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-
- "CRYBABY"
-
- By Philip J. Klass
-
-
-
- Philip J. Klass is a member of the Executive Council, Committee for the
- Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP).
-
-
- [Note: This article, written in 1981, was submitted for
- publication to FATE Magazine, in reply to Dennis Rawlins's
- accusations against CSICOP in his Oct., 1981 FATE article
- "sTARBABY". FATE adamantly refused to publish this article.
- Meanwhile, Rawlins was given the opportunity to make a
- rambling, six-page statement in the SKEPTICAL INQUIRER
- (Winter, 1981-82, p.58), which was published exactly as
- received, presenting his accusations of a "coverup." This
- was in addition to the 5 1/2 page article he earlier had on
- the "Mars Effect" in the Winter, 1979-80 issue (p.26). To
- this day, supporters of the paranormal still charge CSICOP
- with perpetrating a "coverup" on this matter. Only a
- relatively few people ever saw Klass's "CRYBABY", the long
- and detailed answer to Rawlins's "sTARBABY" charges. Now
- that you have the opportunity to read Klass's rebuttal, you
- can make up your own mind.
-
- Klass's original text has been reproduced below, exactly as
- typed, with the author's permission. Spelling and
- punctuation have not been changed. Text that was underlined
- in the original appears in capital letters. -- Robert
- Sheaffer, Bay Area Skeptics, 1991. This article is brought
- to you courtesy of the Bay Area Skeptics' BBS,
- 415-570-0359, from which it is available for downloading,
- although not via FTP.]
-
-
-
-
- "They call themselves the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of
- Claims of the Paranormal. In fact, they are a group of
- would-be-debunkers who bungled their major investigation, falsified the
- results , covered up their errors and gave the boot to a colleague who
- threatened to tell the truth." Thus began a 32-Page article in the
- October 1981 issue of FATE magazine, which a a press release headlined:
- "SCIENTIST BLOWS THE WHISTLE ON PARANORMAL COVERUP."
-
- Since CSICOP was formed in the spring of 1976, it has been a thorn in
- the side of those who promote belief in "psychic phenomena," in
- astrology, UFOs, and similar subjects and it has been criticized sharply
- by FATE whose articles generally cater to those who are eager to
- believe. However, this FATE article was written by skeptic Dennis
- Rawlins, who was one of the original Fellows in CSICOP and for nearly
- four years had been a member of its Executive Council. This would seem
- to give credence to Rawlins' charges -- except to those of us with
- first-hand experience in trying to work with him and who are familiar
- with his modus-operandi.
-
- Because Rawlins proposed my election to CSICOP's Executive Council I
- cannot be charged with animosity toward him, except what he later
- engendered by his actions. And in a recent letter to me, Rawlins
- volunteered that I "was less involved than any other active Councillor"
- in the alleged misdeeds.
-
- The FATE article, entitled "sTARBABY" prompted my own investigation into
- Rawlins' charges. But unlike Rawlins, who relies heavily on his
- recollection of conversations several years earlier, I chose to use hard
- evidence - published articles, memoranda and letters, some of which
- Rawlins cites in his article. When I requested copies of these letters
- and memoranda from the several principals involved, all of them
- responded promptly and fully except for one -- Dennis Rawlins, who had
- accused the others of "cover-up" and "censorship." RAWLINS REFUSED MY
- REPEATED REQUESTS TO SUPPLY HARD DATA THAT MIGHT CONFIRM HIS CHARGES,
- AND WHICH ALSO COULD DENY THEM!
-
- The results of my investigation, based on hard data, prompted me to
- conclude that the Rawlins article should have been entitled "CRYBABY,"
- and that an appropriate subtitle would have been: "A wounded ego is the
- root of much evil."
-
- If the editors of FATE had spent only a few hours reading published
- articles cited in the Rawlins article they could not in good conscience
- have accused CSICOP of "cover-up" or of having "falsified the results."
- Instead, FATE chose to ignore the traditional journalistic practice of
- investigating both sides of a controversial issue and publishing both
- sides, as those accused by Rawlins had done.
-
- Rawlins' charges result from two tests intended to assess whether the
- position of the planet Mars at the time of a person's birth has a
- significant influence on whether he/she becomes a "sports champion."
- This "Mars effect" hypothesis was first proposed by France's Michel
- Gauquelin, who directs the laboratory for the Study of Relations between
- Cosmic and Psychophysiological Rhythms, based on a study of European
- champions.
-
- The first of the two tests was performed by Gauquelin himself, with
- results that generally were supportive of the Mars effect hypothesis by
- eliminating a possible objection that first had been raised by others,
- i,e, not CSICOP. The only way in which CSICOP, or persons affiliated
- with it, could be guilty of Rawlins' charges would be if they had
- refused to publish Gauquelin's results or had intentionally altered the
- data in his report. NEITHER OCCURRED. Nor did Gauquelin accuse CSICOP or
- its members of trying to "cover-up" his results or altering the data of
- this first test whose calculations he himself performed, although there
- were some differences of interpretation of the implication of these
- results.
-
- HOWEVER, GAUQUELIN DID PUBLICLY ACCUSE RAWLINS OF DISTORTION AND
- MISREPRESENTATION, with implied criticism of CSICOP because Rawlins then
- was a member of its Executive Council. There would be other occasions
- when CSICOP would be criticized because of Rawlins' intemperate
- statements and actions.
-
- This criticism was published by CSICOP in the Winter l978 issue of its
- publication, THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER (p. 80). In it Gauquelin wrote:
- "How, in spite of all this data could one distort and misrepresent the
- effect in question and sow doubts on the subject? Dennis Rawlins, a
- member of CSICP ... has done just this in a polemic which appeared in
- the Fall-Winter 1977 issue of that (CSICOP's) journal." In "sTARBABY,"
- Rawlins tries to shift the blame for his transgressions to CSICOP.
-
- According to "sTARBABY," CSICOP Chairman Prof. Paul Kurtz was the
- principal architect of the alleged cover-up. Yet in reality it was
- Kurtz, then editor of THE HUMANIST magazine (published by the American
- Humanist Assn.) who printed the lengthy paper by Gauquelin describing
- the seemingly favorable- for-him results of the first test in the
- Nov/Dec,l977 issue (p. 30). What kind of doubletalk is this when Rawlins
- and FATE charge that Kurtz's decision to publish test results favorable
- to an "adversary" represents a "cover-up"? Rawlins might better have
- waited until "l984" to resort to such "double-speak" accusations.
-
- Because the issues are complex and because two different publications
- and organizations were involved, it is useful to recount briefly the
- events that led to the first Mars effect test, which is at the root of
- the Rawlins/FATE charges, and the second tests performed using data for
- outstanding U.S. athletes. Based on calculations performed by Rawlins
- himself, the U.S. champions test showed a very UNFAVORABLE result for
- the claimed Mars effect, which Rawlins confirms in "sTARBABY." And these
- Rawlins-computed results were published, without change, by CSICOP.
-
- The Sept/Oct. l975 issue of THE HUMANIST carried an article by L.E.
- Jerome that was critical of astrology in general and of the Mars effect
- in particular. When Gauquelin sought an opportunity for rebuttal, Kurtz
- provided it in the Jan./Feb. 1976 issue of THE HUMANIST, which also
- carried several other articles on astrology. Because Gauquelin's article
- claimed that the Mars effect had been confirmed by Belgian Committee for
- the Scientific Investigation of Alleged Paranormal Phenomena (created
- some 25 years earlier), that group also was invited by Kurtz to submit
- an article for publication. Belgian Comite Para, as it is called,
- confirmed Gauquelin's calculations. But it questioned his statistical
- assumption "that the frequency distribution of the hours of birth during
- the day (the nych-themeral curve) is a constant distribution...", i.e.
- that there is an equal probability of a person being born during any
- hour of the day.
-
- This seemed important because the Mars effect hypothesis holds that
- persons born during an approximately two-hour period just after Mars has
- "risen" or during a comparable period after Mars is at upper culmination
- (zenith), are more likely to become sports champions than persons born
- during other hours of the day. If there is an equal probability of a
- person being born in any one of the 24 hours, then 4/24, or l6.7%,of the
- general population should be born when Mars is in one of these two "key
- sectors." (Because of combined orbital motions of Earth and Mars, the
- percentage of the day in which Mars is in two key sectors is
- approximately l7%. But Gauquelin reported that 22% European champions in
- his data base had been born when Mars was in the two key sectors,
- significantly higher than the l7% "benchmark."
-
- Because of the issue raised by Comite' Para, Kurtz consulted statistics
- professor Marvin Zelen who in turn proposed a control test that could
- resolve the statistical issue raised by Comite' Para. This Zelen
- proposed test, also published in the same (Jan./Feb. 1976) issue of THE
- HUMANIST, suggested that Gauquelin should gather birth data for
- "non-champions" who had been born in the same local areas and within
- three days of a RANDOMLY SELECTED sub-sample of Gauquelin's "champions"
- who seemed to show the Mars effect.
-
- If only 17% of these NON-champions were born when Mars was in the two
- key sectors, this would void the issue raised by Comite Para. But if
- roughly 22% of the NON-champions also were born when Mars was in the two
- key sectors, this would undercut the Mars effect hypothesis. Zelen's
- article concluded that the proposed test offered "an objective way for
- unambiguous corroboration or dis-confirmation." In retrospect it would
- have been more precise had he added: "...of the issue raised by Belgian
- Comite Para." If Gauquelin's sample of "champions" data was "biased," as
- Rawlins first suspected, this could not possibly be detected by the
- Zelen-proposed test.
-
- The same issue of The Humanist carried another article, by astronomy
- professor George O. Abell, which was very skeptical of astrology in
- general. But unlike Rawlins who dismissed the Mars effect out-of-hand
- and "didn't believe that it merited serious investigation yet" (FATE: p.
- 74), Abell wrote that if Gauquelin's findings were correct, they were
- "extremely interesting."
-
- However, Abell included the following note of caution: "If all of
- Gauquelin's work is re-checked, and his results hold up, then it is
- necessary to repeat the experiment with a new sample, say in the United
- States. If that sample should give the same result, then further
- verification is in order, until it is absolutely certain that the
- effects are real and reproducible. That is the way science works;
- reproducibility of results is necessary before fundamental new laws can
- be inferred." This sage advice clearly indicated the limits of what
- conclusions could be drawn, and could not be drawn, from the results of
- the upcoming Zelen test, and even from a complete re-check of
- Gauquelin's original data on European champions, which was not
- attempted. It should be stressed that at the time this first (Zelen)
- test was proposed, CSICOP did not yet exist. Several months later, when
- it was formed (initially under the auspices of the American Humanist
- Assn.), Kurtz became its co-chairman and later its chairman. Zelen and
- Abell were named Fellows, but not to CSICOP's Executive Council. In
- l980, Abell was elected to replace Rawlins on the Council.
-
- The results of this first (Zelen) test were published in the Nov./Dec.,
- l977 issue of THE HUMANIST, where the issue first was raised, although
- by this time CSICOP had its own publication. Gauquelin and his wife
- Francoise were given nearly six large-size magazine pages to present
- their findings without censorship. Gauquelin reported having
- difficulties in obtaining data for non- champions born within several
- days of champions in small towns, so he said that non-champions birth
- data had been obtained only from the large cities in France and Belgium,
- The Gauquelins reported that these data showed that only l7% of the non-
- champions had been born when Mars was in the two sectors which seemed to
- resolve the issue earlier raised by Belgium's Comite Para in favor of
- the Mars effect.
-
- The same issue of THE HUMANIST carried an article jointly authored by
- Zelen, Kurtz, and Abell, that began: "Is there a 'Mars Effect'? The
- preceding article by Michel and Francoise Gauquelin discusses the
- experiment proposed by Marvin Zelen and its subsequent outcome. Their
- conclusions come out in favor of the existence of a 'Mars effect'
- related to sports champions. It is the purpose of this article to
- discuss the analysis of the data and to point out the strengths and
- weaknesses of the evidence in favor of the 'Mars effect.'"
-
- The Zelen/Kurtz/Abell article raised some questions about the results.
- For example, that "the 'Mars effect' only appears in Paris, not in
- Belgium or in the rest of France." The article concluded: "lf one had a
- high prior 'belief' that there is a Mars effect, then the Gauquelin data
- would serve confirm this prior belief. In the other hand, if the prior
- belief in the existence of a Mars effect was low, then this data may
- raise the posterior belief, but not enough to accept the existence of
- the Mars effect."
-
- Rawlins charges that publication of this article, following the
- uncensored Gauquelin paper,"commited CSICOP to a cover-up." (FATE: p.76)
- Yet is characteristic of scientific controversy for one party to
- question or challenge another's interpretation of the data. And
- Gauquelin would do so following the second test without being accused of
- a "cover-up" in "sTARBABY."
-
- In the same issue of THE HUMANIST, in a brief introduction written by
- Kurtz, the first "linkage" with CSICOP occurred. Kurtz wrote: "Thus,
- members of CSICP involved in this inquiry believe that the claim that
- there is a statistical relationship between the position of Mars at the
- time of birth of individuals and the incidence of sports champions among
- them has not been established ... to further the cause of scientific
- inquiry, the committee has agreed (with Gauquelin) to make an
- independent test of the alleged Mars effect by a study of sports
- champions in the United States."
-
- In "sTARBABY," Rawlins charges that the U. S, champions test was a
- "diversion." Clearly the Gauquelins themselves did not view it in this
- light, judging from the concluding statement in their article which
- said: "Let us hope that these positive results may induce other
- scientists to study whether this effect, discovered with the European
- data, appears also with the U.S. data."
-
- On March 28, 1978, SEVERAL MONTHS AFTER THE RESULTS OF THE FIRST TEST
- WERE PUBLISHED, Rawlins sent Kurtz a copy of a three- page memorandum he
- had prepared a year earlier (March 29, 1977). It contained a very
- technical analysis of the issue raised by Comite Para, which prompted
- Rawlins to conclude that the 22% figure reported for European champions
- was not the result of a disproportionate share of births of the general
- population during the early morning hours when Mars often was in one of
- the two key sectors. In this analysis, Rawlins concluded that Gauquelin
- had "made fair allowance for the effect."
-
- But Rawlins had not written this three-page memo until several month
- AFTER the Zelen test had been proposed in THE HUMANIST. Shortly after
- preparing the analysis, Rawlins had sent a copy to Prof. Marcello
- Truzzi, then editor of CSICOP's publication. Truzzi had decided not to
- publish it but sent a copy to Gauquelin. IF the Rawlins analysis of 1977
- took account of all possible demographic factors -- and there is some
- disagreement on this question -- it was much too technical to be
- understood by persons without expertise in statistics and celestial
- mechanics.
-
- When Rawlins finally got around to sending this analysis to Kurtz on
- March 28, 1978, his letter of that date did NOT criticize Truzzi or
- CSICOP for not having published it earlier. Rather, Rawlins admitted, "I
- should not have kept my (Mar. 19, 1977) memo..private after all." He did
- suggest that perhaps it might now be published in THE HUMANIST. But by
- this time Kurtz no longer was its editor. More important, the results of
- the first (Zelen) test already had been published several months
- earlier.
-
- If, as Rawlins would later charge in"sTARBABY," the Zelen/Kurtz/Abell
- article published several months earlier in THE HUMANIST amounted to a
- "cover- up," Rawlins did not make such an accusation to Kurtz when he
- wrote him April 6, 1978. Instead, Rawlins wrote; "I think our best bets
- now are 1. The main European investigation might seek to discover how
- the Eur. samp (of Gauquelin) was (hypothetically) fudged -- check orig.
- records microscopically for some sort of Soal trick. 2. Proceed with the
- U.S, test, where we know we have a clean (unbiased) sample."
-
- This April 6, 1978, letter clearly shows that while Rawlins suspected
- that Gauquelin had manipulated his European champions data ("Soal
- trick") he found no evidence of wrong-doing by Zelen/Kurtz/Abell. On
- April 26, 1978, in another letter to Kurtz, following his visit with
- Rawlins in San Diego, Rawlins wrote that he "was certain" that
- Gauquelin's original data "was biased, but not sure how." Rawlins
- concluded this letter on a cordial note: "Now, wasn't it great visiting
- sunny, funny, California -- and getting to see a real live nut religion
- launch itself in San Diego? ... hope you'll get back this way soon
- again."
-
- It was at about this time that CSICOP came under fire for Rawlins'
- actions in another matter. In the summer of 1977, Rawlins and Abell had
- been invited to be panelists in a symposium on astrology to be held
- March 18, 1978 at the University of Toronto at which Gauquelin, among
- others, would participate. The invitation came from Dr. Howard Eisenberg
- on the stationary of the University's School of Continuing Studies. Both
- Rawlins and Abel had accepted. Then, in late September, 1977, Eisenberg
- withdrew the invitations on the grounds that "the response from
- potential speakers...has yielded an incredible acceptance rate of 100%.
- This places us in the embarassing position of not being able to sponsor
- all of you," i.e. pay travel expenses and allow formal presentations.
-
- On Feb. 6, 1978, Rawlins wrote to the president of the University of
- Toronto, protesting what he said were "a number of oddities" associated
- with the symposium, including an imbalance between the number of
- astrology supporters and skeptics. The Rawlins letter charged that "this
- conference looks to be a pretty phoney confrontation, which will
- therefore give the irrational pseudo-science of astrology an
- evidentially-unmerited 'academic' boost in public credibility..."
- Rawlins sent a copy of his letter to another university official.
-
- Rawlins' suspicion of a loaded panel may have been justified. But the
- letter of protest was written on CSICOP stationery and signed "Dennis
- Rawlins, Executive Council, CSICOP." Another regretable action was a
- Rawlins telephone call late at night to a university astronomy
- professor, Robert Garrison, which gave the impression that Rawlins was
- speaking in behalf of CSICOP. In fact, Rawlins had taken these actions
- without consulting other Council members and without official approval
- to use CSICOP's name. In early April 1978, a copy of the Rawlins letter
- had reached Truzzi, who also had been invited and dis-invited to
- participate in the conference. The Rawlins letter claimed that Truzzi
- had co-authored "an astrology-supporting paper...and so rates as a
- strange sort of skeptic." Truzzi sent Kurtz a copy of this Rawlins
- letter with a note that said: "Since Dennis' letter is on Committee
- stationery, would appear he is writing on behalf of the Committee, I
- trust that will not happen again."
-
- Rawlins' actions were reported in the Canadian magazine SCIENCE FORUM
- July/August 1978, in an article written by Lydia Dotto. The article,
- entitled "Science Confronts 'Pseudo- Science'", began; "It was after
- midnight on a Saturday night when University of Toronto astronomer Bob
- Garrison was awakened by a phone call. The caller identified himself as
- a member of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of
- the Paranormal, and according to Garrison, he spent the best part of the
- next hour urging the U of T scientist not to participate in the
- conference on astrology...Dennis Rawlins, a California astronomer and
- science writer and a member of the Committee, acknowledged in an
- interview that he made the call, but denied he was trying to talk
- Garrison out of attending the conference...this and other incidents
- surrounding the conference have become something of a cause celebre,
- particularly since the event was cancelled shortly before it was to have
- taken place in mid-March. Predictably, ACCUSATIONS BEGAN TO FLY THAT
- SCIENTIFIC OPPONENTS OF ASTROLOGY WERE ENGAGED IN A CAMPAIGN TO SUPPRESS
- FREEDOM OF SPEECH." (Emphasis added.)
-
- Indeed they did, much to CSICOP's embarassment. Britain's New Scientist
- magazine, in its June 29, 1978, issue, quoted the Canadian magazine in
- an article that began: "Earlier this year an astronomer at the
- University of Toronto, Dr. Bob Garrison, was awakened by a phone call
- from a member of Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of
- the Paranormal. The caller allegedly spent most of the next hour trying
- to dissuade Garrison from taking part in a conference on astrology."
-
- This New Scientist account was picked up by FATE magazine, which in turn
- attributed the action to CSICOP rather than to one Council member. FATE
- commented: "If you have difficulty understanding their (CSICOP) motives,
- remember that here is a dedicated group of witch-hunters seeking to burn
- nonbelievers at the stake." (How ironic that FATE now is promoting the
- views of the same person whose intemperate earlier actions had provoked
- FATE's harsh criticism.) The same criticism of CSICOP, because of
- Rawlins' actions surfaced again in a feature article in THE WASHINGTON
- POST (Aug. 26, 1979). The article, syndicated and published elsewhere,
- was written by Ted Rockwell who was identified as a member of the
- Parapsychological Association.
-
- When I learned of the Rawlins incident, I was shocked as were others on
- the Council. But all of us hoped that Council members had learned an
- important lesson from the incident and that it would have a maturing
- effect on Rawlins. Yet before another year had passed Rawlins would once
- again demonstrate his inability to distinguish between official CSICOP
- actions and those of its individual members.
-
- Originally it was expected that the required calculations of Mars'
- position at the time of birth of U.S. champions (for the second test)
- would be performed by Prof. Owen Gingerich of Harvard University. But
- during the summer of 1978 the Harvard astronomer was on an extended
- leave so Kurtz asked Rawlins to perform the celestial mechanics
- computations. Rawlins did so and found in sharp contrast to Gauquelin's
- findings that 22% of the European champions were born when Mars was in
- the two key sectors, and compared to the "chance" benchmark figure of
- 17%, only 13.5% of the U.S. champions were born when Mars was in the two
- key sectors. Thus, Rawlins' calculations showed that if Mars had any
- effect on champions, it was a pronounced NEGATIVE effect for U.S.
- athletes.
-
- On Sept, 18, 1978, Rawlins prepared a four-page report describing the
- procedures he had used in his calculations and a summary of the results.
- But Rawlins could not resist including some denigrating charges against
- Gauquelin. For example: "Gauquelin was well known in his teens for his
- casting of horoscopes (a practice he has since disowned)..." The
- comments were both gratuitous and inappropriate.
-
- Relations between Rawlins and Gauquelin had been strained since CSICOP
- published a long, rambling Rawlins attack (Fall/Winter 1977) in which he
- accused Gauquelin of "misgraphing the results of the Belgian Comite Para
- check on his Mars-athletes link..." Gauquelin had responded with the
- charge that Rawlins had distorted and misrepresented the facts in a
- letter which then was scheduled to be published shortly in the Winter
- 1978 issue of THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER. The same issue also would carry a
- sharp rejoinder from Rawlins.
-
- Thus it is hardly surprising that Kurtz decided that it would be best if
- the upcoming summary report on the results of the U.S. champions test
- should be written by Zelen, Abell and himself -- especially since the
- three of them had jointly authored the earlier article and Abell had
- proposed the U.S. test. If Kurtz instead had suggested that the U.S.
- champions test report be jointly authored with Rawlins instead of Abell,
- "sTARBABY" might never have been published. This is evident from
- numerous Rawlins complaints in"sTARBABY." For example, Rawlins complains
- that the day after Kurtz received his Sept. 18, 1978, report (with the
- ad hominem attack on Gauquelin) "Kurtz wrote Abell to suggest KZA
- (Kurtz, Zelen and Abell) confer and prepare the test report for
- publication (EXCLUDING ME)." (Emphasis added.) (P.79.)
-
- Rawlins also complains that Kurtz asked Zelen and Abell "to verify the
- work," i.e. Rawlins' calculations. (P.80.) Because of the importance of
- test, it was good scientific protocol to ask other specialists to at
- least spot-check Rawlins' computations. Then Rawlins reveals he was
- angered because "Abell asked countless questions about my academic
- training." (P. 8O.) Inasmuch as Rawlins lists his academic training as
- being in physics rather than astronomy, Abell's questions seem
- justified.
-
- Further evidence of Rawlins' wounded ego is his complaint that "not only
- was Abell being invited to the press conference (at the upcoming Council
- in Washington, D.C.), he was to be the CSICOP spokesman on astrology in
- Washington." (P.81) Rawlins said he "strongly protested the
- high-handedness of the choice of Abell as the speaker at the annual
- meeting...I emphasized that CSICOP had plenty of astronomers associated
- with it (Carl Sagan, Bart Bok, Edwin Krupp and others), all of them
- nearer Washington than Abell who lived all the way across the country,
- in the Los Angeles area." (In fact, Krupp also lived in Southern
- California, Bok lived Arizona, and Sagan then was working in California
- on his "Cosmos" television series.)
-
- In "sTARBABY," Rawlins claims that Abell had been invited to speak
- because "Kurtz was trying to suppress my dissenting report (of Sept. 18,
- 1978) and (by not paying my travel fare) to keep me from the December
- Council meeting while inviting to Washington as a prominent CSICOP
- authority the very person whose appointed task I HAD MYSELF PERFORMED"
- (his italics, p. 81). In reality, there was no question that Rawlins'
- Sept, 18, 1978, report, describing his analytical procedures, needed to
- be published. The only question was whether it should include the ad
- hominem attack on Gauquelin.
-
- It was not until approximately one year AFTER the results of the Zelen
- test were published in THE HUMANIST that Rawlins first charged the use
- of "bait-and-switch" tactics--what he calls "BS"--had been employed.
- This allegation was contained in his letter of Nov. 2, 1978, to Zelen,
- with a copy to Kurtz. BUT RAWLINS STILL DID NOT CHARGE THAT THIS
- AMOUNTED TO A "COVER-UP," OR THAT CSICOP WAS INVOLVED. Quite the
- opposite. A few weeks later when the Winter 1978 issue of THE SKEPTICAL
- INQUIRER was published, there was a Rawlins response which said: "It
- SHOULD BE CLEARLY UNDERSTOOD THAT CSICP AS A BODY NEVER HAD ANYTHING TO
- DO WITH THE HUMANIST ZELEN TEST 'CHALLENGE'...PUBLISHED BEFORE THE
- COMMITTEE WAS FOUNDED"(Emphasis added.)
-
- Like most members of CSICOP's Executive Council who had not been
- involved either in the first (Zelen) test or the subsequent U.S.
- champions test, and who were not sufficiently expert in celestial
- mechanics, statistics or astrology to take a prior interest, my first
- exposure to the controversy came during the Council meeting in
- Washington in early December, 1978, when Rawlins unleashed a rambling
- harrangue. Understandably I was confused by Rawlins' charge that CSICOP
- somehow was involved in a Zelen test-results cover-up that had occurred
- more than a year before which contradicted his just-published statement
- in THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER stating that the original Zelen test was NOT a
- CSICOP-sponsored effort.
-
- Despite my efforts to understand Rawlins' allegations, it was not clear
- to me (and to many other Council members) just what it was that he now
- was claiming had been"covered-up." After three years of working with
- Rawlins I was well aware of his proclivity for making harsh, exaggerated
- charges. Most often these were directed against supporters of the
- para-normal, but sometimes also against Council members who disagreed
- with his proposals for intemperate actions against "the believers." For
- example, Rawlins had charged that Truzzi was involved with the "Church
- of Satan."
-
- Beyond having difficulty in understanding the specifics of Rawlins'
- charges, I failed to grasp what he thought should be done to correct the
- alleged problem. Because the hour was getting late and Council members
- had to leave to catch flights back home, I suggested to Rawlins that he
- write a memorandum that clearly and concisely set forth the basic issues
- and that he recommend appropriate corrective action. In this way Council
- members could better comprehend the matter and consider corrective
- action if such were justified. Rawlins cites this in "sTARBABY" and
- claims he was the only party who had put the issues in writing. BUT HE
- DID NOT SEND COPIES OF SUCH MEMORANDA TO COUNCIL MEMBERS. ONE LOGICAL
- EXPLANATION FOR THIS IS THAT PREVIOUSLY HE DID NOT BELIEVE THE MATTER
- INVOLVED CSICOP OR REQUIRED COUNCIL MEMBERS' ATTENTION.
-
- Rawlins was the last one to leave my apartment (where we had been
- meeting that night) and he continued his earlier harrangue but without
- clarifying the issues. Later, he called me from the airport to continue
- the discussion. Again I asked that he clarify the issues for me and
- other Council members by preparing a memorandum. I assured Rawlins that
- since I had not been involved in either of the two tests and since he
- had recommended my election to Council, he could expect me to be at
- least neutral if not sympathetic.
-
- Rawlins never responded to my request. About six weeks later (Jan. 17,
- 1979), he did circulate a five-page memo to CSICOP Fellows and Council
- members. It was a "baby sTARBABY" which cited a number of ALLEGED
- mistakes that had been made by OTHERS involved in the tests and in
- CSICOP's operations. I replied on Jan. 31 saying that his memo was "for
- me an unintelligible jumble." I added: "without meaning to give offense
- to a friend, I once again urge you -- as I did at our meeting here -- to
- outline the problem...then outline your recommendations. And please do
- not assume, as you have done, that all of us follow the G-affair as
- closely as you have done." My letter concluded: "Skip the
- invective...outline the problem clearly, concisely, and offer your
- recommendations."
-
- Rawlins never responded to this request. Today, following my recent
- investigation, I know why. There was no cover-up, except in Rawlins'
- troubled mind, fed by the fires of a wounded ego and, perhaps, by
- embarassment over his unauthorized intervention in the University of
- Toronto symposium. Rawlins was unable to recommend specific corrective
- action because nothing could have saved his wounded ego unless it were
- possible to turn back the clock and to have invited Rawlins to be the
- CSICOP speaker on astrology in Washington and to replace Abell in
- writing the report on the results of the U.S. champions test.
-
- Readers of "sTARBABY" might easily conclude that Rawlins believes that
- Zelen/Kurtz/Abell, in the Nov/Dec. 1977 issue of THE HUMANIST, should
- have conceded "Gauquelin has won" and cancelled plans for the U.S.
- champions test. Yet had they done so, Rawlins would have been outraged
- because such a concession would imply that the Zelen test had proved the
- Mars effect beyond all doubt and this was not true. Had
- Zelen/Kurtz/Abell even contemplated such a concession, I am certain that
- Rawlins would have urged that they be ousted from CSICOP.
-
- "sTARBABY" reveals that Rawlins imagines many things that simply are not
- true, such as his charge that I was involved in a plot to suppress his
- discussions of the Gauquelin test at the 1978 Council meeting. His
- article implies that Council meetings are characterized by attempts to
- suppress dissenting views. In reality one usually hears almost as many
- different viewpoints as there are Council members present. And Kurtz is
- the most unconstraining group chairman I have ever known in the many
- organizations of which I have been a member.
-
- Even on easily ascertainable matters, Rawlins chooses to rely on his
- vivid imagination or recollections rather than take time to check the
- facts. For example, in "sTARBABY," Rawlins claims that he was an
- "associate editor" of THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, as well as being a member
- of its editorial board -- which he was [not]. Rawlins makes that claim
- in seven different places in his article. One would expect that a person
- who imagines himself to be an associate editor of a publication over a
- period of several years would at least once look at that publication's
- masthead, where its editorial staff is listed. Had Rawlins done so he
- would not have made this spurious claim.
-
- This is not an error of great consequence. But when I pointed it out to
- him, his response was revealing, especially because he accuses others of
- being unwilling to admit to error and of resorting to "cover-up."
- Rawlins' letter of Sept. 21, 1981, explained that at a Council meeting
- HELD FOUR YEARS EARLIER he remembers that "Kurtz called all Ed. Board
- members 'Associate Editors'...I adopted to save syllables." Rawlins
- tries to justify his misstatement of fact on the grounds that he was
- able to save approximately 42 characters in his 75,000-character-long
- article!
-
- In "sTARBABY," Rawlins claims that the full-day meeting of the Council
- in Washington was held at the National Press Club because this was "the
- temple of CSICOP's faith." (P. 86.) Had Rawlins asked me, I would have
- informed him that I had selected the National Press Club because it was
- the lowest-cost facility in downtown Washington that I could find. But
- Rawlins decided he knew the answer without bothering to investigate.
- This is neither good science nor good journalism.
-
- In the previously cited Rawlins memorandum of Jan. 17, 1979, following
- the Washington meeting, he wrote that he planned to reduce his
- involvement with CSICOP. He added that there was no reason to "hide"
- CSICOP's problems "from the public. So I may inform a neutral,
- responsible, unsensational member of the press re the foregoing." In
- reality Rawlins already had taken such steps at the December Council
- meeting whose press seminar was attended by an experienced journalist
- with a known empathy for some paranormal claims. During the early
- afternoon Rawlins and this journalist left the meeting together and
- returned together several hours later. But this journalist never
- published anything on the matter, possibly because he has as much
- difficulty in understanding Rawlins' charges as did Council members.
-
- According to "sTARBABY," in mid-1979, Rawlins received a letter from
- Jerome Clark of FATE magazine, expressing an interest in learning more
- about Rawlins' complaints against CSICOP. Rawlins claims that shortly
- afterward "I told the Council I'd be open with FATE." I question the
- truthfulness of his statement because Rawlins did not bother to attend
- the next Council meeting in December, 1979, nor have I been able to
- locate any Rawlins letter or memorandum to substantiate this claim.
-
- "sTARBABY" claims that "as the FATE-story realization set in, Council
- reacted like the White House when it learned that John Dean had sat down
- with the prosecution (during the Watergate scandal). (P.91) This claim I
- know to be false. The prospect of a Rawlins article in FATE was never
- discussed at the 1979 or 1980 Council meetings, nor by memorandum during
- the two intervening years. Otherwise CSICOP would have prepared a
- response which it could have released immediately following publication
- of "sTARBABY," preventing Rawlins from boasting that failure of CSICOP
- to respond quickly to his many charges indicated an inability to do so.
-
- Returning, chronologically, to the fall of 1979, CSICOP was preparing to
- publish the results of the U.S. champions test in the Winter 1979-80
- issue of THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER. Rawlins demanded the right to revise
- and expand his original Sept, 18, 1978, paper, and was given that
- opportunity. Furthermore, according to "sTARBABY," Rawlins informed Ken
- Frazier, editor of THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, "that if there were any
- alterations not cleared with me, I wanted a note printed with the paper
- stating that deletions had occurred over the author's protest and that
- the missing portions could be obtained directly from me." (P. 92.)
-
- Frazier (who had been recommended for the position by Rawlins himself),
- acting on the recommendation of Prof. Ray Hyman, a Council member who
- reviewed the Rawlins paper and the others, and on Frazier's own long
- editorial experience, decided to delete the sentence referring to
- Gauquelin's earlier interest in traditional astrology. Frazier also
- opted to delete another sentence that read: "In this connection I must
- also say that, given the self piekill upshot (sic) of their European
- (nonchampions) adventure plus their failure to perform independently the
- U.S. study's technical foundations (sector position, expectation curve),
- I find it amusing that ZKA (Zelen, Kurtz, Abell) are the main
- commentators on this test in THE SKEPTICAL INQUIRER." Once again
- Rawlins' wounded-ego had manifested itself.
-
- On Nov, 6, 1979, Rawlins sent a memo to other members of the Editorial
- Board complaining that his article "has been neatly censored here and
- there, so I have asked to add a statement saying so and suggesting that
- readers who wish to consult the original version may do so by contacting
- me. This sentence has itself been bowdlerized (so that it reads as if no
- tampering occurred)." Frazier had proposed an alternative sentence,
- which was published at the end of the Rawlins paper, that read: "Further
- commentary on the issues raised in this paper and in these notes is
- available from the author." Rawlins' address also was published.
-
- This is the basis for Rawlins' harsh charges of "censorship" against
- Frazier, the man whom he had so highly recommended for the position. If
- Rawlins' complaint were justified, every working journalist could make
- the same accusations regularly against those who edit his/her copy to
- assure clarity and good taste and to avoid libel. In response to
- Rawlins' charges, Frazier wrote to members of the Editorial Board
- explaining what had transpired. Frazier noted, "Dennis seems to believe
- his position as a member of the Editorial Board gives his writings
- special status exempt from normal editorial judgment. None of the rest
- of you has ever suggested this," i.e. demanded privileged treatment. So
- because Rawlins was not given privileged treatment, he charges
- "censorship."
-
- In the same Nov. 6, 1979, letter charging censorship, Rawlins complained
- that he alone among Council members had not been reimbursed for his
- travel expenses of $230 to the previous Council meeting in Washington.
- Rawlins said that he would need $400.00 for travel to attend the
- upcoming Council meeting in New York and added "I won't do that unless
- all 63O dollars are here beforehand." Kurtz promptly sent Rawlins a
- check for $350 as a travel advance and assured him he would be
- reimbursed for previous travel expense as soon as he submitted an
- expense account--which Rawlins had never done (In "sTARBABY," Rawlins
- characterizes this as a "ridiculous excuse" for failure to reimburse him
- earlier.) Rawlins cashed the $350 check but did not attend the New York
- Council meeting, nor did he inform the Council that he would not attend.
- Rawlins never refunded the $120 difference between $230 he claimed was
- due him and the $350 he received. Yet Rawlins professes to have been
- shocked and surprised when the Council voted unanimously not to reelect
- Rawlins at its New York meeting. (Since Rawlins seems so easily shocked
- and surprised, I suspect he was equally surprised at the resignation of
- Richard M. Nixon.)
-
- Two months later, Rawlins wrote to Frazier saying he wished to resign
- from the Editorial Board. But he insisted that the resignation should
- not take effect until his statement complaining about not being
- reelected "in absentia" was published. This Rawlins statement claimed
- that he had not been reelected solely because he had criticized
- "CSICOP's conduct during ITS FOUR YEAR INVOLVEMENT in testing
- Gauquelin's neo- astrology..." (Emphasis added.)
-
- Had Frazier opted to publish this grossly inaccurate statement, which he
- did not, readers might well have wondered if there were really two
- different Dennis Rawlins, recalling barely a year earlier when a Rawlins
- letter had been published which said: "It should be clearly understood
- that CSICOP as a body never had anything to do with the Humanist Zelen
- test 'challenge'..." When Frazier accepted Rawlins' resignation, this
- prompted Rawlins to complain that he had been removed from the Editorial
- Board without "cause or written notice." Later, following a mail ballot
- of Council members, CSICOP dropped Rawlins from its list of Fellows.
- (The vote against Rawlins was 6:1.)
-
- The foregoing highlights the key issues and actions that prompted FATE
- and Rawlins to charge that CSICOP "bungled their major investigation,
- falsified the results, covered up their errors and gave the boot to a
- colleague who threatened to tell the truth." (After my investigation, a
- re-reading of "sTARBABY" gives me the feeling that I am reading a Pravda
- account explaining that the Soviets moved into Afghanistan to help the
- Afghans prevent an invasion by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.)
-
- Were it possible to turn back the clock, undoubtedly Kurtz, Zelen and
- Abell would try to be more precise in defining test objectives and
- protocol and would do so in writing. And more time would be spent in
- more carefully phrasing articles dealing with such tests. But all CSICOP
- Council members and Fellows have other full-time professions that
- seriously constrain time available for CSICOP efforts.
-
- Were it possible to turn back the clock, the Council should have
- insisted in the spring of 1978 that Rawlins issue a public statement
- that he had erred in using CSICOP's name in support of his personal
- actions connected with the University of Toronto's planned astrology
- symposium. Failure to do this has resulted in an unjustified blot on
- CSICOP's modus-operandi. Also at that time the Council should have
- developed a policy statement, as it recently did, that more clearly
- delineates activities that members perform officially in behalf of
- CSICOP and those carried out as private individuals.
-
- When a small group of persons met in Buffalo in May, 1976, to create
- CSICOP, their motivation was a concern over the growing public
- acceptance of claims of the paranormal. CSICOP was created to provide a
- counter-balance to those who espouse a variety of claims, ranging from
- UFOs to astrology, from the "Bermuda Triangle" to psychic phenomena.
- With the benefit of experience, it was apparent that there was an
- extreme spectrum of viewpoints on the Council. Rawlins was at the
- "hit-'em-hard" extreme, while Truzzi was at the opposite pole and
- resigned after a couple years, partially as a result of behind-the
- scenes plotting by Rawlins which he admits in "sTARBABY." Now Rawlins
- has departed and, in my view, CSICOP is much the better for it.
-
- CSICOP never has tried to destroy those organizations that promote
- belief in paranormal causes. But individuals in these organization have
- tried to discredit CSICOP, even going so far in one instance as to
- circulate a forged letter.
-
- FATE magazine made wide distribution of the Rawlins "sTARBABY" article
- in reprint form, together with its press release. Prof. R.A. McConnell,
- University of Pittsburgh, founding President of the Parapsychological
- Association, also distributed copies to CSICOP Fellows and Council
- members, among others. In his accompanying letter, McConnell said he
- believed the "Rawlins report is certainly true in broad outline and
- probably true in every detail...He has created a document of importance
- for the history and philosophy of science." McConnell quoted an "unnamed
- scientist" as claiming that "Rawlins has uncovered the biggest scandal
- in the history of rationalism." McConnell characterized CSICOP as "an
- intellectually dishonest enterprise."
-
- FATE and McConnell have demonstrated the intrinsic flaw in the basic
- approach of those who promote claims of the paranormal -- THEIR
- EAGERNESS TO ACCEPT CLAIMS OF EXTRAORDINARY EVENTS WITHOUT RIGOROUS
- INVESTIGATION. Neither FATE nor McConnell contacted CSICOP officials to
- check out Rawlins' charges. This demonstrates why CSICOP is so sorely
- needed.
-
- The late President Harry Truman phrased it well: "If you can't stand the
- heat, stay out of the kitchen." CSICOP is "in the kitchen" by choice and
- intends to remain there despite the heat. The response of CSICOP's
- Council and its Fellows to recent events shows that the Committee is not
- an easy victim of heat- prostration.
-
- If the Mars effect, or any other paranormal hypothesis, should ever be
- demonstrated using rigorous scientific procedures, there simply is no
- way in which the small group of individuals involved in CSICOP could
- ever hope to suppress such evidence. Nor have I found any CSICOP Council
- member or Fellow who is so foolish as to try.
-
- (end)
-
- [In the years following "sTARBABY", Rawlins has continued to
- receive publicity by making sensational charges of
- scientific coverup and fraud. In 1988, he made national headlines
- by renewing an earlier charge he had made before CSICOP's
- founding, this time supposedly supported by a new-found
- document: that Admiral Peary never actually reached the
- North Pole during his famous expedition in 1909, but instead
- fabricated his navigational records to make it appear as if
- he had. A New York Times article of October 13, 1988 carries
- the headline: "Peary's Notes Said to Imply He Fell Short of
- Pole." It begins: "New evidence based on navigational notes
- by Robert E. Peary indicates that the Arctic explorer fell
- short of his goal and deliberately faked his claim in 1909
- that he was the first person to reach the North Pole,
- according to an analysis by a Baltimore astronomer and
- historian ... Dennis Rawlins, an independent scholar who
- trained as an astronomer and who has a long-standing
- interest in Peary's expedition, said yesterday that his
- analysis of the navigational notes, mainly sextant readings
- of the sun to establish geographic position, indicated that
- Peary knew that he had come no closer than 121 miles from
- the Pole." Officials of the National Geographic Society
- promised to examine Rawlins's data, but added "We believe
- Mr. Rawlins has been too quick to cry fake."
-
- After a three-month investigation of Rawlins' charges, a
- press conference was sponsored by The Navigation Foundation
- at which they dismissed his "sensational claims". As
- reported in a Baltimore Sun story syndicated Feb. 2, 1989,
- "Since October [Natl. Geographic] Society President Gilbert
- M. Grosvenor and others had quietly endured Rawlins's public
- calls for debate and unconditional surrender on the Peary
- issue." The Society was willing to take seriously an
- analysis by the British explorer Wally Herbert, based on
- other evidence, that a navigation error may have caused
- Peary to miss the pole by about 45 miles. "Suggesting that
- Peary might not have reached the Pole is one thing," said
- Grosvenor. "Declaring Peary a fraud is quite another."
- Rawlins held his own "informal press conference" afterwards,
- reports The Sun, in which Rawlins "admitted he had confused
- time readings for chronometer checks with altitudes of the
- sun and had mistaken serial numbers on the chronometers for
- navigational observations." Rawlins conceded, "My
- interpretation has some problems, and I acknowledge that.
- It's fair to say that, if I'm saying Peary was a fraud, I
- think I have not yet met the burden of proof."
-
- Finally, in December, 1989, a 230-page report commissioned
- by the National Geographic Society was released, concluding
- that Peary actually did reach the Pole. As reported in a
- story on p.1 of the New York Times, Dec. 12, 1989, a new
- analysis of Peary's records by professional navigators
- concluded that Peary's final camp was not more than five
- miles from the Pole. "The report said, there was no evidence
- of fraud and deception in the explorer's records. But one
- critic, Dennis Rawlins, a Baltimore astronomer and
- historian, said he remained convinced, despite the new
- study, that Admiral Peary did not reach his goal and had
- faked his claim."
-
- Robert Sheaffer, Nov., 1991]
-
-