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June 1990 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
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         Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
                   Vol. 9, No. 5
                Editor:  Kent Harker



SAMPSON AND DELIGHTFUL THOUGHTS

[BAS advisor Dr. Wallace Sampson, M.D., spoke to our March meeting
in the South Bay. His topic was whether positive thinking has any
medical effect on cancer. Dr. Sampson is an oncologist and teaches
at Stanford medical school, besides his private practice.]

Dr. Sampson's wide range of interests includes medical research,
but not exactly in a direct way. Early in his career he worked as
a researcher, but he decided that he didn't have what it took; he
even went so far as to say that he is not a scientist. Then he
began to show us that if he isn't a scientist few of those in the
medical community using the title deserve it. After he left the
field of active research, he became interested in the work of
others. He pours over papers and systematically shows how
unscientific many of them are. If that doesn't represent good
scientific ability one is at a loss for how one should classify Dr.
Sampson.

As an oncologist, Wally must confront the popular claims of the
booksellers. His patients bring their books and articles to his
office, so read them he must. One cannot overlook the possibility
that maybe there could be something of value for his patients, and
he must always be ready to respond. What he discovered is
discouraging for its shallowness.

A good scientist, upon observation of some unusual phenomenon,
looks first to isolate the variables. Then he or she tries to
replicate the finding and begins to look for a theory to explain
why the event is happening. If one does not follow this general
procedure one may not properly be called a scientist. Wally's
ability as an investigator consists of two parts, both of them
preeminent scientific essentials: (1) he is able to cut to the core
of the problem and throw a flood of light on the confusion, and (2)
he is masterful in his ability to simplify and explicate the
problem. It is as important to discover the flaws in a proposition
as to devise it in the first place.

A capable researcher asks hard questions and will not rest until
they are answered. Evidently, many of the researchers aren't even
asking the simple or obvious questions. A competent researcher
invites criticism and collaborates with others in the field,
sharing ideas and data. Almost none of this has happened in the
studies about meditation, positive thinking, etc., as they may
affect cancer. Neologisms are a substitute for sound theory, and we
hear things like the "magnetic resonance" of the body being "out of
balance."

IMMUNE RESPONSE?

Dr. Sampson started with a question: What brain function set up by
meditation could cause the immune system to effectively attack a
malignant cell?

There are as many as a thousand different kinds of cells in the
body (muscle, corneal, blood, bone, etc.). Purveyors of positive
thinking postulate that somehow the immune system can be "boosted"
so it can better combat disease. That may sound plausible to the
average person, but to one who has -- or should have -- a
dependable knowledge of physiology there are some serious problems
to overcome, especially as the question relates to malignancy. The
first problem is the very notion of "boosting" the immune system:
an increased immunologic response is more often HARMFUL. Toying
with the immune system can have disastrous effects. For example,
auto-immune conditions are those in which the system is "boosted"
to the point that it attacks everything, including the tissue of
one's own body.

The second problem is that cancerous tissue is NOT foreign tissue.
A cancerous cell is one of our own cells gone haywire. The idea
that our immune system could be able to conduct a selective siege
on its own tissues because of some positive thinking requires some
powerful explanation. How could this degree of SPECIFIC instruction
be sorted and carried out from the incipient thought during
meditation to the immunological response? What kind of mechanism
could possibly work this way? This is where research should be
concentrated if those who allege such fantastic results are to have
any credibility with the medical community. 

Instead of sound medical research and penetrating peer review, the
proponents take the easy -- and profitable -- way out: publish
directly to the public. A medically ignorant and hopeful public
doesn't offer the proper ground base for rigorous, skeptical
analyses.

Dr. Sampson explained how the immune system works against
pathogenic invasion. An invading foreign body has antigens on the
surface of its molecules that form a unique pattern. The host
body's immune system sends out coded identifiers (antibodies) to
see if the substance is foreign by a lock-in-key matching mechanism
of the antigen pattern. If there is a match, antibodies attack and
destroy the alien substance. One's own tissues are not coded for
attack except in rare cases of auto-immune disorders like multiple
sclerosis and lupus -- a case of the immune system run amok.

WHERE DID IT START?

Wally wanted to know where the idea of positive-thinking-cures-
cancer started. He dug out the earliest papers and found that they
were almost all done by psychologists. PSYCHOLOGISTS? What does a
Ph.D. psychologist know about anatomy and immunology? They are
simply not qualified. Those early papers were taken uncritically
and a whole industry was built on their flimsy backs. 

The most notable author in the genesis of the idea is psychologist
Lawrence LeShan, who identified personality traits that he claimed
would lead to cancer. Depression, at base, was the bogeyman
according to him. The blockbuster book that really went around the
popular appearance circuit was Norman Cousin's "Anatomy of an
Illness" in which he asserted that he had literally laughed himself
from the scythe's sweep of the Grim Reaper. The proof? He was
alive. He gave no credit -- or presumably thanks -- to his surgery
and post-op therapy. He said he had had a fatal disease, not
grasping the fact that a disease is fatal only if one dies.

Dr. Stuart Simenton, one of the first M.D.s to get into the water
with his book "Getting Well Again" stretched this kind of thinking
into a nice scientific-sounding linear sequence by the following
progression (read "=>" as "stimulates"):

     Psychological stress => depression and despair => limbic
     system => hypothalamus => pituitary gland => endocrine
     system => immune system => abnormal cell production =>
     CANCER.

The first two steps might be reasonable, but it is all pure
supposition after that. Mainstream M.D.s cringe at every page.
Simenton does not give so much as a hint about a mechanism to make
this ad hoc series work, and his treatise is suffused with
Christian Science ideas. 

Dr. Sampson raised some very simple counterexamples that should
serve to reduce Simenton's scheme to rubbish: AIDS patients,
holocaust survivors, WWII POWs, death-row inmates, and the
clinically depressed. In each of these cases the subjects were
clearly under severe emotional and psychological stress and
suffered deep depression and despair. In each of these cases the
incidence of cancer was well BELOW average.

The single most popular book -- it was the number-one best-seller
for over a year -- is Dr. Bernie Siegel's "Love, Medicine &
Miracles". Siegel, a practicing M.D., made several million dollars
from the book and, unfortunately, may have turned hundreds or
thousands of cancer victims away from scientifically demonstrated
life-saving therapies.

This attitude-can-cause-disease folderol is right up the New Age
alley. The movement quickly co-opted the thinking and mixed it with
popular meditation. Guru's jumped on the bandwagon and soon swamis
and yogis were offering seminars and writing books teaching cancer
patients how to meditate themselves right into perfect health by
simply starting at the top of the "cancer chain" with happy
thoughts, which should result in a DECREASE of abnormal cell
production. How this was supposed to destroy the existing cancer
cells is not discussed, and few bothered to ask.

THE REALITY

So what about material from respectable research work? Wally had to
dig deep -- this side, as we in the skeptical community find all
too often, does not get very good coverage. In all the best
studies, one can guess the outcome when the variables are tightly
controlled. The four best studies conducted, all published in the
"Journal of the American Medical Association", found no significant
correlation between one's state of mind and the incidence of or
cure of cancer. The numbers just aren't there. In the largest group
studied -- 1,000 patients -- there was no association whatever. The
studies that showed the most significance were invariably those
that used the fewest subjects and had the worst experimental
controls.

Dr. Sampson began to realize something peculiar in some of the
smaller, less-controlled professional journals: none of the
competing researchers took each other to task. They were unusually
nice to each other. This is uncharacteristic in the halls of
scientific research. The scientific method itself invites sharp
dissent from competing researchers on controversial matters. 

Typically, when one researcher finds flaws in another's work he or
she is only too happy to dig them out and publish a counter or a
refutation. There appeared to be a buddy system working with the
meditation-will-cure-you crowd, a kind of if-you-don't-knock-me-I-
won't-knock-you gentleman's agreement. Normal science is combative.
It is not for the weak-hearted.

CONCLUSION

The real problem is the same one we, as skeptics, always face:
reality versus belief, reason versus emotion. We have all had the
experience of physical suffering from emotional stress. From that
it is not hard to see how one can extrapolate from some physical
manifestation like ulcers to cancer. When pop terminology like
"natural," or "organic," are related to the whole process the
emotional case is made all the stronger. And, after all, meditating
is much more pleasant to contemplate than debilitating surgery and
the powerful side effects of chemo- and radiation therapy.

Alas, positive thinking appears to be the laetrile of the 90s.



CONSUMER ADVOCACY
by Shawn Carlson

Bay Area Skeptics is, among other things, a consumer advocacy
group. We contend that people have the right to know that they are
getting the services for which they are paying, especial when those
services, improperly applied, might endanger the public health.

Psychics and astrologers pander their secret "occult gifts" under
the guise of psychological and life-guidance counseling. They offer
counseling on all matters of their patients' lives. Since the
advice occultists give often has profound effects on their clients'
wellbeing we believe that all occult counselors should be
considered health care professionals and held to the appropriate
standards. 

This means two things. First, that they obtain state certification
in counseling. And second, that they be required to demonstrate
that they really do posses the occult abilities which they often
charge their patients large sums to perform. This second condition
would require every occultist to pass a test of psychic skills
(administered under controls that would preclude the possibility of
cheating before they are permitted to run barefoot through their
patients' troubles). Considering the enormous potential for harm
that occult advice may bring, doesn't the protection of the public
health demand that we hold occultists to the same reasonable
standards to which we hold other counselors?

Astrologers and psychics alike have been given every opportunity to
show that they can provide the services they advertise. They have
been willingly tested numerous time at tasks that they agreed were
fair tests of their powers, yet they have failed each time. We
insist that all occultic counselors come out from behind their
self-woven veils of mystery and be required to either step into the
light of public scrutiny, or give up the business of public and
self-deception.



OF ALL THE PLACES!

BAS secretary RICK MOEN has something to his credit few of us can
enjoy. He was quoted in the "National Examiner", a weekly tabloid.
No, Moen hasn't gone off the deep end with his new hollow-earth
theory, and he didn't tell those folks about his recent UFO
abduction experience.

There is a group in the Bay Area that calls themselves
"Californians for Earthquake Prevention"; they believe a "massive
build-up of sound waves caused by screeching car alarms and
millions of pounding feet" caused the October 17 quake.

The last word in the article was given by Rick: "`These ideas are
ludicrous,' said Rick Moen, a spokesman for Bay Area Skeptics, a
scientific think-tank."

We are a scientific "think-tank" yet. We'll take that, thank you.



GET READY!

For those of us who attended last year's BAS annual picnic, there
is no need to elaborate. For the rest, we elaborate: it was
fabulous. Ben and Carol Baumgartner have agreed to do it again this
year but we told them we cannot have them provide the food. They
said that about $5 per person should be enough to cover expenses
and they will do the rest (BYOD).

We will have the picnic in August, and we invite you to join us for
a truly memorable repast. Notify us that you intend to come so we
can begin to make some estimates of how many will be there. Last
year we had four entr�es, three vegetable choices, three kinds of
salad, and sumptuous desserts. The whole thing was capped off with
door prizes and entertainment.

To get the ball rolling now, send a $5 (or more if you want to help
with expenses) check payable to BEN BAUMGARTNER at 2467 Betlo Ave.,
Mountain View, CA 94043. If you can help out please enclose a note
to that effect. You can talk to Ben or Carol at (415) 968-1535.



DEGREES OF FOLLY: PART XI
by William Bennetta

Parts I through X 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 religious
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'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 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 given 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. In those
negotiations, the ICR was represented by Wendell R. Bird, a lawyer
from Atlanta. On 3 March, Bird and Joseph Barankin reached an
agreement. The ICR would purge "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 committee;
one member would be chosen 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 examined the ICR in August 1989. It was managed
not by Steeves but by Jeanne Bird. Bird had joined the PPED in the
spring of 1989 and had become an assistant director a few months
later. Four of the committee's five members were scientists from
campuses of the University of California or the California State
University. The fifth, Leroy Eimers, came from Cedarville College,
a Bible college in Ohio. He was the member who had been chosen by
the ICR, in accordance with the agreement reached in March.

After the committee's visit, Henry Morris and the other ICR men
feared that the committee would declare the ICRGS to be defective
and unworthy of approval, and that Honig would 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.

The committee's report was submitted on 12 January 1990. As a
whole, it was candid, precise and rich in examples showing the
bases for the committee's conclusions: The ICR, despite its name,
was not a scientific institution and did not offer proper education
in science. But the last paragraph of the report was vapid fluff:
It said that Leroy Eimers had not agreed with many conclusions
drawn in the report, but it did not suggest that he had any
evidence to support his position, or that he had tried to challenge
even one of the detailed findings that the report set forth.

Five days later, on 17 January, the ICR men -- saying that they had
not yet seen the report -- issued another "news release" to
denounce Honig and his Department.

In March, as I shall tell here, the Department formally refused to
reapprove the ICRGS as a source of masters' degrees in science and
in science education.  -- W.B., 10 May

THE COUNCIL CONCURS

When the superintendent of public instruction intends to deny
reapproval of a degree-granting school, he first must notify, and
obtain advice from, the state's Council for Private Postsecondary
Educational Institutions. On 13 March, after examining the record
of the ICR case, the Council's Review Committee recommended that
the full Council should affirm Bill Honig's intention to deny
reapproval to the ICR. Later on the same day, the full Council did
so.

On 16 March the Department's general counsel, Joseph R. Symkowick,
sent a letter (signed by Gregory J. Roussere, one of Symkowick's
staff lawyers) to Henry Morris. Here, with some minor typographic
changes, is the letter's full text:

     Dear Dr. Morris:

     Re: Final notice of denial of authorization to operate
     under Education Code Section 94310.2

     Following the hearing before the Review Committee, the
     Council for Private Postsecondary Education[al]
     Institutions, on March 13, 1990, advised the Private
     Postsecondary Education Division (PPED) of the State
     Department of Education to proceed with its proposed
     denial action against your institution.

     This letter represents the Department's Final Notice that
     the application filed by the Institute for Creation
     Research for authorization to operate under Education
     Code Section 94310.2 is denied. Denial is for the reasons
     stated in the visiting committee's final report, a copy
     of which was sent to you previously.

     You may appeal this denial to the Superintendent of
     Public Instruction in accordance with the regulation
     procedures described in Section 18827 of Title 5,
     California Code of Regulations. A copy of that section is
     attached. If a timely appeal is filed, the matter will be
     heard by an independent hearing officer pursuant to the
     Administrative Procedure Act, the details of which would
     be explained later. In order to expedite the appeal, your
     letter may be sent to me AND a copy to Jeanne Bird,
     Assistant Superintendent of Public Instruction and
     Director, at the Private Postsecondary Education
     Division.

A CURIOUS TACTIC

The ICR did indeed issue a notice of appeal, including a request
that the pertinent hearing be held in San Diego County. The notice
was filed with the Department on 13 April by Loren E. McMaster, a
lawyer from Sacramento.

On the same day, the ICR sought to institute a lawsuit by filing a
complaint in the United States District Court in Los Angeles. The
lawyers representing the ICR in that action were Wendell Bird,
David J. Myers (a partner in Bird's law firm in Atlanta), Thomas T.
Anderson (see "Creationists Issue a Phony Schoolbook," in "BASIS"
for April 1990), and Loren McMaster.

The filing of the lawsuit was a curious tactic, because the ICR had
not (and still has not) exhausted the appeal process by which it
might obtain redress of its alleged grievances. By that standard,
the lawsuit seems premature. Perhaps the ICR is merely trying to
intimidate the Department; perhaps the ICR does not really expect
the federal court to entertain such a suit while administrative
remedies remain available.

The complaint names Bill Honig, Joseph Barankin, Jeanne Bird and
the Department as defendants. It alleges that those defendants, in
their "revocation" of the ICRGS's approval to grant degrees in
science, have violated the ICR's rights to (among other things)
academic freedom, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, due
process and equal protection, as established by the federal
Constitution. It asks the court to declare that the defendants'
actions were unconstitutional, and to enjoin the defendants from
denying approval to the ICRGS; as an alternative to the injunction,
it asks for damages that will compensate the ICR for "lost
investment in establishing and operating the [ICRGS]" and for other
losses.

The text of the complaint, purporting to set forth many facts of
the ICR case, is predictably absurd. It begins by misrepresenting
the case's central issue, which is that the ICR wants to award
degrees and does NOT, as the complaint falsely suggests, merely
want to "teach science courses in peace and without government
interference. . . ." After that, it just gets worse. It even
suggests that "science" has something to do with, or can be
legitimated by, popular culture -- "the view of a majority of the
American public."

In short, the complaint retails a lot of the ICR's customary
nonsense. This includes a badly misleading account of the ICR case
itself, comparable to the accounts that (as my readers will recall)
the ICR has been giving to the press.

THE BROTHEL BROCHURE

The ICR men evidently alerted the press to the filing of the
complaint on 13 April, because the "Los Angeles Times" carried a
story about it, written by Amy Wallace, on the following morning.
The ICR's spokesman was Henry Morris's son John, who seemed not  to
care anymore about the ICR's "scientific" pretensions. He said
explicitly that the ICR was teaching "Christian doctrine"; then he
made a charming excursion into the subject of homosexual brothels.
Here are some excerpts from Wallace's story:

     "If the state can tell a private Christian school that
     they can't teach Christian doctrine, then the state has
     too much power," said John Morris, administrative vice
     president of the institute. "We're not asking the state
     to rule that creationism is the valid scientific
     entrepretation, and we're not aksing for inclusion of
     creationism in the public schools. We are asking for
     freedom of speech."

     Morris and others allege that [Bill] Honig's aim is to
     shut down the institute, which has granted about 20
     master's degrees in biology, geology, physics and science
     education since 1981.

     But William L. Rukeyser, special assistant to Honig,
     disputed that.

     "ICR's continued existence is not at question. Nobody is
     trying to shut down ICR," said Rukeyser.

     "But we cannot legally describe ICR's current curriculum
     as qualifying for a master's of science degree. . . . If
     they wish to grant master's of creationism degrees, that
     would be fine with [Honig]. If they want to describe it
     as a degree in a system of beliefs, that would be fine.

     "What is at question is essentially truth in advertising.
     . . ."

     Morris said endorsement [of the ICR's beliefs by the
     Department] is not the issue: "There are approved by Mr.
     Honig's office homosexual brothels that teach homosexual
     technique. Do they endorse that? The brochure is full of
     nude men doing things to each other. So hopefully we're
     not talking about endorsement here."

     Rukeyser retorted: "Does he claim that any of those
     institutions are claiming to offer master's of science
     degrees? I don't think so."

At this writing, on 10 May, no date has been chosen for the ICR's -
administrative appeal, nor has the Department responded to the
ICR's complaint in the federal court. The Department has asked the
court to extend, until 22 May, the deadline for filing an answer.



THINK POSITIVELY

Before proving that psychotherapy lengthened the lives of advanced
breast-cancer patients, psychologist David Spiegel of Stanford had
a strong prejudice against health-care providers he calls the
"wish-away-your-cancer crowd."

"False hopes are raised," Spiegel complains.
He still has little tolerance for those who encourage the gravely
ill to engage in "visualization" and other mental exercises leading
patients to believe they should be able to destroy killer cells by
thinking positively.

But the difference now is that Spiegel, too, is convinced that a
purely mental activity -- participation in group  therapy -- not
only improves the quality of remaining life, but prolongs it.

In an unprecedented study of 86 Santa Clara Valley women with
metastatic breast cancer reported in the British medical journal
"Lancet" Spiegel and co-researchers at Stanford and UC-Berkeley
showed that a year of group therapy and instruction in pain control
added a year and a half of life.

"We didn't make cancer go away. We extended survival," Spiegel
said. "The fact that you can do something with people who have a
terminal illness that increases life and that is clinically as well
as statistically significant means we have a robust effect here
well worth looking at further."

Spiegel believes survival was extended because therapy curbed
patients' depression, allowing them to follow the best diets and to
comply better with medical treatments.

"It's possible," he added, "that there was some enhancement of
immune function." [Note: see the summary of Wallace Sampson's
address to BAS in the May issue of "BASIS".  -- Ed.]

Dr. Sandra Levy, a specialist in behavioral immunology at the
University of Pittsburgh, said the study was the best thus far to
have shown "fairly indisputably" that psychosocial intervention
helped cancer patients.

Levy has examined links between behavior and immune function in
people with cancer in its early stages. She suspected that
participants in Spiegel's study lived longer because therapy had a
positive physiological effect even relatively late in the course of
the disease.

Ronald Glaser, Ohio State University psychoimmunologist, speaking
for himself and co-researcher Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, said:

     "Along with other studies, this study is consistent with
     the hypothesis that what can [have an] impact [on] the
     central nervous system can have implications for disease.
     If it's stress, it's negative. But if there's something
     else that makes the system react other ways, it might
     have a positive effect."

Berkeley psychologist Neal Fiore, a former cancer patient himself
and the author of "The Road Back to Health", said Spiegel's work
was especially important because it countered bogus New Age
theories holding cancer patients responsible, somehow, for their
disease. Spiegel's study showed that improved health "has nothing
to do with previous attitude of character," Fiore emphasized.

"What the paper does," said Tom Coates, chief of UC-San Francisco's
Behavioral Medicine, "is give hope."

The study also was praised in "Science", the publication of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, by Boston
University Psychologist Bernard Fox, a critic of psychosocial
treatments, and Jimmie Holland, chief of psychiatry at New York's
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Holland's praise was
presented with the caveat that psychotherapy not be viewed now as
a substitute for standard treatments.

Spiegel originally set out to disprove the idea that non-medical
treatments could help cancer patients.

In 1976, Spiegel and Stanford psychologist Irv Yalom -- author of
the critically acclaimed new book, "Love's Executioner and Other
Tales of Psychotherapy" -- tried to determine how those destined to
die from cancer could be made to feel better in the time left.

The 86 women in the initial study generally were upper middle-class
and well-educated; they averaged 55 years of age. Fifty were
selected at random to participate in weekly 90-minute group therapy
sessions with eight to ten patients and two therapists; the -
remainder, like the fifty in therapy, received only standard
medical care.

The 86 were also given a battery of tests at four-month intervals
to assess moods, coping styles, family environments, degrees of
pain and phobic responses, (if any) to their conditions. By year's
end, Spiegel said, the treatment group had half the pain of the
control group, less mood disturbance, fewer phobic reactions and
fewer maladaptive coping behaviors.

"We helped them face their years of dying," Spiegel said. "One
woman said, `Talking about dying in the group is a bit like looking
into the Grand Canyon. I know that if I fell in, it would be the
end. But I feel better about myself because I can look.'"

SURPRISE FINDINGS

Several years ago, however, Spiegel, having grown extremely
irritated by the "wish-away-your-cancer crowd," resolved to rebut
its claims. He remembered, with anger, patients who had been
counseled that the "right mental attitude" might enable them to
quit chemotherapy, and others led to believe they were at fault for
the spread of their disease.

"I thought, `I have the perfect negative study. I have a patient
population we know we helped psychologically. If we can show
there's no difference in survival time, that well really put this
to rest,'" he said. With a grant from the American Cancer Research
Fund, Spiegel obtained data on the 86 women in the original study
group. It came as no surprise that all but three had died. But
Spiegel said he was shocked to discover that women in the treatment
group had lived 18 months longer, on average, than women in the
control group.

With a Sanford biostatistician, Spiegel spent three years analyzing
the data. Variables such as medical treatment, age and length of
time from diagnosis to metastasis were examined closely.

"We simply could not find any differences that would make the
finding go away." he said.



EDITOR'S CORNER

It is wonderful to be found wrong in something. When an honest
person discovers error in his or her thinking, he or she can only
be happy to jettison some cumbersome baggage. Mainstream science
unceremoniously throws discredited hypotheses on the trash heap of
tried-and-failed ideas. Progress in science comes through discovery
and correction of error, and there are great incentives to find
mistakes. One could easily say that the goal of science is the
search to root out error more than it is the search for truth. In
this way, progress is automatically truth-converging. When there
are fakes and frauds, there is every reason and effort to excise
them from the scientific body to eliminate the infection.

PSEUDOSCIENCE CONTRAST

Contrast this when one discovers error in the closet of
pseudoscience and committed believers. The reaction is vastly
different. For them it is not just a simple matter of expunging
wrong. Error is a disaster, a crisis, so there is a powerful
disincentive to pry.

Even minor error is a crack in the dike. Pseudoscientists hide
their fakes and frauds for fear of casting doubt on the body.
Screwball notions from anyone, trained or not, can flash into
prominence if there is the least hint that the idea might give
support to the party line. If critical evaluation exists at all,
the body usually suppresses it from within.

Such are the dangers of committed dogma -- it must be flawless.
Acknowledgement of even the tiniest scratch bodes evil for the
whole edifice. Mistakes are far more than losing face -- they could
mean the loss of identity, so every form of protectionism emerges,
most notably denial and cognitive dissonance all the way to
complete withdrawal.

AN EXAMPLE

In issue XXV of "Creation/Evolution", a journal devoted exclusively
to study of the creation-evolution controversy, a classic example
of this inability to acknowledge error was illustrated in the form
of a response by Norman Geisler to a previous article. The question
of the debate turned about a quote: "It is bigotry for the public
schools to teach only one theory of origins." attributed to
Clarence Darrow from the Scopes trial. A skeptical Tom McIver first
saw the quote in creationist literature and decided to look into
it. He got the transcript of the trial and found that there was no
such quote, so he wrote about his findings in edition XXIV of
"C/E".

Geisler, the director of Liberty Center for Research and
Scholarship at Liberty University (Jerry Falwell's school), a
frequent correspondent in the pages of "C/E", then wrote to
"explain" the origin of the misquote: "Wendel Bird [chief attorney
for the creationists in their Supreme-Court bid requiring
creationism to be taught in the schools], whose "Yale Law Review"
article (1978) was the source of many of the citations, has
subsequently recognized that the quote is probably not authentic.
So much for trusting Ivy League publications!"

The cognitive dissonance flows, even erupts, from the very print on
the pages of Geisler's reply. McIver exposed a clear, unequivocal
error, but do we get an equally clear, unequivocal retraction? Of
course not, we get a "probably not authentic." Worse, Mr. Geisler
prepares us for round II of this circus when he and his comrades
will use McIver's revelation to turn and kick us in the behind.
Look carefully: Geisler cites Wendell Bird's "Yale Law Review"
article as the source for the false quotation and then says,
astonishingly, "So much for trusting Ivy League publications!" 

Wendell Bird's derelict scholarship is not to be questioned.
"Yale's" credibility is suspect. Yale's cancer metastasizes at
light speed and immediately consumes Brown, Columbia, Cornell,
Princeton, Dartmouth and Harvard so that we can no longer trust any
of their communications, either. Alums, pull your card to save
yourselves. Say, didn't Stephen Gould have something to do with
Harvard? Since we already know Harvard to be a den of humanist
snakes, this is only further confirmation that we cannot give any
credence to anything coming from there.

The cognitive dissonance and denial continued in Geisler's response
as he stated that though the quotation "probably is not correct,"
Darrow did, after all, use the word bigotry. Presumably Geisler
wants us to believe that it is not without good reason that Darrow
MIGHT have said such a thing or possibly intimated as much.

A similar incident happened recently at the Paluxy river in Texas.
Creationists, notably a man named Glen Baugh, claimed they had
found dinosaur prints alongside human footprints in the same
strata, thus falsifying evolution (this, while saying out the other
side of their mouths that evolution is not scientific because it is
not falsifiable). 

Glen Kuban and a crew of knowledgeable researchers spent about a
year (in 1988) working at the Paluxy banks and produced proof that
the "mantracks" were misidentified prints of a small, three-toed
dinosaur. (See issue XII for the story.) Creationists are still
mucking around in the Paluxy mire trying to find Fred Flintstone's
tracks alongside those of his pets. There has been no clear,
unequivocal renunciation of Baugh's slapstick farce in spite of the
staring, knock-down evidence that demands it.

THE CREATIONIST THREAT

What the man on the street does not understand is that the
creationists are a very dangerous lot. They have an agenda, are
well financed, and have political clout far beyond their numbers.
They have learned that they cannot make their way by the ordinary
scientific processes of hard research and presentation of evidence
subject to peer review, so they grab the lapels of the executive,
legislative and judicial branches and shake out concessions to
which they are not entitled.

The creationists have shown us they are not above the most
unscrupulous tactics including, but not limited to, lying,
cheating, and manipulation. The flagellant fruitcakes in Iran
chanting "Allah is great" are only a step in degree from some
fundamentalist fanatics among the scientific creationists.
[The journal "Creation/Evolution" is available at P.O. Box 146,
Amherst, NY 14226. The cost is  $12 for four issues. It is not
published on a particular schedule.]



"The more unnatural anything is, the more it is capable of becoming
the object of dismal admiration."   -- Thomas Paine



RINGMASTER EXPOSES RING LEADERS OF SPIRITUAL FRAUD
by Austin Miles

Austin Miles is the author of "Don't Call Me Brother", a book about
his experiences as a former Pentecostal pastor with the PTL
ministry. Miles is an internationally famous circus ringmaster, his
profession before the PTL. He will show how a bunch of con-men
exploited the faith of millions of people to get millions upon
millions of dollars from them.

The PTL took advantage of laws designed to protect the freedom of
worship. The responsible individuals were accountable to no one.
They built a huge machinery of lobby groups and tax dodges to
enrich themselves at the expense of the elderly, the poor and the
genuinely pious.

Mr. Miles will expose the internal workings of such fund raising
schemes as nonexistent "financial crises", telethons and a level of
immorality that makes an honest preacher blush.
Come and hear this first-hand report from a man who traveled in the
inner circles of the PTL Club and who watched Jim Bakker's
corruption grow as the cash flowed in.



KEEP IN TOUCH!

with the BAS BBS: 300/1200/2400 baud. Lively exchange, current
events, updates on skeptical happenings, relevant TV and radio
appearances of BAS notables and rationality are a dial away.
415-648-8944



CALENDAR
June Meeting
LIVE AT THE PTL
by Austin Miles
Tuesday, June 26th, 7:30pm, El Cerrito Public Library

The El Cerrito Public Library is at 6510 Stockton Ave. From Route
80, take the Central Ave. exit (the third exit north of University
Ave.). Go east about three blocks and turn left on San Pablo Ave.,
continue three blocks and turn right on Stockton. The library is on
the right in the third block.

Watch for coming events in the BAS CALENDAR, or call 415-LA-TRUTH
for up-to-the-minute details on events. If you have ideas about
topics or speakers, leave a message on the hotline.

WARNING: WE STRONGLY URGE that you call the hotline shortly before
attending any Calendar activity to see if there have been any
changes.



RINGMASTER EXPOSES RINGLEADERS OF SPIRITUAL FRAUD
by Austin Miles

Austin Miles is the author of "Don't Call Me Brother", a book about
his experiences as a former Pentacostal pastor with the PTL
ministry. Miles is an internationally famous circus ringmaster, his
profession before the PTL. He will show how a bunch of con-men
exploited the faith of millions of people to get millions upon
millions of dollars from them.

The PTL took advantage of laws designed to protect the freedom of
worship. The responsible individuals were accountable to no one.
They built a huge machinery of lobby groups and tax dodges to
enrich themselves at the expense of the elderly, the poor, and the
genuinely pious.

Mr. Miles will expose the internal workings of such fund-raising
schemes as nonexistent "financial crises", telethons, and a level
of immorality that makes an honest preacher blush.

Come and hear this first-hand report from a man who traveled in the
inner circles of the PTL Club, and who watched Jim Bakker's
corruption grow as the cash flowed in.



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 
 

                             -----

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 June, 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-