Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 17, 1962, edition 1 / Page 4
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Wednesday, 1962 Page 1 or Id ChamBionsliip i err ante o ik" "fr tAt "Jr k k JL- Jr Righthander Tosses Brilliant 1-0 Win A M r v Gets import h on :'V-x-;-.M4CW. 1L JL THE DAILY TAR Pitches Y w y Str 1LC: Ry OSCAR FRALEY UPI Sports Writer SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The whiplash arm of a lean young man from Oklahoma swept the New York Yankees to their 20th World Series championship Tues day and tolled midnight at long last for the Cinderella San Fran cisco Giants. Big Ralph Terry fired a blazing four-hitter for a pulsating 1-0 vic tory which ended time for a Gi ant team which had made a ca reer out of battling back. Beaten four times in Series play before he finally snapped his hoodoo by winning the fifth game, the 26-year-old Terry earned the plaudits of 43,948 fans in wind swept Candlestick Park with a classic clutch performance. For those mighty Yankees gave him only one run to work with, and with $4,000-a-man in Series gold as well as the glory which goes with it hanging on every fast ball and each curling curve, Ter ry tossed them to victory. Tresh Catch Helps There was brilliant help which bailed him out ,a dazzling one handed catch by rookie Tom Tresh of a Willie Mays line drive for a second out in the seventh ining. That drive could have been a double and an instant later would have become a run on a rousing triple by Willie McCov ey. Then, in a heart-stopping ninth ining, as those Giants who all season long specialized in come-from-behind victories made their biggest run at Terry, the lean man finally got them out with more pitching courage and a big assist from -his mates. Pinch-hitter Matty Alou, a dan gerous little man with a bat, op ened that last-half inning the last of all in a grinding series of 172 games for these Giants with a bunt single. Terry hitched up his pants and fired a third strike past both Felipe Alou and Chuck Hiller. But then Willie Mays rapped a double down the right field line, with Alou fleeing to third. Out there on the emerald green grass, Roger Maris ran it down and fired the ball desperately to the plate to hold Alou from scoring. The Big Bone Is Sartorial Hews This Fall Big f V One Last Chance Then, with one out left, up camo McCovey, who raps a ball nut of sicM when he hits it sauare. He did once, but it sailed high and foul into the right field corner. And then McCovey drove a rrpaminff line drive which lit tle Bobby Richardson caught for the bissest out of the year. It hung defeat on hard-throwing Jack Sanford, who had bested Terry in the second game of this 13-dav Series matching the long est of them all back in 1911. Tues day Sanford couldn't get out of a vnni-po hases-loadcd ..threat in the fifth inning. Break Through With Run Terry and Sanford were hooked up in a tense pitching duel through the first four innings un til the Yankees finally broke through with that run. Moose Skowron started them off with a single to left, which was only the second hit off the chunky Giant pitcher, and pounded to third on Cletis Boyer's long sin gle to center. Sanford then com pounded his own difficulties by walking Terry on four pitches to load the bases. The Giants were happy to set tle for one run when Tony Kubek grounded into a double play, Skowron scoring and Boyer mov ing to third. Sanford stranded him there by getting Richardson to pop up. The Giants had to fight the Yan kees off from padding their lead in the eighth on a five-pitch relief job by Billy O'Dell which got three quick outs with the bases loaded. In that frame, Richardson was safe at first on an error, Tresh singled off Jose Pagan's leg and Mickey Mantle hitless in his last 13 appearances at the plate- singled to right to fill the bases. O'Dell Stymies Yanks That's when the weary Sanford left the premises and O Dell trudged to the mound. But he Was equal to the task, lie got Maris to rap a ground ball which forced Richardson at the plate and then got Howard to ground into a double play. So those Giant hopes, and those of the partisan crowd sitting in the 25-mile winds which whipped through Candlestick Park, still were high. But it had to end somewhere, sometime, because the way those Giants had been doing it was not only unbelievable but too tempt ing to fate. They gave it that big old-time try in the ninth once again but this"1 time-'the golden coach turned back into a pumpkin. 4 t f - rr .ry 1? iA t 1 GENE SIGMON Coach Jim Ilickey elevated Sigmon to the Blue unit Monday as a result of his fine play against Maryland. "Sig" is a 6-2, 220-pound tackle from Denver, North Carolina. Carnival Tomorrow Features 66 Teams Wide wale herringbones. 1", in domestic wool shetlands in olive or gray olive-tan $45.00. Slightly wider, 1-18" bone in fine lofted shetlands from Scotland black white; rich soft brown -blue hea ther; new hit shade of light tan soft olive $48.75. You can count on Milton's for that refreshing "Old School" flavor. 0m Pa By STUART BALL While it is probably unintention al, the UNC Intramural Depart ment is going to give the JM. C State Fair a good run for its mon ey ... at least for tomorrow night. Though on a smaller scale, the 16th annual Co-Rec Carnival will offer the games, relays, prizes and fun that have made the big-time carnivals an American institution for so long. This year 44 organizations have entered 66 teams that will be pair ed into 33 competing teams. Things will get under way at 7 o'clock in Woollen Gym. The first event will be a scries of four relays in which each team consists of four men and four women. The book evchange, po tato spear, paper plate slide, and balloon burst will he the fields of competition with awards present ed to individuals as well as organi zations. At 8 o'clock pairs representing men's and women's organizations will compete in badminton, table tennis, volleyball, archery, and eight other carnival games. Here, as in the relays, individual and organizational awards will be presented. An all men's box hockey and an all women's tether ball contest will be the only events in which teams do not compete. In these an in dividual will be declared the win ner on the basis of single elimina tion. In Monday's tag football action the Magnum Mavericks romped over the hapless Everett Elis, 35 0. The victory put Mangum at the top of the dormitory division on the basis of total points, and sunk the Elis even farther into the cel lar. Everett now owns thn rluK;. - Readies UNC For Gamecock By ED DUPREE With the confidence votes of Chancellor William B. Aycock and Consolidated Uniyersity President William C. Friday, behind him, Jim Hickey is preparing Carolina's Tar Heels for the fifth obstacle of the 1962 football season. Monday night the administration heads told a Raleigh sports writer that Jim Hickey - was their man, win or lose. Aycock said, "CDach Hickey is in the first year of ar;three-y ear con tract and we hayie no reason to feel he will not be here to fulfill that contract." From President Friday came the same confidence vijte. "As far as I'm concerned, Coach Hickey has a three-year contract." At the Tar Heel coach's press luncheon yesterday, Chancellor Ay cock was present. He was asked if he had been bothered with a great deal of grumbling from the alumni. "No there has not been any grumbling in great proportions," he answered. He pointed out that he had received a few letters, but nothing to speak of. - The 'Chancellor continued, "Of course, 'we want to excel in every thing" we undertake. We all want a winning football team." Earlier ' this week Mr. Aycock held firm on a statement he made in an earlier interview concerning the security of coaches at the Uni versity. "No coach at the University of North Carolina is going to be fired just for losing," he said. "If he abuses his players, that's some thing else. But as long as he's out -there trying to do his job with a reasonable amount of competen ence, he has my support." Coach Hickey, since the Mary land game, has made a great deal of lineup changes. The chief swit ches were made in the line where Gene Sigmon was moved up from the Rams into the number one left tackle spot and Jerry Cabe took over Jack Tillery's left guard spot-both on the blue unit. Cabe has been on the defensive team all season. Alderman is no longer on the first three units and Tillery took Cabe's spot on the Tar unit. Hickey expressed disappointment in the team's pass defense against Maryland, since that was stressed during the previous week's prac tice. Now, he will turn to finding a way to stop South Carolina's tremendous ground game, sparked by Billy Gambrcll the top candi-ri.-tr. fr.r All-Star honors on the team. t Marylapij'd Leads Statistics; Shiner Still Ahead Of Edge Undefeated Maryland continued Stadium. Gambit:!! has carried the scored against it. Scoring for the Mavericks were Alex McKinnon with three TD's and Doug Pearson and Sonny Shel ton with one each. Mangum also got two points by scoring a safety on a bad pass from the Everett center. The Old East Atlantics whipjed the Alexander Esquires, 23-0, and continued to display the top of fense in the division. The At lantics have scored 93 points in three games while giving up 33. A 34-0 score kept the Joyner Jocks in the heat of the race and put them third in total offense. Seven players figured in the scor ing as the Stacy Studs went down to their second defeat. The Aycock Aardvarks and Tea- gue Tots won in default contests over the Winston Wiseguys and Lewis Lusters, respectively. its domination of . individual and team statistics in the Atlantic Coast Conference t&is week, accord ing to figures released yesterday. The Terrapins, who gained their fourth victory at the expense of the UNC Tar Heels. Saturday, boast leadership in seven of the nine categories. Quarterback Diek Shiner leads in both passing and - tatol offense Shiner has completed 55 of 84 passes for 687 yards and has hand led the ball in 115 plays for 728 yards and a 6.3-yard average. ball 37 times foi 269 yards and a remarkable 7.3 average per trpJ Len Chiavernin ( f Maryland is sec ond with 52 carries for 208 yards and. a 4.0 avera'ge. South Carolina also boasts the best rushing offense in the ACC. The Gamecocks;? gained 833 yards on the ground n) their four games for a 208.3 average. The Terrapins -meanwhile lead in total offense, pais offense and total defense, including both the top rushing and passing defense UNC Runners Win Third Straight 3 By Laszlo Birinyi, Jr. Carolina's varsity cross-country team scored their third victory of the season yesterday by beating the harriers of N. C. State, 15-48. ine winning runners were cnarne Little and Larry Henry who tied for first with a 21:10 time. Third was Jerry Stuver who ran the four and one-tenth mile course in 21:35. Bob Bennett and Jerry Smith finished fourth and fifth. Commenting on the meet, Coach Ranson said "We worked heavily OSIS distinctjon of brj th Qn- ri'-hf lln fr thicr mocf o rtin tint , . . v",l.7 right up to this meet. We did not take a light workout like we nor mally do before a meet. The op position was light and I thought we had a good workout." The freshmen, competing for the first time this season, also won, beating the State frosh, 19-36. team to have had over 100 points UNC signal caller Junior Edge remained in second place in both spots, completing 44 of 67 passes for 516 yards in the air and a 5.9 average in total offense. South Carolina halfback Billy Gambrell will have his individual rusing leadership, .at stake Satur day when the Tar Heels tangle with the Gamecocks in Kenan c3 slar pv ofour 0mtt natural fall & iT shoulder iJkhL-jLJ suits t fvw. M TSditicHial tailoring v 24-HOUR of aMgh degree of excellence mafces thl suit first choice with men of fine taste. Town & Campus Today, whon your financial pic ture looks bright, is the best time to insure for the future. For life insurance. See . GEORGE L. COXIIKAD. C.L.U. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1962, edition 1
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