Friday, June 15, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Eleven FrdyJne1- 93 H-SM ERDIL.ag lee I I Sports of The Daily I Southern Cal sweeps OMAHA - Dynasties aren't dead - at least not in college baseball. Southern California, which swept through the double elimination tourney without a loss, captured the NCAA title Wednesday night by defeating Arizona State 4-3. It was the fourth consecutive title for the Trojans. The Trojans jumped off to an early lead and withstood a Sun Devil charge in the middle in- nings. Sophomore hurler J e f f Reinke retired the last 11 bat- ters he faced. Maybe the Libels? COLUMBUS - Ohio State, per- ennial football bad guys, need an opponent for a seventh con- test in 1974 after the school's athletic council approved the ex- tra game. "We just don't have anybody in mind right now," said Buck Ath- letic Director Ed Weaver, "but we want a school of stature, both VALUABLE COUPON WORTH $1.44 Buy one big,delicious Mr.Tony Sub and a Jumbo Drink - $144... get another Mr.Tony Sub and Jumbo Drink FR! State & William .1327 S. University OFFER GOOD FOR PICKUP OR DINE-IN ONLY. June 15-June 21 i M Y I I I I I I I .1 AP Photo SOUTHERN CAL COACH Rod Dediaux proudly holds up the plaque signifying supremacy in college baseball after the Tro- jans beat Arizona State to cap- ture the College World Series crown. AE at Ne Morning NO. NOT REALLY. -IN THE COMMUNITY- 124 East Washington Street Just the best EVERY-DAY DISCOUNTS in Ann Arbor. New Morning is opposed to "all the traffic can bear" and "the public be damned" attitude of the major corporate publishers and distributors that are driving book prices steadily into the stratosphere. We wish we had a ready solution. But all we can do is put our profit-margin on the line and hope that people can recognize a non-profit cooperative bookstore when they see one: 15% OFF ALL Hardcover Books 10% OFF ALL "Quality" Paperbacks and/or 15% OFF LIST on all purchases of $10 20% OFF LIST on all purchases of $20 OR MORE A non-profit publishing industry will depend on people's power, but in the meantime, we are doing what we can to bring down the cost of good reading. And if we don't have a book you want in stock, we'll special order it if we can at the some discount, 761-8632 _Antique Paintings uContemporary Paintings 0Pottery and Sculpture mAntique Clocks ECommission Paintings j Restorations IL SUMMER HOURS pC PM to 7PM 11 Closed Fridays & Sundays SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE souTH ASHLE~n wmk-v Fri, Mon- Sat.-Sun. Tues. at U aat 1-3-5- 7-9 P.M. 7-9 P.M. "NOT ONLY A FIRST - RATE PRODUCTION, BUT ALSO THEATRE OF AMAZING FEROCITY!" --Vincent Conby, N.Y. Times "A CLASSIC!"-Winsten, N.Y. Post "***Va*!"-Claire Bloom "TRIUMPHS!"-Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News Heis the master. He's called a husband. She is the plaything. She's called a wife. 5am-atiok..raPlk' insP IucnsM.A pn Claire Bloom naerwardwinning parrnne in ALDll' House" SeenplaybyChristopherHam"pt-'Produedby Hillard Elkis - Dimeted byNtrickGa rand I'kanviein"ua r-Pripts ywnrl"A-A uns G|Re=-a- academically and athletically." --No comment. Drug tests WASHINGTON - A House com- mittee which probed drug abuse by athletes has recommended that the previous recalcitrant Na- tional Football League use a spot check urine test to determine player narcotic use. The com- mittee also recommended strong penalties for abuse - fines, sus- pension, or baring from life - if warranted. Baseball notes Although the Yankees are in first place in the American League East, the Indians may have gotten the better of the Big*off-season deal - at least for the time being. While Craig Net- tles is hitting in the low .20' Charlie Spikes has 13 home runs and designated hitter John El- lis has cracked the league's Top Ten with a .306 average. All were prominent names in t h e trade . . . The Commissioner's office has really screwed up the All-Star ballot again. At least five National Leaguers are list- ed out of position and a o m e American Leaguer's, particular- ly the Tribe's Jack Brolamer and Chris Chambliss are not hitting their weights. Atlanta's I a v e Johnson was ignored all-together. Ali scoffs NEW YORK - Muhammad Ali scoffed at reports that there was a murder contract out to get him and that he and his fam- ily were "in hiding." Ali, former heavyweight champ- ion, refuted reports at a news conference that his life was in danger because he possibly knows about the killers of Major Benjamin Coxson. Coxson, a flamboyant business- man who was being investigated by the Philadelphia grand jury, was shot to death last Friday morning in his Cherry Hill, N.J., home. Ali was at home nearby. On tab ... tonight is Polish-American Night at Tiger Stadium with Stan Musial as the honored guest . . . Ceremonies wil be held prior to the Twins-Tigers game . . . Jim Perry, 7-4, will face his former teammates in American League action which begins at 8 p.m. Kryplonite BIKE LOCK "Exquisite it isn't, but work it does. The Kryptonite Bicycle Lock and the 3-speed Hercules it protected were recently abandoned on Christopher St. At the end of 4 weeks the lock showed 23 bolt-cutter marks, bends, and other abrasions-but it and the bike were intact." --NEW YORK MAG. "First Choice: Kryptonite Bike Lock." -CONSUMER GUIDE BICYCLE TEST REPORTS FOR FURTHER INFO CALL: 665-8237 $17.50 "includes padlock)