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witchdoctor
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some ghosts stories from round the worldSPIRITS COME ALIVE AT FLORIDA BEACH PUB
Shea's Corner Pub is imbued with spirits, some say, and not just the drinkable kind. Yet Shea's, which is in a soulless Boynton Beach strip mall by a Domino's and a Dunkin' Donuts, doesn't feel spooky. It's homey, thanks to touches such as dark-green walls with pastoral pictures and comfy chairs by a brick fireplace.
When Shea's was the Red Lion, it was a favorite haunt of local bands. That's when the first reports of spooks surfaced. "I've seen it plenty of times," said Keith Michaud, a singer/songwriter and Red Lion survivor. "Something out of the corner of your eye where, when you turn to look, it's not there. It's an elderly woman. Everybody's seen her."
Lisa Mercado used to run the Red Lion, which was her family's business. One warm May afternoon, the glasses above the bar tinkled, she recalled. Tupperware flew off the kitchen counter, the temperature plunged even though the air conditioning was off, and the Red Lion's doors shook on their hinges. "Two other people witnessed it," she said, including a catering client who didn't buy Mercado's alibi. "She was like, 'That's no fucking delivery truck.' "
Mercado said that she had a priest come to bless the Red Lion and that he was jolted by a blue flash by a mirrored beer sign and spices flying off the shelves.
Jeff Mark, a guitarist who played at the Red Lion with the Unseelie Court and with me in Hunger-Thump, said he never saw ghosts there. In all my drunken rock revels, I never did either. So I hooked up with Florida Ghost Team to try to get to the bottom of this via some high-tech sleuthing. I met them at Shea's on a recent Saturday just before midnight.
Ghost Team founder and director Shaun Jones, a truck company worker by day, was downing a Red Bull while her assistant, Rob Demarest, a private tutor in his other life, unloaded official-looking, silver-hinged black boxes. Soon, two more Ghost Team members arrived: Vickie Burnett, a grade-school teacher, and her 20-year-old son, Keith, who serves in the Army Reserves. All four were dressed in black work shirts and black ball caps. They set up thermometers and infrared cameras. Volunteers all, they worked systematically and meticulously. It was the group's third visit to Shea's.
I hadn't visited there since the Lion roared its last. Things didn't seem to have changed much, although the lighting and music were brighter. Kathy Shea Hatch opened Shea's in May 2006. She agreed with Mercado: The place was haunted. Specifically, she said, it was haunted by Francis and Major, two guys who in life had been Red Lion regulars, and Dorothy, the late mother of Mercado's father-in-law, who supposedly vowed to come back and haunt the bar.
The paranormal goings-on in the kitchen had ceased, according to Hatch. "It's all been out here," she said as she sat on a barstool beneath ivy vines and twinkling lights. A picture had been mysteriously inverted despite the screws that held it right-side-up to the wall, she said. And there was the time a female patron was waiting a long time in the hallway for the restroom.
"I asked her why she was standing there, and she said there was someone in the bathroom." The customer said she'd seen an elderly woman. "I opened the door and there was no one there." Dorothy.
While cover band Phree Bier and Shea's customers cleared out, the Ghost Team gave me a quick orientation. When encountering ghosts, I was told, don't ask them how or when they died because sometimes they don't know they're dead. And don't call them "ghosts." Call them "entities." We killed the lights.
"If you're lucky, you get an apparition or shadow, but most of the time, what you get is orbs," Vickie Burnett said, explaining what we were trying to photograph. "An orb is just energy. Some say it's the spirit collecting the energy around it so it can manifest itself, but you also get orbs coming off computer equipment."
Equipped with flashlights, voice recorders, and digital cameras, Vickie, Demarest, and I went into a dark service hallway where Jones had sensed activity. Jones and Keith Burnett were monitoring a computer from the safety of a back bar. We'd keep in touch with two-way radios.
Sitting cross-legged on the floor, Vickie tried the let's-get-to-know-each-other approach, asking for a sign that "anybody" was there. Ten minutes later, there was a bump.
"If that's you, you're gonna have to do better than that," Vickie said. "Can you knock louder?"
Nothing.
They brought in a black light to serve as a spirit conduit.
Nothing.
Jones radioed: She was sending in Keith. He'd gotten dizzy in the same hallway earlier, she explained, which can be a side effect of contact with entities. And Jones said she sensed an entity who was also a young military man.
"I got that same feeling again," Keith said when he joined us.
I felt dizzy too, but I chalked it up to low blood sugar.
"Is that you?" Vickie said to no one in particular. "Can you please tap on the wall or the ceiling?"
After another half-hour, we switched roles. I was on monitor detail now, charged with recording any strange image I saw, the time I saw it, and which of the four cameras I saw it on.
As I watched, orbs abounded, even in the rooms that were supposedly empty.
Then something in a front room whacked Jones' foot.
It was a loose cable. "That's how you debunk the paranormal," she said, laughing.
It was after 3 a.m. I was hungry.
"I wish the paranormal would bring me a burrito," I said to no one in particular.
Jones wasn't surprised that they hadn't seen more yet. This work is a waiting game, she said. And then they review the data on the recorders and cameras and hard drive, which could take hours to turn up anything.
As the Ghost Team packed up, Hatch served beer.
I returned to Shea's on a Thursday for a few more pints. Amanda Sammarco, a 27-year-old student, and Diorella Donofrio, a 27-year-old receptionist, were wearing sundresses and flip-flops as they sat outside at a plastic table drinking beers. Shea's is a friendly place, they said.
Yes, but had they noticed anything ghostly?
"We've never felt anything," Donofrio said. "They say there's something about the ladies room. I'm always attentive in there."
The ladies were joined by their friend Ryan, who laughed when I asked if he'd noticed anything spectral.
"Not even in the bathroom?" I asked.
"It tingles while doing number one," he said. "I don't know if it was number-one-related, but I wouldn't write it off."
I stayed for a bit after that, figuring I'd give the entities one more chance to spook me. I even lingered in the ladies loo. And no one said boo.
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witchdoctor
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HAUNTED AMUSEMENT PARKHAUNTED AMUSEMENT PARK
PRINCETON, W.Va. (AP) -- Halfway between Princeton and Spanishburg, travelers can see the rusty tower of a Ferris wheel.
The Lake Shawnee Amusement Park was once a summertime retreat for thousands of coalfield families. Now it's better known as a gathering place for the spirits of those who once lived along the Bluestone River.
Lake Shawnee owner Gaylord White worked at the park as a youth and then bought the long-vacant amusement park in 1985.
White reopened it that year, but for only three years.
As he began examining the property, White says Indian artifacts and graves started turning up.
Surveys produced evidence indicating the area may contain as many as 3,000 American Indian burials.
It's now visited because of stories of paranormal activity.
White says that after buying the park, he began sensing the presence of someone riding behind him as he drove a tractor there cutting grass and brush.
He says he has sensed other presences at the park, but such encounters don't make him feel uncomfortable.
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witchdoctor
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THE GHOSTS OF GETTYSBURGTHE GHOSTS OF GETTYSBURG
Catch C.J. Rauch on the streets of Gettysburg, and he might tell you a story.
For about 10 hours a week, the 19-year-old Gettysburg College student from northern New Jersey works as a guide for the Ghosts of Gettysburg ghost tour company.
He said storytelling isn't in his background, but it will probably be in his future.
He's majoring in political science with minors in French and education and plans to be a teacher after he graduates.
So, 10 years from now he might be telling stories in front of a class to explain how the U.S. government works or how to pronounce a word in French, but for now he scares the bejesus out of his customers.
He applied to work for Ghosts of Gettysburg after he spotted an advertisement for the job, he said.
He said he already knew a lot of the stories about his campus, and the company trained him in their stories and tours, but he still felt nervous when he led his first tour - a group of Girl Scouts.
But he loosened up before long.
"Once you start going, you know you know the stories," Rauch said.
He said he can tell when customers enjoyed the tour by watching them after the tour ends. As they walk back to their cars, he said, they peek into alleys.
He said he achieved his favorite ghost-story telling moment in the last week of June.
He had a tour group at the base of the clock tower on the Gettysburg College campus and told them the story of a couple who plunged to their death on that spot.
He checked his watch as he told the story, and held the last phrase - "and they jumped" - to coincide with the clock striking the hour.
"The whole tour jumped," Rauch said. "It was pretty cool."
He takes day-time tours past the same spot, he said, though not for Ghosts of Gettysburg.
When it's not dark enough to tell ghost stories, Rauch works as a tour guide for the college's admissions department.
He said the jobs are similar at their core - bringing people through an area and telling them about it - but that's where the similarities end.
He said the college tours are "more like a conversation." He said he typically works with one family at a time as opposed to a large group, and answers their questions factually.
On ghost tours, he said he has wiggle room, and can gear the stories he tells to what he thinks the group will enjoy.
He said he did this with one group he had trouble with.
The group of middle or elementary school children took a tour on a stormy night, and "for whatever reason, these kids were screeches," he said.
He said they screeched at lightning strikes, and even when a stick snapped under someone's foot.
"It got a little old very quickly," Rauch said.
But he played into the group while they were on the Gettysburg College campus. He told stories that fueled their screeching, until he reached a residential area where he worried about the volume.
So then he quieted them. A chaperone suggested he tell them a story about the hotel they stayed in. He did, he said, and the kids went quiet.
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