My first car was not an AMC. When I was a college student in 1967 my Dad helped me get a job as a used car salesman at a typcial used car lot on Broadway in Louisville, KY. I was the token "honest" fresh face on the lot. The rest of the sales guys were classic "plaid pants and suspenders" types. I did sell a few cars during that summer but I would not sell a car to anyone I knew. The lot pulled all of the standard tricks: turned back the mileage (a "mechanic" came in and did this for us), really cheap paint jobs, brake fluid in the auto trannies to swell the seals and fix an leak. You name it. I was in the market for a car before I went back to college in the Fall, but one of the fringe benefits of working as a salesman was that I got to drive one of the cars on the lot home each night. Cars I drove that summer included a 63 Nova covertible, 65 GTO, and a 62 Chevy hardtop (which completely went dead (no lights, nothing) at 60 miles and hour on a state highway, when the main dash wiring came loose). I had out of date plates on it too, so the sherrif towed it before I could rescue it the next morning. One day a guy from Iowa, working in construction came onto the lot and wanted to sell a 56 Chevy hardtop. I asked the manager if I could buy the car and he said go ahead, they didn't need the inventory. The guy parked the car across the street and I put a note on the windshield indicating I would buy the car. The car and the note were gone. End of deal, I thought. A few weeks later he came back and sold me the car for $400. I drove it for two years but never really had the money to fix it up. AMC connection: We had a 61 Ambassador on the back row and I thought that was the ugliest car I had ever seen. We sold that car for cash to a freshly mustered out solder who drove it home to Tennessee I think. Joe Fulton Salinas, CA _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com