If the creepy legends passed down by decades of students at Drew University are true, then nearly every building on the campus of this New Jersey college could be occupied by legions of ghosts. The caretakers of Drew U's online archives encourage students and alumni to submit their own ghost stories via a dedicated link. The first entry is the chilling article "Guess Who's Sleeping in Your Attic?" written by Lisa Spits and originally published in Acorn magazine over thirty years ago. “[T]here are certain buildings you won't walk in to by yourself,” said a '83 Drew graduate. “[Y]ou couldn't pay me to go in by myself.” Photo: Jim Henderson The article collects tales of Drew U hauntings that go back to the early 19th century, and include alleged hauntings by the school's founder Roxanna Mead Drew, who is said to haunt her namesake building, Mead Hall (shown above...
- 2/13/2014
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
By Piet Levy
Religion News Service
Seattle (Rns) Jim Henderson has a pitch for Hollywood: "The 700 Club" meets "Real Time with Bill Maher" meets "Big Brother."
Henderson, a 63-year-old self-proclaimed failed Christian pastor and "spiritual anthropologist" living in Seattle, believes he may have found his real spiritual calling in reality TV, and has turned to YouTube to drum up interest in his idea.
From his experiences creating and running Off The Map, a 12-year-old organization that produces events exposing Christians to non-Christians (it has even paid outsiders to critique Christian churches and purchased the soul of an atheist on eBay in exchange for his assessments of church services), Henderson has developed a potential TV show called "Save Me!" that would put passionate believers of different faiths under one roof.
"Every day they go out individually and independent of each other to try and save people, and then they come...
Religion News Service
Seattle (Rns) Jim Henderson has a pitch for Hollywood: "The 700 Club" meets "Real Time with Bill Maher" meets "Big Brother."
Henderson, a 63-year-old self-proclaimed failed Christian pastor and "spiritual anthropologist" living in Seattle, believes he may have found his real spiritual calling in reality TV, and has turned to YouTube to drum up interest in his idea.
From his experiences creating and running Off The Map, a 12-year-old organization that produces events exposing Christians to non-Christians (it has even paid outsiders to critique Christian churches and purchased the soul of an atheist on eBay in exchange for his assessments of church services), Henderson has developed a potential TV show called "Save Me!" that would put passionate believers of different faiths under one roof.
"Every day they go out individually and independent of each other to try and save people, and then they come...
- 9/10/2011
- by Jahnabi Barooah
- Huffington Post
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