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12.01
Glass Artist, Andy Paiko

11.30
The Simpsons, "Mypods and Boomsticks"

11.01
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8.28
Affluenza, PBS (1997)

8.04
Will it Blend?

7.21
Der Lauf der Dinge

7.10
Broken Rainbow (1985)

7.07
A Film About Jimi Hendrix

6.27
Toxic: Garbage Island

picture Photos by Andrew Zeller #2

6.17
Drop Weapons

6.16
Nam June Paik, Edited for Television (1975)

6.12
The $300 Billion Betrayal

6.06
Bush Overstated Iraq Evidence, Senators Report

6.03
Body of War, Bill Moyers Journal

5.27
Two Great Moments in Oakland Athletics History

4.23
Torched: San Francisco protests spoil China's Olympic celebration

4.17
Sick Around the World

4.14
The World According to Monsanto

4.11
Tear Down the Alaskan Way Viaduct

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Stairway to Stardom

(3-28-08) Learning Man Project #2

3.27
631 Private Companies working in Iraq, fraud rampant

3.26
Tools for understanding
the Iraq War

3.19
The N64Kids

3.13
Tesla, Shredding (lovingly)

picture Photos by Andrew Zeller

3.10
Eric Clapton, Shredding

2.20
New Fla. Standards Use Word 'Evolution'

2.19
Sea Serpeants: Recent History and notable cases

(1-13-08) Learning Man Project #1

12.06
Grateful Dead Live at Mill Valley Recreation Center (12/06/1980)

Recommended Viewing

The End of Suburbia (2008)

A War On Science (2006)

GRASS (1925)

The Fog of War (2003)

Why We Fight (2005)

Ask Me, Don't Tell Me (1961)

Color It Clean (1966)

No Plan, No Peace

GITMO

Jesus Camp

Dead in the Water

The Ghost in Your Genes

Brainman

God's Next Army

Who Wrote the Bible?

Power of Nightmares 1

Power of Nightmares 2

Power of Nightmares 3

The Century of the Self

Control Room

The Trials of Henry Kissinger

The Bush Family Fortunes

The Making of THE SHINING

Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room


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Ethan Rose

Elizabeth Raab Photography

La Pocha Nostra

Meghan Trainor

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Moin Syed

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New Fla. Standards Use Word 'Evolution'

By BILL KACZOR, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, February 20, 2008

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi....

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(02-20) 07:24 PST Tallahassee, Fla. (AP) --

Florida's public school science standards for the first time will use the word "evolution," although the biological concept already was being taught under code words such as "change over time."

The new standards, part of a set of overall science changes adopted by the State Board of Education Tuesday on a 4-3 vote, require schools to spend more class time on evolution and teach it in more detail.

The standards state that evolution is "the fundamental concept underlying all of biology and is supported by multiple forms of scientific evidence." That statement rankled opponents, some of whom had urged the board to add an academic freedom provision that would have allowed teachers to "engage students in a critical analysis of that evidence."

Evolution supporters, including mainstream scientists and clergy, told the board the academic freedom proposal was a wedge designed to open the door for injecting religious arguments into science studies.

"We know what's going on here," said board member Roberto "Bobby" Martinez, a Miami lawyer. "What we have here is an effort by people to water down our standards."

Opponents of evolution denied they had a religious motive, arguing that there are flaws in the scientific theory of evolution and that students should be allowed to explore them.

As a compromise, the standards refer to evolution as a scientific theory, explaining that a theory is a well-supported and accepted explanation of nature, not simply a claim.

The vote was the latest in a long line of public debates over evolution dating back to the Scopes Monkey Trial in 1925, when a teacher was convicted of violating Tennessee's evolution ban. That verdict was reversed on technicality, but courts later ruled evolution could be taught.

Courts subsequently barred teaching the biblical account of creation along with evolution. Most recently, a federal judge in Pennsylvania ruled that intelligent design, which holds the universe's order and complexity is so great science alone cannot explain it, also was a religious theory and could not be taught in public schools.

John Sullivan, executive director of the Florida Baptist Convention, objected to calling evolution the only fundamental concept underlying biology. He wrote in an e-mail to Education Commissioner Eric Smith that Baptists firmly believe there's evidence of a "Creator-initiated origin of life" but did not object to teaching evolution. He argued, though, its scientific weaknesses should be taught as well as its strengths.