0 mwlmmm a a -w -W -W 741 2B - The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazine - Thursday, October 30, 2003 Truths be told: Exposing urban legends at 'U' The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazine No one can hear you scream: y Kaema Akpan or the Daily Do you remember when you took tour of campus trailing behind that right-eyed cheerful Campus Day eader? There were annoying ques- ions that your parents kept on ask- ng while you lagged behind. You istened to tales of virgins that drive ions wild and finding your future nate under the curvature of the krch. That was great and all, but vhat are the real stories lurking >ehind Angell Hall's closed doors end buried beneath the 'M?' "The urban legends here are root- d in tradition and are definitely neant to be more fun than scary. As ar as whether or not they are true . well, it's a secret," said Campus Day leader Alison Gerken. Everyone knows of the stories, but do urban legends really exist, especially here at Michigan? "They make for a good horror movie. I personally don't believe in them, but they better not happen to me," LSA junior Tara Traub said. It's time to get down to the nitty gritty. In honor of Halloween, here's everything that your campus day leader never told you, and more: the urban legends of the University of Michigan. 1. Have you ever wondered about the creepy cemetery positioned a lit- tle too close to Markley? Flocks of crows can often be seen taking refuge in the trees or on the ground, and animals are supposed to see the "unseen." So, what's the deal? In 1967, after failing their third consecutive organic chemistry exam, a group of overwrought stu- dents, in a fit of mass hysteria, were seen running to the Hill area from Central Campus never to be seen again. Their spirits are known to gather in the cemetery, where some- times they can be heard chanting, "if only we had gone to State." If that isn't believable, at least now you have an explanation for the ran- dom spinning of the Cube. 2. A professor was inspired by his pubescent years spent as a hippy, and decided to teach a mini course on the effects of the Grateful Dead on society. Later banned from the University for his promotion of drug use, he staged a protest on the bell tower with his students and fell to his demise when he tried to fly. He is now known to haunt the bell tower, which offers insight into the four different times that can be found on the tower ... 4:20 anyone? 3. In 1995, while construction workers were building Randall Laboratories, cadavers were found buried underground. Apparently they had been "forgotten." "We learned about it in my Michigan history class and I thought it was really interesting that there were bodies buried under- neath," said LSA junior Jenni Ferro. It's also creepy that only two-thirds of the bodies were dug up, still leav- ing bodies underground." What the history course failed to mention was that they were really the bodies of students who went to University Health Services and were misdiagnosed with a case of strep throat or a positive pregnancy test. 4. For those of you who that thought you were safe on North campus, keep dreaming. Bursley is built on top of tunnels leading from the mental ward of an insane asy- lum. Crazed ex-engineering students recently turned Kinesiology majors are known to wander the tunnels in search of a 4.0 grade-point average. 5. And finally, this wouldn't be a story if there wasn't any mention of the squirrels. You know you have seen them - they are enormously large and enormously stupid. Be careful, because in a jealous rage, these squirrels are known to attack any intelligent or more superior life form, in other words, Michigan fans. By Hussain Rahim Daily Arts Writer WEEKEND We don't check our candy before we eat it. Unless it is open and chewed on already ... w t, yes W!e d+ o Ridley Scott's 1979 visionary film "Alien" follows in the grand tradition of "2001: A Space Odyssey" and "Star Wars" in its epic scope, which illustrates and then isolates the image of a colos- sal ship as some- thing stranded in desolate, endless space. Instead of focusing on an existential Kubrickian journey or the grandiose space opera of "Star Wars," Scott's film focuses on the utilitarian notion of "mission gone wrong, let's get home." With just one non-sci fi film under his belt, Scott was offered "Alien" and recognized a way in which he could implement his newly discov- ered Metal Hurlant - a European avant-garde comic magazine - influence into the visual style of the film. Collaborating with influential Swiss surrealist painter H.R.Giger for conceptual design of the actual Alien, they created the biomechani- cal look that has dominated the rep- resentation of extraterrestrials in sci-fi movies to come. The film is peppered with slow, long panoramic shots that establish mood and build suspense. The care- ful camera movement and narrative display a type of pacing lost in today's horror and science fiction films, e.g. "Red Planet." This manner of patient filmmak- ing trusts the audience enough to wait for the tension to build and not drown them with explo- sions. The power of silence is shown through constant focus of the size of the ship, which builds and foreshadows something more sinister. The use of negative space, the strength of what is not seen and anticipation is the mastery that has made directors like Hitchcock and films like "Jaws" such cultural milestones. Also inno- vative were the eschewed romantic ideals of noble scientists and fear- less space explorers, which are all too familiar of the genre. Instead, the realistic notions of space travel becoming mundane and the crew as contracted laborers make a great contrast to the wondrous shots of Ilu interstellar space. From The fact that the the cast is old helps Vault give the sense of blue-collar workers stuck transporting ore and ready to go home. Conversations consist of the disdain for the ship food, which pro- duces double entendres between eat- ing and sex. Issues of class, sexism and bureaucracy are present as we see the two repairmen incessantly wondering about lesser pay shares, Ripley's orders being ignored by the crew and the faceless company giv- ing out dangerous mission objec- tives favoring discovery over the group's safety. After receiving a signal of appar- ent distress, the crew is sent to investigate the source and every aspect is shown with intricate detail. From the descent to the planet's sur- face, to the ominous glimpse of the alien ship, to the petrified pilot and the beautiful atmospherics of the primordial mist of subterranean environment, nothing is missed. The tense inspection of the Alien egg by Kane, played by John Hurt ("The Elephant Man"), followed by its explosion onto his face is the perfect payoff to the build. But that's all you get because the camera cuts away. No pro- longed, action- filled struggle with the alien, but more sus- pense instead. Then the leech is seen resting on his face, as it is slowly prodded, examined and then bleeds acid and more pay-off as the acid burns through the ship with ease. The Alien creature is constantly changing shape and is seen so infre- quently that a tangible form cannot even be placed on it. The imagina- tion is left to do most of the work. i ANN ARBOR REALTY LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION Central Campus Efficiencies, 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apts. Starting at $575/mo. Includes some utilities. ANN ARBOR REALTY 616 CHURCH (734) 663-7444 Open Mon-Fri, 9 am to 5:30 pm annar Sigoumey you fox. Straight from the "Jaws" school of film, Scott believes the less the antagonist is seen, the more frighten- ing it becomes. A modern applica- tion was seen most recently in M. Night Shyamalan's film "Signs." This film made another brave move by having only a female character survive, keeping Ripley, Sigourney Weaver ("Aliens"), who had no prior movie experience, as the lead for all subsequent sequels. Her portrayal of a tough, able and quick-thinking Ripley displayed the grace-under-fire attitude that set the prototype for future female sci-fi heroines. After this film, the focus moved away from the idea of sci-fi as horror and more into sci-fi as action. There is no clearer evidence of this than the arrival of director James Cameron in "Aliens," the 1986 sequel that focused on an all-out war on the inhabited planet between the aliens and humans. The franchise continued with epigones such as "Aliens 3" and Courtesy of FOX "Alien: Resurrection." Despite turning out another sci-fi masterpiece in "Blade Runner," (the director's cut ending must be seen to be appreciated) even Ridley Scott lost the original precision he showed with this film and moved away from the subtle style of trust- ing filmmaking to a more visceral, straightforward action style with movies like, "Hannibal," "Black Hawk Down," "Gladiator" and "Matchstick Men." The masterstroke of "Alien" was its willingness to build with preci- sion, and exacting perfection, every detail that lead to conflict and action. It is hard to find this attention to detail in today's films. With the theatrical re-release this Halloween, a new viewing of this monumental 70's film will be an alien experience for the average the- atergoer but a welcome and needed look back to an almost lost style of storytelling of dark nuance and anticipation. M1: KI i