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Charger Bulletin The official student newspaper of the University of New Haven since 1938. Volume 95, Issue 10 | November 6, 2013 | West Haven, CT
Haunted Maxcy gets Hunted for Ghosts
$1 Million Gift to the Science Depart-
By ELISSA SANCI
OPINION EDITOR ESANC2@UNH.NEWHAVEN.EDU
CAMPUS
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October has passed; see how UNH celebrated breast cancer awareness month, in more ways than just free giveaways
SEE PAGE 2 The marching band is a highlight of halftime during football games, and “University Jewel.” SEE PAGE 2
By PATRICIA OPREA
STAFF WRITER POPRE1@NEWHAVEN.EDU
SPORTS While the men’s soccer team has not had the season they have hoped for, they turned their play around with a win on Senior Day. SEE PAGE 12
OPINION Halloween is an excuse to stuff your face with candy, but one woman took that away from children this year. Read Elissa Sanci’s opinion of this woman’s actions. SEE PAGE 6
ENTERTAINMENT In honor of No Shave November, read about some manly movies you can watch to celebrate this month.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––– Whether in the basement or on the third-floor, rumors of Maxcy Hall being haunted are buzzed about constantly throughout the University of New Haven campus. Some students agree that Maxcy is sinister, while others believe it is a building whose eeriness is merely attributed to its antiquity. Yet there is no denying that Maxcy Hall has been a hot topic among the student body and UNH faculty for many years. For 46 years Maxcy was the New Haven Temporary Home for Children. It then comes as no surprise that students and staff claim to have heard activity relating to children. On Saturday, Oct. 26, SCOPE brought in famous ghost hunters Brian Cano, Syfy’s Haunted Collector, and Chris Mancuso, producer of the Internet show Scared! These two men have been in the field for many years, and have now
begun a Paranormal Mystery tour at colleges around the U.S. Cano and Mancuso spoke to a crowd in Dodd’s Theater about their experiences in the ghost-hunting business and how they fluctuated from skeptics to believers. The presentation began with an explanation of the different kinds of ways energy of a spirit can manifest itself, whether it be as an orb, ectoplasm, a voice on a recording or a chill in the room. Photos with real and fake spirit manifestations were shown, and the audience had to pick the good ones out of the bunch. Cano and Mancuso then discussed the equipment used to capture such phenomena. A Spirit Box, for example, is a tool that scans through radio stations without stopping, and thus allows energy to transfer in the radio frequency, and hopefully a voice will be audible. An EMF detector is used for finding electromagnetic frequency, which is triggered by electronics, but if there are none around, can signify another type of energy. Thermometers are used to
PHOTO PROVIDED BY UNH WEBSITE
detect unusual changes in temperature. Cano and Mancuso spoke about their experiences with the different types of tools, and how situations differed from one location to another. They discussed the most haunted locations they’ve been to, and weren’t hesitant to mention ghost-hunting experiences that didn’t work as planned. Some locations simply didn’t result in the evidence that they had hoped for, but as Cano says, “If it made you think about things you didn’t before, then it was successful.” Cano and Mancuso never tried to force their own opinions on anyone else, and actually wanted to hear controversy from the audience. There was a mix of skeptics, believers, and people in between at the presentation; each with their own share of questions. Some wondered why we tend to leave a spirit or entity alone if we have found evidence on its existence, or why ghost hunters move from place to place instead of focusing on the haunting of one location See HAUNTED page 2
SEE PAGE 13
Girl bands are back, read about the next big girl band; The Saturdays
SEE PAGE 15
PHOTO BY EMILY MCGINTY
Text message your news tips and comments to The Charger Bulletin! 1 (270) UNH-NEWS
Mock Trial Team Wins Outstanding Witness Award at Fifth Annual Colgate Invitational
A CHARGER BULLETIN STORY
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This past weekend, the University of New Haven’s Mock Trial Team kicked off their 2013-2014 season by traveling to Colgate, N.Y. to compete in the Fifth Annual Colgate Classic invitational tournament. This was the first time the UNH Team was asked to participate in an
out-of-state invitational. The team is a member of the American Mock Trial Association, which creates and distributes a yearly case for all registered colleges and universities. The 2013-2014 criminal case is titled State of Midlands v. Whit Bowman, and involves a fictional robbery at RacheterWorld Amusement Park. According to the case summary, the park was robbed by Cameron Poole, a ticket booth operator during the summer of 2012, who threatened the park accountant
with a knife. Poole escaped through the back entrance of the Tunnel of Terror ride while being chased by the park security guard, Winston Thomas. During the chase, Thomas was hit by the moving ride and has been in a coma for one year. Whit Bowman, who was operating the Tunnel of Terror at the time of the incident, is good friends with Poole and has been charged with first degree robbery and theft by deception. See MOCK page 3
Board of Governors member Ernest F. Schaub and his wife, Sandie, recently donated $1 million to the University of New Haven’s science programs. In an email sent out to the UNH campus Oct. 14, President Steve Kaplan thanked the Schaubs for their gift to the university. The gift will “support the University’s ongoing efforts to expand and enhance science classrooms and laboratories,” he said. In addition to the $1 million gift from Schaub and his wife, the university also received a $3 million anonymous commitment two years ago, according to Kaplan’s email. This $3 million, along with Schaub’s $1 million, will be used in conjunction to renovate existing campus space and to create stateof-the-art science facilities. Over the past six years, according to Kaplan, science related majors and minors have increased dramatically. This called for the addition of space for science classrooms and labs so additional buildings were purchased for this project. “As one solution to meet this need, we purchased a nursing home on the south side of campus near Notre Dame High School, which we will renovate into academic space,” Kaplan said. Once the renovations are complete, the university plans on moving faculty and programs currently found in Dodds Hall to the new facility. The then vacated parts of Dodds, Kaplan explained, will be converted into science classrooms and laboratories. According to Kaplan, this endeavor will cost half of what constructing an entirely new science facility would cost—the current plan will cost $18 million, while a new facility would cost roughly $35 million. Schaub graduated from UNH in 1972, receiving a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial Engineering. He went on to receive a Master’s degree in Business Administration from Case Western Reserve University. According to UNH’s website, Schaub served as president and chief executive officer of EnPro Industries, Inc., a provider of products to industrial and processing industries, until his retirement in 2008. Schaub’s gift and the anonymous $3 million donation are the only donations for this project as of now. “We will continue to seek private gifts and grants to fund the project,” said Kaplan. He also mentioned that the university has temporarily invested the $4 million they have already received until work on the project officially begins. “The sciences here are thriving and there is a great need for laboratories,” Lourdes Alvarez, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. “Students in the sciences are doing really well, as seen through the different grants they’ve pulled.” Students are looking forward to the benefits of the generous gift. “Hopefully a genetics lab will be added,” Forensic Science major See MILLION page 5