McKay’s Open Pantry Delicatessen FEATURING Broasted Chicken - by the bucket or the piece • Party trays made to order Fresh home-made pizza • Fresh bagels and pocket bread • San Francisco style sourdough bread 31 varieties Imported and Domestic Cheese • 35 varieties lunch meat and sausages Full line salad bar • Hot food to go • Fresh sandwiches made daily //of or cold. Imported or Domestic foods with old-fashioned service 1960 Franklin Blvd. S&H Green StamPs> to° 655 w. Centennial Blvd. Eugene _ Springfield 343-6418 °P'" 8 am IO 8 P"> da,1>' 747-3023 Bring Out Your Best With RIM Schedule of Activities Activity Golf Tournament Tennis Mixed Doubles Spring Tennis Classic The Canoe Race Home Run Derby Frisbee Golf Doubles Div. M-W-C c M-W-C M-W M-W M-W-C Min. # Players 4 2 1-2 1-2 3-4 2 Entry Deadline 5/17 5/18 5/18 5/19 5/22 5/23 Start Date 5/19 5/20 5/27 5/19 5/22 5/24 i=e !s5 g* 5^ r^1 A Intramural Golf Tournament — The golf tournament is scheduled to be played in the sun on Saturday, May 19 beginning at 9:00 a.m. This will be an 18-hole tournament and will be played at Laurelwood Golf Course. En tries are due by 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, May 17. Tee times will be schedul ed and will be available at the afternoon managers meeting on Friday, the 18th. Teams consist of a maximum of five players (four best scores count). Individuals may also enter. Tennis Mixed Doubles — Tired of Saturday tournaments? Here's a chance to wind up Sunday afternoon with some good tennis. Matches will begin at 3:00 p.m. at the Covered Courts. Students may sign up with his or her parent at the site. This extra time will allow you to decide when parents arrive on campus if they wish to play. All others are asked to have entries in by 5:00 p.m. on Friday, May 18. Matches will be pro sets (first team to 8 games) no ad. Participants furnish their own racket and two new tennis balls. The Canoe Race — A special event for Parent's Weekend. Enter with Mom or Dad, or take them to the Mill Race to witness your skill and daring. The -rx cA Canoe Race begins at 11:00 a.m., is a 50 yard sprint, and takes place at the Waterworks Canoe Co., 1397 Franklin . , Blvd. You may enter in the one or two >' W person race. Cost is 25" per person. If ' 'l Mr . you're daring enough, you'll allow Mom or Dad to race alone. See you there at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, the 19th. Spring Tennis Classic — Participants must plan ahead for this Memorial Weekend Classic (May 25, 26, 27). Entries are due May 18th. Entry fees are $6 singles, $4 doubles. All participants receive t-shirts. Winners in each division receive $50 gift certificates from Mr. Tennis. Trophies will be awarded to all division winners and runners-up. Divisions include: Men's and Women's Singles; Men's and Women's Doubles; Mixed Doubles. En try blanks are available at the RIM office. *****************SWIM MEET RESULTS***************** 200 Medley Relay 100 Feet First Relay 100 Yard Indiv Medley 100 Yard Butterfly 100 Yard Freestyle SO Yard Novelty/Kk k SO Yard Freestyle 100 Yard Backstroke 100 Yard Breastroke 200 Yard Freestyle 200 Yard Freestyle Relay S00 Yard Freestyle Women's SO Yard Novelty Ki< k Women's SO Yard free style Women's 100 Yard Backstroke Women's 100 Yard Breastroke 1st Sigma C hi - 1:52.1 Sigma Chi • 2:12.S l Chin - 1:01.0 I). Silva • 1 00.4 T. Patapoff - 50.6 M Williams *9 5 L. Chin - 22.8 T Patapoff - 1:06.5 B Maginnis - 1:12.3 I Patapoff • 2:07.0 Sigma C hi - 1 46 0 I ( arey 5:45.2 C Brown - 17.8 B S< hull/ 38.0 C, Brown I 10 0 B, St hull/ • 1:45.0 2nd Bottom Vostoules 1:58.5 Bottom Vostoules 2:42,7 |. knppaehne - 1:01 4 J. Krippaehne - 1:07.5 T. Carey - 52.9 t. Tema 41 8 B Koll - 23.3 R Mason - 1:07.2 P Carey 1:13.5 T. Mittleman 2 06.5 SAI 1:578 1. Mittleman - 6-50.0 B Sc hultz - 51.0 C. Hitt htock • 19.2 C. Hitchcock - 2:06.0 23; 1 n. y t'" r BUD LIGHT uo RECREATION & INTRAMURALS 103 Gerlinger Hall *4113 or *4121 Budweiser presents this page as a service to students interested m recreation and mtramurahi Publication of RIM News should not be interpreted in any way as an endorsement of the sponsor's product by the University of Oregon ALBERTO^^ Continued from Page 3B ran) and Stanford. It wasn’t a hard decision. Salazar says he never really considered anyplace besides Eugene, where he thought the people were great and the area was nice. But when pressed, he starts to mention the name Dellinger. While he would have been a good runner regardless of where he went, Salazar implies that Dellinger made him great. “I just feel that he’s the best coach in the country without a doubt,” says Salazar. Of Eugene, he says, “the people are great, but the No. 1 thing without a doubt is Dellinger and the U of O track program. That, I think, is the nucleus of running in Eugene, no matter what anyone else tries to say.” Dellinger has coached Salazar for eight years, and will remain his coach in definitely as far as Alberto is concerned. One of the things Dell inger taught him, Salazar says, was to be smart about running, its effect on the body, and the need to con serve one’s self for the future. The suspicion used to be that Salazar would run 300 miles a week, if permitted. Dellinger wouldn’t allow it. “He can be more objec tive,” says Salazar, “than I can be. I can still get nervous and try and overdo and over train. He’s there, but he can stand back and say, ‘wait a second, you better back off.’ ” • • • “We were watching the 1976 Olympics at Montreal, and Alberto was very disap pointed in the 5,000. Lasse Viren won the race, but it was a very tactical race, and everyone just kind of sat behind him, and that was it. AI turned to me and said, 7 will never do that. I may lose, but if I lose, I’m going to lose as hard as I can. ’ ” — Bob Sevene It is Salazar’s unflinching insistence on total effort that leads to much of his success. If there is a surge in him, he will surge. If there is an ounce of energy in him, he will use it. “I’m not one to go into a race and be scared to make a decisive move, scared to go 'i IttTH Ignore them and they will go away Teeth Cleaning, Exam and X-Rays as needed $30 Will Morningsun, D.D.S. Thomas R. Huhn, D.D.S. Andrea Feight, D.M.D. call for appointment 746-6517 I h mites trom campus, next to Bike Path 528 Mill St., Springfield for a win,” says Salazar. “A lot of athletes ... they don’t want to do all the work, they don’t want to lead. They’re scared of going for the win and being run down by a bunch of guys. So instead, they content themselves with trying to come in fourth or fifth.” Not Salazar. “He’s a very obsessed person,” says Dellinger. “I’ve had a lot of talented runners — Steve Prefontaine, Matt Centrowitz, Rudy Chapa — but Alberto has shown a will ingness to develop his talent.” “Yeah, he may be a little aloof. You have to be aloof when you have 5,000 people hounding you every second. He has to have his own time, and he wouldn't have that time if he honored every Boy Scout and Cub Scout request for an interview.” — Bill Dellinger Salazar isn’t content with letting others speak for him. He would rather speak for himself. He claims a 2:07 marathon is not out of range. He talks of sub-13 5,000 times, 10,000 clockings under 27 minutes. For that, he is called cocky. When people call him cocky, he withdraws a little. For that, he is called aloof. “People don’t use those words that know him,” says Molly, the proud mother of the newest Salazar, infant son Antonio. “It’s just that if you ask him what he thinks, he’ll tell you.” • • • “We’re just people, we just run a little faster." — Alberto Salazar That’s how Salazar explain ed the life of a world record holder to Sports lllustrated’s Kenny Moore back in 1982. It must have been one of his more modest moments. Today, Salazar is still mak ing lofty goals for himself. At age 25, he’s done it all in distance running. Or has he? The Olympic marathon is his present, but the track is his future. “The times I’ve run have all been run at a relatively young age,” he says. "I hit 'em all so early — you know, 22, 23 years old. I’m planning after the Olympics to just concen trate on track for a year or two. I think that if I just train for the five and 10, I don’t see any reason why I can’t run under 13 minutes.” Some things never change. DIM SUM LUNCH Regular Lunches, Too And Try Us for Dinner CHINA BLUE Restaurant 879 E. 13th 343-2832 Key duplication Make a spare. 65* at your Bookstore