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racingfan1
02-22-2019, 10:24 AM
These appear to be the original typed minutes of the Outboard commission meeting from the APBA Annual meeting which was held in Chicago. The writing on the bottom of the 2nd page is in Charlotte Queens' handwriting.

racingfan1
02-22-2019, 11:20 AM
Here are the minutes..

racingfan1
02-23-2019, 08:50 AM
Here are the minutes from the 1972 meeting

racingfan1
02-23-2019, 09:00 AM
Here are the 1973 meeting minutes

Master Oil Racing Team
02-23-2019, 09:14 AM
These minutes of the commission meetings are fascinating to read Dale. I didn't see where the 1972 meeting was held, and was surprised that they could not get a quorum. I will read the Propeller write up by the PRO Chairman in Propeller to find out. The only thing I could think of was that it may have been on the west coast and there was some very bad weather that caused many of the commissioners in the East and Midwest not being able to get there although the Queens, Pop Augustine, Bill Fales and others were able to make it. I didn't realize that the E class was already being brought up. Also, I wonder what would have happened regarding changing class displacement from CI to CC's if a quorum would have been present. It's unclear that class designations were part of that plan. It wasn't until a couple of years or so later that CC's became the primary measure but it came at the same time that class designations were changed i.e Class A became 250cc, B 350cc etc. I also noted the talk about bringing in NOA and AOF drivers. Clyde did not help NOA transform to APBA and held on for another year, plus. The last Roostertail I received was from 1974 and was just some OPC stuff and maybe waterskiing. Only a few thin pages.

I wrote this too soon after you posted the first set, but didn't submit it until the above posts, so I was going to delete it, but I forgot where Bill Kurps told me where to go to delete it. So I'll just leave it with some of the commentary regarding proposed class changes and the time when NOA went down and Drivers moved to APBA. Incidentally, look how well AOF survived even though it could have been sucked up into APBA just as it was getting started.

racingfan1
02-23-2019, 09:14 AM
Here are the minutes from the DePue meeting and APBA National commission meetings.

racingfan1
02-23-2019, 09:21 AM
Miutes continued

racingfan1
02-23-2019, 09:32 AM
These minutes of the commission meetings are fascinating to read Dale. I didn't see where the 1972 meeting was held, and was surprised that they could not get a quorum. I will read the Propeller write up by the PRO Chairman in Propeller to find out. The only thing I could think of was that it may have been on the west coast and there was some very bad weather that caused many of the commissioners in the East and Midwest not being able to get there although the Queens, Pop Augustine, Bill Fales and others were able to make it. I didn't realize that the E class was already being brought up. Also, I wonder what would have happened regarding changing class displacement from CI to CC's if a quorum would have been present. It's unclear that class designations were part of that plan. It wasn't until a couple of years or so later that CC's became the primary measure but it came at the same time that class designations were changed i.e Class A became 250cc, B 350cc etc. I also noted the talk about bringing in NOA and AOF drivers. Clyde did not help NOA transform to APBA and held on for another year, plus. The last Roostertail I received was from 1974 and was just some OPC stuff and maybe waterskiing. Only a few thin pages.

I wrote this too soon after you posted the first set, but didn't submit it until the above posts, so I was going to delete it, but I forgot where Bill Kurps told me where to go to delete it. So I'll just leave it with some of the commentary regarding proposed class changes and the time when NOA went down and Drivers moved to APBA. Incidentally, look how well AOF survived even though it could have been sucked up into APBA just as it was getting started.

Wayne , I originally wasn't going to post these for that reason , that you can find them in Propeller , but i thought it was neat to have the original typed minutes , especially for those who don't have the Propellers. It looks like I have them through 1976. Sorry about the lag time between posts but it takes a while to to scan , resize and then try and get the pages in order.

Master Oil Racing Team
02-23-2019, 10:27 AM
It was my mistake on timing Dale, not lag time. It's my mistake because I know you well enough by now that I know there will be followups very close on. I just wasn't thinking. I been feeling worse than a maggot in a bucket of honey for almost two weeks and I felt so good this morning, that I couldn't hold back and just jumped right in.

I'm very glad you're posting these Dale. I called up Joe a little bit ago and said "Dale is posting stuff right now that almost no Pro drivers have ever seen." Joe asked, "What's that?" I told him about minutes of the commission meetings and he said "Oh, yeah..yeah..yeah!".

I found that the 1972 meeting was in North Hollywood, and there was never a quorum gathered. Don't know if it was weather related, or too rich for some commissioners to attend, but hopefully Ralph Donald will fill us in. The rest of the commissioners were polled to pass or reject any changes to the rules. You keep on posting what you have because it is some of the behinds the scenes information almost nobody has.

Master Oil Racing Team
02-23-2019, 02:41 PM
As I read over minutes of the 1974 commissioners meeting held at DePue, I noticed a "Mr. Baldwin" made a comment about the probationary E class and I thought that I was not even going to be on the Racing Commission until the New Orleans meeting in November, and I did not even remember attending that meeting. Then it dawned on me. I had just started dating Anne Finkl and was not about to use our limited time together to go to some meeting. That was my Dad Baldy making those comments.

Here are some of the speakers at the annual meeting. I sized this as large as I think I can get away with , but don't know how big they will be for identification.

Master Oil Racing Team
02-23-2019, 09:33 PM
I have scanned copies from a safety presentation by John A. Langley to the Safety & Regatta Management Commission (Members only) 5:00 P.M. Hawaiian Room . This was Wednesday November 20 1974. If you remember the earlier minutes from 1972 you will note that there was controversy regarding the full face helmet. It was in the notes that the full face was "bad". There had been some neck injuries purported to have been caused by what was called "Bucketing" i.e. like the helmet scooping up water at speed, thus jerking the head and neck from the body. There was a lot going on back and forth about this. Bell Helmet had been a sponsor and advertised in Propeller as long as I can remember. My first helmet was a Bell because off an ad I saw in Roostertail. Bob Nordskog , inboard/tunnel/ offshore racer and publisher of Powerboat Magazine had someone develop a prototype helmet that would protect the skull yet not be too heavy, and not have surfaces that the water could snatch and trip the helmet. Most of the presentation examines different ways a helmet could hurt a driver, and it is very true. I have seen that most drivers would wear their legs straps loose, very loose or some have the cut off. All the problems I read in the presentation causing helmet problems were a result on improper cinching up life jackets, and most importantly legs straps. I know from personal experience. If not for cinching up leg straps.....I would not have been a BRF member...or have ever been remembered as a boat racer...or ever having my wife as a pit cheerleader. They might have found me a few days later when the San Jacinto River dumped out where the Bayshore boat club was. The presentation was six months prior to my accident, but I was already very safety conscious and did all I could to make sure all our stuff was safe, and had a good electronic safety cut out. What happened to me and my neck was not "bucketing" but I think was from the weight of the helmet. I stuffed at about 90 and so the helmet must have pulled forward, then instantly after compressed back onto my head like a bullet hitting the water first.

I need to talk to Alan Ishii because he was the one who tested the helmet that Nordskog commissioned to be built . There was a Powerboat article all around the design and building of this helmet. I talked about it with Alan many years ago, but I want to get it straight to address this safety presentation.

Every officiating member that attended this conference got a package that included this report, and in reading it the report was written as if was presented at a general assembly but it was only presented at the closed meeting as mentioned above. I always read everything I need to, and as my first time as a Racing Commissioner I'm sure I read that, But we never got the presentation in person, and I don't think any of the implementations regarding Life Support Systems Committee, local or regional safety guys or anything like that were ever implemented. I know for sure there was never any follow up, because I was a safety guy. We did what we needed to do safety wise in Lone Star.

The one paragraph that really struck me most though was why John Langley wondered why so many accidents were attributed by local officials as "driver error." I had one dealing with John Langley and it was basically a lapdog cop out"

Master Oil Racing Team
02-23-2019, 09:38 PM
I pushed the wrong button. Here are the copies of the minutes.

I should have asked Dale how to do this, but it looks like I should have scanned the last page first, Too late. To read in order, start at the bottom and work up.

Master Oil Racing Team
02-25-2019, 06:57 PM
A very providential or maybe heaven sent event occurred as a result of the New Orleans meeting. A group of I think mostly outboarders, but maybe some inboard (have to look back) formed a plan, informally or formally I don't know, to run for office and take over from the stale, old guys that had been running APBA divisions. They wanted to move forward, improve racing and get modern thoughts into how to make racing better. Increase the pace....not sit back and rest on the old laurels. These guys termed themselves the "Young Turks". They planned to get the vote out full force, and as far as I know they were 100 percent successful in each office that they contested. I'm not sure, but I think this "Young Turk" movement took over at this convention. It might have been 1973, but I'm pretty sure it was 1974. Ron Hill might remember. This is the list that I can recall off the top of my head that came into power in 1974 in New Orleans. Rick Sandstrom, Mike Jones, Fred Miller, Wil Pergande, I think Jon Stone, and another I can't remember right now. As a council member my Dad Baldy met all these guys, and as a result I met most of them too. One was Wil Pergande a top Modified driver from Wisconsin. This is the story I alluded to at the beginning.

I don't recall the name of the highly successful company that Wil Pergande was a part of, but they had held a company meeting in New Orleans right before the APBA Nationnal Meeting. The meeting over, Wil's two partners were flying back to Wisconsin. I don't think it was a private charter, but instead a company jet they were flying back in. Wil stayed in New Orleans to attend the national meeting and take the helm at his new position in the APBA hierarchy. After taking off, the private jet went down in Lake Poncentrain and Wil's two partners were killed. I was a devastating blow to his company. He recovered and everything prospered, but what an ordeal to go through having just come off a victory. I only saw him once more in person a couple of years later where he set a D Mod Kilo record.

racingfan1
03-01-2019, 08:50 PM
Here is the minutes of the Pro commission meeting held at the Outboard Nationals in Winona MN.