Page 16-Friday August 15, 1980-The Michigan Daily orts Bosox beat Bengas 3-I Birds bomb NY, 2 games out 4 By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE SpecialtoTheDaily DETROIT-Tiger starter Dan Schatzeder only made one mistake last night, but it cost him the game as the Tigers bowed to the Boston Red Sox, 3- 1. After leadoff hitter Rick Burleson was issued a walk by Schatzeder in the first inning, Boston centerfielder Fred Lynn singled, moving Burleson to third. Then came Schatzeder's mistake. With Red Sox first baseman Tony Perez at the plate, the count went to'. 3-2 before Perez put Boston on top with a blast that just cleared the left field fen- ce, giving the Red Sox all the runs they needed. Boston starter Steve Renko also made only one mistake, but it wasn't as costly as Schatzeder's. In the bottom of the first, Tiger designated hitter Steve Kemp lined one into the rightfield seats, recording the Bengals only tally. From then on. however, the game turned into a pitchers' duel. In addition to the home run by Kemp, the greatest excitement for Tiger fans name in the ninth inning as Detroit rightfielder Al Cowens made a perfect throw to nip Perez at home. Schatzeder turned in a fine perfor- mance, but the costly mistake dropped him to 6-9 for the year. He worked eight innings before being replaced by Dave Rozema. Renko picked up the win working 7% innings for the Bosox. The loss by the Tigers coupled with Baltimore's victory over New York put the Bengals even deeper into third place. They remain 8% games behind the pace-setting Yankees, but are in danger of dropping even lower in the American League Eastern Division. Detroit now only has a game advan- tage over fourth place Milwaukee and a one game lead over fifth place Cleveland. The Tigers open a four-game weekend series tonight with the Texas Rangers at Tiger Stadium. Milt Wilcox is scheduled to get the starting nod from Sparky Anderson. Orioles 6, Yankees 1 BALTIMORE (AP)-Steve Stone hurled a two-hitter and notched his 19th victory with home run support from Gary Roenicke, Rich Dauer and Ken Singleton as the Baltimore Orioles, defeated the New York Yankees 6-1 last night. By winning the opener of the five- game series, the Orioles moved to within 2 games of first-place New York in the American League East.1 Stone, 19-4 after winning for the 17th time in his last 18 decisions, was touched for Reggie Jackson's 32nd homer leading off the second in- ning-but after that the 33-year-old righthander allowed only a fifth-inning single by Bucky Dent and five walks. Two of the walks camerwith two out in the third before Stone retired Jackson on a liner to left-center. With Baltimore ahead 2-1, Roenicle cracked his sixth homer following a single by Benny Ayala in the sixth and the blow finished loser Tom Under- wood, 9-9. Dauer, who keyed a two-run first in- ning with an RBI double, hit his first homer of the season off Ron Davis with one out in the seventh and Singleton hit the next pitch for his 15th round-tripper. The crowd of 49,952 was the fifth- largest regular-season attendance in Baltimore history. Brewers 4, Blue Jays 2 MILWAUKEE (AP) - Cecil Cooper lashed four hits and knocked in two runs yesterday as Moose Haas and the Milwaukee Brewers defeated Toronto 4-2 despite two homers by John Mayberry of the Blue Jays. The Brewers broke a 1-1 tie with two third-inning runs off Dave Stieb, 10-9. Doubles by Paul Molitor and Cooper scored one run and, after Gorman Thomas beat out a hit off Stieb's glove, Ben Oglivie singled to score Cooper. Milwaukee made it 4-1 in the seventh when Robin Yount reached on a fielder's choice, stole second and scored on Cooper's fourth hit, a bloop single. A single by Molitor, a balk, a single by Cooper and a sacrifice fly by Thomas gave the Brewers a 1-0 first-in- ning lead. Haas, 14-9, who scattered nine hits and struck out five en route to his fourth successive victory, gave up Mayberry's 19th homer of the season in the second inning and his second solo shot of the game in the ninth. Giants 5, Braves 1 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jack Clark's third-inning grand-slam home run, the third of his career, led the San Francisco Giants to their fourth straight victory, a 5-1 decision yester- day over the Atlanta Braves. With one out in the third, Larry Mc- Williams, 8-9, walked pitcher Al Hargesheimer and Jim Wohlford, then Darrell Evans singled to load the bases before Clark hit a 1-2 pitch over the left field fence for his 22nd homer of the season. SCORES American League Boston 3, Detroit i Baltimore 6, New York 1 Milwaukee4, Toronto2 Oakiand2, Minnesota i (Iiinnings) 4 MSU will enlarge Mackey football box EAST LANSING (UPI)-Michigan State University, already under fire for renovations at President Cecil Mackey's official residence, will spend up to $17,500 to provide more "milling around" space in his box at Spartan Stadium. "Why don't they go down to look at the University of Michigan," lamented an exasperated MSU spokesman Ed Zabrusky, who said complaints about the box remodeling came from the same Mackey foes who made an issue of the residence work. "IT'S PEANUTS HERE compared with other places," Zabrusky said. Both projects come at a time when MSU is raising tuition, citing a budget crunch. The recently re-carpeted box, located at midfield on the second floor of the stadium press box, seats 50 to 75 persons and is used by Mackey to entertain guests of the university. The VIPs are treated to an unobstructed view, lunch and beverages while watching the games. REMODELING WORK under way includes tearing down some walls, eliminating a closet and replacing a ceiling. "For some reason it wasn't designed well," said Assistant Athletic Director William Beardsley. He said the changes will give guests "more milling around area." ROGER WILKINSON, associate MSU vice president for business and finance, said the project had been in the works for some time and Mackey himself had no direct involvement in the decision to go ahead. The actual request for the work was issued June 26. Beardsley said the decision was made by "the athletic department in concert with the president's office." Funding will come from the athletic budget. THE $17,500 PRICE tag is described as a maximum figure, and officials say the project may well come in under budget. The box is expected to be finished in time for the firstfMSU home game Sept. 27. 4 E lying high AP Phot Oakland A's rightfielder Tony Armas takes a running leap for a fly ball off the bat of Minnesota's Pete Mackanin in ninth inning action of yesterday's game. Armasflagged the long drive down, but a runner scored from third to tie the gameand send it into extra innings. Oakland won, 2-1. 4