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Douches.

AUChizad

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Douches.
« on: November 22, 2009, 07:20:01 PM »
This was from a while ago, but I never saw it posted here, so in case you missed it.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703683804574532052658242422.html

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Southern Football's Dating Game
To Keep Their Prime Seats, Fraternities Embrace an Old-Fashioned Rite; Khakis and Bourbon

By HANNAH KARP

Each Sunday, Peyton Alsobrook, a 19-year-old freshman at Auburn University, gets together with his Alpha Tau Omega fraternity brothers to compare notes on the women they take on dates to Saturday football games.
Football, SEC Style

Those who seem bored are eliminated from further consideration, he says, along with any who might talk too much during a close game "because they're from up North or something." As the all-important Alabama game approaches, Mr. Alsobrook says he's narrowed his list of potential dates to four. The winner, he says, will get a coveted ticket to the big game and, beyond that, special treatment that might include candy or even "actual flowers."

As the Southeastern Conference solidifies its place as the most prestigious in college football—it has produced the last three national champions—the profile of its games and the growing scarcity of tickets have taken a toll on some of the most genteel (some might say antiquated) traditions of college football in the deep South. The University of Mississippi has already banned the waving of confederate flags, replaced a mascot that reminds some of a plantation owner and this week told its marching band to stop playing a song that ends with the words "the South will rise again."

This season, another old Southern football tradition has found itself in the crosshairs. Fraternities, which have long been given some of the best seats in the stadium at schools like Auburn, are facing the prospect of losing the privilege. To avoid this, they're taking a page from their fathers and grandfathers before them: Putting on coats and ties and showing up with a date.

The pressure is coming from alumni and other fans who think these tickets aren't being used, or who don't like the way the fraternity members behave. At Alabama last season, where season tickets cost up to $3,250 and the waiting list can take years, alumni were incensed by the empty seats in the student section, even at nationally televised games. At last year's Kentucky game, the school says nearly 30% of the 15,000 student tickets weren't used.

After Auburn's opening home game, Clinton Patterson, a computer-engineering graduate student, complained in a letter to the editor of the Auburn Plainsman that the "frat guys" in the student section "appear to make up the most obnoxiously vocal, occasionally violent and openly inconsiderate part of the student section." He went on to describe how "belligerently drunk" fraternity brothers cursed at their own team and engaged in a pushing match.

These complaints have prompted some schools to put students on notice. Alabama has started scanning student ID cards at the gates and preventing students from buying tickets in the future if they don't use, transfer or donate their seats at least three times a season. Auburn's athletic department recently devised a system in which student organizations, including fraternities, receive "spirit points" for attendance and good behavior, and have to meet quotas to keep their blocks of rows in the student section.

For the fraternities who've long held some of the best seats, and who continue to use this privilege to recruit new members, the best way to ensure that the seats are occupied, and that people at least try to mind their manners, is to encourage their members to scare up dates.

Some fraternities at Auburn say they are "strongly encouraging" their pledges to bring at least one female with them to every game. Short of inviting an entire sorority to sit in the section (which is rumored to have happened on occasion) they say it's the simplest solution.

But for modern frat guys who hail from "generation text," the act of taking a date to a football game doesn't come as naturally as it might have to their fathers.

According to several sophomore members of Auburn's Sigma Nu chapter, the best quality to look for in a date is that she makes a good "babysitter" (read: she will take care of you if you get too drunk). Others say the best dates won't mind doubling as bourbon-transportation vehicles. (Taping a flask to a date's leg is, by many accounts, another age-old Southern football tradition.)

Sam Poteat, a senior in Alpha Gamma Rho who says he usually tries to lock down a date before Wednesday, believes "there are two kinds of girls who don't know about football—the ones who want to learn, and the ones who don't."

Mr. Poteat, a finance major, prefers the former, he says, because it at least gives him something to talk about. Of course, too much football knowledge isn't always a great thing: At a game several years ago, he says, his date surprised him by calling out plays, predicting which way the ball would go and explaining why certain penalties were being called. "It was emasculating," Mr. Poteat recalls. "At a certain point I was asking her, 'What happened there?' "

Women who would be dates say they have their own calculus. Men who might ignore them, abandon them after the game or fail to hug them at touchdowns (another tradition) are to be avoided. Frat guys who get so drunk that they can't make it to the game, pass out during the game or are tossed out by security, can be blacklisted. But Auburn senior Allison DeBerard, who says she's spent entire summers stocking up on cute orange dresses, says that because fraternities control the prime seating and throw the best tailgate parties, many women who love football games have no choice to put up with some less-than-gentlemanlike behavior from their dates. "It happens," she says.

No matter what happens to the tradition, many Southern students, both men and women, say the tradition is worth maintaining. It's a relic of an era in the South when students dressed more formally and football games were accompanied by parties with fine china.

Rebekah Blakeslee, a lawyer in Jackson, Miss., who attended Mississippi, says that for her, the tradition dates back to times of war, when students wore their finest to football games to honor their classmates who were on the battlefield. At the school's recent game against Auburn, she stood in the visitors section in an elegant red coat and gold-hoop earrings while teetering on high-heeled black boots. "My feet are killing me and I hear the chuckles in the back, but I'm gonna stick it out," Ms. Blakeslee said.

"It's a tradition of Southern chivalry," said Mr. Poteat, the finance major. "It's what's always been done. We're trying to build better men."

I only post now, because I'm just now seeing this tool's response to the editor:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704782304574542090935120518.html

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Auburn Gentlemen Beg to Differ

Although we at Auburn University are honored to be mentioned in such a prestigious newspaper (“Southern Football’s Dating Game,” Sports, Nov. 13), I don’t believe the article portrays the true reasons for our Southern traditions. The tradition of dressing up and taking dates to football games dates all the way back to the late 1800s, when people believed the games to be social events where appearance and acquaintances reflected your social stature. The tradition has carried on through the years because Auburn greatly values its past.

Auburn men don’t take dates to “babysit” them when they are drunk. Dates exist because we see Saturdays in the fall as a celebration worth sharing with someone else. The dates aren’t there to fill seats or keep alumni from trying to take the student seats away. We take dates because the Auburn men and women before us did the same, and we believe in carrying on our traditions.

Auburn men are Southern gentlemen and Auburn women are young ladies who deserve to be treated like queens. This is the motivation behind our Saturday traditions, and it’s why I believe in Auburn and love it.

Peyton Alsobrook

Freshman

Auburn University

Auburn, Ala.

I read your article with no surprise. I taught at Auburn in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the same xenophobic, archaic, drunken attitudes prevailed then. Nothing has changed in 30 years.

One sighs for poor frat boy Peyton Alsobrook, having to avoid women who might enlighten him or widen his tiny world “because they’re from up North or something.” Party like it’s 1792, boys! Or, more to the point, 1861.

Thank you for reminding me why I was so glad to get out of that benighted place and the Deep South in general.

George Jarecke
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Tiger Wench

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #1 on: November 22, 2009, 10:17:23 PM »
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Thank you for reminding me why I was so glad to get out of that benighted place and the Deep South in general.
Thank you for reminding us why we should also be glad to see the last of your asshole self.
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Godfather

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #2 on: November 23, 2009, 11:39:55 AM »
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Clinton Patterson, a computer-engineering graduate student, complained in a letter to the editor of the Auburn Plainsman that the "frat guys" in the student section "appear to make up the most obnoxiously vocal, occasionally violent and openly inconsiderate part of the student section." He went on to describe how "belligerently drunk" fraternity brothers cursed at their own team and engaged in a pushing match.
NERRRRRRRRRRRRRRRDS! 
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Gus is gone, hooray!
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Re: Douches.
« Reply #3 on: November 23, 2009, 04:47:24 PM »
NERRRRRRRRRRRRRRRDS! 

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Engaged in a pushing match

Seriously? Engaged in a fucking pushing match? Pushing match? So it was a match, with pushes involved? Really??? What does that even mean??? Was there a referee? Officials? Did they wear uniforms? Was it an official Auburn event? Really?
What the fuck?
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Snaggletiger

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #4 on: November 23, 2009, 05:12:54 PM »
Seriously? Engaged in a fucking pushing match? Pushing match? So it was a match, with pushes involved? Really??? What does that even mean??? Was there a referee? Officials? Did they wear uniforms? Was it an official Auburn event? Really?
What the fuck?

The match wasn't sanctioned by the University.  Duh!!!  That would have pissed me off too.  These frat guys just think they can get away with anything.
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My doctor told me I needed to stop masturbating.  I asked him why, and he said, "because I'm trying to examine you."

Lurking Tiger

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #5 on: November 24, 2009, 02:53:46 PM »
"I read your article with no surprise. I taught at Auburn in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the same xenophobic, archaic, drunken attitudes prevailed then. Nothing has changed in 30 years.

One sighs for poor frat boy Peyton Alsobrook, having to avoid women who might enlighten him or widen his tiny world “because they’re from up North or something.” Party like it’s 1792, boys! Or, more to the point, 1861.

Thank you for reminding me why I was so glad to get out of that benighted place and the Deep South in general.

George Jarecke "


Looks like he enjoys the taste of cockandballs.

From his bio "He also was an Associate General Counsel of AIG.."

Nice bit of work there Georgey Boy.
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Saniflush

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #6 on: November 24, 2009, 03:01:35 PM »
"I read your article with no surprise. I taught at Auburn in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the same xenophobic, archaic, drunken attitudes prevailed then. Nothing has changed in 30 years.

One sighs for poor frat boy Peyton Alsobrook, having to avoid women who might enlighten him or widen his tiny world “because they’re from up North or something.” Party like it’s 1792, boys! Or, more to the point, 1861.

Thank you for reminding me why I was so glad to get out of that benighted place and the Deep South in general.

George Jarecke "


Looks like he enjoys the taste of cockandballs.

From his bio "He also was an Associate General Counsel of AIG.."

Nice bit of work there Georgey Boy.


Please to be posting any links to him you have so the bombardment may begin.
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"Hey my friends are the ones that wanted to eat at that shitty hole in the wall that only served bread and wine.  What kind of brick and mud business model is that.  Stick to the cart if that's all you're going to serve.  Then that dude came in with like 12 other people, and some of them weren't even wearing shoes, and the restaurant sat them right across from us. It was gross, and they were all stinky and dirty.  Then dude starts talking about eating his body and drinking his blood...I almost lost it.  That's the last supper I'll ever have there, and I hope he dies a horrible death."

Re: Douches.
« Reply #7 on: November 25, 2009, 07:16:51 PM »
I did not read the entire article, but in response to the thread title, who are the douches??  The ones who take chicks to FB games, or the ones who don't like it??
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Take me to Flavor Country!

AUChizad

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Re: Douches.
« Reply #8 on: November 26, 2009, 09:50:27 AM »
I did not read the entire article, but in response to the thread title, who are the douches??  The ones who take chicks to FB games, or the ones who don't like it??
In this particular case, both.
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