Night game

lattedatte

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OK, I love being able to watch every home game on TV but man would I love just one home night game. I don't know why but there is something special about night games, the crowd is louder, the air is crisper, the nachos taste better. Maybe it is the fact that everyone has had some extra drinks. I just wish we could have one home night game a year.
 

scooper

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OK, I love being able to watch every home game on TV but man would I love just one home night game. I don't know why but there is something special about night games, the crowd is louder, the air is crisper, the nachos taste better. Maybe it is the fact that everyone has had some extra drinks. I just wish we could have one home night game a year.


I specifically remember Charlie saying in an interview last year that he doesn't like them. Too much wasted time on game day. Guys wake up that morning all jacked and have to wait until that night to play. Often they are spent by the time night rolls around. If Charlie doesn't like night games, I doubt we'll see them at home.
 

lattedatte

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yeah, plus the NBC contract, I doubt we'll see it in the next 7 yrs or so... a boy could dream though...
 

BGIF

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... I don't know why but there is something special about night games, the crowd is louder, ... Maybe it is the fact that everyone has had some extra drinks.

You answered your own question. And it's the only answer that matters. The Administration's not going to tolerate it.

ND's been cracking down on tailgating and underage drinking. They are not going to create an opportunity to increase drinking.
 

Pete

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The university has also said that they don't like night games because people leave to late, and then have to drive home. Late games, lots of drinks,late drive home, it could be very dangerous
 
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The real reason is that NBC's night programming on Saturdays is just so damn good that they aren't willing to give it up.




















Sarcasm.
 

BGIF

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Consider this article in the context of drinking and a night game.

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Bars, satellites prohibited in dorms

DuLac changes anger, confuse University students who take issue with new restrictions

Eileen Duffy The Observer 8/25/06

Imagine Norm from "Cheers" sitting in a beanbag. Could Tom Cruise spin bottles "Cocktail"-style behind a futon? Would seniors still gather at The Oyster … Coffee Table?

Some students think so.

The 2006 edition of duLac: A Guide to Student Life reintroduces a rule - absent since 2000-01 - prohibiting from dorm rooms "any structure which has by its appearance the function of serving alcohol." However, you can't judge an item of furniture by its cover, junior Matt Barcus said.

"[A bar] is something that's in essence a table," said Barcus, who lives in Dillon. "Just by looking at it you can't assume it's being used for drinking.

"I don't see how it encourages drinking in the room any more than someone who just has a party in their room with a table."

But bars do just that, according to Keenan rector Father Mark Thesing. He described bar structures, along with alcoholic signs, as "items that glorify drinking, especially abusive drinking." And Father Dan Parrish, rector of Zahm Hall, said he believes bar structures interfere with the goals of the University.

"Notre Dame is a Christian community and our job is 'creating citizens for heaven,'" Parrish said, quoting the founder of the Holy Cross Brothers, Father Moreau. "I don't think bars really add a lot to that mission."

The 25 remaining rectors and the Office of Residence Life and Housing agreed with Parrish and Thesing when they met last spring, ultimately deciding to include the former rule.

Kathleen Brannock, assistant director of Residence Life and Housing, said changes in the "Housing" section of duLac stem from "trends in resident halls."

"It wasn't an issue [during its five-year absence from the book]," Brannock said. "Then it was brought up through various rectors last spring and it was decided that we would put it back in … as further instruction for students."

There were no cases involving bar structures in dormitories last year, Brannock said.

Perhaps the inclusion of the rule will clear up some ambiguity, though. While Alumni rector Father George Rozum said bars had not been allowed since the 1970's - no exceptions - Parrish had a more complex understanding of the matter.

"Technically they weren't allowed," he said, "but because there was no duLac policy in place we didn't enforce it."

Many students remain ambiguous despite the reinstated policy. While rector Father John Conley sent Siegfried residents an e-mail in mid-August, other rectors relied on their hall staff members - who received information on the change during their training - to pass on the information.

"I did not specifically notify Keenan residents of this change to duLac," Thesing said.

Dillon rector Father Paul Doyle did not notify residents early - so when Barcus got to school, he wasn't aware. Nor was his quadmate, another junior who prefers to remain anonymous, who spent 16 hours and $200 constructing a bar with his grandfather this summer.

The juniors, who turn 21 shortly, have been told to dismantle the bar.

"We just really wish they'd let us known beforehand that there were going to be changes," Barcus said.

The quadmate called the situation "a big mess."

Juniors Mike Reilly of Fisher and Mike Hazelback of Keough and sophomore Sarah Ponto of Welsh Family Hall were all in the dark as well.

"This is the first I've heard of this," Hazelback said. Ponto bluntly asked, "I'm sorry, what is this about?"

Their obliviousness underscores Thesing's view that "the change is really not noteworthy."

Students, faculty and staff agreed on the other main change to duLac: the prohibition of individual satellites.

Not only did the satellites "do terrible damage to the dorms," according to Parrish, but Reilly said "they looked kind of crummy on campus." Farley rector Sister Carrine Etheridge, who witnessed lightning strike a tree in front of Farley this summer, worried about electrical hazards.

With the exception of a few Zahm men who still miss their NFL Sunday Ticket channel, Parrish said, the installation of cable does provide students the opportunity to watch what they want - especially if they choose to upgrade to the premium cable package.

Should bars or satellites appear in a dorm, hall staffs work as the first level of the enforcement of duLac, Brannock said. They then make reports of violations to ResLife.

"I don't think it's too hard," Parrish said. "If we see a bar, we take it out. I don't anticipate there being any problems.
 
N

NDAlumSon

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The thirsty Earth soaks up the rain,
And drinks, and gapes for drink again.
The plants suck in the Earth, and are
with constant drinking, fresh and fair.
The Sea itself, which one would think
should have but little need of drink,
drinks ten thousand Rivers up,
So filled that they o'erflow the cup.
The busy Sun, (and one would guess
by his drunken fiery face no less),
drinks up the Sea, and when he's done,
the Moon and Stars drink up the Sun.
They drink and dance by their own light,
They drink and revel all the night.
For nothing in Nature is sober found,
and yet an eternal health goes round.
So fill up the bowl then, fill it high,
fill all these glasses there for why
should every creature drink but I,
why, Kathleen Brannock, tell me why.

Abraham Cowley (1618-1667)
 

BGIF

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But the Thirsty Earth better not have a bar in his room if he's an ND student.
 
S

solo

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I specifically remember Charlie saying in an interview last year that he doesn't like them. Too much wasted time on game day. Guys wake up that morning all jacked and have to wait until that night to play. Often they are spent by the time night rolls around. If Charlie doesn't like night games, I doubt we'll see them at home.


Charlie will need to get used to at least one night game a year (BCS Title game). Shouldn't be a problem as he's coached in how many Superbowls?
 

onenybrother

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I think it's a smart idea to not have night games. With the way college drinking can get, it's just not worth the trouble it can cause. But if N.B.C. wanted it Notre Dame will obliged them.
 

LOVEMYIRISH

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OK, I love being able to watch every home game on TV but man would I love just one home night game. I don't know why but there is something special about night games, the crowd is louder, the air is crisper, the nachos taste better. Maybe it is the fact that everyone has had some extra drinks. I just wish we could have one home night game a year.

In person, I much prefer a 1pm game...right after lunch...a couple beers...a crisp autumn day.

In ND stadium its an experience to never miss...
 

lattedatte

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If college kids want to drink they'll find a way to drink, bottom line. A night game will not make it any worse. It drives me crazy when administrations try to find ways to curb drinking, that really worked well in prohibition. It's college, it's part of the experience, if you don't know how to control yourself it's better to learn it in college then later when you are a father or a husband. Don't supply them with bongs and a tap in each room but let the kids make their own decisions. They need to at some point. Sorry guys/gals.
 
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