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Tailgating
Tragedy in Lot D
January/February 2012
by Thomas Kaplan ’10, ’10MA
Thomas Kaplan ’10, ’10MA, is a reporter in the Albany
bureau of the New York Times.
For years, as reliably as Yale and Harvard football players
have readied themselves for The Game, administrators at both schools have
prepared for their own challenge: The Tailgate. A conflagration of school
spirit and alcohol, the partying among students before the football game—and
during it—has resulted in more than a few hospital visits in years past, and
officials have imposed increasingly complex rules in an effort to ensure
safety.
Yale officials are now returning to the drawing board
yet again. The festivities before this year’s Game on November 19 saw the kind
of tragedy they have dreaded for years: a 30-year-old woman was killed, and two
other people were injured, after a U-Haul truck bound for a fraternity tailgate
party sped out of control and ran into a crowd.
The accident cast a pall over the normally raucous
weekend. And although there is nothing to suggest that alcohol—the main source
of concern about tailgating over the years—played any role in the tragedy, the
incident is prompting renewed consideration of a dilemma that has troubled
administrators for years: how to stage a safe tailgate.
On the morning of The Game, Brendan Ross ’13 was
tasked with driving the U-Haul truck that members of his fraternity, Sigma Phi
Epsilon, had rented to haul the necessary provisions—including several beer kegs—to
the tailgate. His mission was not unusual; fraternities and sororities, as well
as residential colleges and other groups, frequently rent box trucks to haul
grills, coolers, and kegs to the Bowl. (U-Haul rents to customers 18 or older
with a valid driver’s license.)
At the same time, Nancy Barry, a fashion designer from
Salem, Massachusetts, was visiting Yale to spend time with an old high school
friend, Sarah Short ’13MBA. They were among the more than 55,000 who descended
on the Bowl this year.
Details remain sketchy on how their paths crossed in
Lot D, the parking lot where most of the undergraduate tailgates take place.
According to witnesses and investigators, Ross had stopped at a checkpoint at
the entrance to the tailgate, like the U-Haul trucks before him. When he turned
into the grassy tailgate area and pulled away around 9:40 a.m., the truck
accelerated. It struck Barry and her friend Short, 31, as well as Elizabeth
Dernbach, 23, a computer lab assistant at Harvard’s Division of Continuing Education,
before crashing into two parked U-Haul trucks.
Barry was rushed to Yale–New Haven Hospital and
pronounced dead barely a half hour later. (Short and Dernbach were also
hospitalized.) Ross passed a field sobriety test at the scene of the accident,
and the New Haven Police Department impounded the U-Haul truck for forensic
testing.
A line of yellow police tape blocked the site of the
accident from the rest of the tailgate, but the party continued despite the
accident. Many students said they assumed it was a fender bender.
After the accident, Ross, a history major from St.
Louis, retained New Haven lawyer William F. Dow III ’63. Dow asserts that the
accident “appears to be the result of a vehicle malfunction.” Pete Sciortino,
the president of the U-Haul Company of Connecticut, disputes that, calling
Dow’s claim “reckless, inappropriate, and disrespectful.” David Hartman, a
spokesman for the New Haven Police Department, says investigators are still
working on the case.
While the annual tailgate at The Game may be most
famous for the upscale, linen-tablecloth celebrations staged by alumni, the
student tailgate has evolved in recent years into a jumble of letter sweaters,
red plastic beer cups, and pulsating music, with the entire spectacle penned
inside a muddy field and surrounded by U-Haul trucks.
The partying leaves students bleary-eyed, and not
often interested in football. But the scene is beloved, and administrators are
met with protests when they try to rein in the festivities. Harvard has been
more aggressive in its regulations, banning U-Haul trucks and beer kegs in
recent years, and the school generally is seen by students as stricter about
limiting the flow of alcohol at the tailgate.
But Yale has its own set of rules. In 2005, alumni
protested a rule that shut down tailgating at halftime; this year, students
griped about a new system requiring wristbands meant to signify who was of
legal drinking age.
The ubiquitous U-Haul trucks have been questioned in
the past for a number of reasons: Harvard administrators said they were causing
damage to the fields where the tailgate was held, and students have also
developed an ill-advised habit of climbing the trucks and turning them into
dance floors. In 2007, Yale considered banning the trucks, but the Yale College
Council complained that such a prohibition would make it hard to bring food and
beverages to the tailgate. The administration ultimately relented.
Yale spokesman Tom Conroy says administrators are
assessing possible changes to tailgate rules in light of the accident. The use
of U-Haul trucks and traffic flow at the tailgate site are among the issues
they are considering. “We always want to allow for students and other fans to
gather and socialize at the games in a safe manner,” Conroy says. “We will
share any policy changes when they are finalized.”
Brandon Levin ’13, the president of the Yale College
Council, says that a “delicate balance” must be struck in any new tailgate
regulations. “We want everyone to have a fun and safe time, and I think finding
ways in which the safe actions overlap with the fun actions—that’s the spot on
the Venn diagram that we aim to hit.”
Ironically, a ban on U-Hauls might have prevented this
year’s accident, but not for the reasons they’ve usually been opposed. Whatever
the cause of the accident turns out to be, Yale and other schools now have new
concerns about student tailgating to add to the old ones.  |