NCSE is pleased to announce that the latest issue of Reports of the National Center for Science Education is now available on-line. The issue — volume 33, number 2 — features Minda Berbeco's "Political Bias Meets Climate Bias: Overcoming Science Denial in a Politically Polarized World" and Barbara Forrest's "Intelligently Designed Data: The Bogus Louisiana Teacher Survey." And for his regular People and Places column, Randy Moore discusses the career of the paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh.
Plus a host of reviews of books on human evolution: Matt Cartmill reviews Michael Ruse's The Philosophy of Human Evolution, Holly M. Dunsworth reviews Anne H. Weaver's Children of Time, Anne D. Holden reviews Brian Sykes's DNA USA, Andrew Kramer reviews Dean Falk's The Fossil Chronicles, Elizabeth J. Lawlor reviews Mary Bowman-Kruhm's The Leakeys: A Biography, and J. Michael Plavcan reviews Rob Brooks's Sex, Genes, and Rock 'n' Roll.
All of these articles, features, and reviews are freely available in PDF form from http://reports.ncse.com. Members of NCSE will shortly be receiving in the mail the print supplement to Reports 32:2, which, in addition to summaries of the on-line material, contains news from the membership, a regular column in which NCSE staffers offer personal reports on what they've been doing to defend the teaching of evolution, a regular column interviewing NCSE's favorite people, and more besides. (Not a member? Join today!)