Media Advisory
"High Noon in the Garden of Good and Evil: Coming to Terms with the Book of Genesis," an eight-session course offered by Johns Hopkins University's non-credit Odyssey Program, examines the Book of Genesis and how it portrays the struggle between good and evil. By studying the familiar narratives, including the story of Cain and Abel, students gain new insight into ideas that are central to Western Civilization. This course is taught by Rabbi David Fohrman, a resident scholar of the Hoffberger Institute for Torah Studies. He has served as a writer and senior editor of the ArtScroll Talmud Project, a 68-volume annotated translation of the Babylonian Talmud. The course runs Tuesday evenings from March 25 through May 20 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. on the Johns Hopkins University Homewood campus, 3400 North Charles Street. The cost is $162 for eight classes. For more information or to register, please call 410-516-4842 or visit: www.odyssey.jhu.edu.
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