The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 10, 1997, Image 5

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Page 5 JIM
Thursday • April 10, 1997
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ontinued from Page 1
The military women declined as rapidly as they
scended, Mitchell said, due to the rise of venereal
seases in the troops.
These women were part of the effort to remove
tanco’s Spain from the United Nations following
brldWar II.
Dr. Robert Shandley, a professor in the depart-
ent of modern and classical languages, said Ger-
any was a stable place for non-Jewish Germans
hive during the Third Reich, but this stability op-
ressed the Communists and left wing in Germany.
The Germans in the left wing went to Spain to
flfiis. fight in the In
ternational
Brigades as a way
of opposing their
own government
in Germany, he
said.
“The Spanish
Civil War was to
become the Ger
man Civil War that
never was,” Shand
ley said.
The German in
fluences in the
Spanish Civil War
are still evident to-
H he said, because Spain is one of the largest sites
'fGerman foreign investment.
“The stakes for Germany and Spain are higher
tan ever,” Shandley said.
ISC
,0
“The Spanish
Civil War was to
become the
German Civil War
that never was.”
Dr. Robert Shandley
Professor, department of
modern and classical
language
Panelists
Continued from Page 1
Dr. Ed Clearfield, Jewish panelist and chem
istry professor, said science is transcultural,
whereas religion is not.
“Religions can be in conflict with each other,”
he said. “Therefore, there has to be a system of
truth so that religion can be dealt with along with
science and vice versa.”
Dr. Mahendra Thakrar, Hindu panelist and an
obstetrician-gynecologist, said his central theme
is, “Truth is one, paths are many.”
“Science has given us nothing new,” he said.
“God gave it to us, it is up to us to find new things
like birth control. God has given each of us moral
ity. How you use what you are given is where reli
gion comes in.”
Thakrar used the cloning experiments as an ex
ample of how morality is determined.
“Cloning is mentioned in our religion, howev
er, we feel nothing is wrong with it as long as the
knowledge is used morally,” he said.
Berger said talks such as these are relevant to
college students.
“I want people to understand that science and
religion can coexist," she said. “We are not looking
for a heated debate, just an exchange of ideas.”
Alston said neither science nor religion needs
to be dealt with separately.
“They both can be dealt with on different lev
els,” he said. “The main thing to remember is that
influence does not mean conflict.”
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