Mho*o try Davis Phlnnay. Alaxl Orawal and Roy Knlckman ol tha Coon Light cycling taam load tha racars down Wolf Croak In Saturday's Kill Hill Road Raca. Phlnnay won Sunday's Unlvanlty Crltarlum. Coors Light dominates local race By Pat Malach Oegori Oat>y tmetak} The Coors Tight cycling team dominated the 1993 Tour of Willamette by winning the top three spots of the five-day, six stage race. Seven-time Tour de France vet eran Ron Kiefel took the overall crown, followed by teammates Scott Moniger and Roy Knick man. Saturn rider Brian Walton was fourth, and Mike Engelman of Coors Tight was fifth. Coors Tight broke the race open at Friday morning's Tost Creek Road Race near Dexter when it placed four ridurs in a five-man breakaway group that took off at the beginning of the second of two 29-mile laps. Knickman won the stage, fin ishing with Kiefel and Moniger about 2:45 ahead of Engelman and Saturn rider Andrew Miller. SPRINGFIELD SCIENTIFIC SUPPLIES Scales Chemicals Lab Equipment 9-6 Mon-Fri • 10-5 Sat 726-9176 1124 Main SL 136 E. 11th • (near Willamette) 342-3358 Must be 21 or Over Monday ^.i $2 A record release part) far... The Pearl Divers featuring assorted special guests Tuesday Apr.120 $3 Mr Blue Wednesday Apm 21 $3 Mcul night' Warface Lazarus Synesthesia Music Starts at 10pm Mon-Sat Music starts at 8pm Sundays Team manager t.en Petyjohn said he hat) hoped C'.oors Light would bu able to use Friday's 60-mile stage, which included 4.830 feet of climbing, to open n lead on Walton liefore the after noon’s 12.3-mile time trial “We were a little worried before this.” Petyjohn said “We didn't want to leave Walton for the time trial. Now (Walton) is 2:45 down. Brian’s a good time trialist. but he’s not that good The tour started Wednesday with the Green Hill Prologue, a two-mile time triul to the top of Green Hill Road. The stage was won by Saturn's Scott Mercier. Thursday saw the riders tack le the 88-mile Smith River Road Race, which was won by Chad Gerlach of Team San Jose. Inclement weather and tough climbing whittled the main field to about 20 riders before Gerlach successfully attacked with a kilometer to go floors Light's big day came on Friday when the team fm ad a road rnce and time trial, placing four riders in the overall lead Walton won Saturday's stage, the 63-mile Kill Hill Road Rai e. by stomping up the one-kilome ter uphill finish ahead of Bobby julicll and Kiefel. "After (Friday's) road race in the morning, we got worked over by Coors Light," Walton said, "and we wanted to prove something, being the other pro team here. " Sunday's sixth stage brought the riders to the University cam pus, where they circled a .75 mile course around the EMU. Sprinter Davis Phinney of doors Light and four other riders broke away from the Held on the 12th of 44 laps. S2 00 OFF Converse Shoes ■ Sunglasses • Pipes HI $1.00 OFF Posters ■ Pd Pk ISI Whip Cream Charges SIO 99 Lazar's Bazar Cards & Gifts S7 W Broadway Downtown Mall 687-0139 ' — __ ■■ an oaa aaaa h' .|P ana I tti m jsjrt tknmjtk iht xhh hwi rtmstitrritinm »*/ A / ('(’ Ki CO t If W7FM- EUOENE N*m*>*l HmUo HI CO to VIM • Robinson Theatre X 00 pm April 22. 23. 24, 30. ami May 1.199.3 Matinee 2:00 p m April 25 Bo* ofnet, (50.3) .346-4191 . The I'niversily Theatre Presents Chimera A theatre piece influenced by the culture of Bali A BOOKSIGNING »"n T () M |’> I K S Thursday, April 22nd • 4-5pm wregon native, former radical, University instructor, and editor for the Los Angeles Times Magazine, Tom Bates will be here ___ io sign copies or nis new door haus The 1970 Bombing of the Army Math Research Center at the University of Wisconsin and It's Aftermath. RADS chronicles the remarkable series of events around one of the country's single most destructive acts of sabotage resulting from the passions and follies of the sixties. "I Bates'J narrative of the bombing and the flight, capture and trial of the culprits, is absorbing, but what renders the book memorable is his brilliant recreation af the protest movement and the self-defeating tactics of both the militants and the authorities." -Publisher'i Weekly Hardcover $25.00