As many of you know, I am associated with the Texas Transportation Museum in San Antonio. The museum currently owns two Imperials. It used to have two more but they "disappeared" long before my time. The Imperial I usually refer to as mine, a 1958, is on the front page of the museum brochure but has lived in my garage ever since we bought this house. The other one is a sorely neglected 1973 four door. I have been using my own money to run and maintain the 1958. There is some method in my madness. I don't have to pay for insurance and I get to claim any purchases for it as a gift to a charity. Regrettably, no one pays even so much as attention to the 1973. In fact it arrived on a trailer and the engine has never been started since we got it. At one point, some folks did try but the effort came to nothing. I am not entirely sure why I became so attached to the 1958 Imperial. It started out as a weird retort to those who thought that none of the cars at the museum needed to be able to run. "Let's take the most useless, most neglected, car and get it running. That'll show 'em." It is relevant to mention it is primarily a train museum. Anyhoo, one thing led to another, somehow, and here I am, a full blown 1958 fanatic. I resigned as Board Chairman this week, after over three and a half years in the position, to become the museum's first paid employee in its 39 year history. I am now the manager and my principle duty is to try to raise revenues at the museum. It is a part time position and I have another job as well. These are jobs five and six for the year, so you know what fun I have been having in 2003. Which gets me back to the Imperials. We have decided to sell the 1973 before it gets too much worse. I think I have a buyer in the local Mopar club. He has a Plymouth GTX but now also two young children and he wants a distinctive luxo-boat. The early 70s is his favorite era for cars and he is very familiar with the engine and transmission already. That will leave the 1958, which almost everyone regards as mine anyway. As you may know, it is not in good shape. Its appearance is close to shocking and it needs a ring job at the very least, which will necessitate the removal of the engine. Good sense would dictate putting it to rest, one way or another. Good sense is not, however, what has driven me to find a way to work at the museum. Lets just say that between the two jobs, I don't make nearly as much as I was this time last year in the credit union business. So, the required work on the 1958 will get done, one way or another. I am reluctant to approach one of our main backers for help with this car. The company is a privately owned trucking firm, one of the few independents left, that has been very helpful with most of our vehicle needs in the past. I will need to be a little more creative than that. I won't know how bad the engine situation is until it has been removed, stripped down and inspected. I hope it will just be a ring job. I fear that at least one cylinder will be bad enough to force a re-bore and then all bets are off in terms of money. There will, of course, be a flurry of might-as-well opportunities as well. Money from grants is usually very specifically given, so diverting some it to a lovely old Imperial may not be advisable. I have never heard of a grant to fix up an old car. The museum has tried to use some local colleges for work on cars, but these efforts were unsuccessful and led, in one case, to the destruction of one car that was actually running before it went to the college, a rather nice 1967 London taxi. It was foolishness on the part of the museum that caused 99% of the problem, but nobody was listening to me at the time when I advised sending the car out there in the first place. Under my guidance, I have had two old fire trucks completely restored, but that was the trucking company I already mentioned. So I am not sure how things are going to resolve when it comes to the 1958. I am sure that they will be resolved, however. In my own weird way, I am looking forward to pulling the engine and seeing how much I can get done myself. The museum lacks an engine hoist at this time, so I have not even got that much figured out. It will be a great adventure, I'm sure. I guess, therefore, I am back where I started. Like everyone in this rather wonderful worldwide group of Imperial enthusiasts, it will be up to me to try to make the impossible happen. It is a miracle that these old cars are still here. It is truly bizarre that there are people like us who care enough about them to try to go above and beyond the logic of economics in trying to keep them alive. My daughter is nine. She recently reminded me that I promised to have the car in "Prom-worthy" condition by the time she goes to hers. At the rate I'm going, that may not be enough time. Hugh