Just a comment, jydog, I used to live in Syracuse, NY. Trust me, in a blizzard, the worst of them, up hills, the worst of them, RWD is just fine. I shouldn't be convincing you of this, as I am obviously interested in your car, but with a Camaro I made it through many blizzards just with big snow tires. My 2wd long bed fullsize pickup, with no weight in the bed at all, has passed stuck 4wd trucks up hills, again, with good, skinny snow tires (185/70/R15 on an eight inch wheel) . If you can drive (can't all GRmers drive) and handle a tailslide situation, a RWD is actually my preference in the snow with skinny-as-all-get-out snows. Here is why:
Think of the traction circle. If a tire is doing something like turning with all of it's grip it cannot provide any tractive effort (accelerating or braking), right? Well if you are spinning the tires in FWD you cannot turn. If you are struggling to get up a hill with a turn, you may end up in a ditch off to the side of the hill (which I have seen many times) because the driver is trying to go up, and turning the wheel doesn't really do anything unless you lift and coast back down. In that same situation with rwd, you control the rear end spin with the front tires, which are just hanging around waiting, because all that they do is brake and turn. Asking the same set of wheels to accelerate, brake and turn can be dangerous on occasion, except in AWD applications. FWD is undoubtedly better in 'going' applications, but if you've ever driven in real snow, you know that getting the car moving is often the least of your problems. And, as I've said, RWD vehicles can do that too with the right shoes.
Anyway...
I suspect many of you are right about the 9-5 and the prices for cars with good service records. I have seen some for around 3 grand though, but the service records are key. If I find one and look for sludge and see none, am I ok? I am fine with frequent synthetic oil changes if that's all it takes.
The Legacy Wagon is the wildcard, but head gasket and timing belt problems seem to be a stopping point. How bad were they, really? A Legacy GT Wagon is a nice piece otherwise...
-Brian