MONTREAL - We were sitting in a Montreal hotel room that could only be described as disheveled -- covers strewn across the bed, towels on the floor, half-empty coffee cups on the table -- when there was a knock on the door.
No chambermaid. No bellman. Just two middle-aged women wearing meek smiles.
"Is this the room?" the first woman asked.
"We're staying in the hotel," stammered the other. "And we just wanted to see. ... "
"Come on in," I said, stepping back to allow two strangers into our sanctum.
So it goes when you're living in the lap of history: Room 1742 of Montreal's Fairmont Queen Elizabeth Hotel, where, in 1969, Beatle John Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono, spent an eight-day "Bed-in for Peace" to protest the Vietnam War.
In this hotel room, the long-haired newlyweds wore white, conducted countless media interviews and received visitors such as Timothy Leary and Dick Gregory before recording the cacophonous anthem, "Give Peace a Chance," with the help of some 50 packed-in revelers.
The luxury hotel is making the most of the 40th anniversary, with a "Bed-in for Peace" package available through the end of the year in Room 1742, now known as the John Lennon and Yoko Ono Suite.