Pro-touring?????
More like ultra pro-street. That's a good thing though. It seems like pro-street has gone into submission again, in favor of pro-touring. Not that that's a bad thing either (soon I'll have one of each).
I have a stock-bodied 1966 Biscayne. I didn't hack anything on the entire build, but it took everything I had to drill a few holes in the trunk pan to run the fuel lines. Like the old saying, it truely can be put back to stock. That will never happen.
It has the usual stuff for a pro-streeter. Weld wheels, nice paint and a nice drive train package. I can honestly say that what sets the car off is the 671 sticking out of the hood, well, if it had a hood (I wasn't about to chop it up). It's the classic example of the engine making the car what it is. It wouldn't make for a good drag car, that's not its intentions. I built it as a cruiser (stock block 406, stock rods/crank, good parts/good machine work) and it does that really well. It's honestly my first project. I did all the wrenching, welding, and fabricating. It's far from perfect and still needs completing (I'm concentrating on my Camaro project now). It runs and drives like it is, so that's kind of how I left it. Many years ago I converted it to DFI and couldn't resist the look of a bug catcher.
http://themagicm.homelinux.org/phpgallery/picture.php?/1292/category/38
So for my advice and to carry your car's theme onto the engine? I'd go w/the blower. If it's attention that you want, it'll surely get it. There's nothing else like it. Keeping everything under the hood just wouldn't be the same.