Good point, KaiserFrazerlibrary, about the center of the country. I am sorry to hear we have lost 400 members. How can we encourage higher membership? I am probably one of the younger ones at 35. I joined when I bought my first Kaiser when I was around 18, but I eventually lost interest in that restoration project (the only part of the "restoration" I actually accomplished was to tear it down!). It wasn't until about 2 or 3 years ago that the Kaiser bug bit again and I bought another Kaiser and renewed my membership. It's a tough thing to attract new members, especially younger members. The reason I really got into the club was because I was in to old cars as a teenager, and happened to be neighbors to Sterling Weber in Logan, Utah, who had a 54 Manhattan, 50 frazer, 49 Traveler or Vagabond--I can't remember which, but it was LOW mileage, like 20,000, and a 48 Frazer--I think Manhattan, but can't remember--for which he had 2 NOS seats in the correct color for his car still in the factory boxes. I remember at that point he had the front clip off of the Frazer and had the rebuilt and repainted engine back in, and was doing other body work. Sterling kind of took me under his wing, lent me Last Onslaught, talked KF to me, and got me really interested. Sterling passed away recently and I'm not sure where all of his cars went, but Larry Barker knew where a few of them had gone when I talked to him in Texas last summer.