T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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44.1 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Thu May 14 1992 17:39 | 5 |
| > 7. What is Mario's wives name?
How many wives has Mario had? Amazing that they all had the same name. :-)
--PSW
|
44.2 | oops | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Fri May 15 1992 07:26 | 3 |
| Mario's only ever had one wives! :-)
Roger
|
44.3 | Correct name for college | GLIND1::MCKEE | But, I'm feeling MUCH better now... | Fri May 15 1992 11:11 | 8 |
|
re Question #29
The Bethlehem Pennsylvania College was really Lehigh University.
Jim, who grew up in Bethlehem, Pa.
|
44.4 | USAC Dirts | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Tue May 19 1992 12:27 | 7 |
| Which qualifiers of the 1992 Indy 500 raced USAC dirt cars? (re:
913.42 for qualifiers)
I think there are five.
Roger
|
44.5 | | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | It's done with mirrors. | Tue May 19 1992 17:40 | 8 |
| let's see.....how about
AJ
Tony B
Gary B
Al Sr.
Stan Fox
Mario???
|
44.6 | Two more | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Wed May 20 1992 01:46 | 14 |
| AJ, Al Sr. and Mario for sure. Gary B, most likely. I've seen Merle
B. race dirts at Springfield with one arm, I'm not sure about Tony. The
other person I was thinking of was Gordon Johncock, he comes from that
era. I don't believe Stan Fox was around then. I believe he raced for
A.J. his rookie year at Indy?
Roger
Two more:
What year had the most rookies? How many?
Who was the last overseas winner before Jimmy Clark in 1965?
|
44.7 | | CRASHR::JILLY | COSROCS -- In Thrust We Trust | Wed May 20 1992 09:08 | 2 |
| Either Jeff or John Andretti also raced USAC midgets don't know about USAC
Champ cars though.
|
44.8 | Ah yes, Wee Gordie | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | It's done with mirrors. | Wed May 20 1992 10:32 | 5 |
| Stan Fox comes from the USAC midget ranks. I didn't think you wanted
only those from CHAMP cars...just USAC dirt drivers in general.
sorry
Terry
|
44.9 | USAC before CART | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Wed May 20 1992 11:18 | 24 |
| RE: .4
The question was not clear. Years ago, (until about 1971/2?), before
CART, USAC was the governing body for Indy cars. The USAC circuit
included both Indy cars on ovals, and dirt cars (I think only sprints)
on flat ovals (usually a half mile). Both types of racing counted
points toward the USAC championship. Most of the USAC boys drove both.
Winning Indy almost assured the championship because USAC awarded 2
points per mile (the longer the race the more points). The dirt track
races were much shorter of course.
I can still remember Al Unser racing his 'Johnny Lightning' special
sprint care with paint job to match his two-time Indy winning car in
1970-71.
---
Does anyone remember the Viceroy/Samsonite 'Super Team' owned by Parnelli
Jones with drivers Mario, Al, Joe Leonard, and one year Jan Opperman?
Mario still wears a helmet design that originated with that team.
Roger
|
44.10 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | | Wed May 20 1992 12:53 | 6 |
| My stepfather loved racing. We lived in Ohio, about 100 miles
from Indy. I remember going one year to the Hoosier Hundred
and seeing this fella tearing up the circuit. Guy's name was
Parnelli Jones.
Scott
|
44.11 | 100 miles from Indy | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Fri May 22 1992 08:09 | 7 |
| I lived in Illinois about a 100 miles from Indy. The fella who was
tearing up the circuit when my father started taking me to races was
Mario Andretti. Hoosier, Springfield, Des Moine, Terra Houte,
Milwaukee, and of course, Indy.
Roger
|
44.12 | 10 questions | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Fri May 22 1992 08:19 | 23 |
| 1. Anybody know what the original race surface of the Indianapolis motor
Speedway was?
2. Who was first to win three Indy 500s?
3. What is the largest winning margin in Indy history? (nearest minute)
4. What was the narrowest winning margin in Indy history? (nearest
100th)
5. Who was first to qualify a rear (mid) engine car at Indy?
6. Who was last to qualify a front engine roadster?
7. Who drove with a special socket style gove that fit onto a ball on
the steering wheel?
8. Who the famous millionaire who never raced, but owned cars... always
number 98?
9. Who is the youngest driver ever to win at Indy?
10. Who is the oldest driver ever to win at Indy?
|
44.13 | err, I thin I know the answer to 1. | COMICS::COOMBER | Inverted Flight Expert | Fri May 22 1992 08:37 | 17 |
|
I think I know that answer to question 1, the rest ?>!?@@? .
some time ago british Tv done a series on motor racing, indy racing
included. The original surfaces that oval were raced on was wood,not
sure if Indy was ever wood. after all the wood tracks close ( cost of
maintanence ) the indy track was laid in brick . Hence the name The
brick yard. Some time after it was relayed in tarmac.
I think I read that somewhere else in this conference too. Not bad for
someone who dislikes oval racing , and live in the UK.
Garry
|
44.14 | Rock-Brick-Tarmac | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Fri May 22 1992 12:05 | 14 |
| Yes there were wooden tracks in the old days. I remember reading in a
book some years ago that one of the original racing surfaces was
crushed white rock. In fact, the original races were motocycles
before the track was sold to Hulman, and shortly after began the Indy
500. If I remember correctly, it was owned by two people in the first
two or three years of existance. One of the original objectives was an
endurance test for car manufactures. The track was build with large
curves to allow cars to essentially run flat out continuosly.
It was paved with brick (3 million I believe) some years later, which
at the time was the highest quality surface available. The start/finish
line today is a three foot strip of the original brick.
Roger
|
44.15 | | BUFFER::WAITE | Dick Waite - DTN 276-8230 | Fri May 22 1992 15:07 | 7 |
| Indy was never a wood track. Also the first races were not 500 miles either.
I believe the track was dirt before it was paved with bricks. The first 500
was in 1911(?).
FWIW, Rockingham Race Track (horse track), in Salem, NH, was a wood track
(for cars) back in the 1920's!!!
|
44.16 | okay I 'll try a few. | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | It's done with mirrors. | Fri May 22 1992 15:58 | 7 |
| let me try a few:
#98 owner======Agaganian (sp)
first to win 3=======Ralph Depalma
oldest winner========Al Unser Sr. ??????
first mid/rear engine qualif======Jimmy Clark
|
44.17 | three out of four | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Sun May 24 1992 12:22 | 15 |
| >#98 owner======Agaganian (sp)
correct.
>first to win 3=======Ralph Depalma
Louis Meyer
>oldest winner========Al Unser Sr. ??????
correct, 48 yrs, 11 mos.
>first mid/rear engine qualif=====Jimmy Clark
I also believe this is correct. I am sure he was the first to win with
a rear engine in 1965. He was a rookie two years before that
Roger
|
44.18 | | CRASHR::JILLY | COSROCS -- In Thrust We Trust | Tue May 26 1992 09:05 | 1 |
| Wasn't the guy with the socket glove Mel Kenyon ???
|
44.19 | socket glove | TKOVOA::THOMPSON | Roger Thompson coming to you from Tokyo | Tue May 26 1992 10:19 | 9 |
| >Wasn't the guy with the socket glove Mel Kenyon?
>
That's right!
They may have been others... Jim Hurtubise drove with three fingers on
each hand after his 1965 firey crash at Milwaukee.
Roger
|
44.20 | DNS from pole? | OASS::BURDEN_D | '24 Stude - The only way to Tour | Tue May 26 1992 11:57 | 3 |
| When was the last time the pole sitter DNS'd?
Dave
|
44.21 | Whata bummer | NYTP05::JANKOWITZ | Twisty little passages all alike | Tue May 26 1992 14:37 | 3 |
| >>When was the last time the pole sitter DNS'd?
I thought they said it had never happened before!
|
44.22 | Deep Pockets??? | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | It's done with mirrors. | Tue May 26 1992 14:44 | 8 |
| re: last 2
That's what I thought I heard also....it was a first.
Speaking of firsts, I wonder if this years' "spectacle" set the record
for twisted ruined chassis, at least as far as $$$ amount goes?
At 1/2 mil per pop, a good case could be made for a record of sorts.
|
44.23 | musta missed that.. | OASS::BURDEN_D | '24 Stude - The only way to Tour | Tue May 26 1992 15:34 | 9 |
| Okay, I didn't hear them say it was the first time for that. I watched it on tape
so sometimes I was only listening for exciting parts.
One interesting bit during the race.. I was holding my 14 month old daughter and
she was facing the TV (I guess whe was watching it, but who knows). Mario spins and
crashes into the wall and SHE STARTS CLAPPING!!! She even clapped again during one of
replays of the crash!
Dave
|
44.24 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue May 26 1992 16:01 | 9 |
| .23> I was holding my 14 month old daughter and she was facing the TV
.23> (I guess whe was watching it, but who knows). Mario spins and crashes
.23> into the wall and SHE STARTS CLAPPING!!! She even clapped again during
.23> one of replays of the crash!
the question is, was she clapping because she's another Andretti
anti-fan, or because she just likes racing for the crashes?
1/2 :-)
|
44.25 | | OASS::BURDEN_D | '24 Stude - The only way to Tour | Tue May 26 1992 17:04 | 3 |
| She was silent (relatively) during other crashes, so it has to be the Andretti thing :-)
Dave
|
44.26 | Milk | RHETT::BURDEN | A bear in his natural habitat | Wed May 28 1997 10:49 | 4 |
| When did the tradition of the winner of the Indy 500 drinking milk in the
Winner's Circle start, and why?
Dave
|
44.27 | | BSS::JILSON | WFH in the Chemung River Valley | Wed May 28 1997 12:10 | 5 |
| This started when a milk producer's co-op sponsored Indy and required the
winner to take a drink of milk in the winner's circle ala Gatorade in WC.
I believe it started in the late 40's early 50's.
Jilly
|
44.28 | | TURRIS::lspace.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT Happens... | Wed May 28 1997 13:55 | 8 |
| It all started when one of the winners, way back when, asked for a drink of
buttermilk, his favorite refreshment, after the race. The milk producer's co-op
saw the widely-published photo of him drinking milk in front of the Borg-Warner
trophy and realized the promotional potential. Since then, the winner has been
offered a substantial sum if he will let himself be photographed drinking from a
milk bottle in the winner's circle.
--PSW
|
44.29 | | RHETT::BURDEN | A bear in his natural habitat | Wed May 28 1997 18:20 | 8 |
| The info I have gives the year as either 1928 or 1936, but apparently it
was started with Louis Mayer (he won in both those years). The reference I
found to 1928 indicated it was done in support of Prohibition (Mayer was
paid to drink the milk, which is a given), but if it started in 1936,
it would have simply been done for publicity since the Volstead Act had
been repealed, I believe.
Dave
|