smokesignals - Ankokas Region of AACA
Transcription
smokesignals - Ankokas Region of AACA
June 2006 Volume 43, Issue 6 SMOKE SIGNALS The Official Publication of the ANKOKAS Region AACA ’49 MERC In This Month’s Issue: ’49 Merc 1 by James A. Wickel Can you remember sitting in the first car that you knew you had to own? It was lateInterest 1948. I had Special stopped at the local Articles: Lincoln-Mercury dealer, the same one my wife • almost Add a highlight twenty years later or yourfamous point ofwith her made interest here.act, to pick up bottoms-up some new literature. The Prez Says.. 4 • Add a highlight your pointthe of new Mercs I or had seen interest here. on television and Lincolns American Muscle 5 • "Toast Add a highlight of The Towns" and your point of I or had gone to the dealer to interest here. Upcoming Events 7 For Sale/Wanted 7 From the Editor/The Cuba Project 8 ads for Ed Sullivan's look at the cars when they first came out. It was so crowded in the showroom all you could do was walk around the cars. I was 15 and not about to buy a car so I kept a low profile. On this particular day the showroom was empty. A young salesman was standing there looking at a dark blue Lincoln Cosmopolitan. I picked up two or three new folders and turned and looked at the Cosmopolitan. I guess my eyes were lighting up. "Would you like to sit in it?", the salesman said. Wow! Would I. I spent the next half hour sitting in all the cars on the showroom floor. I liked the Lincolns very much. In fact, I always thought the '49, '50 and '51 big Lincolns were great looking cars. They rode well and were very good on gas. Fact was I thought they were better looking than the Packard or the Cadillac..but Cadillac had that overhead valve engine and fins..never did quite understand fins. Caddys and Packards in 1950 also had auto trans. I'll give them that but for smooth, clean, rich appearance the Cosmo, in my opinion, had it. Over on the side of the showroom was a green Mercury, 2-door. When my fanny sank into this seat and I closed the door, this was my car. I closed my eyes and we left the showroom down Route 22 to Phillipsburg, out across Pennsylvania towards Ohio. We were really cruising. What a car. It was clean, big, beautiful dash, soft and luxurious upholstery. I loved this car. I had to have this car. I was 15. In 1953 I was 19 and the new car bug was biting in a big way. My '40 Ford was running well. I had it for over two years, but I needed something newer. The 1954 Fords and Mercs had just come out with the new overhead valve V-8 's but I was only making $50.00 or so a week, a new car was out. My Dad said I should visit an old friend of his, Mr. Stonicker, in Bloomfield. He was a Willys' dealer and Dad bought his car from him...remember...a 1938 Willys. Why visit him, I don't want a Willys...but my father insisted. What could I loose, he had a used car department so over I went. Mr. Stonicker's operation was typical of the times. A small showroom with two cars in it. A small lot out front with about five to ten used cars and a repair area behind the showroom. This was a lean operation. Willys was not doing well in 1953, in fact, I guess they were soon bought by Kaiser Fraiser. Mr. Stonicker himself was handling both new and used car sales. As I drove up my eyes lit up. Right in the middle of the used car lot was a 1949 Merc, 2- door, light metallic green. I don't think I saw anything else. I wanted that car. My mind raced back to 1948 as I sat in the used Merc. (continued on next page) SMOKE SIGNALS The inside was like new. No spots on the seats or the headlined. The dash glowed in the lights. The body was perfect, no dents, scratches or missing parts. Once again we were cruising. This time on Bloomfield Avenue, but my eyes were open, my fanny really was in the seat of a real moving 1949 Merc, 2-door...what a car. My fantasy of 15 could now become reality. All I needed was about $1,200. As we drove along Mr. Stonicker looked at me and said, you really want this car, don't you?" Being the hard bargainer I've always been I said, "You betcha more than my next breath. " We went back to the dealership and I was about to drive the Merc back into the used car line. "Never mind, " said Mr. Stonicker, "just run around to the back, I'll put a sold sign on it until the end of the week and you go get your money, that way no one else will sell it." I guess Dad was right about the man. It took three days to get my first car loan at Irvington National Bank True to his word Mr. Stonicker still had the Merc behind his building with a sold sign on it. The next day Don Knowles drove me over to Bloomfield and I picked up my Merc. It was four years old, only 35,000 on the clock and everything worked including the overdrive. Over the years I have become a traditionalist regarding old cars. I go to extremes to restore them exactly as they were produced in the factory. The first thing I did with the Merc was to nose it and to replace the centerpiece of the grille. Next I decked it. All the parts and equipment came from the House of Chrome in Paterson, New Jersey. The first custom car parts store I can remember in New Jersey. The piece I put in the grill gave the Merc a much lower-wider look from the front. By putting a couple of cinder blocks in the trunk, the back was lowered and with the nose and deck job it gave the car a much faster look. I was happier than a pig in you know what. As I look back, however, the thing I remember best was how reliable the '49 Merc was. Sure it looked good but it always ran and it ran well. I do not recall any major repairs other than tuneups and brake shoes. As a current TV ad says, "It just kept going and going and..." In the winter of 1953-54 I purchased a 1949 Shultz house trailer, 30' long. At this time a hitch was welded to the Merc rear frame in order to tow the Shultz to and from the Jersey shore. Little did I think at this time that this was the beginning of the end of the Merc. Page 2 1934 Chevy coil springs were obtained at the junkyard. Metal plates were welded on the bottom with four bolts forming a shackle. The Merc rear was jacked up. The coils were placed between the frame and the rear leaf springs. This gave the extra support to the rear to tow the trailer. A spot was found at Sea Bay Park, a private trailer and cottage area below Bay Head, New Jersey, and for the next three seasons the Merc dutifully towed the old Shultz to and from the shore each season. Early in the summer of 1954 the Merc took us to visit relatives in Canada. A rather amusing episode took place southeast of Buffalo, New York. We were cruising along at about 60-65 on a new four lane section of road. My Dad was next to me in the front seat. My grandmother in her late 70's, my sister who was twelve and my mother were in the back. As I approached a 1951 or 1952 Olds Rocket 88 from the rear I pulled into the left-hand lane to pass. As we drew even with the Olds, an elderly, white haired gentleman was driving, he glared at us and stepped on the gas as if to say how dare you try to pass me. Of course at 19 I was not about to let this challenge go unanswered. 70, 80, 85, the road was straight, no other cars near us. As we exceeded 90 the old fellow driving the Olds appeared to be frozen at the wheel. We were staying even. Dad seemed to have left his body and it was sitting next to me starring straight ahead, very little breathing, no motion. In the rearview mirror I could see my mother holding onto the seat for dear life, eyes almost popping out of her head. My sister Ellen was leaning forward looking at the speeds announcing to everyone 70, 72, 75, 78, etc. Grandma who was 4' 11" and almost as round, was a wonderful lady. I had always liked to be around her. She was knitting in the backseat and she never missed a stitch, watching the other car out of the corner of her eye. I knew the Olds was faster than my flathead Merc but I had an ace in the hole overdrive. I put the pedal to the floor and it downshifted giving us a little extra punch. At this point I heard Grandma say, "Atta boy Jimmy, floor it! " I later found out she had learned to drive in the early 20's and had a lead foot. In any event that "little" extra must have scared the Olds, probably never tangled with overdrive. We passed him and soon settled back to 60. Mom put her eyes back into her head. Dad returned to his body and my sister said she was bored. (continued on next page) SMOKE SIGNALS Grandma kept knitting while she posed a question to me. "Do you think this car would go more than 100 miles an hour?" I've never gone that fast. Talking about overdrive, by 1954 automatics were taking over even with some younger people. I liked to ride next to people with automatics and shift my Merc from 1st to 2nd then let it drop into 2nd overdrive then shift into high and then let it shift into overdrive high. The guy next to you never could figure how you shifted 5 times. At one time we even considered putting a dummy shift handle on the left side of the column just to confuse people. Our plan was to shift 1st on the right then the left, etc. Might have been fun, but we never got around to it. By the winter of 1956 I had the Merc for over two years and the past three seasons at the shore had not been kind to her. As I said earlier I never thought buying the trailer was the beginning of the end of the Merc but it was not due to mechanical fault but be- cause of physical problems that I as its' driver caused. No, I never had any accidents with her but my trailer location at the shore was only 20 feet from the beach at the bay. Several times a year I would come home rather early in the morning and carelessly park to far down the beach at low tide. On a number of occasions my poor Merc would be up to the floorboards in salt water and on one occasion the entire rear including the trunk was in the water. I'm sure you know what happened...my poor Merc had some serious cancer in the lower quarters, rear fenders and trunk area. Winter snow and salt on the roads didn't help the matter. In the spring of 1956 I repaired the quarters, rear fenders and trunk with some new sheet metal. The old girl looked good and still ran as good as new. Towing the trailer back to Mountainside in Sept. 1956 at about 50 on the New Jersey Park- way, the rear wheels of the Merc locked momentarily with a loud clang. They broke free and I never had overdrive after that. I would think something in the planetary gear snapped. The old girl just kept running so good that I was seriously going to have some additional body work done, the overdrive repaired and a new paint job but like so many other young men I fell in love not once but twice. My first love turned out to be my wife of the past 32 + years. Funny thing about this was that we were born and raised about four blocks apart. She went to a Catholic school, St. Leo's, and wore a green uniform. I would wait hid- ding in the Page 3 bushes many times and jump out scaring her and calling her a brussel sprout, great fun huh? We were introduced years later by friends on a blind date and by this time her family had moved 20 miles away. If you think some of my activities as a child and young man are strange you may be right but I suggest before you come to any conclusions you closely review your own youth whether you are 19 or 99, male or female. I'm sure you will fmd some surprises under that covering of aging dust. Hopefully, some real good laughs. At about the same time most of my buddies got newer cars. In fact about 1 1/2 years earlier Don Knowles bought a brand new 1954 Ford convertible, red outside, white inside, overhead valve V-8, stick shift, skirts and all the other bells and whistles. At this time I also sold my trailer so I no longer needed the hitch on my '49 Merc. I had put almost 60,000 on the Merc in 2 1/2 years. Hard Miles. The clock read 90,000+ . Not only did I tow the trailer but I also towed a 1952 Studebaker Commander from Point Pleasant, New Jersey to Plainfield, a trip of about 75-80 mites. The car did not use oil. Every- thing except the overdrive and the clock worked. You know I never had a clock work in a car until a digital in a 1986 Capri. It was at this time I discovered a 1954 Chrysler New Yorker with 9,000 miles in Mallon Pontiac's used car lot. V-8 Hemi, four-door, two tone green and a matching plush interior. My 2nd love at that time. That Chrysler is one of only two non-Ford products I ever owned. I liked the car, its luxury impressed me but when I took the Mercury at tradein time there were tears in my eyes. What a strange feeling. I never experienced it before but have several times since. I was excited about the new car but unhappy and reluctant to give up the old car. Who would buy it? Would they care for it..where was it going? I knew my feelings for the new car...would my old Merc be someone's new car? I guess all of us who like cars feel this way at new car time. Nothing will ever replace my first car, the '40 Ford but my '49 Merc was special. We had a mutual like for one another. You keep me waxed and I will always start. Over the years I have considered restoring another '49 Mercury but that's the problem...another '49 Mercury, not my '49 Merc. SMOKE SIGNALS The Prez Says……. I hope everyone enjoyed the Memorial Day weekend, the weather was hot but beautiful. Well, the Courier post show was rained out for the 3rd; hopefully we will get it in on the 10th. We had 146 cars registered, of which 20 were club cars, how many will show up for the rain date is anyone guess. Now there seems to be at least one car show every weekend. This month we also have the Vintage car Show in Riverton & the Grand National in Dover, DE on the 17th. On the 24th you have an opportunity to see the start of the Great Race 2006 here in Philadelphia. (See the Upcoming Events section in this newsletter) The regular June meeting is our Annual Tailgate Meeting, for those who have not joined us before, it is behind the Haddonfield Town Hall in the back parking lot (behind the post office) at 6:00pm or as soon as you can get there. Bring your car, something to eat & drink, your chairs & a table if you would like. We just sit around, look at cars, chat & usually are gone by 8:00. If it should rain we just move inside to the regular meeting room, but still 6:00pm. I hope we have a large turn out. Page 4 By Tom Mc Larney There are not any meetings in July & August so this is your last chance to discuss anything happening this summer. The next Directors meeting will be on September 5th at the Petters’ home. The Haddonfield Car Show is also before we meet again, this is one of our premier events, so please come out & help park car or help in registration. If I don’t see you at the Tailgate meeting, I hope everyone has a safe & health summer & look forward to seeing you in Haddonfield. Tom McLarney This is the Directors meeting list for the rest of the year: September meeting @ Bob Petters’ October meeting @ Dave Hann’s November meeting @ Jackie Flechtner’s December meeting @ Allan Vogelson’s All are welcome to attend. Contact Director for directions Jeff Schulte CARMASTERS 1920-1970’s Collectable Car Repairs & Maintenance Electrical Specialists 538 Main Street Lumberton, NJ 08048 Tel: 609-267-5234 Fax: 609-267-5100 E. Gilbert Jordan ASE Master Engine Machinist Jordan Automotive Machine Cyl. Head Work, Cyl. Boring & Honing, Connecting Rod Work, Flywheels Resurfaced, Complete Motor Rebuilding 1307 Maine Avenue Tel:609-261-2636 (one block off Rt. 38w) Fax:609-261-2636 Hainesport, NJ 08036 WatchmakerEng@aol.com Bereavements We sadly report that Barbara Moss, a former editor of Smoke Signals who worked closely with Alan Volgelson has recently passed away. SMOKE SIGNALS Page 5 AMERICAN MUSCLE: Factory High Performance Vehicles 1964-1972 By Jeffrey Bliemeister, AACA Museum Curator Since the AACA Museum’s opening in 2003, our staff and volunteers have repeatedly heard the same two questions from our visitors: when are the Tuckers arriving and where are your muscle cars? The Tuckers remain in Alexandria, Virginia where Mr. David Cammack graciously offers personal tours upon request. As for the muscle cars, they will arrive in full force on Saturday, May 20th! What, exactly, is a muscle car? The AACA Museum asked that very question last winter with its exhibition, “Thunder Before the Storm: Birth of the American Muscle Car.” Our starting point for the exhibition was 1949, when General Motors introduced its overhead valve V8 engine. This “modern” power plant changed people’s idea of performance as it offered factory horsepower that could match or exceed that obtained by the era’s hot-rodders who were modifying flat-head Ford V8s. Other powerful landmark vehicles, such as the 1955 Chrysler 300C (with its 300 horsepower hemi engine) soon followed. Yes, it was a new era in performance for the cars coming from Detroit, but were these vehicles really “muscle cars?” We deliberately ended this exhibition at 1964, the year Pontiac debuted its GTO, the car most associated with the beginning of the “muscle car” era. muscle car n. A highperformance automobile, often with flashy, sporty styling; any of a group of American-made two-door sports coupes, with powerful engines, designed for highperformance driving; a production car that is formidable in oval track racing, road racing or drag racing. See also: Supercar and Pony Car Jim Aberts, John Katz, Greg Czarnecki and Steve Jones for their efforts in not only locating these fantastic automobiles but convincing their owners to give up driving them for an entire summer season. Some of these cars are extremely rare and, together, they give the public an incredible exhibition experience. The term “Muscle Car” was not a standard part of our automotive vocabulary in the days when these cars were fresh from the factory. In fact, the term first appeared in print in automotive journals in the mid-1970s, several years after the performance era had run its course. During “American Muscle” their actual production, focuses on the height of these performance the factory performance machines were more period, 1964 to 1972. Our commonly referred to as starting point is the 1964 “Supercars,” possibly in Pontiac Tempest with the reference to their GTO option. This connection with super particular example is stock drag racing. coming to us from the Factory performance cars General Motors Heritage Collection in Detroit. It is reached their peak in the late 1960s and early the same vehicle that 1970s as intense ended “Thunder Before competition between the Storm.” The manufacturers resulted in Museum’s all volunteer Exhibition Task Force has yearly horsepower increases and dramatic really worked hard to styling. The 1973 OPEC identify and secure an oil embargo, stricter air impressive array of pollution laws and milestone muscle cars insurance premiums made from all the major muscle cars impractical manufacturers. I wish to and out of fashion with the acknowledge and thank public. While most models disappeared, a few, such as the Mustang, Camaro and Firebird, remained in production with an emphasis on style and appearance, rather than actual performance. Today, muscle cars are coveted by car collectors and restorers across several generations. Certain vintage vehicles, such as Hemi-Powered Mopars and Boss-Engined Mustangs are setting record prices at major auctions across the country. The “Big Three” are responding to this craze by introducing retro styled versions of these old favorites with performance that far exceeds the original models. “American Muscle: Factory Performance Vehicles 1964-1972” offers the public a rare opportunity to see the legendary vehicles that epitomized this exciting era in American automotive history. The exhibition runs through Sunday, October 8th. (continued on next page) SMOKE SIGNALS American Muscle – Exhibition List 1964 Pontiac Tempest/GTO The General Motors Heritage Collection 1966 Ford Mustang GT350 Hertz Bill Smart – Lansdale, PA 1967 Mercury Comet 427 Pete and Sandy Robinson - Reistertown, MD 1967 Pontiac GTO The General Motors Heritage Collection 1969 AMC AMX Museum Collection, gift of Chris Zinn 1969 Chevrolet Camaro SS Ron Molinaro – Manalapan, NJ 1969 Chevrolet Camaro Z28 Richard Dilworth – East Fallowfield, PA 1969 Dodge Daytona Duane and Bonnie Catlett – Winchester, VA 1969 Ford Mustang Cobra Jet Tom McElroy – Glenmoore, PA 1969 Plymouth Roadrunner Dickie Wolfe – Wardensville, WV 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge The General Motors Collection 1970 Buick GSX The General Motors Heritage Collection 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle Ken Mahr – Chadds Ford, PA 1970 Chevrolet El Camino SS Bob Kapral – Boonton, NJ 1970 Chevrolet Yenko Nova Alan I. Ives – Chesapeake, VA 1970 Ford Mustang Boss 302 Andrew Bickhart – Shamokin Dam, PA 1970 Ford Mustang Boss 429 Joe Spinelli – Media, PA 1970 Ford Torino Mike Porotta – Trenton, NJ 1970 Oldsmobile 442 The General Motors Collection 1970 Plymouth Hemi Barracuda Dave Points – Dover, PA 1970 Pontiac GTO Dennis Nerganst – Downingtown, PA 1972 Oldsmobile 442 W30 Ken Mahr – Chadds Ford, PA 1973 Pontiac Trans Am Super Duty Todd Matthews – Harrisburg, PA Page 6 SMOKE SIGNALS Page 7 Upcoming Events Courier Post Car Show – postponed due to rain - June 10th. Tailgate Party at Haddonfield Municipal Building back parking lot June 15th, 6:00pm in lieu of meeting. Great Race in Philadelphia – on the Parkway. 6/21&6/22…Car registration starts at the Sheraton Society Hill 6/23…Trophy Run to Dover DE. & back 6/24....Cars depart Hotel for Ben Franklin Parkway @ 8:30am Official Start of Race @ 12:30pm http://www.greatrace.com/ for more details. Merchantville Car Show, Saturday July 8th, http://merchantvillecarshow.com/ for more details. Peach Festival – August 5th, 5:00pm at the Mt. Laurel Friends Meeting House – more details to come. Grand National Show in Dover, DE – June 17th - Contact Tom Amendola for details. NOTE THERE WILL BE NO CLUB MEETINGS IN JULY AND AUGUST. For Sale/Wanted 1970 Caddy El Dorado, muscle car 500 cubic inch engine, 400 horse power and 550 torque. Has damage on passenger side. Runs great. Call for details – Caddy Mike – 610-789-5753 For Sale: a ton of Caddy Parts. Caddy guy Mike wants to empty out his entire collection of stuff. Give him a call - 610-789-5753 For Sale: 1957 Pontiac 2 door, good for parts. Call Chuck Sweeney 856-753-8575 ANKOKAS REGION, AACA The ANKOKAS is the South East Region of the AACA dating back to 1964. TOM MCLARNEY, PRESIDENT TomSr@Conveyorsystems.com 856-461-6688 TOM AMENDOLA, VICE PRESIDENT tomamendola@hotmail.com 609-268-8488 GEORGE REINIS, TREASURER greinis@comcast.net 856-424-4243 JACKIE FLECHTNER, SECRETARY 856-429-2709 TOM GIANGIULIO, DIRECTOR glenex@aol.com 856-767-5913 BOB PETTERS, DIRECTOR pettersr@comcast.net 856-7674438 DAVE HANN, DIRECTOR 3043951@mycingular.com 856-546-8241 JEFF SCHULTE, DIRECTOR jefferycar@aol.com 856-234-1623 HOWARD STEINBERG, DIRECTOR Howards101@aol.com 856-424-1861 We’re on the Web! See us at: http://www.geocities.com/ankokas/ For Sale: 1984 Chrysler New Yorker, 5th Ave, original owner, auto, garaged kept, 4 dr sedan, white, dk blue leather interior, 318 V8, ½ vinyl roof, 56K miles, p/s, p/b, p/seats, p/dl, p/ant, am/fm cassette, new tires, driver/pass heat & a/c controls, asking $5,000 firm. Car is located in Westmont near Haddonfield. Please call Dave Bernardo 856-665-1535. For Sale by Bob Petters – ANKOKAS Region AACA “Static Cling” stickers. Reapply-able and available in traditional logo or club banner. $4.00 each – get them from Bob at our monthly meetings. Regular meetings are held on the 3rd Thursday of each month at 8:00pm on the second floor of the Haddonfield Municipal Building. Director meetings are held on the 1st Tuesday of the month at the home of one of the officers. All are welcome. NOTE: No meetings in July, August, or December SMOKE SIGNALS From the Editor……. By Michael Sisto “The Cuba Project: TailLight Diplomacy Starts 9th Year” As I wrote in last months issue, south of Key West. As I did one roadster, Cuba counts but one at our April club meeting you night in 2000, riding along the motor vehicle for 24 people. missed a fascinating oceanfront in a '56 Chevy, Compare this to Pennsylvania presentation by guest Rick looking north I could see a clear with 6 vehicles to every 9 people! Shnitzler on classic American glow that was Florida. Havana OK, what is TLD'S mission ? For cars in Cuba. Rick is the Lead started up 27 years after 8 years we've been working to Organizer of the TailLight Columbus discovered Cuba in get American old car owners to Diplomacy organization. 1492. 1519 or 1959, it's been the Cuba. Persistently seeking to Caribbean's biggest city, bigger create the conditions for the than Baltimore. owners of '57 Buicks, '49 Below is a reprint of his talk on the subject before we watched the video that originally aired on By the 1700's Cuba's roaring PBS back in 2002. Keep your exports included sugar cane, eyes open as it may air again. tobacco, rum and hardwoods. Great thanks to the Ankokas Region's officers and members. And right-off-the-bat I want to Page 8 Starting before WW I, Cubans imported more American cars per person than any nation. SMOKE SIGNALS EDITOR Michael Sisto 20 Huckleberry Way Turnersville, NJ 08012 E-MAIL: ANKOKASNEWSLETTER@ Comcast.net FAX: 856-401-9253 PHONE: 856-232-1329 st Articles due end of 1 week of each month Dodges, '55 Harleys, and '58 Fageols to meet face-to-face with Cuban brethren. Americans acknowledge three other key with Cubans - along with their non-governmental groups. The families. Open visitation . . . US-Cuba Trade Association, the Recent discoveries included a 300 SL, a Chrysler Ghia auto Latin American Working Group, The National Foreign Trade recognize AACA National From any set of assumptions, its Directors. Doug Drake from our easy to confirm a minimum of startup, and now continuing from 30,000 as still in daily use. A line Bo Croly and Terry Bond. We more than 110 miles long. And also must recognize equal this doesn't count at least 60,000 supporting roles by SAH, OCW, AACA-eligible pre-1982 cars, HMN, SEMA, and Cuba's top motorcycles, light and heavy What you will not see next? Dagoberto Rodriguez, Cuba's auto museum, Havana's trucks, and buses mainly from Mixed in among the countless ''ambassador" to the U.S. in Deposito del Automovil. Before Eastern Europe. I caution you '52 Chevies and '49 Plymouths, Washington; and Rodrigo we watch the film, I'm going to these numbers are bare rolling proof of Cuba's Malmierca, Cuba's Ambassador bring you proprietary facts to minimums. Regardless, Cuba, automotive adventures. to the United Nations in New help you frame your responses. with area and population of Czechoslovakian Skodas, Polish, York. ''Classic American Cars of Cuba'' Pennsylvania, ranks 75th in the Fiat 500's, East German was a 2002 PBS special, so far world, but 2nd (after the US) with Wartburgs, West German seen by about 50,000,000 registered AACA-eligible DKW's, English Lagondas, and Americans. I was their script vehicles! Regarding vehicle age, Ural motorcycles from Russia. consultant, and I want you to 5% are from the '20s and '3os; Anybody here ever seen a 2000 decipher just which AACA core 20% are '40s; and 75% are '50s. Ssasyang from China? Or GAZ values - are precise and congruent - despite being totally separated since 1961. 45 years. This offered Americans our first look at Cuba, Cubans, and Cuban cars. For condition, less than 5% are #1 or 2, 25% are #3, 60% are #4. figures. Havana is 90 miles due Guevara's '60 Chevrolet. personnel carriers still in military drag? Stuff I encountered on the streets when I war hoping to see first drove at age 15. Cuba's dominant brand. Chrysler is next, followed by Ford, then Studebaker, Nash, and Kaiser. DC-3 ! OK, some facts and biggest discoveries since Che dominates, with Chevrolet independents such as Packard, hand carried home as a kid in a that TLD is sitting on one of the an Isetta, perhaps the very car I and finger the artifacts. No ''Do in Cuba. Some of this stuff I Skylark. And I want to confirm As in the 1950's, GM still During the Q&A come up here Not Touch'' signs here or on cars show car, and a '54 Buick TLD is a spinoff from US-Cuba Sister Cities Association. In 2000 they invited me to Council. Their leaders are all well aware of AACA. Fernando Remirez' role in Havana sits alongside other senior policy makers like Ricardo Alarcon, General Assembly President; Remember this film reflected great shared optimism of 5 years ago. Now, what's a federal crime for 99.9% of Americans is hosum for any Canadian. Take an extra handout but don't waste it on someone from AACA'S Ontario Region. Find a fellow American whose passion is guaranteeing the rights in our Constitution. RICK SHNITZLER Lead organizer determine if old cars were a TailLight Diplomacy No time soon are any cars likely basis for a US-Cuba people-to- Rickplan@aol.com to be sunk as fish reefs. Whether people cultural exchange. So a 1999 (Canadian-assembled right now aside from Sister Cities Dodge Cirrus ) or a 1929 Ford International, I want to Contact Tom & Carol Amendola if interested in arranging an informal meeting place. SMOKE SIGNALS Michael Sisto, Editor 20 Huckleberry Way Turnersville, NJ 08012 Your June Issue of ANKOKAS Region AACA Newsletter has arrived…… Tail Gate Party is June 15th at 6:00pm in the back parking lot of the Haddonfield Municipal Building. No June, July, or August meeting….