Forum Activity for @dave-fulton

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 09:11:37PM
9,138 posts

RIP to the co-owner of the Skoal Bandit, Hal Needham


Stock Car Racing History

J.C. Hayes posted the photo below last year:

That's RR's Will Cronkrite in the white 7-Eleven driver's uniform. On the other side of Burt Reynolds (who's wearing the blue driver's uniform) is Freddie "Stroker" Webb of Anderson-Webb Trucking in North Carolina, the company that used to furnish the over-the-road tractors for Richard Childress Racing. Wearing the cowboy hat is Hal Needham.

Hal Needham & Dani Crayne, widow of David "The Fugitive" Janssen - from CinemaRX

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 08:52:19PM
9,138 posts

RIP to the co-owner of the Skoal Bandit, Hal Needham


Stock Car Racing History

I have nothing but nice things to say about my very limited time around Hal Needham, and it was very limited. International Speedway Corp. refused to rent a suite at Talladega to U.S. Tobacco because of the NASCAR/ISC/RJR affiliation. We were approached at Wrangler by UST and had Hal and David Jannsen's ( tv's The Fugitive) beautiful widow, who Hal was seeing, as our guests.

That led to our involvement in the Stroker Ace movie. We had our Wrangler show car in that flick, along with some Wrangler employees, including Wrangler president, Bob Odear's son dressed as crew members in the Talladega pit road sequences.

All of the race track V.I.P. sequences in the movie Stroker Ace were shot in our Talladega Wrangler V.I.P. suite and our guests were thrilled to have Burt Reynolds, Loni Anderson, Jim Nabors, Ned Beatty and former football star, Bubba Smith as cordial, down to earth guests during the race.

I've told here before how Bubba Smith "took" my wife's seat at the bar and she asked me to get it back. Bubba was the biggest man I ever was around. My advice was to let him sit wherever he wanted.

They used to have a really nice piano bar in the former Adam's Mark Hotel in Charlotte. Hal was especially fond of hanging out there on a barstool, wearing Wrangler jeans and a chambray work shirt. His shirts and jeans alway had magnificient creases and were so starched they could have stood up by themselves. Hal was always impeccably dressed. He was a good conversationalist at the bar with plenty of good stories. He'd most often be alone in a bar when I'd run into him. Don't know what that says about us, but that's the way it was.

Joyce and I were invited to the world premiere of Stroker Ace in Charlotte at Ovens Auditorium. We drove in from Greensboro and a limo was dispatched to pick us up at the Radisson where we were staying in downtown Charlotte. It was pretty heady stuff and very enjoyable to "rub elbows" - if just for a few minutes.

Our RR member, Will Cronkrite furnished a lot of cars for the movie and spent a lot of time on location for that movie shoot.

I had not heard of Hal's passing until seeing this post. He was always nice when I was in his presence, which was a very limited amount of time. R.I.P. Hal.

We had a female German Shepherd named Smokey and the best looking pup of the litter we named Bandit.

The clip below is from the May 29, 1983 Spartanburg Herald-Journal :

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
09/06/16 12:26:10PM
9,138 posts

October 25, 1964 - Richmond's Ted Hairfield Takes Langley Field's Ray Platte Memorial 200 NASCAR National Championship Modified-Sportsman Race on Dirt Over Creedmoor's Earl Moss


Stock Car Racing History

Thanks, Bobby... but it is Jack Walker's results and Chase Whitfield's newspapers articles that let me post this the other year. Thank goodness Dickie Gouldman corrected yesterdayand let us (me) know that race winner Ted Hairfield is still alive and kicking!

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 04:23:06PM
9,138 posts

October 25, 1964 - Richmond's Ted Hairfield Takes Langley Field's Ray Platte Memorial 200 NASCAR National Championship Modified-Sportsman Race on Dirt Over Creedmoor's Earl Moss


Stock Car Racing History

I've really enjoyed learning about the RAMBI and Columbia weekly drivers from Jack, Bobby, Tim and William. I hope more folks will chime in with memories of the drivers they watched at the home area tracks that they attended

Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 04:02:03PM
9,138 posts

October 25, 1964 - Richmond's Ted Hairfield Takes Langley Field's Ray Platte Memorial 200 NASCAR National Championship Modified-Sportsman Race on Dirt Over Creedmoor's Earl Moss


Stock Car Racing History


This history minute takes us back to a NASCAR National Championship Modified-Sportsman race on the dirt at Langley Field Speedway in Hampton, Virginia on October 25, 1964 - the Ray Platte Memorial 200 .

Back in 2010, RR member, Jack Walker (Coastal Jack) posted the results of this race in our RR photo section with a brief write up. The write up immediately below is how Jack described the event:

The 2nd annual Ray Platte Memorial Modified- Sportsman race was held at the 4/10 mile dirt Langley Speedway on October 25th, 1964. Forty-Four cars were in the pits attempting to qualify for the 40 starting spots in the 200 lap event. Sonny Hutchins of Richmond, VA turned the fastest lap at 20.83 seconds to win the number one starting spot. Doug Yates of Chapel Hill, NC driving the #1va was able to secure the outside front row starting position. Lap leaders were Sonny Hutchins, Ted Hairfield , Earl Moss , and Ray Hendrick . Hairfield was able to lead on 3 different occasions including the final 73 laps. Lil Bud Moore from Charleston, SC was able to work his way through the field getting as high as 3rd from a starting spot near the rear of the field before his steering locked up. Hairfield and Bob McGinnis of Danville went the entire distance without a pit stop. There were 2 red flags, and 3 caution flags in the event. Hairfield won $1000 for the victory before a crowd of 5000 fans.

Here are the results below that Jack Walker posted in our photo section back in 2010 and which he has also posted at his Carolina Race Place site:

Winner Ted Hairfield's be autiful #4 "Snakebite II" coup e at another venue as posted by RR member, David Bentley.

A couple of notes - the namesake of the event, late Ray Platte, was a noted modified driver from Norfolk, Virginia who was killed at Virginia's South Boston Speedway.

Photo of Ray Platte from the Ralph Rose Scrapbook as maintained by Ralph's daughter June Rose Hudgins, who penned the note below:

Sadly, Ray Platte was killed in a wreck at South Boston Speedway, VA. He was driving Bobby Issac's car that day. My mother, Toni, encouraged and helped organize the Ray Platte Memorial Race held at Langley Field Speedway to honor him and his wonderful family. Doug Yates of NC won the race and presented the trophy to a young Ray Platte, Jr. It was a day I'll never forget.

Pole sitter Sonny Hutchins was driving the blue #90 Swansboro Motor Co. Ford modified of Richmond's Junie Donlavey. The 1VA driven by outside pole sitter, Doug Yates was the same Shirley Construction Corp. modified out of Portsmouth, Virginia that Eddie Crouse had driven to two consecutive NASCAR National Modified titles in 1962 & 1963. That ride would soon be taken over by Lennie Pond.

The outside pole winning Shirley Construction Corp. 1va in a previous year at Langley with Eddie Crouse at the wheel. Photo by RR member, Crabber1967 as posted at Photobucket.

4th place finisher, Denny Zimmerman was one of the famed "Eastern Bandits" led by Eddie Flemke and including Rene Charland and Red Foote. Foote finished 37th. Zimmerman would later be named Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year.

Both Bill Champion and Bud Elliott had famous NASCAR Cup and Busch Series nephews. Champion is the uncle of Ricky Rudd, while Elliott is the uncle of both Elliott and Hermie Sadler.

The sons of Ha irfield - Bugs - and Ray Hendrick - Roy - would later enjoy successful short track careers on Virginia weekly NASCAR tracks.

Bill Dennis would go on to be name d NASCAR Grand National Rookie of the Year and driving Junie Donlavey's #90 Truxmore Fords and Mercs become the first driver to ever win three consecutive Permatex 300 Late Model Sportsman races at Daytona.

Lennie Pond would be named 1973 NASCAR Winston Cup Series Rookie of the Year over Darrell Waltrip.

Langley Field was paved in 1968, but 9th place Al Grinnan and Bud Elliott would continue to race dirt through the 1970s at North Carolina's Wilson County Speedway, along with Shelton McNair in his potent #M-1 . Both Grinnan and Elliott would win Wilson track titles in the 70s and recently McNair's son has raced an unlimited Late Model at Lucama, North Carolina's Southern National Motorsports Park.

Gene Lovelace would die of a heart attack en route to the hospital after pulling his Late Model Sportsman off the track at Richmond's Southside Speedway for relief driver, Lennie Pond.

The paint scheme of the second place finisher, Earl Moss lives on with RR member, Bobby Williamson's #300 tribute car.

Ray Hendrick is credited with more NASCAR Modified and Late Model Sportsman victories than any other driver in the sanctioning body's history.

I was fortunate to see every one of these drivers above race - most at one of Richmond's two NASCAR venues. This was quite a field of drivers. I am very appreciative that Jack Walker was able to both assemble the results and give some insight on the race.

In 2010, retired motorsports journalist, Al Pearce wrote a nice piece on the history of this race venue in Hampton, Virginia:

The following article about the history of Langley Speedway was written and published in 2010 by Hall Of Fame Sports Writer Al Pearce of the Daily Press, and Newport News, Va. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News:

Langley Speedway roars into its 60th anniversary season with a well-established and well-earned reputation as one of NASCARs best weekly tracks. From its modest opening in 1950 as a dirt track with few amenities to todays paved showplace, Langley has consistently stayed ahead of the competitive and administrative curve.

In the late 1940s the property on North Armistead Avenue in Hampton was home to Dude Ranch, an 8/10th-mile oval for lower-level thoroughbred racing. The owners occasionally hosted stock car races, which generally attracted more fans than the horses ever had. The owners eventually shortened the track to 4/10ths-mile (clearly, 8/10ths was too long for weekly racing) and turned their attention to cars. Dude Ranch stayed a small, rough-hewn bullring until 1963, when ex-racer and local businessman Henry Klich paid $1,000 for the lease and promptly renamed it Langley Field Speedway.

Today, Langley remains southeastern Virginias longest-running professional sports enterprise and one of the oldest in the Commonwealth. In the 1960s and early 1970s it hosted nine Grand National races (now, Sprint Cup) featuring many of NASCARs greatest drivers: Richard Petty, David Pearson, Ned Jarrett, Bobby Allison, Bobby Isaac, Benny Parsons, James Hylton, Marvin Panch, Buck Baker, Buddy Baker, LeeRoy Yarbrough, Tiny Lund, Junior Johnson, Donnie Allison, Pete Hamilton, Dave Marcis and Wendell Scott.

More than anyone, Klich led the track into the modern era of stock car racing. He presented the Peninsulas first Cup race in May of 1964, when
Jarrett won a 250-lapper ahead of Panch and Buddy
Baker. Jarrett came back almost a year later and won another 250-lapper, this one ahead of Dick Hutcherson and Elmo Langley. In 1966, Petty beat Hylton and Neil Castles in the spring race. A year later, during his historic 27-win season, Petty won ahead of Allison and Hylton in Langleys last dirt-track Cup race.

Realizing that NASCAR was about to abandon its dirt tracks, Klich paid a local contractor $25,000 to pave Langley shortly before its May of 1968 Cup date. Pearson won that first paved-track show over Isaac and Buddy Baker, then repeated in August ahead of Petty and Isaac. In 1969, Pearson beat Hylton and Marcis in a 375-lapper, the tracks longest-ever Cup race. Isaac beat Allison and Castles in the May of 1970 and Allison beat Parsons and Hamilton in November of that year. Sharp-eyed readers and trivia buffs will note that every driver who won a Cup race at Langley had been or was going to win the NASCAR champion.

Klich retired as promoter late in 1969, but retained the lease and kept a close eye on things from his nearby home. Local car-builder Donnie Harris doesnt think Klich (who died in January of 2001 at age 70) gets enough credit for starting Langley on its way to respectability. He turned Langley from a Saturday night redneck get-together to real good racing, he said of Klich, who briefly raced in lower-level cars at Langley in the 1980s. He did everything he could to make the speedway better, to make it successful. He brought in the best drivers he could find and made the public aware of what good racing really was. A Daily Press headline summed it up best the day after Klich died: He Made Us Major-League.

During the early 1970s, after Klich retired as promoter, Langley endured a series of well-meaning but generally overmatched promoters/track operators. Norfolk-area businessman and drag racing promoter Hank Hankins had the track for a while. When he left, a local group featuring Bob Wall, Carl Breen, Gene Hutcheson, Lee Cogdill and B.W. Mitchum took their turn. For the better part of a year, former TV sportscaster Charlie Bailey served as the tracks promoter/general manager.

To many fans and competitors, Langley Speedways savior was Joe Carver. (The track almost certainly would have survived without him, but in what form?) Tall, white-headed, confident and charismatic, the Charlie Rich-lookalike moved to Hampton from Nashville in the fall of 1973. He was on hand for a late-season show and was named Baileys replacement a few days later. He immediately set about rebuilding the tracks sagging image and stirring up what had become a complacent and inconsistent fan base.

He ruled for 10 years, moving Langley forward and creating something of a Golden Age for local racing. Feisty to a fault, Carver never shied from conflict with fans, competitors or the media. In truth, he probably created more feuds and painted payback scenarios than actually existed all part of his come see this style of marketing. Even so, fans saw some of the countrys best short-track racers and enjoyed some truly creative Saturday night promotions. (Wholl ever forget the $1,000-to-win match race among Darrell Waltrip, Sonny Hutchins and Ray Hendrick or the Cup drivers he brought in for special Late Model shows)?

Carver opened the tracks vault in the 1970s and lured many of the regions best short-track racers. Among them: out-of-towners Hutchins, Hendrick, Harry Gant, Morgan Shepherd, Butch Lindley, Paul Radford, L.D. Ottinger, Morgan Shepherd, Gene Glover, Bill Dennis, Red Foote, Jack Ingram, Tommy Ellis, Sam Ard, Jimmy Hensley and Geoffrey Bodine. Later, beginning in the early-1980s and going for seven years, a new wave of stars came to Langley with the second-tier Busch (now, Nationwide) Series. Among them: Dale Jarrett, Tommy Houston, Jimmy Hensley, Rick Mast, Brett Bodine, Mark Martin, Phil Parsons, Jimmy Spencer and series champions Jack Ingram, Sam Ard, Tommy Ellis, Larry Pearson and Rob Moroso.

During this period the current-day Late Model Stock Car class was born and nurtured. From it came many of Langleys most successful drivers: Danny and Greg Edwards, Phil Warren, Elton Sawyer, Billy Smith, Charlie Doyle, Bubba Adams, Diane Teel, Wayne Hanbury, Roger Sawyer, Chip Hudson, Eddie Johnson, Buddy Malish, Mike Buffkin, Howard Crews, Joe Gaita and Shawn Balluzzo. Todays crop of Late Model stars includes the Edwards brothers, plus Mark Wertz, C.E. Falk, Woody Howard, Nick Smith, John Staton and Jeff and Dean Shiflett. Its been said that everybody whos been anybody in NASCAR weekly-track racing
since the early 1970s has been to Langley a time or two.

All told, Langley hosted nine Sprint Cup races between 1964 and 1970 and 14 Nationwide Series races between 1982 and 1988. In addition, its hosted ASA, Hooters Pro Cup, Goodys Dash, Southern Modified and Grand American races. Among the ASA racers who came to Langley were a young, unknown Californian named Jimmie Johnson and a fourth-generation kid from North Carolina named Adam Petty. Then, there were the times a high school kid from near Richmond his name was Denny Hamlin came down each weekend with a purple No. 11 Mini-Stock. In the mid-1970s a tall, thin, raw-boned kid from Kannapolis, NC came in for a Late Model Sportsman race. Later, Dale Earnhardt won a few Cup races and championships.

Not surprisingly, the promoters who took over when Carver returned to Nashville after the 1983 season never quite measured up. In their own unique ways, though, George St. Amand and Joe Baldacci improved the track, offered good shows and presented a comfortable environment. But it wasnt until Wayne Wyatt and partner Jim Wood came along in 1995 that Langley began growing again at a steady rate. If Carver saved the tracks soul during his 10 years, Wyatt and Wood saved its body.
They operated Langley during the time of its greatest physical improvement. Between 1995 and 1997, Wyatt and Wood replaced the aging and unsightly steel guardrail with a concrete wall. They repaved the track and replaced the board-and-scaffolding bleachers with an iron-and-steel grandstand. They added more than a dozen skyboxes and VIP suites, and a modern race control and media booth. Its is believed that Langley was the first NASCAR-sanctioned weekly track with skyboxes and suites accessible only by elevator.

Wyatt brought in Dwight Schaubach as his financial partner in 1999, and they worked together through the 2004 season. Sandy Lemonds and her racer/husband, Dale, bought the lease late in 2004. When Dale was killed at Langley in August of that year, Sandy and her brother, King Hodges, operated the track in 2005 and part-way into the 2006 season. When King finally succumbed to a lingering respiratory disease in April of that year, Sandy chose to turn over day-to-day operations to long-time friend Lou Gotti, her late husbands former Legend Car crew chief.

In the spring of 2009, with the economy taking a toll on local short-track racing, the cash-strapped Gotti sold the track to former racer/area businessman Bill Mullis. Mullis much like Klich raced support divisions at Langley, South Hampton and Southside Speedway. Mullis plans on writing the next chapter of Langleys history, he started by bringing in former Promoter Chuck Hall, and by continuing the compassion as a racer and respect for the speedway as a business. To initiate his goal Mullis has secured top racing events and series in just his 1st year including, the prestigious INEX Nationals for October 2010. The INEX Nationals are a 1st for the entire state of Virginia. Also on the list are two USAR Pro Cup series races (formally Hooters Pro Cup), the NASCAR Whelan Southern Modified Series and the NASCAR home track sanctioned racing all in 2010. With fan support growing to record numbers Bill Mullis has dedicated and directed his mission to making the grand ole Langley Speedway shine once again. Langley Speedway celebrates 60 years of racing excellence in 2010, and Bill Mullis and his staff prepare to help write the next chapter for Langley Speedway.


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 04:45:06PM
9,138 posts

October 25, 1992: Kyle's Rockingham Romp


Stock Car Racing History

Kyle and his SABCO crew most definitely had the handle on Rockingham. He always looked his best there.

Kyle's Rockingham SABCO races - copied from racing Reference:

1989-27 Rockingham 40 36 10 42 Peak Antifreeze ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 489/492 10,107 running 0
1990-03 Rockingham 38 1 1 42 Peak Antifreeze ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 492/492 284,450 running 433
1990-27 Rockingham 40 6 20 42 Peak Antifreeze ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 485/492 13,850 running 207
1991-03 Rockingham 40 1 1 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 492/492 131,450 running 380
1991-27 Rockingham 40 1 9 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 490/492 22,950 running 64
1992-02 Rockingham 40 1 29 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 430/492 12,375 camshaft 24
1992-27 Rockingham 40 1 1 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 492/492 153,100 running 484
1993-02 Rockingham 40 11 32 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 436/492 14,900 running 0
1993-28 Rockingham 41 6 13 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 490/492 18,250 running 0
1994-02 Rockingham 42 7 8 42 Mello Yello ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 490/492 22,635 running 6
1994-29 Rockingham 42 29 36 42 Monsters of the Gridiron ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 233/492 20,575 crash 0
1995-02 Rockingham 42 27 10 42 Coors Light ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 489/492 26,250 running 0
1995-29 Rockingham 40 15 32 42 Coors Light ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 327/393 21,900 crash 0
1996-02 Rockingham 41 9 11 42 Coors Light ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 391/393 24,325 running 0
1996-29 Rockingham 42 11 25 42 Coors Light ( Felix Sabates ) Pontiac 389/393 20,925 running 0
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 11:42:52AM
9,138 posts

Hillenburg Confirms Rockingham Has Lost Truck Race for 2014


Current NASCAR

Rockingham loses NASCAR Truck Series race
By Jim Utter
jutter@charlotteobserver.com
Posted: Thursday, Oct. 24, 2013

ROCKINGHAM Rockingham Speedway, which began hosting NASCAR races again two years ago after an eight-year absence, will not host a Truck Series race in 2014, speedway owner Andy Hillenburg confirmed.

The one-mile track located about 90 miles southeast of Charlotte remains open for track rentals but wont be hosting any NASCAR events in 2014.

Weve got a number of issues that have to be resolved before we can host races again, Hillenburg told the Observer on Thursday. These issues have been mounting over the last two to three years.

Im not giving up on this. My plan is to keep doing it. I want it and NASCAR wants it and Im determined to have it continue.

NASCAR is expected to release its 2014 Truck schedule as early as Friday the last of its three national series scheduled to be released.

NASCAR spokesman David Higdon would not speak specifically about Rockinghams date but said the schedule would be released soon.

We are still finalizing a few last pieces, he said.

Rockingham already lost one NASCAR event this season.

In September, NASCAR officials canceled a K&N Pro Series East race at the track. In a statement announcing the decision, NASCAR said the track failed to meet its financial obligations.

A permanent loss of the NASCAR event could have serious consequences for the surrounding community.

When plans for the inaugural Truck race were first unveiled in 2011, city and county officials said the race would bring $4.2million into the local economy.

The first race in 2012, won by Kasey Kahne, was considered a success with a near-capacity crowd on hand. Attendance was down at this years race, won by Kyle Larson, but the venue was still considered to have a home on the series schedule.

From 1965 through 2004 Rockingham Speedway hosted races in NASCARs premier Cup series.

Hillenburg bought the track in 2007 from Speedway Motorsports Inc., which bought the facility from the International Speedway Corp. in 2004. SMI moved the Cup race from Rockingham to Texas as part of a settlement in an SMI shareholder lawsuit, leaving the track void of NASCAR events.

This has been six years of my life and I want to see it succeed, Hillenburg said.

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/10/24/4412907/rockingham-loses-truck-series.html#storylink=cpy


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:04:08PM
Dave Fulton
@dave-fulton
10/25/13 11:24:48AM
9,138 posts

Just When You Thought the South Originated Live Televised Stock Car Racing, Guess What Aired in New Yawk City Live in 1950-1951?


Stock Car Racing History

Just when we southerners think we invented live telecasts of stock car racing, I happened to see that those darned Yankees in New York City were watching live remote coverage of stock car racing at least as early as the summers of 1950 and 1951.

Listings and station histories show that both WATV Channel 13 and WPIX Channel 11 were telecasting stock car races via live remotes.

If anyone knows what tracks originated these telecasts, it would sure be interesting to know. The WPIX listing mentions Bayonne and there was a 1/5th mile track at Veteran's Stadium in Bayonne, New Jersey running stock cars at this time. Also be interesting to know if stations in other cities were airing live stock car racing in late 40s - early 50s.

Baseball and WPIX Channel 11 History
The station was strong in sports from the beginning.

The station's association with Major League Baseball started only 21 days after the station first went on the air. On July 6, 1948 WPIX aired a game between rivals the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers. And WPIX camera crews began their dominent telecasts of top Madison Square Garden events. By the end of the station's second year, WPIX led all stations with remote telecasts of baseball, Rangers hockey, football, Knicks basketball, boxing, wrestling, and stock car races. The New York Giants started in 1949 and the Yankees in 1951 on WPIX.

Listings for WATV Channel 13 Stock Car racing in 1951:
ON TELEVISION THIS WEEK; LEADING EVENTS TODAY

$3.95 -
New York Times - May 6, 1951
Plnky Lee, Bllly De Woite, Others (4)--Comedy Hour, With Phll Slivers; ...... a( Bayonne (13)-Stock Car Racing 9:4S-(2)-Kentucky Derby Highlights 1A:00 ...
ON TELEVISION THIS WEEK

$3.95 -
New York Times - Jun 24, 1951
From Aqueduct (4)-Vletor Borge Show (13)-Stock Car Racing (7)-Date With Judy 4: AO-(13)-Nesters Roundup (7)-Hollywood Theatre Tlme 0 3O-(2)-The Show Goea ...


updated by @dave-fulton: 12/05/16 04:00:58PM
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