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Page 21 text:
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Bad press, low sales did not overrule Kingdom Come he o pening band , Blind Date, ceased playing. Sounds from the audience overpow- ered the sounds from the stage . A single guitar strum ended the sound check. Another scream- ing chord began the concert . Kingdom Come, the university’s fall Homecoming concert, filled the void of the previous year’s concertless Home- coming. Surrounded by criticism, the concert sold only 1,000 tickets and gave away ap- proximately 200, Shawn Burrell, Ellsworth sophomore, said. As concert committee chairman, Bur- rell said the only problem besides the low ticket sales was the crowd. “Lenny, the lead vocalist, told every- body to come up to the stage. Audience members rushed the stage. It caught our security off guard,” Burrell said. One student tried to catapult himself onto the stage, but Burrell said security handled itself well and removed the young man. He said the majority of the crowd was high school age. Many drank before the show, and security confiscated alcohol from concert goers. Before the concert, an editorial written by fall University Leader Editor Eric Hodson, Pratt senior, appeared in the newspaper. Hodson said Kingdom Come was a bad concert choice because the audience for that band was high school age. We took a survey, and with the infor- mation chose a band that would be in the Hays area on the open date for the amount of money we could afford, while also representing the type of band university students were asking for,” Burrell said. “The concert committee should have saved their money. I think they just took what they could get instead of thinking what the students at this university would go see,” Hodson said. Madeline Holler A STEADY BEAT, Danny Stag, drummer for Kingdom Come, keeps the heat during the university ' s homecoming concert. The heavy metal hand was welcomed by the university with a mixture of criticism and enthusiasm, (Photo by Laura Johnson) Kingdom Come 17
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Page 20 text:
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Concert gopher goes for look Backstage Working backstage at the Kingdom Come con- cert was not all glamour and glitz. It seems people have a natural draw to the back- stage area. I found fans wandering around back- stage, Some went in and out of the coliseum to get a glimpse of the band mem- bers or watch the stage crew finish setting the stage, I caught a group of five high-school students tryi n g to sneak i n, an d th ey offered me $60 to let them look around backstage. Before the concert, I was never really certain which people were band mem- bers or people traveling with the band. Eight be- fore the show began, sev- eral ducked into their backstage dressing room to get ready for the con- cert. Other band members worked along side the stage crew, setting up the equipment. The drummer asked for help cleaning his drum set from the previous night ' s performance. Somehow flour had been tossed around stage, I had a variety of chores that day. I made a run for gray duct tape and guarded a trunk of King- dom Come T-shirts, I num- bered chairs, papered windows to the backstage area and roped off sections for seating. I had a chance to talk with different people in- cl u di ng li gh ti ng de si gn er s, road managers, agency representatives and even band members, “by Lisa Storer, guest writer HOMECOMING HEADLINE. Rick Steier, bass guitarist for Kingdom Come, plays to a crowd of 1,200 people during the group ' s first headline performance. A Hays band, Blind Date, opened the concert, (Photo by Laura Johnson, hand -colored by Todd Sutcliffe) 16 Campus Life
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Page 22 text:
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Ed and Lorraine Warren have spent much of their lives in search of the Supernatural upernatural beings, some people may say, are only the in- vention of an imaginative mind . Ed and Lorraine Warren, how- ever, have dedicated 30 years to the long and exhausting hunt of the supernatural. The Warrens visited the univer- sity in October as part of Dr. Caligari ' s “Vault of Villains,” a week- long Halloween festival sponsored by the Memorial Union Activities Board and the Hays Arts Council. To begin the festival, the Warrens conducted an afternoon field trip to a location just beyond Old Fort Hays where several townspeople have re- ported sitings of an image referred to as the Blue Light Lady. Local legend traces this image back to the 1868 cholera edpidemic and a woman named Elizabeth Polly. According to the legend, Eliza- beth nursed soldiers suffering from cholera and, as a result, suffered and died from it herself. Her last request was to be buried on the hill overlooking the fort where she frequently took long walks. During investigation of the site, Lorraine Warren, an acclaimed clair- voyant, said she could feel the spiri- tual presence of a distressed young woman desperately searchi ng for her husband. As Lorraine moved closer, she said the image became surrounded in a turquoise iridescence followed by a strong, pungent smell that indicated illness. Further investigation led the Warrens and their entourage to the tombstone erected in honor of Eliza- beth Polly. The Warrens’ day concluded with the evening lecture, “Seekers of the Supernatural,” at the Memorial Union Black and Gold Room. They showed pictures of demons and spirits, played tapes of muffled voices they said were demonic or satanistic and presented a film of an actual exorcism. Ed cautioned the audience on the use of tarot cards, Ouija boards, seances, drugs, occult practices and heavy metal music. He said these were all ways of let- ting demons in. “Don’t ever invite a demon in,” Warren said. After attending the Warren’s lec- ture, Tina Huelsmann, Oakley so- phomore, said, “I don’t ever even want to see another Ouija board. That thing moves by itself.” Ed pointed out that 70 percent of demonic encounters he and Lorraine investigated were a result of the use of Ouija boards. “I never really believed in ghosts or life after death, but this lecture really changed my outlook, Huelsmann said. Warren made reference to many spirits he claimed were earthbound, meaning they had not made an ap- propriate crossover. “Death is not the end,” he said. “All of you, each and everyone, will survive the grave.” Vicki Schmidtberger 1 8 Halloween
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