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WIAA No Fan Of Extra Flesh

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WIAA No Fan Of Extra Flesh

Ban On Barechested Fans Sought At Indoor Events

By Associated Press

WAUSAU - The association governing high school sports in Wisconsin is considering banning fans with bare or painted chests from indoor games. "People say, 'Hey, we are attempting to take the fun out of high school sports.' That isn't the intention at all," said Tom Shafranski, assistant director of the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association. High school students can't bare their chests in class, so there's no reason for them to do it at indoor sporting events, he said Thursday. It's simply a matter of being appropriately dressed, he added. The WIAA's sportsmanship committee has voted 6-0 to recommend the ban. A 16-member sports advisory committee of state athletic directors meets next week to consider the recommendation, which would then go to the WIAA's Board of Control for final approval on June 19 in Green Lake. Mike Blackburn, associate executive director of the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association in Indianapolis, said Wisconsin's proposed ban could be the first in the country. Nationally, bare-chested fans have been not been a big problem at high school games, although he has heard some concerns, Blackburn said. Todd Clark, coordinator of the WIAA's sportsmanship committee, said the idea of banning bare chests has been tossed around for years because some people find such behavior offensive. It's usually only a handful of young men, but they draw a lot of attention, he said. "I just don't know what not wearing a shirt at a game has anything to do with being there to watch the competitors compete," Clark said. "You don't hear a lot of argument against moving forward with this." The WIAA now bans bare-chested fans at indoor state tournaments, in part because fans with painted chests damaged cloth seats when the paint dripped on them, Clark said. "We do allow the facial paint to be used. We do not see that as a problem. But if they have body paint on, we ask them to get a jacket or some piece of apparel over it," he said. High school students modeling fans at college and professional games have led to more of the behavior, Shafranski said. "Many times we get some cross-dressing, when boys are wearing bikini tops that some people find to be offensive," he said.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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