r Page 14,-Friday July 19. 1981 TheMichigan Daily 4 Tennis Club snubs MeEnroe LONDON (AP) - The All-England Lawn Tennis Club yesterday handed Wimbledon champion John McEnroe a humiliating snub. The Wimbledon championship commit- tee announced that the 22-year-old American from Douglaston, N.Y. would not be invited to become a member of the exclusive club. THE DECISION, which had been ex- pected (although not by McEnroe), breaks with the tradition of the 104- year-old tournament. All previous singles champions have automatically been accorded honorary membership. A statement issued by the All England Club yesterday morning said the move had been made "because his on-court behavior brought the game in- to disrepute." THE FIERY left-hander, who Satur- day ended Bjorn Borg's five-year reign as Wimbledon titleholder, was em- broiled in controversy throughout the two-week-long tournament. , He insulted officials, shouted and swore on court, abused newsmen and then compounded his actions by not turning up at the Champions' Ball, a formal function held at the Savoy Hotel. McEnroe, preparing for the United States' Davis Cup match against Czechoslovakia, refused to comment on the All England Club's unprecedented decision, but his father, John P. McEnroe Sr., a New York lawyer, said his son had not been informed of the decision by Wimbledon officials. "YOU JUST informed us now," he said by telephone from his New York home. Members of the All England Club said they were not surprised by the decision to bar the American. British Davis Cup veteran Mark Cox, a member for the past 10 years, said, "I can well understand why the committee has decided it does not want to invite him to become a member." Another Davis cupper, David Lloyd, saw things differently. "They are a private club so they can do what they like, but I think their decision was sad," Lloyd said. "People should realize that he played superbly well in the final. He did not behave too well in a couple of games before that, but he was under a lot of pressure." 4 AP Photo' WIMBLEDON CHAMPION John McEnroe, shown here talking with U.S. Davis Cup Team captain Arthur Ashe Wed- nesday night, is the first winner of that tournament in 104 years to be denied honorary membership in the All-England Lawn Tennis Club, it was announced yesterday. McEnroe is currently preparing for the U.S. Davis Cup match with Czechoslovakia.. NFL document shows that league s teams are not equal monetarily Hebert has lead at Senior Open BIRMINGHAM (AP)-Lionel Hebert fired an even-par 7 over the 6,798-yard South Course at Oakland Hills yester- day to take the first-round lead in the U.S. Senior Open. Hebert, 53, who won the PGA Cham- pionship in 1957, played the front nine in one-under 34, then recorded four bogeys and a pair of birdies on the back side. THE LAFAYETTE, La. native, who still plays the trumpet in a six-piece band in his hometown, was the only player in the field of 158 golfers-all over the age of 50-to tame the course which has hosted many major cham- pionships over the years. "I'd say 70 is good anyplace, but especially at this place," Hebert said. "I think it's important to start well. Then, you can play mediocre the next day and still be in the hunt. "This is the kind of tournament where a guy could start fast and just go run away from the field. A lot of guys find it hard to concentrate for four days, now that they're older." ONE STROKE off the pace at one- over 71 was a trio of golfers, including former Masters champions Art Wall and Bob Goalby, plus Jim Ferree. Amateur Bill Campbell was among a group of familiar names from golf's past in at 72. Others in at two-over in- cluded Arnold Palmer, Sam Snead, Gardner Dickinson, Bob Stone and Tom Nieporte. Campbell, a 58-year-old insurance broker from Huntington, W.Va., fired a 3-under-par 32 on the front nine and was in excellent position to be the leader af- ter the first round. However, he stum- bled home with five bogeys on the back nine. CAMPBELL WON the U.S. Senior Amateur title and finished runner-up to Roberto Devicenzo in the Senior Open last year. Palmer made the turn at three-over, including a double-bogey on the 42- yard, par-4 eighth hole. "My game was a mish-mash of some very bad shots with some pretty good ones in between," Palmer said after the round, played in 94-degree heat, which was delayed twice for a total of 55 minutes by thundershowers. Wall, 57, who won the Masters in 1959, was one-under on the.front-nire .espite h dotzble-bogey on the par-4 eight hol . A 4 RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) - A 38- page NFL document, described as a detailed attendance and financial summary of the 1980 football season, shows that the league's squads clearly are not equal monetarily. A computation of each team's net ticket revenues using figures from the document shows that the Los Angeles Rams are $1 million ahead of any other NFL franchise. Sixteen teams trailed the Rams by $2 million or more, and three of them - Baltimore, Cincinnati and Kansas City - were more than $3 W aGiue Ski? about DESIGNAER JEANS? Show Your Friends how you feel about designer jeans by attaching "Who Gives a Shit?" labels to your jeans. Send $1.00 per label. CASH-CHECK or MONEY ORDER TO: LABEL DESIGNS P.O. Box 244 West Branch, MI 48661 million behind. GEORGIA FRONTIERE'S Anaheim- based Rams franchise had revenue from 20 games, including exhibitions, of $7,784,766. The Dallas Cowboys were second with $6,774,925 and the Seattle Seahawks, a last-place team in the AFC's Western Division, third with $6,444,885. Net ticket revenue for other teams: 4, Tampa Bay, $6,291,002; 5, San Diego, $6,197,078; 6, New England, $6,119,155; 7, Philadelphia, $5,975,192; 8, Oakland, $5,978, 503; 9, Atlanta, $5,867,498; 10, Washington, $5,716,097; 11, Cleveland, $5,705,878; 12, Buffalo, $5,658,641; 13, Detroit, $5,525,683; 14, Houston, $5,443,542; 15, New Orleans, $5,396,277; 16, Denver, $5,436,502; 17, San Fran- sciso, $5,320,768; 18, New York Jets, $5,248,577; 19, Miami, $5,203,739; 20, New York Giants, $5,165,546; 21, Pit- tsburgh, $5,128,506; 22, Chicago, $5,124,586; 23, St. Louis, $5,106,640; 24, Minnesota, $5,053,038; 25, Green Bay, $4,969,186; 26, Cincinnati, $4,365,678; 27, Baltimore, $4,319,760; 28, Kansas City, S$4,149,931. , 4 4 4 DEALERS Wte for whotesale prices l