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Archive for May, 2007

Indy 500 history

Posted by Trisha on May 25th, 2007

Straight from the 500’s website, here are the traditions associated with the indianapolis 500:

Since the inaugural race in 1911, the Indianapolis 500 has become steeped in rich tradition, one of the most alluring aspects of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

Here is the history of some of the most popular and enduring traditions of the “500,” written by Indianapolis Motor Speedway Historian Donald Davidson:

500 Festival Parade

The 500 Festival Parade took place for the first time in 1957. It, and several other related activities, largely came about following a series of newspaper editorials by local columnists over a two- or three-year period, who had witnessed the several-day celebration in advance of the Kentucky Derby.

“Back Home Again in Indiana”
Although there are reports that “Indiana,” as the song was originally titled when published in 1917, was played by a trackside brass band as Hoosier driver Howdy Wilcox ran out his final laps on the way to winning the 1919 “500,” it was not until 1946 that it was sung on race morning. James Melton, of the New York Metropolitan Opera Company, was a collector of classic cars, and was at one time president of the Antique Automobile Club of America. He supplied several of the vehicles which participated in a race-morning lap of classic automobiles around the track in 1946, and approximately 45 minutes before the start of the race, he sang “Indiana” with the Purdue University band over the public address system. It was so well received that he was invited back the following year, and in 1948, it was decided to “move it up” to its current slot in the order of the day, just prior to the firing of the engines. Among Melton’s better-known successors have been Mel Tormé, Vic Damone, Dinah Shore, Ed Ames, Peter Marshall, Dennis Morgan and Johnny Desmond, with popular Jim Nabors having missed only a handful of years since 1972.

Balloons Before the Start

It is believed that 1947 was the first year for the release of multi-colored balloons on race morning and that it was Tony Hulman’s wife, Mary Fendrich Hulman, who made the suggestion. By 1950, the release had been timed to coincide, as it does to this day, with the final notes of “Back Home Again In Indiana.”

Borg-Warner Trophy

The Borg-Warner Trophy, one of the most recognizable trophies in all of sports, has been awarded to the winner of every Indianapolis 500-Mile Race since 1936. Crafted out of sterling silver by Spaulding-Gorham of Chicago, it was unveiled at a dinner in New York in February 1936, featuring bas-relief sculptures of every “500” winner up until that time. The new winner has been added every year since, and in 1986 (the trophy’s 50th anniversary), the final space became filled. The solution for 1987 was to add a base, but this too became filled, and in 2004, an even larger version replaced it, this one with enough spaces to last through 2034. The only sculptured face not of a winning driver is that of the late Speedway owner Tony Hulman, whose likeness, in gold, was placed on the base in 1987.

Bump Day

This is a fairly recent term for the final day of qualifications. It is theoretically the day on which, once 33 cars have posted qualifying speeds, but the allotted time for the day has not yet expired, the only way for a participant to be able to join the field is to post a speed fast enough to eliminate or “bump” the slowest car currently still in. The term for “bumped” prior to World War II was “crowded out.” Technically, “bumping” could, and did, take place before the final day of qualifications. Under the new system introduced in 2005, “bumping” has taken on a slightly different meaning in that it can take place on every qualifying day.

Carb Day

Known for many years as “Carburetion Day,” and shortened only in fairly recent years simply to “Carb Day,” it refers to the day on which cars qualified for the starting field are given the opportunity to practice in “Race Day trim,” as opposed to the less economical setups required for out-and-out speed during time trials. A major portion of this used to involve adjustment to the carburetors, but even after the introduction of fuel injection in the late 1940s, the original term “carburetion runs” continued to be used. For the record, the stock-block Ford-powered Lotus cars of Jim Clark and Dan Gurney in 1963 were the last to actually usecarburetors on Carburetion Day.

Gasoline Alley

This is a nickname for the Garage Area in which the racing cars are housed at event time. It originally referred only to the one corner where the fuel depot was located, but over a period of years, it came to be applied to the entire complex. It seems to have first come into use sometime in the 1920s and possibly may have been the result of a newspaper strip cartoon of the same name which debuted in August 1919.

Pace Car

With a huge field of 40 cars having met the qualifying requirements for starting the inaugural Indianapolis 500 in 1911, track founder Carl Fisher reasoned that this might be too many for the typical standing starts then in vogue. He believed it would be safer instead to lead them around on one unscored lap at approximately 40 or 45 mph and then release them to the flagman as he pulled into the pits. Now commonplace at motor racing events throughout the United States, this is believed to have been the very first mass rolling start for any automobile race anywhere in the world and quite possibly the first use of a pace car for a major event.

Pagoda

The Bombardier Pagoda, begun in 1998 and completed in 2000, replaced the glass-and-steel Master Control Tower, which was built during the winter of 1956-57. Prior to that time, a Japanese-style pagoda had occupied the spot. In fact, there were two of them, the first being built in time for the 1913 “500” and serving through 1925. It housed the press, timing and scoring, prominent officials and VIP guests and, toward the end of its run, a radio broadcast booth. Because it stood fairly close to the edge of the track, it was decided, for safety reasons, to replace it for 1926 with a newer version located a few yards farther back. The current building, which has 10 stories and rises to the height of a 13-story building, has a subtle suggestion of the old pagodas designed into it for reasons of nostalgia.

The Greatest Spectacle in Racing

It was on Race Day 1955 when the world heard this famous phrase for the first time. While made famous by Sid Collins, chief announcer for the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network broadcast of the “500,” it was actually a young lady who coined it. Dating back into the mid-1920s, radio broadcasts of the “500” typically consisted of a few minutes of coverage of the start and the finish, with brief updates in between, aired every 15 or 30 minutes. When the track created its own network in 1952, this same format was continued. In 1953, however, history was made when the race was covered in its entirety, with no breaks at all except for commercials. When representatives of the skyrocketing number of subscribing stations were asked for comments and feedback, the most common request was that their engineers could be alerted to an impending commercial break by use of a standard “out cue.” The request was turned over to the sales staff of Indianapolis radio station WIBC, the network’s “flagship” station, and it was a female copywriter in her early 20s named Alice Greene who suggested the enduring classic, “Stay tuned to the Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

The Yard of Bricks

The Yard of Bricks is another nostalgic link with the past. After the track’s original surface of crushed rock and tar was abandoned after only a few days of use in August 1909, it was replaced during that fall by 3.2 million street-paving bricks, trucked in by rail from the western part of the state. Approximately 90 percent were Culver Blocks, manufactured by the Wabash Valley Clay Company of Veedersburg (near the Illinois border), the remainder being supplied by other firms in the same general area. The bricks were laid on their side in a bed of sand, staggered in rows and separated by about 3/8th of an inch on either side so that mortar could be poured between them for strengthening. In the spring of 1936, patches of asphalt were applied to the rougher portions of the turns. Over the next couple of years, more and more asphalt was applied, so that by the time of the 1939 race, only about 650 yards of the main straight were still of bricks. This portion survived for another 22 years until October 1961, when it too was covered over, leaving exposed only 3 feet for the entire width of the track at the start/finish line. The entire 2½ miles has been resurfaced several times since then, with a fresh batch of the original bricks being inlaid at the start/finish line once the new surface has had time to harden.

Winner’s Drink of Milk

Three-time “500” winner Louis Meyer regularly drank buttermilk on a hot day, as his mother had told him it would refresh him, and he consumed some in Victory Lane as a matter of course after earning his third “500” victory in 1936. A dairy industry executive happened to see a photograph of this in the following day’s newspaper and, believing it to be regular milk, vowed to make sure this would be repeated in the coming years. Milk was part of the Victory Lane ceremony between 1937 and 1941 and then again in 1946, the first year after World War II, but disappeared between 1947 and 1955. The tradition was revived in 1956 and continues to this day.

Winner’s Wreath

Long used in Grand Prix racing, the winner’s wreath at Indianapolis appears to have debuted in 1960, when a wreath featuring several exotic-looking, dark-yellow and brown flowers was placed on the shoulders of Jim Rathmann. A garland of white and red carnations of the type normally associated with horse racing was placed around the shoulders of A. J. Foyt in 1961, and in 1962, Rodger Ward wore a wreath not too dissimilar from those seen today. Underwritten by Borg-Warner Corporation, the wreaths were the creation of William J. “Bill” Cronin, a longtime Indianapolis florist, who was at one time a floral consultant for the parades of the Rose Bowl, Cotton Bowl and the 500 Festival. He died in 1989. For most of the last 30 years, the wreath has featured 33 ivory-colored Cymbidium orchids with burgundy tips, plus 33 miniature checkered flags, intertwined with red, white and blue ribbons.

Yellow Shirts

From the time the Indianapolis Motor Speedway opened in 1909 until immediately after World War II, all events at the track were policed by the Indiana National Guard. Shortly after Tony Hulman purchased the track in November 1945, one of his right-hand men, Joseph Quinn of the Clabber Girl Baking Powder Company, set up a Board of Safety which sought input from all of the major law enforcement agencies. By 1948, the track’s own Safety Patrol had been established, featuring dark-blue uniforms and pith helmets, those of department heads painted gold, and the rank and file, silver. The long-sleeved shirts, made of wool, were extremely uncomfortable to wear, both on a hot day and when soaked with rain. In the early 1970s, some of the senior staff members switched on weekends to considerably more comfortable short-sleeved yellow shirts, while golden plastic “bump” or “batting” helmets replaced the pith helmets. By 1975, all of the blue uniforms had disappeared completely; baseball caps had replaced the bump helmets and the term “yellow shirt” had come into vogue.

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Carb Day!

Posted by Trisha on May 25th, 2007

We are inching ever closer to the 91st running of the Indianapolis 500, the Greatest Spectacle in Racing. I love the Indy 500. There really is no greater tradition than this, at least not for us Hoosiers. I remember rushing home from church on that particular Sunday and curling up on the couch with my dad to watch the race. We had our favorites that we always rooted for: Andretti, Foyt, Fittipaldi, Luyendyk, and Unser. There were several years when we got to see our favorite drivers win the Indianapolis 500.

There’s just something about the pomp and circumstance surrounding the 500 that excites me. My freshman year in college, I was a member of the Purdue All-American Marching Band. Every year, Purdue is the host band. That year, we were celebrating our 80th anniversary of being the host band for the 500. We marched in the 500 parade, and I assure you, the thrill of marching in that parade far outweighed the fact that I thought I was going to pass out by the end, lol. I still don’t know how I made it back to the bus! Marching onto the track on race day, standing there palying music, being the backdrop for Jim Nabors while he sang his traditional “Back home again in Indiana,” scaling the wall to get out of the way of the cars as they roared down the track, it was all such a thrill. I’ve never experienced anything like it before. Being there is so much better than seeing it on tv.

So today was carb day, the last practice before the big race. Today’s top posted speed was 225 MPH, posted by Tony Kanaan.

And now, without further ado, here is the starting lineup:

IndyCar Series
91st Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Sunday, May 27, 2007
PROVISIONAL STARTING LINEUP

1. (3) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Honda, 225.817
2. (11) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Honda, 225.757
3. (27) Dario Franchitti, Dallara-Honda, 225.191
4. (9) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 225.122
5. (6) Sam Hornish Jr., Dallara-Honda, 225.109
6. (10) Dan Wheldon, Dallara-Honda, 224.641
7. (12) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Honda, 224.410
8. (7) Danica Patrick, Dallara-Honda, 224.076
9. (26) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 223.299
10. (2) Tomas Scheckter, Dallara-Honda, 222.877
11. (39) Michael Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 222.789
12. (8) Scott Sharp, Dallara-Honda, 223.875
13. (17) Jeff Simmons, Dallara-Honda, 223.693
14. (20) Ed Carpenter, Dallara-Honda, 223.495
15. (14) Darren Manning, Dallara-Honda, 223.471
16. (15) Buddy Rice, Dallara-Honda, 222.826
17. (55) Kosuke Matsuura, Dallara-Honda, 222.595
18. (22) A.J. Foyt IV, Dallara-Honda, 222.413
19. (4) Vitor Meira, Dallara-Honda, 222.333
20. (02) Davey Hamilton, Dallara-Honda, 222.327
21. (5) Sarah Fisher, Dallara-Honda, 221.960
22. (99) Buddy Lazier, Dallara-Honda, 221.380
23. (24) Roger Yasukawa, Dallara-Honda, 222.654
24. (33) John Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 221.756
25. (50) Al Unser Jr., Dallara-Honda, 220.876
26. (98) Alex Barron, Dallara-Honda, 220.471
27. (19) Jon Herb, Dallara-Honda, 220.108
28. (21) Jaques Lazier, Panoz-Honda, 219.409
29. (23) Milka Duno, Dallara-Honda, 219.228
30. (25) Marty Roth, Dallara-Honda, 218.922
31. (77) Roberto Moreno, Panoz-Honda, 220.299
32. (91) Richie Hearn, Dallara-Honda, 219.860
33. (31) Phil Giebler, Panoz-Honda, 219.637

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42nd Annual Zoo Parade today!

Posted by Trisha on May 19th, 2007

Everyone loves a parade. Especially a parade with some of your favorite Erie Zoo animals! Get out your lawn chairs and pick a spot along State Street because it’s the 42nd annual Erie Zoo Parade! This year the parade is scheduled for Saturday, May 19th starting at 10 a.m.

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Speaking of comfort zones…just call me coach!

Posted by Trisha on May 15th, 2007

In case I didn’t say it, last night really was a blast. And, if you read my post last night about the blogger meetup, you know that I was out of my comfort zone, which is good for me.

I have outdone that by a mile today, though. I also mentioned yesterday that we had a baseball parents meeting because there weren’t enough coaches. That problem was remedied there, however, as two dads signed up as coaches. We get a call today around 1 pm this afternoon from the west side commissioner. Apparently the dad who signed up can’t do it “full time” because of his work schedule. He can, however, be an assistant and help where needed. She knew that dh couldn’t do it because of his schedule. So, she asked me.

I must be completely honest here. I know very little about baseball. Just enough to keep up with a game. I am certainly not the person to ask to teach a bunch of 6 year old how to bat, pitch, catch, etc. And, um…my leftie? I was hoping someone else would be able to teach him what he’ll need to know for baseball, since no one else in our house is left handed.

I can’t, however, leave a team full of kids with no coach. No coach= No baseball. The commissioner was very frustrated that none of the parents were willing to step up and help, even a little bit. I guess because I volunteered to be the parent rep, she saw promise in me. She has assured me I don’t need to know anything about baseball (she said she doesn’t know very much, either). And, with the prospect of other dads and such around (I can have 4 assistants) to help, I decided to agree to be the team coach.

Nothing like baptism by fire, huh? And now it’s off to the bookstore to find a Coaching Baseball for Dummies book….LOL.

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Busy, busy day…blogger meetup fun!

Posted by Trisha on May 14th, 2007

The morning of my day wasn’t all that busy. I spent it working on a website. Then i worked out and went to pick up the twins from school. Upon getting out of school, one of their classmates mom’s approached me. She was “late” getting birthday party invites out and wanted to know if Ryan and Zach could come to a birthday party today from 4-8. Uh. Okay. That gives me 90 minutes to get three kids home, changed, get to the store to buy a present and get to Splash Lagoon for the party.

We already had a meeting tonight at 6:30 for baseball. We were told there was no coach for the boys’ team and there was an emergancy parent meeting to discuss what would happen if no one volunteered. While we were standing there, about 4 people signed up as coaches, so the meeting didn’t need to happen afterall.

Anyway, the boys and I had to leave the party before it really got started. They didn’t have the party room until 6, and they went to the arcade at 5:30, which is when we had to leave. I felt very bad about not being able to stay longer, but there just was no way i could work around it. I didn’t know how long the baseball meeting was going to last and although I could have left the twins there and come back to get them at 8, i just didn’t feel comfortable doing that. We have never been to Splash Lagoon before. They did great on the slides and such, but I just wasn’t comfortable leaving them there for a couple of hours without me. No fear of them drowning, as they had on full body float suits. They were upset that they couldn’t stay for cake, and I wish that I could have worked it out.

After the baseball meeting, we went to the Erie bloggers meetup at Fox & Hound. This was my first meetup and I must say, I was more than apprehensive. I do not make friends very easily, and I’m always nervous about meeting new people. However, I was pleasantly surprised. It wasn’t that bad (not that I expected it to be). I just don’t like being out of my comfort zone, and tonight, I was to the moon as far as that was concerned. But, I’m here, so I survived, lol. It was good for me :)

It was great to meet everyone, and finally put (some) faces to names. There was some great conversation, too. I mostly stood around and listened, but once in awhile I did chit chat with people. It was definitely a great time. I do wish I had had my camera. I pulled it out of my purse before we left for the baseball meeting, wouldn’t it figure.

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Happy Mother’s Day!

Posted by Trisha on May 13th, 2007

Happy Mother’s Day to all you moms out there.

myspace layouts, myspace codes, glitter graphics

Helio Castroneves on the pole!

Posted by Trisha on May 12th, 2007

Today was pole day for the Indy 500. The first 11 spots of the field were filled today. Apparently, through most of the day, drivers were chasing Dario Franchitti, the odds-on favorite to win the IndyCar series championship. Only two drivers were able to post speeds faster than Franchitti, who’s average posted speed was 225.191. Tony Kanaan posted an average speed of 225.757 and Helio Castroneves posted an average speed of 225.817, landing him the highly coveted pole position. Tony Kanaan posted the fastest single lap speed of the day, at 225.996, but it was not enough to pass Castroneves.

I like all 3 of those drivers, and can not wait to see them in action on May 27th. For you Danica Patrick fans, she qualified 8th with an average speed of 224.076.

Here’s the top 11, as they qualified today:

Pos. Car # Driver 1st Lap 2nd Lap 3rd Lap 4th Lap Average
1 3 Helio Castroneves 225.920 225.652 225.825 225.870 225.81725
2 11 Tony Kanaan 225.882 225.996 225.794 225.358 225.757
3 27 Dario Franchitti 225.078 225.289 225.318 225.079 225.191
4 9 Scott Dixon 225.159 225.323 225.032 224.973 225.122
5 6 Sam Hornish Jr. 225.403 225.415 225.897 224.043 225.109
6 10 Dan Wheldon 224.668 224.797 224.674 224.425 224.641
7 12 Ryan Briscoe 224.771 224.369 224.361 224.139 224.410
8 7 Danica Patrick 224.175 224.152 224.044 223.934 224.076
9 26 Marco Andretti 223.308 223.902 223.205 223.391 223.299
10 2 Tomas Scheckter 222.864 222.964 222.907 222.773 222.877
11 39 Michael Andretti 222.569 222.526 222.946 223.116 222.789
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Reality

Posted by Trisha on May 12th, 2007

I don’t remember what I was listening to the other day…it may have been Glenn Beck, it may have been Mike and Mike in the morning on ESPN radio…but whomever it was said something that struck me and really made me think about it. They said that your reality is what you have grown up with. The more I thought about that statement, the more true it was. There really is no greater lesson in life than life itself. We grow up and form our reality around things that we know, things that we did growing up, or things that we saw.

I have formed my views around what I grew up with. I was raised in a rather conservative town. I didn’t know that then, but looking back now, I can see that. I grew up in a neighborhood where you didn’t have to worry about cars being stolen, or houses broken into. All the adults knew all the kids. We rode our bikes all over the neighborhood and our parents didn’t have to worry about us, or wonder where we were. One call of our name and we were home, even if the message was being passed on from kid to kid. We all knew.

I was a latchkey kid for a few years (though not all) but my parents didn’t have to worry about what might happen. Our neighbors kept an eye out for us. And they trusted me. They knew that I knew what to do and what NOT to do. And they knew they could trust the people around us. We were taught to respect adults, and people in general. Manners were important. We were also taught to respect property, whether ours or someone elses.

I suppose that we all are the way we are due to the way we were raised. We either strive to be who our parents were (or at the very least, similar…even if we won’t admit it out loud), or we strive to be nothing like who our parents were. Either way, it’s a result of our reality.

I may come back and revisit this topic as I continue to ponder it.

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Been needing to do this for awhile now

Posted by Trisha on May 12th, 2007

Just haven’t gotten around to it until now. The change over to a new computer meant I lost all of my old outlook e-mail, where this info was stored.

Awhile back, I linked my blog and my business website to a site called 5 Minutes for Mom. It is a site run by twin work-at-home moms who help other moms promote their websites. Listing your site is free, but they do ask for a review of one of their sites. Here is that review.

Pedal Cars and Retro Collectibles

This was a delightful store to search. it really took me back to my childhood. My favorite thing on this site was seeing:

I loved my Big Wheel! I’m so glad they have started making them again.

If you are like me, you probably collect something. I collect apples…it’s the teacher in me. But my mom, for a long time, collected Coca Cola memorbilia. They have some neat thinsg. Take, for instance, this:

They have a lot of pedal cars (including a Coke pedal car). There are red ones, pink ones, a black police pedal car, a fire truck pedal car, a John Deere Pedal car, even a Dale Earnhardt pedal car.

But it isn’t just toys, either. They have retro phones, gas pumps, pedal planes, clocks, juke boxes, record players, consoles, stack-o-matics, music boxes and so much more! If you are looking for a retro collectible, this is the place to find it. Check them out!

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Opera pictures

Posted by Trisha on May 10th, 2007

I promised pics of the twins’ opera performance, and here they are:

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