Geeks & gamers Top 10 household items used to make a bong (to be blunt) t. Beer cans I 2. Apples, carrots ana potatoes 3. Juice bottles 4. Two-liter bottle and a bucket of water 5. Toilet paper tube and tinfoil 6. Discarded PVC pipe 7. Empty pen tube 8. Flute (or other wind instrument) 9. Water cannon (it really works) 10. Surgical tubing and a watermelon (That extra duct tape you have can be useful for all of these.) inouestmenui I In Town!! V aWL jHn Served tilUami St. Patricks Day! Your Invited to the HOTTEST Night Club in Eugene! FOOD SDECIAU dukinc; MARTINI HOUR MON-FM 4 SFM NEW FREE Internet Cafe *02. i 1 Comp. High Spee11 FEATURING THE BEST IN LIVE MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT 7 NIGHTS A WEEK!!! Sun - S.I.N. Night - Martini Hour 10-1 Mon - Monster Truck Mondays - Rock Tue - Jazz Night. Live Jazz Bands Wed - Funk Wed. Underground Hip-Hop Thu - L80's Night Ladies Appreciation Fri - Hip-Hop Tremorville npriil Sat - Retro House Night UrfcN March 17th IX w rAhmvereaKji vices team'd... sir your dirty laundtV One ‘Dollar 'GDasfi Top Load Washers 7 -11 am Weekdays * 14 TOP LOAD & 9 FRONT LOAD WASHERS accommodate all your laundering needs • NEW EXTRACTOR saves time and extends the life of your clothes • EXCEPTIONAL CUSTOMER SERVICE for more than 27 years Mr. Clean Jean’s Coin-Op Laundry 240 E. 17th (between High & Pearl) Gamers submit to great 128-bit digital mother Hardcore gamers live a life of late nights, flashing lights and stomped goombas Jacquelyn Lewis Pulse Editor Hardcore video game players in habit a world of flashing lights and glowing consoles, but they might be anyone from college students to pro fessionals — and their legions are growing. According to survey results released by the Interactive Digital Software Association in 2001, 60 percent of Americans age six or old er say they play video games on a regular basis. A May 2002 survey by the same company revealed that U.S. consumers purchased 219 mil lion video and computer games in 2001, a dramatic rise from 1996’s 105 million. Springfield resident Derek Brandt said he became a frequent player when he purchased an Xbox last year. The 30-year-old said playing video games is a relatively new hob by for him. A friend who works as a computer analyst introduced him to the Xbox game “Halo” several months ago. Brandt now plays the game, which allows for a large group of friends to compete simultaneous ly, for more than 15 hours a week — up to six hours in a single night. “The draw for me is actually the team sport of it,” he said. Adam Amato Emerald A May 2002 survey estimated that American fans bought 219 million console and computer games in 2001. Brandt said he doesn’t see the hours he puts into game-play as a bad habit. “I don’t feel like I waste time doing it,” he said. Brandt, who holds two jobs, added that playing “Halo” helps him relieve stress after a 13- to 15-hour work day. He said the only drawback is that late hours spent playing often leave him tired. Marge, a junior anthropology major and video game player who preferred not to reveal her last name, said excessive game play leaves her exhausted as well. She said she has to stay up late making up for homework she did not do during the day. “I’m perpetually tired,” she said. Marge said her favorite games in clude “Animal Grossing,” “Snood,” “Tetris,” “Eternal Darkness,” “The Sims” and “Kingdom Hearts.” She plays games on computers, Playsta tion 2, GameCube and Game Boy. “On some days, I can play for three hours,” she said. “And on some days, I can play for five hours.” Marge said she plays as a means of escape from her daily routine. Turn to Games, page 7B The ring that binds them The ‘precious’ novel and movie trilogies have spurred a worldwide fan craze of conventions and literary classes Mason West Movies/Music/TV Columnist Much like the One Ring itself, J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy has a power over some peo ple. While the power may just be a healthy interest in fantasy, when fans, like the author, stroke copies of the extended edition DVD murmur ing, “We love it, my precious,” there may be a problem. The original obsession started with the books. Senior Jessica Bailey began her love affair with the “Lord of the Rings” as a sophomore in high school, when she and her then-boyfriend would read it to each other in the park. “We never finished,” she said. “But I finished them the next year and never looked back.” Now, Bailey never sleeps without one of the books beside her bed. “It’s so easy to read in your spare time,” she said. “I just turn to a page and start reading.” She owns four complete copies of the trilogy, each of which she has read. She reread the entire series before each film release and will have another under her belt before “The Return of the King” opens in December. Bailey said she also has the story on CD so she can listen to it in her car — which came in handy when driving to Portland to see the mid night release of “The Two Towers” and then returning to Eugene the same night to work in the morning. Others take their love of Middle earth and expand the story with their own fictions. Rebecca Brauning writes fan fictions and has posted a few on www.tolkienonline.com. Brauning also created a list of 127 telltale signs of a “Lord of the Rings” obsession. For Brauning, who lives in the Do minican Republic, Web sites are a way to connect with other fans worldwide. “I am a constant poster on Tolkien Joe Kukowski for the Emerald Edward Shanahan and Tracy Pong, members of the Seattle Knights weapons demonstration group, do battle at a Lord of the Rings conference. Online, where I have about 1,150 posts,” she said. “Since I don’t know many fans near where I live, that is usually where I discuss.” Other fans attend gatherings like RingCon, held last weekend in Gig Harbor, Wash. The “con” (for con vention) boasted an appearance by Brad Dourif, who plays Wormtongue in “The Two Towers.” Former University student Justin Speyer performed at the con with the Seattle Knights, a weapons demonstration group. He was a “generic orc/goblin thing” taking punishment from the good guys. “While I’m not a con junky — I don’t travel the country dressing like an elf — I do belong to an or ganization that hires itself out to do live steel combat at (renaissance) fairs,” Speyer said. “. . .As far as some people are concerned, that does border on the crazy-and-or nuts category.” From the academic perspective, Saint Louis University Professor John Walter said it is too much when reality is abandoned for fiction. “We’re not meant to stay in Mid dle-earth, but to enjoy it, find within it what we want ... and bring that back with us,” Walter said. Walter has taught three courses with Tolkien’s works, his first at Port land State University with professor Marjorie Bums. Both Walter and Bums referred to Tolkien’s essay “On Fairy-Stories” when discussing fantasy as a vice. “Tolkien himself was greatly drawn to other worlds,” Bums said. “He knew the dangers.” Walter said his 2001 class, the first Tolkien course offered at SLU, had a huge waiting fist. “I had students whom I’d never met chasing me across campus beg ging to be let in.” He said there is some resistance to serious study of Tolkien’s work. “Various members of the British literary elite freaked out when the reading public chose the ‘Lord of the Rings’ as their favorite literary work of the past century,” he said. Walter said the public chose Tolkien’s trilogy over works like “Ulysses,” because it speaks to every one on the same level and “there’s an anti-snobishness about it.” Fans like Bailey agree. “I don’t think I’m cooler than anybody,” she said. “I’m a mission ary, and I want to convert every person I meet.” Contact the Pulse columnist at masonwest@dailyemerald.com.