Thursday, June i en on the three years ds have home computer: jrcent of them are hookec nternet. s are logging onto the Wet >r more often thanboysare Tools will likely surpas the primary gateway toth or children by 2005. e notion that Idren are an rging market 9 longer true. They have emerged.” — Peter Grunwald it of Grunwald Associates Thursday, June 8, 2000 Page 5 THE BATTALION Blood on the fairway New golf courses could create interesting rivalry vald Associates, a markets id consulting firm, complel rvey by randomly reachint I. households that include! r users and nonusers, aline population findingsb; d fall roughly in line wift ilyst forecasts, r Communications of Net projected that the numberot ?ar-olds using the Internet mi n double from 21.4 milliona! f 1999 to 46.7 million by 20ffi hurt by the actions of tin she had all but considered ember, orano, 48, pleaded nocontes: le count of receiving stolei ig the items reported zeVis of evening gowns, in- rne worth $20,000. orities said Stone note nissing over the years ani ccasionally ask Membranoi: ■e where they were, housekeeper would say,'ll t to your sister,' or, 'Oh, fe ‘aners,"' said Deputy Disto ' Wendy E. Segall. ctress finally learned thetnil es said, after other staffers sat s stuffed into eight garbajf dembrano's home. ersity honors er and Fonda DU IS (AP) — A university de honor Ted Turner andjarf intly for their dedicationtoei- ntal causes. the celebrity couple ait I their separation. .irner will go solo Thursdayt lis World Ecology Award fro" ersity of Missouri at St. Louis dll get her award at a separat y on a yet-unspecified date, miversity presents the annna ) high-profile individualswb se public awareness of glob] al problems, er has crusaded for deaf d greener business, and If Foundation provides funi arch on ecology and populi les. la is the vice president of tb % removed fro( aurant name >lSON, Texas (AP)-TheHf ornia Grill is no more, suburban Dallas restaurant led the Baja California Gn signs and references to thef* agles' tune must be remove settlement approved this# lias County judge, rock group sued last mo g trademark infringement, •ill Arnold decided not to fig! jly believe they didn't have; t it's time to move on andp 1 ! g behind us," Arnold toldD ; tation KTVT. group's Hotel California i million copies, making the top sellers of all time. •art of the settlement reach y, the restaurant cannot nusic exclusively. C ontrary to all the jokes, the City of Bryan is not a ghetto. Any one saying to themselves, "Yeah, but down past the train tracks..." should take a one-and-a-half hour drive south to downtown Hous ton and poke around the Fifth Ward. Funny how there are no Cafe Capris — or even Dairy Queens, for that matter — in the poorest parts of that city. So while Bryan may be far from the slums, two parties are competing to improve the area and attract visitors with a pair of first-class golf courses. The City of Bryan, in partnership with Texas A&M, is planning a lush, 27-hole golf course to be surrounded by up-scale (i.e. expensive) homes. The Traditions Golf and Country Club will be lo cated in West Bryan and will be designed by Jack Nick- laus and his son. On the other side of town, Miramont De velopment Corporation is scheming up a course of its own. Their plan is a 22-hole wonder in East Bryan, which will have the same costly homes around it, but unfortu nately will not be designed by anybody famous. So thanks to these two groups, Bryan, a city long not ed for its rich golf history, will see the addition of nearly 50 holes of golfing glory. At first glance, new courses and coun try clubs seems like a perfect match for A&M's surrounding community. The Traditions course is pursuing former stu dents as members, and with a historically all-white school, a cozy "members-only" country club seems like a good idea. However, even if A&M drags in every old Ag who has ever stepped onto the links, the Bryan area can not support two new, full-scale golf and country clubs. Even though the Pebble Creek Country Club is doing well, Bryan's Municipal Golf Course and the Texas A&M University's course look like they are slowly going to waste. B-CS is not a large golfing community — it has a hard enough time keeping the Putt-Putt golf course alive, Vying for the pennies of B-CS golfing patrons may be tough, but competition, like love, will make a man do strange things. and that place even has windmills. Besides, nothing would ruin Bryan's working-class community like a bunch of uppity white males with score cards. Unfortunately, it seems too late to stop the construction of these facilities and surrounding upper-crust neighbor hoods. Instead, the courses and country clubs should have to continue their competition by fighting for support from the City of Bryan. With any luck, this will set the stage for a Malthusian 'survival of the fittest' contest with the winner going on to cater what golf-enthusiasts it can attract. As for the loser, nobody wants to see another course lay fallow. Therefore, the less-successful course should get turned into a full-sized miniature golf course a la Cad- dyshack 11. While this new ultimate miniature golf palace may put the old one out of business, at least local high school se niors will still have a windmill to make out behind. Vying for the pennies of B-CS golf ing patrons may be tough, but compe tition, like love, will make a man do strange things. The ri valry should start out small, perhaps with each side trying to outdue the other for mem ber's attention. First greens fees could go down or members could get free lunch buffets in the coun try club. Before you know it, the courses will be offering "Rock & Golf" specials with '80s rock and glow-in-the-dark balls to attract the elitists of tomorrow. But sadly, these ploys will probably not be enough for one of the courses to rise up as the premier, members-only cracker barrel of Bryan, Texas. The Traditions and Mira mont courses will probably have to take more drastic measures. It is not horribly presumptuous to suspect members from rival courses will harbor animosity toward each other and may take out that aggression in a choreo graphed Leonard Bernstein climactic street fight straight out of West Side Story. One can only hope that the competing courses could settle their dispute with song and dance alone, however, things may turn violent. First Bryan gets two new golf courses, how far off is an 18-hole steel cage death match? Nonetheless, this struggle could turn into a spectator event, garnering much needed resident attention. Never forget, this is the community that damn-near sold out Reed Arena when the WCW came last year. However it is resolved, the competition between Bryan's two new golf and country clubs is practically in- RUBEN DELUNA/Thk Battalion evitable. The town may not be a hood, but it is not big enough for Traditions and Miramont. B-CS might support two new Wal-Marts or two new Sonics; but not two new expensive, members-only country clubs and golf courses. So, for the sake of not watching yet another set of fairways grow brown, let there be war. At least the WCW enthusi asts will come. Eric Dickens is a senior English major. News service hurt by religious group purchase WWII veterans deserve memorial I n the words of Neil Young, "It's better to burn out than to fade away." Unfortunately, this phrase is a fit ting epitaph for United Press In ternational (UPI). The news wire ser vice enjoyed its heyday in the '50s, with notable scoops including the first report of President Kennedy's assassi nation in Dallas. Accordingly, UPI earned the majority of its 10 Pulitzer Prizes during this period. It had a ro bust network of affiliates across the country with a staff of news icons in cluding David Brinkley and Walter Cronkite. Profit margins, however, have plummeted steadily since those days as the scars of two bankruptcies and three failed owners in the past decade remain. What once was a vi able competitor to the Associated Press has now become a joke — a skeleton crew of 157 employees. Sad ly, UPI today is merely a silhouette of what it was in its glorious past. Two weeks ago, UPI hit rock bot tom. It was announced that UPI is to be purchased by New World Com munications Inc., publisher of the The Washington Times. More alarming is the fact that New World is the news arm of the ultra-conservative Unifica tion Church, a cult-esque ministry founded by Rev. Sun Myong Moon. The church's antics have been docu mented for years with practices rang ing from mass weddings to "aggres sive" recruitment techniques. Predictably, the media has been in an uproar since the sale's announce ment. "To me, UPI just died," said Sam Donaldson, ABC anchorman. This sentiment is understandable and justified — the notion of an ex tremist church pulling the strings of a once-respected news wire borders on blasphemy. Gone is the journalis tic need for impartiality and in its place is the threat of propaganda and self-promotion on behalf of the UTiification Church. Even if the church somehow man ages to keep their noses out of UPI's content, the damage ha? already been done. The bottom line is that as long as New World controls UPI, the pub lic and the media alike will have no faith in the stories UPI puts out be cause of lingering doubts. Not surprisingly. New World was quick to address this concern soon af ter the purchase was announced. New World representative Larry Moffitt as sured that the wire service will main tain its "editorial autonomy." "UPI will maintain its editorial in dependence and build on its reputa tion for honest, fair-minded reporting that has made it an essential and re spected news agency for genera tions," he said. No offense, but is that not along the lines of a fox guarding a hen house? Does New World really expect people to have faith that they will not, at any time, forcibly promote their agenda through UPI? It already looks like New World has shot itself in the foot. Moffitt has stated that New World will encour age executives at UPI to promote "customized" news in areas such as morality, religion and family issues. In any other context, these sugges tions would be a wonderful addition to any newspaper. But with the Unifi cation Church behind these changes, the line between a legitimate report ing and a church newsletter becomes severely compromised. Sadly, there has already been one sizable casualty due to this purchase — Helen Thomas, UPI's famed White House correspondent for the past 57 years. Often called the "dean of the White House press corps," Thomas enjoyed the honor of asking the first question at every news conference. She has followed eight presidents and was prepared to take on her ninth. Soon after the sale's announce ment, Thomas turned in her resigna tion. She chose to quit rather than work for the questionable new own ers. If Thomas' lack of faith does not call into question New World's possi ble motives, nothing else will. Since UPI's rapid decline, Thomas has be come an ironic symbol, a reflection of the company's history — resilient and dependable, yet old and outpaced. Through this sale. New World and the Unification Church have destroyed that legacy in one swipe. MARK PASSWATERS David Lee is a senior economics and journalism major. O n Memorial Day, the small southern Virginia town of Bedford dedicated the Na tional D-Day Memorial. Bedford was chosen as the site of the memo rial because the town lost more men per capita (106 of its 3600 resi dents) on D-Day than anywhere else in the nation. This Veteran's Day, the National World War II Memorial, a $100 million project, will be dedicated in Washington, D.C. Both of these monuments are well-de served shrines to those who fought and died in the second World War. These veterans deserve every ounce of praise that can be heaped upon them. There is simply one question that needs to be asked: What took so long? It is a terrible indictment of so- <: ciety that it took Spielberg's mas terpiece, Saving Private Ryan, to re- f store the sacrifice of our grandfathers to the public's con sciousness. While memorials were built — quite justly — for those who fought and died in Korea and Viet nam, the veterans of the most horrific war in history were largely ignored. Perhaps it was the last bit of rebel lion that our parents had stored up to pour on their own parents. Maybe it is because our nation is just plain igno rant. Whatever the reason for this ab surd delay of gratification, those of us who did not fight and suffer owe those who did a great debt. It is time that we jeff smith/t repaid them, with interest. That recognition may start with blocks of granite in Washington, but it must not stop there. The men and women of the "greatest generation," as it has been called, faced an evil that most of us to day cannot fathom. The best our generation has for public enemy number one is a dithering idiot like he Battalion Saddam Hussein. In the 1940s, there were villains ga lore, including Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler and Hideki Tojo, who had to be confronted and bested by the average citizen. Each one of these horrible individuals shared a common objective: the destruction of democracy everywhere. Most of us recognize names like Eisenhow er, MacArthur or Patton. Some even know future-fa mous politicians like John Kennedy, George Bush and Bob Dole served in military during World War II. Unfor tunately, we do not know the names of common Ameri cans who did their duty and, quite simply, saved the world as we know it. Even more tragically, we know so little about the half million men whose bodies lie in cemeteries throughout Africa, Europe and Asia. Each day, more and more veter ans of World War II leave us to join their comrades in the great beyond. There is much we can learn before they are all gone. This nation is sorely in need of a > reminder that there are things worth fighting for, and that each person has the courage to do what is required of them. The pain and sacrifice of those who gave their blood during World War II is powerful proof that some things are worth fighting for, no matter what the cost. The insidious disease that was spread by the protesters of the Vietnam war must be expunged from our collective soul before it destroys our ability to stand up for the rights of our nation and mankind. As the memorials to honor those who fought in World War II begin to sprout up across the nation, it is time for all citizens to give these veterans their due. It is not a stretch to say that because of these people, we are not speaking German, Japanese or Russian. Their generation was forced into the greatest con frontation in history and won it. By following their ex ample, maybe we can prevent a repeat occurrence. Column exhibits errors, confusion about GPS In response to Sunnye Owens’ June 7 column. The factual and technical errors in the article are too numerous to mention in one letter, although I will mention a few. For in stance, Owens states that the although GPS "costs [sic] the government $12 bil lion to develop, GPS does not charge com panies for access to the data.” First, the GPS was developed in the ’70s, and there are no more "develop ment" costs. Maintenance, perhaps, but not development. Secondly, "GPS" cannot charge anyone for anything. "GPS" is a system of 24 satellites in geosynchronous orbit who, I assure you, do not charge bills. If anyone did charge for use of the system, it would be the U.S. military, who developed, owns and maintains the system. Thirdly, with even a rudimentary knowl edge of the GPS one would know that it does not contain "data" that users "ac cess." The 24 satellites continuously MAIL CALL broadcast their location and time, and GPS devices can receive that data and tri angulate a position. As far as recouping costs, the system more than paid for it self in the Gulf War. The concept that the GPS could tell employers details of employees actions is false. All that the GPS can do is tell a user where he or she is at that moment. For someone else to track your move ments, you would have to carry around a GPS receiver and some sort of transmit ter to transmit the GPS data to the per son tracking you. Statements such as "The GPS moni toring system should be illegal when it is used id a improper way such as monitor ing employee bathrooms" demonstrate a misunderstanding of the technology. The GPS is not capable of monitoring bathrooms. All the GPS can do is trans mit the time, and all GPS receivers can do is use that transmission to calculate the receiver's current location. If journal ists are going to comment on technology they don't understand, at least keep the facts straight. Adam Mikeal Department of Physics The Battalion encourages letters to the editor. Let ters must be 300 words or less and include the au thor’s name, cldss and phone number. The opinion editor reserves the right to edit letters for length, style, and accuracy. Letters may be submit ted in person at 014 Reed McDonald with a valid stu dent ID. Letters may also be mailed to: The Battalion - Mail Call 013 Reed McDonald Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-1111 Campus Mail: 1111 Fax: (409) 845-2647 E-mail: battletters@hotmail.com Mark Passwaters is a senior electrical engineering major.