My group made the front of the city section of the local paper today, in our crusade for a secular convocation.
It’s been a busy few months, but we’ve finally ascertained meetings with the right levels of administration and could potentially see this resolved by the end of November (university administrations move pretty slowly).
Here’s an exerpt (the full story will be taken down in 30 days, after which you can find it on my blog):
A student group at the University of Alberta is fighting to make the school’s convocation ceremony a God-free event.
Specifically, the U of A Atheists and Agnostics society objects to one line in the service, when the chancellor charges graduates to use their degrees for “the glory of God and the honour of your country.”
The group is petitioning the university to either remove the line or change the wording to respect their “God-optional” views.
The god-optional refers to the last story the Edmonton Journal ran on my group.
A comparison in reporting
Tuesday, September 16th, 2008Recently, John Loftus (former preacher turned atheist) spoke at Indiana State University. The Christian Post (CP) and Indiana Daily Student (IDS) both cover the story. Let’s compare and contrast.
First the titles:
CP: Atheists ‘Evangelize’ on College Campuses
IDS: Ex-preacher speaks to students about atheism
The intros:
CP:
IDS:
Perhaps for ‘objective reporting’ CP brings in comments from Lee Strobel (’atheist’ turned preacher), not from Strobel, but from a video of his:
How do they finish the articles?
CP:
IDS:
Tags: Christian Post, Idiana State University, John Loftus, Lee Strobel, Media, newspapers, objectivity, reporting
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