If you had the chance for Carroll Shelby to sign your dash would you?
Dash, no... a postcard, maybe... not into the "hero worship" (nothing against CS and respect all he has done, far more than many, and don't understand why so many love to tear him down) but saying "he saw my car for 28 seconds, shook my hand and signed it...look!" does absolutely zero for me... a dime a dozen... but do respect that he supports his supporters, as many "famous" folks don't, and his charity efforts.
...besides I'm kinda a purist and it didn't come from the factory that way. :tongue:
No doubt Carroll Shelby is an icon in the heritage & history of the Mustang. But if I were to seek an autograph honoring the Mustang, it would be that of Lee Iacocca- 'the father of the Mustang'.
The only autograph I ever sought (and fortunately got) was Paul Tibbets. (NO, it wasn't during WWII. I'm not THAT old.):grin: Neil
No doubt Carroll Shelby is an icon in the heritage & history of the Mustang. But if I were to seek an autograph honoring the Mustang, it would be that of Lee Iacocca- 'the father of the Mustang'.
The only autograph I ever sought (and fortunately got) was Paul Tibbets. (NO, it wasn't during WWII. I'm not THAT old.):grin:
Neil
Just in case somebody does not know who Paul Tibbets was:
Paul Warfield Tibbets, Jr. (February 23, 1915 – November 1, 2007) was a brigadier general in the United States Air Force, best known for being the pilot of the Enola Gay, the first aircraft to drop an atomic bomb in the history of warfare. The bomb, code-named Little Boy, was dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima.