Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)

 - Class of 2006

Page 17 of 504

 

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 2006 Edition, Page 17 of 504
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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 2006 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

Eating hot dogs and chips, Kristin Hardy, freshman in open-option, tailgates north of Kimball Avenue before the football game. Sept. 24. Christopher Hanewinckel Tailgating Etiquette Trait Description | Time Early arrival helps ensure choice parking locations. Tailgaters recommend arriving three hours before game time. Activities Tossing a football, beer pong and washers. Food Bring a lot and do not be surprised if people not from your party eat it. Tailgating is a group thing - you ' re all from the same school, so you ' re all considered family. Beverages Typical beverages include beer or mixed drinl s, but anything in a cooler will suffice. Roacf Games Travel in packs to intimidate the opponent. Attire Dress for the weather, but it should be purple. Courtesty Share food and conversation with students and visiting fans. Washers, a popular game played by student tailgaters like Scott Summers, freshman in mechanical engineering, consists of tossing a washer into a hole in a wooden board. Summers and his friends played in the lot north of Bill Snyder Family Stadium before the North Texas game, Sept. 24. I try to hit the tailgates for the people I know. li Iiles Duncan, junior in sociology, said. I will go and see how they are doing and what ' s up and will steal some of their food. Christopher Hanewirtckel tailgatingl3

Page 16 text:

During a pregame tailgate, Gina Remus, sophomore in bakery science and management, chats with Lee Legleiter. sophomore in marketing. Remus and Legleiter relaxed in the stadium lot before gomg into the football game against Florida International, Sept. 3. The party had beer and drinking games in which Legleiter took part before he entered the stadium. Joslyn Brown by AlexYocum The scent of alcohol and barbecue filled the air while vehicles of all shapes, sizes and colors filled the parking lots and fields. Hours before the gates of Wagner Field opened for Saturday football games the sounds of music, laughter and conversation shifted from party to party. Tailgating, a long-standing football tradition, brought fans from competing schools together for a common purpose - a good time. Kathy Johnston, K-State alumna, said tailgating was for everyone. Even fans from rival teams opted to join Wildcat fans for the festivities. We had six Nebraska students join us, Johnston said. It is what you do when you tailgate. Everyone is there for the game and you always have enough food so why not share it, and the moments, with whoever wants them? Besides the company of family, friends and passersby, food was an important element in the art of tailgating. Fans brought a variety of food and beverages. Some tailgaters like Jenny Pereira, senior in marketing, had themes for their food. We have something different for every team, Pereira said. For KU we cooked chicken hawk. My dad even made it red, one of the Jayhawks ' colors. Beer was often the beverage of choice for tailgaters; students incorporated beer in games like beer pong, poor-man ' s golf and washers. Family Tailgating unites fans young and old, Wildcats and rivals, who arrive at the stadium before the gates open with one simple thought - college football tailgating consisted more of casual conversation and throwing footballs. It ' s a different tone between family tailgating and college students and their tailgates, Johnston said. I did both, and they both have their similarities, but with families it is more talking about the game and solid food, while students play their games and have liquid meals. Both family and student tailgaters arrived at the game early. Pereira said her family arrived early in the morning to get their spot. Miles Duncan, junior in sociology, said he and his friends got there two to three hours before the game. Because they arrived so early, tailgaters found innovative ways to entertain themselves. I wore my banana costume to tailgate once, Duncan said. It was kind of scary, but really you just need to have fun while you are out there. Everyone should try to be a banana. (Tailgating) is all about being spontaneous and having a good time. When the game began, most families and students went into Bill Snyder Family Stadium but a few continued tailgating outside, listening to the game on the radio. Most people associate tailgating with beer drinking, Duncan said. Really though, it ' s about a bunch of diehard K-State fans having a really good time. 12student life



Page 18 text:

I Cheering on their friends, students watch as others make their way down the slide to the pool at the bottom of the hill. Matt Winger, Sigma Nu president and sophomore in business administration, said students had fun no matter what they did, Some people just stand and watch, but the majority of people do take the opportunity to slide, he said. Christopher Hanewinckel Mstudent life

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