183 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
183 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
---------------
|
||
NEWS & COMMENT: KLASS AT ASU
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
ParaNet Alpha 03/06 -- Philip J. Klass, billed as the world's
|
||
foremost UFO debunker, lectured a small audience at Arizona State
|
||
University's Neeb Hall last night.
|
||
|
||
The event was promoted by the Phoenix Skeptics, whose members
|
||
constituted the majority of the audience. Several members of
|
||
ParaNet were also in attendance.
|
||
|
||
Klass was introduced by Skeptic Ron Harvey as "The Sherlock Holmes
|
||
of Ufology," and indeed, his investigative approach is methodical
|
||
and detailed. He is responsible for succesfully debunking some of
|
||
the more mysterious and baffling UFO reports over the past 22
|
||
years.
|
||
|
||
To his credit, Klass began his lecture by debunking the myth that
|
||
all UFO percipients are "kooks and nuts," saying that particular
|
||
attention should be paid to reports made by credible witnesses such
|
||
as pilots, astronomers, and other seasoned observers. He attempted
|
||
to separate himself from those skeptics who would "dismiss all UFO
|
||
reports out of hand."
|
||
|
||
The first half of the lecture was devoted to two famous cases
|
||
which, according to Klass, encapsulated many elements of standard
|
||
UFO sighting reports, mainly nocturnal lights and daylight "disks"
|
||
(something of a misnomer, since all daytime object sightings,
|
||
regardless of shape, are lumped under this category). The cases
|
||
were of a May, 1968 multiple witness report centering on Nashville,
|
||
TN, and a 1969 report of fast-moving daytime objects sighted by
|
||
three sets of jet crews centered around St. Louis. The first case
|
||
turned out to be the re-entry of a Soviet Zond spacecraft, and the
|
||
second, according to Klass, was a bright meteor-fireball, or
|
||
bolide. Klass builds his case for the mundane nature of UFOs
|
||
around these two sightings, because they exemplify many of his
|
||
published "Ufological Principles," such as the fact that a majority
|
||
of witnesses to an event CAN be mistaken in their descriptions; the
|
||
fact that the human mind tends to fill in details that it doesn't
|
||
see but expects, through societal archetypes, to find; and the fact
|
||
that we tend to draw correlations between events where none may
|
||
exist.
|
||
|
||
Extrapolating from these two stereotypical cases, Klass then
|
||
attempted to explain the famous Mansfield/Coyne Helicopter case,
|
||
which won the National Enquirer award for the most baffling UFO
|
||
case of 1973. A slide showing the four primary witnesses receiving
|
||
their National Enquirer checks drew the expected chuckles from some
|
||
members of the audience, who behaved like good little Skeptics and
|
||
snickered appropriately throughout the presentation.
|
||
|
||
The Mansfield case is one of the most oft-told in UFO literature,
|
||
and details can be found in several sources, including two of
|
||
Klass' four books, and a pamphlet available from the Fund for UFO
|
||
Research, so I won't recount it in full here, but briefly, in
|
||
October of 1973, four National Guardsmen flying North near
|
||
Mansfield, OH in a Bell UH-1H helicopter had a nighttime encounter
|
||
with an object which approached them from the east, threatened to
|
||
collide with their chopper, hovered briefly, then flew off to the
|
||
west where it disappeared. During the encounter, the pilot-in-
|
||
command, Capt. (now Col.-ret.) Lawrence Coyne pitched the
|
||
helicopter into an 800 ft. descent; when the encounter was over, he
|
||
found he had actually CLIMBED from 1700 ft above sea level (MSL) to
|
||
3500 ft., and was still climbing at 1000 feet per minute. This
|
||
unintentional climb has been attributed by many to some sort of
|
||
"tractor beam" emanating from the UFO.
|
||
|
||
Making use of his "Ufological principles," Klass proceeded to
|
||
debunk the case as being another bright meteor-fireball. He
|
||
contended that Coyne subconsciously noticed that his descent was
|
||
bringing him close to the ground, and at approx. 400 ft above
|
||
ground level (AGL), brought the collective up and initiated an
|
||
ascent.
|
||
|
||
All four men reported that the interior of the chopper was bathed
|
||
in a green light while the object hovered above them. Klass points
|
||
out that the windows on the top of the Huey are tinted green, and
|
||
that the bright light of the fireball, caused by an envelope of
|
||
ionized air, merely shone through the top windows, causing the
|
||
"green" effect. The other anomalous elements of the report, the
|
||
hovering, the structure, the temporary loss of radio contact with
|
||
area airport towers, Klass dismissed with aplomb.
|
||
|
||
It would be a momentous job of demystification, if it were not for
|
||
a few basic flaws in Klass' main argument, the most challenging
|
||
being the possibility of a bolide of such duration going unnoticed
|
||
by the rest of humanity.
|
||
|
||
Time is a crucial element in this case, for the duration of a
|
||
bolide has an upper limit, as does the rate of climb of a Huey
|
||
helicopter. While it has been demonstrated many times that
|
||
percipients of sudden, extraordinary events have unreliable recall
|
||
of the passage of time, some idea of the duration of the event can
|
||
be gleaned from the fact that the Huey began descending from 2500
|
||
ft. MSL at the start of the event, reached 1700 MSL, then rose to
|
||
3500 MSL just after the event. The lowest amount of time
|
||
acceptable to anyone is 45 seconds; most investigators agree,
|
||
however, that the event lasted at least a minute. But let's take
|
||
the 45 second figure.
|
||
|
||
In order for a bolide to even theoretically last this long, it
|
||
would have to be travelling in the very upper reaches of the
|
||
Earth's atmosphere, where there is little friction to slow down the
|
||
object or affect the arc of its trajectory. Recall that the object
|
||
was first seen in the east, then disappeared on the western
|
||
horizon. We can therefore say that, due to its great altitude and
|
||
the amount of Earth's atmosphere it subtended, it would have to
|
||
have been visible, not just over a large portion of Ohio, but over
|
||
a large portion of the North American continent. As Klass points
|
||
out, the event occured during the height of the Orionid meteor
|
||
shower, at just after 11PM -- a late hour, but not too late for
|
||
avid skywatchers, of which there would surely be a great number.
|
||
Yet NOT A LIVING SOUL REPORTED SEEING A BRIGHT METEOR-FIREBALL on
|
||
that night.
|
||
|
||
When challenged on this point, Klass retorted by asking why no
|
||
credible independent witnesses stepped forward to report a large
|
||
UFO either. (A group of four witnesses DID attest to seeing the
|
||
helicopter/UFO encounter some time later, however, their testimony
|
||
is flawed in some respects, and hence cannot be considered
|
||
reliable.) Ignoring for the moment the perceived unlikelyhood of
|
||
alien spacecraft, it is much easier to believe that such a craft,
|
||
operating at the low altitude of the helicopter over an area which
|
||
Klass himself characterizes as sparsely populated, would go
|
||
unnoticed, whereas a high-altitude bolide would be a spectacle most
|
||
likely observed by thousands.
|
||
|
||
Count forty-five seconds off to yourself, and imagine that, while
|
||
you're counting, a fireball is traversing the night skies. Now
|
||
imagine no one seeing it.
|
||
|
||
Add to all this the fact that very few astronomers and meteor
|
||
experts agree that a bolide event CAN last for that period of time.
|
||
In answer, Klass characteristically trots out an event that
|
||
occurred in 1972 over the Western part of the U.S., which was
|
||
captured on 26 seconds of film, arguing that it had to have lasted
|
||
even longer in order for the photographer to notice it and ready
|
||
her camera. The event (which occurred in broad daylight, over a
|
||
more sparsely populated area of the country, and yet was reported
|
||
by thousands) was characterized by Carl Sagan as something that
|
||
happens "once in a century." Yet Klass has used the "bright
|
||
meteor-fireball" device to explain SEVERAL cases throughout his
|
||
three previous books. How many times can a once-in-a-century event
|
||
occur since 1947?
|
||
|
||
In his book "UFO's: The Public Deceived" (Prometheus 1981), Klass
|
||
states that, since he believes the chopper crew saw SOMETHING
|
||
strange and are not making the whole thing up, the event can only
|
||
be one of two things, a bolide or a real, honest-to-goodness alien
|
||
starship. He begins his argument against the latter on the basis
|
||
of facts and evidence, but when challenged, falls back on theory,
|
||
relying on Science's characterization of alien visits as
|
||
"unlikely." I must ask how one measures such unlikelyhood, absent
|
||
any reference data on such visits. We DO have some idea of the
|
||
unlikelyhood of 45-second bolides, however, and I am here to tell
|
||
you that they are SO unlikely as to put Klass in the position of
|
||
virtually endorsing, by his own words, the ET Hypothesis.
|
||
|
||
In the middle part of the lecture, Klass showed a slide of Dr. J.
|
||
Allen Hynek, widely recognized as the father of scientific ufology.
|
||
Klass strongly implied that Hynek's decision to switch from skeptic
|
||
to proponent on the UFO issue was financially motivated. He
|
||
related that Hynek drew $150 a day as a consultant to Project Blue
|
||
Book; when the Air Force shut down that project, Klass said, Hynek
|
||
changed into a believer and drew up to $2000 for lectures.
|
||
|
||
Klass' implication is nothing short of contemptible. He ignores
|
||
the fact that Hynek's path to advocacy of UFO research began long
|
||
before the end of Blue Book; it can be traced to the aftermath of
|
||
the 1966 Swamp Gas Incident in Dexter, MI. In addition, much of
|
||
Hynek's lecture income was known to have gone back into UFO
|
||
research.
|
||
|
||
Skepticism is a necessity in the badly muddled world of ufology,
|
||
and much of Klass' work has served to define the boundaries and
|
||
goal lines for would-be saucer seekers. But the raison d'etre of
|
||
skepticism is Science, and Klass, who accuses Ufology of having
|
||
none, seems to have forsaken Science in favor of his own myopic
|
||
axe-grinding.
|
||
|
||
-- Jim Speiser
|
||
|