hope’s Hospice) and as a writer who “…takes the reader to a wonderfully alive world where the musical possibilities of language overflow with surprise and innovation.” (Bruce Weigl, author of What Saves Us)  Finney was raised in South Carolina as the daughter of a civil rights attorney and a teacher and came of age during the civil rights and black arts movements. Those facts of her upbringing continue to exert powerful influences on her writing and teaching. Many of her poems relate intimately to emblematic figures and events in African American life, from civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks to former secretary of state Condoleezza Rice. The National Book Award nominating form said that Finney’s poems dramatize the struggle for justice and speak of “…family and politics, violence and compassion;

Ashley Gutshall and Tristan Fretwell named assistant directors of residence life

Ashley Gutshall and Tristan Fretwell have been named assistant directors of residence life at Transylvania University. They will maintain housing records and the physical condition of the residence halls, lead staff functions, provide program support, and mentor the residence life student staff. In 2008, Gutshall worked through Americorps VISTA in Transylvania’s office of community service and civic engagement. She developed and recruited students for an Alternative Spring Break, established a mentoring program and bridged connections between the campus and the community.  “I am so excited to be back at Transy,” Gutshall said. “I loved my time here with the AmeriCorps VISTA program and I am looking forward to working with our wonderful staff and students.” Gutshall interned with Housing and Dining services at Kansas State University and worked as a graduate assistant for sexual assault and violence intervention and prevention with the University of South Carolina (USC). She has a B.A. in English from James Madison University and an M.A. in higher education and student affairs from USC. Fretwell has been at Transylvania since 2011 as the area coordinator of residence life. He oversaw four upper-class student residence halls, participated in an emergency on-call system, maintained the staff budget, bi-weekly staff meetings and recruited prospective residence life members. “With so many exciting changes to the university this year I cannot wait to start working with our incredible students and amazing staff and faculty,” Fretwell said. Before coming to Transylvania he

Transylvania University first-year students focus on two books during August term

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Transylvania University first-year students are in their final week of the university’s inaugural, three-week August term that is designed to introduce them to the expectations of college work by reading and discussing two books. The 350 students read Come and Go, Molly Snow, a novel by Kentuckian Mary Ann Taylor-Hall, over the summer. Once they arrived on campus Aug. 10, they began reading The Professor and the Madman, a non-fiction work by Simon Winchester that tells the story of two of the key figures in the making of the Oxford English Dictionary. The books were chosen by a committee of faculty members who are teaching the three-week First Engagements course. They looked for books that they felt would foster a joy of reading while also providing a wide range of discussion topics. Groups of about 16 students meet for three hours every weekday morning to discuss the books and related materials. “August term scholars”—Transylvania juniors and seniors who serve as mentors both in and out of class—assist the professors. John Svarlien, classics professor and academic director of August term, says choosing these particular books was “a stroke of genius or very good luck” because they complement each other and carry out the theme of the term: Making Sense. “Come and Go, Molly Snow helps students make sense on a personal level by raising issues related to an individual’s past, future and relationships,” he explains. “The Professor and the Madman

The Wholesome Chef will teach healthy cooking classes at Transylvania University

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Transylvania University will kick off a series of healthy cooking classes with Wholesome Chef Carolyn Gilles on August 28. The monthly class is offered to all Transylvania students for free and will be held in the university’s hospitality lab. Senior Eryn Hornberger, the food and dining committee chair for Transylvania’s Sustainability Council, is thrilled to help coordinate the event as the intern for the university’s sustainability office. “As a student, I understand, you want food that is cheap, easy, and fast. A lot of people put cooking off—it’s easy to go to Taco Bell,” Hornberger said. She believes these classes could change that.  “Working with The Wholesome Chef will hopefully encourage and provide the opportunity for Transylvania students to become acclimated with the culture of Lexington and to view the buy-local, eat-local movement as progressive change—not a trend, but a way of life.” Gilles was trained at the Natural Gourmet Institute for Health and Culinary Arts and cooked at the famous Candle Café in New York. Later she founded The Wholesome Chef, a Lexington cooking school that focuses on teaching the connection between food and health. She will boil down her cooking techniques for students, using recipes that can be made in a dorm room, requiring only a cutting board and a knife. For Gilles, there’s a direct correlation between what we eat and quality of life. “Home Economics classes don’t exist anymore,” she says. “They were replaced with

Transylvania’s Don Combs: Gold Medalist at Giving Back

LEXINGTON, Ky.—Transylvania University student Don Combs won a gold medal this summer, but it’s not from the London Olympics. Combs was presented the prestigious Congressional Award Gold Medal by U.S. Rep. Harold “Hal” Rogers in recognition of his outstanding public service record and personal development achievements. A senior from Pikeville, Ky., he is the first to receive the award in the 5th Congressional District, which Rogers represents, and is one of only 177 gold medalists in the nation. “I congratulate Don on this accomplishment,” Rogers said. “I’m thrilled to see young people taking initiative in their communities to lend a helping hand, advance their skill sets, strive for healthy living, and take on character-building projects.” The congressional award is given to young Americans aged 14-23 and requires 400 hours of community service, 200 hours of both personal development and physical fitness activities, and a four-night expedition. Combs fulfilled the requirements through his positions as president of Kappa Alpha Order fraternity and southern regional chief for the Boy Scouts’ Order of the Arrow. His expedition consisted of a week-long canoe trip with the Boy Scouts. With a full academic load, Combs traveled 103 days last year for the Boy Scouts, conducting leadership seminars and leading events. When he wasn’t hopping on a plane to mentor young men all around the country, he did the same in his own backyard. Under his leadership, Kappa Alpha Order organized the Transy 500 Race to