Lynn - I would guess you meant 1.2 degrees "negative" camber with solid dragster style axle. I forget myself which direction when thinking about negative and positive camber. My thoughts here, for a race car with independent front suspension, 1.2 degrees positive camber good. For your dragster with solid front axle, it will probably be 0 to 1 degrees negative camber (the top of the wheels tilt inward for negative camber). 0 degrees camber would be best considering rolling resistance.
Drag strips are flat & straight, not like a typical roadway. With positive camber, the wheels (steering) will have tendency to go in direction that has more positive camber on a flat straight road. For example, if your left wheel has 0.5 degree positive camber and your right wheel has 1.5 degree positive camber, your vehicle may tend slightly right.
However, the end result with your 60s style dragster with a skinny front tire like an Avon speedmaster, you will probably not notice any steering difference with a camber range between -1.5 to +1.5 degrees due to the minimum contact patch with the road surface.
p.s. FTF - I've had a few messes in my projects too, some big and some little mistakes, some I laugh about, some not so much.