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2026 Candidates for Election

ROB EVON

Rob Evon is an NCAS Life Member and a lifelong supporter of national skeptical and science organizations, including the Center for Inquiry and the Skeptics Society. He has been a frequent attendee of CFI’s CSICon and The Amazing Meeting (TAM), as well as a direct supporter of CFI initiatives such as Teacher Institute for Evolutionary Science (TIES).

He currently serves as Treasurer and a member of the Board of Directors, and previously as Vice President, of one of the nation’s largest branch-level Friends of the Library nonprofit organizations. He brings more than 30 years of senior leadership experience in strategic planning, business development, and governance across both the corporate and nonprofit sectors. His strong commitment to evidence-based analysis, public education, and organizational strategy would help advance NCAS’s mission of promoting critical thinking and scientific understanding.

BRIAN GREGORY

I’m a senior software engineer, currently working for NVIDIA on their supercomputer scheduling software.  A while back, I ran a skeptical video-chat discussion group called “Virtual Drinking Skeptically,” used to host a weekly podcast called “The Virtual Skeptics,” and have somehow managed to (with a lot of help) organize three SkeptiCamp DC (https://skepticampdc.org) events, and continue to work toward organizing the Baltimore Skeptics.


MARY PASTEL

I have been a member of NCAS for over twenty years. I am interested in many pertinent topics but especially in why people choose to believe things that are demonstrably not true. My background is in science and engineering. I have been a researcher, lab director, regulator. By the time I retired I headed up the radiological health part of FDA.


MELISSA POLLAK

Melissa Pollak retired from the National Science Foundation in 2010 after spending nearly three decades at the agency.  During her tenure at NSF, she was responsible for seven chapters of the National Science Board biennial report Science & Engineering Indicators, including the 2000, 2002, 2004, and 2006 chapters on public attitudes toward and understanding of science.  When she began that assignment, she discovered how little attention the science community was giving the public’s belief in pseudoscience.  She was astounded by her colleagues’ unfamiliarity with the problem and lack of concern.  As a result, she made it a goal to give the subject as much coverage as possible in Indicators, as well as in NSF’s increasingly dwindling survey work on public understanding of science.  In October 2005, Ms. Pollak went on a Long Term Professional Development detail at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).  After returning to NSF, she was involuntarily re-assigned different duties.  So, to stay involved, she decided to do whatever she could to see that NSF continued to have a role in the work of skeptical organizations.  To that end, NCAS was able to hold some of its monthly public lectures at NSF.  However, with the agency's move to Alexandria in 2017, that arrangement ended.  From 2010 to 2015, Ms. Pollak served as a volunteer at the Science and Entertainment Exchange, a program of the National Academy of Sciences whose main mission is to connect scientists with producers of movies and TV shows to ensure that the science seen on both the small and big screen is as accurate as possible.  She holds a B.S. degree in political science and economics from American University and an M.A. in economics from George Washington University.  Incidentally, it’s now been more than two decades since NSF last undertook any survey work on the public’s belief in pseudoscience.

 

WALTER ROWE

Dr. Walter Rowe is currently a member of the Board of NCAS.  He is a founding member of NCAS and has served on its board since the organization was founded.  He has published several skeptical articles in Skeptical Inquirer and has presented several talks to NCAS on such diverse topics as the Salem Witchcraft Trials, alchemy and forensic science.  Dr. Rowe recently retired as professor of forensic sciences at The George Washington University and has been named professor of forensic sciences emeritus.  He has published over fifty peer-reviewed articles in scholarly journals. Dr. Rowe has AM and PhD degrees in chemistry from Harvard University and a BS degree with highest honors in chemistry from Emory University.  He was awarded a National Science Foundation Fellowship for graduate study. Dr. Rowe is also an honor graduate of the US Army Military Police School’s criminal investigator course and was a credentialed US Army CID investigator.  He served in the US Army Crime Laboratory system as a forensic drug analyst and a forensic serologist. During his military service Dr. Rowe testified as an expert witness at Army courts-martial and processed crime scenes on several US Army posts. Dr. Rowe has also testified as an expert witness in both criminal and civil trials in state and federal jurisdictions across the United States.

SCOTT SNELL

I’m a charter member of NCAS, a past vice president, the current president, and I hope to continue to serve on the NCAS board of directors.  The capabilities that NCAS events producer J. D. Mack has delivered to skeptics, both locally and worldwide online, is a unique gift that I support to the maximum possible extent.  We skeptics are inquirers, and NCAS, perhaps more than any other organization in the world (other skeptics groups, Smithsonian, news media, etc), offers unparalleled opportunities for any event participant to share fully visible moderated comments and questions with other participants and have them conveyed to the speaker.  As moderator/host of our events, I strive for the greatest possible opportunity to share information and questions, both to and from our speakers.  Now, more than ever, we can consult with experts around the world, pose questions to them that they may not have considered before, and see what comes of it. By this, we can also lead by example.  My hope is that more and more people will incorporate skeptical principles in their roles as citizens, students, employees, and even as relatives and friends.  What’s true, and how can we know?  What decisions can we make, despite inevitable uncertainties?  If we skeptics can ask the best questions, we might even pick up some of the slack that much of our news media has sadly dropped in its duty to inform the public.

Coming April 20 and April 25

Cryptocurrency.
Are you skeptical because you know too little? Or because you know too much? Either way...


movie poster: Everyone is Lying to You for Money
EVERYONE IS LYING TO YOU FOR MONEY is a documentary that asks a sobering question: Who benefits from the chaos, and who is left to clean up the damage?

NCAS exclusive interview with filmmaker Ben McKenzie:
https://youtu.be/J9cW5gylKpE?si=dJAVXaPdtVcHet-K
For more information on the film, or for showings in other cities, please see www.everyoneislying.com.

Join NCAS members at the AFI Silver in downtown Silver Spring, Maryland, for special screenings on April 20 at 6:45 and April 25 at 6:15, both with Q&A with Ben McKenzie. Tickets are available in advance: https://silver.afi.com/movies/detail/0100005537/

Anchored by the stunningly restored 1938 Silver Theatre, the three-screen AFI Silver Theatre is a state-of-the-art film and digital media exhibition venue, which serves as a national model for preserving and honoring our shared film and filmgoing heritage. 

8633 Colesville Road
Silver Spring, MD 20910

Optionally, meet for a 5:00 PM pre-show dinner and good company:
Monday, April 20, Copper Canyon Grill
Please sign up here if you will be joining us so we can make a dinner reservation. Note: This is for dinner only; you are responsible for getting your own show tickets.


Thoughts on the way to the Moon

view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman

Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman (proud son of Baltimore, Maryland) took this photo of Earth after the crew put their ship on course for the Moon.

Except for a slight sliver of sunlight at upper left, the only illumination of Earth is from the full Moon behind the photographer.

Venus is at upper left.

[Artemis II pilot Victor Glover]
"... I think these observances are important, and as we are so far from Earth and looking back at, you know, the beauty of Creation.  I think, for me, one of the really important personal perspectives that I have up here is, I can really see Earth as one thing.  And you know, when I read the Bible, and I look at all of the amazing things that were done for us, who were created, it’s…you, you have this amazing place…this spaceship.  You guys are talking to us because we’re in a spaceship really far from Earth.  But you’re on a spaceship called Earth that was created to give us a place to live in the universe, in the cosmos.  Maybe the distance we are from you makes you think what we’re doing is special.  But we’re the same distance from you, and I’m trying to tell you, just trust me, you are special.  In all of this emptiness, this is a whole bunch of nothing; this thing we call the universe, you have this oasis, this beautiful place that we get to exist together.  I think as we go into Easter Sunday thinking about, you know, all the cultures all around the world, whether you celebrate it or not, whether you believe in God or not, um, this is an opportunity to remember where we are, who we are, and that we are the same thing in that we’ve got to get through this together."