The Coaster Derby: Difference between revisions

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[[File:1 Coaster Derby.jpg|frame|right|top|450x330px|Coaster Derby held during Engineering Week. PR; Series 1; Sub-series 5; Item 6800 1977]]Date(s) of occurrence: 1975 - 1990s?
[[File:1 Coaster Derby.jpg|frame|right|top|450x330px|Coaster Derby held during Engineering Week. PR; Series 1; Sub-series 5; Item 6800 1977]]Date(s) of occurrence: 1975 - 1990s?


Previous/other names:  
Previous/other names:


Origins: First held in 1975, the Coaster Derby was organized by the [[Student_Society_of_Mechanical_Engineers|Student Society of Mechanical Engineers]] as an opportunity for "students to test their theories and knowledge of the applied science and witchcraft."
Origins: First held in 1975, the Coaster Derby was organized by the [[Student_Society_of_Mechanical_Engineers|Student Society of Mechanical Engineers]] as an opportunity for "students to test their theories and knowledge of the applied science and witchcraft."


History: The course ran down the east side of campus from the [[Aitken_University_Centre|Aitken Center]] to the [[Lady_Beaverbrook_Gymnasium|Lady Beaverbrook Gymnasium]], as students billowed down "the Hill" at fifty to sixty kilometres per hour — sometimes going as fast as ninety kilometres per hour. To officially qualify for the competition, a car must be gravity-powered, have three or four wheels, brakes, streering, a seat belt and a roll bar, and the driver must wear an approved helmet. Anyone not meeting these standards could still attempt a practice run. Throughout its history the event gave rise to a number of accidents. Before traffic was blocked off during the event a competitor was run over by a car pulling out of a parking lot, though the student was not gravely injured. In the early 1990s the event was moved from Fridays to Saturdays, when traffic was expected to be less significant. Notes: Source(s): *Montague, Susan. A Pictorial History of the University of New Brunswick. Fredericton, NB: University of New Brunswick, 1992, p. 250.{{Copyright}}
History: The course ran down the east side of campus from the [[Aitken_University_Centre|Aitken Center]] to the [[Lady_Beaverbrook_Gymnasium|Lady Beaverbrook Gymnasium]], as students billowed down "the Hill" at fifty to sixty kilometres per hour — sometimes going as fast as ninety kilometres per hour. To officially qualify for the competition, a car must be gravity-powered, have three or four wheels, brakes, streering, a seat belt and a roll bar, and the driver must wear an approved helmet. Anyone not meeting these standards could still attempt a practice run. Throughout its history the event gave rise to a number of accidents. Before traffic was blocked off during the event a competitor was run over by a car pulling out of a parking lot, though the student was not gravely injured. In the early 1990s the event was moved from Fridays to Saturdays, when traffic was expected to be less significant.  
 
Notes:  
 
Source(s): *Montague, Susan. A Pictorial History of the University of New Brunswick. Fredericton, NB: University of New Brunswick, 1992, p. 250.
 
{{Copyright}}
[[Category:Annual Events and Festivities|Coaster]]
[[Category:Annual Events and Festivities|Coaster]]

Revision as of 15:39, 4 December 2015

Coaster Derby held during Engineering Week. PR; Series 1; Sub-series 5; Item 6800 1977

Date(s) of occurrence: 1975 - 1990s?

Previous/other names:

Origins: First held in 1975, the Coaster Derby was organized by the Student Society of Mechanical Engineers as an opportunity for "students to test their theories and knowledge of the applied science and witchcraft."

History: The course ran down the east side of campus from the Aitken Center to the Lady Beaverbrook Gymnasium, as students billowed down "the Hill" at fifty to sixty kilometres per hour — sometimes going as fast as ninety kilometres per hour. To officially qualify for the competition, a car must be gravity-powered, have three or four wheels, brakes, streering, a seat belt and a roll bar, and the driver must wear an approved helmet. Anyone not meeting these standards could still attempt a practice run. Throughout its history the event gave rise to a number of accidents. Before traffic was blocked off during the event a competitor was run over by a car pulling out of a parking lot, though the student was not gravely injured. In the early 1990s the event was moved from Fridays to Saturdays, when traffic was expected to be less significant.

Notes:

Source(s): *Montague, Susan. A Pictorial History of the University of New Brunswick. Fredericton, NB: University of New Brunswick, 1992, p. 250.


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