I The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 12, 1980-Page 7 GRAHAM, CALDWELL TIE FOR SECOND Ballester (By the Associated Press) AUGUSTA, Ga.-Severiano Ballesteros, playing with the flair and' flourish that made him the idol of Eur- pe's golfing millions, slashed his way to a 3-under.par 69 and took the second- round lead yesterday in the 44th Masters Golf Tournament. The brilliant young Spaniard, put1 together a 36-hole total of 133, 9 strokes under par on the 7,040 yards of sun- splashed beauty that make up the Augusta National Golf Club course. Australian David Graham, the current PGA champion who shared the 18-hole lead with Ballesteros with a first-round score of 66. Graham's first, round score of 66, 'os captures combined with his score yesterday of Nelson had 72,1 73, gives him a total of 139, placing him Hubert Gre in a tie for second place with Rex Cald- champ Gary1 well. and Tom Waty Caldwell, a non-winning American ding perform journeyman tourist, came out of the years, were at pack with a 6-under-par 66 that placed Player a 71. WE him at 139. "The gold co JERRY PATE, A runner-up in his Watson said. last two starts, Jim Simons and Ed you get a cours Sneed were tied at 140. Pate shot a 68, with good cond Simons matched par 72 and Sneed, who to take advant had the 43rd Masters title in his grasp pace with the: before he bogeyed the last three holes, of good score shot another 70. well." With Mitchell at 141, 3 under par, He was less were Ed Fiori and Larry Nelson. his chances ofI Masters lead Fiori 70. en, three-time Masters Player of South Africa, son, the game's outstan- er over the last three 142. Green had a 74 and atson shot 69. urse played easy today," "It's funny; sometimes se that's playing easy and ditions and nobody seems age of it, just kind of keep field. There weren't a lot s, except for Rex Cald- than enthusiastic about gaining a second Masters title. "Seven strokes is a lot to make up," he said. "Seve must be playing very well. I'm going to have to shoot a couple of 67s to have any chance at all." TOM WEISKOPF'S adven- tures :continued on the par-3 12th hole., He hit five shots in Rae's Creek, the lit-*. tle stream that guards the front of the4 green, in Thursday's opening and had ad record-setting score of 13 on the hole. He improved by six strokes yester- day. But that still computes to a quadruple-bogey 7. This time he got twoa'j in the water. In two rounds Weiskopf played the hole in 20 strokes, 14 over par. The 4-time Masters runner-up also had two other 7s on his card Friday, shot 79 and failed to qualify for the final two rounds with a whopping 164 total for 36 holes.; BATSMEN SEEK REVENGE M' nine to confront Spartans By JON WELLS The Michigan baseball team will have a chance today to avenge a defeat that denied the Wolverines the 1979 Big Ten championship. Picking up where they left off last year, the Blue nine open their Big Ten season against1 defending champion Michigan State with a home and home series that. begins this afternoon at Fisher Stadium. On May 19 of last year, in the second to last gameof the season, the Spartans seized the Big Ten crown by defeating Steve Howe and Michigan, 8-5. Although the Wolverines whitewashed State the next day, the Spartan niner finished a half game better than Michigan who played one less game. Many things have changed since last1 year which give this weekend's con- frontation a distinctly different tone thanits 1979 counterpart. Most of the central characters for Michigan have departed. Moby Benedict, Wolverine coach for 17 seasons, is gone. Pitcher Steve Howe now spends his afternoons and evenings in the Los Angeles Dodger's bullpen. Pitcher Steve Perry, who hurled a three-hit shutout against the Spartans in the season finale, now pitches in the Dodger farm system. Rick Leach plays for Evansville, the Detroit Tigers AAA farm club. Whatever desires for revenge that certain veterans may have, the main task for this predominantly young and untested team, under the leadership of its managed only five victories in 15 games thus far. The backbone of Spartan coach Dan- ny Litwhiler's offense is formed by switch-hitting leftfielder Ken Robinson (;5), catcher Eric Payk (.364), right- fielder Mark Russ (.346), and shortstop Al Dankovich (.341). On the mound, State will throw the same pair of righthanders that faced Michigan in the series last year. Brian Wolcott (1-2) was the winning pitcher in the Spartan victory while Jay Strother (1-3) took a 6-0 Blue pasting in the finale. Junior righthander Mark Clinton will get the starting nod for today's game, with freshman righty Steve Ontiveros a tentative starter for Sunday's game at East Lansing. LEADERS Seve Ballesteros .... Rex Caldwell ....... David Graham ....... Jim Simons .......... Jerry Pate ........... Ed Sneed ............ Doug Tewell ......... Tom Kite ............ Ed Fiori ............. Jeff Mitchell ......... 66-69-135 73-66-139 66-73-139 70-70-140 72-68-140 70-70-140 71-69-140 69-71-140 71-70-141 66-75-141 Do a Tree a Favor:. Recycle Your Daily Ar rnoto BALTIMORE ORIOLE John Lowenstein, instead of sliding, braces as he nears Chicago White Sox catcher Bruce Kimm. BASEBALiL ROUND UP Mark Clinton K.C. blanks From Wire Service Reports KANSAS CITY-Pete LaCock knocked in three runs with a single and double to lift the Kansas City Royals to a 4-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers last night behind the six-hit pitching of Wrry Gura. The shutout enabled Gura to match his 1979 season total and up his career ledger to eight. He walked two and struck out five, including Lou Whitaker and Jason Thompson twice apiece. ' Kansas City scored the only run it needed in the fifth inning on a single by Hal McRae, a walk to John Wathan and a single to center by LaCook to ruin Dan Schatzeader's American League debut. The Royals chased Schatzeder with ree more runs in the seventh. McRae oubled and with two outs, Wathan was intentionally walked to get to LaCook, who promptly belted a two-run double. LaCook scored when Bobby Detherage followed with a single. White Sox 8, Orioles 4 CHICAGO-Lamar Johnson's three- rin homer and a two-run blast by Wayne Nordhagen, both off Cy Young ward winner Mike Flanagan, powered e Chicago White Sox to an 8-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles yesterday. Flanagan, a 23-game winner last season, issued two walks in the first in- ning before Johnson hit an upper deck Homer to wipe out a 2-0 Baltimore lead produced by Ken Singleton's first-in- ning homer. Tigers,40 Then, after Rick Dempsey restored Baltimore's lead with a two-run homer in the second, Nordhagen's shot, following a walk to Johnson, put the White Sox in front to stay. Nordhagen also had a wasted triple in the first inning and he singled leading off the sixth to ignite a clinching two- run rally. Sox starter Ken Kravec was the win- ner but needed help from Mike Proly and Fd Farmer in the sixth and seventh. innings. Farmer earned the save. Phillies 6, Expos 3 PHILADELPHIA-Greg Luzinski's three-run homer in the first inning backed the eight-hit pitching of Steve Carlton and helped the Philadelphia Phillies to a 6-3 victory over the Mon- treal Expos last night in the Phils', season opener before a crowd of 48,460. Montreal starter Stever Rogers retired the first two Phillies, then walked Garry Maddox and Mike Sch- midt. Luzinski, trying to come back from his worst major league season when he managed just 18 home runs, crashed a 2-2 pitch over the left field fence for a 3-0 lead. Rangers 11, Yankees 7 ARLINGTON, Texas-Pinch-hitter Rusty Staub lashed a two-run homer to cap a six-run outburst in the fifth inning and doubled to start a four-run rally in the seventh last night, carrying the Texas Rangers to an 11-7 victory over the New York Yankees. first year coach Bud Middaugh, is to establish themselves as legitimate con- tenders for the Big Ten crown. Assistant coach Dan Hall reflected the priorities of the new season. "I don't really think that revenge is the main theme. A lot of the players from last year are gone, but just knowing the rivalry that exists between these two teams makes these games some of the biggest of the season." Unlike the Wolverines, Michigan Stae underwent few changes over the winter and fields a veteran team. In spite of this, however, the Spartans have IMMEDIATE CASH Students right now are earning money while studying! A? Plasma will pay you 412.00 for each visit. Bring in this coupon and receive an x-tra $5.00. Coupons for $5 for new donors only Blue netters triumph; overcome sub-par play A2 PLASMA Mon-Thurs 10-6 Fri-Sat 8-3 214 S. fourth AvĀ®. 662-7744 By GREG DeGULIS Liberty Racquet Club may be an ocean away from London, but at times yesterday the Michigan men's tennis team appeared to be playing in the English city. "We seemed to be in a fog", ex- plained coach Brian Eisner referring to his Wolverines' 8-1 victory over Iowa. "We just weren't concentrating and we did not return serve well. Overall, we played a very mediocre match", added Eisner. A couple of factors may have con- tributed to the sub-par play, including the change to the Liberty Racquet Club. "The switch from the slower courts at the Track and Tennis Building may have affected the timing", noted Eisner. In addition, the familiar nemesis of overconfidence could have entered into CLUB DIVIDES GM DUTIES the picture as Iowa was fresh off of two decisive losses at home. AN EXCEPTION to the rule yester- day was freshman Mark Mees, who oc- cupied the number one spot for the first time this season. Mees disposed of Iowa's highly touted Tom Holtmann 6-4, 6-3 to commence Wolverine victory number ten, against one defeat. At number two, sophomore Michael Leach battled to fight off Greg Ander- son 6-4, 7-5 and at number three, a pair of Matts dueled with the Wolverines' Horwitch easily winning over Hawkeyes' Smith 6-1, 6-2. Due to the nagging back problems of senior Jud Shaufler, Jack Neinken filled in at number four, successfully defeating Brian Johnson 6-1,6-3. With Neinken mved up to number four, freshman Tom Haney played number five, eliminating Tim Jacobson in a see- saw match. Freshman Louie McKee played six singles and much to his dismay, found himself as the "1" in the final score. MKee fell to Dan Rustin in three sets 6- 2,12-6, 6-3. WITH AN insurmountable 5-1 lead af- ter singles competition, Michigan atruggles to maintain intensity in the three doubles matches. Two of the doubles matches went three sets, in- cluding Michigan's formidable number one team of Horwitch and Leach. The duo statted out fast, faltered in the second set, and then finally finished off Iowa's Holtmann and Anderson 6-1, 5-7, 6-2. At number two, a carbon copy of the first doubles match occurred with Haney and Neinken defeating the Hawkeyes' Smith and Dave maurer in three sets 6-4, 3-6, 6-2. Contrary to the other doubles matches, the number three team of freshmen Mees and Dan McLaughlin played very well, accor- ding to Eisner, in their straight set disposal of Rustin and Jacobson 6-3, 6-2. FDA License Number: 77701 indsay named Red W 'DETROIT (UPI)-Detroit Red Wings General Manager Ted Lindsay was bumped down to head coach yesterday and his administrative duties'split anong three other top officials of the faltering NHL club. The move came three weeks after obby Kromm was fired as coach of the ed Wings, who finished 18th this year in the overall NHL standings and failed to make the playoffs for the ninth time in 10 seasons. LINDSAY, a former Red Wing great who is in the third year of a five-year agreement with the club, was named director of player personnel in addition to his head, coaching duties, club president Bruce A. Norris said. SCORES Major League Baseball Chicago (A) 8, Baltimore 4 Pittsburgh 4. St. Louis 3 Chicago (N) 7, New York 5 Philadelphia 6, Montreal 3 Kansas City 4, Detroit 0 Texas 11, New York?7 Milwaukee-Boston-postponed NBA Boston 95, Houston 75 NHL Atlanta 4, New York 2 Lindsay will report directly to Louis J. Risi Jr., who has been named executive vice president of the club and in that capacity will direct its hockey operations, Norris said. Risi currently is vice president of the Detroit Hockey Club, Inc., the Red Wings' parent organization. He also is president of Norin Corp., and a member of the board of directors of Norris Grain Co. JIMMY SKINNER, currently assistant general manager, has been named associate director of player per- sonnel, Norris said. 'His new duties will include many of Lindsay's old chores-including coor- d~nation of player drafts, supervision of scouting and player movement within the organization and contacts with other clubs concerning trades. ings coach Robert Cavalieri, general counsel and administrative director for Olym- pia Stadium Corp., will assume the duties of general counsel for the Red Wings. His primary duties will include contract negotiations and assisting Risi in general hockey operations. LINDSAY WILL work with Norris, Risi and Skinner in coordinating player drafts and trades. BILLBOARD The University of Michigan women's golf club will open its season at the Uni- versity Golf Course on Stadium Blvd. on Tuesday, April 15, 1980. Inquiries regarding the club may be directed to the membership chair- man, Michelle Morris at 662-8196. . P, NIGHT HAWK SPECIAL -after 7p.m.- a. l 1, . HOUSING DIVISION OXFORD HOUSING EMANUEL CO-OP (French House) Opening for Resident Director-1980-81 Academic Year .tal Ln..ue i s n smnl cnnnrativA livina situation in Oxford Housing which also contains Buy 1 fragel or 2 cookies and get FREE 1 drink or another fragel *Also-We're reducing our amazing cheese- cake from $1.00 to only $.79-and that in-