First one to guess what this car is will be the Champion!
Well, that did not take long. '51 Studebaker Champion
tradio wrote:
Well, that did not take long. '51 Studebaker Champion
Your problem is the UHH has a bunch of old foggies who remember those things. When my my '54 Buick blew the engine in February of my sophomore year of college (1965) I got a 49 Studebaker for $35 from the local salvage yard to finish the school year. Hey, it ran and beat walking 26 miles from my Grandmother's farm to the college. The exhaust leaked and I had to drive with the windows down in the coldest winter in Western Kentucky for over 20 years. The first day before I found the exhaust came in through a hole in the floor and was sucked in by the heater I got a real bad case of hallucinations from breathing that stuff. The rest of the semester, windows down, heater off and dress like Nanook of the North for the drive to school and home.
alawry
Loc: Timaru New Zealand
The answer is in the question!
My parents had a 1950 Studebaker, so I recognized it right away. My father worked at the Studebaker plant in South Bend, Indiana for the last 24 years of that the company was operating. I still have some of the memorabilia from the company's 100th year celebration.
It was a line from the Guys and Dolls musical. Nicely Nicely Johnson says “I hope you get stabbed by a Studebaker”.
My first "experience" was in a back seat of a 1953 Studebaker
billgran wrote:
My first "experience" was in a back seat of a 1953 Studebaker
Alone? Anyone else attending?
Morry
Loc: Palm Springs, CA
tradio wrote:
First one to guess what this car is will be the Champion!
1947 or 1948 Studebaker. Interesting car.
GeneB
Loc: Chattanooga Tennessee
Morry wrote:
1947 or 1948 Studebaker. Interesting car.
It is a Studebaker Champion
tradio wrote:
First one to guess what this car is will be the Champion!
IT looks like a Studebaker to me with a really nice chrome job to boot.....?
took about 2 seconds. It's so much easier to identify a car from the 50's or 60's than it is to identify a car from the past 20 years or so. The newer ones all look alike, and basically are interchangeable. Today getting a new car is about as exciting as getting a new stove!
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