厕所强奸

厕所强奸 - National Hot Rod Association

'Jungle Clare' Sanders

19 Feb 2016
Phil Burgess, National Dragster Editor
DRAGSTER Insider
Clare Sanders, then and now

By 1969, the Funny Car class was in full bloom and contested at three 厕所强奸 national events. After its debut at the 1966 World Finals, the fledgling class was showcased in 1967 at the Springnationals in Bristol, Tenn., and the U.S. Nationals, which were won, respectively, by Tommy Grove and Doug Thorley. 厕所强奸 held no Funny Car races in 1968 but returned with three in 1969: the Winternationals, Springnationals, and U.S. Nationals. The latter two were both won by Danny Ongais in Mickey Thompson鈥檚 Mach I, but the 1969 season opener was won by 27-year-old Clare Sanders, at the wheel of 鈥淛ungle Jim鈥 Liberman鈥檚 Chevy II.

Sanders, now 74, and the beautifully restored flopper were both at this year鈥檚 Circle K 厕所强奸 Winternationals as part of 厕所强奸鈥檚 50 years of Funny Car celebration. Sanders was warmly greeted by SoCal鈥檚 famously nostalgic fans and took part in a panel discussion Saturday with fellow former flopper pilots Don Prudhomme, Kenny Bernstein, Ed McCulloch, Al Segrini, and Tom Prock. I caught up with him earlier this week to reminisce about his turn in the Pomona spotlight.

It was a long road to the Pomona winner鈥檚 circle from Sanders鈥 childhood in Alaska, where his father was in civil service and the military. His family later moved to the lower 48, and it was in Washington where Sanders began racing in 1960, partnering with mechanic Jim St. Clair on a number of cars while he was attending college in Idaho. When the Christmas Tree began replacing the flag starter, Sanders became especially adept at matching the rhythm of the five-bulb countdown and gained a reputation as a 鈥渓eaver.鈥

Sanders and St. Clair moved to San Jose, Calif., and the hotbed of Northern California racing in 1963-64. Fate smiled on the duo when St. Clair met Jack Groner, a retired businessman looking for 鈥渁 little excitement鈥 in his life. Groner had a thick wallet and Sanders and St. Clair a head full of dreams; it was the perfect match. Interestingly, their first endeavor as J&J Enterprises in 1965 was not a race car but a liquid traction compound for drag racing that replaced the arduous task of applying and 鈥渂rooming in鈥 powdered wood rosin to the track surface. St. Clair came up with the mix, which combined a synthetic rosin, methyl isobutyl ketone, and toluene. Groner figured out how to mix it all together, and Sanders, who also had some knowledge of chemistry, came up with the very 鈥60s name: 鈥淏oss Bite.鈥

鈥淚t was the first of its kind and really popular, especially for the first injected Funny Car-style of cars that had a lot more power than the tracks could handle,鈥 recalls Sanders. 鈥淲e鈥檇 either spray the track or the drivers would paint it onto their tires. It was very popular, and the company became very successful; the money was really rolling in. We had a big bank account and sat down one day and said, 鈥榃ell, do we want to keep building Boss Bite or do we want to go racing?鈥 We all voted to go racing. We cashed everything in and went racing.鈥

Courtesy Clare Sanders Collection

Their first car, dubbed Lime Fire for its factory-paint color, was a huge hit. Built to stock dimensions and retaining somewhat of a street-car resemblance 鈥 down to the real chrome trim 鈥 as desired by money man Groner, the Barracuda was once called 鈥淭he World鈥檚 Most Beautiful Funny Car." Using the popular Logghe chassis as inspiration, they built their own chassis and fitted it with a 392 Chrysler backed to a Torqueflite transmission. The show-car-worthy entry, towed to the races behind Groner鈥檚 Cadillac, not only won in its debut at an 厕所强奸 divisional meet at Southern California鈥檚 Carlsbad Raceway 鈥 running in Super eliminator because Funny Car was still not widely accepted as a class unto itself 鈥 but also caught the eye of Hot Rod magazine photographers at the event, who featured the car in their December 1967 issue, further gaining them popularity and bookings.

Jim听Liberman, and Brutus, 1965; he was barely out of his teens.

The trio had been sharing shop space with Funny Car pioneer Lew Arrington and his new driver, a kid named Russell James Liberman, a transplanted Pennsylvania-born high school dropout who was building headers at Goodie鈥檚 Speed Shop in San Jose. Despite being barely out of his teens, Liberman already was driving wild cars like the injected-nitro Hercules Nova, Arrington鈥檚 blown-on-nitro Brutus GTO, and, ultimately, his own Goodies-sponsored Chevy II, in which he earned his memorable 鈥淛ungle Jim鈥 nickname for his wild, on-track performances. They all became fast friends, and when the Lime Fire was ready, they toured together, along with NorCal-based Don Williamson and his Hairy Canary Plymouth Valiant.

鈥 鈥楯ungle鈥 was always a little ahead of us; he was a sharp guy,鈥 Sanders recalled fondly. 鈥淗e was a racer, 100 percent; you could tell it and feel it. He was good in the car and good at getting sponsors. He did all of the things that we all tried to emulate. As much as he鈥檚 known for his showmanship, in my opinion, what he did best was win races.鈥

The Lime Fire ran hard 鈥 at one pointing posting a 7.71 at Orange County Int鈥檒 Raceway, at the time the quickest pass in class history, according to Sanders 鈥 and scored a runner-up at the 1968 AHRA Winternationals at Beeline Dragway outside of Phoenix, finishing second after losing the driveshaft in the final against Eddie Schartman. By late 1968, the thin-tube Lime Fire chassis, built for speed and not the long-haul grind of match racing, was on its last legs, and Liberman, with his popularity growing virtually by the week, decided to add a second car 鈥 pretty much unprecedented at the time 鈥 to keep up with match race demand. He looked no further than his traveling buddy Sanders, who wasted no time in accepting the offer.

鈥淚 worked on Jim鈥檚 crew while the second car was being built, and we were at a match race in Suffolk, Va., one night, and he caught me totally off guard when he said, 鈥榊ou know, I鈥檝e never seen my car make a run. Why don鈥檛 you drive it tonight?鈥 I put on my firesuit with his helmet goggles, and we beat Malcolm Durham that evening with a new track record,鈥 Sanders recalled.

The new car, with a Logghe chassis, Fiberglass Ltd. Chevy II body, and supercharged 427 Chevy power, was a twin to Liberman鈥檚 car, with the exception of an inch-and-a-half engine setback for better traction on the more marginal tracks on Sanders鈥 match race docket. Sponsorship was provided by Philadelphia speed shop entrepreneur Steve Kanuika.

鈥淐ompared to the Lime Fire, 鈥楯ungle鈥檚鈥 car was a dream to drive,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淢y first race for 鈥楯ungle鈥 was in late 1968 against Don Nicholson at Delmar, Del. The car was still just painted white pearl, which we sprayed on the car before the candy blue, and we split the first two rounds. In the final, we both ran 7.86, and I beat him on a holeshot. That was a good start.鈥

The team鈥檚 first major outing together was the 1969 AHRA Winternationals. An anecdotal story is floating around about the two running one another in the semifinals, with Liberman winning but turning the car over to Sanders to run the final against Dickie Harrell, but Sanders says that never happened. 鈥淲e never swapped cars in the middle of a race,鈥 he insists. 鈥淪ometimes, but not often, we鈥檇 trade cars before a race, but never in the middle.鈥

All of this preamble, of course, leads to the 厕所强奸 Winternationals in Pomona and the official West Coast debut of the Funny Car class. The racers turned out by the dozens, with 40 or more cars trying out for the 16-car field. (鈥淓veryone was there,鈥 marveled Sanders. 鈥淚t was like walking into Carnegie Hall.鈥) Traction was a little tricky because, due to weather/time concerns,听the Funny Cars were not allowed to burn out across the starting line as they were at match races, and Liberman did not qualify for the field. Sanders鈥 car, however, qualified an impressive No. 3 in a talent-laden field, but everyone was well behind Tom McEwen鈥檚 direct-drive Tirend Activity Booster Barracuda, powered by a Tim Beebe-prepped 392 Chrysler. (Beebe would have more reasons to celebrate at the event: He and partner/driver John Mulligan won in Top Fuel.)

1969 WINTERNATIONALS FUNNY CAR FIELD
Tom McEwen7.796, 193.66
Low qualifier Tom McEwen
Don Schumacher8.024, 193.65
Clare Sanders8.035, 191.08
Ray Alley8.148, 183.67
Randy Walls8.204, 180.00
Rich Siroonian8.223, 185.11
Pat Foster8.240, 181.45
Mike Hamby8.256, 187.89
Marv Eldridge8.277, 185.95
Kelly Chadwick
Dave Beebe8.277, 188.28
Kelly Chadwick8.298, 187.89
Art Ward8.300, 185.56
Leonard Hughes8.311, 187.89
Eddie Schartman8.326, 174.75
Ron Leslie8.326, 170.13
Larry Reyes8.331, 180.72

Among those joining Liberman on the sidelines were hitters like Ongais, Nicholson, Roger Lindamood, Jack Chrisman, Charlie Allen, and Della Woods.

Liberman鈥檚 DNQ proved a boon to Sanders, as 鈥淛ungle鈥 was able to apply his tuning magic to the Chevy, which came to life in eliminations, and when McEwen surprisingly blew his engine in a round-one loss to Marv Eldridge鈥檚 Fiberglass Trends AMX, he and Leonard Hughes became the favorites.

Round one: Rich Siroonian holeshots "Fast Eddie" Schartman
The flyin' Hawaiian

Hughes and the unlettered Candies & Hughes Barracuda steamed to low e.t. of the first round with an 8.01 to beat Randy Walls鈥 8.22 while Sanders was right there with an 8.09 over 鈥淧rofessor鈥 Kelly Chadwick鈥檚 8.53.

The rest of the round went like this: Rich Siroonian slapped a holeshot on Schartman and his SOHC-powered Air Lift Rattler Cougar, and even 鈥淔ast Eddie鈥檚鈥 8.39 couldn鈥檛 catch 鈥淏ig John鈥 Mazmanian鈥檚 candy-apple 'Cuda鈥檚 8.45. Art Ward lost traction in Roger Guzman鈥檚 Assassination Too Corvair, falling to Ray Alley鈥檚 8.41 in the Engine Masters Barracuda. Ron Leslie鈥檚 High Country Cougar ran 8.17 to defeat Pat Foster in Mickey Thompson鈥檚 other Mustang in a battle of SOHC-powered machines. Dave Beebe smoked hard in Nelson Carter鈥檚 Super Chief Charger against Don Schumacher鈥檚 8.24. The round鈥檚 most spectacular moment came at the conclusion of Larry Reyes鈥 8.14, 181.45-mph victory over Mike Hamby when his Roland Leong-owned Hawaiian Charger took flight in the lights and soared 200 feet before crashing back to earth.

Hughes looked unbeatable again in round two with a 7.86 at a sizzling 198.23 mph (top speed of the meet) to beat Eldridge鈥檚 8.35. Alley took an 8.32 bye run in the Hawaiian鈥檚 absence, and Siroonian eked out a win over Schumacher鈥檚 John Hogan-tuned Stardust Barracuda, 8.10 to 8.12. Sanders, meanwhile, threw his hat further into the ring of contention with a 7.88 at 181.08 that dispatched Leslie鈥檚 early-shutoff pass.


(Above) Sanders beat Leonard Hughes and the Candies &听Hughes 'Cuda in the semi's and Ray Alley's Engine Masters Dodge听in the final (below).


Sanders is flanked in the Pomona winner's circle by mechanic Carl Dubow, race queen Marsha Bennett, and Bobbie and Jim Liberman.

All eyes were on Sanders and Hughes in the semifinal clash of 7.8-second cars, but Hughes 鈥 who had grenaded his best engine in qualifying 鈥 lost another engine early and watched Sanders soar into the final with low e.t. of eliminations, 7.80, despite 鈥渢uliping鈥 an exhaust valve (common for those early nitro Chevys), which necessitated a between-rounds cylinder-head swap. Alley joined Sanders in the final, earning a white-knuckle 8.270 to 8.271 victory over Siroonian.

With the eyes of the sport 鈥 not to mention the Wide World of Sports cameras 鈥 looking on, Sanders suited up for the final he was expected to win. He liked to get into the car early to calm the butterflies and get mentally right, and 鈥淛ungle鈥 leaned in and told him not to change a thing that he had been doing all day.

The final proved pretty lopsided as Sanders got the win light and the $5,000 payday with a 7.88 at 187.89 over Alley鈥檚 8.11, 187.11.

鈥淚t was pretty surreal to get out at the other end, and there鈥檚 [ABC鈥檚] Keith Jackson and the cameras,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he funny thing though was Keith walked up to me and said, 鈥楥ongratulations Jim Liberman on winning the Winternationals.鈥 People were used to just seeing one 鈥楯ungle鈥 car, and I was relatively unknown at the time, so I understand why he was confused. I was so happy, I didn鈥檛 care, but he was nice enough to reshoot it for the show [which ran the following weekend].

鈥淭he next day, a couple of us went to Disneyland to celebrate, but 鈥楯ungle鈥 got on the phone and booked both cars for the rest of the year. We were out and having fun, and he was working; that鈥檚 the way he was.鈥

Liberman hired Larry Petrich as crew chief for Sanders for the rest of the year, with a number of highlights. On the same night, both Sanders and Liberman won 鈥淢r. Chevrolet鈥 races at U.S. 30 Dragway and Capitol Raceway, respectively. Sanders then went off to Kansas City, Mo., where he beat 鈥淢r. Chevrolet鈥 himself, Dickie Harrell, on his home turf. Fans seldom got to see both 鈥淛ungle鈥 cars at the same track on the same date, so much in demand was the 鈥淛ungle Jim鈥 name. And although Sanders admits there were times when fans came to a track expecting to see Liberman instead of him, eventually, he developed his own strong following. Throughout the summer, both cars ran pretty much every other day, and, according to Sanders鈥 logbook, they won 86 percent of their races.


The Super Camaro


Sanders also听wheeled the famed Chi-Town Hustler


The Ramchagers Dodge was Sanders' last ride

Without putting too much of a fine point on it, Liberman鈥檚 personal life changed pretty significantly late in the 1969 season, the team dynamics changed, and Sanders decided it was time to move on. He partnered in 1970 with New Orleans-based Frank Huff on the Chevy-powered Super Camaro (and, later, Super Vega).

鈥淲e had a lot of bookings with that car, and it paid real well, but by the end of the year, the tires had gotten a lot better, and the Hemis were just running away from the Chevys,鈥 said Sanders, who was about to get another major career boost. 鈥淎ustin Coil came over to me one weekend and told me that Pat Minick was going to stop driving the Chi-Town Hustler, and they were looking for a replacement. 鈥楢re you tired yet of driving this Chevy?鈥 he asked me. 鈥榃ell, yes I am,鈥 so I went to work for them. I was a lot smaller than Pat and had to put pillows in the seat, but that was a great car. It was like driving a Buick. It was a big, huge race car.鈥

)He thinks he got Coil鈥檚 attention when he filled in for Schumacher at a race at New England Dragway and quickly mastered the new clutch combo in the car; at this point, most cars still had an automatic transmission with a footbrake, and Schumacher鈥檚 car had the now-familiar hand brake. It also was the first car that Sanders had driven that had a butterfly steering wheel.)

After finishing 1971 with the Chi-Town team, Sanders got the call from Ramchargers President and crew chief Pete Goulet to drive their famed car, which in 1970 had broken the six-second barrier with Leroy Goldstein at the wheel. Goldstein had moved on to drive for Candies & Hughes and been replaced by Arnie Behling, who didn鈥檛 work out. Sanders helped the team sort through some handling issues, and the car became a real runner again, dominating the 1972 IHRA Summernationals and setting the IHRA national record.

Sanders drove for the team for a year and a half before it dissolved as factory backing began to dry up across the class. Looking for steady employment and a future beyond drag racing, Sanders went to work for Snap-on Tools driving a truck and in a 30-year career worked his way into management and sales. The experience he gained there led to his post-retirement gig, building websites for the likes of Don Garlits, Tommy Ivo, and a bunch of his old racing buddies.

Sanders鈥 driving career only lasted about six years, but he packed a lot into that short span, winning national events and driving for three of the sport鈥檚 iconic teams. Does he have any regrets about not staying behind the wheel?

鈥淧retty much every day,鈥 he answered with a laugh. 鈥淭he first couple of years after I quit were an adjustment, but it鈥檚 very rewarding to know people still remember me. The reception I got at the Winternationals was phenomenal. A lot of people came up to tell me they were there when I won. It was very gratifying.鈥

You can check out more on Sanders, his career, and his cars at his website, .