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“Let Us Bring You Into Our World…”

The paranormal has always been one of Chad Calek’s interests.

“Instead of going to spring break, I was going to the Waverly Hills Sanatorium or the Villisca Axe Murder House. I was going to all these haunted places to investigate them,” he said.

More than 200 students, faculty and visitors gathered on Friday to hear Calek speak in the Frank G. Pogue Student Center’s Multipurpose Room. Calek spoke about his purported encouters with ghosts and showed footage he and his team recorded for the television show “Paranormal State.”

In “Good vs. Evil” – Calek’s first episode on the show – Chip Coffey, a psychic, and Ryan Buell, one of the directors, told Calek there was a demon in the basement and suggested he check it out.

While sitting on a chair in the middle of the basement, an ominous growl came out of the darkness.

Calek radioed upstairs and asked if anyone else had heard it. “Yeah, man, [we] heard it,” they replid.

The growl came again and Calek told the team upstairs, “There’s something down here, bro.”

“People ask me how I could just sit there and listen to the growling without moving.”

Calek laughed as he described the situation to the audience.

“Well, the truth is, the growling came from between me and the stairway out… If that thing had come from behind me, I would’ve been flying through that door like a pissed off Sasquatch!”

Calek has been investigating such phenomena since the age of 12, when his family was torn apart by paranormal attacks.

His parents and siblings had told him they had been experiencing things, but Calek had seen and felt nothing.

Calek said he would shout into the air to provoke the ghosts to show themselves when the family wasn’t there; he wanted to be a believer and not think that his family was crazy.

One night at 3 a.m., Calek woke up to his father reciting Scriptures.

According to Calek, when he looked into his parents’ room, he saw his mother’s hair was being pulled by something that wasn’t there.

She also had mild burn marks on her skin and was speaking in Latin, said Calek.

“It’s when you’re looking into the eyes of your mother, and it’s just not your mother and everything that’s going on is just shattering your entire belief system,” Calek said.

That was the moment that he decided to investigate the paranormal.

Throughout their time with “Paranormal State,” Calek and his team have encountered paranormal activity in Waverly Hills Sanatorium, Villisca Axe Murder House as well as churches.

“Our goal is to go out and challenge the biggest [and] most scary, horrifying places around, document that footage and show the people have the power,” said Calek.

This will be the last season on “Paranormal State” for the team. Calek and Buell have been working on a documentary film called “American Ghost Hunter,” which will be released June 2.

“It came out 10 times more intense than we had imagined,” said Calek. The film covers the paranormal activity his family experienced for more than two decades.

According to Calek, “the stuff we captured is the most compelling evidence we have for the paranormal.”

Calek and Buell realized people are going to have questions and will want answers once they see his film.

That’s when they decided to tour around the world with the film. They intend to give their audience a taste of their world.

Pittsburgh and Philadelphia will be two of their even locations this year.

The Student Philanthropy Council sponsored “Student Philanthropy Day: Trail of the Dead Tour 2011” and made it possible for Calek to come to campus.

Visit his website at: http://www.wolfmanproductions.com/chad_calek.html

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Women in Literature Panel

EDINBORO UNIVERSITY – In honor of Women’s History Month, four students participated in a  “Women in Literature Student Panel” on March 31 in the Frank G. Pogue Student Center’s Multipurpose Room A.

Discussion focused upon  women authors and characters don’t receiving the recognition that they each deserve.

“Recognizing the importance of women in literature… is an important step in a journey to developing a more dynamic view of the role of women in society,” said Morgan Larchuk, vice president of Sigma Tau Delta at Edinboro University.

Corey Saxton, a sophomore English Literature major, analyzed the characters in Virginia Woolf’s book To the Lighthouse and how they display the concept of the ideal woman.

Saxton said that Woolf’s perception of the “perfect woman is… so constituted that she never had a mind or a wish of her own, but preferred to sympathize always with the mind and wishes of others.”

Yet, this could create a problem for women writers who want to publish their own work. According to Saxton, Woolf states: “this perception of women… stands in the way of any female author wishing to express her true thoughts on morals, sexuality and human relations.”

Next, Edward Jackson, a junior secondary education and English major, introduced and spoke about Judy Blume and how her writing impacted literature.

“Overstated moral lessons have caused [Judy Blume] to become the center of censorship controversies,” he said.

“Judy Blume’s books have not only directly touched generations of readers,” Jackson stated, “but have also helped to pave the way for a whole genre of realistic fiction for young people.”

The panel also examined the stereotypes in the stories. Larchuk talked about why stepmothers in fairy tales and other types of stories are seen as “usurpers” (taking a position that doesn’t belong to them) and “deviants” (lack of fitting in with the social norms).

Since the stories were written down a long time ago, many of the ideas from that time are still passed around, she said.

“Women who did not represent the traits of conventional femininity are cast as villains because cleverness, will power and manipulative skill are allied with vanity, shrewishness and ugliness,” Larchuk said.

“While fairy tales may seem innocent and cute, said Larchuk, they send an underlying message to women who don’t conform to expected role women are supposed to play in society.

“But not all independent women are pictured as evil. Megan DeLancey, a sophomore English major, ended the panel with a discussion on one of the best known characters of the Harry Potter’s series: Hermoine Granger.

“Since 1997… one witch has shown what it takes to be an amazing role model to girls and women alike,” said DeLancey. “[She demonstrates] what it means to be herself and stand up for what is right.”

“As readers follow Hermoine through the her years of growing up and learning at Hogwarts, she teaches them that girls don’t need to wait for a man and don’t need one to complete them, DeLancey pointed out.

The panel was held by Sigma Tau Delta in order to show the importance of women in literature and stories. According the program, Women’s History Month is a time when many of us look forward to hearing new ideas and broadening our perspectives on women throughout the world and throughout history. Facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Houdini Rises From the Dead

QUEENS COUNTY, NY – Harry Houdini has done it again.

A small crowd of people quickly gathered as the 137-year-old escape artist slowly dug himself out of his grave in Machpelah Cemetery in Queens County, N.Y. on March 24.

“I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw a hand coming up through the grass at his grave,” said Magdaline Mallas, an astounded student from New York State College, who had been walking by the cemetery with a group of her friends when it happened. “But then a couple of the guys I was with ran up and started digging and soon helped him out of the hole.”

Toby Bayside, one of the young men who helped in digging Houdini out, said he just stood in one spot for several minutes after Houdini had emerged.

“I thought it was one of those Halloween hands that people use for decorations,” he said. “But after I grabbed it, it was very obvious that there was someone attached to that hand.”

Questions buzzed through the air as hundreds of onlookers saw Houdini standing before them, a little pale and weak, but very much alive.

“It went according to plan,” chuckled Houdini as he dusted himself off and took several deep breaths.

Houdini said that he planned this mind-blowing escape for years before his supposed death on October 31, 1926.

“Now, I don’t want to give away all the details,” Houdini said with a smile when asked about how he had planned this escape. He did say that he had a bronze casket made for a new death-defying act that he was going to perform sometime in 1927.

Houdini was going to be placed in a strait jacket, sealed in the casket and then buried in a tank full of sand. But he said that he was unable to perform this act because, in 1967, Houdini supposedly died of peritonitis, a result of a ruptured appendix.

This death-defying escape act was very similar to his first “buried alive” stunt, noted Longfellow Hana, a Houdini expert from New York City.

In Santa Ana, Calif., in 1917, Houdini was buried six feet underground, without a casket, and nearly died from the effort of digging himself out, Hana said.

But, Houdini said that it was his second “buried alive” stunt that helped him the most.

On August 5, 1926, Houdini was placed in a sealed casket under water in a swimming pool for an hour and a half. Just by controlling his breathing he was able to endure and complete that feat.

“It has everything to do with controlled breathing,” Houdini explained. Refusing to discuss anymore details about how he pulled off this feat, the magician smiled, “This is what I’ve been looking forward to all these years: the expressions on people’s faces when I rise again out of my grave,” he said.

 (Pictures from YellowMagpie.com)

—April Fools 🙂

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