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Page 33 text:
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I—---- A helping hand doesn't comfort this young visitor as she squeezes through a narrow passage in the Wildcat Lodge. Holes in the wall allowed residents to grab the children as they walked by. —Photo by Burt Ladd Who's resting in peace? With eyes glaring and teeth clenched, |ohn S wintosky prepares to attack young visitors at the Wildcat Lodge Haunted House. Swintosky is an engineering sophomore. —Photo by Terry Keys Returning from the dead, ghoul Dale Patter- son reaches ominously for a victim from a graveyard in the basement of Wildcat Lodge. —Photo by Terry Keys Specializing in amputations in the chainsaw massacre room, engineering sophomore Ld C ierner gets a handful of human flesh during ,i performance at the Boyd Hall Haunted House. —Photo by ferry Keys 29 FALL Halloween
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Page 32 text:
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28 FALL Halloween Events benefiting charitable projects make Halloween Frightfully Fun I he sheet-shrouded furniture cast an eerie calm in the lobby of the aging building. Strangely-clad individuals greeted the guests as they entered then led them through the dimly-lighted rooms to the entrance of a Halloween adventure. A sign over the door warned, Abandon hope, • all ye who enter here. Over 300 brave souls ignored the sign and took the trip through Boyd Hall's annual haunted house. For the sixth year, the campus residence halls staff and interested stu- dents sponsored the event, proceeds to the United Way. The haunted house proved once again to be the highlight of campus Halloween events. Months of preparation and a lot of money went into the building of the seven-room adventure through the freshman women's hall. Mike Sims, head resident of Keeneland Hall, initiated the tradition along with Terry Strange, former Keenelend head resident when they were both undergraduates. We had ab ut 60 people who did everything from con- structing it to aeing in it, said Sims. And these were resi- dents from all over campus. The haunted house collected over $300 for the United Way. We bought around $250 in new props and equip- ment, Sims said, that can be used for years to come. Also on north campus the goblins gathered in Joe B. Hall Wildcat Lodge to entertain children of faculty and staff members. The haunted house was a project of the Little Sisters of the Lodge, who led groups of three to four child- ren through the basement, which was inhabited by Lodge residents dressed as such ghoulish favorites as Dracula, Frankenstein and the chainsaw murderer. continued on page 30 Aren't you glad you didn't turn on the lights? Jane Gehringer, a resident advisor from Jewell Hall, portrays a murdered coed in the Boyd Hall Haunted House. —Photo by Terry Keys
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Page 34 text:
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30 FALL Hdlloween The Hunchback of Notre Dame (alias Dennis On, a junior major- ing in animal silences) frightens another group of visitors to the Boyd Hall Haunted House. I he House, an annual event, raised appioximately $300 for the United Way —Photo by Barton Branscum Meanwhile, in the Complex Commons, South Campus C ounciI and Kirwan Tower sponsored a masquerade party for the United Way. Over 300 people dropped in to dance and show off costumes for the judges. Prizes were given to the best-dressed male, female and couple. Vickie Walker, committee member in charge of the dance, described it as very succcessful, especially since it was a long weekend for many people to go home (because of Election Day).” Halloween, the traditional celebration of death, turned into one of the most festive nights on campus and proved profitable for an organization which specializes in life. -KAREN HOSKINS Betsy Graves applies make-up for one of the participants in Boyd Hall's Haunted House. —Photo by Barton Branscum With King Tut looking over her shouldei, Mit i Hobson, an ele- mentary education )unior, cleans up at the Wildcat Lodge Haunted House Photo by Terry Keys Fun
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