Harvard Crushes Yale, Dons Ivy League Crown
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — In a highly anticipated contest between two undefeated football teams, Harvard trounced Yale 37 to 6 at the Yale Bowl yesterday.
More than 57,000 people attended the event known as “The Game,” including New York notables such as New York’s deputy mayor, Daniel Doctoroff, NBC chief Jeff Zucker, who brought his son Andrew, and Chelsea Piers mastermind Roland Betts, who is the senior fellow of Yale’s corporation.
“This is the kind of day you wish you didn’t get out of bed,” the president of Yale, Richard Levin, said at half time when Harvard was ahead 27-0.
“I’m in no mood to talk,” the football captain of the Yale team in 1982, Frederick Leone, said from the stands.
Not even the cheerleaders or the Yale Precision Marching Band’s half-time show could raise the spirits on the Yale side of the stadium, which was recently restored with major support from the Class of 1954. Members of the class were honored on the field during halftime.
Tailgates in Lot D, known as the “Park Avenue” of the tailgating venues, featured grilled steaks, deviled eggs, and champagne, with guests including the American ambassador to China, Clark Randt.
Roger Cheever served Commencement Punch at the tailgate he has hosted for the past 35 years with a friend he met while serving in the Navy, Richard Sperry.
Tailgates for students and graduates of the 1990s featured potato chips, carrot sticks, and peanut butter cookies.
The festivities continued last night with the Harvard Yale Concert at Woolsey Hall at which singing groups from the schools performed.