| Ames Tribune,
June 2, 1958
FUN, EDUCATION WITH SAFETY ARE AIMS OF AMES
DRAG STRIP ENTHUSIASTS - Safety, education and fun -- in that order --
is a terse summary of what participants "get out" of drag racing.
No longer is the scream of tires, the roar of souped-up engines on dangerous
gravel roads, curving highways or dark streets a true picture of a drag
race.
The sport of drag racing -- and it is truly
a sport -- has gained considerable respectability since its post-war birth
under conditions which caused many accidents and personal injuries.
Today, "dragsters" across the country hold races on strips sanctioned by
national organizations which insist upon full compliance with some 30 basic
rules of safety. The Ames drag strip is no exception.
As a building is the showplace for the architect,
so the drag strip is the showplace for those who race cars. Though
few actually build their cars from scratch, more often than not a car that
is expected to win a drag is modified to some degree. It is in working
with cars that a considerable part of the educational portion of the overall
picture comes into view.
Because of the interest in cars so many
boys have shown, the Ames school system includes a course of study in Auto
mechanics in its curriculum. |
| As Leonard Bengtson,
the instructor of the twelve-week course points out, "The aim of the course
is to teach; to teach the boys how the car works and how to make the simple
repairs that every car owner can use" to gain more economic output for
the vehicle.
Part of the course time is spent in the
class room studying from a text and part in the back shop and outside seeing
in practice what has been studied. "We have had excellent cooperation
from the administration and very little objection from outside the school
to our working on cars in the school yard during the class period," Bengtson
said. However, he pointed out that the course did not teach the boys
everything about a car. He stressed that the course teaches only
the basic operations of the automobile. From this, there is no limit
to what boys can learn from experimentation and books, he continued.
To assure the boys of up to date dependable reading material the high school
library provided numerous references which are continuously consulted according
to Mrs. Russell Dickenson, school librarian.
The high school subscribes to five magazines
in the automobile field, Motor Trend and Hot Rod being the most popular.
Last year the library also purchased "everything in the way of books that
was available" that boys considered to be reliable and worthwhile, the
librarian said. |
| STRESS ON SAFETY -- Safety
is learned through participation and through the club local enthusiasts
have formed. The safety rules followed during the race come from
the national headquarters of the Automobile Timing Association of America
(ATAA). All participants are required to submit their car to an inspection
by a technical committee before they are allowed to race. The cars
are checked on 30 specified points ranging from roadworthiness to fire
extinguishers to windshields.
In an actual contest a pair of cars race
over a quarter mile divided strip and slow down in a half mile chute designed
for that purpose. "nothing could be safer than dragging," according
to Margaret White, 2003 Green Briar Circle, member of the local advisory
board for the strip. "Both cars are going in the same direction over
a well-cared-for strip that is fenced off from the spectators."
To help promote safety on the highway as
well as the drag strip, a number of the students from Iowa State College
and local boys organized the Nightcrawlers club. Each Nightcrawler club
member carries a membership - courtesy card identifying himself as a member
of good standing in an organization pledged to encourage traffic safety
and driver courtesy.
An excellent example of the club's work
is expressed by K. H. Erickson, advertising manager for Northrup King and
Co., a nationwide firm, to chief of police O. L. Erickson, after he had
passed through Ames late one evening and had mechanical failure in the
starter of his car.
Some members of the club "urged that they
be permitted to help and went out of their way to see that we got our car
started and were able to continue our trip," he wrote. "Their most
refreshing courtesy and thoughtfulness," he continued, "is a very wholesome
and desirable attitude on the part of these young men."
To those who work with the club and the
drag strip as advisers, this was as equally rewarding as it was to the
club members. "The purpose of the club is being reached and a contagious
attitude is being developed," as one advisor said. |
| Working on the advisory
board, donation their time and services, the Dr. W. A. Owens, head, department
of psychology, I.S.C.; Dr. Glen Murphy, head, department of theoretical
and applied mechanics, I.S.C.; Prof. H. M. Black, head, Mechanical
engineering, I.S.C.; J. D. Armstrong, city council; Everit Ritland, boys
adviser, Ames High School; Dr. E. W. Remley, minister, Presbyterian church;
Herman Arrasmith, in charge of Christian education, Presbyterian church;
the Rev. John Galigher, St. Cecilia church; Fred White, former head, Iowa
Highway Commission; Charlie Barr, Ames Reliable Feed; O. J. Erickson, chief
of police; Margaret White, chairman of the group.
The Ames drag strip, located on the J. D.
Armstrong property two miles south of Ames and owned by Bud Overland is,
for all practical purposes, run by the Nightcrawlers with the assistance
of Overland and the advisory of the above named committee. The strip,
open every Sunday of the summer at 11 a.m., is supported by its gate receipts.
Although the strip is safe for racing as
it now exists, an unlimited amount of money could be spent on extension
of the pavement on the strip and for spectator facilities. Prior
to this year's opening the club members, with the help of local business
establishments, added 200 feet of concrete to the original sixty feet at
the head of the strip. It is the hope of the club that soon they
will be able to pave the entire quarter mile. |