NOTE: The quiz randomizes questions, so your questions may not be in the same order as below or may not even be included below!!

UNIT 5

Question 1

Who was popular NASCAR driver Bill Elliot's crew chief?
Correct Answer:
Mike Ford

Question 2
	
The earliest, car as sex symbol, ads featured pictures of ?
Correct Answer:
strong, handsome men

Question 3
	
The "Distributor" is part of the _______________ found on your cars engine.
Correct Answer:
ignition system

Question 4

The Museum of Automobile History presents information on which items?
Correct Answer:
motorcycles, trucks and cars

Question 5

What is Lisa Smokstad's job?
Correct Answer:
she works as a tire specialist for driver Jack Sprague

Question 6
	
As early as the 1920 suburban growth had begun to rival that of cities, but only after World War II did American suburbs come into their own. Beginning in the ? , huge real estate developers took advantage of new technology, federally insured home loans, and low energy costs to respond to the acute housing shortage that returning GIs, the baby boom, and pent-up demand from the Depression had created.
Correct Answer:
mid-1940s

Question 7

Caster, Camber, Toe-in are all terms related to a?
Correct Answer:
wheel alignment

Question 8

How many photo libraries can you visit on the Museum of Automobile History's website?
Correct Answer:
9

Question 9

AACA judging of a vehicle is based on two major components: Authenticity and condition.
It is critical that the vehicle be ? authentic in reference to the conditions listed in the AACA General Policy.

Correct Answer:
100%

Question 10

If it's Monday and you're in Ontario, which of the following places could you go to if you wanted to participate in a Classic Car Cruise Night?
Correct Answer:
Manotick, across from the LCBO or Napanee at the Canadian Tire

Question 11

Which style feature distinguished the 1959 Thunderbird Convertible?
Correct Answer:
it had the convertible top stored in the trunk when out of use

Question 12

The publication that was the culmination of this attempt to sell auto design as high art was Edson Armis  ?  book, The Art of American Car Design. The most carefully researched and scholarly work on automobile design to this date, Armis book, published by a university press, pushed the autos-as-art argument to new heights.
Correct Answer:
1988

Question 13
	
The Volkswagen Beetle was a design for efficiency and low price. The car progressed over 60 years with minimal change from _______________________?
Correct Answer:
1938-2003

Question 14

The new "interstate" highways also encouraged the development of roadside businesses that serviced highway travelers. A uniform highway culture of drive-in restaurants, gas stations, and huge regional shopping malls soon developed, all of it advertised on large roadside billboards. Industries designed to serve motorists expanded, with the motel industry in particular growing in lock-step with the interstates, taking advantage of the same increase in family vacations that caused visits to national parks to double over the course of the ?
Correct Answer:
1950s.

Question 15

On NASCAR tracks, what does a white flag with a black cross mean?
Correct Answer:
you will no longer be scored if you don t come into the pits

Question 16

Prisoners were transported in horse-drawn covered wagons known as _______ Contrary to popular opinion, the name was not a slur on immigrant Irish but referred to padding on the walls and floor of the wagons to prevent the prisoners from injuring themselves.
Correct Answer:
Paddy Wagon

Question 17
	
According to the French cultural theorist Roland Barthes, classic cars are today's equivalent of?
Correct Answer:
the great Gothic cathedrals

Question 18

According to Charles Ofria, which decades produced the cars with the greatest styling and design?
Correct Answer:
50's and 60's

Question 19
	
The Antique Automobile Club of America was founded in ? by a small group of people with a common interest, the love of old cars. Their initial purpose was to gather together and plan outings and driving contests. These contests were based on driving skill rather than races, and the winners were awarded useful items, such as a quart of oil or a gallon of gasoline.
Correct Answer:
1935

Question 20
	
Which glitzy car was designed specifically for the Hollywood elite, by Dutch Darrin?
Correct Answer:
1939 Packard Model 120, Convertible Victoria