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CPU > Newsletter > 2005-2006 > 2/26/06 CPU NewsletterFebruary 26, 2006CPU EVENT: "ID: The Politics of Intelligent Design" (TONIGHT, 02/27) -- Last Chance to RSVP! CPU EVENTS/ANNOUNCEMENTS: 1. "ID: The Politics of Intelligent Design" - A CPU Panel Discussion (TONIGHT, 02/27) 2. CPU Issue Update: Intelligent Design -- Featuring exclusive commentary from witnesses in the Dover, PA trial! (Available at http://www.cupolitics.org) 3. CPR Pitch Deadline for March Issue (Sunday, 03/05) CPU CO-SPONSORED EVENT: 4. "The Untold Story of Emmitt Louis Till" (Thursday, 03/02) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1. "ID: The Politics of Intelligent Design" - A CPU Panel Discussion RSVP at http://www.cupolitics.org/rsvp. Seats are filling quickly! Press release and event poster are also available online. Date: TONIGHT, 02/27 NOTE: Dr. Barbara Forrest, one of our esteemed panelists, will be signing copies of her book Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design (with Paul R. Gross) prior to the panel. The book signing will be held in the Columbia University Bookstore, located in Alfred Lerner Hall. Featuring: Rev. John C. Rankin is president of the Theological Education Institute (TEI) and Mars Hill Society of Hartford, CT. Raised an agnostic Unitarian and secular humanist before his conversion to a biblical worldview in 1967, he holds graduate degrees from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary ( M.Div.) and Harvard Divinity School (Th.M. Ethics and Public Policy). The author of the three volume series, First the Gospel, Then Politics., and host of the Mars Hill Forum series, John has been married since 1977, and he and his wife Nancy have four children. His website is: www.teinetwork.com . Barbara Forrest is the co-author with Paul R. Gross of Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design (Oxford University Press, 2004), which details the political and religious aims of the intelligent design creationist movement. She served as an expert witness for the plaintiffs in the first legal case involving intelligent design, Kitzmiller et al. v. Dover Area School District, which originated in Dover, PA, and was resolved with a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in December 2005. She is a member of the board of directors of the National Center for Science Education and the National Advisory Council of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. She has appeared on Larry King Live and ABC's Nightline. Her radio interviews include NPR's Science Friday with Ira Flatow, Americans United's Culture Shocks with Barry Lynn, and Infidel Guy with Reginald Finley. She is a Professor of Philosophy in the Department of History and Political Science at Southeastern Louisiana University. Nick Matzke is a Public Information Project Director at NCSE. He has a double B.S. in Biology and Chemistry from Valparaiso University, and a Master's degree in Geography from U.C. Santa Barbara. He has a long-standing interest in evolution in a spatial context, particularly issues surrounding dispersal and convergence. Before coming to NCSE, he conducted extensive literature surveys on the origin of carnivorous plant traps and bacterial flagella. In the area of evolution and earth history education, Nick specializes in making the scientific literature accessible and understandable to the public, in order to rebut antievolutionist claims about the evolution of biological complexity. During the landmark "intelligent design" case Kitzmiller v. Dover, Nick spent a year working for the Plaintiffs' legal team, providing scientific advice and researching the creationist origins of the ID movement, work which eventually resulted in the discovery of the now-famous creationist drafts of the 1989 ID textbook Of Pandas and People (this episode was recently written up in Skeptic magazine). After his appointment at NCSE, he intends to enter a Ph.D. program, where he can work on the integration of bioinformatics, biogeography, and large-scale evolution. Joel Cracraft is Lamont Curator of Birds and Curator-in-Charge of the Department of Ornithology, American Museum of Natural History. He received his B.S. (Zoology) from the University of Oklahoma, M.S. (zoology) from Louisiana State University, and his Ph.D. (biology) from Columbia University in 1969. He was on the staff of the University of Illinois, Chicago (Anatomy and Cell Biology) before coming to New York in 1992 as Curator of Ornithology. He also has professorial appointments in the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology at Columbia University and in the Graduate Program in Biology at the City University of New York. His research interests are in systematic biology, biological diversification, and biogeography. Much of his current research focuses on the higher level systematics of birds, and the radiation of the large Australian endemic avifauna, including birds-of-paradise, using both molecular sequence and morphological data. He has written or edited books on phylogenetic systematics (1979, 1980), phylogenetic analysis of molecular data (1991), the biodiversity crisis (2000), the Tree of Life (2004), and the teaching of evolution (2005), in addition to over 150 scientific papers. He is a recipient of the Elliott Coues Award from the American Ornithologists' Union, and was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is a member of 14 professional societies and has held office or served on the board of many of them, including being President of the Society of Systematic Biologists and President of the American Institute of Biological Sciences (2004). Over the past decade he has been active in "biopolitical" efforts to promote systematics and biodiversity science, including Systematics Agenda 2000/US (co-chair), Systematics Agenda 2000 International (Steering Committee), Biodiversity Panel, President Clinton's Council of Advisors for Science and Technology, OSTP (member), and the international biodiversity science program Diversitas (Steering Committee). He also served as an advisor to the American Civil Liberties Union at the Arkansas creation trial in 1981. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2. CPU Issue Update: Intelligent Design - Featuring exclusive commentary from witnesses in the Dover, PA trial! The newest CPU Issue Update, Intelligent Design , is now available on campus and at http://www.cupolitics.org. ID provides an excellent introduction to the history and politics of intelligent design and features exclusive commentary from participants in the Dover, PA trial. Read it in time for the ID panel tomorrow! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sunday, 03/05 The deadline to pitch an article for the April issue of the CPR (the last of the 2005-2006 academic year) is Sunday, March 5th at midnight. Each pitch should include a summary of the issue you want to cover as well as some possible arguments and conclusions you would make. Keep in mind that you are trying to convince the editors why your article should be selected. Feel free to not only describe the facts and circumstances, but also to explain why the issue is important and deserves coverage. Also, remember that the issue will not be published until late April. You may want to make the case for why your article will still be relevant in a month and a half. If you would like to have an editor review your ideas, simply indicate that in you're pitch. We'll do our best to get to all of them. The earlier you get your pitches to us though, the more likely it is that we'll be able to give you meaningful comments. To obtain a pitch form, please send an email to cpureview@columbia.edu or visit http://www.columbiapoliticalreview.com. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. The Columbia ACLU, Black Students Organization, College Democrats, and The Columbia Political Union Present: The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till, with director/producer Keith Beauchamp Date: Thursday, 03/02 In a decade marked by unchecked segregation and countless acts of violence against the black population, the death of Emmett Till both represented the national condition and stood out on account of its sheer brutality. The 14-year-old's murder, revenge for his alleged transgression of whistling at a white woman, mobilized the nation and set the Civil Rights Movement in action. In spite of multiple witnesses and ample evidence, however, Till's murderers were set free, acquitted in court by an all-white jury after only 67 minutes of deliberation. In 1996, Keith Beauchamp set out to Mississippi to research the case, which had been closed for over four decades. With access to previously reticent witnesses, Beauchamp found that as many as 14 people may have been involved with the murder, some of whom are still alive. After nearly a decade's worth of research, The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till premiered at the United Nations and compelled the United States Justice Department to reopen the case. Come see the film that forced the government to take action, and meet the man who made it possible. Co-sponsored by the University Chaplain, Kraft Family Fund, BC/CC History, BC/CC Human Rights, BC/CC Political Science, BC American Studies, BC/CC MMUF, SuA, Columbia OMA, CCSC, and the Ferris Reel Film Society
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