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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010003 8
Page 4
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010003-8
FLYING SAUCERS continued
nated her waking life during that week and con:
tinued to plague her with anxiety afterward. But
the dreams themselves stopped abruptly after five
days and never returned. Years later, under Dr:
Simon's hypnosis, she recalled in detail:
She had dreamt she had encountered a
strange roadblock on a lonely New Hampshire
road. A group of men approached the car, and
as soon as they teachéd it, she found herself slip-
ping into unconsciousness. Sheawoke to find her-
self and Barney being taken aboard a wholly
strange craft, where she was given a complete
physical examination by intelligent, humanoid
beings. Barney was taken off down a corridor, ap-
parently for the same purpose. They were assured
that no harm would come to them, and that they
would be released without any conscious memory
of the strange happening. At that point, the
dreams.ended. 7
‘A few weeks after the nightmares ended,
another disturbing incident occurred. The Hills
were driving through the countryside, on a road
ina sparsely populated area. Up ahead, a car par-\
tially blocked the road. A group of people were
standing outside the car, and Barney began to slow
down. Betty felt a sudden, cold wave of fear. She
could not explain it." Barney,” she begged, “Bar-
ney—keep going. Please don't slow down! Keep
going, keep going!” She started to open the car
door, feeling an almost uncontrollableimpulseto
jump out of the car and run.
Without questioning, Barney drove the car
as fast as was practicable. Becty’s panic subsided,
and she recovered her composure. She could not
explain her panic. os
On October 19, 1961, Walter Webb, lec-
turer of the staff of the Hayden Planetarium in
Boston, received a letter from Richard Hall, now
assistant director of the National Investigations
‘Committee on- Aerial Phenomena in Washing-
ton, Webb, a scientific adviser to NICAP, occasion-
ally investigated the more serious and puzzling
UFO reports in the New England area. Hall's
letter included a copy of a letter Betty Hill had
written him. He suggested that Webb might want
to investigate the Hill case.
Webb was not impressed because the case
involved a report of the movement of beings on
a craft. He was extremely skeptical of this type
of sighting. There had been a rash of similar
“sightings” in the past from highly irresponsible
people , none of whom had provided any kind of
rational documentation.
‘Webb drove to Portsmouth on October 21;
1961, with his skeptical attitude unchanged: He
thought it was possible that the Hills might be
seeking publicity, perpetrating a hoax or suffer-
ing from a mental aberration.
His interview with the Hills began. shortly
~ afternoon and continued with only occasional in-
terruptions until after eight that evening. "I was
so amazed, impressed by both the Hills and their
accounts,” Webb said later, “that we skipped
junch and went right through the afternoon and
early evening. During that time, I cross-examined
them together, separately, together, requestioned
them again and again. I tried co make them slip
up somewhere, and I couldn't; I simply couldn't.
Theirs was an iron-clad story.”
At the close of the session, Webb suggested
AB 100K 104-66
to the Hills that they actually drive back over the
trip step by step, to try to pin down the exact spots
where the varied events happened. They agreed. -
Five days later, Webb prepared his report
for NicaP. He reviewed the incident in the-mi-
nutest derail, including compass directions, posi-
tion of the moon and planets, weather and de-
tailed description of the object, including the
sketches the Hills had given him. He concluded
his lengehy report: ‘It is the opinion of this inves-
tigator, after questioning these people-for over
six hours and studying their reactions and person-
alities during that time, that they were telling the
truth, and the incident occurred exactly as re-
ported except for some minor uncertainties and
technicalities that must be tolerated in any such
observation where human judgment is involved
(ie., exact time and length of visibility, apparent
sizes of object and occupants, distance and height
of object, etc.). Although their occupations do
not especially qualify the witnesses as trained sci-
entific observers, I was impressed by their intel-
ligence, apparent honesty and obvious desire to
get at the facts and to underplay the more sensa-
tional aspects of the sighting.””
It wasn’t until after the holidays that the
Hills thought about the suggestion of returning
to the scene of the encounter. In February of
1962, a series of pilgrimages began that were to
continue over many months, in all seasons. They
would drive along Route 3 and along several back
roads branching off the main road. They bickered
about where they might have traveled or on
which of the byways off Route 3 they might have
made-a turn. Nor could they acco i
ordinate length of time it took them to reach
Portsmouth the night of the incident.
The trips were fruitless. Always, the same
curtain of darkness descended for Barney after
the critical moment at Indian Head. Always, the
same veil of darkness obscured Betty's memory
after she hieard the strange series of beeps as they
drove frantically away from Indian Head, with
Barney, apparently in great emotional distress, at
the wheel. Always, there was the blank between
Indian Head and Ashland.
Barney's daily commuting drive from Ports-
mouth to his job in Boston, his night work sched-
ule, the gnawing doubts about the Indian Head
experience, the discomfort of an ulcer all began
to take their toll. His condition was further com-
plicated by the recurrence of elevated blood pres-
sure., Then, another disturbing symptom ap-
peared, contributing to his general distress. In
January of 1962, a series of warts developed in
an almost geometrically perfect circular ring in
the area of his groin.
By the summer of 1962, Barney's exhaus-
tion and general physical illness prompted him
to seek medical aid for his overall condition, en-
tirely aside from the traumatic experience in the
White Mountains. The physician treated him for
elevated blood pressure and ulcers and finally
recommended the possible need for psychiatric
assistance. Barney agreed, and a long process of
therapy began during the summer of 1962, under
Dr. Duncan Stephens, of Exeter, N.H.
At first, the incident at Indian Head was ig-
nored altogether by Barney. Later, he discussed it
with Dr. Stephens, but did not emphasize it. He
felt it was at most only a minof cause of his'anxi-
ety. He concentrated on his, personal emotional
and social problems.
Dr. Stephens indicated to Barney that there
were many unusual and interesting facets to his
case, including the circumstances of Barney's in-
terracial marriage. During the therapy, Barney
bécame more and more aware of the subconscious
ing-foom his being a
Negro, a member of a minority race.
(All through his family background there
was a record of interracial relationships. His
great-grandmother was the daughter of a white
plantation owner. She was raised in the owner's
house and cared for by his sisters, even though she
was legally a slave. When she married, the plan-
tation owner gave her and her husband 250 acres
of land, to be handed down to their children.)
CHAPTER
What happened that September night?
FOR A FULL YEAR, Barney continued with Dr.
Stephens. One day, duging a discussion of hypno-
sis, Dr. Stephens indicated to Barney that simul-
taneous hallucination and simultaneous amnesia
were highly unlikely, although there is a rare psy-
chological phenomenon known as folie a deux,
wherein two people develop a psychotic condi-
tion in which their beliefs and delusions are simi-
lar. This seemed unlikely in the-case of Barney
and Betty Hill's experience, since most of the
conditions for this phenomenon did not seem to
be present in the Hills’ day-to-day relationships as
husband and wife. But Dr. Stephens suggested
that it would be advisableat this point to have the
opinion of Dr. Benjamin Simon, the eminent
Boston psychiatrist and neurologist.
Dr. Simon is a graduate of Stanford Univer-
sity and the Washington University. School of
Medicine. During his psychiatric and neurologi-
cal training, he developed proficiency in tech-
nee se
niques and procedures of hypnosis. In World War
II, he found it a remarkably useful adjunct in the
treatment of military psychiatric disorders, first
as consultant psychiatrist to the General Dispen-
sary in New York, later on a more extensive scale
as Chief of Neuropsychiatry and Executive Offi
cer at Mason General Hospital, the Army's chief
psychiatric center in World War II. When John
Huston directed his outstanding motion-picture
documentary on psychiatric treatment, Let There
Be Light, a¢ Mason General Hospital,-Colonel
Simon served as adviser and personally did the
scenes involving hypnosis and narcosynthesis.
After leaving military service in 1946, Dr.
Simon maintained his interest in these special pro-
cedures, though their place in civilian psychiatric
practice is much more restricted.
On December 14, 1963, Mr. Barney Hill,
accompanied by his wife, arrived to keep his ap-
pointment for consultation. At Mr. Hill's request,
continued on page 53,
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