Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool
Posted: Wed Jan 01, 2014 2:51 am
After downing several shots of whisky and a bag of pretzels.Guest Poster wrote:Or rather, quit themselves. In shame. Or jump off the school's roof.
After downing several shots of whisky and a bag of pretzels.Guest Poster wrote:Or rather, quit themselves. In shame. Or jump off the school's roof.
I dunno, is Misha responsible enough for that? Seems she'd neglect the 'guard' part...Xaredian wrote:I was more thinking people like Misha would be the lifeguard. You know, the one's without disabilities.
I was saying students without disabilities could be volunteer lifeguards. Not meaning Misha only. Unless, she's the only student there without a disability.Potato wrote:I dunno, is Misha responsible enough for that? Seems she'd neglect the 'guard' part...Xaredian wrote:I was more thinking people like Misha would be the lifeguard. You know, the one's without disabilities.
Is she afraid of water?bhtooefr wrote:Hanako would have obvious mental issues preventing it
Apart from the swimsuit problem, a Lifeguard has to be highly visable, and able to yell at people when they're screwing around. Hanako just couldn't do it.bhtooefr wrote:No, but she's afraid of people, and has a habit of running from stressful situations.
Japanese courts are presided over by Santa in his downtime. Never mind the legal stuff.Mirage_GSM wrote:Well, there's the obvious legal problem of assigning a job people's lives depend on to minors...
It's one thing to tell them to go swimming together and help each other - it's another thing entirely to give them lifeguard duty^^°
The Yamaku swim team disbands upon Nomiya getting the lifeguard position.Potato wrote:Nomiya probably has free time. Nobody seems terribly interested in pursuing art...
A wise man once said that for every situation you want to give, there's someone for whom that's a fetish.Guest Poster wrote:Being rescued and given mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by Nomiya.
The International Lifesaving Federation (of which the Japan Lifesaving Association is a member) puts the minimum age for (full-fledged) lifeguarding at 16 years. The Japan Lifesaving Assocation, from what I can tell, has a minimum age of 15 for Surf Lifesaving, and 16 for Advanced Surf Lifesaving - a more intense role than pool lifeguarding.Mirage_GSM wrote:Well, there's the obvious legal problem of assigning a job people's lives depend on to minors...
It's one thing to tell them to go swimming together and help each other - it's another thing entirely to give them lifeguard duty^^°
Okay, maybe Mutou then. His 'science club' never went anywhere.Guest Poster wrote:Hmmm.
Interesting choice.
- Being rescued and given mouth-to-mouth resuscitation by Nomiya.
- Drowning.
If wonder how many students would pick the second one.