By Abby Simons and Jim Anderson Star Tribune staff writers
NORTHFIELD – Barely a mile from their Carleton College campus home, bound for a prestigious Ultimate Frisbee tournament in California, the five teammates were poised to put the rigors of both school and an endless winter behind them, just for a while.
Instead, their families, friends and the Carleton campus were cloaked in mourning Saturday after three of the young men were killed and the other two seriously hurt when their sport-utility vehicle went out of control on a snow-slicked road and was hit broadside by a semitrailer truck just before 3 p.m. Friday.
Killed were James P. Adams, 20, of St. Paul; Paxton M. Harvieux, 21, of Stillwater, and Michael D. Goodgame, 20, of Westport, Conn. All were dead at the scene near the junction of Hwy. 3 and County Road 47.
William Sparks, 20, of Evanston, Ill., who was driving the 1997 Toyota 4Runner, and Conor J. Eckert, 19, of Seattle, were injured. Eckert was flown to Hennepin County Medical Center, where he was in satisfactory condition Saturday, said spokeswoman Christine Hill. Sparks was in satisfactory condition after being transferred to the Medical Center from Northfield Hospital.
The truck's driver, Danny Terry, 56, of Pioneer, Tenn., was uninjured, said Lt. Eric Roeske of the State Patrol.
A wave of shock and grief coursed through Carleton, the kind of small, close-knit campus where many of the 2,000 students are either friends or friends of friends. Hundreds of students and faculty packed Skinner Memorial Chapel for an 11 a.m. service Saturday, overflowing from the pews and leaving many to stand as they shared memories, anecdotes and tears. Afterward, they streamed out into the cold, giving one another support as they braced against sorrow and a harsh wind.
On the edge of campus, where snow sculptures dotted the yards of students' homes, people were still coming to terms with the loss of three vibrant campus leaders.