Terry Moore Tar Heel Giant - Jack King (1973)
Strength & Health April 1970
By Jack King
From six feet tall and 145 lbs. body weight to 227 lbs.
doesn’t have to take a long time, but if you include measurements such as chest
52 inches, arms 19 ¼ inches, thighs 27 ½ inches and 17 ½ inch calves; the road
is paved with sweat and toil. Terry began training at home on the family farm
and at the “Y” in Winston-Salem, N.C. Sam Green, the physical instructor at
that time, constantly encouraged Terry to train. He, himself, had a tremendous
physique that served him well for three years as halfback at Wake Forest
University. Another strong influence, at least by example, was Gary Simpson,
who at that time was winning titles all over the South. While in high school
Terry was just too diminutive to play football. This often is all the
encouragement one needs to train. Terry smiles everytime he remembers those
days because it wasn’t long before several grid coaches approached him, but
Terry was realistic; he lacked the experience having never played in high
school. Terry first entered Lees McRae Junior College to begin his further
education. While spending those two years there, he laid a sound physical base
for the success he is now enjoying in the sport he loves. He trained with a
fanatical drive, spending many hours in the gym. It was during this period that
the “Tar Heel Giant” entered his first physique contest. He didn’t exactly make
a clean sweep as he now does. In fact, the first five missed him. Everyone
could see that he was a comer “if” he would continue to train and most
important – get those legs up to the rest of his body. Terry talked training
with everyone who would talk, sought criticism from those who would know what
they were talking about. He went back to school with his head swimming, but all
fired up. The next time I saw Terry the change was so obvious I had to blink to
be sure it was really him. His legs were tremendous. Terry found, as many
others have, that by training with guys shows all over the body. Recently Terry
did a squat with 500 lbs. and several on-lookers commented, “Yeah, but what can
he do with those big muscles in his legs?” Terry responded with a vertical jump
36 inches above his reach. The next day he ran a one hundred yard dash in 10.8.
Experience they say is the best teacher, and certainly Terry has learned a lot
from his own training and definitely is his own trainer. He has certain little
variations to about every exercise he does. The best way to describe this method
is to say he performs every exercise with intense concentration and in the
manner that gives the best muscle ache. After moving to Pembroke Regional
University and getting married, Terry began putting some finer finished looking
points to his physique. He converted his living room into a gym. Plenty of York
equipment made a rather unusual furniture décor. I’m sure Terry’s wife, Linda,
got real tired of explaining to visitors. Terry liked training at home because
it almost always was alone and he got a lot done. When he was home on weekends
back in Winston-Salem he would have to catch a “quickie” at the “Y” and attract
a crowd, always with all the standard questions. Then rush home to the farm to
work on his definition with such specialized exercises as loading hay or clearing the north forty,
etc. Terry uses large amounts of Hoffman’s Super Hi-Proteen coupled with large
does of the Vitamin B group, C & E. Linda, Terry’s lovely wife, is a
perfect cook for a bodybuilder. She is very diet conscious and prepares
nutritious meals for Terry. Linda graduated with Terry in June 1969 from
Pembroke. They are settled in Louisbury, N.C. teaching at the same high school.
Terry is a biology teacher and Linda instructs the young Tar Heels in science.
They both love fishing and horseback riding. Terry’s family back in
Winston-Salem are real proud of his accomplishments in the bodybuilding field.
Terry’s father, Oscar, is a supervisor at Western Electric. His mother stays
very busy at home and on the farm. His sister, Melonia, is a junior in high
school and his brother, Sterling, is an engineering student at N.C. State
University. Regular readers of S&H will recall the pictures of the 1969
Junior Mr. America contest, those
featuring Boyer Coe, Chris Dickerson and Terry on the victory stand pointed up
what a great future Terry has ahead of him. He compared quite well for someone
with so little prior publicity. The next few years will find Terry entering all
the top contests. Nature was good to Terry, he has an ideal bone structure,
very good basic shape and he is slightly over six feet tall. Combine these
advantages with his fierce ambition and more maturing through training and
surely the top will be his.
Contests: Mr. North Carolina; Mr. Smoky Mountains; Mr.
Capitol District; Mr. Blue Ridge Invitational; Mr. South, Mr. Southern U.S.A.;
others: second to Bill St. John in Mr. Cheseapeake Bay, second to Ken Waller in
Jr. Mr. U.S.A., third Jr. Mr. America
Monday & Thursday (Chest & Back)
Sit ups and toe raises –
Bench press – 325 lbs. 6 x 6
Incline Bench Press (dumbbells) – 100 lbs. 5 x 10
Supine lateral raises (flys) – 45 lbs. 3 x 6
Pull Overs – 250 lbs. 3 x 6
Dips – no weight 4 x 8
Pushups – no weight 3 x 50
Bent rowing – 150 lbs. 4 x 6
Pull ups – 4 x 15
Tuesday & Friday (legs)
Sit ups and toe raises – 275 lbs. 6 x 6
Squats (front) – 425 lbs. 9 x 6
Regular Squats – 325 lbs. 4 x 6
Hack Squats – 170 lbs. 6 x 15
Quadricep Machine – 315 lbs. 6 x 8
Leg Presses
Wednesday & Saturday (shoulders and arms)
Sit ups and toe raises – 160 lbs. 3 x 6
Hanging cleans – 160 lbs. 3 x 6
Presses – 235 lbs. 5 x 6
Behind Neck Press – 150 lbs. 4 x 6
Later Raises (dumbbell) – 40 lbs. 4 x 6
Dips – 4 x 8
Tricep press down – 140 lbs. 6 x 6
Tricep Extensions – 150 lbs. 5 x 6
Curls – 150 lbs. 6 x 6
Preacher curls – 130 lbs. 5 x 6
Close grip curl – 130 lbs. 3 x 6
Reverse curl – 130 lbs. 5 x 6
Wrist curl – 120 lbs. 5 x 6
Wrist roller – 35 lbs. 3 x 4
The author of this feature (Jack King) was close friend of Bill Starr's, and was an Olympic lifting official in the Tidewater area of the Southern Atlantic States.
ReplyDeleteTravis Mash did a nice job eulogizing Jack here: https://www.mashelite.com/jack-king-how-to-leave-a-legacy/
ReplyDeleteAnyone have info on Terry Moore after his 3rd-place 1969 AAU Jr. Mr. America? His physique was obviously able to compete with Coe's, Dickerson's, and Jim Morris's, but I've found nothing about him yet past that 1969 contest.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen anything on Jack outside of what has been published here. I have a few more S&H magazine's from the early 70's I still need to get through. It is surprising that someone who was neck and neck with future Mr. Olympia competitors just dropped off the face of the earth. If I unearth anything I'll post it here!
DeleteTHANKS, Grey Cat.
DeleteI'm 68, been slinging iron ever since beginning in 1971 at age 15.
In 1972, I began reading S&H and Weider's MB, then Rader' IM, Lurie's MTI , Kennedy's MMI, and then in 1976, Wong's MD magazines. I never recall seeing anything about Moore in any magazine during 1972 nor later.
Yeah, exactly, that's my opinion too regarding his physique. In that 1969 photo capture, he looks to have carried as much mass and equivalently-good proportions as Dickerson , Coe, and Morris, but with even deeper ab cuts? So, where th' hell did he go??
THANKS, for keeping on the look-out for anything about him.