50th Anniversary Press On Regardless Rally
September 9-12,1999; Boyne City, Michigan
The 1999 Press
On Regardless (POR) Rally, aside from celebrating its 50th
anniversary, was expected to be a somewhat kinder, and gentler, edition of the
legendary endurance rally. After many
years in the capable hands of Gene Henderson, the POR has evolved from the
premier performance (read Pro) rally in North America to the special TSD rally
it is today.
First run in
1949, the Detroit Region’s POR has gone through many phases. During one period, the POR was an FIA listed
rally. Teams from not only the U.S. and
Canada, but also from Europe, would come to fight it out in the backwoods of
Michigan. It was late in this era,
1973, that my father wrote an article about the POR. That article would make it to press in the February 1974 issue of
Sports Car. Since that time, the
POR has changed from the top Pro Rally on the circuit to a brisk, tough TSD
(time, speed, distance) road rally.
This latter style of rally more closely resembled those from the 50s and
60s.
With Gene
Henderson stepping down as POR “Top Gun”, Jim Mickle has taken on the
monumental task of organizing the oldest, continuously run rally on the
continent (perhaps even the world - if you believe some claims). Jim promised to bring the rally back to a
more “civilized” state (my word, not his).
Some of the recent year’s PORs have definitely lived up to the name. Brisk speeds, rough roads and long
hours. Cars were breaking, things were
conspiring against teams to finish with good scores. Complaints were heard from competitors and, unfortunately, some
in the local populous. What was the
name of this rally, again? Oh, right.
Thus it was
with some trepidation that the rally faithful should gather in Boyne City,
Michigan (home of sponsor Mac Sam Specialties, and Brad Schade). Nine previous, overall, winners were in the
field. These would include, from the
PRO Rally days, Gene Henderson, R. Dale Kraushaar and Harry Ward; and from the
TSD years; Mike Friedman, Marc Goldfarb, Dan Coughnour, Jim Fekete, Jim Shaffer
and Greg Lester. These previous winners
would be given priority in seed one, regardless of class or partner. From there the seeded draw was for the E
class, followed by L and Vintage, then for Stock and then Novice.
The Vintage
class is in many regards a fledgling rally class in this country. It is left entirely to the discretion of the
organizer whether to recognize older cars, and navigational equipment, in a
separate class. Historic and vintage
rallies are very big in Europe; but have yet to catch on here, within
SCCA. For the purposes of POR, Vintage
class is defined as first: competing in a vehicle which was manufactured
prior to
1980. (Other variations on this may
include 25+ years old, no turbo engines and no 4 wheel drive). Then, the real trick is the navigational
equipment. Again, the POR rules
stipulate only mechanical mileage measuring devices (e.g. Halda) and only
mechanical calculating devices (e.g. Curta).
The Halda and the Curta (along with Heuer watches) were essential
equipment 25 - 35 years ago, if you wanted to win a road rally. Today, they will only help take a class
win. Computers help win (overall) these
days.
Along with the
former winners, there were a lot of top rallyists entered. Joe Andreini was navigating (in car #1) with
Gene Henderson. John Smiskol was
driving, with Harry Ward, in an L class Nissan. (Two vintage competitors who really belonged in a vintage
car. A 240Z perhaps). Ron Johnstonbaugh, fresh off his win at the
Finger Lakes 1000, was teamed with Ken Swarm in L. From the East (NH and NY) came Fred Mapplebeck and Hugo Brunert
(also in L).
In Stock, the
hard luck (at POR, anyway) team of Fred Cochran and Steve Novatne (NJ and PA)
made the pilgrimage once again. Richard
Worden and Richard Robinette, Detroit Region “locals”, would be a strong team
in S. Vintage saw most of the familiar
crews from recent PORs. Eric Jones and
Bill Potvin would return with their ageless MGB. Phil and Dallas Smith would return with a different MGB - one
that the husband and wife team have been using in Pro Rally this year. Your humble reporter would be there again
with, navvy of choice, Bryan Murphy and the old Colt - a 1975 Dodge Colt which
was prepared for PRO (what it was called in those days) Rally, from day
one. Gary Kowalski teamed up with his
brother, Patrick, in a 1970 AMC Hornet.
This car had also seen stage time in an earlier era, driven then by Tom
Samida. Bruce Fisher and Tom Bell were
in a vintage car, a 1972 Datsun 510 wagon, yet had to compete in L due to their
modern electronic odometer.

Three “vintage” cars outside
the Wolverine Dilworth Inn. The
Harvey/Murphy Colt, the Kowalski’s Hornet and the winning car (a custom
Studebaker) from the first Press On Regardless of 1949.
The Equipped
class was heavily populated, and guaranteed strong competition. Aside from those already listed, E contained
teams of: Al Tolle and Jeff Boris, Dick Foster and Bill Secrest, Dave and
Daniel Harkcom (the younger, just 14 years old), Randy Wittine and Les Talcott
(in the ever popular “Police Caprice”), Dave Parps and Rob Moran, Mark
Henderson and Donna Rinkel, David Miller and David Bruce and, finally, a pair
of PRO Rally competitors; Don Jankowski and Pete Gladysz. Had there been an award for the most
distance traveled, to get to the rally – it would have gone to Kraushaar and
Richardson, who came from Oregon and California, respectively.
Other stories
could be told of the ones who had planned to compete; but could not. World renowned International Motorsport
Journalist Satch Carlson, had been boasting that he would return to Michigan
(from Anchorage, Alaska) to whip my
behind, in the Vintage class. His plans
were to bring something he calls the “Hawg of Steel” - some silly Saab of some
sort so it seems. Apparently the
Frankfurt Auto Show did not consult the U.S. rally schedule before placing
their little gig in conflict with POR.
And of course, our favorite IMJ did not plan his vacation properly. Include also the possibility that my father
Scott Harvey (Sr.) would be returning with Ralph Beckman. Initial plans were to have this old time
pairing compete in a 1967 Barracuda (built to resemble their winning car from
the 1968 Shell 4000 - Trans-Canada Rally).
This was later updated to the likelihood of running in E, in an Eagle
Talon (the same car and crew that won POR in 1995). Ultimately, preparation of
a Porsche 356 for La Carrera Pan America got in the way; so POR was out for
this year.
Back to what
did happen. Pre-rally distractions included the car used to win the first POR,
in 1949 - a very interesting, customized, two-seater, Studebaker. At parc exposé on Friday morning, the teams
gathered for the ceremonial flagging-off.
The main street of the business district had been closed to traffic and
the rally took over for a couple of hours.
At precisely 9:01 AM (EDT) the first car, a Subaru, left the start in
search of Michigan’s finest dirt roads.
The weather
was clear and cool as the teams headed north and east out of Boyne City. It didn’t take long to realize this really
was POR. The third, or fourth, rally
road we were instructed to take was just barely one lane wide and very sandy. It was hilly and twisty, with enough trees
lining it to make it interesting. The majority
of the roads were nice, unpaved, forest roads.
Speeds were brisk enough to keep from getting bored, but not so as to
alarm the few locals encountered. On
this first day we came across dozens of wild turkeys that seemed to enjoy
congregating on many of the roads we were using. Later in the weekend, it was noted that the turkeys were no
longer being sighted. It was suggested
that they must be union turkeys and had weekends off.

No turkeys here. Friedman and Goldfarb prepare to start day
two of POR ’99. In the background many
crews congregate, in the road, and talk about the weather.
Unknown at the
time would be the first casualty of the rally.
The Kowalski Hornet had snapped an axle and was out. Two other teams had less serious trouble
mid-way through day one. At a
particularly challenging downhill “S” section of road, the infamous “magnetic
pine” took its toll. First would be the
Harckom/Harckom Audi, followed a few minutes later by the Smith/Smith MGB. Both cars would have an altercation with the
same tree stump on the inside of a turn.
Both times the stump won. The
cars were dented and creased but were able to continue. After more than nine hours and 265 miles of
rallying the teams made their way to the Wolverine Dilworth for dinner and
story swapping. Rain fell heavily for a
couple of hours during the night and it was anticipated that this would help
keep the dust down on the roads for Saturday.
Dust had not been a big problem on Friday, but a little more moisture
would be welcome.
Day two was
nearly a repeat of day one. The weather
was cool and clear. The roads, expected
to be damp from the rain, were in fact dry and dusty. Dust was not a major problem, but it was evident in the air on
some roads. The rally route for
Saturday would take the teams further south and toward the west.
Two teams
turned up in different cars on this second day. Johnstonbaugh and Swarm were in a rental (Mystique) as there was
concern that a wheel bearing was about to fail in their Mazda. They still had to drive home to Ohio after
the rally, too. At the first break on
day two, the Kowalskis joined the rally in their rental car (an Escort).
At the lunch
break in Cadillac, I discovered a puddle under our little Colt. It was determined that it was coming from
the transmission. Luckily we had a
two-hour break. We needed nearly all of
it to drain the transmission, apply a patch of JB Weld to the transmission
housing, seal the pan and refill. We
stocked up on trans lube and headed out to the woods for the remainder of the
day.
The leak was
not fixed, as it continued to drip - only now from two places! The original hole and the re-sealed pan were
both weeping. At our last break, I
removed the floor mat and the shifter and dumped in two more quarts of
lube. It was hoped this would get us to
the end of the day. Much to my
amazement, when we did arrive at the finish, of day two, I drained about 4
quarts of lube from the transmission.
Normal capacity is 2.5 quarts!
It would seem it dripped only when we sat still. Nonetheless I had the time now, to apply a
more permanent fix to the pinhole in the housing. Proper cleaning of the area, some JB Qwik Weld and time put us
right. The same could not be said for
the Smith’s MG. They had been fighting
a war against low oil pressure in their engine. Not willing to risk ruining the engine, the team decided Saturday
would be their last day of the three-day rally.

The Smith and Jones Gang’s
beastly Bs. Two teams who aren’t afraid
to get their older cars a little dirty.
Up front
things were shaping up. Friedman and
Goldfarb had run incredibly clean and had a total of 27 points after two
days. Knight and Lester were second
with 35. Third overall (and in E) would
be Coughnour/Marcus with 42 points. L
was looking good for Shaffer/Fekete (77); but,
Smiskol/Ward (103) were slowly making their way back after a 22-point
score on the first leg of the rally.
Vintage was also between two teams.
We (Harvey/Murphy) were holding a very precarious lead over Jones/Potvin
(142 to 150). The Stock class was well
in hand for Worden and Robinette with 347 points, versus 896 for Cochran and
Novatne. There were two brave novice
teams entered too. John Twichel and
Kevin Bulow had 1402 points and Ed Argalas with Karen Abbott had accumulated
2217 points.
The third, and
final day, of POR was the shortest - only 130 miles in length and just over 6
hours in time. It was during this final day that the two remaining vintage
crews
tried to give
the rally away to the other team. We
took a wrong turn and tried to make up lost time; but got caught 30 late at the
next control. We thought that was the
end for us. At the morning break we
talked to Jones and Potvin about our blunder.
It turned out they were getting lots of wheel slip, in the deep sand,
and consequently had high mileage readings.
They estimated about 25 points in penalty because of it. We fortunately, take our readings off a
non-driven wheel and did not experience this much error. Little mistakes continued to plague us the
rest of the day. It would come down to
which team would make the fewest.
About mid-way
through the day it rained. It rained
hard. The roads started to get real
sloppy and soupy. These slimy
conditions started to effect the odometer factors for some and contributed to
higher scores. Just as quickly as the
rains came, they were gone. This did
knock the dust down, but the roads absorbed the water quickly. About this time Eric Jones was seen under
the hood of his MG at every out marker.
The water pump was leaking and he was filling the radiator at every
opportunity.
The last few
miles were turned under as we headed to the finish. A mile out of Boyne City we saw “Friedfarb” going the other
way. They must have turned in their
score card and started the long trip home to New Hampshire. They must surely have known they had the
rally won; and really didn’t need to see the scores.
They were
right. After 680 miles of some good
rally roads, and 64 scored controls, their total score was 41 points. The other positions did not change much on
the final day. Those with leads, even
after day one, held on to them. The
awards banquet included the recognition of these competitors for their
accomplishments. More importantly, it
recognized the workers involved in the production of such an event. Many people worked behind the scenes to make
it happen. Bob Martin did the scores in
record time. Tom and Greg Woodside,
Mary and Jerry Schiloff, Marianne Mickle, Pete Padden, Jim Walker, Barb
Steencken, Ed and Mike Macklenburg, Oran Sands, “Skip” Kleckner, the Beauvais,
the Essenburgs, Mike Bodnar and a dozen others, gave up their time to make POR
‘99 a success.
A couple of
legs were thrown due to clerical mistakes, but everything else seemed to go
flawlessly. Any concern that this
particular running of the famous rally would not live-up to its tradition were
quickly squashed when we hit that first forestry road that made me remove the
sunglasses, and turn on the lights. It
would seem the POR is still going strong after 50 years. Not the car breaking endurance event, nor
the Pro Rally it was, the Press On Regardless Rally is still here. Jim Mickle did a great job of bringing back
a more “civilized” version of POR. My
only suggestions would be to allow some utilization of those big rally lights,
throw in a few of those rough roads, and bump the CASTs up a notch. (But then, I always did like the rough
stuff).
Written by Scott Harvey, Jr. Photos by author, unless otherwise noted.

“Wash me”. What you do after 680 miles of Michigan’s
finest roads. Overall winners of POR
’99, “Team Alfa - M. Friedfarb - We
suck less”
Results
of: POR 1999 Start and Finish
Boyne City, MI September 10-12 64
controls scored, 680 miles
1/1E Mike
Friedman/ Marc Goldfarb – NH/NH 41
’90 Eagle Talon #2
2/2E Ken
Knight/ Greg Lester – MI/OH 51 ’91 Mitsubishi
Galant #6
3/3E Dan
Coughnour/ Ildiko Marcus – OH/OH 60 ’96 Jeep Cherokee #3
4/4E Dave
Parps/ Rob Moran – WI/MI 82 ’91 Mitsubishi Galant #13
5/5E Gene
Henderson/ Joe Andreini – MI/MI 87 ’98 Subaru SUS #1
6/1L Jim
Shaffer/ Jim Fekete – MI/MI 97 ’99 Jeep Grand Cherokee #5
7/6E Al Tolle/
Jeff Boris – MI/MI 103 ’99 Subaru 2.5 RS #8
8/7E R Dale
Kraushaar/ Larry Richardson – OR/CA 115 ’95 Subaru Impreza #4
9/2L John
Smiskol/ Harry Ward – IL/OH 120 ’92 Nissan Stanza #7
10/8E David
Miller/ David Bruce – KY/OH 126 ’99 Honda CRV #15
11/9E David
Harkcom/ Daniel Harkcom – MI/MI 189 ’90 Audi Coupe #10
12/1V Scott
Harvey, Jr/ Bryan Murphy - MI/MI 201 ’75 Dodge Colt GT #18
13/2V Eric Jones/
Bill Potvin – OH/OH 222 ’64 MBG #17
14/3L Fred
Mapplebeck/ Hugo Brunert – NH/NY 226 ’90 Audi Quattro #25
15/4L Bruce
Fisher/ Tom Bell – MI/MI 279 ’72 Datsun 510 wagon #19
16/10E Randy
Wittine/ Les Talcott – MI/MI 292 ’91
Chevrolet (Police) Caprice #11
17/5L Ron
Johnstonbaugh/ Ken Swarm – OH/OH 298 ’88 Mazda 323 GTX/ rental #24
18/11E Mark
Henderson/ Donna Rinkel – MI/OH 322 ’91 Subaru Legacy #14
19/12E Don
Jankowski/ Pete Gladysz – MI/MI 373 ’00 Dodge Neon #16
20/1S Richard
Worden/ Richard Robinette – MI/MI 439 ’96 Saab 900 SE #27
21/13E Richard
Foster/ William Secrest – OH/KY 518 ’94 GMC Sonoma #9
22/2S Fred
Cochran/ Steve Novatne - NJ/PA 1056 ’90 Eagle Talon #26
23/14E Bill Braund/
Tim Steiner – MI/MI 1145 ’89 Ford Escort #28
24/6L Steve
Phillips/ Paul Gilbert – IN/IN 1285 ’89 Saab 900 #22
25/7L James
White/ Jerry White – MI/IL 1635 ’90 Subaru Legacy #23
26/1N John
Twichel/ Kevin Bulow – MI/MI 1673 ’99 Chevy S-10 #29
27/2N Edward
Argalas/ Karen Abbott – MI/MI 2414 ’99 Plymouth Neon #30
28/3S Matthew
Bos/ Phillip Boer – MI/MI 2862 ’99 Ford Rental #31
29/3V Phil Smith/
Dallas Smith – OH/OH 5085 ’68 MGB GT #21
30/4S Gary
Kowalski/ Patrick Kowalski – IN/IN 8358 ’70 AMC Hornet/ rental #20

They travel from near and
far. The Kraushaar/ Richardson, “2.5
RS”, Subaru, from Oregon. The Cochran/
Novatne, “On Time”, Talon from New Jersey.