The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Authorities charge 42 at Harvard-Yale with disorderly conduct
Officials in New Haven, Connecticut, said 42 people were charged with disorderly conduct after a protest interrupted Saturday’s football game between Harvard and Yale.
Students and alumni from both schools occupied the midfield of the Yale Bowl during Saturday’s halftime protest. Some held banners urging their colleges to act on climate change. Other signs referred to Puerto Rican debt relief and China’s treatment of Uighurs.
Most protesters walked off after about an hour; those who remained were charged with misdemeanor disorderly conduct. They were issued a court summons and released.
Actor Sam Waterston was among those arrested, according to the Connecticut Post. The actor known for his roles in TV’s“Law & Order”is a graduate of Yale.
Organizers of the protest had initially estimated that 20 to 30 protesters were arrested.
Rachel Sadoff, a junior at Harvard, said about 150 students from the universities had planned to participate and about 100 more who were sitting in the stands joined in. She said organizers considered the protest a success.“Our goal was to spread the word,”Sadoff said.
Yale officials said in a statement handed to reporters in the press box during the fourth quarter that the school“stands firmly for the right to free expression.”
“It is regrettable,” a statement attributed to the Ivy League said, “that the orchestrated protest came … when thousands gather from around the world to enjoy and celebrate the storied traditions of both football programs and universities.”
Yale beat Harvard 50-43, clinching the Ivy League title.