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Fertilized by belief
Portland Mercury, Aug. 1, 2002
http://www.portlandmercury.com/2002-08-01/feature.html
by Frank Bures
Clyde Lewis Wants to Believe in Crop Circles. But What If the Nothing is Out There?
Clyde Lewis stands in the middle of the crop circle and calls upon the wisdom he has gathered over the years.
“I think this is a typical agroglyph,” he says with the air of an archeologist. “It looks real.”
[...]
That is the professional opinion of the self-described “talk show host/journalist” and Portland’s nearest incarnation of Fox Mulder. On his radio program, “Ground Zero,” he frequently totters between reason and belief while discussing everything from aliens to chupacabras to government mind control, with guests that include everyone “from crackpots to weirdoes.”
Now we will be discussing crop circles.
The flattened wheat is arranged in a complex design that gives an eerie effect and raises strange questions. Is this where the ship landed? Was there a rift in the space-time fabric? Is it some undecoded message from another planet? Or did the new Mel Gibson movie, Signs, give local kids ideas?
[...]
Now, though, he focuses mainly on his radio show, which he started in Utah, and has continued doing since moving to Portland in 1999. He says he was the first one to synchronize The Wizard of Oz and Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon. He was also a Mormon missionary in Argentina, where he met voodoo priests, satanists, witches, communists, and Muslims. The experience blew him open.
[...more...]
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