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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 69

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
69
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-V tt Sunday, June 25, 1972 Philadelphia Inquirer 7-D J'1" -y 'I 1 Jamieson Widens Western Golf Lead With 3d-Round 67 NORTHBROOK, 111. (AP). Jimmy Jamieson, a moonfaced nonwinner on the pro tour, forged a four-under-par 67 and established a whopping eight-stroke lead Saturday in the third round of the $150,000 Western Open Golf Tournament. The chunky Jamieson, playing the unusual role of gallery favorite, posted a 54-hoIe total of 20211 under par on the yard Sunset Ridge CC course. Crenshaw, Kite Tie in NCAA I cnP FglMI Hi jjf "Expert Car Service S' 1 4 wm wum mmm E53 mom KS9 BESSI K3S9 8S9 BF i LUBE OIL a 1 1 fji Includes expert jf chassis lubrication fmm ml jn' I I Tj- quality uflTU JUT Check differential and WIIH Not available at IesM' transmission oil and CBUPDM CC, iL water level.

J. Good thru July 3rd. ENGINE TUNE-UP lilt ii i ii Includes new AC plugs, Deko points, condenser and rotor. Adjust carburetor, check UPI Telephoto It's a Sunny World for generator and regulator. Jim Jamieson takes 8-stroke lead with 202 after 54 Air conditioned cars extra.

uuuu uiiu Good thru Bad Weather at Pocono Gives Andretti Chance to Prove Theory on Time Waste 4 WHEELS BALANCED tire wear. naiance an wheels and your tires vacation -SI I Avoid vv Good IftWIl WW 1 mmmmm four rotate for your driving. If WITH CWOH thru July 3rd. mi. fat Precision alignment factory trained mechanics.

Extra for some cars with air conditioning extra LONG POND, Pa. MARIO ANDRETTI has been saying for several years that the month he spends at Indianapolis and now the two weeks at both Pocono and Ontario, are for the most part a waste of tine. Now, following almost a solid week of rain and flooding in Northeastern Pennsylvania, Andretti is going to get a chance to prove his point. The bad weather has forced officials of Pocono International Raceway and the United States Auto Club to cram practice, qualifying and the second annual Schaefer 500-mile race into an eight-day period. "We could even do it in less than that," said the diminutive Italian expatriate from nearby Nazareth.

"On the Gran Prix circuit, we handle everything in fotr days. In NASCAR (stock car racing) they do it all in f( ur days except for the Daytona 500." The reason, of course, is to help the promoters bolster public interest and, therefore, ticket sales in USAC's Triple Auto Racing if needed. CAPE CORAL, Fla. (UPI). Tom Kite of the University of Texas fired a four-under-par 68 and teammate Ben Crenshaw struggled to a 72 Saturday to tie for the NCAA individual golf championship and lead Texas to its second straight championship.

Kite bounced back from a third round 78 to finish nine-under-par. Crenshaw had to sink a 25-foot par putt on the final hole to get the tie and his second straight individual NCAA title. Texas finished six under par with a team total of 1146, 13 strokes ahead of the University of Houston's second place 1159. Oklahoma State and Florida tied for third at 1174, Arizona State had a 1176, Georgia 1185, Southern Methodist 1193, Wake Forest and San Jose State tied at 1200. general public?" he asked.

"Zero. Maybe even less." MARIO IS ON Pocono's Board of Directors and, naturally, has more of an interest in the track's success than the rest of the drivers here. But he would still like to see the program cut to a maximum of a week and preferably four or five days. "I'm not the only one who has this problem," he said. "Peter Revson is driving Formula One this year, too.

And Mark Donohue has a stock car ride and the Canadian-Amercian series." It has long been argued that by allowing the teams to squeeze that extra mile an hour or so from their racers with the extended practice periods that the races are more competitive. Andretti vociferously disagrees. "As far as the fans are concerned, it wouldn't make any difference in the show," he said. "Speed is relative. As long as everything is equal, the only ones who would notice a difference are those with a stopwatch." BARRING AN unforseen continuation of the rains that have closed Pocenoe International Raceway for six of the last seven days, there will be a lot of speed recorded on the 212-mile tri-oval today.

There are 45 drivers on the premises virtually chomping at the bit, including 16 who missed last Tuesday's session. USAC Director of Competition Dick King has scheduled practice from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.

daily through Wednesday, with time trials to begin at 11 A. M. on both Thursday and Friday. Saturday has been set aside as a "buffer" day in case inclement weather wipes out either qualifications day. Every entrant is guaranteed at least one chance to qualify.

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3rd. with new cvlinders $59.44 I 7' FRONT END PACKAGE We professionally Veteran Tommy Aaron, who matched Jamieson's 67 as the best round on this cool and cloudy day, was a distant second at 210 with one round left in the chase for the first prize of $30,000. JAMIESON, 215 and 5-foot-10, started the day with a three-stroke lead and ended with the biggest 54-hole margin on the tour this year. Doug Sanders slipped to a three-over-par 74 and headed a group of five tied for third at 211. Also at that figure were J.C.

Snead, Steve Oppermann, Bob Lunn and Bobby Nichols. NICHOLS HAD a 69, Lunn 68, Snead 73 and Oppermann 70 despite a triple-bogey six on the sixth hole. Billy Casper, with a 68, was one of five at 212. Defending champion Bruce Crampton of Australia managed only a 73 and was well back at 219. Jack Nicklaus, who won the U.

S.v Open last week, Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino and South African Gary Player are not competing. Jim Jamiesor 8-7-7 202 Tommy Aaron 78-65-67210 Steve Oppermann 69-72-70211 J. Snead 71-A7-7W911 Doug Sanders 71-66-74211 Bob Bobby Nichols i-unn 75-68-68211 Hale Irwin Billy Casper Lee Elder Jim Wiechers Labron R. H. Sikes Rod Funseth Dale Douglass Dick Rhyan Torn Shaw Bob Goalbv Tom Weiskopf David Charles Coody Kermit Zarlev.

Miller Barber Homero Biancas 72-70-69211 68-71-74-213 74-71-68213 71-72-70213 73-69-71213 69-73-71213 70-72-72214 74-71-70215 72-70-71215 Larry Wood Chi Chi Rodriguez 73-73-69215 Ray Floyd 71-73-71215 Johnny Miller 76-66-74216 Dave Stockton 71-74-71 216 Dutch 73-74-69216 Julius Boros 77-72-67216 a Joel Hirsch 75-71-70216 Bob Smith 76-70-70 216 Bob Barbarossa 70-76-70 216 Man Who Beat Hunter Defeated ELYRIA, O. Arturo Del-gado, who had upset South Carolina prison inmate Bobby Lee Hunter in the 1971 Pan-American Games, was defeated in the pro-Olympic Western Hemisphere Invitational Boxing Championships here Saturday. Delgado lost an unanimous decision to Gary Griffin, 19, of New Orleans in the 112-pound division. Herman Artis of Philadelphia won a split 125-pound decision over Jose Vellon of Puerto Rico. Alfonzo Zomoro of Mexico was the only non-United States boxer to win.

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Most cars. wheel cvlinders on wheels; arc linings, drums, repack mh 10-P0INT BRAKE OVERHAUL jjSSSSj" New linings and rebuilding 4 ll i Petty Defends Lone Star 500 Title 1 13 i' 'ft" bearings and inspect complete system. Drum-type brakes. Fords, Chevy Plymouths and American compacts. Jim holes in Western Open SIMMONS Pocono 500 to get ready to qualify your car so you can sit arcund and twiddle your thumbs for another two weeks before the race," he said.

"They say it's been done this way for 50 years and you can't fight traditon. I don't buy that. Out there they treat you like they're doing you a favor by letting you run in their race. Everywhere else that you go, it's a give-and-take operation. But not there.

It's their way or no way at all." Andretti cited Pocono's Friday decision to postpone time trials five days to this Thursday and Friday as an example. "You have any idea what the chances are of Indianapolis doing something like that to help the drivers, crews and mitted in the consolation. Castels averaged an unofficial 162 MPH. ROUEN, France. Name drivers Hill, Henri Pescarolo and John Surtees will be challenged by top Formula Two drivers in the 22d Rouen Formula Two Grand Prix.

Current Formula One leader Emerson Fittipaldi of Brazil, driving a Lotus, had the fastest qualifying time Friday, 114.500 MPH. Argentinian Fomula Two driver Calos Reutemann was two tenths of a second behind. iHWw mi. i. BALDING START LIVING TODAY (WITH YOUR NEW HEAD OF HAIR!) The "HAIR FLOW METHOD" succeeds where nature failed.

We add the finest quality European hair on your head that cannot be taken off IT BECOMES PERMANENTLY PART OF YOU! It's YOUR NEW HEAD OF HAIR. ALL WORK DONE by HAND ON PREMISES Also Specializing in Transplants Hairpieces Hairweaving TRANSWORLD HAIRMAKER Div. of Mr. Hoirmaicer Inc. 1 i i I I1 i .1 Others Good thru July BILL At The Crown races -lis, Schaefer the Indianapo-and California 500s.

Andretti realizes and accepts that fact. But he still considers it as an imposition on his time. "MY MAIN objection is that it costs me chances to race," Andretti said. "I'm a member of the Ferrari Formula One team but, because of conflicts mainly with these long practice and qualifying periods, I haven't driven in a Formula One event since the Spanish Grand Prix two months ago." Mario's main complaint is with the schedule at Indianapolis where he has spent every month of May for the last eight years. "Nobody will ever convince me that you need two weeks Joe Frasson (164.305) are on the second row of the 44-car field.

Petty, who has earned almost $100,000 in 15 races this season, won the event last year at 144.277 MPH. A 20-mile consolation race Saturday was won by Soapy Castels, who also will be in today's race. The 10 top Lone Star qualifiers were not per- Trenton Today Indianapolis-car drivers Kenyon, Gary and Merle Betten-hausen, Billy Vukovich, Jimmy Caruthers and Wally Dallenbach. Stock Race Tonight GRANTVILLE, Pa. Promoter Lindy Vicari and the Reading Stock Car Association will try again tonight for an 8 P.

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Bobby Allison, who joins Petty on the front line, qualified at 167.836 MPH. Bobby Isaac (155.005) and Midget Indy 100 at TRENTON, N. J. Mel Kenyon of Lebanor, will lead the fastest midget car field in history at Trenton Speedwav today, when the rescheduled Midget Indy 100 Championship takes the green flag at 2:30 P.M. Postponed by rail last Sunday after Kenyon placed the Walt Knepper Ses co-powered Edmunds midget cn the pole at 135.168 mph, the race will feature a varied field of US AC and ARDC drivers, including 6.00-13 mwM Blackwall Plus tax your WHITEWALLS and OTHER SIZES ALSO AT LOW, LOW PRICES WI'IIMIIMiilmftit WAYS TO CHARGE Drive nfor i Hats Off FREE to this great tire value tire air check by the people tire people YOUR CENTRAL PHILA.

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Pages Available:
3,845,541
Years Available:
1789-2024