The following is excerpted from an article originally appearing in the
print edition of the News and Advance on November 5, 2006.

November 5, 2006

I'll be back in a minute: I've wandered down a rabbit hole
Darrell Laurant
The News & Advance
Lynchburg, Virginia

Strange and twisted thoughts for a Sunday....

Kipp Teague strikes again. One of the webmasters of a site called "Lynchburg's Little-Known Attractions," Teague has a genius for coming up with people, landmarks and historical events that are just too weird to be real. And with good reason.

Like the ABC Cemetery in Amherst County, where all the graves are in alphabetical order. Or the Dark Vortex of Windsor Hills, the Gilligan's Island Bed & Breakfast at Smith Mountain Lake and Maggs, the headless cat.

Every so often, I'll get a call or e-mail asking me about one of these Kippisms ("I can't seem to find a phone number for the Gilligan's Island Bed & Breakfast, and it really sounds like fun."). I try to let them down gently.

Teague even fooled me once. I was trying to find out more about a Campbell County man who supposedly had suffered from hiccups most of his life until I followed an Internet trail back to "Lynchburg's Little-Known Attractions."

Indeed, pursuing any lead on the Internet is often very much like following Alice's White Rabbit down into his hole.

For example, I received an e-mail this week about a supposed "Church of Spock" in Campbell County. It was posted on a Web site called "Purgatorio" -- "a panoply of evangelical eccentricities, unorthodox oddities and Christian cultural curiosities" -- and even featured a photograph. The picture showed a pleasant looking brick church with the trademark Spock hand-sign painted across one side.

"Founded in 1977," the Web site description read, '"The Spock,' as the church is called, is the world's only Church of Star Trek, a religion centered on the popular 1960s television series featuring the adventures of a crew of interstellar explorers.

"The ideology of the church is centered on the so-called Vulcan philosophy which includes the belief in pure 'logic' and which emphasizes a lifestyle devoid of emotion. A huge stained-glass likeness of the church's namesake is featured in the sanctuary, where churchgoers recite sequences of dialogue from the series and participate in what they call a 'Holy Mind Meld.'

"Many church members wear stick-on pointed ears (mimicking those of the TV character) during services and at other church functions."

I could almost believe in a Church of Spock -- after all, many devotees of the show do seem to regard it in almost a religious way -- but it just wasn't logical, as Spock would say, that there would be one in Campbell County. A friend of mine, Linda Smith, is the commander of the local Star Fleet, the U.S.S. Heimdahl, and she would have told me.

So on a hunch, I went back to "Lynchburg's Little-Known Attractions," and there it was. Blast you with a phaser, Kipp Teague.

...

Laurant writes a weekly column for the Lifestyle section of the News & Advance.