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Tailgate Rages Forth At Yale

The Game
Grace Sun

The Harvard Cheerleading Squad energizes students in the stadium.

With a roasted pig’s head from the Porcellian Club tailgate facing her, Alyssa N. Hill ’11, with a plateful of that same swine’s meat in-hand, said, “I’m not really that interested in going to the game.”

Indeed, for many Harvard and Yale students, Saturday’s football game was just an excuse for tailgating.

Yale’s less restrictive rules allowed for kegs at the tailgates, which were not required to shut down until the third quarter.

Last year, the Boston Police began enforcing stricter alcohol policies at the Harvard-hosted Game, irking many students and dampening festivities. Tailgates were required to end by kickoff, and kegs were prohibited.

“I love Harvard to death but Yale’s tailgate rules are amazing. This is the way a tailgate should be,” Sam W.K. Bonsey ’10 said. “It’s the greatest experience of my life.”

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The Game

The Game

Each of Harvard’s 12 houses was allotted a space just 100 yards from some of the Yale tailgates, and many houses used this as an opportunity to display their creativity.

While Pforzheimer wooed students with buckets of steaming chili and cowbells, Mather House stole the show by sporting a 25-foot fabric Mather tower look-alike, which was held up by three helium balloons.

On the ground, students ate burgers in front of the Mather table, waiting for “Crunk Time.” Every fifteen minutes, students drank to the sounds of whistles and screams as the minute hand of the “Crunk Clock” reached Crunk Time. Although Crunk Time only occurred in fifteen minute intervals, students kept drinking throughout the morning.

“We push the hands forward,” said Julia E. Cain ’11, who helped organize the Mather tailgate.

Students freely walked through the parking lot holding bottles of André, handles of tequila, and cans of beer.

“I have never seen this many people this drunk, this early in the morning,” Steven W. Talbot ’13 said.

The bells and whistles of Mather house may have attracted quite a crowd but other houses sought to impress their clientele through more traditional means.

“We don’t have a giant cloth tower, but we wouldn’t want that kind of scar on Winthrop,” said Frank A. Myslicki ’12, a member of Winthrop HoCo, which served burgers and beer.At Eliot’s tailgate, things were slightly more formal.

“We have champagne. We do mimosas. We like to keep it classy,” said Eliot HoCo member Brett M. Giblin ’11. “It’s a reflection of our houses and our lives.”

About 100 yards from the sea of Crimson, members of Yale’s 12 colleges and various clubs had their own tailgate, incidentally located near the only source of music, a large set of speakers blasting everything from Miley Cyrus’ “Party in the USA” to Lil Jon’s “Shots.”

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