[Home]History of NapalmIncident


Revision 3 . . May 2, 2008 23:54 by MaxGibiansky
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Changed: 1c1
In which several students in EastDorm (the ThomasGarrettFireFolks) mixed gasoline, styrofoam, and acetone to create a flammable jelly, and burned it behind ThomasGarrett. On one occasion they were spotted by CampSec and then subsequently self-reported. The students involved in that particular incident shared the cost the school had incurred by having a private HazMat company remove the "napalm" from campus.
In which several students in EastDorm (the ThomasGarrettFireFolks) mixed gasoline, styrofoam, and acetone to create a flammable jelly, (It was green! It bounced!) and burned it behind ThomasGarrett. On one occasion they were spotted by CampSec and then subsequently self-reported. The students involved in that particular incident shared the cost the school had incurred by having a private HazMat company remove the "napalm" from campus.

Changed: 13c13
The point is, the housing policy specifically prohibits storage of flammables (ie gasoline) in the dorms. In addition, the HonorBoard felt that our reluctance to self-report, the resultant delay in doing so, and our apparent lack of concern for the safety of the other members of the dorm, all constituted violations of the HonorCode. As such, all of the punishments handed down were completely justified; the school would have been well within its rights to do far worse, even. The only reason this case caused such hard feelings is because this punishment was far harsher than previous punishments given for similar incidents (including, but not limited to, DryIce? bombs, propane bombs, and fireworks). So lay off the HonorBoard. True, I feel they acted hastily and irrationally, but they were perfectly justified in what they did. The rules may not say that a dog can't play baseball, but the HonorBoard can still suspend the dog if he does.
The point is, the housing policy specifically prohibits storage of flammables (ie gasoline) in the dorms. In addition, the HonorBoard felt that our reluctance to self-report, the resultant delay in doing so, and our apparent lack of concern for the safety of the other members of the dorm, all constituted violations of the HonorCode. As such, all of the punishments handed down were completely justified; the school would have been well within its rights to do far worse, even. The only reason this case caused such hard feelings is because this punishment was far harsher than previous punishments given for similar incidents (including, but not limited to, DryIce? bombs, propane bombs, and fireworks). So lay off the HonorBoard. True, I feel they acted hastily and irrationally, but they were perfectly justified in what they did. The rules may not say that a dog can't play baseball, but the HonorBoard can still suspend the dog if he does.

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