|  |     Re .0 (Chuck):
    
    Ouija is a form of communication using a planchette on a board with
    letters, numbers, and a few words.  It was developed as a game by
    Parker Brothers more than 60 years ago (the exact date slips my
    mind), and the name is the fusion for two words for "yes,: the French
    "oui" and the German "ja."
    
    The conceptual ancestor of the Ouija Board was the planchette used
    in a form of automatic writing.  Here, the planchette had a writing
    instrument (commonly a pencil, though pens have been used), and
    the subject (or channeler) would place a hand over the planchette,
    and, eyes averted, would let the planchette spell out words.  One
    movie, _Oracle_, shows the use of a planchette in this manner (not
    to be confused with _Witchboard_, which involves a Ouija Board).
                     
    The predecessor to the planchette was "automatic writing," which
    is what it sounds like: the subject (or channeler) has a writing
    implement and, eyes averted, lets his or her hand "write" by itself.
    
    Ouija got a great boost because of the high interest in spiritism
    and seances following World War I, but the original board was
    manufactured to be a parlor game.
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
    
    P.S.:  For more on Ouija, see notes 8, 242, 268, 421, 433, 476,
           and 499.  
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