Now then, this Missouri State professor (unnamed, of course) who called 911 on the "nerf warriors" really does lend real life confirmation of the truthful adage: "If you can...do. If you can't...teach". Spot-on. Be thankful the kids weren't packing pea shooters.
As for Don Clark, safety director, he should get out more, visit a real rifle range with live ammo, maybe? And, for non-political sake don't wrap himself up in what other colleges are doing. Be a man. Distinguish his manhood by making independent decisions.
As for Don Clark, safety director, he should get out more, visit a real rifle range with live ammo, maybe? And, for non-political sake don't wrap himself up in what other colleges are doing. Be a man. Distinguish his manhood by making independent decisions.
Missouri State Considers Banning Nerf Guns After Lockdown
December 13, 2013 12:21 PM
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) - Missouri State University officials are discussing whether to limit or ban the use of Nerf guns used in a popular weeklong campus game.
About 500 people took part in October’s “Humans vs. Zombies” game, in which players try to tag other people, who then become zombies. The humans can defend themselves by stunning the zombies with Nerf guns or balled-up socks.
During October’s game, a professor called 911 and put a classroom on lockdown after thinking he saw a real gun. And the university’s safety and transportation department got several calls to its non-emergency number while the game was being played, The Springfield News-Leader reported.
The game is not played inside but it does go on at all hours of the day. The Nerf guns can sometimes look like real weapons, particularly in low-light, said Don Clark, director of the university’s Department of Safety and Transportation.
“When we get that call, we have to make the initial assessment that it might be a real gun,” he said.
Several colleges across the country have banned Nerf guns.
“That’s probably an option that we’ll discuss,” Clark said. “I wouldn’t say that’s where we want to end up.”
might appear as real gun in 'low light' |
“The biggest solution to that is just awareness,” he said.
Clark said he is most concerned with averting a conflict between an armed police officer and a participant.
“That can end in disaster, and that’s ultimately what we’re trying to prevent,” he said.
The Live Action Society is already planning the spring game and members are aiming for 1,000 participants this time.
“We might actually come out of it with some solid precedence of protection for Nerf guns. That’s my hope,” Holmes said.
Source stlouis.cbslocal