The name says it all………….DODGE Brothers CLUB. To admit there is not a reservoir of computer literate Dodge owners is comparable to a recent statement which says that Generation Xer’s are more interested in collecting “antique” cars than Baby Boomers. Well, gee, this is really true if the AACA definition of a “antique” car being more than 25 years of age is applied. Then, all the cars made prior to 1998 becomes statistically countable as collectible “antiques”. This is not semantics or a play of words to prove, or disprove, that a person who owns a 1980 Ford Pinto possesses the talents and traits I possess when I want to talk about the transmission or clutch of my 1923 DODGE Brothers Roadster. Counter point is that there just may be a person, born in 1967, who does possess knowledge about a 1980 Pinto, as well as a 1923 DB Roadster, as well as being retired and fully capable of setting up a functional DB Club wep page. I suggest that other such clubs be looked at, critically evaluate the way they procure talent needed to fill jobs like a web page designer, and do it. By the way, I pay as much in dues to the DB Club as I do the Cushman Club of America and the Willys, Overland, Knight Registry (WOKR) and I have completed builds on a 47 Cushman and a 27 Willys, and much of the help on obtaining information and parts came directly from members, via the web site. What does the BB Club do differently in regards to the way dues are spent for member benefits, I.e. a functional web page? Jack
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