0regotv#£m£ral& Up close with Ezra A profile of Eugene independent musician, Ezra Holbrook/PAGE 8A Big Headache Big Head Todd and the Monsters' album Live Monsters' is DO. A/PAGE 6A T Volume 100, Issue 59 NCAA Gamebreaker ’99, the Sony Playstation’s latest football addition, features life-like player motion as well as flashy graphics and sound effects By Matt Garton Oregon Daily Emerald Picture this: You are the Ducks' quarterback. There are 10 seconds to go in the fourth quarter, and the ball is on your opponents’ two-yard line. The game has a score of 17 for Ore gon and 20 for Notre Dame — it’s the 1999 Rose Bowl. What do you do? Kick the field goal to tie it up? Or go for the touchdown and win? The ball is in your hands ... ... and so is the controller. Wel come to NCAA Gamebreaker ’99, quite possibly the best real-time, full action, gut-wrenching football game for the Sony Playstation. Featuring analog and vibration compatibility, all 112 NCAA Divi sion 1A teams and a host of other features, Gamebreaker offers a lot for the football enthusiast to the casual game player. The game even features each team’s fight song as well as a current and complete roster for each team. One of my favorite matchups is the Civil War game, Oregon vs. Oregon State. There’s nothing like kicking some Beaver butt to make the days go more quickly. My only complaint is that the real Oregon State just doesn’t pass the ball as much as the computer seems to think it does. They also actually catch the ball: Imagine that! The game is also a little rough around the edges at first. Unless computerized football games are old hat to you, the controls might fumble you up at first. But once you've over come the controller’s learning curve, the game is a riot. Did I mention that legendary foot ball announcer Keith Jackson calls the play-by-play? From the very be ginning, gamers get Jackson’s com plete monologue of each game’s ri valry, penalties, passes, runs, tackles and touchdowns. But Gamebreaker does not have the same boring and repetitive phrases heard again and again in other computerized football games. For example, I played the same game four times consecutively, and each game’s introduction where Turn to GAMEBREAKER, Page 7A NCAA Game breaker’99 WHAT: Videogame FOR: Sony Playstation RATING: Courtesy photo Clockwise from lower left: Shannon Saunders, Hanz Araki, Cam Salay, Tom Landa and (center) Paul Lawton make up the Celtic group The Paperboys. Paperboys deliver music to EMU The Cultural Forum sponsors the Celtic quartet The Paperboys’ visit today in the EMU Ballroom By Darren E. Freeman lor the Emerald The Paperboys call their blend of Celtic, bluegrass, folk and pop music “stomp," and stomping is just what their audience will be doing at the EMU Ballroom tonight. “Their music is the kind you can’t listen to without tapping your feet,” said Krista McKennitt, the band’s publicist. “Because their music is so great, you’re not just tapping your feet, you are stomping your feet.” The band coined the term “stomp” after a 1995 per formance at the Whistler Country and Roots Festival. Dancers were jigging and stomping so fervently that parts of the ceiling of the room below them were falling down. The five-piece band out of Vancouver, Canada, plays traditional Celtic music with a modern spin. You might even catch lead singer/guitarist and principal song writer Tom Landa ripping robust chords from his elec tric guitar in the middle of a reel. Landa attributed the Paperboys’ stylistic fusion of music to the band’s hometown. “Most people in Vancouver have moved there from somewhere else,” Landa said in an interview with Dirty Linen. “So we’ve gathered an eclectic mix of musicians.” Besides Landa, the band includes Paul Lawton (drums, bodhran, percussion), Cam Salay (five-string banjo, bass), Shannon Saunders (accordion, fiddle, vio la, bass, piano), and Hanz Araki (flute, shakuhachi, pen ny whistles). The five musicians are extensively touring the Unit ed States and Canada in their 1980 Dodge van, “Rufus,” who is named after the famous fiddler Rufus Duncan. “These guys are really road warriors—they’re always in the van,” said Richard Flohil, who works with McKennitt. “They manage to do well over 250 shows Turn to PAPERBOYS. Paae 6A