Page 16-Friday, July 14, 1978-The Michigan Daily CRENSH AWBALLESTEROS JOIN AOKI: ST. A incredib "Road Balleste him reel with Ber Trio tied for British Open lead 4DREWS, Scotland (AP)-The this centuries-old layout, the Old Cour- on the left, out of bounds on the right. A did, to putt off the green into a bunker ly difficult 17th, the famed se at St. Andrews the birthplace and corner of the old course hotel intrudes Bogeys, double bogeys and other assor Hole," cost Severiano cradle of the game. into the fairway. A road runs along the ted horrors outnumber pars more tha ros a double bogey and sent Particularly to be reckoned with is right and bites into the green. There are 2-1. ing back into a tie for the lead the 17th, perhaps the most difficult hole bunkers andswales and hollows. Ballesteros was not the only victin a Crenshaw and Japan's Isao in golf. It's 461 yards long. heavy rough It's possible, as Scot Brian Barnes From the early lead, Arnold Palme r. n . er Aoki in yesterday's second round of the 107th British Open Golf Championship. BALLESTEROS, the spectacular 21- year-old Spaniard who has ruled European golf for two years, held a 2- stroke lead in this ancient event until he hit his tee shot out of bounds on the 17th. This caused him to plunge back into a tie with Crenshaw and Aoki at 139, 5 un- der par. Crenshaw had an extremely solid, no- bogey 69 in the mild, breezy weather. Aoki, a slender Japanese veteran who led the first round, putted his way to a 71. The bold Ballesteros, who plans a full-scale assault on the American tour next season, recorded a 70 despite his late difficulties. It was almost as if Crenshaw, who played well in front of Ballesteros, had issued a warning. "THERE'S A LOT to be recokoned with out there," said gentle Ben, a golf historian. Crenshaw, as a boy, spent hours studying maps and diagrams of FEW PEOPLE would equate the British peni Ith an international ethnic festival, but there is enough international diversity among the leaders to make you wonder whether it isn't just that. Isao Aoki (above) of Japan is smiling be- cause he retained a share of the lead after two rounds at St. Andrews, Soctland. MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Chisox top slumping Yanks, 6-1 By TheAssociatedPress NEW YORK-Veteran knuckleballer Wilbur Wood hurled a six hitter yesterday for his fifth consecutive vic- tory of the season, retiring 15 batters in one stretch, as the Chicago White Sox topped the slumping New York Yankees, 6-1. Wood, 10-5, allowed five singles, only one after the third inning, and Reggie Jackson's leadoff home run, his 14th, in the ninth, It was the first victory for the White Sox in six meetings with the Yankees this season and only their fifth triumph in 28 games over the last three years. The Yanks have now lost four games in a row. Loser Dick Tidrow, 4-7, retired Chicago in order over the first two innings but was touched for three runs in the third, two of them unearned. Chet Lemon and Eric Soderholm opened with singles and two outs later, Garr singled home the first run. Garcia then ranged far to his right for Jorge Orta's hopper but muffed the ball. Bob Molinaro headed for the plate and scored when Garcia heaved the ball over catcher Mike Heath's head. Garr also scored from first on the misplay. The Yankees shook up their lineup, installing Heath as the catcher, switching the sore-kneed Thurman Munson to right field and giving the lefty-swinging Thomasson a shot against all types of pitching., Texas outslugs Boston BOSTON-Toby Harrah clouted two of Texas' five home runs and Dock Ellis recorded his eighth victory with ninth-inning relief help from Steve Comer as the Texas Rangers whipped the Boston Red Sox 12-7 last night. The Rangers, who had lost 1 of 13 games before the All- Star break, jumped on Boston starter Luis Tiant, 7-2, with three solo homers in the first two innings-including shots by Juan Beniquez and Al Oliver in the first inning and Harrah in the second. The Rangers bombed three Red Sox pitchers for 17 hits, as the American League East leaders w. routed for one of the few times thisseason. SCORES Birds hold off Twins BALTIMORE-Two home runs by Ken Singleton and one each by Rich Dauer and Dough DeCinces, accounting for seven runs, powered the Baltimore Orioles to an 8-6 victory over the Minnesota Twins last night. The triumph ended a four-game losing streak for the Orioles and halted an eight-game winning streak by the Twins. Mike Flanagan, 13-6, who tied New York's Ron Guidry for the most victories in the American League, had a no- hitter until Dan Ford doubled with one out in the sixth as Minnesota scored its first run. * * * Reds nip Mets CINCINNATI-Doug Flynn, who came to New York from Cincinnati in the Tom Seaver trade, drove in a run and scored another last night to help the Mets beat the Reds 4-2 and hand Seaver his third consecutive loss. Cincinnati's Pete Rose set a career high with a run- scoring double in the seventh inning, extending his hitting streak to 26 games-tops in the major leagues this season. * * * Giants blank Bucs PITTSURGH-Catcher Marc Hill drove in two runs to support Bob Knepper's five-hit pitching last night, helping the San Francisco Giants record their fifth victory in seven games-a 4-0 triumph over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Knepper, 11-5, allowed only singles while striking out eight and walking three. Pittsburgh's JohnCandelaria, 8-9, allowed all the runs in three-plus innings. Expos rip Astros MONTREAL-Gary Carter's RBI double capped a four-run sixth inning and backed Ross Grimsley's five- hitter last night, carrying the Montreal Expos to a 6-0 vic- tory over thefHouston Astros. slashed and thrashed his way to a triple-bogey 7 also with a ball out of bounds. "I DON'T LIKE the hole," Arnold said bluntly. "It cost me the British Open in 1960. I played it 5-5-5-4." He lost that title by a single stroke. One stroke off the pace were a couple of longshots, Australian Bob Shearer and Gary Cullen, a son of British paren- ts who lives in Kenya. The obscure Cullen, 23, who never has won a pro title, had the best round of the tour- nament, a 67. Shearer had a 69. DEFENDING CHAMPION Tom Watson birdied the final hole for a 68 that put him within 2 shots of the lead at 141. He was tied with Tom Kite-a double bogey victim on the 17th-Tom Weiskopf and a pair of Japanese, Jum- bo Ozaki and Tsuneyuki Nakajima. Kite and Ozaki shot 69s, Nakajima 70 and Weiskopf 72. Jack Nicklaus, who won his second British Open title in 1970, the last time this event was played at St. Andrews, let some golden opportunities escape him in his bid for a 15th major professional title. He shot par 72 for 143 despite 2-putting every green, and missing a seven-foot eagle putt on thefifth. Billy offered seeurity NEW YORK (AP) - New York Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner offered Billy Martin a proposal that would provide financial security for the Yankee manager and his family if the skipper decided to retire because of failing health, the New York Daily News said today. Steinbrenner offered to extend Mar- tin's contract, retain him as a con- sultant and work with him on his goal of establishing a camp for boys, if the manager retired for health reasons, the News reported. MARTIN'S PHYSICAL appearance has grown haggard-looking this season and several of his close friends have suggested that he resign before his health deteriorates. Steinbrenner offered fhe proposal ina meeting Thursday but Martin, whose contract expires in 1979, declined the of- fer. "I'm not a quitter," Martin said. "I want to try to win this thing. I owe it to Yankee fans all over the country to stay and see if I can turn this thing around." BILLBOARD Renew renewable lockers and user passes starting Monday, July 17th at 8:30 a.m. Renew lockers at the par- ticular building where you have one. User passes may-be purchased at the CCRB during regular office hours or by mail. Mail-in forms may also be picked