Document 6456535
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Document 6456535
8 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 Jam Sessions: 2011 — a Blues odyssey by Brittany Green, Entertainment Editor Has blues just transformed into a new Recently, I was browsing the comments set of genres? One could argue that blues under a YouTube video of Robert music, in a way, became rock and roll. Johnson playing “Sweet Home Chicago.” However, rock follows a format more One YouTube user, Gregorius91, said, similar to European music forms. It’s rare “Johnson’s music is the ancestor of all to hear a 12 bar AAB pattern on top 40 modern western pop music. radio. Sure, you might not like his music, but Two of the most there’s no denial that famous musicians of without Robert Johnson, the 1960s, the Beatles pop music today would’ve and the Rolling Stones, sounded a lot different.” supposedly came out of Gregorius91 brings two traditions of music. up a good point. Where The Beatles followed the would American music be style of skiffle and 1950s without blues? It has had rock and roll, which at least minor influence came out of New Orleans over nearly every genre jazz. The Rolling Stones of music, but at the same supposedly emerged from time, it seems that blues African American rhythm itself is almost a dying and blues music. genre. Clearly, over time, both Why is it that some of these groups evolved genres seem to last and and became something last, while others fade? entirely different, Even classical music has especially once the Beatles lasted through the ages in Photo courtesy of Libby Engeman, started getting into the everything from musical Graphics Coordinator. psychedelic music scene. scores to films. I think the one good thing that came out Classical is also the main type of music of the 1998 film “The Blues Brothers 2000” that is studied in school. was this speech from Elwood (played by Jazz bands are still fairly common as Dan Aykroyd): “Walk away now and you well. Over the summer, I had at least four walk away from your crafts, your skills, opportunities to see jazz bands at local your vocations; leaving the next generation events, but there were no chances for me with nothing but recycled, digitallyto see someone wailing lyrics about going sampled techno-grooves, quasi-synth down to the train station over slide guitar. rhythms, pseudo-songs of violence-laden While there are still blues festivals, it gangsta-rap, acid pop and simpering, seems as though it has become something saccharine, soulless slush. Depart now and of a niche market. you forever separate yourselves from the Current musicians still seem to love the vital American legacies of Robert Johnson, old classics. Nirvana, Meatloaf, Grateful Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, Jimmy Dead, Rod Stewart, and Deer Tick have Reed...Otis Redding, Jackie Wilson, Elvis all covered Lead Belly. John Lee Hooker Presley, Lieber and Stoller, and Robert K. has been covered by some of the most Weiss.” famous classic rock musicians such as Led How many of those musicians did you Zeppelin, Cream, ZZ Top, The Doors and recognize? The Animals. Do yourself a favor, go on YouTube, and It seems as though we know all the watch a video of one of these musicians classic blues songs, just not in their that made all your favorite bands possible. original form. Fireside Café Pub will open this Friday, Oct. 28 at 11 a.m. On Saturday, Oct. 29, there will be a ribbon cutting ceremony and Grand Opening after the football game. Hours of operation will be 7 a.m.-midnight Monday-Thursday, 7 a.m.-1 a.m. on Friday, 11 a.m.-1 a.m. on Saturday and 4 p.m.midnight on Sunday. Heidelberg’s student newspaper, The Kilikilik, is located on the third floor of Founders Hall. Information about upcoming events, story ideas and letters to the editor are always encouraged and may be submitted to one of the Co-Editors in Chief. Accepted submissions will be published in the next available issue. Co-Editors in Chief Liesl Barth lbarth@heidelberg.edu Matt Echelberry mechelbe@heidelberg.edu Associate Editor in Chief Brittany Cook bcook1@heidelberg.edu Graphics Coordinator Libby Engeman eengeman@heidelberg.edu Layout Editors Emily Doseck edoseck@heidelberg.edu Seth Newell snewell1@heidelberg.edu 2011 vol. 121, Issue NoOctober No vveemb m err 26, 6, 2009 20 009 09 || vvol. oll. 111 o 19, 9, iissue ssssu uee 53 November 6, 119, Discover Local Haunts Campus Editor Logan Burd lburd@heidelberg.edu Entertainment Editor Brittany Green bgreen2@heidelberg.edu News Editor Brianne Cook bcook@heidelberg.edu Opinion Editor Erin Crenshaw ecrensha@heidelberg.edu Sports Editor Kyle Youngblood kyoungbl@heidelberg.edu Faculty Adviser Ms. Heather Surface hsurface@heidelberg.edu The editing staff reserves the right to edit all submissions for potentially libelous statements and will print submissions based upon the staff’s discretion. Letters to the editor reflect the opinions of the individuals who wrote them. They do not necessarily reflect the views of The Kilikilik staff or of Heidelberg’s faculty, staff and/or administration. http://www.heidelberg.edu/studentlife/ studentorgs/Kilikilik Photo courtesy of Libby Engeman, Grphics Coordinator, and Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor 2 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 7 Spooks, screams and haunted fun! France Hall brings Halloween to campus Happy Halloween endings for these record-breaking athletes by Sarah Stump, MED 216 by Logan Burd, Campus Editor France and Brown Hall residence life staff are sponsoring a Haunted House in France Hall on Oct. 27 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. This fun Halloween event is open to all students, Heidelberg staff and faculty, and their families and the Tiffin community. France Hall is an ideal place to host a haunted house because it is home to one of the most famous ghosts on Heidelberg’s campus. Ellen, a past student who committed suicide in her room in France Hall, is rumored to still haunt the halls and the attic of her residence. The usual Halloween event that Heidelberg sponsored in the past was a “Haunted Catacombs” tour beneath Founder’s Hall. However, a Halloween walk-through of France replaces the usual haunted catacombs. Students will be walking throughout the first floor hall, the creepy basement, and the kitchen of France to discover several bone-chilling events. The event was concocted by the Resident Coordinator of Brown Hall, Gregory Haines. He had been interested in creating a haunted house in France and presented the idea to the staff of Brown and France, who provided their overwhelming enthusiasm and support. With the support of his staff, Haines introduced his idea to Mark Zeno, director of residence life, who also loved the idea. France and Brown hall staff members are working with several other organizations on campus to create a realistic and scary haunted walk-through. Black Student Union and the theatre department are providing props, and Alpha Phi Omega (APO) has volunteered to provide manpower to help run the event. The funding will be provided by three organizations on campus: Student Senate, Berg Events Council (BEC) and InterResidence Hall Council (IRHC). Even more organizations are getting involved since the staff from Brown/ France opened the event to all Greek organizations and other organizations on campus. Each group will get the opportunity to get one room to decorate however they wish and get to help scare the students coming through. Examples of organizations that will be helping are Kappa Psi Omega (ΚΨΩ) and Weekend and Night Time Activities (W.A.N.T.A.). Businesses around Tiffin will be sponsoring rooms and will pick a theme for the room sponsored. The groups on campus helping out will decorate according to whatever theme is chosen by businesses. The money raised from the business sponsors will go toward fixing one of the maintenance issues in France Hall, chosen by the residents. Admission for this event is free for everybody; there will be a box for donations at the front door. One section of France Hall will be friendly for all ages; while other sections will be for certain ages. There will be candy being passed out to the kids. The members of France/Brown staff are still looking for volunteers for all types of help, whether it is to do face paint/makeup for people, help with costumes or just helping out in general. The France Haunted House is sure to be a frightening fun time for all who participate and those who attend. Heidelberg students, get ready to be scared! For more information or any questions, please contact Becca Dickinson at rdickins@heidelberg.edu. Ohio Halloween attractions open for visitors by Angela D. Hill, MED 216 Fremont at least for this dark attraction to sliding down Grove Hill, which is covered Every community has traditions for be open until after Halloween. with smashed pumpkins, on trash can different holidays, whether it’s during Another example is from Chagrin Falls, lids, according to Colorado Connection on Halloween, Christmas or Easter. WKYC. The Haunted Hydro, located in Fremont, OH, outside of Cleveland. The juniors and seniors from the local high school, The event normally starts at midnight on OH (about 20 miles north of Tiffin) is an dating back to 1969, have a tradition of Halloween. attraction for local residents to get their One more tradition is the scare on. Harvest Festival that is in Bath, The Hydro used to be a OH, close to Akron. functioning electric dam. According to WEWS-TV, When the Ballville Dam the owner C.O. Hale, given was created, the Hydro the name “Apple Hale,” will be was shut down. helping to prepare food for the The owners, “Crazy” winter. Bob and Beth Turner, The festival takes place this turned the building into weekend, and will include the haunted attraction as “pumpkin painting, wagon it is now known. rides through the grounds, The building, according a huge pile of hay, and a Fall to The Fremont News Frolic scavenger hunt.” Messenger, is turning In different communities, no 100 this year, and with matter where a person is from, that comes a 100th there is always a tradition for anniversary special. The Haunted Hydro attraction in Fremont offers thrills and fun for visitors. Photo courtesy holidays. It has been tradition in of Libby Engeman, Graphics Coordinator. While some athletes may have fears of curses and black cats while playing on Oct. 31, some star athletes trotted hallowed ground on All Hallows Eve. From Billy Cannon’s “Halloween night run” for LSU to a record hot air ballooning performance, some stars shine brightest on Oct. 31. On Halloween night, 1959, Louisiana State University running back Billy Cannon made one of the most memorable punt returns in college football history. According to Cannon, who was interviewed by Sports Illustrated, the LSU Tigers were up against division rival Ole Miss with a score of 3-0 and LSU was down. “We couldn't move the ball. I knew if I got my hands on another one, I was going to take it up the field,” said Cannon. He got his chance when an Ole Miss punt took a bounce right into Cannon’s hands. He ran 89 yards to the end zone. Game over? No, Ole Miss had ten minutes, almost an entire quarter, to regain the lead. With 18 seconds left, the score remained 7-3 LSU. Then, Ole Miss drove to the goal line. According to Baton Rouge Today Online, for the last play Ole Miss ran the ball, where their running back was stopped by none other than Billy Cannon. While hot air ballooning is not often considered a sport, it’s hard to argue with the “spooky” altitudes reached by balloonist Julian Nott. According to his website, Nott.com, a 1 hour and 9 minute flight on Halloween 1980 broke the hot air balloon altitude record, soaring 55,134 feet (over 10 miles) above Colorado. In the 31 years since that Halloween, the record has been broken, but Nott still holds many ballooning world records. For runner Ron Grant, this next record shouldn’t have even happened. According to the Australia Ultra Runners Assoc. Inc., after back and hip problems limited Grant’s running, his doctor warned him that running over 3 miles could land him in a wheelchair. Grant didn’t listen and instead ran for 217 days around the border of his native Australia, ending on Halloween 1983. Averaging over 38 miles every day, his grand total was just over 8,315 miles (a round trip from Seattle to Miami and back is only 6,559 miles). Even more impressive, the last few thousand miles were run on a stress fracture in Grant’s leg. Other notable sports events also occurred on Oct. 31. Received on Halloween, Gaylord Perry’s 1972 American League Cy Young Award made him the oldest player to ever win the pitching honor. Also, the Milwaukee Bucks won their first basketball game as a franchise on Halloween, beating the Detroit Pistons 138-118 after a 0-5 start to the 1968 season. All of these, and other notable Halloween day feats, can be found on HistoryOrb.com/Events/October/31. the Turks and the so-called lowlifes of society: the beggars, the liars, the thieves. In one instance, Vlad organized a feast for all of the beggars in Wallachia. In the middle of it, he asked if they would like to live a life where they did not have any difficulties. After the beggars agreed with his proposition, Vlad ordered them to be burned alive. No one survived. Vlad’s confidence in his rule was so great that according to The Cultured Traveler he would leave a gold cup sitting in the main square of Tirgoviste, the main city of Wallachia, that thirsty travelers were allowed to drink from. During Vlad’s entire reign the cup remained in Tirgoviste. Nobody dared to cross him. That is, however, until the boyars, Hungarian noblemen, gathered together and formulated a devious plot to eject him from power. Medieval Times & Castles stated that the boyars captured and beheaded Vlad as part of a conspiracy. They supposedly sent his head to the Turkish sultan as a gift. This ended the reign of Vlad the Impaler. Today, people most recognize Dracula as the popular character invented by Bram Stoker according to The Cultured Traveler. This website also stated that Stoker, whose novel was completed and sold in 1897, loosely based his inspiration for Dracula on the life of Vlad the Impaler. Because many of the stories surrounding Vlad have been subject to exaggeration, Stoker was able to enhance certain qualities that may or may not have been true. The Cultured Traveler stated that Stoker created a terrifying character that would creep into our imagination and haunt Halloween. A character that forever will be known as a demon that drank blood in the candlelight. Dracula Continued from p. 5 and buried alive by Turkish enemies. The Cultured Traveler suggested that these instances shaped Vlad’s bloodlust. The site stated that Vlad was “known throughout his land for his fierce insistence on honesty and order.” In order to control his land and its people, Vlad began a strict rule of Wallachia. The main act of punishment became impalement, a punishment that Dr. Courtney DeMayo, assistant professor of history, described as gross: “You force a spear through the rectum and torso of the victim, and the spear emerges somewhere near the neck. It is a painful way to die.” Because of his new strict rule, Vlad Tepes became known as Vlad the Impaler, but his bloodlust did not stop there. It is estimated that Vlad the Impaler murdered between 20,000 and 300,000 people according to Medieval Times & Castles. Although impalement was his preferred choice of murder, he killed people various ways. Medieval Times & Castles stated that Vlad the Impaler’s main targets were Do you have an interest in writing or photography? We want you for the Kilikilik staff! Contact Matt Echelberry (mechelbe@heidelberg.edu) or Brittany Cook (bcook1@ heidelberg.edu) for more details. 6 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 3 Halloween’s history filled with a combination of tradition Haunted Ohio: Where to find good scares close to campus by Jessie Dillon, MED 212 by Emily Doseck, Layout Editor Halloween is just around the corner. While it is true that every culture has a different history of Halloween, the most well-known version is of the Irish and Scottish, which tells of the dead and living worlds overlapping. This belief started at Samhain, an ancient Celtic festival that was celebrated at the end of the Gaelic culture’s harvest season. They feasted, had bonfires, made sacrifices and paid their respects to the dead, but the main purpose was to store supplies and prepare for winter. According to Paul Sittason Stark, Heidelberg’s campus minister, the Christians in England wanted to replace Samhain and this celebration of the dead with a Christian celebration of the saints and martyrs. Stark said this version was called “All Hallows’ Eve” which was eventually shortened to Halloween. “All Hallows’ Eve” is the night before “All Hallows’ Day” or “All Saints’ Day.” On this day, the church honors all of the saints who are not celebrated on any other day. Halloween as we know it today is actually a combination of several cultural traditions. The Celts wore costumes like we do today, but to please evil spirits by imitating them. When the Celts were at war with Julius Caesar, the men wore orange into battle to give them courage and strength. Stark also commented that Halloween Orange also signifies endurance, which isn’t about worshipping the devil or the Celts wanted during harvest time. evil spirits but about remembering our The association with black comes from ancestors and lost ones. When Stark the Celts’ focus on death at this time of was asked how he felt about Halloween the year. Together these explain why he said that he enjoyed it. He said, “My Halloween’s colors are orange and black. mom always told me that because we The tradition of trick-or-treating came from parades in England. When the poor begged for food, families gave them “soul cakes” if they promised to pray for their deceased love ones. Jack-O’-Lanterns are a huge part of Halloween today. When you drive by a neighborhood you will most likely see many hand-carved pumpkins sitting outside. They originated in Ireland but were made out of large turnips and potatoes. When the tradition was started in America, pumpkins Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. were used because they are native to believe in a God of love we do not need to America. be afraid of evil spirits or believe in evil The name Jack-O’-Lantern came from spirits… Halloween is a celebration of an Irish myth about a man named “stingy love vanquishing evil by remembering the Jack.” The story portrayed Jack as a stingy man that would trick the Devil into paying saints and all who have died before us.” One of Stark’s fondest memories of for his drinks on multiple occasions when Halloween was when he served as a he would go out. When Jack died, God campus minister at Ohio University. One didn’t want him in Heaven and the Devil year he and Traci, his wife, dressed up as didn’t want him in Hell, so he ended up ghosts and each carried the Bible. They roaming the earth with only a burning coal. He put the coal in a carved out turnip were the “holy ghosts.” So take after Stark’s example and make Halloween and got the name Jack of the Lantern, memories of your own. which was shortened to Jack-O’-Lantern. Ghosts of Johnson’s Island offer scary Halloween thrills by Emily Doseck, Layout Editor Chris Woodyard’s “Haunted Ohio III” revealed 18th century ghosts that may be familiar to archaeology students here at Heidelberg. The prison camp on Johnson’s Island, which held over 10,000 soldiers after the Civil War, was nicknamed Uncle Sam’s Confederate Hotel by prisoners. In spite of the nickname, diseases were rampant and food was scarce, often including rats. Over 200 men died and were buried in the cemetery with boards from their bunks as grave markers. The United Daughters of the Confederacy replaced the wooden markers with marble ones shortly after the beginning of the twenieth century and a bronze Confederate soldier statue was erected in June 1910. Italian laborers were working in the quarry in 1915 when a thunderstorm brewed up. The men took shelter in crumbling remains of the prison. Woodyard reported that “as the thunder roared like cannon, the terrified men saw the statue of the Confederate soldier turn slowly on its pedestal and face the 206 graves” before blowing reveille on its bugle. Mist began to rise from above the graves, hovering before transforming into grey uniformed-soldiers. Each ghostly soldier stood at attention, shouldered his rifle and marched off into the storm. The Johnson’s Island portion of the Dead Ohio website confirmed that “it is said that he changes position at midnight” while the Ghosts of the Prairie website indicated that “apparitions of Confederates have been seen for many years.” Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. The car pulls to a stop on the bridge. Four kids—two girls and two boys— sit inside, giggling as the driver turns down the radio. Midnight is only moments away. He shushes everyone inside before turning to his friend in the front seat. “Got the camera ready, man?” “Yep. Let’s do this.” Taking a deep breath, the driver flashes his headlights. On-off, on-off, on-off. Everyone holds their breath, looking out the windows into the darkness around them. A minute passes; nothing happens. In the silence, one of the girls suddenly screams. A white mist is floating up from under the bridge and gathering in front of the car. The driver guns the engine and speeds off through the mist as it begins to take the shape of a woman. Stories like this often become the conversation of choice for young thrillseekers around Halloween. Everyone suddenly remembers that the bridge outside of town is supposed to be haunted or how that school bus crashed outside the woods years ago, leaving the spirits of dead children to roam the trees for eternity. Nearly every town has a story or two that kids like to pass around. Tiffin and the surrounding towns are not exempt. Even the campus itself is rumored to be haunted. Ellen paces the attic in France Residence Hall, an unnamed ghost roams the basement of Williard, and the catacombs beneath Founders Hall have their fair share of spooky shadows and sounds. Perhaps the best and most well-known local haunt is in Old Fort near Morrison Lake: the Screaming Mimi Bridge. According to the Banded Spirits.com, visitors who park their car on the bridge and honk the horn three times will see a banshee, a screaming female spirit, in the car with them. The Seneca County page of Ohio Exploration’s website instructs visitors to flash their headlights instead of honking. Both websites agree on the basic facts of why she haunts the bridge. According to Ohio Exploration’s website, “She was forced to kill her baby born out of wedlock. She threw the infant over the edge of the bridge and went insane. Another version of the story states Mimi was beheaded and thrown over the bridge by her husband on their wedding night so he could inherit her fortune.” Senior Nicole Malow has visited the bridge at midnight with a friend. While she is not sure if she believes the bridge is haunted, she does know that her experience there was not completely benign. After honking on the bridge, “At first, nothing really happened and we were getting bored. But the longer we sat there the more we felt like something was watching us...We didn’t stick around to see if anything else happened, the feeling of being watched was bad enough.” Photo by Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. Brittany and Brianne Cook, both juniors, also had an experience at the bridge. Their father took them to the bridge when they were eight while returning from Fremont one night during the winter. He flashed the headlights before shutting them off. “As we were sitting there, waiting for this spirit to appear, there was a loud thud on our van’s roof. Of course, Bri and I started wailing in fear. We had thought Mimi had come to get us!” Brittany stated in an email. “We discovered later that night that the thud was merely a fallen icicle from the trees above. Needless to say, we have never returned to Screaming Mimi’s Bridge!” Other less well-known haunts can be found in Tiffin. The Ritz Theatre and the location of the former Sunrise Retirement Home (located on the same blockof Washington Street downtown) are believed to be haunted by ghosts that put in occasional appearances. Some of the towns around Tiffin are rumored to have their own hauntings as well. The Dead Ohio website reported that in 1887, a passenger train and a freight train collided half a mile outside of Republic. Since the crash, many people have witnessed what they say is a ghost train passing by on the tracks. The Forgotten Ohio website has two stories of hauntings near Tiffin. The first is located south of town on Route 53, where a tombstone in McCutchenville is said to be seen glowing from road. The second states that a murder victim from the 1950s haunts the Tindall Bridge in Fremont. The website claims that she “roams the area under the bridge, sobbing and asking for help.” They also warn that another murder victim was found in the field across from the bridge. The paranormal section of the Ohio Exploration website mentioned the Green Hills Golf Course in Clyde that is supposedly haunted after a car-train collision took the lives of four teenagers in the 1960s. Parking a car on the train tracks near midnight will cause the wreckage of the crash to become visible, along with the severed heads of the victims. The website also indicated that WNRR radio station of Bellevue is frequently visited by the spirit of a vagrant who died there and now wanders around the station, taking the stairs and going past the control room window. Another location is the Melmore Elementary School, a few miles south of Tiffin. A series of hauntings have occurred by various staff and students who died over the years. While preparing the school for demolition, the ghost-related activity seemed to increase. Local residents would notice lights in the building at night, even though the electricity was no longer on, and would also hear strange noises coming from the building. So for anyone looking for a good scare this Halloween, Tiffin and the surrounding area can provide plenty. 4 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 5 Master of terror Wes Craven screams up fun for audiences by Arneal Squibb, MED 212 Horror movies can be thrilling, unsettling, and give you a gut-wrenching feeling in your stomach. From those filled with gore to the supernatural, they cause fear of the unknown. Creating fear for an audience comes easy for Wes Craven. Craven is most well-known for the classic series “Nightmare on Elm Street” and “Scream.” There has been an addition to movie producer and director Craven’s “Scream” series with “Scream 4” in theatres. “Scream 4” has been released to Blu-Ray and DVD as of Oct. 4, just in time for Halloween. Thrill seekers will not have to search far for a horror film. According to Alan Orange of MovieWeb, there are rumors that “Scream 5” and “6” are in the making. Craven’s writers, Kevin Williamson and Bob Weinstein, are eager to bring new ideas to the table for future films in the series. The question is whether or not Craven will be a part of the future films. If he likes the ideas that his writers pitch he will be involved in creating another one of his scary specialties. Hal Erickson of Fandango explained that the making of the “Scream” series was a spark for other teen films that were never able to live up to Craven’s films. According to Erickson, Craven was “credited with reinventing the teen horror movie.” Many other filmmakers attempted to repeat the success enjoyed by Craven and his crew but were unsuccessful. The 1990’s hit series “Scream” is known for main character Sydney Prescott and the trademark dark-cloaked, whitemasked killer who killed nearly everyone around her. In “Scream 4,” Sydney returns as a well-known author to her hometown of Woodsboro and must face the killer once again. It remains to be seen whether or not it will be her last reunion with the killer. Craven, who received his bachelor’s degree in psychology, is able to create conflict among characters in his latest addition of the series. Main character Sydney returning home must deal with the revived memory of a gruesome past. In an interview with MovieWeb, Craven described how each character Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. that was installed into the plot was compared to his leg. evaluated on how they may die. According to Dr. Gary Dickerson, Craven said that they “are always trying professor of communication, “Horror to stay one or two steps ahead of the movies allow us to vicariously experience audience.” In that character evaluation fear without actually having to be involved. he attempted to find unique and thrilling We can be afraid and feel the fear. Then as ways for each death that takes place within the movie fi nishes we are okay when the the plot. lights come on.” Taking pride in your work is natural. As Dickerson explains that horror movies a movie producer for a popular series such use common themes and fears that all as “Scream,” it’s expected of Craven to people can relate to: “In a scene from provide the audience with realistic footage ‘Scream’ you watch a girl home alone of gore scenes. It’s possible that Craven late at night and her phone rings. As an takes his job much more seriously than audience, you’re sitting there saying don’t other film producers. pick up the phone, it’s the killer. Producers Craven made that clear when he of horror fi lms create tension and use described a past vacation in an interview anticipation to get us to jump in our seats.” with MovieWeb. Craven uses the ordinary things from While on vacation, Craven was riding a everyday life like phone calls, creaking Vespa, which is a similar to a scooter, and doors, and Halloween masks to organize crashed. Flipping over the front end, the them into something that people recognize kick stand went into his leg and tore some as scary. muscle. Our imaginations cause us to wonder The muscle was protruding from his “what if” when we watch these scary body and he oddly noticed that his leg movies. muscle looked much like a prop made by Although most of what we see in scary his make-up crew for his movies. movies isn’t real, that doesn’t necessarily Strangely, instead of focusing on the mean that our imagination will believe condition of his leg he was thinking of how that. his gory scenes in “Scream” were realistic New Batman video game offers new story line for gaming fans by Seth Newell, Layout Co-Editor Batman costumes are one of the most popular each Halloween. This Halloween season, with the release of the new, highly anticipated video game, “Batman: Arkham City,” children dressed as the Caped Crusader might happen more than ever. The in store version of the game was released on Oct. 18. In this follow-up to 2009’s overwhelmingly successful “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” you must play as the Dark Knight, whose secret identity has been compromised by the infamous Dr. Hugo Strange, a familiar enemy to the Batman series. Gameplay begins with Batman’s escape from prison, where he was abducted, to discover Dr. Strange’s plans to reveal “Protocol Ten.” In an attempt to find out more about this plan, Batman enters Arkham City, where he must battle common criminals and memorable foes, such as Two-Face, Poison Ivy, the Joker, Mr. Freeze and more each with unique story plots all their own. This game offers unique gameplay options to the newly created franchise by the gaming company Rocksteady. Batman fans now have the opportunity to play as Catwoman, and even Robin, in optional downloadable content. The boxed game is priced at around $60 and is sure to be worth every penny. Looking for a horror flick? Just the ‘Thing’ to watch this Halloween by Matt Echelberry, Co-Editor in Chief This Halloween, with no more films from the “Saw” franchise being made and “Human Centipede 2: Full Sequence” getting only a limited release, there just aren’t many gross-out horror films to entertain audiences. The only other nod towards the horror genre we are getting this October is “The Thing,” which came out on Oct. 14. For those of you who may not know, the film is a prequel-remake of a horror classic: 1982’s “The Thing.” Set in Antarctica at an American research facility, an unsuspecting crew there takes in a stray dog that was mysteriously being chased down by a helicopter. A few members of the crew, led by R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell), take a trip to the Norwegian base where the helicopter came from in order to investigate. They find the camp destroyed and all of its members dead from being burned alive or from freezing in the desolate tundra. But it seems the Norwegians found an artifact that had been buried beneath the ice for over 100,000 years. As the mystery unfolds, the stray dog turns out to be an imposter—an alien life form that disguises itself as anything it kills. It infects the crew like a plague, imitating its victims perfectly. By the time the humans realize what they are dealing with, they do not know who is still human…and who has been taken over. This sets off paranoia within the dark, claustrophobic confines of the facility. As the crew stands outside and burns one of the imposters, MacReady states, “This thing doesn't want to show itself, it wants to hide inside an imitation… If it takes us over, then it has no more enemies.” Directed by the legendary John Carpenter (“Halloween,” 1978, “Escape from New York,” 1981), 1982’s version has all the thrills and gore a person could ask for. Ironically, it was a remake of Howard Hawkes’ “The Thing from Another World” (1951). However, what made this one an improvement from the original and so memorable were the truly gruesome creature effects used throughout. Though these effects are dated by today’s standards, they are still imaginative and effective. Just a few moments in store include a head detaching itself and growing arachnid-like legs, a torso suddenly opening up and growing teeth (then clamping shut on someone’s arms) and several transformation sequences where the imitations reveal themselves. If “The Thing” was memorable and entertaining for the disturbing imagery, then it was equally as chilling for its attention to the degradation of the men’s mental states. When paranoia and cabin fever start to set in, the way they treat each other as they try to flush out the intruders will leave audiences just as suspicious as the characters are. At one point, after the crew has put the facility on lockdown, MacReady is outside the facility during a snowstorm. As he begs for the others to let him in, they are suspicious of him. One of the men asks, “What if we’re wrong about MacReady? What if he’s still human?” Another replies, “Well, then we’re wrong.” This year’s reimagining of “The Thing” is now playing in theaters; it focuses on the events that occurred at the Norwegian base. Find out for yourself how it stacks up against the 1982 version (which is available on Netflix and Hulu). The Dracula legend: The inspiration behind the character By Jackie Stanziano, MED 212 writer Candles illuminate the dank castle as the sun begins to set in Transylvania. Artificial lighting is not a commodity that a nobleman has during the mid fifteenth century. A man is sitting at a table, eating his dinner in silence. He is wearing a black cape and his eyes show no fear. The man takes a piece of bread and dips it into a cup of blood sitting just within arm’s reach. He looks up to see at least ten men impaled on stakes, all of them lifeless, rotting. The stench of death fills his nostrils. He takes a sip of his bitter wine and is satisfied. According to carter-stephenson. co.uk, this is real life for Vlad the Impaler, the man that would later be the inspiration for one of America’s most famous Halloween icons. Halloween is a holiday that celebrates the scary, the grotesque, the paranormal. A traditionalized staple for this holiday is the involvement of vampires, a trend that has recently become quite popular due to the “Twilight” series, as well as television shows such as “True Blood” and “The Vampire Diaries.” Jenna Rhoades, a current Heidelberg sophomore, said, “They are the incarnation of everything that humans aren’t supposed to be: wrathful, lustful, and gluttonous, which of course fascinates people because of how taboo it all is. People live vicariously through these creatures because they are everything we’re not supposed to be and that’s what makes them fun.” This vampire fascination can be taken back to the beginning with possibly the most notorious vampire of all: Dracula. Many people don’t know, however, that the character of Dracula was loosely based on the life a real Transylvanian nobleman named Vlad Tepes. However, unlike the current romantic portrayal of vampires, Vlad Tepes was shockingly horrifying. According to Medieval Times & Castles (medievality.com), Vlad Tepes was born in the winter of 1431 in Transylvania. He was the second child to Vlad Dracul and Princess Cneajna of Moldavia His father was a military governor in Transylvania and belonged to the Order of the Dragon. This religious and quasimilitary society had two main goals: protect Catholicism and crusade against the Turks. These goals would eventually influence Vlad’s own decisions in life. After entering his teenage years, Vlad took the surname Dracula, specifically translated as ‘the son of Dracul.’ According to The Cultured Traveler (theculturedtraveler.com), Vlad and his younger brother, Radu, were held as Turkish hostages for six years. During this time, his father was assassinated by the Turkish people. Vlad was later rescued from his captors and then returned to rule Wallachia, his father’s former land. Soon after, one of his older brothers, Mircea, was found (DRACULA continued on page 7) 4 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 5 Master of terror Wes Craven screams up fun for audiences by Arneal Squibb, MED 212 Horror movies can be thrilling, unsettling, and give you a gut-wrenching feeling in your stomach. From those filled with gore to the supernatural, they cause fear of the unknown. Creating fear for an audience comes easy for Wes Craven. Craven is most well-known for the classic series “Nightmare on Elm Street” and “Scream.” There has been an addition to movie producer and director Craven’s “Scream” series with “Scream 4” in theatres. “Scream 4” has been released to Blu-Ray and DVD as of Oct. 4, just in time for Halloween. Thrill seekers will not have to search far for a horror film. According to Alan Orange of MovieWeb, there are rumors that “Scream 5” and “6” are in the making. Craven’s writers, Kevin Williamson and Bob Weinstein, are eager to bring new ideas to the table for future films in the series. The question is whether or not Craven will be a part of the future films. If he likes the ideas that his writers pitch he will be involved in creating another one of his scary specialties. Hal Erickson of Fandango explained that the making of the “Scream” series was a spark for other teen films that were never able to live up to Craven’s films. According to Erickson, Craven was “credited with reinventing the teen horror movie.” Many other filmmakers attempted to repeat the success enjoyed by Craven and his crew but were unsuccessful. The 1990’s hit series “Scream” is known for main character Sydney Prescott and the trademark dark-cloaked, whitemasked killer who killed nearly everyone around her. In “Scream 4,” Sydney returns as a well-known author to her hometown of Woodsboro and must face the killer once again. It remains to be seen whether or not it will be her last reunion with the killer. Craven, who received his bachelor’s degree in psychology, is able to create conflict among characters in his latest addition of the series. Main character Sydney returning home must deal with the revived memory of a gruesome past. In an interview with MovieWeb, Craven described how each character Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. that was installed into the plot was compared to his leg. evaluated on how they may die. According to Dr. Gary Dickerson, Craven said that they “are always trying professor of communication, “Horror to stay one or two steps ahead of the movies allow us to vicariously experience audience.” In that character evaluation fear without actually having to be involved. he attempted to find unique and thrilling We can be afraid and feel the fear. Then as ways for each death that takes place within the movie fi nishes we are okay when the the plot. lights come on.” Taking pride in your work is natural. As Dickerson explains that horror movies a movie producer for a popular series such use common themes and fears that all as “Scream,” it’s expected of Craven to people can relate to: “In a scene from provide the audience with realistic footage ‘Scream’ you watch a girl home alone of gore scenes. It’s possible that Craven late at night and her phone rings. As an takes his job much more seriously than audience, you’re sitting there saying don’t other film producers. pick up the phone, it’s the killer. Producers Craven made that clear when he of horror fi lms create tension and use described a past vacation in an interview anticipation to get us to jump in our seats.” with MovieWeb. Craven uses the ordinary things from While on vacation, Craven was riding a everyday life like phone calls, creaking Vespa, which is a similar to a scooter, and doors, and Halloween masks to organize crashed. Flipping over the front end, the them into something that people recognize kick stand went into his leg and tore some as scary. muscle. Our imaginations cause us to wonder The muscle was protruding from his “what if” when we watch these scary body and he oddly noticed that his leg movies. muscle looked much like a prop made by Although most of what we see in scary his make-up crew for his movies. movies isn’t real, that doesn’t necessarily Strangely, instead of focusing on the mean that our imagination will believe condition of his leg he was thinking of how that. his gory scenes in “Scream” were realistic New Batman video game offers new story line for gaming fans by Seth Newell, Layout Co-Editor Batman costumes are one of the most popular each Halloween. This Halloween season, with the release of the new, highly anticipated video game, “Batman: Arkham City,” children dressed as the Caped Crusader might happen more than ever. The in store version of the game was released on Oct. 18. In this follow-up to 2009’s overwhelmingly successful “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” you must play as the Dark Knight, whose secret identity has been compromised by the infamous Dr. Hugo Strange, a familiar enemy to the Batman series. Gameplay begins with Batman’s escape from prison, where he was abducted, to discover Dr. Strange’s plans to reveal “Protocol Ten.” In an attempt to find out more about this plan, Batman enters Arkham City, where he must battle common criminals and memorable foes, such as Two-Face, Poison Ivy, the Joker, Mr. Freeze and more each with unique story plots all their own. This game offers unique gameplay options to the newly created franchise by the gaming company Rocksteady. Batman fans now have the opportunity to play as Catwoman, and even Robin, in optional downloadable content. The boxed game is priced at around $60 and is sure to be worth every penny. Looking for a horror flick? Just the ‘Thing’ to watch this Halloween by Matt Echelberry, Co-Editor in Chief This Halloween, with no more films from the “Saw” franchise being made and “Human Centipede 2: Full Sequence” getting only a limited release, there just aren’t many gross-out horror films to entertain audiences. The only other nod towards the horror genre we are getting this October is “The Thing,” which came out on Oct. 14. For those of you who may not know, the film is a prequel-remake of a horror classic: 1982’s “The Thing.” Set in Antarctica at an American research facility, an unsuspecting crew there takes in a stray dog that was mysteriously being chased down by a helicopter. A few members of the crew, led by R.J. MacReady (Kurt Russell), take a trip to the Norwegian base where the helicopter came from in order to investigate. They find the camp destroyed and all of its members dead from being burned alive or from freezing in the desolate tundra. But it seems the Norwegians found an artifact that had been buried beneath the ice for over 100,000 years. As the mystery unfolds, the stray dog turns out to be an imposter—an alien life form that disguises itself as anything it kills. It infects the crew like a plague, imitating its victims perfectly. By the time the humans realize what they are dealing with, they do not know who is still human…and who has been taken over. This sets off paranoia within the dark, claustrophobic confines of the facility. As the crew stands outside and burns one of the imposters, MacReady states, “This thing doesn't want to show itself, it wants to hide inside an imitation… If it takes us over, then it has no more enemies.” Directed by the legendary John Carpenter (“Halloween,” 1978, “Escape from New York,” 1981), 1982’s version has all the thrills and gore a person could ask for. Ironically, it was a remake of Howard Hawkes’ “The Thing from Another World” (1951). However, what made this one an improvement from the original and so memorable were the truly gruesome creature effects used throughout. Though these effects are dated by today’s standards, they are still imaginative and effective. Just a few moments in store include a head detaching itself and growing arachnid-like legs, a torso suddenly opening up and growing teeth (then clamping shut on someone’s arms) and several transformation sequences where the imitations reveal themselves. If “The Thing” was memorable and entertaining for the disturbing imagery, then it was equally as chilling for its attention to the degradation of the men’s mental states. When paranoia and cabin fever start to set in, the way they treat each other as they try to flush out the intruders will leave audiences just as suspicious as the characters are. At one point, after the crew has put the facility on lockdown, MacReady is outside the facility during a snowstorm. As he begs for the others to let him in, they are suspicious of him. One of the men asks, “What if we’re wrong about MacReady? What if he’s still human?” Another replies, “Well, then we’re wrong.” This year’s reimagining of “The Thing” is now playing in theaters; it focuses on the events that occurred at the Norwegian base. Find out for yourself how it stacks up against the 1982 version (which is available on Netflix and Hulu). The Dracula legend: The inspiration behind the character By Jackie Stanziano, MED 212 writer Candles illuminate the dank castle as the sun begins to set in Transylvania. Artificial lighting is not a commodity that a nobleman has during the mid fifteenth century. A man is sitting at a table, eating his dinner in silence. He is wearing a black cape and his eyes show no fear. The man takes a piece of bread and dips it into a cup of blood sitting just within arm’s reach. He looks up to see at least ten men impaled on stakes, all of them lifeless, rotting. The stench of death fills his nostrils. He takes a sip of his bitter wine and is satisfied. According to carter-stephenson. co.uk, this is real life for Vlad the Impaler, the man that would later be the inspiration for one of America’s most famous Halloween icons. Halloween is a holiday that celebrates the scary, the grotesque, the paranormal. A traditionalized staple for this holiday is the involvement of vampires, a trend that has recently become quite popular due to the “Twilight” series, as well as television shows such as “True Blood” and “The Vampire Diaries.” Jenna Rhoades, a current Heidelberg sophomore, said, “They are the incarnation of everything that humans aren’t supposed to be: wrathful, lustful, and gluttonous, which of course fascinates people because of how taboo it all is. People live vicariously through these creatures because they are everything we’re not supposed to be and that’s what makes them fun.” This vampire fascination can be taken back to the beginning with possibly the most notorious vampire of all: Dracula. Many people don’t know, however, that the character of Dracula was loosely based on the life a real Transylvanian nobleman named Vlad Tepes. However, unlike the current romantic portrayal of vampires, Vlad Tepes was shockingly horrifying. According to Medieval Times & Castles (medievality.com), Vlad Tepes was born in the winter of 1431 in Transylvania. He was the second child to Vlad Dracul and Princess Cneajna of Moldavia His father was a military governor in Transylvania and belonged to the Order of the Dragon. This religious and quasimilitary society had two main goals: protect Catholicism and crusade against the Turks. These goals would eventually influence Vlad’s own decisions in life. After entering his teenage years, Vlad took the surname Dracula, specifically translated as ‘the son of Dracul.’ According to The Cultured Traveler (theculturedtraveler.com), Vlad and his younger brother, Radu, were held as Turkish hostages for six years. During this time, his father was assassinated by the Turkish people. Vlad was later rescued from his captors and then returned to rule Wallachia, his father’s former land. Soon after, one of his older brothers, Mircea, was found (DRACULA continued on page 7) 6 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 3 Halloween’s history filled with a combination of tradition Haunted Ohio: Where to find good scares close to campus by Jessie Dillon, MED 212 by Emily Doseck, Layout Editor Halloween is just around the corner. While it is true that every culture has a different history of Halloween, the most well-known version is of the Irish and Scottish, which tells of the dead and living worlds overlapping. This belief started at Samhain, an ancient Celtic festival that was celebrated at the end of the Gaelic culture’s harvest season. They feasted, had bonfires, made sacrifices and paid their respects to the dead, but the main purpose was to store supplies and prepare for winter. According to Paul Sittason Stark, Heidelberg’s campus minister, the Christians in England wanted to replace Samhain and this celebration of the dead with a Christian celebration of the saints and martyrs. Stark said this version was called “All Hallows’ Eve” which was eventually shortened to Halloween. “All Hallows’ Eve” is the night before “All Hallows’ Day” or “All Saints’ Day.” On this day, the church honors all of the saints who are not celebrated on any other day. Halloween as we know it today is actually a combination of several cultural traditions. The Celts wore costumes like we do today, but to please evil spirits by imitating them. When the Celts were at war with Julius Caesar, the men wore orange into battle to give them courage and strength. Stark also commented that Halloween Orange also signifies endurance, which isn’t about worshipping the devil or the Celts wanted during harvest time. evil spirits but about remembering our The association with black comes from ancestors and lost ones. When Stark the Celts’ focus on death at this time of was asked how he felt about Halloween the year. Together these explain why he said that he enjoyed it. He said, “My Halloween’s colors are orange and black. mom always told me that because we The tradition of trick-or-treating came from parades in England. When the poor begged for food, families gave them “soul cakes” if they promised to pray for their deceased love ones. Jack-O’-Lanterns are a huge part of Halloween today. When you drive by a neighborhood you will most likely see many hand-carved pumpkins sitting outside. They originated in Ireland but were made out of large turnips and potatoes. When the tradition was started in America, pumpkins Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. were used because they are native to believe in a God of love we do not need to America. be afraid of evil spirits or believe in evil The name Jack-O’-Lantern came from spirits… Halloween is a celebration of an Irish myth about a man named “stingy love vanquishing evil by remembering the Jack.” The story portrayed Jack as a stingy man that would trick the Devil into paying saints and all who have died before us.” One of Stark’s fondest memories of for his drinks on multiple occasions when Halloween was when he served as a he would go out. When Jack died, God campus minister at Ohio University. One didn’t want him in Heaven and the Devil year he and Traci, his wife, dressed up as didn’t want him in Hell, so he ended up ghosts and each carried the Bible. They roaming the earth with only a burning coal. He put the coal in a carved out turnip were the “holy ghosts.” So take after Stark’s example and make Halloween and got the name Jack of the Lantern, memories of your own. which was shortened to Jack-O’-Lantern. Ghosts of Johnson’s Island offer scary Halloween thrills by Emily Doseck, Layout Editor Chris Woodyard’s “Haunted Ohio III” revealed 18th century ghosts that may be familiar to archaeology students here at Heidelberg. The prison camp on Johnson’s Island, which held over 10,000 soldiers after the Civil War, was nicknamed Uncle Sam’s Confederate Hotel by prisoners. In spite of the nickname, diseases were rampant and food was scarce, often including rats. Over 200 men died and were buried in the cemetery with boards from their bunks as grave markers. The United Daughters of the Confederacy replaced the wooden markers with marble ones shortly after the beginning of the twenieth century and a bronze Confederate soldier statue was erected in June 1910. Italian laborers were working in the quarry in 1915 when a thunderstorm brewed up. The men took shelter in crumbling remains of the prison. Woodyard reported that “as the thunder roared like cannon, the terrified men saw the statue of the Confederate soldier turn slowly on its pedestal and face the 206 graves” before blowing reveille on its bugle. Mist began to rise from above the graves, hovering before transforming into grey uniformed-soldiers. Each ghostly soldier stood at attention, shouldered his rifle and marched off into the storm. The Johnson’s Island portion of the Dead Ohio website confirmed that “it is said that he changes position at midnight” while the Ghosts of the Prairie website indicated that “apparitions of Confederates have been seen for many years.” Photo courtesy of Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. The car pulls to a stop on the bridge. Four kids—two girls and two boys— sit inside, giggling as the driver turns down the radio. Midnight is only moments away. He shushes everyone inside before turning to his friend in the front seat. “Got the camera ready, man?” “Yep. Let’s do this.” Taking a deep breath, the driver flashes his headlights. On-off, on-off, on-off. Everyone holds their breath, looking out the windows into the darkness around them. A minute passes; nothing happens. In the silence, one of the girls suddenly screams. A white mist is floating up from under the bridge and gathering in front of the car. The driver guns the engine and speeds off through the mist as it begins to take the shape of a woman. Stories like this often become the conversation of choice for young thrillseekers around Halloween. Everyone suddenly remembers that the bridge outside of town is supposed to be haunted or how that school bus crashed outside the woods years ago, leaving the spirits of dead children to roam the trees for eternity. Nearly every town has a story or two that kids like to pass around. Tiffin and the surrounding towns are not exempt. Even the campus itself is rumored to be haunted. Ellen paces the attic in France Residence Hall, an unnamed ghost roams the basement of Williard, and the catacombs beneath Founders Hall have their fair share of spooky shadows and sounds. Perhaps the best and most well-known local haunt is in Old Fort near Morrison Lake: the Screaming Mimi Bridge. According to the Banded Spirits.com, visitors who park their car on the bridge and honk the horn three times will see a banshee, a screaming female spirit, in the car with them. The Seneca County page of Ohio Exploration’s website instructs visitors to flash their headlights instead of honking. Both websites agree on the basic facts of why she haunts the bridge. According to Ohio Exploration’s website, “She was forced to kill her baby born out of wedlock. She threw the infant over the edge of the bridge and went insane. Another version of the story states Mimi was beheaded and thrown over the bridge by her husband on their wedding night so he could inherit her fortune.” Senior Nicole Malow has visited the bridge at midnight with a friend. While she is not sure if she believes the bridge is haunted, she does know that her experience there was not completely benign. After honking on the bridge, “At first, nothing really happened and we were getting bored. But the longer we sat there the more we felt like something was watching us...We didn’t stick around to see if anything else happened, the feeling of being watched was bad enough.” Photo by Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor. Brittany and Brianne Cook, both juniors, also had an experience at the bridge. Their father took them to the bridge when they were eight while returning from Fremont one night during the winter. He flashed the headlights before shutting them off. “As we were sitting there, waiting for this spirit to appear, there was a loud thud on our van’s roof. Of course, Bri and I started wailing in fear. We had thought Mimi had come to get us!” Brittany stated in an email. “We discovered later that night that the thud was merely a fallen icicle from the trees above. Needless to say, we have never returned to Screaming Mimi’s Bridge!” Other less well-known haunts can be found in Tiffin. The Ritz Theatre and the location of the former Sunrise Retirement Home (located on the same blockof Washington Street downtown) are believed to be haunted by ghosts that put in occasional appearances. Some of the towns around Tiffin are rumored to have their own hauntings as well. The Dead Ohio website reported that in 1887, a passenger train and a freight train collided half a mile outside of Republic. Since the crash, many people have witnessed what they say is a ghost train passing by on the tracks. The Forgotten Ohio website has two stories of hauntings near Tiffin. The first is located south of town on Route 53, where a tombstone in McCutchenville is said to be seen glowing from road. The second states that a murder victim from the 1950s haunts the Tindall Bridge in Fremont. The website claims that she “roams the area under the bridge, sobbing and asking for help.” They also warn that another murder victim was found in the field across from the bridge. The paranormal section of the Ohio Exploration website mentioned the Green Hills Golf Course in Clyde that is supposedly haunted after a car-train collision took the lives of four teenagers in the 1960s. Parking a car on the train tracks near midnight will cause the wreckage of the crash to become visible, along with the severed heads of the victims. The website also indicated that WNRR radio station of Bellevue is frequently visited by the spirit of a vagrant who died there and now wanders around the station, taking the stairs and going past the control room window. Another location is the Melmore Elementary School, a few miles south of Tiffin. A series of hauntings have occurred by various staff and students who died over the years. While preparing the school for demolition, the ghost-related activity seemed to increase. Local residents would notice lights in the building at night, even though the electricity was no longer on, and would also hear strange noises coming from the building. So for anyone looking for a good scare this Halloween, Tiffin and the surrounding area can provide plenty. 2 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 October 26, 2011 | the Kilikilik | 7 Spooks, screams and haunted fun! France Hall brings Halloween to campus Happy Halloween endings for these record-breaking athletes by Sarah Stump, MED 216 by Logan Burd, Campus Editor France and Brown Hall residence life staff are sponsoring a Haunted House in France Hall on Oct. 27 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. This fun Halloween event is open to all students, Heidelberg staff and faculty, and their families and the Tiffin community. France Hall is an ideal place to host a haunted house because it is home to one of the most famous ghosts on Heidelberg’s campus. Ellen, a past student who committed suicide in her room in France Hall, is rumored to still haunt the halls and the attic of her residence. The usual Halloween event that Heidelberg sponsored in the past was a “Haunted Catacombs” tour beneath Founder’s Hall. However, a Halloween walk-through of France replaces the usual haunted catacombs. Students will be walking throughout the first floor hall, the creepy basement, and the kitchen of France to discover several bone-chilling events. The event was concocted by the Resident Coordinator of Brown Hall, Gregory Haines. He had been interested in creating a haunted house in France and presented the idea to the staff of Brown and France, who provided their overwhelming enthusiasm and support. With the support of his staff, Haines introduced his idea to Mark Zeno, director of residence life, who also loved the idea. France and Brown hall staff members are working with several other organizations on campus to create a realistic and scary haunted walk-through. Black Student Union and the theatre department are providing props, and Alpha Phi Omega (APO) has volunteered to provide manpower to help run the event. The funding will be provided by three organizations on campus: Student Senate, Berg Events Council (BEC) and InterResidence Hall Council (IRHC). Even more organizations are getting involved since the staff from Brown/ France opened the event to all Greek organizations and other organizations on campus. Each group will get the opportunity to get one room to decorate however they wish and get to help scare the students coming through. Examples of organizations that will be helping are Kappa Psi Omega (ΚΨΩ) and Weekend and Night Time Activities (W.A.N.T.A.). Businesses around Tiffin will be sponsoring rooms and will pick a theme for the room sponsored. The groups on campus helping out will decorate according to whatever theme is chosen by businesses. The money raised from the business sponsors will go toward fixing one of the maintenance issues in France Hall, chosen by the residents. Admission for this event is free for everybody; there will be a box for donations at the front door. One section of France Hall will be friendly for all ages; while other sections will be for certain ages. There will be candy being passed out to the kids. The members of France/Brown staff are still looking for volunteers for all types of help, whether it is to do face paint/makeup for people, help with costumes or just helping out in general. The France Haunted House is sure to be a frightening fun time for all who participate and those who attend. Heidelberg students, get ready to be scared! For more information or any questions, please contact Becca Dickinson at rdickins@heidelberg.edu. Ohio Halloween attractions open for visitors by Angela D. Hill, MED 216 Fremont at least for this dark attraction to sliding down Grove Hill, which is covered Every community has traditions for be open until after Halloween. with smashed pumpkins, on trash can different holidays, whether it’s during Another example is from Chagrin Falls, lids, according to Colorado Connection on Halloween, Christmas or Easter. WKYC. The Haunted Hydro, located in Fremont, OH, outside of Cleveland. The juniors and seniors from the local high school, The event normally starts at midnight on OH (about 20 miles north of Tiffin) is an dating back to 1969, have a tradition of Halloween. attraction for local residents to get their One more tradition is the scare on. Harvest Festival that is in Bath, The Hydro used to be a OH, close to Akron. functioning electric dam. According to WEWS-TV, When the Ballville Dam the owner C.O. Hale, given was created, the Hydro the name “Apple Hale,” will be was shut down. helping to prepare food for the The owners, “Crazy” winter. Bob and Beth Turner, The festival takes place this turned the building into weekend, and will include the haunted attraction as “pumpkin painting, wagon it is now known. rides through the grounds, The building, according a huge pile of hay, and a Fall to The Fremont News Frolic scavenger hunt.” Messenger, is turning In different communities, no 100 this year, and with matter where a person is from, that comes a 100th there is always a tradition for anniversary special. The Haunted Hydro attraction in Fremont offers thrills and fun for visitors. Photo courtesy holidays. It has been tradition in of Libby Engeman, Graphics Coordinator. While some athletes may have fears of curses and black cats while playing on Oct. 31, some star athletes trotted hallowed ground on All Hallows Eve. From Billy Cannon’s “Halloween night run” for LSU to a record hot air ballooning performance, some stars shine brightest on Oct. 31. On Halloween night, 1959, Louisiana State University running back Billy Cannon made one of the most memorable punt returns in college football history. According to Cannon, who was interviewed by Sports Illustrated, the LSU Tigers were up against division rival Ole Miss with a score of 3-0 and LSU was down. “We couldn't move the ball. I knew if I got my hands on another one, I was going to take it up the field,” said Cannon. He got his chance when an Ole Miss punt took a bounce right into Cannon’s hands. He ran 89 yards to the end zone. Game over? No, Ole Miss had ten minutes, almost an entire quarter, to regain the lead. With 18 seconds left, the score remained 7-3 LSU. Then, Ole Miss drove to the goal line. According to Baton Rouge Today Online, for the last play Ole Miss ran the ball, where their running back was stopped by none other than Billy Cannon. While hot air ballooning is not often considered a sport, it’s hard to argue with the “spooky” altitudes reached by balloonist Julian Nott. According to his website, Nott.com, a 1 hour and 9 minute flight on Halloween 1980 broke the hot air balloon altitude record, soaring 55,134 feet (over 10 miles) above Colorado. In the 31 years since that Halloween, the record has been broken, but Nott still holds many ballooning world records. For runner Ron Grant, this next record shouldn’t have even happened. According to the Australia Ultra Runners Assoc. Inc., after back and hip problems limited Grant’s running, his doctor warned him that running over 3 miles could land him in a wheelchair. Grant didn’t listen and instead ran for 217 days around the border of his native Australia, ending on Halloween 1983. Averaging over 38 miles every day, his grand total was just over 8,315 miles (a round trip from Seattle to Miami and back is only 6,559 miles). Even more impressive, the last few thousand miles were run on a stress fracture in Grant’s leg. Other notable sports events also occurred on Oct. 31. Received on Halloween, Gaylord Perry’s 1972 American League Cy Young Award made him the oldest player to ever win the pitching honor. Also, the Milwaukee Bucks won their first basketball game as a franchise on Halloween, beating the Detroit Pistons 138-118 after a 0-5 start to the 1968 season. All of these, and other notable Halloween day feats, can be found on HistoryOrb.com/Events/October/31. the Turks and the so-called lowlifes of society: the beggars, the liars, the thieves. In one instance, Vlad organized a feast for all of the beggars in Wallachia. In the middle of it, he asked if they would like to live a life where they did not have any difficulties. After the beggars agreed with his proposition, Vlad ordered them to be burned alive. No one survived. Vlad’s confidence in his rule was so great that according to The Cultured Traveler he would leave a gold cup sitting in the main square of Tirgoviste, the main city of Wallachia, that thirsty travelers were allowed to drink from. During Vlad’s entire reign the cup remained in Tirgoviste. Nobody dared to cross him. That is, however, until the boyars, Hungarian noblemen, gathered together and formulated a devious plot to eject him from power. Medieval Times & Castles stated that the boyars captured and beheaded Vlad as part of a conspiracy. They supposedly sent his head to the Turkish sultan as a gift. This ended the reign of Vlad the Impaler. Today, people most recognize Dracula as the popular character invented by Bram Stoker according to The Cultured Traveler. This website also stated that Stoker, whose novel was completed and sold in 1897, loosely based his inspiration for Dracula on the life of Vlad the Impaler. Because many of the stories surrounding Vlad have been subject to exaggeration, Stoker was able to enhance certain qualities that may or may not have been true. The Cultured Traveler stated that Stoker created a terrifying character that would creep into our imagination and haunt Halloween. A character that forever will be known as a demon that drank blood in the candlelight. Dracula Continued from p. 5 and buried alive by Turkish enemies. The Cultured Traveler suggested that these instances shaped Vlad’s bloodlust. The site stated that Vlad was “known throughout his land for his fierce insistence on honesty and order.” In order to control his land and its people, Vlad began a strict rule of Wallachia. The main act of punishment became impalement, a punishment that Dr. Courtney DeMayo, assistant professor of history, described as gross: “You force a spear through the rectum and torso of the victim, and the spear emerges somewhere near the neck. It is a painful way to die.” Because of his new strict rule, Vlad Tepes became known as Vlad the Impaler, but his bloodlust did not stop there. It is estimated that Vlad the Impaler murdered between 20,000 and 300,000 people according to Medieval Times & Castles. Although impalement was his preferred choice of murder, he killed people various ways. Medieval Times & Castles stated that Vlad the Impaler’s main targets were Do you have an interest in writing or photography? We want you for the Kilikilik staff! Contact Matt Echelberry (mechelbe@heidelberg.edu) or Brittany Cook (bcook1@ heidelberg.edu) for more details. 8 | the Kilikilik | October 26, 2011 Jam Sessions: 2011 — a Blues odyssey by Brittany Green, Entertainment Editor Has blues just transformed into a new Recently, I was browsing the comments set of genres? One could argue that blues under a YouTube video of Robert music, in a way, became rock and roll. Johnson playing “Sweet Home Chicago.” However, rock follows a format more One YouTube user, Gregorius91, said, similar to European music forms. It’s rare “Johnson’s music is the ancestor of all to hear a 12 bar AAB pattern on top 40 modern western pop music. radio. Sure, you might not like his music, but Two of the most there’s no denial that famous musicians of without Robert Johnson, the 1960s, the Beatles pop music today would’ve and the Rolling Stones, sounded a lot different.” supposedly came out of Gregorius91 brings two traditions of music. up a good point. Where The Beatles followed the would American music be style of skiffle and 1950s without blues? It has had rock and roll, which at least minor influence came out of New Orleans over nearly every genre jazz. The Rolling Stones of music, but at the same supposedly emerged from time, it seems that blues African American rhythm itself is almost a dying and blues music. genre. Clearly, over time, both Why is it that some of these groups evolved genres seem to last and and became something last, while others fade? entirely different, Even classical music has especially once the Beatles lasted through the ages in Photo courtesy of Libby Engeman, started getting into the everything from musical Graphics Coordinator. psychedelic music scene. scores to films. I think the one good thing that came out Classical is also the main type of music of the 1998 film “The Blues Brothers 2000” that is studied in school. was this speech from Elwood (played by Jazz bands are still fairly common as Dan Aykroyd): “Walk away now and you well. Over the summer, I had at least four walk away from your crafts, your skills, opportunities to see jazz bands at local your vocations; leaving the next generation events, but there were no chances for me with nothing but recycled, digitallyto see someone wailing lyrics about going sampled techno-grooves, quasi-synth down to the train station over slide guitar. rhythms, pseudo-songs of violence-laden While there are still blues festivals, it gangsta-rap, acid pop and simpering, seems as though it has become something saccharine, soulless slush. Depart now and of a niche market. you forever separate yourselves from the Current musicians still seem to love the vital American legacies of Robert Johnson, old classics. Nirvana, Meatloaf, Grateful Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, Jimmy Dead, Rod Stewart, and Deer Tick have Reed...Otis Redding, Jackie Wilson, Elvis all covered Lead Belly. John Lee Hooker Presley, Lieber and Stoller, and Robert K. has been covered by some of the most Weiss.” famous classic rock musicians such as Led How many of those musicians did you Zeppelin, Cream, ZZ Top, The Doors and recognize? The Animals. Do yourself a favor, go on YouTube, and It seems as though we know all the watch a video of one of these musicians classic blues songs, just not in their that made all your favorite bands possible. original form. Fireside Café Pub will open this Friday, Oct. 28 at 11 a.m. On Saturday, Oct. 29, there will be a ribbon cutting ceremony and Grand Opening after the football game. Hours of operation will be 7 a.m.-midnight Monday-Thursday, 7 a.m.-1 a.m. on Friday, 11 a.m.-1 a.m. on Saturday and 4 p.m.midnight on Sunday. Heidelberg’s student newspaper, The Kilikilik, is located on the third floor of Founders Hall. Information about upcoming events, story ideas and letters to the editor are always encouraged and may be submitted to one of the Co-Editors in Chief. Accepted submissions will be published in the next available issue. Co-Editors in Chief Liesl Barth lbarth@heidelberg.edu Matt Echelberry mechelbe@heidelberg.edu Associate Editor in Chief Brittany Cook bcook1@heidelberg.edu Graphics Coordinator Libby Engeman eengeman@heidelberg.edu Layout Editors Emily Doseck edoseck@heidelberg.edu Seth Newell snewell1@heidelberg.edu 2011 vol. 121, Issue NoOctober No vveemb m err 26, 6, 2009 20 009 09 || vvol. oll. 111 o 19, 9, iissue ssssu uee 53 November 6, 119, Discover Local Haunts Campus Editor Logan Burd lburd@heidelberg.edu Entertainment Editor Brittany Green bgreen2@heidelberg.edu News Editor Brianne Cook bcook@heidelberg.edu Opinion Editor Erin Crenshaw ecrensha@heidelberg.edu Sports Editor Kyle Youngblood kyoungbl@heidelberg.edu Faculty Adviser Ms. Heather Surface hsurface@heidelberg.edu The editing staff reserves the right to edit all submissions for potentially libelous statements and will print submissions based upon the staff’s discretion. Letters to the editor reflect the opinions of the individuals who wrote them. They do not necessarily reflect the views of The Kilikilik staff or of Heidelberg’s faculty, staff and/or administration. http://www.heidelberg.edu/studentlife/ studentorgs/Kilikilik Photo courtesy of Libby Engeman, Grphics Coordinator, and Emily Doseck, Layout Co-Editor