Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 17, 1967, edition 1 / Page 5
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Tuesday, October 17, 1967 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PnT3 5 r l if Causes Smash At Charlotte's National. J 2 -r.i Mme- -, .-ii,. -,,B n m -- " "vrv -7 .... j- , Gibson Is MVP ............... vt Basketballers To Work Says SpOFt Mag. j Individually This Week J r-f! - CRUNCHED put five top Andretti (11) j i i L AGAIN: A blown tire in Snnday8 ECO In Charlotte drivers out of action. Pearson ti thmm while Petty got through by hitting outside wall. NEW YORK Pitcher Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals has been named win ner of the 13th annual "SPORT Magazine World Series Award" as the outstanding player in the 1S67 World Series. For Gibson, who won three games in the 1967 Series, in cluding the seventh and deciding contest 7-2, from the Boston Red Sox, it was the se cond time he has received the award as "the player who did the most for his team through his overall play in the World Series." Bob added a bit of ic ing to his bid for the prize with a fMth-inning homer that pro ved to be the wmning run in the seventh game. Gibson also tied Christy Mathewson's record of allow ing just 14 hits in three complete-game victories during a career covering more than one Series. His three wins in the Series put him into the record book with a half-dozen other pitchers. Gibson, who hurled 2-1, 6-0 and 7-2 complete-game vic tories against the Red Sox, will receive a 1968 Corvette sports car, at a luncheon in his honor. Bob first received the award in 1964 when he bested the New York Yankeees in the deciding game and established an overall Series mark of 31 strikeouts in three games. Pearson, Andretti and two others who hit wreckage were out im mediately; Petty, already damaged by previous wreck, went out several laps later. . DTH Staff Photos By Ernest H. Robl Fraternity Blues Have Jimmy Clark To Race At Kockingham 2 Games This Week (LTD Famed Grand Prix driver J4mmy -Clark 3 oV Scotland will, drive a Holm an-. Moody-Ford im.the -American 500 stock car. race 4t was an-; nounced Monday. North Carolina Motor Speedway said here the winner of 23 Grand Prix races' would be in the lineup for the October Hi" nmirniR Jtrtriil ,3!" I iii'li NKED GAS Come on up to the Robo-Wash (Chapel Hill Ice Co. site) and get a free wash with a $1.P0 purchase of Esso gas. Courtesy cards honored BUY A BUYER'S GUIDE Closing out Motor Bikes $379 now $249, recapped tires white any size $10. No trade in. Auto Parts Warehouse, Dunn, N.C. You too can park on campus! Buy a 1906 Yamaha, 250 cc in excellent condition, red, new rear tire and sprockets. Call 1965 Lotus Super 7. never rac ed or damaged, 13,500 miles, original owner commutes to Memorial Hospital daily, 150a cc dual Webered Cosworth Ford, $3,000, Durham 544-2874. COLOR HOeUu NOW PLAYING 13579 23th event at Rockingham, last of the-majorraces this yeari The announcement was seen as an 11th hour move by Ford Motor Co. to salvage some prestige from a Southern stock car racing year dominated by Plymouth driver Richard Pet ty ,who has won 27 races this season. The American 500 will be on ly the third race in history to feature the top drivers from all three of the world's top racing circuits Jrand Prix, In dianapolis, and the stock car circuit. Clark, a wealthy farmer from Dunns, Scotland is the star driver for team Lotus of England and has recorded 23 Grand Prix victories in his career. He is favored to tie Juan Fangio's record of 24 in this Sunday's Grand Prix of Mexico. He will fly directly to the North Carolina Motor Speedway after the race and begin American 500 practice. This year he has won the Grands Prix of the Netherlands, Great Britian and the United States. In a taped interview Clark, a 31-year-old batchelor, said the only time he had driven stocks was back in 1962 when "I did a few laps at Daytona when I was there for a completely dif ferent race altogether." "Clark said he felt the handl ing and breaking of stock cars "is going to be quite different altogether." Stock carsweight Need Gas-Beer-Wine or Cham pagne? Visit your party bev erage store, Bay Gas & Food. 2 miles north of Fire Station on iarport Road. Regular gas 30.9, premium 33.9. P T-Hmriiiwm Veterans: You have 120 days frcm release to convert 'yur Servicemen's Group Life Insurance. For details, call 94-w6 B.U. roll single 1937-D quarters paying $250 per roll. Call J. P. Riggsbee, 942-3263. . Wanted: Student to work part time. Writing sports articles, selling ads and subscriptions for Carolina Sports magazine. Write . Carolina Sports, Highway 14, Spray, N.C. A Single Performance Robert Shaw Conducting The Atlanta Symphony Featuring Grant Johannesen, Pianist Playing Selections From: Bela Bartok Ludwig Beethoven Peter llyitch Tchaikovsky -Tuesday, October 31 Memorial Hall $1 .25 All seats are reserved Ticket Sales Begin TODAY Presented By Graham Memorial about 4,000 pounds compared . with " lOOcFpounds " of ; Grand;; Prix racing. r r -t - . Clark admitted a lack of, familiarity with stock car; races but said he had heard oft Petty and his blue Plymouth . and added, "I certainly look -forward to seeing him in ac tion." Clark's first Grand Prix vic tory came in 1962 in the' Belgian Grand Prix. The same year he also won the British and U. S. Grands Prix. His first world driving cham pionship came in 1963 when he captured the Grands Prix of Belgium, the Netherlands, France, Great Britain, Italy, Mexico, and South Africa. He made his Indy 500 debut the same year and finished se cond. Clark won the Belgian and British Grands Prix for the third straight year in 1964 and also repeated in the Netherlands Grand Prix. He ran away with the Indy 500 that year until he decked about half-way with mechanical trou ble. His second driving cham pionship came in 1965 when he also became the first foreigner in 30 years to win the In "dianapolis 500. He also won the grands Prix mat year in Belgium and Great Britian for the fourth straight year, the Dutch Grand Prix for the third straight year, and also the Grands Prix of South Africa, France and Germany. While the American 500 will be his first Nascar Grand Na tional Race, Clark isn't a stranger to stock cars. He has had some experience racing Ford Cortinas and six-liter Galaxies in Europe. By BOB COLEMAN Of The DTH Staff " ; Fraternities will play twice this week in the blue football league and in most of the white leagues. Weather has been good so far, but both rainout days have come at the expense of the Greeks, who are usually scheduled on Tuesday and Thursday. About half of the fortv-two men who signed up for the All Campus Squash even thave survived so far in single elimination play. Matches Monday and tomorrow from 6 8:30 will halve the remaining field. In residence hall horseshoes, 12 teams are still hoping to win four more matches and the championship. Fraternities haven't quite completed their first round of horseshoe pitching, yet. The winner will have to take five more matches in single elimination play. , The point standings so far reflect only the track results. Stacy heads the residence halls, with Everett a smidgeon ahead of Carr. James A is fourth and James E, Ehr inghaus C and Morrison A tied forfifth. - - Graham is eighth, Aycock ninth and Morrison D com pleted the top ten. Phi Delta Thsta is on their usual perch atop the Greek ladder. DU is a strong second and DKE is not far behind. Phi Kap Sig is fourth, Beta fifth, and ATO is sixth. The Zetes and TEP are tied for seventh, while Chi Psi, SAE, St. A and Sigma Nu are all B 1V1 even point wise in the ninth rankings , - . . Tomorrow is the deadline for entering volleyball teams. Play will tentatively start next Mon-'? day. raves Can Coaches, unson ATLANTA (UP!)--The Atlanta Braves Monday dumped two of their coaches Bob Kennedy r and Bill Adair and broadcaster Larry Munson. Vice president Paul Richards said no replacements for the coaches had been chosen but that Kennedy and Adair were geing given their release now so that they might look elsewhere for employment prior to next season. The dismissal of the coaches was expected after Lum Har ris was named several weeks ago to replace ousted manager Billy Hitchcock. New managers traditionally name their own coaches. Munson formerly worked for a Nashville, Tennu, radio sta tion where he did the play-byplay of Vanderbilt football and basketball games. According to both the Atlan ta Journal and the Atlanta Constitution, the Braves will go with Milo Hamilton and former pitcher Ernie Johnson as their broadcast team for 1968 with occasional help from Dizzy Dean. LENOIR HALL announces the Opening in the North Dining Room of THE STEAK PlOG A DELICIOUS STEAK, Baked Potato with Sour Cream, Garlic Bread, Green Salad & Coffee, Tea, or other non-carbonated bever age, all for onfy Monday thru Friday Nights 5:00-7:00 Basketball Coach Dean Smith said vesterdav that the Tar Heel players will work out this week individually, but will not play together as a team until next Monday. "I feel that seven weeks of practice prior to our first game is too much time without a scrimmage game," Smith says. "We hafe a maximum schedule of games and we're not allowed a scrimmage game with anyone. By starting next week, we will have six weeks of work before our opener. That should be just about the length of time we need to get ready." The Tar Heels have four returning starters from last year's powerful team. They are All-America Larry Miller, Rusty Clark, Dick Grnbar and Bill Bunting. University Opticians ' Located In UNIVERSITY SQUARE 123 WEST FRANKLIN STREET J PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED LENSES DUPLICATED SUN GLASSES CONTACT LENS ACCESSORIES Thank you for your past patronage. I look forward to serring you now and in the future. ' J.PAUL MOORE Rxgittend Ucnued Optician TcL 963318 J . THE FIRESIDE . GIRL OF THE WEEK If 1 0 lJ - J it ' L .m I . ! ! ( For an afternoon Sorority Tea, Miss Margaret Mozin go, a senior Phi Mu, selects a Double Knit by David Crystal from The Fireside. si ! r A (
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1967, edition 1
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