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by
Nathan Warne
10/30/2003
It was past 10 p.m., and there were only a handful of
people left in the University Heights Community Center,
since it was already past closing time.
The
lights inside the building were still on, which gave some
sense of comfort no one would want to be there alone after
the lights go out. During the day, the center is harmless
enough, alive with classes and activities.
But
don't stay there too late at night.
According
to Stefanie Marshall and her Amateur Ghost Hunters of
Seattle, Tacoma (AGHOST) cohorts, the center is haunted.
AGHOST
is an organization of volunteers who conduct pro-bono
investigations of possible ghost encounters. Its second
anniversary is this Halloween; in two years it will have
grown from a membership of 10 to 60 people. There are
20 active members who conduct investigations, and 40 other
members who participate in meetings and are involved with
the group in other ways.
All
members of the group have jobs or go to school, and they
volunteer their time to do the investigations.
The
important thing to remember, said David Daughty, one member
of the group, is that we are just investigators, not busters.
Mark
Akey, the lead technician for the group, added, If people
want to get rid of a ghost, we can point them to some
other people, and say, These people might be able to help
you out.
Before
an actual investigation, AGHOST conducts a walk-through
of a site a preliminary survey of the premises. Then the
investigation takes place.
Kendra
Demuth, the expedition director and a UW alumna, said,
Except for those who went on the walk-through, investigators
go in cold, which means that they dont have any information
prior to the investigation they dont even know where they
are going.
They
do this to avoid contaminating the investigators and screen
out anyone who might research the site prior to an investigation.
Marshall
attends about 90 percent of AGHOSTs investigations, and
has been to the University Heights location several times.
This
is one of my favorite haunts, she said.
Marshall,
the secretary for AGHOST, led the tour, and told the stories
behind the haunting. While Marshall explained the history
behind the hauntings, Demuth wielded an electronic device
called an electromagnetic field detector, which measures
fluctuations in the Earths electromagnetic field. Two
other members of the group were taking photographs and
recording the tour on a digital video camera.
At
one point, Demuth held up a strange-looking cylindrical
object that flashed different colors.
When
asked what it was, she said, Its a glow-in-the-dark pen.
AGHOST
members thoroughly research the background of a location
to help substantiate and support their other methods of
investigation. The group employs psychics and sensitives
during investigations, but also uses scientific instruments
to obtain objective data.
We
get a lot of our EVPs (electronic voice phenomena) from
[the teachers room], said Marshall. It is one of the more
active rooms.
Investigators
use audio recorders to pick up unexplained auditory events,
or EVP. It is one form of evidence that AGHOST uses to
support its investigations. The investigators use video
cameras, photographs, thermometers, EMF detectors and
a slew of other instruments.
Its
most common evidence is field and video sequences, or
photographs of orbs, small glowing spheres that move around
irregularly.
During
the tour, Akey caught an image of an orb on video; it
looked like a small marble and darted up from the floor
and onto a shelf.
You
can get pictures of orbs and EVPs all you want, Akey said,
but the real incontrovertible proof is a picture of an
apparition.
AGHOST
said that an apparition was reportedly seen in Room 107
of the community center by others, but the group turned
up nothing during its recent investigation. At one point,
though, with a closed and empty building, and no wind,
the door slammed shut by itself.
Other
reports of activity were from the north end of the building,
the opposite end from the teachers room. According to
AGHOSTs psychics, there was a suicide attempt in the bathroom.
Near
that bathroom, Marshall pointed out a locked closet and
relayed a story she had heard from the owner of the center.
A
boy was put in there for punishment, and they forgot about
him over the weekend, Marshall said. When they found him
on Monday, he had suffocated.
Besides
the teachers room, the other major area of activity was
the basement. AGHOST was originally called to the center
when the night watchman heard banging downstairs. When
he went to investigate, he heard more loud banging on
the other side of the boiler-room door.
The
police came and found no one, but the strange activity
continued even after they arrived. There was more banging
and doors slamming, even though no one was there.
The
previous night watchman no longer works at the center,
but Demuth said that he didnt mind the ghostly activity.
Brian
Buncichen, an employee of the center, said, I havent had
any weird experiences; Ive just heard a lot of stories.
But
Ive only been working here since July, he added.
When
other employees were questioned, they denied any direct
experience, but none of them work late into the evening.
The night watchman who works weekends is the one who originally
contacted AGHOST.
This
summer, AGHOST held a conference at the center. The members
were joined by other ghost-hunting organizations from
Oregon, and there were guest speakers on various topics
such as ghosts, spirituality and the paranormal.
This
Halloween, AGHOST will hold a Halloween party at the University
Heights Center, marking its two-year anniversary.
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