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God forbid they should be responsible with firearms and/or get involved in historical re-enactments.
Two stories today
abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory
abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory
Two stories today
abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory
abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory
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Re: What has become of the children?
Wed, October 13, 2004 - 5:34 PMthat is just crazy !!
when i was in high school we had a rifle team , we had a in door range
we shot ar15s remington 700 bolt rifles to 22's and no one cared that
we where are school grounds shooting some of the sheriff deputy's
would stop buy to see how we where doing .
and this was in los angeles county in the 80's
know you can't carry a plastic fork on school grounds with out
going to jail . -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Thu, October 14, 2004 - 2:49 PMI actually took a shell-reloading class in six grade. It was part of a program where the teachers each taught some kind of skill that related to their own personal hobbies. Mr. Griffith kept all the gun powder and caps right there in the science room. At the end of the 3 week course we all went to the shooting range as a class to shoot our relaoded shells. This was in Wyoming.
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Re: What has become of the children?
Thu, October 14, 2004 - 3:33 PMI went to high school in Anchorage. Got my varsity letter in riflery my freshman year. I would regularly take my AR15a2 Delta Hatch HBar to school for matches. A school bus would take us, the students, to the high power range to shoot.
I think the world is a bit different now. -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Thu, October 14, 2004 - 5:19 PMi guess i take a different tack... to me, they aren't telling him he CAN'T shoot. especially considereing they attempted a compromise, including that pic elsewhere. but, as per usual, compromises aren't good enough.
in the high schools i attended, as well as those of my friends and siblings, there have always been rules about what was considered acceptable for the senior picture section. if you didn't follow those rules in MY school, they didn't even try to work out a compromise......they just didn't include a senior picture for you.
their reasoning? we pay for it, we decide. made sense to me. -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Fri, October 15, 2004 - 2:54 PMI recall paying for my yearbooks, something like $20-30 at the time. -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Fri, October 15, 2004 - 3:42 PMthey still pay to make it. just like a publisher ultimately has veto rights on anything you submit to them. regardless of the sales price "at retail".
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Re: What has become of the children?
Thu, October 14, 2004 - 5:46 PM<<I would regularly take my AR15a2 Delta Hatch HBar to school for matches. A school bus would take us, the students, to the high power range to shoot.
I think the world is a bit different now. >>
My daughter's school has various .22s and a training HBAR.
NRA American Rifleman mags and gun geek books like you wouldn't believe.
OK, so we're homeschooling... :)
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Re: What has become of the children?
Sun, October 17, 2004 - 3:35 PMGosh... you were kind of a pussy in my jr. high, if you couldn't shoot a gun or a crossbow by the 7th grade.
We even had a taxidermy-club, in my 8th-grade teacher's science classroom. Extra-credit for bringing in morning roadkill, or your weekend hunting bounty.
I learned how to shoot in 5th grade summer camp. The counselor didn't appreciate my caricature of Ronald Reagan on my target baloons... -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Sun, October 17, 2004 - 3:44 PMDamn - wish I went to your school! -
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Re: What has become of the children?
Sun, October 17, 2004 - 6:29 PMsame here
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