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- From: snopes@netcom.com (snopes)
- Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 17:31:03 GMT
- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban,alt.drugs
- Subject: LSD users stare at sun until blinded UL
-
- Responding quickly to a tip offered me two months ago by the keen-
- memoried Mr. Phil Gustafson, I headed out to the library last weekend with my
- lovely and eager research assistant in hand to dig up some dope on the "LSD
- users stare at the sun until blind" UL.
-
- Eschewing my usual method of sitting amidst dusty stacks of magazines
- and reading every page of each issue until turning up some interesting
- tidbits through blind luck, my assistant brazenly reached for the bound
- indices I had already sworn didn't exist and quickly flipped to the 'LSD'
- subject heading. After this awkward but propitious beginning (and the
- heartbreak of finding a few badly-needed pages torn out of their volumes),
- we soon located some useful information, vintage 1967.
-
- First up was a blurb which _The New York Times_ picked up from the
- Associated Press:
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- _The New York Times_ May 19, 1967
-
- Four Students Under LSD
- Hurt Eyes by Sun-Gazing
-
- SANTA BARBARA, Calif. May 18 (AP) -
- The vision of four users of LSD has been
- impaired for life because they stared at
- the sun while under the drug's influence,
- a spokesman for the Santa Barbara Opthal-
- mological Society said today.
- The spokesman said the sungazing resulted
- in the burning of the macula, a small part
- of the cornea, and caused total loss of
- reading vision.
- Four students at the University of Cali-
- fornia campus here and a City College stu-
- dent reportedly sought treatment for eye
- injuries and said they stared at the sun
- while under the influence of the hallucin-
- atory drug. Damage to the fifth student's
- eyes was reported not serious.
- One student said he was "holding a
- religious conversation with the sun."
- Another said he had gazed at the sun "to
- produce visual displays."
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Not much useful information here -- just a date, a place, and a
- basic story, but no names or other confirmatory information. Since
- this story was apparently a Southern California phenomenon, we turned
- to the _Los Angeles Times_ for the same day. They had a much more
- detailed version of the story, which they had covered themselves rather
- than picking up from the wire version:
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- _Los Angeles Times_ May 19, 1967
-
- Four LSD Users Suffer Serious Eye Damage
-
- (Exclusive to The Times from a Staff Writer)
-
- SANTA BARBARA -- Four college students have
- suffered permanent impairment of vision as a
- result of staring at the sun while under the
- influence of LSD, according to a spokesman for
- the Santa Barbara Ophthalmological Society.
- One of the youths told his doctor he was
- "holding a religious conversation with the sun."
- Another said he had gazed at the sun "to
- produce unusual visual displays."
- The students, all males, suffered damage to
- the retina, the sensory membrane which receives
- the image formed by the lens.
- In the same way that a piece of paper will burn
- when bright light is beamed through a magnifying
- glass, a pinhead-size hole was burned into the
- retina of each eye of the students as sunlight
- passed through the lens.
- What this has left the students with is not
- total blindness but a blind spot in the center
- of their vision.
- As a result, the victims have lost their
- reading vision completely and forever, the
- ophthalmological spokesman said.
- "For example, if you wanted to read," he said,
- "you might see all of the corners of the page
- and most of the print -- except you wouldn't be
- able to see that one word you were looking at.
- "If you were to look at a traffic stoplight,
- you might see the pole and trees and cars --
- but you wouldn't see the stoplight itself.
- "That little black hole always moves directly
- where you want to see," he said.
- Solar burns of the retina, the spokesman said,
- are not uncommon, particularly among children
- watching eclipses of the sun. But he knew of no
- previous cases which resulted from someone being
- under the influence of LSD.
- In the cases here, the victims admitted they
- were users of LSD.
- Three of them attend UC Santa Barbara, the
- other goes to Santa Barbara City College. Their
- ages range from 18 to 24.
- The spokesman said it was his impression that
- each of the sun-staring incidents occurred
- separately. He did not know whether the students
- knew each other.
- The four had no awareness of pain or discomfort
- while the sun was burning through the eye tissue,
- the spokesman said. The damage is permanent,
- because tissue so damaged does not regenerate
- itself.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- By now there should be a three-shergold UL alarm going off in the
- firehouse of your mind. Nowhere in this entire article is a single name
- mentioned: the reporter is unidentified ("a Staff Writer"), the information-
- providing "spokesman" is anonymous, none of the students' names is given, nor
- is there any mention of the doctor(s) who presumably treated the alleged
- "victims". All the details of this article are provided by a single source
- -- the unnamed "spokesman for the Santa Barbara Ophthalmological Society".
- We have typically bizarre quotes given to the doctors by the students (e.g.,
- "I was holding a religious conversation with the sun"), yet nary a word from
- any of the doctors themselves. This story is already starting to smell like
- a hoax.
-
- Sure enough, _Time_ magazine picks up the tale in their next issue,
- lumping it in with some other standard LSD horror stories:
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- _Time_ May 26, 1967
-
- More Bad Trips on LSD
-
- Irresponsible users of LSD in Southern
- California, already noted for having tested,
- with fatal results, the notion that they can
- fly from tall buildings, last week added more
- dangers to the list of the drug's effects:
-
- o In Los Angeles, a machinist, aged 29, was
- charged with "driving under the influence of
- LSD" after police said he had run through a
- red light, injured a woman and her daughter
- in another car. He later told police he
- remembered nothing about it.
-
- o At the wheel of a speeding, careening
- truck in downtown Los Angeles, police said
- they found a driver "naked and incoherent"
- on LSD. He insisted he remembered nothing
- about the trip.
-
- o Four Santa Barbara college students lost
- most of their reading vision by looking
- straight at the sun. Under LSD they could
- do this for three or four minutes, hardly
- squinting and feeling no pain, so their
- eyes were wide open to the sun's infra-red
- rays, and the macula, the point of clearest
- vision in the retina, was badly burned.
- There is no effective treatment. Explained
- one boy, "I was holding a religious conver-
- sation with the sun."
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Seems as though everyone just loves that quote about the "religious
- conversation" with the sun.
-
- In an interesting twist, _Newsweek_ doesn't pick up the story until
- several months later, by which time it has mutated into a slightly different
- version:
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- _Newsweek_ January 22, 1968
-
- Darkness at Noon
-
- "It's a real tragedy," Norman M. Yoder of
- Pennsylvania's state welfare department said
- sadly. "And the parents are asking, 'How can
- something like this happen?" It can, and did,
- happen this way. Six young men -- all college
- juniors studying for careers in engineering,
- all "nice kids, not hippies" -- slipped out
- into a woodland clearing a half-mile from their
- campus in western Pennsylvania and tripped out
- on LSD. Then the six nice kids flopped on their
- backs in the grass and, each in a trance roughly
- akin to a fit a catalepsy, gazed unblinking up
- into a blazing springtime sun. Though each had
- sampled LSD at least once before, classmates got
- worried and went looking for them. Six hours
- after the trip began, they found the six kids,
- all still in the clearing -- and all totally,
- permanently and helplessly blind.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The locale has shifted from southern California to western Pennsylvania,
- the number of students has increased from four to six, and the "victims" now
- have not merely damaged their vision but are "totally blind". Plus we have
- some extra bits of morality in this version: these students were "nice kids",
- they were "not hippies", and they were presumably clean-cut "engineering"
- majors. (And no bizarre quotes from these kids, no sir.) In other words,
- watch out: this could happen to YOU (or your children).
-
- A few weeks later, _Newsweek_ prints a letter to the editor taking them to
- task for printing what was apparently known to be a hoax, along with their
- admission that they, like others, ran the story "in good faith":
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- _Newsweek_ January 22, 1968
-
- Letters to the Editor
-
- o In your finest offhand prose you depicted
- the grotesque situation of six young men
- from Pennsylvania going blind under a blazing
- springtime sun while tripping out on LSD. As
- you must be painfully aware by now, the entire
- affair was the ill-conceived hoax of individuals
- who possibly share your zealotry for evoking
- before the public's terror-charged eyes the
- many perils presumably awaiting the hallucino-
- genic traveler. Your eagerness to vilify LSD
- (thereby disregarding its unexplored potential
- for good) betrays a wrong-minded fear of the
- unknown.
-
- CHRISTOPHER BARR
- Denver, Colo.
-
- + In common with the rest of the press,
- _Newsweek_ ran [the story] in good
- faith, and is now glad to set the
- record straight.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- So, what we are left with is an apparent hoax, but no details to indicate
- the who, why, or how behind it. Who pulled this off, why was it done, and
- how was the information disseminated to the press in a believable manner?
- (There is no such organization as the Santa Barbara Ophthalmological Society
- today, if indeed there ever was one.)
-
- We're still trying to obtain more information on this story from the
- sources who printed it, but a 27-year-old trail may not be so easy to follow.
- If anyone has anything to add to this story or can provide some leads to
- track down, we'd be most grateful.
-
- - snopes
-
-
- snopes: Keeper of the list of shows better than pink tofu.
- Ask me about the Auckland Festival of Missions, 18-25 April, 1993.
- I never change my mind; it always works right the first time out.
-
-
-
- From: rich@weeds.xs4all.nl (Richard v.d. Horst)
- Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 17:43:00 PST
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,alt.folklore.urban
- Subject: Re: LSD users stare at sun until blinded UL
-
- snopes@netcom.com (snopes) writes:
-
- > We're still trying to obtain more information on this story from the
- >sources who printed it, but a 27-year-old trail may not be so easy to follow.
- >If anyone has anything to add to this story or can provide some leads to
- >track down, we'd be most grateful.
-
- 'Play Power' by Richard Neville (appeared +-1970 in the UK. I have a Dutch
- translation):
-
- "...Later on the story was shown to be a hoax. A Dr. Yoder from the
- Institute of the Blind in Pennsylvania admitted he had made up the story
- "because I am concerned about the illicit use of LSD and other drugs".
-
- --Richard
-
- ---
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