8
Vol. 79 No. 35 Friday, October 28, 2011 DAILY H ELMSM AN The Independent Student Newspaper of The University of Memphis www.dailyhelmsman.com Men’s soccer tops Central Arkansas; prepares for Florida matchup see page 8 Tigers Readying for No. 10 Gators Halloween 2011 As the special collections curator care- fully handled the book bound with human skin, he talked about the distinct waxy smell of the 400 year old skin covering the outside of the book. The cover of the book has visible human pores. There are no pictures or words, just the tanned leather that used to be the skin off someone’s back. The Ned McWherter Library’s special collections section is home to the book titled, “Idolatrie Huguenotre” which trans- lates to “Huguenots Idolatry.” The author, Louis Richeome, a Catholic controversialist, wrote the text as testimony to his belief that Huguenots, or Protestants, are not “real Christians,” said Ed Frank, curator of special collections. There are several theories about how this copy of Richeome’s book became bound in human skin. Walter Brown, associate profes- sor of history, believes this is a rare example of a religious fanatic. “I believe it was bound in the skin of a Protestant in the religious wars by a Catholic. It was a statement of religious con- viction,” he said. The University of Memphis acquired the book on Oct. 29, 1986. This Saturday will mark the 25th anniversary of special collec- tions housing the book. The University bought it from Burke’s Book Store in Midtown for $500, who got it from the estate of Barry Brooks, a wealthy member of the Brooks family, for whom the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is named. The oral tradition is that Brooks was traveling in France in the early 1950s when he went into a bookstore. He began speak- ing with the clerk about his love of collect- ing rarities. The clerk brought out the book bound with human skin and Brooks had to have it. “The University paid to have three dif- ferent tests done in a lab to determine if the skin was actually human,” Frank said. The book, more than 700 pages, is filled with rag paper, typical of the time. Rag paper is literally made from old rags and won’t age as quickly as modern paper, Frank said. Archivists refer to books bound in human skin as “anthropodermic bibliop- egy.” The first word, “anthropos” is a Greek term translated as a human being, plus “derma,” meaning skin or hide. The second word consists of “biblion,” or book, and “pegnunai,” which means to fix. The technique of binding books with human skin dates back to the 17th century. Examples include anatomy books bound with the skin of deceased surgical patients, wills covered in the skin of the person who “Idolatrie Huguenotre,” the 400-year-old book bound in human skin, is part of special collections in The U of M’s Ned C. McWherter Library. by Brian Wilson Library’s special collections home to a skin-crawling read BY MICHELLE CORBET News Reporter It’s the one time of the year that boys, girls, men and women get to dress up as ghouls and dolls. Memphis Area costume shops have more than enough supplies for the little monsters of Halloween at The University of Memphis this year. At The Fun Shop on Highland, a customer placed an Avatar costume on the counter she’d tried on as she spoke with the owner, Doug Hendrickson. Hendrickson, wear- ing an orange flair-hair hat, placed it back in inventory with 2,300 other selections. The store, which opened as a family business in 1935, has about 1,000 unique costumes ranging from $20 pack- aged items to $900 unique outfits. “I’m never out,” Hendrickson said. “I’ll always have something for somebody. Here, you’re going to find the largest variety in Memphis.” Little shops of horror BY ERICA HORTON News Reporter More than a dozen creepy and funny Halloween masks on display at The Fun Shop, located on the Highland Strip. by Christopher Whitten see Costumes, page 5 see Book, page 5 Death Day Halloween Bash in Smith Hall Potterheads — fans of “Harry Potter” — looking for a chance to dress up as wizards, fight boggarts and dementors, and drink non-alcoholic butterbeer, room 304 in James M. Smith Hall is the place to be today. The University of Memphis Harry Potter Club will host their Death Day Halloween Bash from 2-4 p.m. The event is free and open to any student, faculty or staff member who wishes to attend. “We hope that by attending the bash, members will get to know one another more, as well as feel like they are a part of a community of sorts that centers around all things Harry Potter,” said Alec Underhill, senior biology and chemistry major and “Headmaster” of the Harry Potter club. Underhill said that since the club has become a registered stu- dent organization, more than 80 students have joined the group. “We even have a few faculty members, some of whom I hope will serve as the Heads of House, interested in joining the club as well,” he said. English instructor Catherine Dice said that she has used the “Harry Potter” series as a staple of her syllabus for years. “Between the books themselves, the LEGOs, the movies, and even the hype over the topic of witchcraft, just about everybody with a pulse has heard about the series, whether they’ve read it or not,” she said. Future plans and events for the club include forming a Quidditch team for The U of M, hosting a Horcrux scavenger hunt on campus and hosting a Yule Ball sometime next semester. English instructor Tammy Jones, who attended the club’s first meeting, said that despite her punctuality, she had to sit under a desk on the floor due to the Smith Hall room being “literally packed with over 100 ‘Harry Potter’ fans and more coming even after I arrived.” “The most revealing thing about the meeting—and most sig- nificant, in my mind—was that it was truly the most representa- tive group of students of any club at The U of M,” she said. Jones also said everyone who attended the meeting acknowl- edged that “Harry Potter” and the novels’ characters were real friends who they had grown up with. “It was a powerful moment, and I’m glad I got the chance to experience it—even if I was sitting on the floor,” she said. BY MELISSA WRAY News Reporter

The Daily Helmsman

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The independent student newspaper at The University of Memphis.

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Vol. 79 No. 35

Friday, October 28, 2011DAILY

HELMSMANThe

Independent Student Newspaper of The University of Memphis www.dailyhelmsman.com

Men’s soccer tops Central Arkansas; prepares for Florida matchupsee page 8

Tigers Readying for No. 10 Gators

Halloween 2011

As the special collections curator care-fully handled the book bound with human skin, he talked about the distinct waxy smell of the 400 year old skin covering the outside of the book.

The cover of the book has visible human pores. There are no pictures or words, just the tanned leather that used to be the skin off someone’s back.

The Ned McWherter Library’s special collections section is home to the book titled, “Idolatrie Huguenotre” which trans-lates to “Huguenots Idolatry.” The author, Louis Richeome, a Catholic controversialist, wrote the text as testimony to his belief that Huguenots, or Protestants, are not “real Christians,” said Ed Frank, curator of special collections.

There are several theories about how this copy of Richeome’s book became bound in human skin. Walter Brown, associate profes-

sor of history, believes this is a rare example of a religious fanatic.

“I believe it was bound in the skin of a Protestant in the religious wars by a Catholic. It was a statement of religious con-viction,” he said.

The University of Memphis acquired the book on Oct. 29, 1986. This Saturday will mark the 25th anniversary of special collec-tions housing the book.

The University bought it from Burke’s Book Store in Midtown for $500, who got it from the estate of Barry Brooks, a wealthy member of the Brooks family, for whom the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is named.

The oral tradition is that Brooks was traveling in France in the early 1950s when he went into a bookstore. He began speak-ing with the clerk about his love of collect-ing rarities. The clerk brought out the book bound with human skin and Brooks had to have it.

“The University paid to have three dif-ferent tests done in a lab to determine if the

skin was actually human,” Frank said. The book, more than 700 pages, is filled

with rag paper, typical of the time. Rag paper is literally made from old rags and won’t age as quickly as modern paper, Frank said.

Archivists refer to books bound in human skin as “anthropodermic bibliop-egy.” The first word, “anthropos” is a Greek term translated as a human being, plus

“derma,” meaning skin or hide. The second word consists of “biblion,” or book, and “pegnunai,” which means to fix.

The technique of binding books with human skin dates back to the 17th century. Examples include anatomy books bound with the skin of deceased surgical patients, wills covered in the skin of the person who

“Idolatrie Huguenotre,” the 400-year-old book bound in human skin, is part of special collections in The U of M’s Ned C. McWherter Library.

by B

rian

Wils

on

Library’s special collections home to a skin-crawling readBY MICHELLE CORBETNews Reporter

It’s the one time of the year that boys, girls, men and women get to dress up as ghouls and dolls. Memphis Area costume shops have more than enough supplies for the little monsters of Halloween at The University of Memphis this year.

At The Fun Shop on Highland, a customer placed an Avatar costume on the counter she’d tried on as she spoke with the owner, Doug Hendrickson.

Hendrickson, wear-ing an orange flair-hair hat, placed it back in inventory with 2,300 other selections. The store, which opened as a family business in 1935, has about 1,000 unique costumes ranging from $20 pack-aged items to $900 unique outfits.

“I’m never out,” Hendrickson said. “I’ll always have something for somebody. Here, you’re going to find the largest variety in Memphis.”

Little shops ofhorrorBY ERICA HORTON

News Reporter

More than a dozen creepy and funny Halloween masks on display at The Fun Shop, located on the Highland Strip.

by C

hris

toph

er W

hitte

n

see Costumes, page 5

see Book, page 5

Death Day HalloweenBash in Smith Hall

Potterheads — fans of “Harry Potter” — looking for a chance to dress up as wizards, fight boggarts and dementors, and drink non-alcoholic butterbeer, room 304 in James M. Smith Hall is the place to be today.

The University of Memphis Harry Potter Club will host their Death Day Halloween Bash from 2-4 p.m. The event is free and open to any student, faculty or staff member who wishes to attend.

“We hope that by attending the bash, members will get to know one another more, as well as feel like they are a part of a community of sorts that centers around all things Harry Potter,” said Alec Underhill, senior biology and chemistry major and “Headmaster” of the Harry Potter club.

Underhill said that since the club has become a registered stu-dent organization, more than 80 students have joined the group.

“We even have a few faculty members, some of whom I hope will serve as the Heads of House, interested in joining the club as well,” he said.

English instructor Catherine Dice said that she has used the “Harry Potter” series as a staple of her syllabus for years.

“Between the books themselves, the LEGOs, the movies, and even the hype over the topic of witchcraft, just about everybody with a pulse has heard about the series, whether they’ve read it or not,” she said.

Future plans and events for the club include forming a Quidditch team for The U of M, hosting a Horcrux scavenger hunt on campus and hosting a Yule Ball sometime next semester.

English instructor Tammy Jones, who attended the club’s first meeting, said that despite her punctuality, she had to sit under a desk on the floor due to the Smith Hall room being “literally packed with over 100 ‘Harry Potter’ fans and more coming even after I arrived.”

“The most revealing thing about the meeting—and most sig-nificant, in my mind—was that it was truly the most representa-tive group of students of any club at The U of M,” she said.

Jones also said everyone who attended the meeting acknowl-edged that “Harry Potter” and the novels’ characters were real friends who they had grown up with.

“It was a powerful moment, and I’m glad I got the chance to experience it—even if I was sitting on the floor,” she said.

BY MELISSA WRAYNews Reporter

Little shops ofhorror

Little shops of

www.dailyhelmsman.com2 • Friday, October 28, 2011

Across1 Grafton’s “A”6 Mill fill11 Witchy woman14 Aristotle forte15 Major outlet16 Chemical ending17 Start of a quip19 Lot20 First name in hair products21 Spanish possessive23 Like the 4-Down in a 1960 chart-topper25 Quip, part 226 Bear27 Champagne designation28 “them” author29 Payoff30 Acquire31 Word in a current account?32 Quip, part 335 Take willingly38 Dreyer’s partner in ice cream39 River wriggler42 Don’t just want43 Top-secret org.44 PETCO Park player46 Quip, part 448 Hawks’ homes49 Outclassed by a large margin, as competitors50 You are, in Yucatán51 Mid-seventh-century date52 End of quip56 Deborah’s “The King and I” costar57 Thumbs-up person, perhaps58 “Amazing” magician59 Ike’s WWII domain60 Alex’s mom on “Family Ties”61 Words of reassurance

Down1 Poetic pugilist2 Online chuckle3 “Tell me already”

4 See 23-Across5 Stranded in winter, perhaps6 Reading pen?7 Fabled flier8 Like many “Twilight Zone” episodes9 Pub choice10 Pay after taxes11 Member of an ancient Asia Minor empire12 Beautifier13 Columbus, by birth18 __ Bo22 Exchanges23 “Conan” channel24 Handel cantata “__ e Leandro”25 Least arid27 Go out with30 It’s eight hours later than PST31 Singer Grant32 Cut

33 Forest safety concern34 Actress Lupino35 Wool-coloring agent36 Close-cropped hair style37 Italian horse39 Inventing family40 Prior to41 French article43 Feature of one who is barely sleeping?44 “Great” czar45 Former PLO leader47 Corolla part48 Pompeii burier50 French 101 verb53 Nintendo’s Super __54 Meter lead-in55 Hägar creator Browne

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There are no extravagant nice-ties in Mynders Hall. No air con-ditioning, no elevators and no computer lab. However, some say the residence hall has something found nowhere else on campus: a ghostly guest.

An urban legend of the city alongside the likes of the Orpheum Theater’s “Little Mary,” the story of Elizabeth Mynders is nearly as old as The University itself.

Mynders Hall was built in 1912 and named in honor of former University of Memphis President Seymour Mynders and his recent-ly-deceased daughter. Elizabeth Mynders passed earlier that year at 21, four months after her wed-ding. The exact cause of her death is unknown.

Some say that her ghost often plays tricks on unsuspecting coeds who spend late nights par-tying in lieu of studying. Legend has it that young women would often return to their dorms to find their books open to the exact chapter of the week’s readings.

Many have regarded the ghost of Mynders as a friendly or mis-chievous spirit. Superstition dic-tates that dorm residents greet the portrait of Elizabeth Mynders in the lobby every morning to stay in the spirit’s good graces.

Mynders Hall is no stranger to things that go bump in the dark. Although the mundane might attribute this to the archaic heating system employed by the building, its eponymous spectral resident may have been cause for

sleepless nights.“Sometimes my roommate

told me she had bad nightmares. They made her a little jumpy,” said former Mynders resident Becky Wilson.

Wilson admitted that the building had a certain eeriness to it, especially at night. However, it lacked some of the classic signs of a haunting.

“None of the scary stuff you see on TV – lights going off, pic-tures falling, stuff like that,” she

said.Even so, the mystery behind

Mynders has a way of captivat-ing students who glance at the auburn-haired woman in the portrait.

“I would sometimes catch myself staring at her picture and wondering about her,” Wilson said. “It’s hard to imagine her as a real person.”

The building’s curious past combined with the mysteri-ous circumstances surrounding Elizabeth’s death has made the residence hall a popular destina-tion for local historians with an interest in the unusual.

Michael Einspanjer has been a purveyor of the paranormal for more than 20 years. In 2001, Einspanjer formed Memphis Paranormal Investigation, a col-laborative effort that looks into ghostly activities in the Bluff City and abroad.

“Most of the urban legends you see on the news are exactly that — myths” he said.

Einspanjer has made a name for himself by debunking local

and national urban legends free of charge.

“A lot of people have ridden on my coattails over the years,” Einspanjer said. “But there are probably a few hundred people across the country who can testify about the validity of my work.”

According to Einspanjer, ghost-ly entities are composed of heat or electrical energy, memories, and emotions – mostly emotions.

“A real haunting has physi-cal symptoms. You can feel the emotion that the spirit is dealing with,” he said. “If a spirit lingers, they are here for a reason.”

While one might imagine para-normal investigation requires a “Ghostbusters”-esque arsenal of tools, Einspanjer operates with minimal equipment. His crew often enters sites with little more than a handheld camcorder and a readiness to confront something otherworldly.

“How you approach a para-normal investigation determines your outcome,” Einspanjer said. “It doesn’t matter about the equipment – it’s all about the

attitude.”Einspanjer said the signs of a

ghostly presence are obvious to anyone in tune with their emo-tions. A cold chill in a windless hallway. A feeling of heat being drained from the head to toe. A sudden onset of anxiety or other negative emotions.

“That’s how you know you aren’t alone,” he said.

Einspanjer has investigated Mynders Hall twice during his 23-year career. Both times, he returned empty-handed.

“Not to say the place isn’t haunted – we just haven’t seen enough evidence to convince us otherwise,” he said. “I never label a place as haunted unless I see something firsthand.”

While the confirmation of a campus haunting probably won’t come any time soon, wary resi-dents are still welcome to offer Elizabeth a daily greeting.

“I never did buy into any of the superstition, but you could prob-ably get a good scare out of some freshmen if you dressed up as her this Halloween,“ Wilson said.

Mynders Hall’s namesake spirit rouses superstitionBY CASEY HILDERManaging Editor

Campus spookiness

The portrait of Elizabeth Mynders greets students in the dormitory bearing her name.

by C

asey

Hild

er

www.dailyhelmsman.com4 • Friday, October 28, 2011

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The horror genre is hard to do right, with most films in it either turning into jump-scare filled slasher flicks or just plain silly with ridiculous monsters and makeup. While the latter can be entertaining for a laugh, it’s been a while since we have had a truly good horror film. But if you’re in the mood for some good and some not-so-good horror mov-ies this weekend, here are a few places to get started.

“Psycho” (1960)Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho”

helped shape what we know of as horror movies today. It was a revolutionary film in many ways and was only possible due to the strict moral guidelines of the industry beginning to loosen. For instance, it is the first film to show a toilet flushing, something censors were actually concerned about at the time.

The movie is most famous for its “shower scene” where Marion—the character who had been the lead for the first 20 min-utes—is suddenly, brutally mur-dered in the shower. The music from the scene, with its violent crescendo of violins, is some of the most memorable in movie history.

Those who see the movie today may not appreciate how truly shocking this scene was. Not only is it more violent than most other films at the time, but Janet Leigh, who played Marion, was a big actress at the time, not someone you expect to die early in the movie. The later death of another character implied to be the lead also helped create the feeling that anyone in the film could be dead by the end.

“Alien” (1979)While I do love “Psycho,”

my personal favorite horror movie is Ridley Scott’s “Alien.” Combining science fiction and horror, “Alien” hits all the right notes for a horror movie. It does have lots of gore with its chestburster alien and numer-ous deaths, but it avoids the trappings of slasher films that came after it, which make bloody violence the focus of the movie.

“Alien” does something its many imitators fail to: it kept the alien a mystery. The alien is first seen in its facehugger form attached to a crewmember’s face. After it becomes the chest-burster, we do not see it for a while, at least not in detail. The alien isn’t shown onscreen for much of the movie, keeping it largely unknown and thus more frightening.

While other movies, includ-ing “The Thing from Another World,” had used this trope before, “Alien” helped codify the plotline of people in an enclosed space being hunted down and killed one by one. With its strong female lead,

solid pacing and dark tone, it became a huge hit and is one of the best the genre has to offer.

“The Shining” (1980)I’m not a fan of Stephen King

and I find most movies based on his work unintentionally hilari-ous, but I do like “The Shining.” That may have to do with Stephen King saying Stanley Kubrick’s treatment of “The Shining” is the only movie based on his novels that he “remembered hating.”

The film is very odd, like most of Kubrick’s work, and is very confusing, like all of Kubrick’s work. “The Shining” doesn’t have much to do with its title, with the shining ability of the protago-nist’s son being downplayed in the film. Instead the movie focus-es on Jack Nicholson’s character, Jack, and the hotel where he and his family are staying.

Jack is an alcoholic writer with writer’s block who goes to the hotel to try to finish his latest book. Ghosts from the hotel’s past begin to appear to him and he goes completely insane. Jack Nicholson’s acting is both good and bad. At times he is comi-cally over the top, and at others it works perfectly. It’s entertaining either way and his descent into madness is quite eerie.

“The Happening” (2007)“The Happening,” directed by

M. Night Shyamalan, is a prime example of how not to do horror movies. It was Shyamalan’s first movie with an R rating, and it is very obvious when watching it. He uses gore for the sake of gore and takes everything so far

it becomes comical. The plot makes the movie

even worse, with plants caus-ing humans to kill themselves in a variety of ludicrous ways. There is an actually chilling scene of a cop killing himself with his weapon before a bystander picks it up and does the same. Shyamalan takes this too far, thus ruining it, by having about three more characters doing the same thing again.

Other oddities including a character obsessed with hotdogs and a little old lady who threat-eningly utters the line “Why are you eyin’ my lemondrink, boy?”

“Amityville 4 – The Evil Escapes” ( 1989)

Most of the Amityville movies aren’t very good, but the fourth is notable for its badness due to the villain being a lamp. The original Amityville house has a yard sale and the evil spirit gets into a lamp before it gets sold. The movie even has several low-angle shots of the lamp in an attempt to make it somewhat menacing.

The lamp also spends most of the film doing comparably harm-less things to the inhabitants of the house in which it now resides. Instead of horribly murdering the inhabitants, it kills their pets and gets the little girl to draw on the walls. It chops up a guy’s hand in a garbage disposal, but none of the protagonists are never in any danger.

Without a tangible danger to the protagonists it never comes close to being scary, and the silly concept just ruins every other part of the movie.

5 scary movies for the weekendBY KYLE WAYNE LACROIXArts & Entertainment Reporter

Frightening films

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The University of Memphis Friday, October 28, 2011 • 5

The U of M Classical Guitar Society presents

Dr. James Baur in Concert

TONIGHT @ 7:30 p.m.Harris Concert Hall

Performing a Guitar Concerto with the Contemporary Chamber Players, conducted by Dr. Kamran Ince, U of M professor of music,

and featuring compositions by his father, Dr. John Baur, U of M composition & graduate music theory professor, and Dr. Ince.

wrote them and records of judicial proceedings bound in the skin of the murderer.

Bounding books with human skin was very uncommon during the 17th century. When human skin is used, it comes with the intention to make a statement about a person or group, said Walter Brown, associate professor of history.

“The same reason people were burned at the stake, making a statement about an erroneous or dangerous religious sect, this is the way Catholics saw Protestants and Protestants saw Catholics,” Brown said. “It is an act of reli-

gious intolerance.” Orientation guides mention the

“human skin book” when they lead incoming freshman into the lobby of the library, often receiving astonished gasps.

“We mention that neat fact that students would be interested in, so students will want to come back to check it out and become interested in the resources the library has to offer,” said Lindsey Widick, senior electrical engineering major.

The book is rarely handled and kept in a clamshell box in a tem-perature and humidity controlled room.

“We make sure to say that it is not available for the public to view, you must see it by appointment, they need to supervise who is in the room with it,” Widick said.

Hendrickson, also a magi-cian since 1993, flipped through a book of costumes with a customer as people trickled in and out of the store Thursday evening.

He started working at The Fun Shop as a manager in 2001 and later bought the store after the previous owner retired.

Halloween, Christmas and Easter are his three busiest holi-days, he said. People also buy costumes year-round for par-ties, charities and birthdays.

The Darth Vader costume is one of the most popular items in the store, complete with mask and cape. It sells for $750, but rents for around $100.

“It’s amazing. It may as well have been a replica,” he said. “We had a Batman, but someone loved it so much that they bought it last week. It sold at $400. I don’t know what he’s going to do with it past Halloween.”

This year, hero and “couple” costumes have been the most popular sell at the Fun Shop.

“Super heroes in general have been a good seller for several years,” Hendrickson said. “Superman and Supergirl, they’re good couple costumes. There is a girl for every guy.”

Barry Lincoln, owner of Mr. Lincoln’s Costume Shoppe for more than 20 years, said this year’s most popular costumes

at his store are pirates. Lincoln has about 4,000 other

options for the partier or trick-or-treater looking for a one-night commitment.

“They start out about $25 and no higher than $225,” he said. “I only allow people to rent them. I would rather let someone else sell the cheapies and I take care of better quality costumes and rent them out.”

The only things for sale in Lincoln’s shop that customers can keep are prosthetic wigs, make-up and some masks.

People are usually very sur-prised that he has so many products packed into his small building on Florence Street in Midtown, Lincoln said.

In one room, a Fat Bastard costume from the Austin Powers movies, complete with giant white underwear, hangs from the ceiling. The room is filled wall to wall with costumes labeled by decade, including flapper dresses from the 1920s and floral-print dresses and shirts from the 1970s.

“About July, we start get-ting the shop ready and work on it until the first of October,” he said. “There are thousands of costume shops and you have to get your orders in. We start ordering around February and March and we get them around August or September.”

While visiting Scotland once, Lincoln bought a Prince Charlie costume complete with a kilt and jacket.

One of his oddest requests from a customer came from a company executive when he requested choirgirl costumes for about five or six men.

“They were doing some kind of meeting,” he said.

Talia Trigg, senior educa-tion major at The University of Memphis, said one of her favorite parts of Halloween is dressing up in weird costumes.

“I’m dressing up as a rogue from Dungeons & Dragons,” she said. “Her name is Ryden Tildus. I created her in a game.”

Instead of going to a store and buying a costume for Halloween this year, something she hasn’t done for two years, Trigg went to a thrift store and bought an oversized leather skirt.

“I cut it and sewed the pieces into armor,” she said. “I’m bor-rowing a bow and arrow, boots and fake daggers for other parts of the costume and I made a cape with a piece of fabric I got at Hancock Fabrics for two dol-lars per yard.”

Dylan Hanks, history sopho-more major, is dressing up as Indiana Jones.

“Who wouldn’t want to be Indiana Jones?” he said.

Hanks, who dubbed himself a professional adventurer, is going to two Halloween parties this year and hanging out with friends.

“I haven’t dressed up since I was 12,” he said. “I’m kind of new to Halloween again. This is going to be fun.”

Costumesfrom page 1

Bookfrom page 1

The Ned C. McWherter Library has been home to Louis Richeome’s “Idolatrie Huguenotre” since Oct. 29, 1986.

by B

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The University of Memphis Alumni Association will kick off its Lambuth chapter with True Blue Day. The Alumni Association will host the Jackson, TN community Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the quad behind

Varnell-Jones Hall.Candy Donald, Coordinator of

Student Services and Operations for the Lambuth Campus, said the day will make the communi-ty more familiar with The U of M.

“The Alumni Association is doing this as a welcome to their Lambuth Chapter and as a thank you to the community for being

so instrumental in The University taking over the Lambuth campus and offering classes there,” she said.

While True Blue day will showcase what The University has to offer academically, the campus will be more family friendly.

“We will have free barbeque and other food, live music from Darrell Wilson and the Soul Outsiders, face painting and a bouncy house for the children,” she said.

Donald also said representa-tives from the main campus will visit Jackson.

“Pouncer; the cheerlead-ers; Dr. Shirley Raines, U of M President; Tammy Hedges, Executive Director of the Alumni Association and Dr. Dan Lattimore, Dean of the Lambuth Campus will greet visitors and guests,” she said.

The three-hour celebration will give community members a chance to learn about The University and become more acquainted with faculty and staff.

“This day is to really pull together The U of M with the Jackson community and strengthen the partnership that we started this summer,” Donald said.

She said True Blue Day is not to be confused with the Lambuth campus grand opening, which has yet to be announced because Raines is holding that celebration off for the transfer of paperwork into U of M’s name.

BY TIMBERLY MOORENews Reporter

Lambuth goes blueCampus Activities

www.dailyhelmsman.com6 • Friday, October 28, 2011

green fee submit an idea and/or proposal for funding for the fall 2011 supplemental funding cycle

THE GREEN FEE COMMITTEE IS ACCEPTING IDEAS AND PROPOSALS FOR GREEN FEE FUNDS FOR THE FALL 2011 SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDING CYCLE. IDEAS AND PROPOSALS MAY BE SUBMITTED BY ANY UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS FACULTY, STAFF OR STUDENT.

proposals actually seek funding from the green fee and should fall within one of the following categories:

• energy & utilities (electric, gas, water, etc.) • local generation (renewables - solar, wind, etc.) • alternative fuel (hybrid vehicles, bio-diesel projects, etc.) • other (environmental recycling, etc.)

educational initiatives will also be considered.

the person(s) and/or department(s) submitting a proposal must be capable of managing the funds in a university account and actually carrying out what is needed to fulfi ll an accepted proposal.

ideas are simply your thoughts on how the green fee could be spent. you do not actually need to be able to carry out your envisioned idea.

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Solutions(Don’t look

under the bed — Howie Mandel could

be under there)

Walk&Talk What are you going to be for Halloween?

“A t-shirt ninja. I’m cheap.”

— Kiernan Bensey, Architecture freshman

“A Jedi knight. It’s kind of an inside joke between me

and some friends. ”

— Ben Vega, Architecture sophomore

“A mechanic. My friends in my architecture studio talked

me into it the other day.”

— Rachel Wolford, Architecture freshman

“A dead zookeeper. I don’t really know why. It just kind

of happened.”

— Errol Rivers, Undecided freshman

“Freddie Mercury, because he’s Freddie Mercury. I

mean, come on.”

— Annie Piercey, English sophomore

by Brian Wilson

A Rock and Roll HalloweenWith the possible exception of

Christmas, no other Holiday gets paid tribute in rock and roll like Halloween. Halloween-themed songs are a no-brainer, and while they’re almost always tongue-in-cheek, some of the artists on this playlist have enjoyed their highest level of success thanks to the scari-est day of the year.

The Shaggs - “It’s Halloween”The title says it all. This 60s girl

group was dubbed “better than The Beatles” by Frank Zappa, but never received the mainstream success of other girl rock groups of the time. “It’s Halloween” originally appeared on the group’s debut album “Philosophy of the World” released in 1969.

The Cramps - “Human Fly“ Is there a better Halloween-

themed band than Ohio’s The

Cramps? Probably not. Memphis rock legend Alex Chilton produced “Human Fly,” which appears on The Cramps debut 12-inch EP “Gravest Hits.” Singer Lux Interior sounds like a drugged out Frankenstein as he hisses his lyrics over the band’s trademark psycho-billy guitar riffs.

The Sonics - “The Witch”Hailed by many critics as the

first 60s punk band and the found-ers of Seattle rock and roll, The Sonics played simple and fast rock and roll with chord progres-sions simple enough for a zombie to figure out. “The Witch” was arguably The Sonics’ biggest hit, and although the band faded into obscurity, the song can still be heard on dive-bar jukeboxes around the world.

The Accüsed - “Martha Splatterhead”

What’s a Halloween playlist without “Martha Splatterhead?”

Splatterhead, a fictional character portrayed on most of the Accused albums, was a zombie who came back to life to fight crime and wear tight clothing. Really, with song titles like “Buried Alive,” “Autopsy” and “Devil Woman,” any Accüsed song makes the cut.

The Ramones - “Pet Sematary”Stephen King’s horror master-

piece wouldn’t have been com-plete without a hit theme song! By the time “Pet Sematary” was made into a movie in 1989, The Ramones had their sound down to a science. Joey Ramone generally kept things simple in the lyrics department, and this song is no exception.

Roky Erickson - “Two-Headed Dog”

What’s more disturbing than lis-tening to a certified mental patient who thinks he’s God sing about a two-headed dog? Nothing.

The Misfits - “Halloween“Dubbed as the fathers of horror

punk, it’s a safe bet that these New Jersey rockers had a soft spot for Halloween. In fact, pretty much every song by The Misfits has something to do with skulls, death or both. Even the band’s infamous logo is stolen from the 1946 hor-ror movie “The Crimson Ghost.” Released on Halloween in 1981 on the band’s record label, it doesn’t get any more authentic than this.

Screaming Lord Sutch - “She’s Falling in Love with a Monster

Man”This Screamin’ Jay Hawkins-

inspired London performer frequently dressed like Jack the Ripper while playing with his rock band the Savages. In 1983 Lord Sutch’s music took a back seat as he became more involved in poli-tics, founding the Official Raving Monster Loony Party and partici-pating in elections until 1999.

Venom - “Buried Alive”What’s Halloween without a

little heavy metal? Hailed as the kings of Black Metal (the title of bands second full length album), “Buried Alive” will send shivers up the spines of Trick or Treaters every-where. Singer Cronos belts out “As they lower me down into that hole in ground, I scream out for help, but they hear not a sound.” It doesn’t get much creepier than that.

Screamin’ Jay Hawkins - “I Put a Spell on You”

The original shock rock weirdo Screamin’ Jay Hawkins rounds out the playlist, with his most success-ful song, “I Put a Spell on You.” It’s hard to believe that the song was recorded 1956, and even harder to believe the live performances Hawkins was able to get away with during that time period. With a bone through his nose and a cape on his back, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins proved you don’t have to wait for Halloween to get into character and freak people out.

BY CHRIS SHAWArts & Entertainment Reporter

Terrifying tunes

The University of Memphis Friday, October 28, 2011 • 7

Football

Coming off an impressive 33-17 win on the road at Tulane, The University of Memphis Tigers football team (2-6, 1-3 in Conference USA) will look to build on that momentum as they go on the road once again to take on the Golden Knights of UCF in Orlando, Fla. The Tigers were led by defensive and special teams units that caused turnovers and helped create points for a struggling offense that has yet to

find their stride this season. But second-year head coach Larry Porter thinks his team is starting to come around.

“I am very proud of the young

men that are in our locker room,” said Porter at his weekly press luncheon. “It basically validated what we have been saying all along, and that is that we must

continue to push and press and stay the course on the things that we fundamentally believe in. And what was the difference in that game as opposed to the oth-

ers that we have had in the past three or four weeks, I thought the difference was the ability to really respond to negative momentum.”

The Tigers had all three phas-es working in last week’s game against Tulane – offense, defense and special teams. And if they want to come away with a much needed second win in a row, then all three must show up again against a tough C-USA opponent in Central Florida. The Golden Knights boast one of the top defenses in the country, allow-ing just 16.3 points against per game (12th), a rushing attack that averages 171 yards per game (48th) and a passing offense that is ranked 51st with an average of 237.3.

“UCF is in an unfamiliar posi-tion in terms of what they have experienced in the past in being 3-4, losing the last two games,” Porter said. “You still see a very quality team. Defensively, they are ranked top five in the country in total defense. They try to con-trol the line of scrimmage, and the linebackers are very active and very productive.

Freshman quarterback Taylor Reed, who was 14-for-26 for 213 yards and two touchdowns and one rushing touchdown, will be welcoming back junior wide receiver Marcus Rucker who has been out the last few weeks due to injuries. Rucker’s playing time, though, will probably be limited. So Reed and the Tigers will count on senior Tanner Rehrer and a host of young receivers.

“The thing about our team this year is we’re family,” Rehrer said. “We fight like family. We eat like family. We’re just always trying to be relentless out there and just keep on coming.”

Tigers face tough UCF ‘D’

BY ADAM DOUGLASSports Editor

Freshman quarterback Taylor Reed avoids a Tulane defender and throws for a touchdown in last weekend’s Conference USA win against Tulane.

“The thing about our team this year is we’re family. We fight like family. We eat like family.

We’re just always trying to be relentless out there and just kept coming.”

— Tanner Rehrersenior wide receiver

by D

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The University of Memphis men’s soccer team closed out their non-conference schedule with a 2-1 win over the Central Arkansas Bears on Wednesday in Conway, Ark. thanks to a pair of goals from sophomore forward Mark Sherrod.

The Tigers got on the board early, scoring the opening goal ten minutes into the match. Sophomore midfielder Liam Collins lobbed the ball to Sherrod from the left side of the box. Sherrod volleyed the ball off the post to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead. Collins’ assist was his tenth this season.

The Bears equalized in the 28th minute through midfield-er Taylor Hart. Hart dribbled up the left side of the box and beat Memphis goalkeep-er Conor Hurley unassisted. The goal was only the sec-ond allowed by the Memphis defense in the last six games. The first half ended with the teams tied at 1-1.

The match remained even throughout most of the second half until the Tigers broke the deadlock in the 75th minute.

Sherrod collected a through

ball from freshman forward Lewis Ellis and beat Central Arkansas goalkeeper Patxi Shortsleeve for his second goal of the match. It was his sixth game-winning goal this sea-son. Ellis was credited with his sixth assist of the season.

Memphis outshot Central Arkansas 10-6, marking the tenth consecutive match the Tigers have outshot their opponents, and the 13th time

overall this season. The Tigers have failed to outshoot their opponents just twice this sea-son, against Wisconsin (9-9) and Missouri State (9-12).

Sherrod’s 16th and 17th goals moved him into a tie for second-most goals scored in a season at Memphis. He tied Morton Akerfors’ tally posted in 1987, trailing Sean Fraser’s record 18 goals in 2001. Sherrod has also recorded 34

points this season, the most since Fraser scored 42 in 2001.

Collins also etched his name in the record books. His assist on Sherrod’s first goal tied him for third with Rogerio Lima (1996) and David Jackson (1984) in the single-season record books. Collins sits behind Lima in second (12 assists in 1997) and Dayton O’Brien in first (14 in 2004).

With the win, the Tigers

improved to 10-4-1, The U of M’s sixth ten-win season under head coach Richie Grant. The Tigers now lead the Bears 6-1 in the all-time series, and have won the last five. The team will close out it’s home slate as they take on No. 10 Central Florida at 7 p.m. on Saturday at the Mike Rose Soccer Complex before closing out the regular season on the road at SMU on Nov. 4.

Sherrod shines in win over Central ArkansasBY SCOTT HALLSports Reporter

Sophomore midfielder Liam Collins dribbles to find an open teammate against Central Arkansas on Wednesday.

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