1974 Volkswagon Thing Turquoise With White Removable Hardtop on 2040-cars
Tucson, Arizona, United States
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1974 Volkswagon Thing. Turquoise body with a white removable hardtop. Windows are removable as well. Manual. Fair condition. Gas fuel. One small dent in front fender. Owner will bring car to buyer. Discuss payment methods with serious buyer through phone. (520)906-2815 for further information.
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Volkswagen Thing for Sale
1974 volkswagen "acapulco" thing restored & beautiful, runs excellent rare!
1973 volkswagen thing base 1.6l(US $14,500.00)
Florida, nicest rust free vw 181 thing around, family owned since 1974(US $15,500.00)
1974 volkswagen thing base 1.6l(US $5,000.00)
You can have my thing! it's beautiful and purrs. like new! imagine riding, fun
1973 volkswagon thing
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Volkswagen continues hunt for new chairman
Tue, May 5 2015Volkswagen is going to need a new chairman. And the question is not only who that will be, but when he or she will be selected. The German automaker held its Annual General Meeting in Hannover yesterday, the first in a baker's dozen years without Ferdinand Piech presiding as chairman. The gavel was wielded instead by Berthold Huber, a labor representative on the board who was named as interim chair. Piech was ousted along with his wife Ursula (who also sat on the board) after a failed attempt to push out Martin Winterkorn as CEO. According to Winterkorn, in speaking with Reuters in an article published by Automotive News, the industrial giant is working hard at finding a new chairman in short order. "The executive committee and the supervisory board are working hard to swiftly resolve the remaining issues with regard to the composition of the supervisory bodies in the best possible manner," Winterkorn said. The publication's German counterpart, however, paints a different picture. Speaking with Stephan Weil, the president of Lower Saxony who sits on the board as a shareholder representative, Automobilwoche says Volkswagen is in no rush to name a new chairman. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle. What is clear, however, is that the new chairman will need broad support from the company's labor representatives as well as its shareholders – including the Porsche and Piech families and government representatives from Lower Saxony and Qatar. Porsche Automobil Holding SE holds 50.7 percent of the company's shares, the State of Lower Saxony another 20 percent, Qatar 17 percent and the remaining 12.3 percent by other shareholders. Some have speculated that Winterkorn could be promoted to the chairmanship of the Supervisory Board, but could end up having his term as chief executive (and chairman of the managing board) extended instead, with the chairmanship going to another candidate. Related Video:
VW bringing fuel cell concept to LA Auto Show
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