October 25, 2016

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OCTOBER 25 - NOVEMBER 1, 2016

NEWS

THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG

UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE

SPORTS

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Local snowboarder shreds his way to success

From the Sun Star: Sexual assault sparks controversy campus-wide

Haunted tales of the Wendy Williamson

PHOTO BY YOUNG KIM

Shane Mitchell explains some of the mysterious occurrences surrounding the portrait of Wendy Williamson.

By Victoria Petersen

vgpetersen@thenorthernlight.org

Mysterious doors that lead to a wall, showers and sinks running on their own, pianos playing by themselves, an elevator shaft that leads nowhere and lights that will never reach the stage are just a handful of the spooky scenarios that have occurred in the Wendy Williamson Auditorium. With construction beginning in 1973, the auditorium sat dormant for 18 months before money became available to finish the building. When the builders finally completed the building, there were multiple mistakes. Creating doors that lead to walls, an elevator shaft that leads to a second floor that never was, a catwalk visible to no one and a spotlight room angled in a way that makes it impossible to spotlight the stage are just a few of the unusual engineering aspects of the auditorium. Many cultures attribute energy to spaces. The Confucius Institute has even been said to have visited the auditorium; telling the manager that the energy of the space was evil and the feng shui was all wrong. “The lightroom is by far the most sinister, but all the place is funky,” Shane Mitchell, a UAA alum, the auditorium’s manager and director at TBA theater, said. Mitchell, who has worked in the auditorium for twenty years began his relationship with the theater as a student in UAA’s theater program in the 80s. “When I started here in 1982, the place had a reputation for being haunted. It hadn’t even been open for a decade yet,” Shane Mitchell said. The auditorium bears the name of John Wendell Williamson, professor of music at UAA since 1971. Williamson, nicknamed Wendy, passed away in 1988. The auditorium was named in his honor.

“Weird things happened way before he passed on,” Shane Mitchell said. Shane Mitchell has his own share of less-than-ordinary occurrences. Once while acting in a performance of “The Monkey’s Paw,” Mitchell opened up the coffin he was going to use during the show, backstage. The cast and crew surrounded him as he lifted the coffin to see what was left inside by other cast members. As Mitchell opened the coffin door, all the props for the show flew off a table and against the wall, just about ten feet away from them. “It became a habit to open up the coffin backstage before I went on. The whole cast gathered around me to crack up. With all the cast around me, all the props flew off the prop table, against the wall. Like someone flew them off with their arms,” Shane Mitchell said. In that same show, about 350 school age kids were in attendance on a field trip. A question and answer session soon followed the conclusion of the show. “This one kid raises his hand and says, ‘at the end of the play, how did you make the lady in the white dress float above your heads?’ The director said ‘what?’, then the teacher said, ‘he just wanted to know how the special effect worked.’ The director said ‘next question.’ There was no special effect,” Shane Mitchell said. Many years ago, a self-proclaimed psychic and FBI profiler toured the building and sent a thorough document explaining the energy and presence inhabiting the auditorium. “She mailed a document that listed things that made

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RED ZONE: Signs of an abusive relationship

By Cheyenne Mathews

cmathews@thenorthernlight.org

As October ends, domestic violence awareness month also comes to a close. This month is all about targeting domestic violence, and there are several obvious warning signs that signal an abusive relationship.

facebook.com/northernlightuaa

According to Abused Women’s Aid in Crisis, AWAIC, there are several key questions to ask that address warning signs. Questions like, does your partner make threats of any kind, prevent you from working, or control what you do? Bridget Dooley is the Title IX Coordinator at UAA and she works with AWAIC when dealing with abusive relationship situations. “Control is a big part of domestic violence,” Dooley said. “Do you have access to your money, or does someone else have control of your money? Does your partner have to be with you all the time? Are you allowed to leave without your partner? Those are warning signs of domestic violence.” Dooley has seen domestic violence cases come in many forms, and last year alone there were 89 different Title IX reports about sex discrimination, which includes sexual harassment, sexual mis-

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GRAPHIC BY JIAN BAUTISTA

thenorthernlight.org

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