John’s 1967 Pontiac GTO with rare His and Hers shifter has been a lifelong project, restored to drive and enjoy on the road. For many car enthusiasts, their first vehicle is a memorable milestone, but ...
One of only three examples known to still exist, this 1967 Pontiac GTO sweepstakes campaign car is a survivor that spent ...
The Pontiac GTO first appeared in 1964 as an option package for the LeMans. It didn't take long, though, for the name to catch on, and the GTO quickly became a legendary part of muscle car history.
The Pontiac GTO was the direct result of John Z. DeLorean trying to find a way to attract the youth market after GM brass forbid all the divisions from participating in competitive motorsports. GM had ...
Introduced for the 1964 model year, the Pontiac GTO is widely regarded as America's first muscle car. This statement isn't exactly accurate because Chrysler sold 400+ horsepower intermediates as early ...
Denny Kloha was not unlike most red-blooded American kids growing up in the industrial city of Flint, Michigan, in the '60s. He was seriously into cars, liked to drag race, and, more importantly, he ...
Did your new pair of shoes come with a four-speed? They may have if you were one of the winners of a Thom McAn GTO giveaway in 1966. Actually, to win one, you didn't even have to buy a pair of the ...
This 1967 Pontiac GTO on Exotic Car Trader has less than 4,000 miles on the odometer and a near-mint original interior. The Pontiac GTO is a legendary American muscle car produced for a whopping five ...
Retired Indiana University geologist David Bish was on a team that invented a portable X-ray diffraction device NASA deposited on Mars to analyze minerals on the surface of the solar system’s Red ...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Pontiac had hung the majority of its’ advertising on their involvement in competitive motorsports. This was in direct contravention to an agreement GM had signed in ...
Editor's note: Laura Lane is on vacation this week so we reached into the My Favorite Ride archive for this classic column from November 2024. Retired Indiana University geologist David Bish was on a ...