Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday iut 1 _ 19c)75 Page welveTHEMyICHIANAIL Peter Oosterhuis lines up a putt on the seventh hole, in the 'first round of the British Open. Oosterhuis holds a one stroke lead going into today's second round, over Jack Nick- laus and four other rivals. The 27-year-old Britoi was the only golfer to birdie two of the final three holes in Carnoustie, Scotland. (For details see Page 11.) Major League St AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB astan 4 4 37 .554 - New aCk 44 39 .530 2 Mlwakee 45 40 .529 2 Baltimorne 39 41 .480 15h Cleveland 37 47 .440 6 Detroit 36 46 .439 9% West Oakland 53 31 .631 Kaasas City 46 31 .548 7 Texas 41 45 .477 13 Chicago 38 44 .463 14 Calt ifornia 39 47 .453 15 Minnesota 37 47 .440 16 Late game nt included Wednesday's Games xsnston 9, Mnnesta I Oakland 3, Cleveland 5 Dietrnit 0, Chicago 2 Texas 4, New Ynrk 0 M4iwaukee , Kansas City 4 Blaltimore at Calfonia, late Today's Games Texas at Bonston, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at New York, 8 p.m. Detrnit at Kansas City, 1:30 .m. Baltimnre at Califonina, 10:30 p.m. Pittsbul Philadel NeweT: St. Lo Chicago Montre Cincinn Los An San Die Ca Fr andings NATIONAL LEAGUE Freenan blast teaus East Egh 51 32 .614 - sPia 47 39 .547 53!.K ff 4r 43 73 G.531 g7 si past Chisox; a 39 47 .453 53 West ' ati 57 29 .663 - N tgees 41 39 .552 9% ego, 40 45 .471 16% aeicp nA lalt banr rancisco 40 45 .471 16% Atlanta 36 48 .429 20 Houston 32 57 .360 26 % Wednesday's Games San Diego 3, Chicago 2 New York 2, Atlanta 1, 10 innings Pittsburgh 3, Las Angeles 2 Cininnati 9, Philadelphia 7 Houston 4, Montreal 3, 10 innings St. Louis 9, San Francisco 0 Today's Games San Diego at Chicago Monteeal at Atlanta Lns Angeles at Pittsburgh By The Associated Press DETROIT-Veteran Bill Free- han hit a three-run homer and rookie Jack Pierce drove in three runs with a single and an infield out, powering the Detroit Tigers to their eighth consecu- tive victory, a 6-2 decision over the Chicago White Sox last night., Reds, Dodgers fill N L All-star line-up NEW YORK (A)-A final week surge of votes has lifted Jim Wynn of the Los Angeles Dodgers into the National League's starting lineup for baseball's 1975 All-Star game, it was announced yesterday. Wynn overtook Del Unser of the New York Mets, who had been leading for the third starting berth in the outifeld. The final vote totals showed four Cincinnati Reds and three Los Angeles Dodgers among the NL's eight starters. Wynn had 1,241,291 votes to 1,210,084 for Reggie Smith of St. Louis, who finished fourth. Phila- delphia's Greg Luzinski, the major league lead- er in home runs and runs batted in, was fifth with 1,093,355. Unser slipped to sixth place with 1,057,049. Wynn joins Pete Rose of Cincinnati and Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL out- field. Brock holds the distinction of being the only starter named that does not play for the Dodgers or Reds. Rose, who has been playing at third base but was listed on the computerized All-Star ballot as an outfielder, received more votes than any other NL player at that position with a final count of 2,072,932. Brock, who set an all-time record with 118 stolen bases last season, had 1,247,489 votes, the second highest total among a. the outfielders. Two other Los Angeles regulars are in the starting lineup. Steve Garvey, most valuable player in last year's 7-2 NL victory, will start at first base and teammate Ron Cey will be at third. Garvey, elected as a write-in last year, led the NL attack with a single and a double, driving in one run and scoring another in the 1974 game at Pittsburgh. He had 1,713,539 votes to 1,491,084 for Tony Perez of Cincin- nati. Cey, who also started last year, had a double and drove in two runs in that game. He finished with 1,745,858 to 939,141 for Chicago's Bill Mad- lock, the NL's leading hitter. Cincinnati teammates Joe Morgan at second base and Dave Concepcion at shortstop com- plete the NL infield. Cincinnati's Johnny Bench, the leading NL vote-getter with 2,930,147 ballots, will be the starting catcher. Pittsburgh's Manny Sanguillen was the runner-up with 1,153,794 votes. Brock and Concepcion are the only changes from last year's NL starters. Brock replaced all- time home run king Hank Aaron, who was traded to the American League Milwaukee Brew- ers over the winter, and Concepcion beat out Bowa, last year's starter, for the shortstop berth, Thetops The string is Detroit's best since July 26-Aug. 1, 1973, when the t e a m also won eight straight. The triumph' gave the Tigers a sweep of the three- game series after having taken four games from Milwaukee. Pierce staked Detroit to a 2-0 lead in the opening inning against loser Jesse Jefferson, 1-4, by blooping a bases-loaded single. He drove in another run in the third with a forceout grounder. B r i a n Downing's two - run homer off .Ray Bare narrowed Detroit's lead to 3-2 in the fifth but Freehan blasted his eighth home run of the season in the bottom of the fifth off Dan Os- born.- Bare, 4-5, scattered eight hits. Yanks blanked NEW YORK-Ferguson Jenk- ins picthed a four-hitter for his first shutout of the season and Jim Sundberg belted a three- run homer as the Texas Ran- gers defeated the New York Yankees 4-0 last night. The setback broke a three- game winning streak and drop- ped the Yankees two games be- hind the Boston Red Sox in the American League's East Divi- sion. Wildness was the downfall of loser Rudy May, 7-6, who drop- ped his fourth game in a row. He walked two batters before Tom Grieve's run-scoring dou- ble with two out in the first inning and issued another walk -his sixth of the game-before Sundberg's two-out homer in the sixth. Jenkins, 10-9, was in trouble only in the third inning when Jim Mason led off with a single and wente tthird on Rich Cog- gn'one-out single. Jenkins then struck out Roy White and center fielder Lenny Randle made a running catch of Ron Yanks Blomberg's drive to right-center to end the threat. Rice explodes BOSTON-Rookie Jim Rice's two-out double in the bottom of the ninth inning scored Doug Griffin with Boston's winning run as the Red Sox outslugged the Minnesota Twins 9-8 yester- day. The Red Sox had tied the game in the bottom of the ninth on a leadoff pinch home run by Cecil Cooper. Then Griffin de- livered a pinch single and scored all the way from first on Rice's hit. Earer, two-run shots by Carl- ton Fisk and Fred Lynn had helped B o s t o n overcome a seven-run Minnesota third in- ning. Jerry T e r r e 11 keyed the Twins' big inning with a pair of hits, starting it with a single off pitcher Rogelio Moret's glove and capping it with a run-scor- ing pop double down the right field line. Money belts KANSAS CITY - Don Money slugged two home runs and Bobby Darwin hit one, powering the Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals last night. Money led off the first insisg with his fourth homer of the season and hit No. 5 with tsO out and none on in the fifth. Darwin's 10th homer of the year triggered a four-run upris- ing against Nelson Briles, 4-4, in the Breivers' second. After Darwin's shot, Sixto Lezcano and Bill Sharp singled before Lacano wan thrown out at the plate on Bob Sheldon's grounder. Gorman Thomas dou- bled, scoring Sharp, and Money hit a sacrifice fly.