BU students learn about paranormal activity wrote:Wednesday, November 15, 2006
By Mónica Ortiz Uribe
Tribune-Herald staff writer
The night was dark, desolate, the air still as death, and floating above the Old Alton bridge was a ghostly orange cloud — potential proof of the paranormal realm.
All in a day’s work for Rick Moran and his clan of real-life ghost busters, who Tuesday visited a Baylor University class that is studying “extreme deviants.”
Moran is currently researching a supposedly haunted bridge in Denton County.
“I don’t really believe in the paranormal,” said senior Mark Bowden, one of a few skeptics in the class. “It can’t be proven, I guess.”
Moran, a former New York City police officer and freelance journalist, used to be a skeptic himself. That is, until his first encounter with the inexplicable.
While working on an article about a haunted building at New York University, Moran asked aloud for the ghost to come down and say hello.
Not 10 seconds later, a portrait of the alleged ghost in life came crashing down from a wall, breaking into hundreds of pieces on the floor, he told the class.
From that moment, he learned to “stop ticking off the ghosts,” he said
Moran heads the Association for the Study of Unexplained Phenomenon, a group of volunteer researchers whose name is self-explanatory.
A stretch from the norm
Christopher Bader, assistant professor for the Baylor Department of Sociology, said he wanted to create a fun class that would open students’ minds to belief systems that are a stretch from the norm.
Bader was one of the authors of “American Piety in the 21st Century,” a Baylor study published this year on where Americans stand on religion.
This is the first time the class is being offered, and students have studied social and behavioral deviants in sexuality, the workplace and not-so-strange situations such as riding on a plane and eating.
On the first day of class, he presented students with a case of cannibalism in Germany in which the victim willingly participated.
That got their attention, Bader said.
Moran told Bader’s students in a dimly lit classroom about his experience researching the Mothman prophecies in Pleasant Point, W.Va., where residents claimed to have seen an 8-foot flying creature with blood-red eyes and mothlike wings.
Moran said a scene in a movie based on the Mothman was taken directly from his own experience when he and his family received eerie phone calls from an unknown source.
“I think it’s interesting to learn all the different beliefs people have and sometimes have to keep to themselves because the conventions of society,” sociology major Erin Mason said.
“I don’t doubt (unexplained phenomenon) happen.”
Moran hopes his research won’t be considered far-fetched and outlandish in the future, and that someday someone will find a way to explain all of the evidence he and his team have collected.
“I’m naturally a very curious person,” he said.
“I’m looking for answers.”
I'm glad to hear someone is actually trying to teach people that this stuff is real in a formal setting. Any idea if this guy is an Agency or Society member?