enryT's Appetizers Our Famous Buffalo Wings 4.85 Nathos Deluxe 5.85 Red Hot Jalapenos 4.85 Calamari 5.75 Mozzarela Sticks 4.95 Quesadillas 4.95 Chicken Strips 4.95 Chips and Salsa 2.25 Veggies, Fruit and Stuff 4.95 Now That's a Potato 1.55 Salads & Soups House Salad 4.25 Dinner Salad 2.95 Chef Salad 5.49 Crispy Chicken Salad 5.95 Grilled Chicken Salad 5.49 Jerked Shrimp Caesar Salad 6.75 "Absolut" Antipasto Greens 4.75 Sandwich and Salads 4.75 Soup and Sandwich 4.49 Soup and Salad 4.49 Hand Crafted Soups cup 1.95 bowl 2.95 Gourmet Burgers Black Angus Burger 5.25 American Gyro 5.95 Beef Burgundy 5.95 Ninety Thousand, Two Hundred and Ten 5.95 Sandwiches Grilled Chicken Breast 5.25 Wizzo’s Chicken 5.95 Texas Cheese 3.79 The Californian Chicken 6.25 Chicken Salad 5.25 A Real Philly Cheesesteak 5.49 Turkey Club 5.25 Malibu Chicken 6.29 Fat Tuesday Chicken 5.75 Southwest Chicken 5.95 TNT Tuna 5.25 Ultimate Reuben 5.25 Entrees Choice K.C. Strip 12.95 Ribeye Steak 12.29 Chicken Fajitas 7.95 Chicken Marsala 8.95 Filet Mignon 14.29 T’s Lasagna 7.95 Wild Mushroom and Chicken Linguini 8.95 Voted Lawrence's #1 Sports Bar 3520 West 6th 749-2999 Bikers: adrenaline keeps them going Continued from Page 5. "My goal is to gain a few extra pounds and hit the road," Friesen said. The extra weight, he said, will give him a reservoir of energy, and if he and his friend bike at a moderate pace, they will gain the stamina needed to complete the tour. "The biking feels good," Friesen said. "You're tired for a while. So you go out, you chow. Then that's ok, but its your butt. That gets you every time." Friesen said the possibility of physical pain does not worry him. He said he had been on a 50-mile tour, and it only took him a few hours. One of his main concerns is possible weather variations. He said in Wyoming he and his friend will bike through the mountains and possibly have to bike in snow. In other parts of the country, the two will have to fight the heat. "We're thinking of thumbing it through the mountains, or at least to the top," Friesen said. "It's hard to fathom riding up a mountain in the snow." "When it get too hot, we'll lay low during the day and have a siesta," Friesen said. Small towns in Wyoming and Montana could also be a source of pain for the pair. "Everyone I've talked to who's toured has been harassed," Friesen said. "Cars will drive by, and people will scream or throw cans." This antagonism could compare to the physical pains from riding. However, Friesen said, the views and sunsets during the tour, Yellowstone and his 21st birthday — celebrated somewhere in the Rocky Mountains — will compensate for any harassment. "It'll be a low key trip," Friesen said. "If we get out there and realize we have a long way to go, we'll do it. There's no way we won't." Bikers can take precautions to keep themselves from becoming walking scar bundles. Jamie Katz, Overland Park sophomore works at the Terraplane bike shop, 916 Massachusetts St. He said all bikers could avoid major injuries by wearing helmets Also, wearing biking shoes with stiffer soles provide more power transfer and can provide additional protection against blisters. "Padded pants are necessary for road racing or you'll really work your crotch," Katz said. Mountain bikers can also buy pants with built in knee pads. Katz added that no type of store-bought protection could prevent injuries as well as developed biking skills. Experienced bikers also caution beginners not to attack the new sport too aggressively, because overconfidence can lead to injuries. "You need to learn how to fall," Jones said. "You develop this over a couple of years so you won't slide a lot when you roll." 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 April, 1996 The Hill Alternative Sports 12