tl20080306-01 "March 6, 2008 www.thetowerlight.com The Towerlight Published by and for the students of Towson and Baltimore -- twice-weekly Thursday Now on TheTowerlight.com: View The Towerlight�s exclusive interview with Carlos Alazraqui and Cedric Yarbrough of �Reno 911!�... Students make �Noises� Theatre department presents spring play, British comedy, �Noises Off!� Photos by Patrick Smith/The Towerlight Above, Brooke, played by Renee Rogers, holds a plate of sardines during the first act of a dress rehearsal of �Noises Off!� Wednesday night in the Center for the Arts. Below, Ryan Airey, who plays the director of �Nothing On!,� gives directions to his actors in the play within a play. Tailgate policy under review Changes may include beer truck, limited cars, fenced festival area Junior William Paine balances school while preparing for a career as a chef Life, page 14 Carrie Wood Assistant Arts Editor Bags and boxes are misplaced, doors malfunction and plates of sar-dines are thrown and caught amid the chaos as the director can be heard yelling instructions from out in the seats. The final dress rehears-al for �Nothing On!� is a mess. In contrast, �Noises Off!� had a much smoother dress rehearsal on Monday night. The mess, a British sex comedy, a play-within-a-play entitled �Nothing On!,� crumbles as it should have over the course of three acts. See PLAY, page 17 Students �Adopt� Towson�s campus News, page 7 Sharon Leff Editor in Chief This year�s Homecoming tailgate won�t include any of the drunk, out-of-con-trol behavior of last year. Not if Towson administrators have anything to say about it. �We cannot have the outcome we had this past year in terms of the over consumption of alcohol, the amount of underage drinking [and] violence exhib-ited toward police and others,� Teri Hall, associate vice president for campus life, said. Plans are still being discussed, but the University may host a beer truck with a three-beer maximum, cap the number of cars allowed in Lot 14 at 150, and pre-sell all parking passes. University officials are also referring to the event as the Homecoming Pre-Game Festival. Hall said that at the Fall 2007 Homecoming tailgate, administrators were met with some belligerent students who would not move into the game when the tailgate ended, and beer cans were thrown at Towson University Police officers. Deb Moriarty, vice president for stu-dent affairs, said the University is looking to control the excessive, dangerous out of control drinking that was most prevalent at the end of the event. �How do we allow this to happen in a way that is safe, legal and fun,� Moriarty said. Hall said the Towson�s policy states one alcoholic beverage per hour is allowed at campus events. See HOMECOMING, page 8 HOMECOMING "