American Schools of Witchcraft and Wizardry

Angie angiebebb at hotmail.com
Sat Oct 6 02:23:42 UTC 2001


No: HPFGUIDX 27218

--- In HPforGrownups at y..., "Milz" <absinthe at m...> wrote:
> --- In HPforGrownups at y..., "Joy M" <joym999 at a...> wrote:
> 
> >   Long Island is > If a school exists in the tri-state area, I 
think that the school 
> should be in Westport, Connecticut. Why Westport? Because it's 
within 
> commuting distance to NYC. But more importantly that's the city 
where 
> 1164 Morning Glory Circle is located. What's so special about 1164 
> Morning Glory Circle, you say? That's the address of the very 
famous 
> American witch, Samantha Stephens, her Muggle husband Darrin, and 
> their children, Tabitha and Adam. 
> 
> For the Mid-Western School, I pick Athens, Ohio. Athens is a hot-
bed 
> of paranormal activity, everything from Indian burial grounds, 
Civil 
> War ghosts, cults and the really weird locations of the cemeteries. 
> And it's not too well-known either.
> http://www.athenslegends.org/cemetaries.html

     I think I'll come out of the closet.  If this falls flat, blame 
my new status.  Anyway. . .  I don't see why the site of an American 
wizarding school would have to be a place known for sightings of 
ghosts and such.  I'm no expert, but London, where (tentatively) 
Diagon Alley seems to reside, isn't what one immediately associates 
with magic.  At least, not that I've ever heard.  I don't have a 
quess as to where it actually DOES reside, but that's just my opinion 
on the places known for strange happenings.  Even I can poke holes in 
my own theory, like you certainly aren't going to be able to control 
alll the magical mistakes, but I'll just shut up now.  
     
     -Catta





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