October30 2013 Issue

Page 1

Etera

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 Volume 45, Issue 4

THEY WALK AMONG US Zombies are taking over your living room By Justin David Tate Life & Arts Editor

One minute, you’re studying in the library for the inevitable pop quiz in chemistry. Then, all of a sudden, a blood-curling scream rings out. Panicked students and faculty members begin running down the halls of the second floor of the L building. You creep forward to investigate and see the bloody, decomposing meatbags known as zombies salivating after the taste of living flesh. As the shuffling dead break through the library’s glass windows, you have two choices: Escape the library and fight your way out, or run to the private study areas in the back and barricade the pathway behind you. Which choice would you make? This is one of many dilemmas that come up in meetings of the Zombie Club, a weekly forum for all things living dead and post-apocalyptic. “Zombies, when you see them in the movies, they’re always set in places that you normally would see, like houses, malls, toy stores,” said club member and business administration major Arlene Nelson. “I’ll go to the store and I’m thinking, ‘I wouldn’t mind if something crazy happened here,’ but the zombie apocalypse does that for you.” The Zombie Club began last spring with the purpose of discussing the zombie phenomenon as it relates to video games, movies, literature, television and even what would happen if an imagined apocalypse were to occur on campus. The zombie obsession can be traced back to director George A. Romero’s 1968 cult classic “Night of the Living Dead,” which introduced the familiar zombie formula of a cast of survivors trapped in a house trying to survive. Help never comes. Zombie Club President Terrance Starling considers the film one of the top five zombie movies of all time, but he believes the zombie genre is flexible enough to adapt and evolve beyond Romero’s initial success. “George Romero has a hundred different movies out — not literally, but he has a lot — and in each movie, his zombies are actually a little different than they were in the previous movie,” Starling said. “So everybody has their different zombies. In my opinion, ‘The Walking Dead’ zombies are as close as you can get to what I consider a real zombie.” See ZOMBIES, page 9 ➤


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