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To: scrabblehack

If you want to the auction, you would have seen that it was, in fact, clearly identified as one of "those busses" you see in the picture and as non-operational.

They used the infamous picture, marking which one it was.

There were actually people who did want it. They got 23 bids in the second auction, I think more in the first one before it was pulled.

Now that I search my memory, I seem to remember the busses were worth more as salvage, so they were eventually sold in bulk.

Unfortunately for them, a schoolbus is a rather awkward collectable ... it's just too big!

D


54 posted on 03/04/2007 6:55:04 AM PST by daviddennis (If you like my stuff, please visit amazing.com, my new social networking site!)
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To: daviddennis

Oooh....maybe they were collectors' items as it were.

http://www.railroadforums.com/photos/showphoto.php/photo/14367/ppuser/1480

In Arden, PA is one of the original "Streetcar Named Desire." (not far from where I grew up). My father was under the impression it was the only one. When I moved to New Orleans, I found out it wasn't. (There was no streetcar on Desire Street, but rather a bus, but there was a streetcar in a museum or something.) It looks like California has a couple of them as well:

http://www.streetcar.org/mim/spotlight/world/heartbreak/index.html


56 posted on 03/04/2007 12:27:27 PM PST by scrabblehack
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