Halloween was last week, and what is better than smashing pumpkins on the campus of 98ÌÃ? The annual Pumpkin Drop, sponsored by the 98ÌÃ Society of Physics Students (SPS), has been a popular fall tradition for over two decades. This year the competition may have been the most intense ever. Each entrant - usually teams of students - was challenged to build a portable contraption that could "catch" a pumpkin dropped from atop the nine-story Batten Arts and Letters Building. Photos by Chuck Thomas and David B. Hollingsworth.

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Daniel Akers retrieves a pumpkin that survived the nine-story fall. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Physics students take videos of the falling pumpkins. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Victoria Tabibi, master of ceremony, starts the countdown for the Pumpkin Drop. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Society of Physics Students use liquid nitrogen to make ice cream. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Spectators line the sidewalk to watch pumpkins being dropped. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

2019 Gallery Pumpkin Drop Pumpkins littered the grounds of BAL after the annual event. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

Dozens of pumpkins plunged nine stories from atop the Batten Arts and Letters Building on Tuesday afternoon. Photo Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

Robert Godwin drops a pumpkin from atop the Batten Arts and Letters Building while other members of the Society of Physics Students watch. Photo Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

As part of the grand finale, students dropped multiple pumpkins trying to hit various pumpkin catchers. Photo Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

To prove Galileo's principle, students drop two pumpkins from the roof at the same time. Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

Evan Johnson aims a pumpkin at the catcher below. Photo by Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

Students from 98ÌÃ’s Children’s Learning and Research Center watch as pumpkins fall from the top of the Batten Arts and Letters Building. Photo Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

Only a few feet from impact, will this pumpkin be snared by the catcher? Photo David B. Hollingsworth/98ÌÃ

The drawn-on eyes and hat did not save this pumpkin from getting smashed. Photo Chuck Thomas/98ÌÃ

Daniel Akers retrieves a pumpkin that survived the nine-stor

Physics students take videos of the falling pumpkins. Photo

Victoria Tabibi, master of ceremony, starts the countdown fo

Society of Physics Students use liquid nitrogen to make ice

Spectators line the sidewalk to watch pumpkins being dropped

Pumpkins littered the grounds of BAL after the annual event.

Dozens of pumpkins plunged nine stories from atop the Batten

Robert Godwin drops a pumpkin from atop the Batten Arts and

As part of the grand finale, students dropped multiple pumpk

To prove Galileo's principle, students drop two pumpkins fro

Evan Johnson aims a pumpkin at the catcher below. Photo by C

Students from 98ÌÃ’s Children’s Learning and Research Center

Only a few feet from impact, will this pumpkin be snared by

The drawn-on eyes and hat did not save this pumpkin from get