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"Nearly
six weeks after the University of Virginia banned all signs at its sporting
events including football and basketball the university abruptly
switched course Thursday afternoon and rescinded its controversial no-sign
policy.
UVas athletics department announced in an Aug. 19 e-mail to students
that it was banning all signs. Beginning this year, signs are not
permitted inside athletics facilities, it said. Thank you for your
cooperation.
The sign ban came a year after UVa student David Becker was threatened with
ejection from Scott Stadium because he was holding up a sign that said:
Fire [head football coach Al] Groh.
In the aftermath of the sign ban, however, outrage grew steadily over
what many Cavalier fans perceived as an infringement on their right to voice
their opinions at a
university founded by Thomas Jefferson.
At the UVa football teams game against the University of Richmond
on Sept. 6 an estimated 5,000 students in the stands of Scott Stadium held
up blank sheets of paper as in, not technically signs to protest
the policy.
A second protest of the sign ban was being organized for Saturdays
home game against the University of Maryland. In that planned protest, dubbed
the power of students night, many fans promised to wear blue
T-shirts rather than the universitys preferred orange T-shirts. The
protest also called for Cavalier fans to abandon their official orange gameday
T-shirts by placing them in collection bins to be sent overseas to needy
people.
Stand up: Wear blue at Saturday nights game, urged a protest
announcement Wednesday from UVas Student Council. If you dont
have blue, anything but orange will do.
Amid all the fury, UVa Athletics Director Craig Littlepage continued to
defend the no-signs policy. As recently as Wednesday, Littlepage defended
the ban, saying it promoted a positive gameday environment.
Yet on Thursday, Littlepage released a new written statement that announced
he was rescinding the sign ban, saying it had become too much of a distraction.
The policy prohibiting signs, banners and flags in all UVa athletics
venues has become a distraction and has taken the focus away from supporting
our student-athletes, he wrote. Our football team needs our
support right now and that should be our collective focus. With that in
mind, I am repealing immediately the policy prohibiting signs, banners and
flags in all athletics venues. I encourage all of our fans to be in attendance
at Saturdays football game with Maryland. My hope is our fans will
wear orange and be prepared to support the Cavaliers.
Littlepages flip-flop on the sign ban drew kudos from some fans on
various UVa football focused blogs and message boards.
I feel like a winner today, wrote one. Mr. Jefferson,
we got the signs back! WAHOOWAH!
The fans protests of the no-sign policy seemed to be behind the decision
to lead to the overturning of the ban, said John W. Whitehead, president
of the Rutherford Institute, a Charlottesville-based nonprofit organization
that aims to protect constitutional and human rights.
All those who have engaged in staging creative protests should be
encouraged and also commended for their efforts, said Whitehead. This
is a timely reminder of the power of the people to speak out and bring about
change.
UVa is not the only university in Virginia that has sought to ban signs.
Virginia Tech and James Madison University do not allow signs at athletics
events, while Virginia Commonwealth University and the College of William
& Mary do not have a policy regarding signs.
Rich Murray, spokesman of UVas athletics department, declined to
say what led to Littlepages decision to allow signs.
All I can say is what is there in his statement, Murray said.
It had become a distraction.
The UVa football teams record for the season is 1-3. The team is
considered one of the most lackluster in the NCAA, ranked last in scoring
offense, 118th in total offense and 98th in scoring defense.
Becker, the student who held up a Fire Groh sign last year,
said that he is happy that signs will be back at UVas football and
basketball games.
The repeal of the sign ban is obviously great news for students,
he said. It goes to show how far the power of protest can take you.
I cant wait to bring positive signs back to Scott Stadium and the
John Paul Jones Arena." (Brian McNeill, The Daily Progress,
October 2, 2008)
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