The Battalion Classified Advertising • Easy • Affordable • Effective For information, call 345-0569 Student workers needed to distribute the 2003 Aggieland yearbook and 2003- 2004 Campus Directory. Should be Texas A&M student in good standing and be available to work in mini mum two-hour blocks at least two days a week between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. For immediate consideration, con tact Dell Bomnskie in 011A (basement) Reed McDonald Building. 10 Wednesday, September 17, 2003 NATH THE BATTALIi Game addicts hit the dance pat By Jenee Osterheldt KRT CAMPUS ATTENTION FACULTY, STAFF and STUDENT LEADERS! F.A.C.T. (First-time Aggie Contact Team) is a program where faculty, staff and student leaders contact new Aggies to welcome them to the University and ask about their experiences at A&M. F.A.C.T. will be conducted Mondays through Thursdays, September 29-October 16 from6:00 - 9:00 PM. Please volunteer your time to help our new Aggies feel at home. You may sign up on-line at http://studentlife.tamu.edu/nsp/FACT or contact Vanessa Roberts at 845-5826 in the Office of New Student Programs. Thank you in advance for your time and commitment. UDEirr !FE Office of New Student Prograiral 1257 TAMU | PHONE (979) 845-5826; FAX [979] 862-1309 WWW hup://»tudentlife tamu edu ...A Department in the Division tf Student Affair* Angle Orientation lawder Program $ 1 Bar Drinks and Pints 8-11 p.m. "Sometimes clean, sometimes dirty, always fun' A&M vs. Virginia Tech 6:30 p.m. at The Tap! 696-5570 for details Party Safe and Designate a Driver. Forget the fascination with the eye-daz zling graphics of the Xbox and PlayStation 2. Many sit-and-play video game addicts are getting up and out, heading for the near est arcade to jump on the interactive rhythm game “Dance Dance Revolution.” They’ve traded their tired fingers for crazy legs in an eye-ear-foot coordination challenge. The video game-dance union started in Japan a few years ago and is turning America’s video gamers into a rhythm nation of sorts. The “DDR” craze has ignit ed the creation of clubs everywhere, from California to a club in Kansas City known as DDRKC. DDRKC isn’t a traditional club with meetings and officers and minutes and dues. This organization is strictly for the sport of rhythm games. At the meetings, gamers swap techniques while playing the games. Ryan Edwards, a 27-year-old software engineer, founded DDRKC in April because he wanted to generate some interest in the area. Edwards even owns his own “DDR” arcade machines in Play Central Station, an arcade in the suburb of Overland Park, Kan. DDRKC helps encourage new players and provides a forum to address local game issues, Edwards said. “It generally adds to the following of such games in the U.S. and worldwide,” he said. “Besides, it’s more fun to play with friends than alone.” “DDR” friends gather in groups as large as 20 every Thursday at Play Central Station to take turns playing and watching. “DDR” is fun for the players, but to the spectator it looks as serious as a boxing match. There are three levels based on speed, beat and precision: Basic, Trick and Maniac. Players keep a straight face, they barely move their arms, and it’s all about precision. Feet on , arrows on beat for four songs straight. It’s hyper-aerobic. By the fourth and final song in a game, the dance maniac is wearing a sweat-soaked shirt. The first move they make as they step off the machine is toward the concession stand where they guzzle water so fast it gushes out of their mouths and down their chins. “It’s incredibly fun and a great workout,” says T.J. Vehlewald, 17. “I am in better shape than I used to be and before I started playing this. I sat around doing nothing.” Bud Crittenden, a “DDR” maniac, and some of his co-workers at Sprint in Kansas City, Kan., enjoy a game of “DDR” during lunch breaks. In addition to his lunch-hour fun, Crittenden says he comes out on Thursday nights for a little fun exercise that’s cheaper than a membership at Bally’s. Sentei in the % I MATT RICNEY that the standarc will rightfully rt detennine their The Sixth An U.S. citizen a “s state and districi I clause applies tc |£fF Siner* KRT CAV : Matthew Davis, 16, and his brother, Josh, 23, dance on a Dance Dance Revolution machine dJ arcade in Concord, North Carolina. "Since I’ve been doing it, I’ve been slow ly losing weight, and I’m toning up,” says Crittenden, 33, who’s been playing for more than a year. For others, the beat’s the thing. “These games are fun because everybody likes music. It’s not like using a controller; it’s about using your body,” said Duncan Oliver, a senior at Blue Valley Northwest in Overland Park, Kan. “It’s pretty addictive. People who like it should probably get the home version because once you start you'll end up using lots of tokens,” said Oliver, 17. Each player gets four songs for $1, but eventually this adds up. Which is why many “DDR” fanatics have the home version of the game on PlayStation ($30). Some play with their fingers by controller, others buy the pad set ($50). A PC version is available as well, and some dance fiends even have the actual arcade version at home. Like Jon Effertz, 15, who got the actual arcade machine for his birthday earlier this summer. “My mom sees it as really good exercise. and it’s so much fun.” Jon said. "My nws actually getting good at it. The whole fair ly plays, and it’s good entertainmeniu company.” The next step for DDRKC freaiii competition. “It’s seemed like you had to travrioal farther west to get some solid compdto, so we decided to hold our own ton® merits here,” said Vehlewald, a highschw senior. Tournaments are divided into technia] and performance. Performance compel; tion is about freestyle dancing; technic; competition is based on precision. Ani there are competitions for basics, tricks and maniacs. “Competing in a tournament would be about seeing how I rank,” said Drew Miller, a 21-year-old “DDR’’ freak “There’s a challenge about it.” “There really is no preparation for tour naments other than practice,” Effertz said “The hardest part of the game is gettini exactly on beat.” Tex&s A&M Uwiz/ersTt$ Engineering Career Fair Student Engineers' Council Today (10 am - 4 pm) REED Arena Bus rides to REED Arena from Zachry and MSC!! *TAMU Student ID Required* List of today’s companies hiring for jobs, internships, and co-ops: http://sec.tamu.edu/careerfair 3M Accenture Adams Consulting Engineers, Inc. AEP Airdyne International Inc. Alcatel USA ALLTEL Corporation AMD Amerada Hess Corporation Anheuser-Busch, Inc. Applied Materials Applied Research Laboratories/The University of Texas at Austin Archer Daniels Midland Company BAE SYSTEMS Baker Hughes Bank of America Bechtel Bettis Bechtel Corporation Bechtel Nevada Berwanger, Inc. BHPBilliton Boeing Booz Allen Hamilton BP America, Inc. Brown & Gay Engineers, Inc. Bums & McDonnell Bury+Partners Cameron Capro, Inc CATERPILLAR INC. CDM Celanese CenterPoint Energy Central Intelligence Agency Chesapeake Energy Corporation Chevron Phillips Chemical Company ChevronTexaco CITGO Clark Realty Builders CNA Insurance Colgate-Palmolive and Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc. ConocoPhillips Dashiell Corporation Data Systems & Solutions Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Dell Deloitte Consulting Duke Energy DuPont Ecolab, Inc. Ernst & Young Ethicon (A Johnson & Johnson Company) ExxonMobil Federal Communications Commission Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Flint Hills Resources Florida Power & Light Company Fluor Corporation FM Global FMC Technologies, Inc. Framatome ANP, Inc. Freese and Nichols, Inc. Frito Lay Technology General Electric Granite Construction Company Halff Associates, Inc. Halliburton Hewlett - Packard Company HNTB Honda R&D Americas, Inc. Informatica International Paper Invocon Jacobs JobGusher Johnson Controls Inc KBR Kennedy Consulting Inc. KIEWIT c/o Peter Kiewit Sons', Inc. Kimley-Hom and Associates, INc. L-3 Communications Integrated Systems LCRA Lockheed Martin Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam, Inc. Lone Star Steel Company LSI Logic Storage Systems, Inc. Lynntechjnc Lyondell/Equistar Malcolm Pimie, Inc. Matkin-Hodver Engineering McKesson Corporation Micron Technology, Inc. Microsoft Minerals Management Service Motorola Mustang Engineering National Instruments National Security Agency NAVAIR North Star Steel Pape-Dawson Engineers, Inc. Parsons Corporation PBS&J Pioneer Natural Resources USA, Inc. PPG Industries, Inc. Raytheon Rinker Materials Rockwell Automation Rohm and Haas Co. Rolls-Royce SCHLUMBERGER Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) Shell Oil Company Siemens USA SMI-Texas Southwest Research Institute Stemco STP Nuclear Operating Company TCB Temple-Inland Forest Products Corporation Texas Department of Transportation Texas Instruments The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory The Pepsi Bottling Group THOMPSON Titan Systems Corporation - Astronautics Engineering Unit TOTAL E&P USA, INC. TRC Environmental Trinity Consultants Tyco Fire and Building Products Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc. U.S. Department of State/ Diplomatic Security Recruitme' U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission United Parcel Service United Space Alliance URS Corporation US Air Force US Navy Officer Programs USG Corporation Veritas DGC, Inc Vought Aircraft Industries, Inc. Wal-Mart Logistics Engineering Wier & Associates, Inc. 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