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Ghosts, legends haunt campus life
By: Jeff Wilkin Feature Editor
The story begins as a superstitious schoolmaster leaves a party on a dark and
dismal night. It's the time of year when tales of ghosts and evil spirits
are most popular, and Ichabod Crane knows it. As he nervously rides his
steed through the small valley, he spots a shadow by a brook, someone who is
also on horseback. The "shadow" turns
out to be the most famous and feared specter in the county, the Headless
Horseman. A chase ensues, and it is one that is
to be decided with supernatural aid. The Horseman rises in his stirrups
and hurls his head at the unfortunate schoolmaster.
Ichabod Crane was never seen again. In the churchyard the next morning,
all that was found was his hat...next to the remains of a shattered
pumpkin. County folk told and retold this story many times, and it soon
became known in American literature as "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." No
headless horseman It's not likely that anyone will see
any headless horseman chasing nervous professors down Route 17 tonight because
the horseman's favorite "haunt" has always been Sleepy Hollow.
Bonaventure may not have a spook on horseback, but does have its own ghosts-in
the form of campus legends. Probably the most
famous of the three chief legendary stories occurred in Devereux Hall in the
early '60s. Three students held a strange nocturnal session on the fifth
floor lounge-a black mass. They had read books on Satanism and tried to
summon the devil. Afterwards, one member of the
group had psychological problems and had to be treated for them.
"This was the only thing that ever came out of the Fifth Dev affair,"
Father Alphonsus Trabold, OFM, assistant professor of theology, said.
"There are stories about Fifth Dev, but that's all they are is
stories. Not much of it is true." Stories ran
wild throughout Devereux about the "mass" and still do. Fifth
Dev was supposedly closed down for a few years after the mass took place but Fr.
Alphonsus maintains that it was for renovation purposes only. Other tales
spoof that the devil occasionally returns to Fifth Dev, but no one has ever
reported seeing the "lord of darkness" up there. The Rathskeller
might be a better place to look for him. Dev is
also the site for another campus tale. Supposedly an annual visitor to the
World War II memorial exists in back of Dev-a soldier named William J.
Cooper. According to legend, Mr. Cooper looks after the memorial, shining
his name every year.
The
Bona Venture October 31, 1975 Vol.
L1 No. 6
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