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Secular Student Alliance eMpirical No. 39 - Conference, Creation, and Back-to-School All in One



eMpirical, the newsletter of the Secular Student AllianceAugust 31, 2009

In this issue:
Don't like scrolling? Check out the teasers only version of the eMpirical.

The SSA only exists because of your support. Please donate today.

Secular shorts:
The Secular Student Alliance is now on YouTube! Tune in for conference videos and more!

Follow us on Twitter @SecStuAlliance

Going somewhere? Support the Secular Student Alliance while you go. Book travel through http://ytbtravel.com/secularstudents

The Metro State Atheists are holding a Food for Freethought drive and need your help! Donate or help them get books through their website.

The Illinois Family Institute is going after the Friendly Atheist for being an atheist while teaching math class. Read more.

Read ABC News on our Creation Museum trip.

American Atheists win challenge to Kentucky Homeland Security plaque calling on God. Read more.

New Secular Student Alliance Group Services!

Back to School? Check out our resources for your student group!

Need ideas or some how-to help? Let our Activity Packets

What could your group do this year? See a Sample Year full of freethought fun!

Reach out to help a student starting a secular group on a campus near you. Become a mentor.

Coming soon: Learn how changing your group's name can help the entire movement!

help your group.
Contact us!
Call us toll free at 1-877-842-9474. You can also email us at ssa@secularstudents.org. We are always happy to hear from you and answer any questions or concerns!

What do you think?
This is your eNewsletter and we are always updating and changing to fit your needs, so please let us know what you think of our new format! Email enews@secularstudents.org with any suggestions, ideas, or comments.

eMpirical Team

Content Manager:
Frank Bellamy

Editors: August E. Brunsman IV, Elizabeth R.A. Liddell, Hemant Mehta


Introduction

The Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference was a blast! We took almost 300 freethinkers to the Creation Museum, met with leaders from the entire freethought movement, and got to meet students from all over the country.

Now it's back to school with us. We're gearing up for the new year with a whole pile of new resources and programs. Check out our new Activity Packets and Sample Year, and stay tuned for our upcoming programs!

We're always excited to hear what your group is up to. Email us at enews@secularstudents.org and let us put your group in the news!


The Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference: Freethinking Friends & Secular Cephalopods

Secular Student Alliance Conference 2009

After our colorful trip to the Creation Museum in Kentucky, many students as well as other notable freethinkers accompanied us back to Columbus, Ohio for the Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference. Students from universities and groups across the country converged to learn, discuss, and mobilize for later action in their own communities. We ended up with a delightful variety of secularists - as student Jon Reams noted, "I enjoyed the mix of popular figures, organization leaders, and students."

Seminar topics ranged from activism and service to interacting with the media, fundraising, and dating as an atheist. As a member of one of our 150+ campus Affiliate Groups noted, "[The conference] was extremely useful and involved subjects that are applicable to our organization. The seminars were helpful and informative." Students and speakers alike stayed on the Ohio State University campus and shared meals together, strengthening connections between groups.

With so many like-minded people in one place, it is little wonder that a sense of community was established right away. Secular Student Alliance board members talked to and sat with students, who talked to and sat with speakers and organization leaders. Andy Cheadle, organizer for the freethought group at Wright State University remarked, "I absolutely loved the conference. Being able to meet so many great people and having access to these resources is something not a lot of people get!"

In addition to giving the keynote address at the conference, PZ Myers also wrote up a very nice blog post about his time at the Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference. Thanks, PZ!
We'll be posting videos and other goodies over the next few weeks so those of you who weren't able to make it to the event itself can still benefit from all the great content at the conference. Until then, you're quite welcome to enjoy some photos. (Thanks to Gus Brunsman for taking so many great shots!) Got your own photos? Tag them with "ssacon09" and tell us.
A weekend of business, laughter, and networking, the conference was an inspiration to those who attended, and serves as a reminder of why maintaining secular student communities is so important.
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Video: Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference Keynote Speech by PZ Myers

PZ Myers Keynote Presentation

PZ Myers, eloquent as always, explains our role in countering bad ideas in his keynote presentation at the 2009 Conference. Watch it on our brand-new YouTube channel!

Biologist and blogger PZ Myers delivered the keynote address at the Secular Student Alliance 2009 Conference on 8/8/09.

In addition to discussing the Secular Student Alliance's recent trip to the Creation Museum and his experience as being a "star" of the movie Expelled, PZ also reacts to the recent coverage he's received in the new book Unscientific America by Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum. Enjoy!

Click here to watch the video!

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Welcome Secular Coalition for America Members!
Secular Coalition for America

A warm welcome to Secular Coalition for America activists from the board, volunteers and staff of the Secular Student Alliance!

We are proud to add you as subscribers to the Secular Student Alliance newsletter, the eMpirical. We hope you enjoy this new resource offering updates of secular campus activities, thoughtful discussion by and about secular students, and more.

The Secular Student Alliance is an educational non-profit organization that assists atheist, agnostic, humanist, and secular high school as well as college students in establishing campus groups dedicated to freethought, human based ethics, and secular activism. We offer our affiliates travel grants to conferences, project grants to help them in their activist pursuits, an impressive speakers bureau, full-time staff support, and more.

It is our mission to secure the future of secular activism by engaging freethinking and skeptical students and providing them an alternative to the plethora of theistic organizations that pervade our educational institutions. And we're proud to say that we've been extraordinarily successful recently: currently, the SSA has 158 affiliate groups in ten countries around the globe, with 137 in the U.S. That's an increase of more than 50% in the last year, and over 300% since five years ago!

The Secular Student Alliance is one of the original founding organizations of the Secular Coalition for America. We believe in the mission of the Secular Coalition and work with their staff and board to reach like-minded students. The SSA has arranged for Secular Coalition leaders to speak at affiliated campuses about all aspects of the Coalition's work on Capitol Hill. We educate students about the positive influence of the Coalition and encourage them to participate in Action Alerts to effect positive change. By cooperating with the Secular Coalition for America in these ways, the SSA simultaneously builds leadership for a stronger secular future and injects youth into the efforts of the Secular Coalition for America.

We hope that as supporters of the Secular Coalition for America you will endow the Secular Student Alliance with your contributions as well. We are an independent organization that exists only with the help of donors from the freethought community. Each additional school we add as an affiliate depletes rather than increases financial resources so, as we continue to grow, we will need additional support from the secular community to maintain our momentum in bringing young freethinking students into secular activism. Without an educated class of atheist, agnostic and humanist activists, our desire for a government that truly separates politics from religion is unobtainable. Student or non-student, please become a voting member of the Secular Student Alliance today.

The Secular Student Alliance is a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit and your donation is entirely tax-deductible. Thank you for your kind support, and welcome to the Secular Student Alliance!

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New Resources for Your Secular Student Group

Secular Student Alliance
The Secular Student Alliance has been hard at work over the summer, creating new resources to help you run your group!
We're excited to announce our new line of Activity Packets, designed to help you get a snapshot view as well as step-by-step instructions for holding events and activities with your group. Whether it's organizing activist training, sponsoring a blood drive, bringing in a speaker, or giving your group mohawks, we have a packet for you. Head over to www.secularstudents.org/activitypackets and see what we can help you with!

Once we put together the packets, it was only natural to put some of them together into a Sample Year. We took a theoretical, overachieving group and show you how things fit together: regular meetings, large events, planning and organization. We've also provided a blank version, including only the basic things you need to do to keep your group alive, so you can brainstorm out your own year. Visit the sample year at www.secularstudents.org/sampleyear.

Last, but not least, we're launching a new program to raise awareness of the secular student movement. At our 2009 conference, we announced our Branded Affiliates program, in which your group uses "Secular Student Alliance" as its name or in an official subtitle. As more groups take the name, we will have more and more visibility and name recognition, which helps your group, other groups with the name, and the Secular Student Alliance as a whole. Keep your eyes on your inbox for more information about this exciting new program!

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Skeptics Among Us: Atheists Visit The Creation Museum

Creation Museum video


On August 7th, 2009, over 300 atheists, agnostics, humanists, and freethinkers participated in the Secular Student Alliance's group trip to the Creation Museum with science blogger PZ Myers. Around the Secular Student Alliance office, our favorite part so far is that Ken Ham (founder of Answers in Genesis, the organization behind the museum) actually wrote on his official blog that our own Lyz Liddell "she was a pleasure to deal with-always courteous and polite-what one would expect from a professional organizer." The event has was also covered by both the ABC and USA Today news blogs and Science + Religion Today.

Independent video producer Paige E. Malott came with us that day and she made her own 30-minute video about our trip titled Skeptics Among Us: Atheists Visit the Creation Museum. Enjoy!

Click here to watch the videos!

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The Creation Museum Trip: A Religious Experience?

Lyz Liddell, Senior Campus Organizer

by Senior Campus Organizer Lyz Liddell

When I agreed to organize the Secular Student Alliance trip to the Creation Museum, I wasn't expecting it to be a "religious experience." In fact, I was expecting it to be a mostly overlooked crowd of 20-30 students and maybe a few local supporters going through with PZ Myers, discussing the inanity of what we saw.

So even I was surprised when we ended up with almost 300 freethinkers - or, as PZ put it, "quietly chortling, science-minded people." Did I think we were going to have an epiphany and recant our evolutionist ways? Of course not! Did I think we would get kicked out? Well, probably not. But I wasn't expecting the stories of the people I met to have such an impact - and those stories made all the difference.

I can be perfectly honest: I wasn't expecting the trip to go as smoothly as it did. But from my first few steps onto the Creation Museum property, I was taken aback by the kindness, courtesy, and above-and-beyond hospitality of the Creation Museum staff, over and over again. The tent-and-table combination that they allowed us to use might have been there all season, but they had no obligation to let our group use it. Nor were they obligated to bring my volunteers bottles of water as they checked in all 300 museumgoers. They didn't have to take our check-in list at the ticket counter in case someone turned up late. They could have been cold, distant, and minimally polite; instead, they were warmly welcoming, despite our differences in worldview.

After our trip through the museum, I stopped for a few moments to talk to a group of people about what they saw and thought. The most touching of all of these was the story of a young woman who had driven all the way up from Fort Worth, Texas to join us. She had heard about the trip on PZ's blog Pharyngula, and took the day to come up and see us. As we stood in a little circle talking, she explained how she had never before been able to talk so openly about her nonreligious beliefs with other people. Not until that day, at the Creation Museum, of all places, was she able to say what she really thought without fearing the consequences. How often do you get to provide that kind of experience for someone?

One of the many, many people who came up to introduce themselves to me that day had emailed me just the day before the trip. He had gotten tickets, but was concerned that his 12-year-old son would have trouble looking critically at the museum and would be vulnerable to blind belief. I had emailed the dad back with a response encouraging him to come, and included advice from Camp Quest Executive Director Amanda Metskas. I was glad to see both father and son there, and set them up to go through the museum with a graduate student in evolutionary biology to help answer any questions that might come up.

A skeptical kid at the Creation Museum!

I heard from this man and his son a few days after the trip. He wrote me to let me know that the trip had turned out to be one of those days that they will both remember fondly forever. The son had learned about everything from meteors to mutations, and more critical thinking skills than most people acquire in their entire lives. The museum was a inspiration to discuss what we should believe, and why. And to make things better, a quick hike on the way home turned up brachiopod and crinoid fossils - what better souvenir for someone so newly excited about the real history of our planet?

I was there with PZI could tell more stories, for hours and hours. The student from DeAnza College who finished his last final exam, got a ride from the classroom to the airport, and flew out to Columbus to join us; the student who more or less accidentally ended up in my car on the ride back to Columbus; the openness and honesty of the Creation Museum's Mark Looy; the head of the security team, who admitted as we were leaving that we had been a better group than he had expected (I gave him my "I was there" button for surviving us!); the Christian radio interviewer who was straightforward and honestly interested in what we were doing and our reasons for doing it.

Was it a religious experience for me? I suppose it depends on how you define "religious." It was an opportunity to learn about a group of people that I would never have walked up to otherwise, a chance to understand a belief system that I would have otherwise dismissed out of hand. But more than that, it was a chance to help make a difference in a few people's lives. To change some impressions. To help people understand one another and the world we live in.

So would I do it again?

Well...we'll have to talk about that one!


Lyz Liddell is the Senior Campus Organizer for the Secular Student Alliance and was the primary organizer for the Creation Museum trip. Now that she has free time again, she spends it playing renaissance instruments with funny names, canning vegetables, and enjoying Columbus' great local ice cream.

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The Pseudo Scientists Interview PZ Myers about the Creation Museum

Young Australian Skeptics
In anticipation of the Creation Museum trip, the Young Australian Skeptics invited PZ Myers (or P-Zed, as they say) to do an interview on their podcast, The Pseudo Scientists. Listen here!

Members of the Young Australian Skeptics got involved by inviting PZ to an interview session on their official podcast, The Pseudo Scientists. They've generously shared that portion of the show with us, but we definitely encourage you to check out the episode in full at http://www.youngausskeptics.com/2009/08/the-pseudo-scientists-podcast-episode-17/.

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Cederdahl Wins Prestigious American Atheists Scholarship

Andrew Cederdahl

by Leslie A. Zukor

Congratulations to Andrew Cederdahl, a third-year student at the University of South Carolina, the recipient of the 2009 American Atheists $2,000 Founders Scholarship. Each year, the American Atheists awards three scholarships: the $2,000 award; a $1,000 runner-up scholarship; and the $1,000 Chinn Scholarship to a gay or lesbian student atheist. Several Secular Student Alliance affiliate leaders received Honorable Mentions. In subsequent editions of the eMpirical, the Secular Student Alliance will chronicle the other awardees: Shelley Mountjoy, a student at George Mason University, and Jon Adams, a student at Utah State University.

A tireless worker on behalf of freethought principles, Cederdahl is excited to win the scholarship competition. "I was so happy to get [the award]," he said. Cederdahl is a pre-law major and carries a 4.0 GPA. He is a co-founder of the Pastafarians at USC (University of South Carolina), a humorous takeoff on the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. He is also a member of the Secular Student Alliance Board of Directors. Cederdahl is also very involved in student government; he was the Director of Conferences for the Gamecock Leadership Society and organized its Student Leadership and Diversity Conference. But it is his work as a freethought activist that he was ultimately honored for.

Andrew Cederdahl with his Scholarship Award
Andrew Cederdahl poses with his
American Atheists Certificate.
Cederdahl has led the Pastafarians to many successes, including acceptance on a conservative campus. "The vast majority disagrees with our principles ... [but] we are very open and positive and respectful to theists," Cederdahl said. From raising $400 for Relay for Life to having a pasta benefit dinner for Operation Foxhole Atheists, Cederdahl's club has put a positive spin on atheism. Cederdahl also spearheaded a tongue-in-cheek WWFSMD? (What Would the Flying Spaghetti Monster Do?) Clothing Drive--a take-off on WWJD? (What Would Jesus Do?) events. In short, Cederdahl's good-natured activism has paid dividends for the Pastafarians, making atheism a viable option at USC.

Although South Carolina is not known as a state friendly to secularism, the USC Pastafarians have created a presence far beyond the university's walls. "What we are doing ... is sort of revolutionary," Cederdahl explains, underscoring that at USC, in the center of hyperreligious South Carolina, there is a thriving nontheist group. While Cederdahl had been interviewed on the April 18th episode of Freethought Radio, he reached the pinnacle of journalistic fame when he was interviewed for the front page New York Times article "More Atheists Shout it From the Rooftops" about the increase of publicly visible atheists. Mentioning the USC Pastafarians, as well as Cederdahl and another club member by name, the subsequent coverage in local print and television media catapulted Cederdahl's club into First Place for the Secular Student Alliance's Best Media Award of 2009.
Leslie ZukorLeslie A. Zukor is a freethought activist, who founded the Reed Secular Alliance and has spearheaded the Freethought Books Project. Zukor is a Senior Anthropology major at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. Her hobbies include nature photography, writing for various publications, and Houston Astros baseball.

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University of Melbourne Secular Society Challenges Prayer in Parliament

UMSS logo
This story originally appeared on the University of Melbourne Secular Society website on 7/22/09, and is reprinted with permission.
Since 1901, Parliamentary Standing Orders have compelled the [Australian] House & Senate to open daily with a recital of this exclusively Christian prayer:

"ALMIGHTY God, we humbly beseech Thee to vouchsafe Thy blessing upon this Parliament. Direct and prosper our deliberations to the advancement of Thy glory, and the true welfare of the people of Australia. Our Father, which art in Heaven: Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation; but deliver us from evil: For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. AMEN."

We at the University of Melbourne Secular Society believe strongly that our national Parliament should be a democratic house of inclusion, and not a house of forced worship. Mandatory Christian prayer alienates and excludes those who are of a different faith, or those who choose no faith at all. Our national parliament should be secular in both law and practice, and should represent the Australian people as a whole, rather than the religious opinions of some.

In October 2008, speaker of the Australian House of Representatives, Harry Jenkins MP, called for debate about the use of the Lord's Prayer at the opening of the House. Major party leaders Kevin Rudd (Labor) and Malcolm Turnbull (Liberal) were quick to undemocratically snuff out the debate on grounds of tradition.

This month, former Labor premier of Western Australia and a former federal minister Carmen Lawrence called for Australians to stand up and keep God out of our democracy. Today, a petition to remove this prayer from both the House of Representatives and the Senate has been administrated by Brendan Lloyd from the University of Wollongong, and will be presented by Greens Senator Bob Brown when complete.

UMSS will be printing these petitions and collecting signatures at all our major events this semester. We encourage you to come along and sign it.

Also, to get involved on Facebook please join this group.


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Military Association of Atheists & Freethinkers Leadership Grant Opportunity

MAAF

$500 educational grant for military & nontheist leadership and activism!

www.maaf.info/leadergrant.html
Applications taken through October 13th, 2009

The military has always been a source of leaders in the United States. The Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers would like to encourage and support nontheistic military student leaders. MAAF is partnering with the Secular Student Alliance to find up-and-coming leaders. MAAF will award $500 to a student leader who has demonstrated excellence in both military and nontheistic activities. The military includes both current and prior service, all branches, and particularly ROTC and academy cadets. Nontheistic activities include participation in student or non-student organizations with atheist, humanist, agnostic or other nontheistic focuses. In each area, leadership, volunteerism, and awards should be included.

This program should also provide an opportunity for student organizations to reach out to local military installations and to ROTC programs. Let them know that there is nontheistic support for them as well and that our community is supportive of the military.

Applications must be submitted online at http://www.maaf.info/leadergrant.html. Applications include two sections, military activities and nontheistic activities, collectively limited to 500 words. There is also an administrative section requesting name, contact information, academic status, and military status. MAAF will follow up to clarify submissions prior to making the final decision. The application period is August 9th to October 13th, 2009

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