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To: Ruffian who wrote (225363)10/22/2007 11:50:22 AM
From: ManyMoose  Respond to of 793955
 
Yup. Humans have always liked being scared.



To: Ruffian who wrote (225363)10/22/2007 3:42:09 PM
From: Snowshoe  Respond to of 793955
 
Daddy, what's a bonfire?...

Health and safety killjoys ban bonfire night - in Guy Fawkes' home town
dailymail.co.uk

Hundreds huddle around virtual bonfire
dailymail.co.uk



To: Ruffian who wrote (225363)10/23/2007 9:46:21 AM
From: goldworldnet  Respond to of 793955
 
Underwater carving contest draws fish
By NICHOLAS SPANGLER
Posted on Sun, Oct. 21, 2007

miamiherald.com

The 10th annual Amoray Dive Resort Underwater Pumpkin Carving Contest was held 37 feet down and five miles off Key Largo before an audience of fish, as is almost always the case.
''They're just inquisitive,'' said Bob Care, a videographer hired to record the proceedings on Saturday. Also, it turns out fish will eat almost anything.

''Try to keep your pumpkin stuff with you, because we are in a marine sanctuary,'' said the dive boat captain, Scott Fowler.

By then the dive boat was at the appointed spot. The contestants -- tattoo artists from Virginia, a retired electrical engineer from Arizona and his retired chemical technician wife, an advertising man from Key Largo and some others -- were listening, but they also were adjusting equipment and sketching designs.

The chief tattooist, Brad Buehrle -- HATE on his right knuckles, a heart over his sternum -- was sketching a skull backlit by tongues of flame.

Then everybody jumped in the water and sank to the bottom, pursued by the videographer.

There are two problems endemic to all underwater pumpkin-carving contests. The first is that pumpkins are naturally buoyant and must be weighted or held firmly by someone with a good grip, which makes carving a two-person job.

The other -- no hindrance to the contest per se, but a major problem as far as spectatorship is concerned -- is that it's absolutely impossible to tell that a pumpkin-carving contest is going on if you're on the surface. There's no sign that anything is going on, except for the bubbles. And sometimes a competitor will surface with a carving injury.

The retired electrical engineer gave one to his wife. It was on her finger, and it was minor. She came up for a Band-Aid and went straight down again.

Judging was back at the dock, performed by Fowler, dive master Dan Betterman and resort owner Amy Slate.

She does not lay sole claim to underwater pumpkin-carving. Improbably, other contests are held in places like Ontario, Wisconsin and Iowa, where in 2003 a man carved a face in a 1,028-pound pumpkin submerged in the water of an abandoned rock quarry.

She does, however, know a good theme when she sees it. She is the mastermind behind underwater Christmas-tree decorating, discontinued because the tinsel kept floating away. She also came up with the underwater Halloween costume party, discontinued because swimming in a costume is as hard as you'd think.

She still conducts underwater weddings, having earned certification as a public notary for just that purpose: 'I have a slate. They just check `I do.' ''

The judges were unanimous, and first prize went to Arizonans Ken and Linda Smith, who carved the only pumpkin to have both fangs and eyeballs. They won a free dive trip for their trouble.

* * *



To: Ruffian who wrote (225363)10/26/2007 3:27:20 PM
From: goldworldnet  Respond to of 793955
 
Poll: One-third believe in ghosts, UFOs
By ALAN FRAM and TREVOR TOMPSON,
Associated Press Writers
Thu Oct 25, 4:22 PM ET

news.yahoo.com

It was bad enough when the TV and lights inexplicably flicked on at night, Misty Conrad says. When her daughter began talking to an unseen girl named Nicole and neighbors said children had been murdered in the house, it was time to move.

Put Conrad, a homemaker from Hampton, Va., firmly in the camp of the 34 percent of people who say they believe in ghosts, according to a pre-Halloween poll by The Associated Press and Ipsos. That's the same proportion who believe in unidentified flying objects — exceeding the 19 percent who accept the existence of spells or witchcraft.

Forty-eight percent believe in extrasensory perception, or ESP. But nearly half of you knew we were about to tell you that, right?

Conrad, now 40, lived in Syracuse, Ind., when her family was scared from the house they rented.

"It kind of creeped you out," she recalled this week. "I needed to get us out."

To put the roughly one-third who believe in ghosts and UFOs in perspective, it's about the same as, in recent AP-Ipsos polls, the 36 percent who said they are baseball fans; the 37 percent who said the U.S. made the right decision to invade Iraq; and the 31 percent who approve of the job President Bush is doing.

A smaller but still substantial 23 percent say they have actually seen a ghost or believe they have been in one's presence, with the most likely candidates for such visits including single people, Catholics and those who never attend religious services. By 31 percent to 18 percent, more liberals than conservatives report seeing a specter.

Those who dismissed the existence of ghosts include Morris Swadener, 66, a Navy retiree from Kingston, Wash.

He says he shot one with his rifle when he was a child.

"I woke up in the middle of the night and saw a white ghost in my closet," he said. "I discovered I'd put a hole in my brand new white shirt. My mother and father were not amused."

Three in 10 have awakened sensing a strange presence in the room. For whatever it says about matrimony, singles are more likely than married people to say so.

Fourteen percent — mostly men and lower-income people — say they have seen a UFO. Among them is Danny Eskanos, 44, an attorney in Palm Harbor, Fla., who says as a Colorado teenager he watched a bright light dart across the sky, making abrupt stops and turns.

"I knew a little about airplanes and helicopters, and it was not that," he said. "It's one of those things that sticks in your mind."

Spells and witchcraft are more readily believed by urban dwellers, minorities and lower-earning people. Those who find credibility in ESP are more likely to be better educated and white — 51 percent of college graduates compared to 37 percent with a high school diploma or less, about the same proportion by which white believers outnumber minorities.

Overall, the 48 percent who accept ESP is less than the 66 percent who gave that answer to a similar 1996 Newsweek question.

One in five say they are at least somewhat superstitious, with young men, minorities, and the less educated more likely to go out of their way to seek luck. Twenty-six percent of urban residents — twice the rate of those from rural areas — said they are superstitious, while single men were more superstitious than unmarried women, 31 percent to 17 percent.

The most admitted-to superstition, by 17 percent, was finding a four-leaf clover. Thirteen percent dread walking under a ladder or the groom seeing his bride before their wedding, while slightly smaller numbers named black cats, breaking mirrors, opening umbrellas indoors, Friday the 13th or the number 13.

Generally, women were more superstitious than men about four-leaf clovers, breaking mirrors or grooms prematurely seeing brides. Democrats were more superstitious than Republicans over opening umbrellas indoors, while liberals were more superstitious than conservatives over four-leaf clovers, grooms seeing brides and umbrellas.

Then there's Jack Van Geldern, a computer programmer from Riverside, Conn. Now 51, Van Geldern is among the five percent who say they have seen a monster in the closet — or in his case, a monster's face he spotted on the wall of his room as a child.

"It was so terrifying I couldn't move," he said. "Needless to say I survived the event and never saw it again."

The poll, conducted Oct. 16-18, involved telephone interviews with 1,013 adults and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

* * *