Boston College @ Notre Dame (10/13/2007): Two Notre Dame touchdowns.
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This is part 2 from the ACC. The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) is a collegiate athletic league in the United States. Founded in 1953, the ACC sanctions competition for its twelve member universities in twenty-three sports in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Football teams participate in the Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), the higher of two levels of Division I college football. The ACC is considered one of the six "power conferences," and the ACC football champion receives an automatic bid to one of the Bowl Championship Series games each season. It is best known, though, for its success in men's college basketball. Seven universities became charter members of the ACC: Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina, and Wake Forest. They had previously been members of the Southern Conference, but they left partially due to that league's ban on post-season play. After drafting a set of bylaws for the creation of a new league, the seven withdrew from the Southern Conference at the Spring Meeting on the morning of May 8, 1953. The bylaws were ratified and the ACC officially came into existence on June 14, 1953. On December 4, 1953, officials convened in Greensboro, North Carolina, and admitted Virginia into the conference. In 1971, the ACC lost a member in South Carolina, which two decades later in 1991 became a member of the Southeastern Conference. The ACC operated with seven members until the addition ...
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Orignal From: ND vs. BC (10/13 /2007)
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