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Case Western Reserve University volume L, issue 8 friday, 10/12/2018
Observer
Socks, NERF blasters and tag... Oh my!
Jack Lewis/Observer Fourth-year students Liam LeBlanc and Mark Goldberg prepare for Humans vs. Zombies, a 10-day campus-wide game of tag held every semester.
Mary McPheeters Copy Editor Have you noticed a bunch of students running around with NERF blasters in green bandanas for the past week and a half? You’re not imagining things. These students have been playing Humans vs. Zombies (HvZ), a 10-day long, campus-wide game of tag that simulates the zombie apocalypse. The game is about humans trying to survive the apocalypse and zombies trying to increase their ranks. The game starts with five “Original Zombies” (OZs), whose objective is to tag as many humans as possible. You can
runs HvZ each semester. HvZ Core chooses the rules, story, dates, missions and pretty much everything else involved in making HvZ happen. They also run other weekly events, such as Nerf Wars, when weather permits. Missions are hour-long games where humans and zombies compete to achieve objectives that occur every other day during HvZ. These missions impact day-to-day play as the winning side receives rewards for their triumph. This year, the humans won the first two missions. If humans check in on time, they will receive a rubber band. If they have this rubber band and are tagged during the mission, they
recognize an OZ by their bandana, which will be green and pink and worn on their head. Everyone else starts out as a human and wears a green bandana on their arm to signify their status as one of the living. Humans that get turned into zombies wear their green bandana on their head instead of their arm. Zombies tag humans by touching them. However, humans can prevent being turned with NERF blasters and balled-up socks. If a human hits a zombie with a NERF dart or a sock, the zombie will be stunned for 15 minutes, during which time they are not able to tag anyone. HvZ Core, a committee created by the executive board of Big Games Club, plans and
do not turn into a zombie for day-to-day play. If they do not have the rubber band, they will be turned into a zombie for the rest of day-today play. Every semester, the game has a different story. The overarching story drives the gameplay for each mission. “This semester our story is all about dinosaurs, where our campus has become ‘MesoZombic Park.’ Just like Jurassic Park, we’re in a dinosaur theme park, but the dinosaurs (zombies) got out of their enclosures,” said third-year computer science major and Core member Dylan Briggs.
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Fundraiser supplies crafts to third world societies Jack Heneghan Staff Reporter Bead bracelets and bookmarks—these objects may bear minimal significance to many children but are incredibly important to those who have little in the way of personal possessions; that’s why Case Western Reserve University DCI (Distressed Children and Infants International) held a Bracelets for Service event this past Friday, Oct. 5 in the Thwing Center. At the event, participants prepared bracelets, cards and bookmarks for underprivileged children in India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Nic-
leged children have equal access to opportunities for a secure and prosperous life.” Additionally, the group seeks to connect American youth with those in other countries and to bring awareness to the challenges children face worldwide. The first DCI project at CWRU kicked off in 2016, the same year the club’s chapter was founded. The goal of the first event was, similarly to the Oct. 5 drive, to interact with the community and spread awareness of the global problems children face. This is also the greater mission of CWRU Distressed Children and Infants. The inaugural 2016 event was successful in this aspect as well because as many
aragua. At the end of the semester, DCI will be donating all the crafts to the children through the international organization. In addition to the fact that these items are easy for students to both physically make and donate, they are also objects which can brighten a child’s day and serve as a reminder that someone is thinking of them. The program is successful because such an easy action can leave a powerful impact on a child. “DCI’s mission is to protect the rights of children, stop child labor and help families lift themselves out of poverty through education, healthcare, vision care and income generating opportunities,” its mission statement reads. “DCI envisions a society where underprivi-
as 100 bracelets and bookmarks each were made, only limited by the number of supplies. Fourth-year Cindy Chen, DCI Vice President, estimated that about 70 people attended throughout the event.
News
A&E
Opinion
Sports
pg. 2 Professionals with Pride
pg. 7 East Cleveland Theater at 50
pg. 10 CWRU tackles toxic masculinity
pg. 16 Women’s soccer nets a win
Students enrolled in Mathematics 121 and 122, Physics 115 and Statistics 201 all received extra credit for participating in the drive. Chen estimated that about half of the attendants came for the extra credit. “I don’t think that’s a bad thing,” she said about students’ reason for turnout, “because
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