BROKEN BOW, Neb. – At least one school board isn’t giving into the anti-gun hysteria engulfing many schools across America.

The Broken Bow school board voted to allow students to pose with guns in their senior portraits, so long as it’s “done in a tasteful manner in terms of a hunting or sporting-type picture,” according to Superintendent Mark Sievering.

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“Sievering says students may not be pointing guns at the cameras in their pictures or the photos will not be used in yearbooks or other school publications,” the AP reports.

A student requested he be allowed to include his gun in his senior portrait last year and was denied. It caused the rural district to rethink its policy.

“We have the 1 Box Shooting Club, a great trap range and sporting clays range,” said Ken Myers, the Broken Bow School Board President, according to NBC Nebraska.

“A lot of youth are interested in that so that brings up firearms, I guess, a little bit more to the forefront along with the hunting.”

The superintendent adds, “We decided that we didn’t want to have any offensive depictions of firearms.”

CBS notes in 2004, a New Hampshire school board voted to ban a photo of a student from the senior section of his high school yearbook because he posed with a shotgun. He later unsuccessfully sued the school.