- Bladderball
, between 1954 and 1982.
Bladderball was conceived by Yale student
Philip Zeidman , owner of a six foot leatherexercise ball , as a preliminary event before theYale-Dartmouth game in 1954, according to respected Yale bladderball historianSarah Hammond . Hammond traces the name "bladderball" back to a rugby-like game played by Yale students on theNew Haven Green in the first half of the 19th century, featuring an inflated animal bladder.Once each year, at 11 AM the Saturday before the
Yale-Dartmouth game , the inflatable six foot ball was rolled through Yale'sPhelps Gate ontoOld Campus , where a throng of Yale students waited. At the sound of a whistle, teams from each residential college and various extracurricular organizations would fight for possession of the ball. Teams were allowed to use any means at their disposal to seize control. In 1975, theJonathan Edwards College team attempted to capture the ball using ameathook which predictably popped the ball, inciting enraged chants of "J.E. sucks!!!" from the other participants; this remains the unofficial motto of Jonathan Edwards College to this day.In the absence of any scoring system, victory consisted of fervent declarations of victory by each team. Listeners to the Yale radio station,
WYBC dn, would invariably learn that the station team had won a mighty victory, while readers of the Yale print media were invariably informed that each particular publication had bested all other teams handily, by scores often ranging into the thousands of points. In 1977, thePierson College team literally took this to new heights, by chartering a helicopter (carrying not only the student team captain but also the Master of the College) to fly over the campus and drop leaflets saying "Surrender, Pierson has won!"; leaving nothing to chance, the Pierson team backed this claim up by chaining shut the doors ofBranford College andSaybrook College , trapping the opposing teams inside. The crew in the helicopter filmed the entire event, created a news package 'verifying' Pierson's victory, and brought the film to New Haven's local TV station which that evening broadcast the aerial footage, read the script as written by the stringers and confirmed Pierson's 'win' in the mainstream media.In the 1960s a new dimension was added to the game, as teams began to move the ball out of Old Campus and roll it through the
New Haven streets to the Yale president's house onHillhouse Avenue , while simultaneously protecting it from city police seriously bent on deflating it. As might be expected, the path taken by the ball under the influence of the myriad of squads trying to seize possession was not direct; in 1971 the ball rolled a six mile swath through downtown streets leaving massive traffic tangles in its wake, only to be trapped and deflated by police atBeinecke Plaza , a scant few blocks from its starting point.Preparing for bladderball competition involved as much preliminary
alcoholic beverage consumption as preparing to watch theYale-Dartmouth game did. Unfortunately, this resulted in an escalating series of bladderball-relatedantisocial activities. In 1976, a car and its driver were badly trampled by the mob of students chasing the ball over the top of the vehicle. TheBranford College dining hall was vandalized by overzealous students fromSaybrook College , who poured foul-smellingbutyric acid mixed with food from the catwalk above the dining hall. Finally, in 1982, several participants were injured, and Yale University PresidentA. Bartlett Giamatti declared bladderball's toll of minor injuries, property damage, and increasingly strange pranks too much to bear, and put an end to the tradition. The bladderball was rumored to be in the possession of theYale Symphony Orchestra for some reason; it reappeared briefly in 1999 in the YSO Halloween Show film "Jane Bond," during a shortRaiders of the Lost Ark sequence, playing the large boulder. It was subsequently under the control of theYale Precision Marching Band which used it in the 2006 Princeton halftime show."The bladderball clearly incarnates the archetypal female form: the egg," wrote Yale student Jonathan Tucker in the 1977
Yale Banner [http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=4933] . "Magically released from theFallopian tube -like tunnel of Phelps Gateway, it bounces rhythmically above the swarming hands of the crowd like a huge ripeovum being battered by thousands of franticspermatozoa . The accumulated libidinal energy aroused by the pre-game skirmishes (but largely repressed, because ofhomophobic anxiety) is immediately transferred onto the permitted female form of the bladderball."In symbolic transaction occurring during each game is this: each team strives to '
fertilize ' the egg and thus become the sole possessor of its life-giving power. In this respect the game fits well with the competitive nature of Yale society. But this also markedly departs from the competitive mode in that everyone is permitted to claim victory in the end. (Some more vociferously than others, of course.) Thus the potentially destructive aspect of the game (the necessity of a loser) is resolved in a non-threatening manner, producing an increase in groupsolidarity by removing those elements of competition that would tend to alienate students from one another. In addition, the game produces a revitalization of the community through the symbolic release of libidinal energy, which can be redirected (sublimated) into academic achievement and, more specifically in this case, victory on the football field."External links
* [http://www.yaledailynews.com/articles/view/374 Bladderball: 30 years of zany antics, dangerous fun]
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