Well - I have now been teaching for two weeks and I have talked to the dean at a great social we had. Good thing about our college is that they serve free wine after every faculty meeting and he was pretty honest and open with me.
Pretty much he personally thinks that intelligent design and creationism are not appropriate to discuss in an education atmosphere. The college is a place of open, scientific learning and tolerance of all faiths, or lack thereof, is needed to advance intellectual pursuits. There is no mandate to include the Bible or any of the teachings in the courses (except for the obvious ones).
Faith is faith and science is science and there is room for both at the college - just not in the classroom. Open inquiry is what the college strives for and as long as I honor the opinion of others - life is good.
I have found out that there are many atheists and agnostics at the college that the dean recommended me to talk to. He assured me that the entire Biology department would be a great place to start as well as most of the Mathematics division.
All is well and actually I am really enjoying my interactions with all departments at the college. The best policy - as most of you stated - was to be honest and open at the beginning and I feel much better now. It is quite nice to have a forum to release one's frustrations since most of my colleagues really cannot understand the stress I felt taking the job.
I should have done a little more research before I applied for the college, but there aren't really any resources around and I didn't know anyone who went or taught at the college. I must admit that my prejudices and stereotypes were challenged (even at my age) and I feel a little guilty for thinking the way I did before. I fell into a trap that I often observe others fall into and feel pretty stupid. Oh well, I guess life is all about learning - I am just glad I can still recognize mistakes and change - even with a Ph.D.
Scott