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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
Page 103
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
Physiological Effects; November 1957
As in the fall 1954 French sightings, the November 1957
‘flap’’ in the United States brought with it reports of physical and
physiological effects from UFOs. Ona farm in Scotia, Nebraska,
November 3, Roger Groetzinger (10) was milking the cows when
he noticed an oblong object circling low over the barn. He thought
it was a plane about to land, and went outside to the pasture fence
to watch. The object was at low altitude emitting a humming
noise. Suddenly Roger found that he could not move. As the UFO
gained altitude and started moving away, the paralysis left.
When Roger’s mother returned home, she found a thoroughly
frightened son. Where the UFO was seen low above the ground,
heavy fumes lingered in the air,
A week later, Mrs. Leita Kuhn in Madison, Ohio, observed a
brilliant glowing object at close range. The physiological after-
effects of her sighting were fairly serious. Between 1:00 and 2:00
a.m. on the morning of November 10, Mrs. Kuhn had been having
difficulty with an overheating stove in her kennel. It was a dark
night, snowing and windy, and she had to make several trips be-
tween her house and the kennel.
Finally, after she was sure all was well in the kennel, she
shut the door and stepped outside. Suddenly she realized the sky
was very bright. It had stopped snowing.
“I stepped away from the kennel,’’ she told NICAP, ‘‘and there
in back about 60 feet above ground was a huge glowing object. . .
It was phosphorous in color. Base, forty feet wide and nine to
ten feet thick, domelike top. Top seemed brighter than bottom.
I looked the bottom over well. . .’? Exhaust-like clouds were visi-
ble on the left side of the object.
“‘The top was brighter. I couldn’t look at the top. My eyes
burned so I closed them--orange sparks seemed to glow every-
time I closed my eyes. . . The brilliance is beyond descrip-
tion.’’
Becoming frightened, Mrs. Kuhn fled to the house. She looked
out the window and it was dark again. ‘‘I went back outside and
it was gone. There was no noise, no odor. It was 1:55 a.m.’’
Mrs. Kuhn couldn’t sleep, and wondered what to do about the
sighting. UFOs were not supposed to exist; who could she report
it to?
“I decided not to,’”’ she said. ‘‘A few days later I had to see a
doctor. My eyes were troubling me, arash was driving me insane
and I hadn’t slept since November 10. Upon hearing my story,
he advised me to report it. Which I did--thank goodness. The
publicity was tough but through it I met others who have seen
these too.’’
UFO witnesses sometimes need psychological reinforcement.
In the face of repeated official denials that UFOs exist, a person
would begin to doubt his own sanity unless he knew that others had
made similar reports. Mrs. Kuhn was shockedby her experience,
and a little bitter toward those in authority.
Date & Location Type of UFO
8-1-52; Sharonville, Ohio white disc "low"
Distance estimate
‘J surely wish they [the Air Force] would call on me. I’ve
been wanting to tell them I’m mad--clear through. I feel duped
and deceived.’’
Later NICAP contacted Mrs. Kuhn again to inquire about her
health. In a detailed letter which she requested be treated as
confidential, she described in detail what the physiological effects
had been. Although ultra-violet radiation had been suggested as
the cause at one point, the doctors she consulted treated her for
a variety of ailments which had not beenpresent prior to the UFO
sighting. Some were painful and emotionally disturbing, and she
began to fear for her life. In time, the symptoms began to clear
up until, as of her January 1959 letter, her health was returning
and she felt ‘‘rather well.’’
Aside from the physical effects, Mrs. Kuhn experienced several
psychological problems. Local civil defense officials treated
her report seriously, but why did the government deny the existence
of UFOs? .Some friends rebuffed her, curiosity seekers plagued
her. Getting no satisfactory explanation from government or
scientific authorities, she sought an answer among UFO believers.
In the process, she encountered the inevitable crackpots who took
every light in the sky to be a space ship bearing noble beings.
She was repelled by their attitude toward UFOs, and felt they
only obscured the truth.
Mrs. Kuhn seemed to be an intelligent and level-headed
woman who was shocked and disturbed by an experience so
immediate that it caused her to lose confidence in officialdom.
She now feels it: is urgent that the truth about UFOs be made
public so that others may be prepared psychologically where
she was not. At last report, she had given up her kennel to devote
more time to establishing the truth about UFOs.
SOUND
The notion that UFOs are typically silent, unlike piston and jet
aircraft, is true in general. In a surprising number of cases,
however, UFOs have made noises of some kind. This aspect
of the phenomena should be studied carefully in the future, since
it could provide some important clues to the nature of UFOs.
To date, the descriptions of the sounds have been sketchy. This
line of questioning has not been pursued by investigators in as
much detail a's it might have been, probably because of the ‘‘silent
UFO’’stereotype.
Useful information for a study of UFO sounds would include
careful estimations (or measurements when possible) of the dis-
tance of the object from the observer when the sound was heard;
and ideally tape recordings of the actual sound, as well as infor-
mation about the appearance of the UFO and what maneuvers it
was making at the time. Sound detection and amplification
equipment would be required for any complete scientific inves-
tigation.
The following chart is intended only to be descriptive, and to
organize seeming patterns tentatively.
Sound & Maneuvers
crackling, while ascending after level flight
mss 0 I$: i
9-17-54; Nr Rome, Italy top- like
3600-6000 ft.
series of staccato explosions [Section X.]
(radar track)
—— --—- ————-.wOqX_“-~ i eee
11-12-54; Oolitic, Ind. white ball
7-29-55; Cincinnati, Ohio
1-27-57; Glendora, Calif. 2 amber discs
greenish glowing
light
8-2-57; Sebago Lake, Maine
11-2-57; Levelland, Texas torpedo-shaped
glowing ball -
first on ground, rose &
hovered, exploded "like shotgun," took off
at high speed
penetrating shrill noise while zig-zagging,
making sharp turns [Section VII.]
hovered, sped away making swishing noise
maneuvered, rapidly at times; hovered 30
minutes, making loud humming noise
rush of wind, "noise like thunder"
sped low over truck
11-5-57; Nr Ringwood, III. luminous ball
shaped like lamp-
shade
11-6157; Dunn, N.C.
11-6-57; Dugger, Ind.
est. 40 ft. diameter;
no description
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : GIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
2000 ft. altitude
1000 ft. altitude
noise "like swishing water"
sharp explosive sound attracted witness;
saw UFO going straight up
hovered, climbed straight up, moved away
horizontally making "whirring" noise
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