The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, May 27, 1971, Image 7

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    Canadian Takes Purse
At 5-Mile Point Raceway
Lloyd Holt, St. Catherines,
Ontario, Canada, made his
Saturday trip to 5-Mile Point
Speedway a profitable one as he
wheeled his modified-sports-
man to a first place finish in the
30-lap feature event and
pocketed $500 for his efforts.
Holt slipped past Al Cole,
Binghamton, N.Y., on the 21st
circuit, after the Binghamton
speedster went a little too wide
in the fourth turn. Cole had led
from the opening green flag.
Pete Cordes, Sidney Center,
N.Y., also moved past Cole on
the same lap. Holt took the
checkered flag with Cordes less
than a quarter length back.
Pete Hulbert and Don
Pocono 500 Lists Lineup
Qf Special Racing Events
Gentlemen, start
engines,
That familiar cry will echo
from Pocono International
Speedway at Long Pond, Satur-
day, July 3 when 33 of the
world’s greatest automobile
drivers will compete in the
“Shaefer 500.”
Track manager, Bill Marvel,
expects a crowd of over 150,000
fans to witness the running of
whzi has been termed the
seC¥ad jewel in automobile’s
triple crown. The first, of
course, is the time honored
Indjgnapolis, which will be
staged this Saturday. The other
is the California 500-miler
scheduled at Ontario Motor
Speedway over the Labor Day
weekend.
Advance
reported at a press conference
held in Scranton last week at the
Hilton Inn, showed that some
25,000 reserved seats have
already been sold for this
classic race. And the orders for
choice ducats are coming in
every day as the day of the race
approaches.
Actually, there’ll be an entire
week of racing at Pocono with
the ogials expected to lure
recorl-breaking crowds to
watch the qualifying events.
The admission charge for the
trials low enough to permit
family groups to see the world’s
greatest drivers in action.
The Pocono International
Raceway is quite unique. Where
Indianapolis and Ontario
feature standard, four-cornered
ovals with high-banking,
Camp St.
your
Viekss sales,
Beagell, Binghamton; Norm
Norton, Clarks Summit; Larry
Catlin, South Waverly; Cliff
Norton, Derbry, N.Y.; Chuck
Akulis, Windsor, N.Y.; and Carl
Nagel, Kings Point, rounded out
the top ten finishers.
Dick Longstreet, Clarks
Summit, dominated the late
models for the second con-
secutive week, winning the 20-
lap feature by nearly half a lap.
Mike Colsten, Binghamton; Art
Riek, Johnson City, N.Y.; Len
Bailey, and Marv Goodwin,
Binghamton, completed the top
five.
Norm Norton, Pete Hulbert,
Chuck Akulis, and Chuck Mec-
Pocono is a tri-oval
arrangement, sporting banking
of 14, eight and seven degrees,
straights of 3740, 3055, and 1780
feet, and an overall length of 21,
miles.
Famed drivers Mario An-
dretti, Mim McElreath and Jim
Hurtubise are convinced lap
speeds in the neighborhoood of
180 miles per hour are possible.
Hurtibise puts it this way: “I
think the times at Pocono will
be a lot faster than Indy
because you only have three
corners to Indy’s four.”
The Pocono track is not
merely unique in its use of three
corners instead of the tradition-
al four. The raceway is an
entire planned complex,
having, in addition to the 2%
mile championship tri-oval, a
1.8 mile road course and a 3-
mile grand prix course.
Dr. Joseph Mattioli, chair-
man of the board of directors at
Pocono International Raceway,
is confident the new track will
give the economy of the entire
region a real shot in the arm.
Race fans have been making
hotel and motel reservations for
stays of a week and longer prior
to ‘the running of the 500.
Tickets for the race are on
sale at the Hilton Inn in Scran-
ton and the Square Record
Shop in Wilkes Barre. Prices
range from $30 to $15 for
reserved seats. General ad-
mission tickets will go on sale at
the track on the morning of the
race.
Those who follow the sports
beat have labled automobile
Andrew
Adds Mat Coaches
JM Sauve, Gettysburg
College head wrestling coach,
and Bob Fehrs, assistant wrest-
ling coach at Harvard Universi-
ty, will serve as staff instruc-
tors\eat Camp St. Andrew’s
clinics this summer, according
to John Reese, Wilkes College
coach and clinic director.
Sauve, a graduate of West
Chester State College, coached
the frosh teams at Maryland
and West Point before joining
that Leroy Alitz, Army’s varsity
coach, will be a member of the
staff.
Fehrs, an outstanding
wrestler at Michigan Universi-
ty, was a three-time Big Ten
champion. He was assistant
coagh at Pittsburgh before
goin, Harvard.
It was announced previously
. the Leroy Alitz, Army’s varsity
coach, will be a member of the
staff.
Camp St. Andrew wrestling
clinics are scheduled from Aug.
1 to 6 for wrestlers with limited
experience in the junior high
age group; and from Aug 15 to
20 for experienced wrestlers
desiring to learn advanced
techniques.
Regular camping periods
begin June 26 and continue for 8
weeks. Applications are now
available for all camp activities
including basketball and swim
clinics and the Boy Scout
program. Reservations should
be forwarded to the Rev.
Francis J. Houston, ‘camp
director, 36 S. Washington St.,
Wilkes-Barre.
located on State Street, in the Borough
Sheridan Chest of Drawe
~= | MARY SHEETS——Clerk
TERMS ~— CASH
PUBLIC
SALE
MILLVILLE, PA.
MONDAY, MAY 31, 1971
(MEMORIAL DAY)
STARTING AT 10 A. M. SHARP
The listing below is but part of the merchandise we will sell to the highest bidder
of Millville, Pa., known as the Frank
e
eller Form, 2 Drawer Cherry Night Stand
H rs in Ch
Back Sink Cupboard with drawer; Walnut Book Case; Walnut Wash Stand:
Oak Wash Stand; Very Old Hutch Table, Cork Pine; 2 Piece Pine Wall Cup-
board; Old Porch Swing; Slatted Porch Settee; Set of 6 High Back Kitchen
Chairs; Very Fine School Masters Desk; Very Old Butter Churn; Victorian
Chairs; Blanket Chest, and many, many other pieces too numerous to mention.
GLASSWARE AND CHINA
including Pattern Glass; Cranberry; Fine China and other interesting pieces.
MISCELLANEOUS [TEMS
including Mantle Clocks; 2 Wheel Cast Iron Coffee Grinder, Original Paint;
Primitive Slaw Cutter; Cow and Sheep Bells; Picture Frames; Cast Iron Trivets;
Old Kerosene Lamps; Gold Plated Candlelaubras; Gold Plated Candle Sticks;
Silver Candlelaubra; Old Pocket Watches, 14 Kt. Solid Gold Case; Old Jewelry
* | Fine Selection of Old Coins; Old Guns, including
Bottles; Pitcher and Bowel Sets, Plank Bottom Rocker Brass Bed
of other 0s.
and hundreds
This will be an outstal Sale, so Lun to anend.
'WELLIVER, STUBEN AND BACOR uctioneers
Refreshments and Goodies Served on the Grounds.
Smooth Bore Kentucky Rifle;
Daniels, Kirkwood, N.Y., won
preliminary events in the
modified-sportsman category,
while Marv Goodwin, Dick
Longstreet, Gary Beagell,
Binghamton, and Dave Vicks,
Tunkhannock, copped the late-
model prelims in the ten-event
action-packed program.
Saturday night, another twin-
bill program of modified-
sportsman and late models will
provide the action with
racetime set for 7:30 p.m.
Monday, May 31, the URC
Super Sprints will share the
card with the late models.
Racetime for the special
holiday show is 6:30 p.m.
racing as ‘the sport of the
seventies.”” Pocono Internation-
al Raceway backers hope it’s
nk
THE DALLAS POST, MAY 27, 1971
Brushed Paint, owned by Leon Emanuel, Dallas, who is shown in the
winner’s circle at right, paid $62.20 last week at Pocono Downs. The
trotter, driven by Al Ingram, figured in a $270 daily double.
for practice Saturday, June 1
and will be open daily from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. thru June 25.
Penn State Coach to Head
Lage Clinic at St. Andrew
Penn State University head The past season, Coach
On Saturday, June 26 and
Sunday, June 27, the drivers
will vie, in two action packed
days of qualifications, for one of
the 33 starting positions. Admis-
sion on practice days is 50 cents
per person and on qualifying
days the cost will be $2 per
person.
On Sunday, June 27, if you are
carrying a camera, you will be
admitted for $1 (half price), this
being Camera Day sponsored
by Kodak.
The public will be allowed to
park in the infield on all prac-
tice and qualifying days. On
race day the infield will be open
only to pedestrian traffic.
The Raceway parking lots
will be open to fans on Thurs-
“the sport not only of the seven-
ties but for years to come.
Many exciting events are
being planned to accompany
this history making event.
Starting with Saturday, June 19,
the opening day of the track, the
Luzerne Agency will have a
mayor’s breakfast, at which
many of the racing celebrities
will be in attendance. Following
the breakfast, a caravan will go
to the raceway for the opening
day ceremonies, and everyone
attending the breakfast will be
admitted to the raceway.
On Monday, June 21 at 12
noon, a luncheon and fashion
show will be held honoring the
drivers wives and guests at the
Penn Stroud Motor Inn in
cage coach, John Bach, will join
the Camp St. Andrew basketball
clinic staff for his third con-
secutive year, it was announced
by the Rev. Francis J. Houston,
campdirector.
Coach Bach, a former Boston :
Celtics star, served at Fordham
University as director of
athletics and basketball coach
for 18 years. He is a former
chairman of Madison Square
Garden NIT competition and :
served on the Olympic Selection
Committee.
Another returnee to this
season’s staff will be George
Raveling, assistant basketball
mentor at University of Mary-
land. George, a graduate of St.
Michael’s School for Boys,
captained the Villanova Univer-
sity squad his senior year. As a
Raveling’s Maryland frosh
team compiled a 16-0 record
with Mansfield’s - McMillan a
member of the squad. Local
cage fans remember Raveling
playing with high school all-star
teams and as a member of the
Wilkes-Barre Barons.
Three basketball clinics are
scheduled this season under the
direction of Jim Atherton,
Luzerne County Community
College coach. They will be
conducted the weeks of June 26-
July 2, July 3-9 and Aug 7-13, for
young boys, 12 years of age and
older, interested in becoming
better players.
Camp opens June 26 and
continues for eight weeks.
Reservations are now being
accepted for clinics and regular
KIBUIC
Stroudsburg. Fashions will be
modeled by the princesses of
the Pocono Laurel 500 Race
Festival.
The next big event will be the
Pocono Laurel 500 Race Fes-
tival Queens Ball, which will be
held Wednesday evening, June
23 at Mt. Airy Lodge. Mario An-
dretti will be on hand to crown
the queen and will be joined by
many of his cohorts from the
. racing fraternity.
On Monday, June 28, the
Schaefer 500 Celebrity Golf
Classic will be held at, and
hosted by, Le Chateau. Many of
the racing personnel, news
media members, and racing of-
ficials will join celebrities from
the sports and entertainment
world in this event. All proceeds
from the golf classic will go to
the United States Auto Club
Benevolent Fund. Representing
USAC, as hosts, are racing
drivers, Johnny Rutherford and
Lolyd Ruby.
On the evening of June 28, the
White Haven Industrial De-
velopment Agency will host a
dinner in honor of the racing
team that wins the covetted pole
position. The dinner will be held
at Le Chateau at 7 p.m. In addi-
tion to the dinner and award
presentation, a floor show will
be put on by the ‘‘Golddiggers.”
On Sunday, July 4 at 10 a.m.
the Schaefer 500 Victory Brun-
cheon will be held at Mt. Airy
Lodge. This informal affair will
be held to honor the driver and
winning team of this history
making event.
The track will officially open
day, July 1, for those who wish
to arrive early and avoid the
rush. Parking is free of charge.
For those having a group
coming by chartered bus, they
may request special parking
passes by writing William R.
Marvel, Sr. x
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Shavertown, Pa.
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BUICK
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camping periods by the Rev.
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Dickies may make
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SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS
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LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS
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$599
PANTS
STORE HOURS
DAILY 10 to 6 THURS.& FRI. TILL 9 P.M.
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BACK MOUNTAIN SHOPPING CENTER
SHAVERTOWN
3
PAGE SEVEN
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