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AMERICAN ATHEISTS MEDIA ALERT
On Wednesday, Oct 22, the following event will
occur at
Northern
Kentucky
University. This has
managed to attract some national attention and it is feared by some that the
forces of ignorance will pack the auditorium with the people who will get to
vote on this issue.
Note that
the first
200 people in attendance will have an opportunity to serve as jurors, using
small remote control clickers to register their opinions both before and after
the trial. At the conclusion of the proceeding, they will decide the case.
Your help is needed. Get as many people as
you can to the event early so they can be in among the first 200 people who get
the clickers to be able to vote. A vote for Intelligent Design could be very bad
for the future of science education in Kentucky.
Edwin.
Thursday - October 16, 2008
For immediate release...
KAGIN IN MOCK TRIAL WED.
OCTOBER 22
NORTHERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY ~
"CREATION SCIENCE" v. EVOLUTION
"Fundies" to pack event? First
200 will serve
as "electronic jurors"
Northern Kentucky University in
Highland Heights, KY. will be the site of a unique "mock trial" this Wednesday,
October 22, 2008 pitting defenders of so-called "creation science" against
proponents of evolution. The Resolved asks whether public school teachers
should be permitted to teach creation science in public school classrooms.
Among those participating will be Edwin
Kagin, National Legal Director for American Atheists. Mr. Kagin is a
nationally recognized figure in the battle over evolution versus creationism.
The debate begins at 7:00 PM at NKU's
University Center in the Otto M. Budwig Theater. This event is free and
open to the public. The first 200 persons in attendance will be invited to
serve as "jurors" using small remote control clickers to register their opinions
both before and after the trial. A the end of the proceeding, they will
decide the case.
Freethinkers, Atheists, Humanists and
all other supporters of science and good teaching standards are urged to attend.
WHO & WHAT: Edwin
Kagin, National Legal Director for American Atheist at the Northern Kentucky
University "mock trial" on teaching creationism.
WHEN: This Wednesday,
October 22, 2008 beginning at 7:00 PM.
WHERE: NKU's
University Center in the Otto M. Budwig Theater
(AMERICAN ATHEISTS is a nationwide
movement that defends civil rights for nonbelievers; labors for the absolute
separation of church and state; and addresses issues of First Amendment public
policy.)
NKU to host
interactive mock trial on creation science and evolution in the classroom
News from NKU...
Thursday - October 16, 2008
For immediate release...
HIGHLAND HEIGHTS, Ky. - On Oct. 22, Northern Kentucky
University will host a unique interactive mock trial that will turn local
citizens into jurors on the hotly-contested issue of whether public school
science teachers should be allowed to teach creation science, which attempts to
use scientific means to prove the Genesis account of creation.
The trial, which will take place at 7 p.m. at NKU's University Center Otto M.
Budig Theater, is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Northern
Kentucky Forum, the NKU Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement and Nonprofit
Development and the NKU Chase College of Law Center for Excellence in Advocacy.
The first
200 people in attendance will have an opportunity to serve as jurors, using
small remote control clickers to register their opinions both before and after
the trial. At the conclusion of the proceeding, they will decide the case.
"It is part of the mission of the
Scripps
Howard
Center to conduct public
forums," said Mark Neikirk, the Centers executive director. "I've heard
President Votruba state many times that a college campus should be a safe place
for difficult conversations." Neikirk said that while the evolution/creation
science debate is a difficult conversation, he felt it could be more productive
if held as a mock trial.
The Trial: Scott v.
Chandler
County
School Board
The trial centers around the termination of fictitious biology teacher Susan
Scott (a traditionally trained evolution adherent), who according to her
complaint, encouraged students to "explore creation theories." Scott, who will
be played by
Simon
Kenton
High School teacher Heather
Mastin, is suing the fictitious Chandler County School Board for wrongful
termination and seeks reinstatement, compensatory damages and a judicial
declaration that the school board violated her First Amendment rights.
Scott will be represented by local attorney Phil Taliaferro, who will argue that
teaching creation theory is not only permitted in
Kentucky, but legally protected.
The defendant, Chandler County School Board, will be represented by local
attorney
Margo Grubbs, who will argue that
Scott's termination was justified under existing law.
Scott's chief witness will be the real-life Dr. Ben Scripture, who received his
Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Notre Dame in1998. Dr. Scripture
has earned degrees from the
University of
California at Berkeley (a
A.B. in zoology) and Grace Theological Seminary (M.Div.). Dr. Scripture has
published articles in the Journal of Biological Chemistry and the Journal of
Molecular Biology. He hosts weekly radio programs, "Scripture on Creation" and
"That's What Scripture Says" on radio stations in
Fort Wayne,
Ind., and
Indianapolis, and on the Good News Network
stations covering the southeastern region of the
U.S.
The school board will be represented in court by fictional superintendent Bryan
Boone, who will be played by retired Boone County Superintendent Bryan Blavatt.
Its key witness will be real-life evolution advocate Ed Kagin, a Union,
Ky., attorney. Kagin is a founder
of the Free Inquiry Group and co-authored The Fundamentals of Extremism: The
Christian Right in America. He is the originator of
Camp
Quest, the nation's first
residential secular summer camp. He has run unsuccessfully as "the candidate
without a prayer" for the Kentucky Supreme Court and Senate. Kagin is the
national legal director for American Atheists and was awarded "Atheist of the
Year" by that group in 2005 and 2008.
As is so often the case, the legalities of the issue aren't black and white.
Kentucky has fairly strict
guidelines that suggest evolution-only instruction, but also has a pro-Genesis
statute. And, of course, the question isn't confined to the Commonwealth. It is
playing out again in the national political debate - as it so often does - and
is heating up in a number of states.
The trial judge will be played by retired Kenton County Circuit Court Judge Doug
Stephens.
Northern Kentucky
Forum
The mock trial is the first of what Northern Kentucky Forum, a partnership
between the
Scripps
Howard
Center, Legacy and Vision
2015, hopes will become monthly events that attract diverse audiences, advocate
for public dialogue but not any one position, provide for audience input and
allow all sides of a given issue to be represented. "We'll always be looking for
a way to bend the format," Neikirk said, "to look at issues in a different way."
The next forum will be held Nov. 12 and will focus on the results of the
presidential election and what impact it will have upon the region. Other
upcoming forum topics tentatively planned include Northern Kentuckys role in
Frankfort; public education; energy
policy; and diversity in the region.
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