12 Wednesdav. December 8,1993 SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Jayhawk Bookstore Billiards $2.40 per hour until 6:00 p.m. ... "Your Book Professionals" "At the top of Naismith Hill" Hrs: 8:50-M-Th., 8-5F. 1st, 12-4 Sun. 843-3826 Gift Shop toys ♫ books jewelry ♫ tee shirts posters ♫ stones earth music ♫ and much more! Mon-Sat 10-5 and Sun 1-5 / 864-4450 next to the USA THE "REAL WORLD" YOU MUST CHOOSE! A. WORK HARD, ... MAKE BIG $$$$ B. DONT WORK HARD, ... DONT MAKE BIG $$$$ IF YOU CHOOSE "A" GO ONLINE to find out how you can earn $8,000 "$12,000 next Spring/Summer. IF YOU CHOOSE "B" Don't bother All student positions will be filled by January 1st SO CALL NOW! The original student housepainting company 'REAL' WORK 'REAL' EXPERIENCE 'REAL' MONEY Minneapolis/St. Paul, Kansas City, St Louis (612) 935-8250 (800) 769-PAINT Incoming varsity athletes face dealing with change "Sometimes I wonder what it would be like just to be in school," Charlene Reyes said. By Anne Felstet Kansan sportswriter As an outfielder for the Kansas softball team, she said she figured just being in school would be boring. Reyes, a freshman, is one of the varsity athletes who simultaneously adjusted to college life and varsity athletics. She has successfully survived her first fall season and looks forward to her more competitive spring season. Reyes had an advantage over most of the incoming players. She played softball for San Marcos Junior College in California. She said she understood the time commitment she would have to make, and it was not a big adjustment for her. Nonathletes do not realize how much time athletes put into their sport, she said. By 8 p.m., other students in her residence hall were running around because they had slept all day, while she had been busy. "Somehow we manage to find a social life and attend school," she said. "Somehow we just do it." Trent Tucker, freshman Kansas tennis player, had difficulties adjusting to the structured, full schedule of varsity athletics. He moved from high school tennis directly to collegiate tennis and was thrust into the varsity athletic environment with no control over his own schedule. Instead of following the typical freshman routine of going to class, staying up late, and acquainting himself to his surroundings, he was learning the ropes of being an athlete. He monitored his diet, attended practice sessions that lasted three hours longer than he was accustomed to, and he was rolling out of bed at 5:30 every morning for weight training. "I didn't feel like a student at all," Tucker said. "I wanted at least one morning to sleep in." The fall season is not as busy as the spring season in many sports, and it gives new athletes a chance to acclimate themselves to the new routine of balancing college with varsity athletics. Tucker said the fall season had taken away his nervousness about playing varsity tennis and it taught him what he would need to do at the collegiate conference and national level to be a competitive player. "The spring season will be insane," he said. "The spring season will be insane," he said. Sophomore Chessa Bieri also is a newcomer to Kansas tennis, although she has a slight advantage over Tucker. She opted to redshift last year, so she witnessed the intensity she would be expected to maintain when she played with the team. "You never really realize how much it takes until you actually do it," she said. "No one can tell you about it; you have to learn it by going through it." However, seeing and doing are two different things. She described varsity athletics as a full-time job with no sick days. She said it was a major time commitment and she had to sacrifice a lot, but the rewards equaled all the time she put into it. "It's a great experience to do something you enjoy doing, and you get a lot of opportunities through it," she said. Scripture-toting fan ordered to stand trial The Associated Press SANTA ANA, Calif. — Rollen Frederick Stewart, known to television sports fans as "Rainbow Man" for his multicolored wig, was ordered to stand trial on charges that he set off stink bombs at the Crystal Cathedral and other buildings. At a hearing Monday, Stewart was scheduled for arraignment on Dec. 21 on four felony counts each of discharging a gaseous, nauseous substance in a public place and of placing a fake bomb with the intent of making people fear for their safety. Stewart, 48, was sentenced in July to three life terms for taking a hostage last year at a hotel near Los Angeles International Airport. He told police the incident was intended to publicize the second coming of Jesus Christ. During the 1970s, Stewart traveled to sporting events around the world, posing for television cameras in a curly, colored wig and often holding up signs with religious slogans or Bible verses. He faces a maximum of five years in prison for the stink bombings, and defense attorney Robert Knox said Stewart probably would plead guilty if he could get a sentence to run concurrently with his prison terms. "The rapture was motivating him," Knox said. "He is remorseful, and he never must harm anyone." s Tornoseful, and he never meant to harm anyone." Several witnesses testified that Stewart placed homemade bombs at the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, home to television evangelist Robert Schuller; a Christian bookstore in Garden Grove; Trinity Broadcasting Network Studios in Tustin; and the Orange County Register in Santa Ana, all in 1991. Healthy Men Needed Receive up to $250 IMTCI, a pharmaceutical research company is now seeking volunteers to participate in a medical research study. To qualify you must: * be age 18-40 * be near your ideal weight * be able to attend two 29 hour visits at our clinic Call IMTCI for more info: Mon-Fri from8am-5pm MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology University of Kansas Mon.-Sat. 9 am-5pm International Medical Technical Consultants, Inc. 16300 College Boulevard Lenexa, Kansas Sunday 1pm-5pm 1-800-669-4682 [ ] One stop for "Round the World" shopping Shape up for the holidays! SAVE $139 on a full-year or six-month membership!* Absolutely NO joining fee! BODY BOUTIQUE 749-2424 Northeast Fitness Facility 925 Iowa - you can stop your membership over X-mas break! favorite Delivering from Have a fun, safe Winter Break!!! restaurants; Lawrence's favorite Waiters on Wheels restaurants: Cornucopia Fall Moon Cake 842-2662 Cornacopa Full Moon Cafe Low Rider Mexican Cafe Quinton's Bar & Dell Tin Pan Alley Uptown Bagel Hours: Mon. Sat.,11 to 10 Sun.,12-9 Optical Dispensary JOHN LENNON October 9,1940-December8,1980 ...We all shine on. 24th & Iowa St. PO Box 2 Lawrence, Kaplan, 817-932-6888 913-842-1544 913-842-1811 913-842-1438 KIEF'S CDs/TAPES The women of Panhellenic Association and the men of the Interfraternity Council would like to take this opportunity to wish all KU students good luck on their Finals. --- DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT'S TOO LATE! CHOOSE YOUR APARTMENT NOW! NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR JANUARY-JUNE OCCUPANCY Basketball Court Community Hot Tub Tennis Court SHANNON PLAZA On the KU Bus Route --- AUTUMN RUN Apartments & Townhomes 2700 Heatherwood Drive Lawrence KS. (913) 841-7726 --- ON PLANET REEBOK, EVERY BOY HAS AN EQUAL RIGHT TO REACH FOR THE STARS. A FEW WILL EVEN BECOME ONE. THE PUMP™ PAYDIRY 840 Massachusetts JOCK'S NITCH SPORTING GOODS The Sports Look of Today! YOUR SON'S GROWING FEET NEED ALL THE COMFORT AND SUPPORT THEY CAN GET. THAT'S WHY HE DESERVES REEBOK* BOY'S SHOES. THEY HAVE THE SAME TECHNOLOGY YOU'LL FIND IN REEBOK SHOES FOR DAD. THEY'RE COMFORTABLE FROM THE WORD GO. THEY'RE DURABLE ENOUGH TO OUTLAST THE TOUGHEST KID ON THE BLOCK. AND THEY HAVE THE STYLE KIDS LOVE. EVERY BOY FEELS LIKE A STAR IN REEBOK SHOES. 842-2442 © 1983 Reebok International Ltd. All Rights Reserved. REEBOK is a registered trademark of Reebok International