Sabtu, 30 Oktober 2010

Top 10 Haunted Hotels

Top 10 Haunted Hotels

Mystical orbs, ethereal apparitions, things that go bump in the night. A load of hooey you say? Then check in to one of these 10 haunted hotels and test your tolerance for the paranormal.

By ShermansTravel Editorial Staff

As far as we can tell, ghosts like their hotels. These territorial phantoms stick to their turf and never, ever leave. (They have good taste at least – many of their stomping grounds come with five-star service and an atmosphere to match.) The unbelievable and inexplicable seem almost mundane at these eternally haunted haunts, but we've narrowed down the creepy contenders to those that have the ghost tales and the "evidence" (i.e. paranormal expert backing, documented deaths on the premises) to go with it. Devilish reputations aside, many of these storied American mainstays – Hotel Monteleone and Queen Mary, for instance – embrace their spooks, and even offer ghost tours and ghost-themed events, while others only whisper about their suspected presence. One thing is certain: The legends surrounding these beings and the mysterious circumstances that led to their demise never die.


Beverly Hills Inn
Atlanta, Georgia

Respecting your elders takes on new meaning at Atlanta's Beverly Hills Inn, an 81-year-old Buckhead property now supposedly haunted by the souls of three old ladies. The 18-room neo-classical inn became a bed and breakfast in 1982, but its first stint was as an apartment building for widowed women in 1929. It is the alleged apparitions of those former residents that both the Atlanta Ghost Hunter and Haunt Analyst Georgia Ghost Hunters have caught on tape. Although the images from both investigations are specious (white, cloud-like fog; shadowy, imperceptible blotches; and floating orbs that look like dust particles make up most of the photographic evidence), the audio, on the other hand, evokes chills. The Haunt Analyst investigation in 2007 recorded hoarse voices whispering phrases both ominous (“Get out!”) and encouraging (“Make it happy”).

Book a room on the haunted hotel's third floor, where Haunt Analyst and Atlanta Ghost Hunter collected most of their proof, for a similarly creepy experience, but be prepared. Like many old biddies, these ghouls are kind but spirited: The elderly souls have apparently tucked in respectful guests before bed, but visitors who bad-mouth the dead have seen drinking glasses suddenly smash to pieces. Rooms from $119/night.


Congress Plaza Hotel
Chicago, Illinois

During the prohibition era, Chicago was chockfull of hotels that moonlighted as gangster hideaways, headquarters, and, quite often, grisly crime scenes. Today, one of the few left standing is the Congress Plaza Hotel on Michigan Avenue. Built in 1893 to accommodate visitors to the World’s Fair, this landmark hotel comes with history-ridden public spaces, two towers comprised of 850 guest rooms, and a lot of, shall we say, permanent residents. In the late 20s, the Congress is rumored to have been one of Al Capone’s hangouts (old-timers at the hotel say he played cards here, perhaps with fellow mobster Jake “Greasy Thumb” Guzik who lived at the hotel). Rumored secret escape routes likely stemmed from the original “Peacock Alley,” an underground marble passageway that was constructed when the hotel was built to connect it with the auditorium building next door. The Congress Plaza may not be as public with their hauntings as some of the other hotels on this list, but we got the after-dark scoop from nighttime security. Johnny D., who has been on the job for 25 years, talks about several incidents (and entities) which he says are very regular occurrences. The staff often sees the ghost of a young boy in the rooms and hallways of the north tower (legend has it that he and his brother were tossed off the roof by their mother before she took her own life and jumped); a few guards refuse to even walk into the Florentine Room (one of the banquet rooms) for fear of a female ghost that whispers in their ears; and, perhaps, most startling, is the mysterious circumstance that surrounds room number 441. Security is called to 441 more than any other room and guests all report seeing the same thing: the shadowy outline of a woman. Rates from $129/night in fall.


Gettysburg Hotel
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

Steps from the Wills House, where President Abraham Lincoln edited his legendary Gettysburg address, and a quarter mile from the infamous battlefield, sits the Civil War-era Gettysburg Hotel. Established in 1797, the historic building lays claim to at least one eternal occupant named Rachel, a civil war nurse who lived at the hotel during the bloody battle. Guests have reported seeing her ghostly figure roaming the halls and in several of the hotel’s 119 rooms. Hotel employees swear that they’ve seen carts move and trays float, and that Rachel can even be spotted rushing up and down the street outside. She prefers to be in the hotel, though, where her hundreds of reported visits have resulted in clothes mysteriously gone missing and drawers left open (some think she is rummaging for medical supplies). Staff often talks of sudden drafts and drops in temperature which both indicate a passing spirit. Along with Rachel, there have been reports of another female ghost at the haunted hotel. This lady wears fancy period garb and is seen dancing in the hotel’s ballroom. Gettysburg is reported to be one of the top three most haunted cities in America by Haunted Tours America, and, certainly the Gettysburg Hotel has plenty to do with that ranking. Rates average around $128 for weeknight stays, and $148 for weekend nights.


Hotel Monteleone
New Orleans, Louisiana

In the land of voodoo and witchcraft, legends and legendary disasters, it’s no wonder New Orleans – and the state of Louisiana, for that matter – is rife with ghost tales. Hotel Monteleone, a 19th-century hotel in the French Quarter, is a hotbed for paranormal activity – and there’s a string of former hotel guests, employees, and the International Society of Paranormal Research that back it up. Cleatter Landry, who works at the concierge desk, insists “our ghosts are friendly.” Time and again, she has witnessed the doors of hotel restaurant Le Café swing open inexplicably, always around 7pm. Investigations by the ISPR captured on film what appeared to be the spirits of a maintenance man and a waiter opening the doors. Former guest Phyllis Paulsen was staying in a suite on floor 14 (actually floor 13) when the ghost of a young boy in a striped shirt walked up to her bed. Various guests have reported a similar encounter with a young boy, and so the story goes that the child is Maurice, the son of Josephine and Jacques Begere who were killed in a buggy accident while staying at the Monteleone in the late 1800s. Aside from the otherwordly happenings at this haunted hotel, the grand dame offers plenty of old-world charm: gilded paneling, chandeliers, and soaring ceilings. But, be forewarned, of its 600 guest rooms and 55 suites, those found on floor 14 (really 13) are where most of the ethereal action occurs. Request a “historic haunts” self-guided iPod tour (free) at check-in for a lay of the lore. Fall rates start from $149/night.


Manresa Castle
Port Townsend, Washington

Built in 1892 in the palatial Prussian style of the owner’s heritage, the Manresa Castle remains beautifully preserved in a Victorian seaport town in Washington (about two hours from Seattle). The Jesuit order occupied the castle in 1927 and used it as a training college until 1968 when it was converted to a hotel. The castle is supposedly home to two distinct spirits that reside on the third floor. The first is the ghost of a Jesuit priest, who hung himself in the tower attic. Guests staying in room 302, located directly below the site of the priest’s demise, report hearing footsteps, a man crying, the clanking of chains, and the sound of a straining rope above. One guest even reported awakening in the night to see a dark figure in a hooded robe standing over his bed. The second frequently sighted ghost is that of Kate, a young woman who once stayed as a guest in the castle . . . and never really left. After hearing news that her lover was lost at sea, she threw herself out of room 306. Visitors at the haunted hotel today claim to see the translucent image of a woman wearing period clothing sitting at the window and staring out to sea, while others have awoken in the middle of the night to see the shape of a woman walking around the room. Room rates from $109/night.


Myrtles Plantation
St. Francisville, Louisiana

Among the swampy lowlands and bayous of Louisiana’s West Feliciana Parish, set beneath tall, arching oak trees, rests Myrtles Plantation – allegedly the most haunted hotel in America, so say the owners. Guests who wish to experience southern hospitality, antebellum décor, and, potentially, a spine-chilling spook-fest should visit the 11-room St. Francisville plantation (about 30 minutes north of Baton Rouge). The house was built in 1796 supposedly on Tunica Indian burial grounds and the ghost of a naked Indian girl is an apparition seen by guests today.

The most famous haunting, although, resulted from a multi-murder tragedy in 1817. The legend goes something like this: Then owner Judge Clark Woodruff had an affair with his house slave (named Cleo or Chloe), found her snooping on his private conversations and cut off her ear (she forever after wore a green turban to hide her scar). Cleo, enraged, poisoned the eldest daughter’s birthday cake killing the judge’s wife and two children. Soon after Cleo herself was murdered and tossed into the Mississippi (by whom is uncertain). Today, guests claim to see her wandering the plantation in her green turban and have awoken to see her face staring at them from beside the bed. Also look out for haunted objects, including a piano that mysteriously plays a single chord and a mirror that appears clean but in photos often reveals handprints, smudges, and faces. If you’re hoping to meet one of the eternally lost souls at the plantation, be sure to book a room in the original main house (garden units weren’t added until the 80s when the house became an inn, though some say those rooms are just as haunted). Rates start from $115/night.


Queen Mary
Long Beach, California

Ever been on a vacation that you wished just wouldn’t end? Then you might just sympathize with the spooky stowaways who opted to stay aboard Cunard’s legendary RMS Queen Mary long after their cruise was over. The retired luxury ocean liner served as pleasure cruiser for society’s elite from the 1930s to ’60s – and did a brief stint as a World War II transport ship (when she was perhaps aptly dubbed the Grey Ghost) – before permanently docking in California’s Long Beach port and converting to a floating hotel in 1972. Some of the purported guest ghouls stem from among the 55 onboard deaths that were reported during the ship’s history, including those of Jackie, a young girl who may have drowned in the swimming pool, and John Pedder, a teenage crewman who was crushed alive by a watertight door in the engine room (both ghosts appear in the areas where they were killed). The haunted hotel far from shies away from its paranormal connection: In fact, after a slew of psychics deemed it one of America’s most haunted locations (some have pinned as many as 200 apparitions to the ship’s manifest), they’ve embraced it, offering numerous ghost-related gatherings every year: Autumn sees the GhostFest Expo unfold (a multiday consortium led by paranormal investigators), while 18 nights in October are dedicated the Queen Mary’s Dark Harbor event, which features five mazes and general Halloween-inspired fun. Year-round, visitors can sign up for regularly scheduled paranormal-themed tours; some employ special effects and even ghost-hunting apparatuses for amplified thrills and chills. Or, bunk down if you dare in one of the 314 staterooms. Rates start at $149/night.


Stanley Hotel
Estes Park, Colorado

The spectacular Rocky Mountain peaks surrounding this famous Colorado hotel steal the spotlight by day, but after dark the place crawls with the spirits and ghouls that inspired Stephen King to write The Shining. The haunted hotel hosts mostly happy spirits, as the mountain retreat was once a vacation destination for many of these lingering souls, but that doesn’t detract from the estate’s creepiness. A room on the paranormally buzzing fourth floor practically guarantees a frightful getaway. A little boy in room 418 playfully switches water faucets on and off. Bitter Lord Dunraven, the estate’s original owner (who was forced out of proprietorship, making way for new owner F.O. Stanley who opened the hotel in 1909), holds court in room 401, the estate’s most haunted (and second-most requested) room, but by far the most chill-inducing suite is room 217, the very place where King penned The Shining. Ghost-busting visitors can enlist the help of the on-site paranormal expert, who will outfit them with spirit-hunting equipment and provide access to hotel grounds only open to guests. If spending a night thwarting ghoulish shenanigans sounds too frightful, opt for one of the hotel’s daily ghost tours ($15 per person; available from 10am–5pm, reservations are required), which explore the property’s most notoriously spooky spots. Room rates from $119/night.


The Driskill
Austin, Texas

Cattle Baron Colonel Jesse Driskill opened his luxe namesake hotel in downtown Austin in 1886, and by 1887 its first resident ghost had moved in. As the story goes, a visiting senator’s daughter chased a ball down the hotel’s grand staircase and tragically tumbled to her death. All signs indicate that the daughter hasn’t left: Eerie peals of laughter and the gentle rhythm of a bouncing ball can be heard in the lobby, the ladies restroom, and on the stairs that lead to the mezzanine. Today, she has plenty of partners for playing catch, as a gaggle of ghosts occupy the building, among them a Houston woman who fled to the Driskill after her fiancé cancelled their wedding in the 1990s. Armed with her ex’s credit card, the rejected bride consoled herself with retail therapy before committing suicide two days later in room 29, where a female figure toting shopping bags is sometimes seen. Guests needn’t even stay in one of the haunted hotel's 189 rooms for a thrill as some say big band music sometimes mysteriously bellows from the lobby, where rowdy ghouls dressed in tuxes and gowns are thought to throw an eternal party. Rates from $279/night.


Three Chimneys Inn
Durham, New Hampshire

The oldest hotel on our list (and one of the oldest buildings in New Hampshire), with the original structure dating back to 1649, is the Three Chimneys Inn, tucked away in oft snow-cloaked Durham, just a 10-minute drive from the University of New Hampshire. They say the haunting of the Three Chimneys Inn is another tale of a young life taken too soon. The house was built by Valentine Hill, a local entrepreneur and mill owner. His granddaughter, Hannah, is said to have drowned in the nearby Oyster River. Not long after her tragic death did local townspeople start reporting ghostly sightings of a young girl bearing an eerie resemblance to Hannah by the river and the house. The home’s current incarnation is that of a bustling, quaint inn (it was transformed only recently in 1998). Employees at the inn have also experienced their fair share of inexplicable sounds and sightings. One night, innkeeper Karen Meyer and a waiter at the inn’s ffrost Sawyer Tavern saw an empty glass on an empty table float six inches into the air before crashing down onto the ground. Legends aside, the now cheery inn comes with 23 rooms in the main house and adjoining carriage house, all of which are furnished with old-style mahogany furniture and antique artwork (as well as modern touches like free Wi-Fi). Open year-round; prices start at $149/night in fall.


http://travel.yahoo.com/p-interests-36436907

30 easy DIY Halloween costume ideas

30 easy DIY Halloween costume ideas

Boy (6-7) wearing skeleton costume, portrait (Photo by Stockbyte)


While putting together a Halloween costume can be tons of fun, it can also be creatively challenging and tough on your wallet, especially if you’re trying to outfit multiple family members for the holiday. So, to take the stress out of trick-or-treat planning, read on for a re-cap of 30 easy-to-assemble ideas, many of which are comprised entirely of goods that you probably already have lurking around the house. And if you’ve any thoughts to add to this list, by all means chime in here!

1. Baby: PJs, pacifier, teddy bear

2. Fall: Brown sweatshirt, safety pins, autumnal-looking leaves

3. Biker: Black leather, white tee, bandana, sunglasses

4. Candy Cane: white clothes, red (and/or green) duct tape

5. Charlie Brown: yellow tee, black marker or fabric paint (for zig zag stripes on the tee), black pants

6. Present: Cardboard box (that’s big enough for you to fit into!), wrapping paper, ribbons/bows

7. Where’s Waldo: Red and white striped tee, beanie, eye glasses, jeans

8. Cotton Candy: White clothes, pink tulle, safety pins

9. Ghost: White sheet (plus cutouts for your eyes)

[Photos:Vintage images of 'ghosts']

10. Dalmation: White clothes, black felt/fabric/paper, safety pins

11. Dr. Pepper: Lab coat, peppers, safety pins

12. Old Lady: Old fashioned dress, rolled-down knee-high nylons, large black frame purse

13. Bunch of Grapes: Green or purple clothes, matching balloons, safety pins

14. Static Cling: All black or white clothes; random clothes (socks, briefs, tees) and dryer sheets, safety pins

15. Mummy: White clothes, old white bedsheet you don’t mind tearing into strips or white gauze bandages

16. Nerd: Button down shirt, high waist pants, calculator, glasses, textbooks

17. Rainbow: Grab a group of friends, and each one dresses head-to-toe in one color of the rainbow color

18. Road: Black clothes, white masking tape (for street lines), toy cars, safety pins

19. Jack-O-Lantern: Orange sweatshirt, black tape

20. Tourist: Bright clothing (a Hawaiian floral short is ideal), map, camera around neck

[Photos: Celebs break out Halloween costumes ]

21. Veterinarian: Scrubs, stuffed animals, safety pins

22. Skeleton: Black outfit, white gloves, bones cut out from white contact paper

23. Sherlock Holmes: Trench coat, fedora, magnifying glass

24. Surgeon: Scrubs, lab coat, shower caps (to wear over your shoes)

25. School girl: White button down, plaid skirt, knee socks, hair in pigtails, chewing gum (for blowing bubbles!)

26. Popeye: Sailor cap, peacoat, marker (for drawing on an anchor tattoo on your forearm), and can of spinach

27. Cowboy: Western shirt, jeans, cowboy hat, boots, rope (to make a lasso)

28. Dry cleaning: Plastic dry cleaning bag (just slip it over any outfit)

29. Pirate: Striped shirt, black fabric (to make an eye patch), bandana

30. Bag of Jelly Beans: Clear plastic bag, multi-colored ribbons to slip underneath


Sources: ehow.com; familycrafts.about.com; robinsfyi.com

Related: 12 tips for safe and flawless pumpkin carving

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10 tips for a great jack o' lantern

10 tips for a great jack o' lantern

Jack-o-lanterns (Corbis)

grim reaper pumpkin
(Photo courtesy of LadyDragonFlyCC.)

Most pumpkin-carvers have made a simple jack o’ lantern with triangle eyes and nose plus a jagged smile. But this year, how about something different -- maybe a creative scene etched onto the pumpkin skin or a wicked smile that will scare the trick-or-treaters. You don’t need to spend all October creating a design either, because there are tons of great templates available.

Of course, you want a jack o’ lantern that will last and look sharp on your porch, so don’t carve it too early. A few days before the 31st is ideal, unless you have space in the fridge to store a cut pumpkin. And make sure to preserve the memories with great pictures of your work.

Here are some tips to create an amazing Halloween display this year:

1. Start with the basics: Martha Stewart and Pumpkin Carving 101 have excellent, photo-filled guides for carving a jack o’ lantern.

2. Collect the right tools for a carving fantastic pumpkin. Knives, melon ballers, electric drills, and other hardware can produce elaborate results.

Remember that children should always be supervised around sharp objects.

3. Search for pumpkin-carving patterns on the Web and print out free stencils.

Then transfer your favorite design onto a pumpkin using a nail, following these instructions from ExtremePumpkins.com.

Stencils can help create jack o’ lanterns like the Grim Reaper (above) or this Cheshire cat.

Cheshire cat pumpkin
(Photo courtesy of CodyR.)

4. Making a complex design? Color-code the different parts with dry-erase markers. The colors wipe off easily.

5. Take a look at these unusual jack o’ lanterns for inspiration. A huge creation like this millipede isn’t that hard -- it just requires a lot of pumpkins for the body, one carved pumpkin for the head, and a bunch of carrots for the legs.

milipede pumpkin
(Photo courtesy of Tom Nardone.)

Carve a jack o’ lantern in a simple design, but add some fake worms (plastic or gummy ones) and rice or candy "maggots" to make it look gross and creepy.

wormy pumpkin
(Photo courtesy of Tom Nardone.)

This fairy house pumpkin becomes whimsical because of the window frames and ladder made from twigs.

fairy house pumpkin
(Photo courtesy of Anissa Housley.)

6. Light the lantern creatively. The pumpkin head below is more dramatic with extra candles, and those tiki jack o’ lanterns light up a walkway like flaming torches. Make sure not to leave lighted flames unattended.

pumpkin head
(Photo courtesy of Brian Kong.)

tiki pumpkins
(Photo courtesy of Tom Nardone.)

You can also use strings of battery-powered LEDs, or how about a solar-powered pumpkin?

solar pumpkins
(Photo courtesy of Lenore M. Edman, www.evilmadscientist.com.)

7. Keep the jack o’ lantern's grin from drying out or turning brown by spreading petroleum jelly on the cut edges. Pumpkin Masters recommends spraying or dousing the pumpkin in water mixed with a little bit of bleach to prevent mold.

8. As you carve, don’t throw anything away! The pumpkin seeds, meat, and rinds can all be used.

Toast the seeds, and try some of these nine pumpkin recipes for everything from cheesecake to ravioli.

9. Photograph your masterpiece. To get good nighttime photos with a digital camera, you need to adjust the ISO setting and exposure time. Also, don’t use the flash, take pictures at dusk, and use a tripod.

10. And when the jack o’ lantern has finished its turn on the porch, send it to the compost pile.

Hopefully, these tips will help make your Halloween decor more delightful and frightful this year. Share how you're celebrating the spooky season in the comments below. Happy haunting!

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World's largest cruise liner has a twin

World's largest cruise liner has a twin


The Allure of the SeasAP – The STX Finland shipyard's vessel The Allure of the Seas sails out on Friday Oct. 29, 2010 from the shipyard …

HELSINKI – The second in a pair of the largest cruise liners in the world — an extravagant behemoth spanning nearly four football fields, with a 3-D move theater, an open-air central park and room for 8,300 people — set sail Friday for its new home port in Florida.

The Allure of the Seas, which cruised out of the shipyard in Turku, southwestern Finland where it was built, faces its first big test Saturday, when it must squeeze under a Danish bridge, just one foot (30 centimeters) taller than the ship — even after its telescopic smokestacks are lowered.

The gigantic vessel is the sister ship of the Oasis of the Seas, which was also delivered to Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines last year with a price tag of about $1.5 billion. The Allure of the Seas is in the same price range, said Juha Heikinheimo, managing director of STX Finland, which constructed the vessel.

Like its twin, the Allure of the Seas spans 1,200 feet (360 meters) from bow to stern, and its height from sea level is 236 feet (72 meters). It weighs 600 tons — 12 times more than the Eiffel Tower.

It can accommodate 6,300 passengers and some 2,000 crew, and has dozens of restaurants, cafes and bars along a promenade shopping street that includes a park with living trees and numerous plants. The ship boasts a two-deck high dance hall, a 1,380-seat theater and an ice skating rink, numerous pools, spas, gyms and a rock climbing wall.

It names the Rising Tide Bar as one of its showpieces — an elliptical restaurant platform accommodating 50 customers that ascends and descends a vertical distance of 32 feet (10 meters) between the central park and promenade.

The ship's home port will be Fort Lauderdale in Florida, where it is expected to arrive in a few weeks.

Like the Oasis of the Seas, it is scheduled to pass under the Great Belt Fixed Link off the Danish coast. Last year, the other ship passed below the bridge with less than a 2-foot (half-meter) gap, bridge operators said.

The shipping line said that cruise travel, especially in the United States, had picked up since the global downturn and that their cruise bookings were nearly full.

"Markets have developed well. We are not in the same situation as we were before 2008," said Harri Kulovaara, a deputy director at Royal Caribbean. "Our bookings have been full for a year, down to almost the last berth."

Construction of the Allure of the Sea at STX Finland's Turku yard began in February 2008. The company employs 3,300 people in Finland, of whom 1,100 are currently laid off. More layoffs are expected with no new projects until next autumn when the Turku yard is expected to begin the construction of a passenger ferry.

STX Finland is part of the international STX Europe Group, with shipyards in Brazil, Norway, France, Romania and Vietnam.

_____

Online:

STX site: http://www.stxeurope.com

(This version CORRECTS Updates throughout. Corrects crew number. Adds byline. This story is part of AP's general news and financial services.)

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