XL s-i ■ J- f’nf/t* 0, April 24, 1900 Career Fair attracts nearly 1000 Tenneco Oil Mark Janek, a representative of Tenneco Oil, talks with an Interested student about the corporation. A company representative discusses career potential in Brown and Root with several Texas A&M students. Nearly 1,000 other students spent time last Thursday visiting with the 37 corporate representatives who had set up booths In the Memorial Student Center for the College of Business Administration's First Annual Undergraduate Career Fair. Obstensibly a function cater ing to business students, the Career Fair attracted stu dents from a variety of majors. Photos by Kevin D. Higginbotham Science vs. Religion Local pastor attends conference Houston Lighting A Power representative, Joyce Brown, explains career possibilities to several students. by Paul Barton Ever since Copernicus over hauled conventional notions of the solar system, science and religion have been on uneasy terms with each other — some books have cal led it warfare. At least one local minister thinks it is time to change that. The Rev. Hubert Beck, campus pastor at Uni versity Lutheran Church in College Station, says scientists and theolo gians need to cooperate in addres sing questions posed by the com plexities of the modern age. Beck recently returned from a consultation on "Faith, Science and the Future” held at Harvard Univer sity over spring break. The confer ence was sponsored by the Center for the Study of Campus Ministry of the Lutheran Church, and Beck was one of the eight campus pastors in- vited to attend. At issue was how scientific think ing and technological advances mold and give thrust to people's thought. Churchmen are growing concerned about the effects on hu manity of a wide range of technolo gical developments from In-Vitro fertilization methods to nuclear power. In fact, a conference bearing a similar title was sponsored last July at MIT by the World Council of Churches. Although religionists are ex pressing their interest in many sci entific issues, not everyone seems willing to listen to them. "People are afraid of theolo gians, afraid they are going to preach," said Beck. "But one of our jobs should be to help raise ques tions. To help point toward deci sions concerning values is one of the historic tasks of theology." Beck feels the prevailing influ ence of scientific thinking is one ma jor reason for the decline in influ ence of religion in modern life. "Because of the tendency to think relatively about things, people are hesitant to say something is right or wrong," Beck said. He added that the "faith dimen sion" of reality is ruled out by many because it is not observable or quantifiable. Subsequently, a large number of religious people in con temporary society tend to indi vidualize their faith. “If they run into other believers, fine, but for the most part they are hesitant to speak out about it," he said. Similarly, Beck argues that the church as a whole has lost its prophetic voice. "It's not addressing current thought patterns," said Beck. "To talk about God and heaven means to take an interest in the here and now as well as in the afterlife. The church has tended to isolate itself. You can't read the Bible in a vacuum; it was addressed to a cul tural setting. "It’s how you look at reality that is at issue. People in the Middle Ages or even the 1930s had a much diffe rent concept of reality than we do." For example, he points to the communications explosion that has brought world events into the home far faster than ever before. Beck labels as misconception the idea that science is value-free. “That’s simply not true,” he said. "Any set of facts has to be inter preted and that brings presupposi tions into play." Beck himself is the author of sev eral published papers on the re lationship between religion and technology and has a book entitled "The Christian Encounters the Age of Technology.” He sees an increasing concern among scientists for values in de termining how to use new technolo gies. “I think the ecology movement in the 1960s kicked off a lot of this interest,” he said. "People started to realize that manufacturing is not value-free.” Beck feels the church must play a role in helping to determine what values shape the use of these adv ances. "There is value for the church in seeing the world God made through the eyes of those who set them selves to examine it in scientific as well as in metaphysical ways,” he said.