Friday. June 8, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Eleven I ,R 17 TH SMME.DALYPagIEve Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Player Club G AB R H Pct. Player Club G AB R H Pet. Blomberg, NY 36 106 17 42 .396 Maddox . SF 45 170 22 60 .353 Horton, Det. 24 94 15 34 .362 Mota, LA 35 121 16 42 .347 Suarez, Tex 31 93 14 31 .333 Watson, lou 57 203 37 69 .340 Kirkpatrick, KC 45 166 29 55 .331 Cash, Pit 39 163 29 55 .337 D. Allen, Chi - 47 173 32 57 .329 Goodson, SF 47170 17 57 .335 Kelly, Chi 36 141 24 46 .326 Fairly, Mtl 40 120 16 40 .333 Carew, Min 48 182 32 59 .324 Bonds, SF 58 240 60 78 .325 Fisk, Bos 46 170 24 53 .312 B. Robinson, PhI. 36 120 19 39 .325 llenderson, Chi 36 135 21 42 .311 Santo, Chi 50 179 29 58 .324 Mayberry, KC 56 196 37 60 .306 Crawford, LA 52 179 33 58 .324 Lopes, LA 43 145 22 47 .324 Pitching Pitching Wood, Chi 13-5; Singer, Cal 10-2; Bryant, SF 9-3; Billingham, Cin 8-2; Holtzman, Oak 10-3; Coleman, Det 10- Wise, St. L 7-2; Seaver, NY 7-3; Sutton, 4; Splittorff, KC 8-3. LA 7-4. F ITS A R]EALLY GOOD Yankees acquire hurlers; rain delays NCAA track NEW YORK - The New York Yankees, moving to bolster their pitching staff, made two major deals with National League teams yesterday, acquiring vet- eran hurlers Sam McDowell and Pat Dobson. McDowell, a left-hander, was purchased in a straight cash deal from the San Francisco Giants and Dobson, a righty, came from Atlanta in exchange for two minor leaguers for im- mediate delivery and two more players to be named later. Both hurlers figure to move quickly into the troubled New York pitching picture. The club has been seeking another start- er as well as a long reliever for the bullpen. The McDowell announcement went smoothly for the Yankees, unlike the one involving Dob- son. Owner George Steinbrenner spilled the beans on that one, prematurely announcing Wednes- day night that his club had ac- quired Dobson in exchange for left-hander Mike Kekich. NCAA track BATON ROUGE, La. - A se- vere thunderstorm curtailed the opening day's program yesterday in the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association's track and field championships. The one hour-and-40 minute storm, accompanied by hail and lightning, forced cancellation of qualifying in the javelin, ham- mer throw and shotput and de- layed for several hours prelimi- naries in the mile run, 120 high TIRES We are makinq it possible for U-M students, faculty, and staff to buy tires, wheels, batteries at dealer prices. These are first quality, first line tires made by molar tire manufacturers. 404 W. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR, MICH. F Sports of The Daily I MIA hurdles, three mile, 100 and 220 dashes, pole vault, long jump and high jump. UCLA ranked as a heavy favor- ite to capture its third consecu- tive NCAA crown, with the great- est competition coming from its Pacific Eight Conference neigh- bors - Southern California and Oregon State. NCAA baseball OMAHA - Arizona State heads the formidable list of challengers to Southern California's bid for a fourth straight College World Series baseball title as the 27th annual classic opens here today. Oklahoma, 47-10, tangles with Big Ten Conference champion Minnesota, 29-14-2, in the series opener today at 6 p.m., EDT, and Penn State, 56-6, in the nightcap. Southern California, bidding for its fifth title in six years, plays Harvard, 35-3, and Texas, 48-5, meets Georgia Southern, 42-10, in first-round games to- morrow. English rugby squad ends Midwest tour By CHUCK DRUKIS Completing a sweep of their six game tour of the United States, the Northampton Saints riveted the University of Michi- gan Rugby Football Club 62-3 on Palmer Field last Wednesday. Northampton, one of the old- est clubs in England, is the first major team to visit the Midwest. In honor of thtir visit, the Michigan State Legislature passes a resolution honoring the United Kingdom guests. At ceremonies following t h e game, Saint manager Don White, M PIN BOWLING Win a Free Game BILLIARDS at THE UNION This Weekend received a plaque from Michi- gan legal counsel Thomas Woods, thanked the instrumental people in the Midwest who made the tour possible. "The hospitality was magnificent," said White. "We were shown every interest- ing aspect of America wher- ever we've been. It actually be- came difficult to accept hospital- ity and still play good rugby." Northhampton began the tour May 26 with a 32-12 victory over a tri-state team consisting of Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky at Indianapolis. They followed with a 434 triumph at Champaign, against a squad comprised of Illi- nois and Iowa ruggers. Their third victory came in Madison against a Wisconsin and Minne- sota nucleus, 66-10. Proceeding to Chicago, t h e y pounded the Midwest All-Star squad 38-9 and shutout the Chi- cago Lions 33-0 before their fin- ale in Ann Arbor. ESTEAK & 4 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile * LAST NIGHT * is candy faithful? ...only te the book Robert Haggio9, Peter Zoref and Selnxw Pictures Corp.* pre "t A Christicn Marquond Producion C7ies Ainavour-Mardon Brando-Richard Burton James CobumJohn Huston -Walter Matthau Ringo Starr int Ewa Aulin. Candy RESTRICTED " usdayo h mro oc, op ,Ic Amtnles m panied ... .S.P.., R .- - 'Pri , 'o n o a a M aeto urian ii5a aot~isolai Director Marquand spared nothing to set these performances of distinctly rare quality and extremely sharp satirical sketches. Music by: THE BYRDS & STEPPENWOLF 7:45 & 10:00 * DOUBLE FEATURE * Betty Davis in THE VIRGIN QUEEN 8:15 & 10:00 in the MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING Washington at Thayer St. NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP eastern michigan university major events committee PRESENTS: SAVOY BROWN MANFRED MANN Dr. Hook & The Medicine Company Siegel-Schwall Band SATURDAY, JUNE 9-4 P.M. [MU Campus-Rynearson Stadium $5 ADVANCE, $6 AT THE DOOR GENERAL ADMISSION lickets Available at: McKenny Union Ann Arbor Music Mart Huckleberry Party Store All Hudson's &UGrinnells