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- ---------------------------------------------------------
- January 1990 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 9, No. 1
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- "I predicted last year before New Years on KGO radio and TV [San
- Francisco] and KCBS that there would be a 5.2 earthquake this year
- with some aftershocks, but that I didn't see a major 7-pointer
- destroying the Bay Area." -- Terri Brill, Psychic Astrologer, "San
- Francisco Chronicle", October 14, 1989 [three days before the
- earthquake].)
-
-
-
- COSMIC CATASTROPHES
- by Rick Moen
-
- [This article is our November meeting review of astronomer David
- Morrison's talk. Dr. Morrison, a CSICOP Fellow, is a planetary
- scientist and head of the Space Science Division at NASA's Ames
- Research Center.]
-
- Dr. Morrison spoke on "catastrophism", the school of thought that
- has revolutionized astronomy in the past few years and stirred
- debate among biologists as well. In the course of his talk, he
- also expounded on the "quack catastrophisms" of Immanuel Velikovsky
- and the creationists, by way of contrast. Within mainstream
- planetary science, there are two basic approaches to explain the
- geological and biological record: Uniformitarians hold that the
- land and lifeforms of Earth were produced by continuous activity
- over very long time spans, producing gradual, cumulative changes.
- This was the traditional view, which prevailed over the past 150
- years, until recently.
-
- The dissenting "catastrophists" have suggested that periodic
- intense bursts of geological activity have produced the bulk of
- this change, through such means as meteor strikes, or cataclysmic
- floods and volcanic explosions. Recent developments in astronomy
- and geology have lent their position powerful support.
-
- Morrison felt that the influence of catastrophism may have been
- somewhat delayed because of the affair of Immanuel Velikovsky,
- whose theories bear at least a surface resemblance, and was at some
- pains to point out the difference. Velikovsky published in 1950 a
- work called "Worlds in Collision", describing his ideas about a
- kind of planetary ping-pong that supposedly brought our solar
- system to its current configuration: Venus sprang out of Jupiter
- during an encounter of that planet with Saturn, and swung by Earth
- circa 1500 B.C., causing such events as the parting of the Red Sea,
- the sun standing still for Joshua's benefit, the collapse of the
- walls of Jericho, and the plagues in Egypt.
-
- Venus then knocked Mercury off course, into several near-collisions
- with Earth, in the seventh and eighth centuries B.C., causing
- further upheavals. For good measure, Velikovsky had Saturn
- showering the Earth with water, thus accounting for the Deluge, and
- the moon being captured by Earth, all also within human history.
-
- If this were not amazing enough, Velikovsky adduced as his primary
- evidence various "myths" from different cultures, employing his own
- idiosyncratic form of extreme literalism. Everywhere gods were
- mentioned, they were IN FACT planets: Zeus and Ares having a tete-
- a-tete actually meant a near-collision of Jupiter and Mars. He was
- thus able to tie various peoples' written records and mythologies
- to his hypothetical planetary ballet and its terrestrial side-
- effects (e.g., volcanoes and meteorites), making adjustments as
- needed (such as eliminating 4 Egyptian dynasties to synchronize
- events).
-
- Velikovsky's work met with a harsh and perhaps disproportionate
- blast of criticism from the scientific establishment, mostly
- because it was published by Macmillan & Company's textbook
- division. He and his followers thus were able to follow the well-
- worn path of the self-described martyr, gaining from it
- considerable publicity and sympathy from the unwary, as have cranks
- in all ages.
-
- Like the creationists, Velikovsky insisted on fitting everything
- into the human record, and so came up with an anthropocentric view
- of the universe, with an implausibly young solar system. He used
- a very narrow conception of history, postulated physical forces
- that are no longer at work today (and thus are not testable),
- distorted the human record to make the various myths world-wide and
- simultaneous, and ignored conflicting evidence from astronomy,
- physics, geology, and archeology.
-
- All his major predictions turned out to be false (e.g. Venus giving
- off heat, because of its supposed recent formation), in spite of
- numerous attempts at rationalizing, as was pointed out by
- Velikovsky's many scientific critics (not least of whom was David
- Morrison himself). Yet some of his followers have persisted to this
- day, keeping the faith alive even after his death in 1979.
-
- Creationism, the other major variety of "quack catastrophism," has
- itself undergone a type of radical change. As early as the 18th
- century, many writers attempting to reconcile biblical cosmology
- with scientific findings had concluded that the Deluge (however
- inaccurately recorded) must have been the most recent of a SERIES
- of catastrophes. Biblical literalism had been set aside or relaxed
- by most.
-
- Around the turn of the present century, a "new U.S. creationism"
- began to be popular. It involved strict biblical literalism, the
- occurrence of only ONE flood caused by the collapse of an overhead
- vapour canopy, and worldwide volcanic eruptions. These events
- produced all the Earth's continents and other landforms, geologic
- strata and fossil deposits, over the course of a SINGLE year, and
- all of cosmic history was required to fit within a timescale of
- less than 10,000 years (instead of billions of years). As with
- Velikovsky's theories, no physical evidence for this Deluge
- catastrophism exists: It contradicts the fundamentals of geology
- and astronomy, and is unrelated to (and fails to explain) the
- observed patterns of mass extinctions, evolution, and other
- elements of biological history.
-
- In contrast to these variants, Morrison described the "new
- catastrophism" emerging from astronomy. For a long time scientists
- entertained the idea that infrequent, catastrophic events made the
- dominant effects in geology and biology. In the same way that
- sudden floods produced most of the erosion that formed the Grand
- Canyon, one could conceive of astronomical events that cause
- worldwide upheaval and consequent rapid change. The Cretaceous-
- Tertiary and Permian extinctions were cited as possible examples
- of these effects. Only recently, however, have plausible mechanisms
- and other supporting evidence for such rapid and dramatic change
- come to light.
-
- Studies of the comets and asteroids, as well as of impact craters
- on the Earth and other bodies, have made apparent that collisions
- with the Earth have occurred quite frequently (on the cosmic
- timescale). The comets pass Earth orbit both inbound and outbound,
- and perturbations in asteroid orbits occasionally eject some of
- them into the inner solar system. The several largest of the
- roughly 30,000 asteroids are not too far short of planetary scale,
- and dwarf the remainder added together. One of these could be
- expected to strike Earth on the order of every 5 to 100 million
- years.
-
- Astronomers now think that, in the most dramatic such episode,
- around 4.5 billion years ago, a body the size of Mars struck the
- earth, nearly splitting apart the Earth, and creating the moon.
- Some scientists thus speculate that life may have formed several
- times on Earth, with the Earth being "sanitized" by massive impacts
- each time.
-
- Another clear collision on a lesser scale occurred at the time of
- the Cretaceous extinction (when the dinosaurs died out): The late
- BAS Advisor Luis Alvarez pointed out that the high concentration
- of iridium from that geological layer is best explained by a
- collision with some sizable iridium-bearing body (as some comets
- are thought to be).
-
- Stephen Jay Gould and others have suggested that at ordinary times,
- species can in general adapt to the small, gradual changes in their
- environment, but have no such survival mechanism equal to the
- challenge of such catastrophic events. It is on such occasions that
- ordinarily-unimportant quirks, like living mostly underground (as
- the ancestors of mammals did at the time of the dinosaurs' demise)
- suddenly become important survival traits, and enormous biological
- changes become possible as the environment changes drastically.
-
- Although the craters resulting from some past impacts can be found
- in places around the Earth, constant erosion makes the record a
- relatively brief one: Better information can be found by examining
- the Moon. Part of the surface there, the "old highlands," consists
- of heavily cratered terrain -- craters on top of craters, of great
- age. The lunar "maria", by contrast, are volcanic flow plains
- formed about 3.5 billion years ago, and so were a "clean slate" at
- that time, and are thus useful for studying the more "recent"
- period since then. Only 5 craters of 50 km or more appear on the
- "maria".
-
- Extrapolating to the 80-times-greater area of the Earth (and
- ignoring the stronger gravitational field), one would expect 400
- such impacts in 3.5 billion years, or about one every 10 million
- years. (Note that the Cretaceous extinction, 65 million years ago,
- fits this model.) These would be massive impacts, utterly dwarfing
- the effects of even the most massive volcanic explosions, or any
- other known geologic processes. Each such meteor (of, say, 10 km
- diameter) would release kinetic energy of about 10 million megatons
- of TNT, excavating 10 to the 15th power tons of material,
- sufficient to blot out all sunlight for months and leave a layer
- several feet deep around the earth.
-
- Evidence from the time of the Cretaceous extinction suggests that
- just such global effects occurred at that time. Alternatives to
- this impact scenario have been offered and considered. The only
- plausible event of enough severity is explosive volcanic eruption.
- Such cataclysms as the explosions of Thera (Santorini), Krakatoa,
- and Mt. St. Helens have seemed devastating to human onlookers, but
- have never been shown to reach more than one-millionth the power
- of the (inevitable) impacts already mentioned.
-
- Krakatoa made possible the stunning beauty of Turner's painted
- sunsets, but was certainly not catastrophic on a global scale. So,
- unless one accepts the ad hoc hypothesis of million-times-magnified
- volcanoes, it seems more reasonable to expect impact events to have
- dominant effects.
-
- What does all this mean for us? For an individual, the chance of
- having one's day ruined by a meteor is minuscule: For a
- once-per-million-year event (a several-km-wide meteor causing a
- several hundred thousand megaton impact), one chance in 20,000.
- However, for CIVILISATION, the risk of such an impact is
- significant, since the loss of sunlight would cause crop failure
- and starvation of most of humankind, much like the hypothetical
- "nuclear winter." The risk to individuals can be put into
- perspective compared to more familiar death risks:
-
- Botulism: 1 chance in 2,000,000
- Fireworks: 1 chance in 500,000
- Tornadoes: 1 chance in 50,000
- Air Crashes: 1 chance in 20,000
- Meteor Impact: 1 chance in 20,000
- Firearms: 1 chance in 200
- Car Crash: 1 chance in 100
-
- Or, to put this another way, Morrison listed the expected average
- deaths per year in the U.S. from each cause:
-
- Botulism : kills a few
- Fireworks: kills a dozen
- Tornadoes: kill a hundred
- Air Crashes: kill several hundred
- Firearms: kill 20,000
- Car Crash: kill 50,000
-
- Averaging over a long period of time, impacts could, like air
- crashes, be expected to kill several hundred per year, or wipe out
- the U.S. population once per million years. What should be done
- about this? Well, considering the amount spent on such preventative
- measures as tornado watches, aircraft safety (a comparable hazard,
- not counting the civilisation threat), and food inspections, it
- seems reasonable to expect some proportionate societal effort.
- Several hundred people lost (on average) per year equates to
- roughly a loss of some hundred million dollars or so in lost
- earnings power, as another point of comparison. Such comparisons
- based on the number of lives at risk would suggest spending several
- hundred million dollars per year on research and protection.
-
- Morrison urges intensified telescope searches, missions to examine
- comets and asteroids, and continued research on impacts, nuclear
- winter scenarios, orbital chaos theory, etc. He envisions, in the
- next decade or so, effective defenses from such disasters, using
- explosive devices to deflect incoming meteors when they are still
- far enough to nudge off course, a REAL space defense for everyone.
-
- Dr. Morrison has gone into this matter in greater (and more
- eloquent) detail in his book "Cosmic Catastrophes" -- just out --
- and many of those in attendance were able to buy copies at the
- lecture site (the Academy of Science). Keep your eye out for this
- well-written and interesting work.
-
- A near catastrophe of much lesser proportions grazed Morrison not
- too long ago: He was a co-defendant, with CSICOP and several other
- local skeptics, in the recent Hawaii lawsuit filed by self-
- described psychic Gareth Pendragon. The skeptics prevailed, but we
- hope to give Dr. Morrison a safer environment here in the Bay Area,
- earthquakes notwithstanding, and extend to him a warm welcome --
- and a thank you for a wonderful talk.
-
-
-
- THANKS!
-
- A note of gratitude to Daniel Sabsay for a keen eye and some great
- recommendations to improve the appearance of "BASIS". Look around
- and see if you can see the changes. We are always pleased to
- receive the comments and suggestions of you, the talented people
- out there. Pull out your rulers, graphic-art minds and send your
- ideas to make things better. The improvements to our newsletter
- have almost all come from very caring people, some of them
- professionals. Thanks to you all.
-
-
-
- UNSOUND ADVICE
- by Robert Pease
-
- [Robert Pease is an electronics engineer who saw some gibberish in
- the "San Francisco Chronicle" Home Entertainment section alleging
- that splicing speaker wire is to be avoided because it degrades the
- sound quality. He wrote to the "Chronicle", challenging the claims
- of their article. What follows is background and part of the
- rebuttal to the newspaper. -- Ed.]
-
- In the olden days, the soothsayer would require you to cross her
- palm with silver before she would assure you that you could win the
- hand of your true love, etc. These days, there are other areas
- where you have to have faith in the unexplainable to win the prize.
- For example, you have to trust and spend $$$ according to the
- advice of the Hi-Fi Expert. You have to take his word for it that
- an expen$$ive amplifier made with vacuum tubes sounds better than
- any amplifier made with the best transistors. You have to take his
- word for it that $200 speaker cables "sound better" than $5, $50,
- or $100 speaker cables.
-
- This whole thing is lifted to new levels of absurdity when a man
- named Somerfield comes along and says, if you have a perfectly
- adequate set of speaker wires, and you need them 5 feet longer,
- well, throw them away and buy new ones at the new length so you can
- avoid splices in the wires. After all, you wouldn't want to add
- splices which would "hamper the sound quality," would you? I have
- done some measurements and can say that this is hogwash.
-
- I took some 12-gauge stranded wire and spliced it simply by
- twisting the strands together. Unspliced wire has a resistance of
- about 150 micro ohms per inch. With the twisted splice, about 900
- ohms -- the equivalent of an unspliced wire six inches longer --
- was added. When the splice was soldered, making the splice more
- solid, the increased resistance was only about 40 ohms, or less
- than .3 inches of wire! I have also checked other effects of
- splicing, such as impedance, with the same negligible effects.
-
- I have proposed a test and challenged Mr. Somerfield to tell me
- which wires, spliced or unspliced, "sound better." I asked him to
- pick out an unspliced wire from a group of wires with up to 10
- splices in each wire. Obviously, even HE knows he has no chance to
- do that. He'd have to be clairvoyant to guess which wire has a
- splice, because at microwave frequencies, (200 - 800 MHz), one
- might be able to notice a tiny difference. At the highest end of
- human hearing (20 kHz), no way.
-
- Many of these "Golden Ear" fellows really do have good ears, but
- too often they claim to be able to hear things that are just not
- there. Some of these people claim things that border on the
- paranormal, and they cry out to be rebutted to help prevent even
- a duped yuppie from getting ripped off.
-
- The notion that a properly spliced speaker wire is sufficiently
- inferior as to "hamper the sound" is so absurd that next they'll
- be telling us that a speaker wire in a knot will cause the sound
- to be "constricted" or "strangled." Often, when a "Golden Ear"
- claims that amplifier A has "less distortion when overdriven" than
- amplifier B, or that speaker system C has "smoother phase" than
- system D, we laymen are not in a position to argue, because the
- experts' opinions are subjective and because it would cost
- thousands and thousands of dollars for us to duplicate the
- experiment. Here, we are talking about a few dollar's worth of wire
- and some very basic comparisons: either a wire with one or two
- splices is noticeably different from unspliced wire or it is not.
-
- Self-proclaimed experts must beware of making pompous
- pronouncements which cannot be supported when challenged.
-
- (Note: As of press time, Mr. Somerfield has not responded)
-
-
-
- SATANIST SURVIVORS
- by Rex Springston
-
- [The following is a June 1988 excerpted article from the Richmond,
- Virginia "News Leader".)
-
- Cassandra Hoyer said she was being thrown to the ground by 30
- Satanists when a woman drove by and stopped her car to help. "They
- dragged her into the woods, hung her on a cross and sacrificed her
- by fire," Ms. Hoyer alleged. Another time, Ms. Hoyer and a teenager
- were harassed and dipped into vats of blood, she said. She claimed
- that both rituals occurred in the summer of 1987 in a rural part
- of Goochland County, Virginia, she said.
-
- At the time, investigating Police found nothing -- no car, no
- missing person report, not even a drop of blood from the vats, said
- chief deputy Leslie Parrish. Does he believe the stories? "I'm a
- little iffy on it," he said. Sue Bane says she has witnessed 50 to
- 70 human sacrifices by Satanists in the Richmond area. The most
- recent occurred about six months ago in Henrico County when a baby
- was sacrificed on an altar, then cut up into pieces, she said. The
- police have found nothing.
-
- Hoyer, 42, and Bane, 28, call themselves survivors of Satanic
- cults. They are representative of hundreds of such "survivors"
- across the country. Both have had intensive psychotherapy, and both
- suffer from multiple-personality disorders, their psychiatrists
- say. Neither has physical evidence to support her contentions.
- "Survivors" across the country have told extremely similar stories
- of torture and sacrifice without corroboration by physical
- evidence, experts say. The stories -- given great play on talk
- shows and in the mainstream press -- help feed the notion that
- Satanic cults are conducting sacrifices with regularity across the
- country. Many experts say that notion is a myth.
-
- Two outspoken local advocates of the Satanic-conspiracy theory,
- Richmond police Lt. Lawrence Haake and Hanover County private
- investigator Patricia Pulling, say "survivors" are key sources of
- their information. "People are saying the same thing all over the
- country, and those people are totally unrelated to one another, but
- what they say is consistent -- to me that is a degree of
- credibility," said Haake.
-
- Some mental health professionals say the survivor accounts are
- simply delusions suffered by mentally disturbed people and passed
- to the public as fact by unskeptical therapists, police officers
- and news reporters. The delusions may be reactions to genuine, but
- non-Satanic, abuse they received as children, experts say. "The
- true cult is the people who believe in this," said Dr. Park Dietz,
- a Newport Beach, CA forensic psychiatrist.
-
- Ms. Hoyer, a toy-store cashier who was brought up in New England
- and has lived in Richmond since 1980, has spoken in public meetings
- and in news stories of being chased by a Satanic cult, being
- repeatedly raped and being forced to witness two local sacrifices.
- Her story was the basis for a January 1988 feature article in
- "Style Weekly", a weekend newspaper insert. Mrs. Bane has spoken
- about Satanism to Richmond police training groups, according to her
- and Parrish. She is writing a book, "Freedom from Satan's Horror".
-
- She revealed she had 17 personalities, and some of them wanted to
- be in the cult. She said therapy and faith in God fused her 17
- personalities into one. "I prayed, and through a miracle, I was
- completely integrated," she said. Her husband, Nathan, a 35-year-
- old plumber, said the whole thing had been a "nightmare." He said
- he never saw the rituals; his wife would slip out at night to go
- to them. Ms. Hoyer and Mrs. Bane said they began to realize they
- were Satanic cult victims while undergoing psychotherapy in recent
- years.
-
- Adults are not the only ones to describe Satanic rituals. According
- to officials, a dozen or more children in the Richmond area have
- described them, as logged by various Virginia state and local
- departments. The children reported -- or indicated through play and
- passing comments -- seeing sacrifices, dismemberment and other
- bloody rituals.
-
- "They are not saying they witnessed it. They are talking about it
- as if they know about it, and that's what makes us suspicious,"
- said Bettie Kienast, a Social Service director. She said her
- department had dealt with four such children in about four years.
-
- The stories are consistent with unconfirmed reports from children
- across the country. Many experts say the children may have picked
- up the stories from adults or other children or even from movies
- and other popular culture. The stories also may be fantasies or
- false reports induced by leading questions, experts say. In some
- cases, the children may have been victims of real but non-Satanic
- abuse, or of abuse by pedophiles who use the trappings of Satanism
- as a means of control, some experts say.
-
- Kenneth Lanning, the FBI's chief expert on sex crimes against
- children, has been consulted in more than 299 case involving
- Satanic themes. He would not discuss specific cases but he said he
- was aware of claims of sacrifice in the Richmond area. He said he
- knows of no bona fide Satanic cult sacrifice -- not only in Central
- Virginia, but nationwide. Regarding Mrs. Bane's story, Lanning
- said, "It's unlikely that a group of individuals could come
- together, commit 50 to 70 human sacrifices, and no one ever finds
- any evidence, no mother of a (sacrificed) child ever has second
- thought . . . nobody ever makes a mistake."
-
- [Note the great similarity in reports of Satanic ritual and UFO
- abduction reports.]
-
-
-
- UFO TREKKIES
-
- They recently reuned in Foster City, CA to discuss the growing
- problem of alien abductions. J.R. Wheeler sent us the story from
- the 8-7-89 "Peninsula Time Tribune" detailing the conference. More
- than anything, it appears that it was an occasion for the faithful
- to swap stories: "You know what happens when you leak any of the
- UFO information? You get snuffed out," said a society member who
- preferred to stay anonymous as he leaked UFO information.
-
- The general topic of discussion was the vast government cover-up,
- about which everyone on the planet knows. One of the reasons given
- for the success of the plot is that we are getting great
- technological secrets from the aliens in exchange for silence
- guaranteeing that nobody knows they are here. We must be very
- careful to see that people don't write books or have meetings about
- them.
-
-
-
- DEGREES OF FOLLY: PART IX
- by William Bennetta
-
- Parts I through VIII of this article ran in earlier issues of
- "BASIS", starting in February 1989. Here is a summary: By law, no
- unaccredited school in California can issue degrees unless the
- school has been assessed and formally approved by the
- superintendent of public instruction -- the chief of the State
- Department of Education.
-
- In August l988, the Department's Private Postsecondary Education
- Division (PPED) staged an assessment of the ICR Graduate School
- (ICRGS). The ICRGS is an arm of the Institute for Creation
- Research, a fundamentalist ministry that promotes the pseudoscience
- called "creation-science." The founder and president of the ICR is
- Henry Morris, a preacher and former engineer who poses as an expert
- in geology, biology, paleontology and various other fields in which
- he has no detectable credentials.
-
- The Department's assessment of Morris's school was made by a five-
- man committee that had been chosen by, and was managed, by a PPED
- officer named Roy W. Steeves. The committee included two ringers
- who had been linked closely to the ICR or to Morris, and the
- committee's report was bogus: It hid the real nature of the ICR,
- promoted the ICR's scientific pretensions, and said that the
- superintendent of public instruction, Bill Honig, should approve
- the ICR as a source of masters' degrees in science and in science
- education.
-
- Two of the committee's legitimate members then sent separate
- reports to Honig, telling the truth about the ICR. But Roy Steeves,
- in memoranda to the PPED's director, Joseph P. Barankin, endorsed
- the ICR and urged that it should be approved. Honig, in statements
- that he gave to the press in December 1988, refused the approval;
- but in January 1989 the Department drew back from that decision and
- began to negotiate with the ICR.
-
- On 3 March 1989, Joseph Barankin and the ICR reached an agreement.
- The ICR would revise its curriculum, purging "ICRGS's
- interpretations" from courses that would count toward degrees. To
- learn whether the ICR had made the revisions, the Department would
- send a new examining committee; one member would be selected by
- the ICR. Despite the agreement, the ICR continued to advertise the
- ICRGS as a "Graduate School of Creationist Science," devoted to
- "scientific and Biblical creationism."
-
- The new committee visited the ICR in August 1989. Four of the
- committee's five members are scientists from campuses of the
- University of California or the California State University. The
- fifth, evidently selected by the ICR, is from a Bible college in
- Ohio. The committee is being managed not by Roy Steeves but by
- Jeanne Bird. Bird joined the PPED in the spring of 1989, as a staff
- consultant, and became one of the PPED's assistant directors a few
- months later.
-
- Henry Morris and the other ICR men, according to their own
- statements, expect that the committee will declare the ICRGS
- unworthy of approval, and that Honig will follow the committee's
- judgment. On 31 August, in an effort to win sympathy from the press
- and the public, the ICR men held a "news conference" to denounce
- Honig and to distribute a fiercely misleading account of their
- transactions with his Department.
-
- They achieved only modest success, however: Most news organizations
- apparently recognized that the ICR men's only "news" was their own
- desperation. The committee has not yet given its report to Honig.
- I recently asked the Department about the status of the committee's
- work, and I shall tell here what I learned. -- W.B., 14 December
- 1989
-
- NEW ARRANGEMENTS
-
- On 20 November 1989, Jeanne Bird replaced Joseph Barankin as
- director of the PPED. Bird's title is "acting director"; she
- presumably will manage the PPED through the end of this year, when
- it will go out of business. (See sidebar.) According to the
- Department's public-relations officer, Susie Lange, Barankin now
- has a special assignment and works for Bill Honig's deputy
- superintendent for specialized programs, Shirley Thornton.
-
- As a part of that assignment, Lange says, Barankin is still
- handling the ICR case. Responsibility for the case, however,
- remains with Jeanne Bird in the PPED, even if Barankin no longer
- works there.
-
- WHAT'S TAKING SO LONG?
-
- Early on 4 December I telephoned Jeanne Bird to learn how the case
- was developing. She said that she had to go to a meeting and would
- return my call in the afternoon. The person who called me in the
- afternoon, however, was Gregory Roussere, the Department's lawyer
- who has overseen the ICR case and who accompanied the members of
- the new committee during their visit to the ICR.
-
- According to Roussere, each member of the committee had submitted,
- in August or in early September, an account of what he had observed
- during the visit. Jeanne Bird then had directed the synthesis of
- those accounts into a draft of the committee's report; and copies
- of the draft had been sent to all the members, in mid-November, so
- that they could offer comments and corrections that would be
- reflected in a new draft.
-
- Further drafts will be generated until all the members reach a
- consensus and sign a report that can be delivered to Honig. "We'd
- like to finish it as soon as we can," Roussere commented, "but as
- a reality, we probably won't have a final report until the first
- of the year."
-
- Why, I asked, has the writing of the report proceeded so slowly?
- The chief reason, Roussere said, is that the PPED has been
- preoccupied with preparations for implementing some new legislation
- that will take effect on 1 January 1990. That legislation governs
- the assessment and approval of vocational schools.
-
- TOPICAL STUFF
-
- The ICR men, meanwhile, have just distributed another batch of
- religious pamphlets, including the December issues of "Impact" and
- "Acts & Facts". "Impact" offers an end-of-the-world piece --
- "Earthquakes in These Last Days" -- by Steven A. Austin, of the
- ICR's Geology Department. (For a note about one of Austin's earlier
- ventures in pseudoscience, see "A Truth Patrolman Tracks Prof.
- John," in "BASIS" for October.)
-
- Austin mentions the California earthquake of 17 October 1989, links
- some biblical passages to earthquakes, and then tells how recent
- earthquakes should be interpreted:
-
- Jesus Christ spoke of them as "signs" of His coming again
- to earth. He said, "There will be earthquakes in divers
- places" (Matthew 24:7; Mark 13: 8), a fact now verified
- by the global distribution of earthquakes recorded on
- seismographs. Furthermore, He said this sign is the
- "beginning of sorrows" (Matthew 24:8; Mark 13:8). The
- word translated [as] "sorrows" in many English Bibles is
- the Greek [word] for "birth pangs." Just as we know that
- a woman is going to give birth to a child because of
- birth pangs, Jesus says we know that the intolerable
- anguish of God's judgment and the return of His Son is
- [sic] at hand.
-
- Austin concludes that "our basis for understanding earthquakes"
- should be this: They are divine devices for judgment, deliverance
- and communication. An unsigned article in the December "Acts &
- Facts" says that the California Republican Assembly (CRA) last
- October adopted a resolution supporting the ICR' s attempt to get
- approval from Bill Honig.
-
- According to the article, the resolution accused Honig of intending
- to deny the ICR men's academic and religious freedom; it also
- called for investigations of Honig's actions by the federal Civil
- Rights Commission and by the attorney general, among others. I have
- not yet been able to get the CRA's comment about the "Acts & Facts"
- piece.
-
-
-
- SIDEBAR: SB190 IS NOW LAW
-
- SB190 -- State Senator Becky Morgan's bill for reforming the
- regulation of unaccredited schools that operate in California --
- was signed into law by Governor George Deukmejian on 1 October.
- The bill had been approved in the Senate (by a vote of 31 to 1) on
- 19 June. It then had been amended by the Assembly, which passed
- the amended version (by a vote of 70 to 5) on 13 September. Two
- days later, the Senate accepted the amended text (by a vote of 23
- to 4); and on 20 September the bill went to the governor.
-
- Since 1977 the responsibility for regulating vocational schools and
- unaccredited, degree-granting organizations has resided, by
- statute, with the superintendent of public instruction -- the chief
- of the State Department of Education. Morgan's law will transfer
- that responsibility to the California Council for Private
- Postsecondary and Vocational Education, a new agency that will come
- into existence on 1 January 1991 and will be devoted entirely to
- overseeing postsecondary schools.
-
- Concomitantly, the new law will abolish the Department of
- Education's Private Postsecondary Education Division (PPED) and the
- Council for Private Postsecondary Educational Institutions, an
- agency that was established in 1977 to advise the superintendent
- of public instruction. It will not, however, affect the California
- Postsecondary Education Commission (CPEC), an advisory body that
- serves the governor and the legislature. A committee convened by
- CPEC will prepare, by 1 October 1990, a forecast of the new
- council's operating budget, including an estimate of any subsidy
- that the council may need, from the state's general fund, to
- supplement the fees that will be paid by regulated schools.
-
- The council will have authority to establish "minimum criteria"
- governing the operation of unaccredited, degree-granting schools
- and to grant or deny approval to such schools. No unaccredited
- school will be able to grant degrees, legally, unless it has won
- approval. The council will begin practical operation on 1 July 199l
- and will have 15 members: the superintendent of public instruction,
- the secretary of state, a representative of the California Student
- Aid Commission, six representatives of schools that fall under the
- council's jurisdiction, and six people from the general public.
-
- (The text of the law adds: "It is the intent of the Legislature
- that the members of the general public . . . have a strong
- interest in developing private postsecondary and vocational
- education, and include representation from businesses that employ
- persons in positions requiring academic, vocational, or technical
- education.")
-
- Any civil-service employee who may be working for the PPED on 31
- December 1990 will become an employee of the new council; and any
- school that may be holding an approval under current law will have
- its approval extended "for a period not to exceed four years from
- the date of the institutions's last approval review."
-
- The new law offers a new opportunity and mechanism for policing
- unaccredited schools and for driving bogus outfits from the state,
- but it is not as potent a law as it might have been. One glaring
- weakness lies in the composition of the council: Two-fifths of the
- council's members will come from unaccredited schools -- that is,
- two-fifths of the regulators will be regulatees -- but none of its
- members need come from ACCREDITED ones.
-
- Hence there is no clear, mandated link between the council and the
- mainstream academic community, nor any clear, mandated safeguard
- against the council's turning into a mutual-certification club. The
- law's actual effect will depend on the integrity of the council's
- members and technical staff, their diligence in resisting attempts
- by diploma mills to vitiate the law, and the willingness of the
- legislature and the governor to support the council with money. If
- the council must depend entirely on license fees for its funds, and
- must see its own budget shrink when it refuses to approve or
- reapprove a school, then both the intent and the letter of the new
- law may be compromised. -- W.B.
-
-
-
- SAI BABA BABBLING
-
- The sleight-of-hand cum-psychic, Sai Baba, is so confident of his
- unswerving support that he feels he can be as reckless and carefree
- as he pleases. B. Premanand, head of India's CSICOP-like
- organization, has exposed the Indian guru many times, but his
- followers remain stalwart. (Premanand visited the Bay Area and told
- about the god-men of India, of which Sai Baba is the most
- notorious.
-
- In July of 1989, another rationalist, Abraham Kovoor, uncovered an
- utterly shameless attempt by Sai Baba to claim he had materialized
- a unique Seiko watch "from thin air" for the head of the Japanese
- watchmaker company when he was on a visit to the god-men in India.
- Sai Baba claimed that the watch in question was locked in a vault
- in the corporate headquarters in Japan, yet he was able to
- materialize the timepiece and hand it to the dignitary during the
- Indian visit.
-
- Kovoor did some painstaking investigations and found that the truth
- was quite different. He wrote repeatedly to Sai Baba's office for
- details of the miracle, but his letters went unanswered. He then
- wrote to the Seiko company who told him that no Seiko company
- official had visited India near the time in question, let alone to
- Sai Baba. Therefore no watch had been produced. Most significant
- is the simple fact that no such unique watch exists in the first
- place.
-
- The entire episode from start to finish was a fiction. This
- incident should remind us that when miraculous claims are spouted,
- the FIRST explanation we should consider is that it is simply a
- fabrication.
-
-
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
-
- Chair: Larry Loebig
- Vice Chair: Yves Barbero
- Secretary: Rick Moen
- Treasurer: Kent Harker
- Shawn Carlson
- Andrew Fraknoi
- Mark Hodes
- Lawrence Jerome
- John Lattanzio
- Eugenie Scott
- Norman Sperling
-
-
-
- "BASIS" STAFF:
-
- Kent Harker, editor; Sharon Crawford, assoc. editor;
- Kate Talbot, distribution; Rick Moen, circulation
-
-
-
- BAS ADVISORS
-
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
- Dean Edell, M.D., ABC Medical Reporter
- Donald Goldsmith, Ph.D., Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Diane Moser, Science writer
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D.,U. C. Berkeley
- Bernard Oliver, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Technical Writer, UFO expert
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Lecturer, Writer
- Ray Spangenburg, Science writer
- Jill C. Tarter, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
-
-
-
- THE NEW SCIENCE FRAMEWORK: WHY SCIENCE WON BIG.
-
- Dr. Kevin Padian, a professor of evolutionary biology in the
- department of Integrative Biology at U.C. Berkeley, an advisor to
- BAS and a member of the board of the National Council for Science
- Education said that he learned a lot about the political tactics
- used by creationists in the fight over California's science
- curriculum. The public need to know more about the threat to
- science eduction. As a member of the "Science Framework Committee"
- drafting the new guidelines for science education, he discovered
- that it wasn't all rational science or obvious public policy. The
- stakes are high, and the creationists have an agenda.
-
- The editor of "The Origin of Birds and the Evolution of Flight"
- (1986) he had to come down to earth and confront these very real
- opponents of sound scientific education. But "science won big," he
- insisted. Find out why, despite last minute compromises and wording
- changes, your children's future as science students took a leap
- forward. Come and hear Dr. Padian's step-by-step analysis of what
- really happened in Sacramento.
-
- -----
-
- Opinions expressed in "BASIS" are those of the authors and do not
- necessarily reflect those of BAS, its board or its advisors.
-
- The above are selected articles from the January, 1990 issue of
- "BASIS", the monthly publication of Bay Area Skeptics. You can
- obtain a free sample copy by sending your name and address to BAY
- AREA SKEPTICS, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco, CA 94122-3928 or by
- leaving a message on "The Skeptic's Board" BBS (415-648-8944) or
- on the 415-LA-TRUTH (voice) hotline.
-
- Copyright (C) 1990 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-