<p>^ It’s not a requirement of two exact courses, but one each from two categories of courses. I’m glad that there’s at least one atheist at St. Olaf, but I maintain that many/most? would be less laid-back about two explicitly Christian course requirements and the struggle of being a tiny minority. I think the number of open atheists/agnostics on the campus would be equal to or fewer than the “10 total Muslim students.” (Side observation: what do Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have in common? Monotheism and belief in a single omnipotent deity. I wonder–and maybe they do?–if St. Olaf offers comparative courses on Hinduism or Buddhism or secular humanism that fulfill the Christianity requirements.)</p>