Author Topic: Ghosts  (Read 2159 times)

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Ghosts
« on: September 16, 2008, 11:12:54 PM »

Offline BigAlTheFuture

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Do you guys believe in them? Seen one? Scariest ghost story you've ever heard?

My uncle told me something about he went to a haunted school back in junior high and whenever he went to the bathroom he would hear some weird noises and when he's walking in the hallways by himself he would hear footsteps behind him. Don't believe him at all or do I believe in ghosts, but I may be wrong. You never know.

Yes, I'm very bored.

EDIT: Just went on Youtube to search up some good videos. Now, I have goosebumps.
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Re: Ghosts
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2008, 11:25:03 PM »

Offline Redz

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The restaurant I worked at in Hingham supposedly was haunted, but I never had any direct contact with any ghosts.  I used to have to close the place up at night by myself, and enough people, who I gave some level of credit to, had spoken of having some ghostly experiences there that I was definitely a little spooked.  To the extent that I was feeling spooked at the prospect of there being a ghost, I guess I believe in the possibility of their existence.  But I think without any direct first hand contact I'll never fully believe, no.
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Re: Ghosts
« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2008, 11:26:52 PM »

Offline cordobes

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Only on these ones:


Quote
Earlier, near the end of the third period, the poltergeists who inhabit the dark, spooky recesses of the Garden had worked their mischief on two of the Pistons' top guns, Adrian Dantley and Vinnie Johnson. They had met head-on in a violent collision under the Detroit basket. Dantley was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital with a concussion (he was released on Sunday), while Johnson, suffering from a sore neck, didn't play the final seven minutes.

But now, as Boston's Danny Ainge released a three-pointer with a little more than four minutes left, the poltergeists really got into the flow. Ainge's shot missed, but Larry Bird got the rebound. Bird tried a three-pointer that missed, but Kevin McHale retrieved. Bird tried another shot, and McHale got it back. Then McHale misfired on a driving jumper, but Robert Parish, who played 42 courageous minutes on a badly sprained ankle, came up with the rebound. It was crazy, improbable, illogical. No, it was simply Boston Garden in a seventh game. Parish's shot underneath, the fifth of the sequence, was swatted away by Detroit's Dennis Rodman. And the poltergeists swatted it back to Bird. Then to Ainge, to Dennis Johnson, back to Bird, over to Ainge, still in three-point range. "By the time I got it back, I was rested," said Ainge.

He let it fly, and this time it swished—one minute and five seconds after his first attempt. Not only did it give the Celtics a lead—102-99—they never lost, with 3:06 left, but it also served surrealistic notice that the Pistons simply were not going to win an Eastern title in Boston Garden.

http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1066079/index.htm