Skip to main content
Donate to the Fighting Fund
Sports unite in protest against climate change, racism and domestic violence
Yale punter Jack Bosman watches as demonstrators stage a protest on the field at the Yale Bowl

THE two worlds of football saw protests against racism, climate change and domestic violence over the weekend, each in their own unique way.

College football fans in the United States staged a sit-in during half-time on Saturday night as Harvard took on Yale.

In the game dubbed the Yale Bowl, protesters took to the field with banners that read: “Nobody wins. Yale & Harvard are complicit in climate injustice,” and “Yale and Harvard Students United for Climate Justice.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
SELF-DETERMINATION: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro posters cover the walls in downtown Caracas, Venezuela
Features / 24 October 2025
24 October 2025

To defend Puerto Rico’s right to peace is to defend Venezuela’s right to exist, argues MICHELLE ELLNER

People take part in a demonstration outside the head office of Ultra Precision Control Systems in Cheltenham, part of a protest by pro-Palestine campaigners at sites across the country supplying F-35 fighter jet parts used by Israel to bombard the Gaza Strip, October 8, 2025
Right to Protest / 8 October 2025
8 October 2025
Detroit Prowl's Toya Shinaul, from left to right, Kelly Bernadyn, Sydney Hebel, Jasmine Hamilton and Allie Gorcyca walk out for the coin toss at the start of an AWFL women's football game against the Lansing Legacy, in Allen Park, Mich., Saturday, May 10, 2025
Tackle Football / 24 June 2025
24 June 2025

LARRY LAGE writes about the growth of tackle football and how it provides female athletes opportunities in a game previously dominated by men

TARGETED: Mohsen Mahdawi speaks outside the courthouse after a judge released the Palestinian student activist on Wednesday April 30, Vermont
Features / 1 May 2025
1 May 2025

The Trump government is seizing overseas students from their homes and campuses and even off the streets, with no legal grounds and no due process, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER