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World's last VW Beetle rolls off the assembly line MEXICO CITY (AP)  The last Volkswagen Beetle rolled off the assembly line Wednesday, 70 years after Adolf Hitler's government introduced Germans to a two-door passenger car that became an icon around the globe. A mariachi band serenades the last "bug" at a Volkswagon plant in Puebla, Mexico. By Andrew Winning, pool Competition from newer compacts and a Mexican government decision to phase out two-door taxis led Volkswagen to shut down its only remaining "bug" productionline at its plant in Puebla, 65 miles southeast of Mexico City. (Related story: 'Love Bug' driven by generations) Workers painstakingly crafted the final car: a baby blue version marked No. 21,529,464 that will go to a museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, home of VW headquarters. Adorned with a Mexican flag made of flowers, the car was serenaded by a mariachi band playing "El Rey," or "The King." "You didn't just participate in the construction of a car, but in the creation of a legend," Reinhard Jung, president of the executive committee of Volkswagen Mexico, told workers and executives. The ceremony at the factory was closed to outsiders but transmitted around the world on a satellite television feed. The 300 employees working on the bug assembly line will be reassigned to other departments at the factory, which also produces Jettas and the modern version of the Beetle. Volkswagen produced 3,000 "last edition" bugs to be sold at Mexican dealerships for $8,000 — a few hundred dollars more than the normal price. The design stays faithful to the original model with a few minor changes, including whitewall tires and a CD player. The end of production sparked a fierce, international battle among collectors who have been flying to Mexico and shipping the cars all over the world. An Australian, Gary Collis, said he couldn't resist making the long journey for a car he calls "the heart and soul of Volkswagen." Collis bought his new bug — the 21st of his collection — in Guadalajara and is driving the car back to Los Angeles, where he will have it shipped to Australia. "Since they first announced the final edition ... I thought to myself: 'This is really the end,'" he said, adding that the venture is costing him $20,000. In Germany, last edition bugs are selling for $14,900 each, while car companies in Britain have them on sale for $16,000. Volkswagen of Brazil plans to import 50 last edition bugs and sell them for $13,000. "This is the end of a very long story, and a lot of Beetle people here are going to be very sad," said Ivan McCutcheon, editor of VolksWorld, a monthly magazine for VW lovers in London. VW stopped production of the bug in the United States in 1977 after the car's design and air-cooled engine no longer met U.S. safety and emission standards. That has made it virtually impossible for U.S. enthusiasts to get their hands on final models. Jerry Jess, a collector from Phoenix, tried and failed to get permission to bring a new bug over the border. "There is a lot of demand for those last bugs here in America, and I'm sure some of those cars are going to get here illegally anyway," Jess said. The bug collected a variety of nicknames around the world — "el huevito" (the little egg) in Cuba, "coccinelle" (ladybird) in France. It's known by the madeup name "vocho" in Mexico City, where bugs still crowd the streets. But a recent city regulation banned new two-door taxis, contributing to plummeting sales. Guadalupe Loaeza bade farewell in a column Tuesday in the newspaper Reforma, fondly recounting the numerous vochos she's owned over the years. "The vocho produced in Mexico was, without a doubt, a Mexican's best friend," she wrote. Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.