Th 99 .i. ,, a- ai-rirr , -, , c-Fa NEWSPoAPER-n LL U. I " tz NH I IVNHL t.VLLCC.aC 1VCvv,--> r/-1rrr-, Students peda By Rich Scherr The Retriever U. of Maryland, Baltimore County From the Atlantic Ocean, across the plains of Kansasto the sun and surf of the Pacific, Phillip Noll saw it all, but in a perspective like none other. Last summer, Noll, a mechanical en- gineering junior, and partners Nick Gounaris and Chris Benisch invested $1000 and many blisters to see America by bicycle. The trio departed from the beaches of Ocean City, Maryland, biking 3500 miles through 11 states on a central route through the U.S. Upon arriving in Santa Clara, California 10 weeks later, they had completed a journey which each will remember for the rest of his life. "The people we came across and the ordeals we went through . . . this was a once in a lifetime experience," Noll said. The three friends, who biked an aver- age of 70 miles in eight hours each day, survived with only the bare necessities. "Everybodycarried their own clothes, and we each carried a sleeping bag," Noll said. "Nick took the tent, Chris took the stove and cooking supplies, and I took the tools and bathroom supplies." The trio survived on tuna fish and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. "We'd meet people in supermarkets and start telling them what we were doing. A lot of times they'd invite us Eve I 3500 miles to see Pacific e"g Virg back to their homes to spend the night," broke the treeline (10,500 feet above sea Noll said. level), there was no place to go to the By S The bikers camped out in nearly 30 bathroom," Noll said. "We had a rough The R homes during their journey, having to time." U. of C pay for hotel rooms only twice. The group reached the pinnacle in Seni' Fifteen days into the trip, Nick Estes Park, Colorado, where they dent D crashed in Wilmington, Ohio. The in- climbed the second highest paved road Mt. EvE jured cyclist returned to Maryland to in the U.S.-elevation 12,200 feet. er been recover. "That was the hardest day of my life The "During the time when Nick was physically. It was a six-and-a-half mile gone, there were a lot of hard times for climb straight up and we climbed an ha vTb Chris and I," Noll said. "It's very tough elevation of 5000 feet in 30 miles," Noll betw said. "When we finally reached the top. Novem the feeling was just incredible." "Thi The cyclists reached speeds of 60 mph hardes of0the bineda volved. w° five mi look u Everes . ~ Miry ° climb z ning a s with a psychologically when you're used to Q p ack - having two other guys around for moral % I back,; support, and then there's only one." ryour'n The two remaining friends pushed a hang each other on for three weeks until Nick as they dropped 4000 feet in a span of 15 The rejoined them in northwestern Kansas. miles. tion's The most grueling, but also most re- "I thought in the beginning that to budge warding, part of the trip, Noll said, was make it there (California) you would the pe covering the Rocky Mountains. have to be some great athlete, but in transl "People told us to drink a lot of water actuality it's just a matter of pacing and s in those high elevations, but once we yourself to your own ability," Noll said. Dinna As e - .. has si he Student Body MARCH 19BP rest hopefuls "r to scale in route - ^' '- ' u --- A Walk-on reporter scores scoop on women's basketball I1 By Chris Sigley Northern Star Northern Illinois U. They say practice makes perfect. But no one ever said how long it would take. Obviously it would take more than the four-day workout I had with the Northern Illinois U. women's basket- ball team as an undercover reporter. I had had my share of fundamental passing and shooting skills and had played in high school and junior college, but to try out as a 5' 9" walk-on forward at Division I level definitely turned some heads. The coaches, aware of my staged try- out, warned me about the "heat" I might take for missing pre-season workouts. Nothing was easy. There were many times during the drills when I wanted to tell everyone that I was a reporter-my excuse for messing up. But I didn't. When they ran, I ran. When they got a water-break, I got a water-break-at times I felt I needed twice as many. s Practices became easier as I learned the routine and Chris Sigley started to fit in. Between drills and running sessions, the two-hour-and-40-minute practices taught me that these girls were disci- plined. And dedicated. I only heard the coach raise her voice once, and we all paid for it by running a Suicide. You start from one endline of the gym and run to the free-throw line and back; then you sprint to half-court and back; then you push to three-fourths of the court and back; then you give your all to the other endline and back. It's not too bad, unless you're being timed. The coach decided we didn't run fast enough, so we ran another. On the third day, I asked one of the players, "So when does your team's sea- son start?" She looked at me funny and said, "What do you mean 'your' team? It's OUR team." I just smiled and took my turn for the next drill. The final practice day came. My aching body would be happy to be finished, butI was going to miss my new friends. I was afraid of the girls' raction when I had to tell them I was a reporter. I thought they might accuse me of being a spy. After their initial shock, their mouths widened into smiles and each one shook my hand or gave a high-five. Mission accomplished. I]