I dll >t have|< r jobs. class) e lookii r they do' to con sumes. >g Probli do resin a anytl can’t b r done si XT iked pre and k gesture iy otbi aeyondli succeed i^iew will tries wk well-pre oe reallj The Battalion hursday ptember 14, 1995 File Edit Open I Aggielife Uiem Label Special 3 Internets Sane Print Quit Caught in the net Students look for ways to utilize campus technology Amy Protas e Battalion "^he age of the computer has finally arrived. In the past, computers were mostly sed by businesses and comput- |||y r nerds spending hours playing ^ ames. Now, getting on-line and ccessing the world is a wide- b (7rak|P read P ract ice. Finding an exact definition of uiness ntj [, e Internet is close to impossible. Sean Geoghegan, the Academ- tions Computing Center help desk eras til sector, said the best way to find utis to get on any small net- rork and branch out. “People come in and say they ed Hesl vant ^ get on internet,” Ge- critiqui '^a 11 said - “ If the y want to 4 'bat, they can just stand on a omputer. It’s a conglomeration if networks.” The scope of the Internet stretches across 83 countries and indudes 20 million people and over 2.2 million computers. The Internet may be the fu ture of education. Professors at are already utilizing the In ternet for their teaching . Stu dents can access their syllabuses, dass notes, exams and grades through the World Wide Web. The amount of information the Internet provides draws in many users. Gena Garrett, a junior indus- "People automatically have a fear of change. The human element won't be lost, though. We need to use this wonderful technology." — Michael D. Edwards CIS employee trial distribution major, said she can access professors through the Internet. “I like it because my professor puts his notes on the World Wide Web,” Garrett said. “I no longer have to go to Notes and Quotes and buy them.” Michael D. Edwards, a Com puting and Information Services employee, said this move toward education through computers tends to scare traditionalists. “People automatically have a fear of change,” Edwards said. “The human element won’t be lost, though. We need to use this wonderful technology to en hance education. There will still be human teaching; the computers will just be a supplement.” The information on the In ternet is not limited to tradi tional education. Anyone “surfing the net” can find facts on everything from jug gling to 42 essays about the significance of the white lodge and black lodge on Twin Peaks. Greg Small, a senior in dustrial distribution major, said he heard his friends talking about the Internet and had to find out for himself what all the hype was about. “I love the Internet, because it has so much outdoors information on it,” Small said. “If I want a loca tion of a climb or a biking trail, I can find it on the Internet.” As some users have found, the appeal of the Internet can be come a problem if consumes too much time. “People can even get addicted to the Internet,” Geoghegan said. “I love tasteless jokes and it takes a long time for me to read them. That’s time I have to spend dedicated to the computer.” Electronic mail is the most widely-used function. People can send mail to one another through the Internet. Lynn Brunnet, a senior com puter engineering major, said she uses E-Mail constantly. “E-mail comes in handy espe cially with my boyfriend co-oping in Austin,” Brunnet said. “It’s a cheap and easy way to talk to friends and family all over the country and world.” Sean McDonnell, a junior me chanical engineering major, said he started using the Internet when he was working as an in tern in San Antonio. He said everyone should have some work ing knowledge of the Internet. “The Internet is about to ex plode,” McDonnell said. “I think it’s going to be the future of com merce and education. Everybody is going to have to know how to use the Internet.” There are five general comput ing help desks offered by the CIS in the computer labs around cam pus. The Networking Help Desk is in 133 Blocker. ■ The Internet is a massiue network, spanning 83 countries and linking 20 million people and more than 2.2 million computers. Fact courtesy of CIS pi, Higher learning Brad Thompson, a rock performer, is playing at The Tap. Saturday MSC Film Society is presenting Batman Forever in Rudder Auditorium Friday and Saturday at 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. 11 igrams ielh my Thursday jfondue Monks, a rock band, is playing at 3rd Floor Cantina. Willie Jaye, a rock performer, is opening. Peeping Tom, a cover band {with a few original songs, is playing at The Tap. Carolyn Wonderland & Imperial Monkeys, a rock band jbm, is playing at The Dixie Theatre. Breedloveis opening. Friday Blue Midnight, a blues band, is performing at Sweet Eugene's House of Java. Confederate Railroad, a country band, is playing at Denim & Diamonds. Dixie Chicks , a country and western band from Dallas, is playing at 3rd Floor Cantina. Since the trio was formed seven years ago, it has progressed from playing on the streets to playing at the 1993 Tennessee Presidential Inauguration Ball I for President Clinton. Stop the Truck, a country band, is opening. Chris Duarte, a Texas rock performer from Austin, is I playing at The Dixie Theatre. Gravy, a blues rock band from Alabama, is opening. Robert Earl Keen, a country performer, is playing at Wolf Pen Creek Amphitheater. Sarah Hickman is opening. Luck of the Draw, a country band, is playing at The Texas Hall of Fame. Bobby Schilling, a classic rock performer, is at Fitzwilly's. Big Apple Trio, a jazz band, is performing at Sweet Eugene's House of Java. Fuerza Latina, HYPE, Yayo Castillo y Rumors, Xelencia and the Bade Folkorico from San Antonio will be celebrating the first annual Diez Y Seis on the streets of downtown Bryan all day. The festival will also have food and craft booths. House of Dreams, a cover band from San Antonio, is playing at The Tap. Texas Fever, a country band, is playing at The Texas Hall of Fame. Wooden-Ride, a classic rock cover band, is playing at Fitzwilly's. Pizza patrons can earn honorary degrees as they achieve a worldly drinking education From playmate to playwright ... Phoebe Legere (above), a rock performer, is playing at The Dixie Theatre Saturday night. Legere has a four-and-a-half octave range and is a cabaret pianist, a playwright and she has written an opera. Legere also posed for an eight- page layout for Playboy in 1988. Josh Alan Band is opening. By Jan Higginbotham The Battalion T here are experts in every field — politics, re ligion, sports, science and beer. Beer? It’s not the most likely field to spend time studying for expertise. But College Station residents have the unique opportunity to become certified experts in global beer drinking. Double Dave’s Pizza Works offers the Global Beer Experts Tour for individuals interested in be coming beer experts. The process is simple — Double Dave’s employ ees give customers a card, and each time cus tomers drink one of the restaurant’s 69 available beers from 11 countries their cards are stamped. After drinking 60 beers, customers be come official beer experts. Elizabeth Graves, a senior po litical science major, is 15 beers into the tour, having started three weeks ago. “I just wanted to see what the beers from other countries taste like,” Graves said. “Plus, you get a free t-shirt.” Beer experts are hon ored by Double Dave’s with a t-shirt and plaque. The names of experts are placed on plaques in restaurants where they finish the tour. After becoming an expert, beer drinkers ca^i go on to become beer masters after completing the tour a second time. When drinkers finish the tour a third time, they earn a doctorate in global beer drinking. Gary Younger, manager of Double Dave’s on Uni versity Drive, said it is not uncommon to see repeat performers on the beer tour. “There is one guy that has finished the tour five times,” Younger said. “He’s trying to convince us now that we should start giving people tenure for finishing the tour several times.” Graves said she plans to finish the tour at least three times before May. Jay Thornton, manager of Double Dave’s on George Bush Drive, said he sees a lot of regulars in the restaurant who finish the tour numerous times. “I’ve seen several people finish at least twice,” Thornton said. “We also have one guy who has earned his doctorate twice.” The beer tour has become a challenge for many Double Dave’s patrons. Thornton said he has seen people determined to finish the tour. “Once people hear about the tour and get start ed on it,” he said, “they’re usually very determined to finish it.” Groups of beer drinkers often attempt to finish the tour together, Thornton said. “We had five roommates come in one day, and together they drank all 60 beers,” he said. “They had their ad dress put on the plaque.” But fame is not usually a mo tivation. Many of those individu als who complete the tour pre- _ fer to remain anonymous. Bl H “The Three Amigos” made HI H their mark on the University B f Drive Double Dave’s, Younger W |*sf said. V Ijjl “We had three guys come in and start the tour at opening Sr time,” he said. “They finished all f 60 beers in one day. They had us put ‘The Three Amigos’ on the plaque. They were pretty drunk and even got a sick, so we had a delivery dri ver take them home.” After The Three Amigos’ global beer tour, Younger said Double Dave’s decided to limit beer drinkers to four beers per day. Customers often do not realize that the imported beers are much stronger than American beer. Younger said the beer tour is an experience everyone should try. “It’s like a social event,” Younger said. “You get a couple of people together and sit around and drink beer. It gives you a unique beer experience.”