95 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
95 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
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SUBJECT: ECLECTIC VIEWPOINT FILE: UFO3288
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Abduction by aliens isn't anything this group would scoff at
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03/26/93
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THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS
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Does the idea of crop circles make your head spin? Does the
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thought of UFOs give you vertigo? Do rumors of Martian pyramids send
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you into orbit?
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Then the Eclectic Viewpoint isn't for you. The Dallas group,
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whose newsletter has about 200 subscribers, is a "forum for
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extraordinary science, unusual phenomena and diverse viewpoints.'
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Things your average-folk-taking-the-same-route-to-work-every-day
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would consider, well, WEIRD.
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Among the topics listed on Eclectic director Cheyenne Turner's
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business card: free energy, alternative medicine, antigravity,
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extraterrestrial abductions, radionics, anomalous phenomena, unusual
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archaeological finds, crop circles, age reversal theories -- all of
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which are explored monthly by lecturers whose specialty is making the
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incredible credible.
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Saturday, the speaker is Tracy Torme, screenwriter of the film
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Fire in the Sky, the "true story' of an Arizona logger abducted by
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aliens. Since its March 12 release, the movie has drawn the wrath of
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a strange-stories watchdog, the Committee for Scientific
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Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal, and caused controversy
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over what the label "nonfiction' really means.
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But perhaps most disturbing to the public are the reasons such a
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film might exist. Presented as a quasi-documentary, the movie
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explores reports not just of UFO sightings (those have become small
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potatoes by now) but extraterrestrial abductions the likes of which
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were depicted in last year's miniseries Intruders (script also by Mr.
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Torme).
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What's going on? Eclectic Viewpoint wants to know. And Tracy
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Torme -- a writer with sci-fi taste buds -- wants to know. He began
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asking the question almost 15 years ago after reading Bud Hopkins'
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book Missing Time.
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"There's something going on, something physical and very real,'
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Mr. Torme says via phone from Los Angeles. "I tend to be pretty
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cautious about what it really is, what the purpose behind it is, and
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I think with the subject of UFOs in general, it's very important to
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maintain a healthy skepticism, to separate the wheat from the
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chaff.'
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With that mind-set, he will address Dallas listeners. The
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lecture -- the only "UFO lecture' Mr. Torme plans to give during the
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film's promotion -- is strictly designed to broaden people's
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perspectives.
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"I'm going to try to make it clear . . . that I'm not some kind
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of UFO lecturer,' he says. "I'm really just there to talk about the
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movie, the phenomenon and some of the reactions we've been getting.'
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"Now, 18 years later,' the writer says, "you see that image on
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beer commercials and camera commercials. They even abducted Gumby on
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a cartoon. . . . That image has become part of the American
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consciousness. And I think part of the reason that has happened is
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just the weight of the number of people who claim to have seen these
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beings.'
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Yet Mr. Torme, who has also written for Star Trek -- The Next
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Generation, doesn't exactly call himself a believer. "The movie is about
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a missing person's case, where someone disappeared for five days and the
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police felt murder was involved -- that's the true story. . . . As far as
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where Travis went and whether these guys were telling the truth, we don't
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say that's 100 percent the truth.'
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In this way, Mr. Torme differs from the Eclectic Viewpoint's
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previous speakers. Past guests are steadfast believers in their
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respective phenomena, and many are authors, military officials or
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scientists.
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Recent guests
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Last year, the Eclectic Viewpoint hosted Arlington-based
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archaeologist and divinity scholar Vendyl Jones -- "the real Indiana
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Jones' -- and David Fasold, who claims to have discovered Noah's ark
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in Turkey.
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Other speakers have included Robert Groden, one of the world's
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leading photographic experts on the Kennedy assassination; British
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astronomer and former IBM employee George Wingfield, who is director
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of research at the Centre for Crop Circle Studies in England;
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ex-Marine Dannion Brinkley, whose near-death experience landed him on
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The Joan Rivers Show, Oprah Winfrey Show and Larry King Live; and
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Mary Nash Stoddard, head of the Dallas-based Aspartame Consumer
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Safety Network.
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More bizarre topics -- such as the idea that extraterrestrials
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erected pyramids on Mars -- are broached by people who have a
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"scientific background IF POSSIBLE,' says Eclectic Viewpoint director
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Turner.
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*********************************************************************
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* -------->>> THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo <<<------- *
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*********************************************************************
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