The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 19, 1995, Page 6, Image 6
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on the town
! AUDITIONS
: Opera Carolina will hold open cho,
rus auditions for its 1995-1996 sea'
son at 1 pm. Saturday in Spirit Square
j. in Charlotte, N.C.
CONCERTS
USC Stellar Jazz Festival XHI will
be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Belk
Auditorium. Tickets are $5 for students.
A jazz clinic will start at 7:30
p.m. Friday at Fraser Hall. AdmisI
sion is free for students-,
: The South Carolina Philharmonic,
Columbia Choral Society and the
' North Yorkshire Chorus will present
' The Manzoni Requiem" at 8 p.m.
Saturday at the Koger Center. Call
. 254-PHIL for ticket information.
i
1 The Black Crowes will play at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Charlotte
' Hornets Training Facility.
I Winebottles will play Wednesday at
f Elbow Room. Tickets are $3.
i
Jackopierce will play at Rockafellas
Sunday.
! MUSEUMS
USC master of fine arts candidate
I Stephen CraH's exhibit "How I Earned
: a Master's Deeree" is on disDlav at
I McKissick Museum.
; "Josiah Wedgwood: Experimental
J Potter" will run through Sunday at
j McKissick Museum. The exhibit inI
eludes more than 70 pieces of Wedgwood
pottery and chronicles how he
influenced ceramics as decorative art.
j "A Journey to Hindoostan: Romantic
Views of India, 1780-1860" is on
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Hollywood Pictures
CPU will show a free sneak
preview of 'While You Were
Sleeping' starring Sandra
Bullock at 6 p.m.
display at the Columbia Museum of
Art. The exhibit will run through May
21.
"Triennial '95," an exhibit of contemporary
South Carolina art, will
be on display at the S.C. State Museum
through May 31.
THEATER
"The Pigs of Love" will open at 11:15
p.m. Friday at Trustus Theatre. Tickets
are $5.
"Mother Courage and Her Children"
will open at 8 p.m. Friday at Drayton
Hall. The play will run through
April 29. Tickets are $6 for students.
MISCELLANEOUS
Riverbanks Zoo will host its 13th annual
Taste of Columbia from 11 a..m.
to 4 p.m. Sunday.
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| Can religion be taken out
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ethics? Whose ethics?
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r^cxta W/atttxt/^ ^ ost agree that, as with all reUhNA
WALL1NU m M Ugious issues, this is compliStaff
Writer |\ /I cated. Historically, thesepaI
% / I ration of church and state
I I was instated to protect reli
^^gious freedom, and some wonder
if it has gone too far. What is meant by religion
in education? Is it a doctrine or a viewpoint
A person's defintion of religion determines
their opinions on this subject. If taken as a
frame of reference or a paradigm, then the
question is, can a class be taught without personal
bias?
Rev. Tom H.B. Hall with United Methodist
Campus Ministry said everyone teaches with
a bias, but a teacher should not force his or her
views on others.
"Schools don't need to be made into labs for
prayer. Things of faith should be taught by the
_ community of faith," Hall said.
He said that to use the schools for the spread
of religion defeats the purpose of schools. However,
Hall also said that to not address reli
gious views in the classroom could lead stuI
dents to a negative view of religion. Education
includes learning about the many aspects of
life, including how religion effects people, he
said.
B Most students interviewed said it is good
that professors do not present their views as
law in the classroom. But some said that while
professors may present their views in the classroom,
they are quick to qualify them as their
views.
Some students said they believe religion
has not been removed from education but rather
has been replaced by another religion. Christian
students in a discussion in the Russell
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House said they believed that man replaces
God in the classroom as the source of knowledge.
They defined this as Humanism. Hall
agrees that Humanism exists in classrooms
and that it shouldn't be presented any more
strongly than any other religious view.
The problem these Christians said they see
with Humanism is it's a seemingly unconscience
effort.
Hall said he believes it is necessary to present
many different views in the classroom to
provide students with a well -rounded view of
the world. One may conclude that if a parent
or student were interested in making religion
part of his or her educational experience, then
a religious school would be the best choice.
Your comments, questions or concerns have
been greatly appreciated. Please email your
latest comments to Gena at walling@univscvm.csd.scarolina.edu
or call or write the
Gamecock.
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RYAN SIMS The Gamecock
"Schools don't need
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Rev. Tom H.B. Hall
United Methodist
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