Page 12-Thursday, July 19, 1979-The Michigan Daily Who is he any awy? Beauty-contest winner leads British open LYTHAM ST. ANNES (AP) - England's Bill Longmuir, an obscure golf pro and sometimes male beauty- contest winner, tied a couple of records on his way to a 6-under-par 65 that cap- tured the first round lead by three strokes yesterday in the 108th British Open. The score - a magnificent effort in the wet, cold, windy weather in which the Britons take such pride for their national championship - had the American pros shaking their heads in disbelief. "I believe neither the score nor the person," defending champion Jack Nicklaus said in mock tones. "I believe they've puta purely fictitious name and score on top of the leader board. "Who is he anyway?" Well, Jack, he's a 26-year-old Briton of Scottish descent, dark-haired, slen- der and possessed of a personality that outshines his golfing credentials. A pro since he was 15, Longmuir's more notable previous ventures into the limelight occurred with 1976 victories in the Nigerian Open and a small tour- nament in New Zealand, and his two beauty contest appearances. The first, some 5-6 years ago, came when friends entered him "just for laughs" in the Mr. Basildon contest in that city. "You do a lot of silly things, answer silly questions - just a laugh," Longmuir said. Americans pay to see '80Ol1yp gymnasts NEW YORK (AP) - The Moscow the budget for the U.S. Air Force from Olympics are just a year away, and 1969-72. "We've had to make airlift nearly 70 per cent of the spaces plans and 67 itineraries in 16 cities and allocated for tours to the Soviet Union Moscow. All of the Olympic tickets have been reserved, have been made complimentary t And surveys by the organization han- tours of the Soviet Union." dling the 219,056 tickets allotted to the No provisions have been made for United States for the Olympiad show trips solely to Moscow. All packages in gymnastics as the sport most clude stops in other cities in the Soviet Americans want to see. Union. "GYMNASTICS are even more RTB HAS been getting orders since popular than track and field," said just after the Montreal Games in 1976 General Ernest T. Cragg, the director Tickets remain available to all event of the Russian Tourist Bureau, which is at the Games. handling all arrangements for trips to the Olympics. "After those two come swimming, basketball, boxing and volleyball. "About 80 percent of the people goinga u to Moscow will want to see those sports, N affw j The Russians have given us a pretty fair shake on tickets. "But if they're not enough, we'll set By The Associated Press up barter booths at the Moscow hotels PONTIAC, Mich. - After 12 seasons to swap on events with other coun- and 168 games, linebacker Paul tries." Namff is retiring from the Detroit A few years later, he was driving a truck and, he said, "stoney broke" when he entered a similar contest in Southend. He won again. As part of the contest, he was required to give a golf lesson to a noted striptease artist, a lesson in which he stood behind her, reached around and guided her hands and arms through a swing. "How was her swing?" he was asked. "Lumpy," said Longmuir. But the contest carried a $600 prize which financed Longmuir to the Nigerian Open, a victory that was "really the start of me playing tour- nament golf," he said. He's done very, very little since then, however, before playing his front side Wednesday in 29. That tied a British Open record and his 65 matched the best round in an Open championship on the difficult, 6,822-yard, par-71 Royal Lytham and St. Annes Club course. "Good gosh," said U.S. Open cham- pion Hale Irwin, in second but three shots back at 68. "What a round of golf. That's incredible. My hat's off to him." The score - compiled in blustery, 25- mile per hour northwest winds off the Irish Sea - matched Longmuir's career best and gave him command of this ancient, revered championship. Irwin, who played the back - tougher - nine in 33, was alone in second. He started quietly with two bogeys cancelled by two birdies, making the turn in a par 35. He then caught fire on the back nine, finishing with a three- under-par 68. One stroke back was Jerry Pate, who was four-under at the turn. He slipped a little on the back nine to card his 69. His round began with a birdie three on the second, buta couple of bogeys put him a stroke behind par. Then he cut loose on the next five holes with three birdies and an eagle. Slender, little Isao Aoki, the best of the Japanese contingent, was the only other man under par at 70. Lee Trevino, twice a British Open winner, topped the group at par 71. Also FIRST ROUND LEADERS Bill Losngmair 29-36-65 HaleeIrwin 35-33--68 Jerry Pate 31-38-9 Isao Aoki 33-37-70 Terry Gale 33-38--71 a-Peter McEvoy 34-37-71 Orville Moody 34-37-71 LeeTrevino 36-35-71 Gary Culen 33-39-72 Hugh Balocchi 35-37-72 Ben Crenshaw 37-35-72 lark Nicklas 32-401-72 Tom Watsos 37-35-72 DennisClark 32-40-72 Ken Brown 35-37-72 a-denotes amateurs at that figure was "O' Sarge", Orville Moody, Australian Terry Gale and former British Amateur champ, Peter McEvoy. The starry group at 72 included Nicklaus, who had his 10th career hole in one before playing the back nine in a fat 40, Ben Crenshaw and Tom Watson, this year's leading money-winner and the outstanding player in golf for the past 212 seasons. .. s SPORTS OF THE DAILY 'hangs up Lion jersey I RTB HAS been planning since 1974 - before Moscow officially was awarded the 1980 Games - how to get "20,000 Americans to and from the USSR in a six-week period," said Cragg, who worked in the Pentagon as director of Tulsa nips Detroit TULSA - A short second half surge by Detroit wasn't enough last night, and the Express lost to the Tulsa Roughnecks, 2-1. The Roughnecks dominated the first half, although they scored only one goal. The Express, meanwhile, playing without the injured Trevor Francis or any other starting strikers, were held scoreless. Brian Tinnion tied the game for Detroit at 56:35. But the Roughnecks came back a little over three minutes later to score the deciding goal, a header by David Nish. -DAILY SPORTS Lions and professional football, a Lion's spokesman said yesterday. The 34-year-old Naumoff, who missed just two games in his entire National Football League career, completed his playing days tied for third on the Lions' all-time longevity list. Naumoff was drafted in the third round of the 1967 draft by Detroit. He earned a starting position at outside linebacker during his rookie season. He went on to start 142 consecutive games. His durability record was equaled by Darris McCord in 13 seasons. Only Wayne Walker, who started 200 straight games, and Dick LeBeau, who started 185 straight games, have ever bettered Naumoff's-length of service to the Lions. He played the first 13 games last fall before a foot injury forced him to miss the St. Louis game Dec. 3. The only other game in which he failed to appear was in Baltimore on Dec. 11, 1977. * * * Change of plans BOSTON - So much for Larry Bird's "five-year" plan. The National Basketball Association rookie, signed to a $3.25 million Boston Celtics contract, said in Providence Tuesday that he will retire when his five-year pact expires in 1984. ' But yesterday, through his Boston. based agent Bob Woolf, Bird issued a short statement which said his announ- ced retirement plans are "ridiculous." "I hope I'm with the Celtics for the next 20 years," Bird said. Celtics officials said Bird's initial statement to a Providence Journal reporter caught them by surprise. "He hasn't played a single minute of pro basketball," said Celtics Vice President Jeff Cohen. "Who knows how he'll feel six months or a year from now?" Originally, Bird told the Providence newspaper that "five years is enough," that money isn't important and he'd like to live quietly in his hometown of French Lick, Ind., and teach physical education. The former Indiana State star told the newspaper he didn't know what he'd do with his estimated $650,000 per year and that he's tired of being chased by the news media. The newspaper quoted Bird as saying he hates being a millionaire, that he'd probably give most of his salary to charity and needs only $10,000 or $12,000 per year to support his lifestyle. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore Boston Milwaukee New York Detroit Cleveland Toronto California Texas Minnesota Kansas City Chicago Seattle Oakland East W L 59 31 56 32 54 38 49 43 45 45 42 48 29 64 West 55 38 52 39 48 41. 44 47 41 .50 40 54, 25 69 Pct. .606 .636 .587 .533 .500 .467 .312 .591 .571 .539 .484 .451 .426 .265 GB 2 6 11 14 17 3112 2 5 10 13 15% 301% NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct. Montreal 50 35 .588 Chicago 47 38 .553 Philadelphia 50 41 .549 Pittsburgh 46 39 .541 St. Louis 44 42 .512 New York 37 49 .430 GB 3 3 4 61/2 1312 512 812 12 131/ 171/2 Houston Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Atlanta Los Angeles West 54 40 48 45 45 48 43 53 39 52 36 57 .574 .516 .484 .448 .429 .387