as Harry Houdini, was born in 1874 in Budapest. He came with his family to the United States when his father was appointed rabbi of the Jewish con- gregation in Appleton, Wis. aurie Jacobson couldn't not committed suicide, and asked Houdini took his last name in honor of French help but notice the smell. for a sign to prove it. magician Robert-Houdin, and adapted his first She had gone to a "tiny That's when the horrible smell name from "Eri" to "Harry." and rather seedy hotel in started. The consummate magician, Houdini had tricks Los Angeles." Built in the 1930s, it Ghosts, Ms. Jacobson explains, that ranged from undoing seemingly fail-safe locks had provided a temporary home to often are connected with the sense to escaping from underground burial. He became many of the Big Bands playing at of smell. Sometimes they leave a the highest-paid performer of his day. the nearby Palladium in the 1930s delicate trail of perfume. Houdini died Oct. 31, and '40s. Author, TV producer and Holly- 1926, in Detroit. Since then, In 1933, a double for wood historian Laurie Jacobson be- author Dennis Hauck actor Harry Langdon came interested in ghosts while writes, Houdini's ghost has killed himself in the researching her first book Holly- been reported at his former basement of the hotel. wood Heartbreak, , a 70-year his- mansion at 2398 Laurel Or SO the story went. tory of Hollywood told through 31 Canyon Blvd. in Hollywood For years, strange lives of the city's builders. goings-on had been re- Hills, Calif. It's an eerie, "Hollywood is filled with mys- ported at teries and tragedies, and often desolate site that burnt the hotel. ghost stories are attached to vic- down 50 years ago. Houdi- Laurie when she tims of violent crime," she says. Jacobson: ni's ghost is said to make its Searching for Ms. Jacobson followed literally spirits in appearance in the garden was re- searchi HollYwood ng hundreds of rumors of ghosts and on a staircase, all that her new throughout Hollywood for her book. remains of the old mansion. book, Hollywood Haunted, Ms. Ja- She brought psychics along while Houdini also apparently has come back from cobson went there with a psychic. researching, and made it a point the dead to visit his apartment in New York City. The psychic felt sure the man had "never to take one person's word" The brownstone, today a private residence, is at 278 W. 113th St. No one has heard him crooning, but the ghost of folk ghost has been reported on the balcony, stairway and singer Phil Ochs has been seen from time to time in an office" at the site. around 60 Mercer St. in Manhattan, the site of his for- mer restaurant, Breezin'. Ochs was part of the famed family of newspaper publishers. Julius Ochs (1826-1888) was a Bavarian immigrant whose sons, Adolph, George and Milton, rose to prominence as newspaper editors and pub- hicago's most famous ghost is probably Al lishers. Capone. But visitors in search of spirits in In the 1970s, Phil Ochs opened Breezin', a West In- the Windy City may also want to make a dies restaurant, in a building constructed in the 1880s stop at the Jewish Waldheim Cemetery in that had formerly served as a bank and Western Union North Riverside. Author Dennis Hauck reports that office. He operated the restaurant until he committed the ghost of a 1920s flapper has been seen at the ceme- suicide in 1976. tery gates. According to author Dennis Hauck, Ochs' "passive In England, a friendly Jewish ghost is said to haunt cent Of A Ghost . . . on a ghost sighting. A native of St. Louis, Ms. Jacob- son said she believe,s ghosts make their appearance for a reason, It may be unfinished business; or per their spirits haven't found their way to the world beyond; or they may be here to protect loved ones. And then there's the:case ofOzzie Nelson. Also featured in Hollywood Haunted, Mr. Nelson's ghost re- portedly roams his former haunts because he simply didn't want to take that train to the great beyond. "He wasn't ready to leave," Ms. Jacobson says. "And so he stays." To order Hollywood Haunted, contact Angel City Press at 1- 800-949-8039. Books will be shipped in October. . Here, There and Everywhere c: the Lyric Theater on Shaftesbury Av- enue in London. Her name is Nellie Klute, and author Terence Whitaker, writing in Haunted England: Royal Sharon Tate: A warning from Paul Bern? Spirits, Castle Ghosts, Phantom Coaches and Wailing Ghouls, de- Nellie's spirit delighted guests with stories about scribes her as "a sprightly, elderly behind-the-scenes theater life in the early part of the woman" both "chirpy and forthright." NS- She had worked selling programs in century (she died in a raid during World War I),. Mr. C/1 Whitaker said. Later, "two theatrical members.of the* : several London theaters. group checked all the . details Nellie had Oven them. UZ.t (N and found they were all correct." The Grand Opera House in Meridian: An appearance by Sarah Bernhardt? Ghost hunter and author Lorraine Warren has en- CD countered two Jewish ghosts. She met up with one several years ago. The trouble < started in church. Mrs. Warren began to feel uneasy, nn then looked up to see her priest's eyes filled with tears. ad