Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 18, 1968 a Page Ten THE MICHIGAN UAILY A quiet Sunday at the MIS 10 By PHILBROWN pete in the track's inaugural race,+ It was hot last Sunday, un- a 250-mile event.+ seasonably hot, and the 55,000 The announcer did his bit to' fans gathered at the Michigan keep them occupied while the main act was still rehearsing. He International Speedway were get- shot off inane one-lipers and a ting restless. half dozen serial acts got the They had been streaming onto folks into the proper frame of the Speedway's vast acreage,;south ( mind. of Jackson since early morning to There was a glider-not really get a good look at the big names thrilling, but beautiful and dra- of auto racing who would comL matic, nonetheless-and a couple of stunt pilots who twisted and climbed and dove through a series of rolls to the tune of labored whines from their planes' engines. The thrill show came to a stir- ring climax with the egress of a parachuting troupe from a plane almost invisible far overhead, with two of their number landing squarely on a large X on the ground directly in front of the stands. But even this brought little reaction from the fans. They ap plauded politely at the announcer's request, and fell to silence in anticipation of the action to come. Then, from far down toward the end of the pit area, came a sputter and a sudden roar. It was not the sound of just any auto- mobile engine, and the fans knew it. The roar was high-pitched and loud, because the cars had no mufflers. They were starting them up and down the pits, winding then up and backing them off. Mechanics made their final ad- justments, some laboring fever- ishly with unexplained problems, the starting time some 15 minutes away. Quite abruptly all was silent, but soon the announcer informed )all crews that they would be given another five minutes to run their engines. The start was confusing to the uninitiated, because it was highly disorganized in appearance. It wasn't neat and quick like a LeMans start, but actually took nearly five minutes to perform. Mechanics raced wildly among the sleek little forms brooding on the grid, which suddenly came to life simultaneouslyhroaring their unique roar, and then beginning to move.' The cars made- the first lap be- hind the official pace car, running at a speed between 80 and 120 miles per hour, maintaining their proper positions in the starting order while. stragglers zoomed out of the pits to get in line for the start; the fans at the Speedway understood the process, and cheer- ed each lap as the space increased and then the pace car dropped off. '4 -Daily-Phil Brown -Daily-PhilBrown WATCHING THE BIG RACE means watching the big-name drivers, and these two got plenty of attention at the Speedway Sunday. A. J. Foyt (left) steams in the garage area over his car's overheated engine. His anger subsided quickly, and he joked with reporters when the car had been cooled off. Ronnie Buckman (right), the winner in his first year on the tour, is pulled toward a meeting with track and USAC officials after posing for the, press. -Daily-Phil Brown CAR NUMBER ELEVEN sits alone in the Speedway garage less than halfway through the in- augural 250-mile race. Driven by tour rookie Gary Bettenhausen, this one succumbed to the rigors of the 160-mile per hour pace with clutch problems. Others were. forced out with such disparate dif- ficulties as oil pump problems, broken valves, and a hub which snapped on one of the banked turns. The cars' speed increased to something like 170 on the next lap, the drivers holding the start- ing pattern, and they got the flag on the next. After the start, I got a chance to run around in the pits and the garages, and made a few obser- vations. Like, everything happens awfully fast in one of those things. The speed seems to be an. illusion at first. The cars traverse the two- mile oval in something like 42 seconds, and it seems to be all you can do to\keep up with three or four of them. Another thing is that you only need to keep up with three or four cars, which makes everything a little easier. You might say that the cream rises early in these things. With- in the first ten laps the leaders have already begun to out-dis- tance the pack, which straggles around the track in bunches of two and three cars. You also realize that there is a fantastic a m o u n t of activity throughout the race. Some of the cars come into the pits a half dozen times before it's over, changing tires, getting fuel, or making untold minor repairs. These cars are as temperamen- tal as most women, and they have to be alternately babied and beat- en to perform well. But even the most tender loving care is not enougn' for most of them. Only a third of them finish the race, while the rest pack up quietly and head for the next stop on the championship tour. 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