NOT MINE 1970 Dodge Polara 9 Passenger

I don't know who they are but I was thinking one inside, one on the roof. Only on nice days of course.
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Okay... not to nit-pick... But the surfboard fins are in upside down. There supposed to be on the bottom of the board, not sticking up at the top! :)

I don't know how that's even possible. Boards only have fin slots on the bottom. Unless they surf upside down on the east coast?
 
Okay... not to nit-pick... But the surfboard fins are in upside down. There supposed to be on the bottom of the board, not sticking up at the top! :)

I don't know how that's even possible. Boards only have fin slots on the bottom. Unless they surf upside down on the east coast?

Hand grips? A variation of this?

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This wagon really needs a set of Cooper Cobras! Am I right gentleman?
No, we need to see more restorations with factory wheel covers and whitewalls and less of people trying to make everything a muscle car.

That having been said, it's odd to see many stating that whitewalls and dog dishes are inappropriate; that wasn't an uncommon thing back-in-the-day. People have to remember that, although whitewalls were optional on most cars, almost everyone got them, even if they didn't upgrade their wheel choice.
 
No, we need to see more restorations with factory wheel covers and whitewalls and less of people trying to make everything a muscle car.

That having been said, it's odd to see many stating that whitewalls and dog dishes are inappropriate; that wasn't an uncommon thing back-in-the-day. People have to remember that, although whitewalls were optional on most cars, almost everyone got them, even if they didn't upgrade their wheel choice.
Wheel covers were Frisbees back then and they still are today.
 
A coffin or a dead body on the roof on a wagon. HMMM that makes me think of a movie.

As an aside ponder this: My friend Jim was hitching a ride years ago in Phoenix. He got one in a wagon.
At some point he turned around as something was rolling back and forth in the rear. He asked the driver what it was.
He was transporting a body to a funeral home. That story so far has beat any other "what's that in the back of the vehicle?
This was in the 1970's. Doubt it would happen now. The late 60's into the 70's...you just never knew what was going to happen.
 
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