Jerry-On 70 degree temps and night watering-My experience is in the Northeast. You really need to be careful when it gets this hot at night, with fungicide applications up to date, a check on the humidity and wind and keep a close watch on the amount of water that was used by the turf that day. When it gets real humid, with the wind light, you can limit the amount of water you apply, or irrigate every other night (keeping a close watch out for wilting turf on the offnight-following day). Its a constant watch of evapotranspiration rate (the amount of water used by the turf during the day-the word is a combination of evaporation and transpiration-a.k.a. plant water usage). Needless to say,its a time of high stress for golf superintendents in the Northeast.
This brings up the issue of hand watering, a seasoned superintendent told me once "you have to watch that hand watering, its like an addictive drug for the turf, Once the grass gets used to it they will want it every day". I used hand watering only in an emergency.
You don't need to push water every night in the summer, you actually may use more water during the early spring, with low humidity and brisk winds drying the course out quickly.
Craig-You could spend a hundred hours taking about GM and Super communications-I always took an aggresive approach to communications-I would talk to my boss 2-3 times a day and ask if anything was planned. These guys get information overload too. If something bad happened than I tried to be visible, hiding out only complicated the problem. I tried to talk to key members and listen to their complaints. And I still got burned on occasion.