Tuesday, July 3, 2012

STU CON 4



STU CON 4

Los Angeles' Largest Gathering of Ghost Hunters

Note: This event is not hosted by GHOULA. This is just a local (ghost related) event that exists independently that GHOULA wants its members to know about.

When: August 11 at 12:00pm until August 12 at 1:00am
Where: Mazatlan Theatre
3355 N. Eastern Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90032
Admission: $5.00

There is parking in a nearby public parking lot, Linda Vista Hospital has generously allowed parking in the rear parking lots, where the Ghost Coach Shuttle will shuttle folks from there to the Mazatlan as Scott has arranged, there is also a recreation center two blocks away where parking is available.

$1 to investigate the Mazatlan Theatre

For more info...
http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/325129620897281/

Monday, July 2, 2012

Ghost Art In Burbank



Welcome Foolish Mortals...
to the 3rd Annual Tribute to the Haunted Mansion Group Art Show!

When: On Exhibit Through July 21st
Where: Halloween Town
2921 W. Magnolia Blvd. Burbank, CA 91505
Admission: Free

Current Featured Artists: Rick Baker, William Basso, The Creep, Curioddities,Dienzo, Frank Dietz, Daniel Horne, Hideousboi, Bob Lizarraga, Eric Pigors, Queenie, Dan Szczepanski, Wolfinger, and Zombienose

For more info...
http://www.halloweentownstore.com/page/HS/CTGY/3rd_Annual_Haunted_Mansion_Tribute

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Ghost Lecture @ Machine Project


When: 8pm, June 30, 2012 (Saturday)
Where: Machine Project
1200 D North Alvarado, Los Angeles, CA 90026
Admission: Free

Haunted Geographies of L.A.
A lecture by Rob Sullivan

The ghosts of the past and the traces of history are inscribed on the streets of L.A., conjuring images of shattered dreams and grotesque crimes. The hills and flats of this city are haunted with acts of infamous criminality as well as the anonymous remains of the banality of lives spent in total obscurity. Starting with one of the city’s most notorious crimes – the kidnapping and murder of Marion Parker in 1927 by William Edward Hickman, we explore the ways in which specters haunt Los Angeles.

How far do you have to go to get to the “past”? A series of three lectures explores the notion that you needn’t go very far at all. Under the umbrella of archeology of the contemporary past, Justin Walsh (Chapman University), Annie Danis, and Rob Sullivan (UCLA) will discuss how archeology and geography can help us explore the materials and meaning of people still alive (or still dead as the case may be) today. Surveying the site of the US’s 1969 moon landing, excavating the trash heap of an early 70s hippie commune, and analyzing the ghost geographies of Los Angeles are new windows into a past you already think you know.