Lisa Lee Harp Waugh will attempt to astral project her living spirit form on Halloween
This Halloween, Lisa Lee Harp Waugh, who is often referred to as the "Great America Necromancer", will attempt to astral project her living spirit form to those who conduct a séance and call her to them. She's working with paranormal groups, psychics and mediums around the world who will attempt this challenging paranormal experiment. Usually during a séance the people holding the event attempt to call up the spirits of the deceased. Never before has anyone attempted to call up the astral projected spirit of a living person...
Ghostbusters: are military bases haunted?
Military bases appear to be a popular haunt for wandering spirits, with several attracting the attention of ghost hunters seeking evidence of paranormal activity. The Atlantic Paranormal Society (TAPS) in January checked out reports of unexplained phenomena-mysterious footsteps, voices and apparitions-in three buildings at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio for the Sci Fi Channel show Ghost Hunters. Some base personnel have reported seeing the ghost of a blond-haired boy in building 219; others claim to have spotted the apparition of an elderly woman in building 70...
Ghosts of Eureka Springs draw crowds
Ken Fugate and Carroll Heath are mediums. No, not shirt size. They're clairvoyants. They talk to ghosts. Specifically, the two communicate with the spirits that roam the halls of the 1886 Crescent Hotel and Spa, which is billed as America's "most haunted hotel," making it a dandy place to spend Halloween or any other dark and stormy night...
Ghost lusters: If you want to see a specter badly enough, will you?
Most scientists dismiss the vast majority of ghost sightings as hoaxes. But researchers in Canada, England and elsewhere are exploring what happens in the brain to create the illusion that something is "haunted." So far, they have found evidence that some apparitions may be brain benders caused by spiking EMFs (electromagnetic fields), and possibly even extremely low-frequency sound waves (known as infrasound) so subtle that the ear does not register them as noise...
Haunted businesses: Putting your ghost to work
Objects moving by themselves, disembodied voices, ghostly apparitions -- who you gonna call? Forget the 'Ghostbusters.' We called a paranormal investigator and a marketing expert to find out how these haunted businesses can put their ghosts to work...
Recent Central Illinois giant bird sighting rings familiar
Sunday, October 26 was, to say the least, a blustery day here in central Illinois. In these conditions, sometimes you don't know what will be carried in or out by these currents. On that evening, I was contacted by Tom Sheets, a long time, avid outdoorsman and a gentleman who has worked as a land surveyor for the past forty years. He related the following sighting to me from earlier that day...
When cemetery could be your next-door neighbor
It's been 10 years since Mike and Beth De Coss moved into their home that backs up to Oak Mount Cemetery in Healdsburg. They weren't afraid of ghosts and goblins then, and nothing has happened to change their minds...
Dark curses, friendly ghosts abound on the South Shore
Step into the upstairs bedroom in the Isaac Winslow House at the right time, and you may feel a sudden draft of cold air, making your neck hair tingle. For those who believe in the paranormal spirit world, you're in the presence of Penelope Winslow, the wife of a 17th-century Colonial governor and the mother of the judge who built the house in 1699...
The sacred side of spooky
Spooky nights at the cemetery...Next Friday, no one will be surprised to see ghosts and goblins on the loose. But for some Americans, ghosts, along with extraterrestrials, Bigfoot and Unidentified Flying Objects aren't the stuff of seasonal sightings or tabloid teasers. They're real -- as real as a resurrected Jesus and a devious Satan are to millions...
'The haunting' at Caledonia Wine Cottage
Pepper Carpenter didn't believe in ghosts before she bought the Caledonia Wine Cottage. She was a skeptic who thought it was all in a person's imagination. That's all changed for the former school teacher from St. Louis. Several unexplainable events that have taken place at the historic landmark have now made Carpenter a believer...

