Cardiff students’ union bans chinos and blue shirts
after violence
Incident at university clubbing night leads to preppy
staples being barred from union premises
Richard
Adams Education editor
Fri 20 Oct
2023 13.30 EDT
They may
have been preppy fashion championed by Ralph Lauren and Calvin Klein but chinos
and blue shirts have now been banned by Cardiff University students’ union
after being associated with a violent incident at a nightclub.
The
students’ union announced the ban in a memo sent to all members of Cardiff’s
athletic union, the umbrella body representing sporting clubs on campus.
Local
residents say that the chinos and blue, button-down shirt combination had
become an unofficial uniform of male students involved in many of the athletic
union’s clubs.
The
students’ union said the clothing ban was “not aimed at a specific group”, and
was solely related to incidents at its weekly “Yolo” clubbing night.
An email
from the students’ union to athletic union members said: “Due to the dangerous
behaviour portrayed by groups of individual wearing chinos and blue shirts in
the Yolo queue on 4 October, a decision has been made to temporarily prevent
similar attire to be worn to future events.
“The
behaviour displayed by the group in question can only be described as reckless,
dangerous and incredibly irresponsible.”
A
spokesperson for the students’ union said: “It is our established practice to
proactively respond to behaviour concerns so we can ensure that our events are
safe, accessible and comfortable, and we thank the student body for their
support in achieving this. The current clothing restrictions are temporary, not
aimed at a specific group and is in direct response to a specific recent
incident.”
Student
media reported that a large group of “rugby freshers” – first-year male
undergraduates – had started pushing each other within the queue, causing
security staff to take action.
The
students’ union said its security was “able to intervene and safely disperse
the crowd” but that it could easily have escalated into a “major incident”. It
called for help in identifying the men involved.
The preppy
look, promoted by the US brands such as J Crew, has long been associated with
the elite of the east coast as long ago as John F Kennedy in the 1950s. But in
recent years the look, including polo shirts, has become identified with some
“alt-right” groups in the US, such as the deadly torchlight march in
Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 and protests involving the far-right Proud
Boys.
In Cardiff,
the students’ union told members of the athletic union that after imposing a
ban on chinos and shirts “we saw a marked improvement in behaviour in the
queue”. The ban applies only to students’ union premises.
The
spokesperson for the students’ union said it “proactively communicates any
changes in safety measures to students to ensure they know of the initiatives
in place”, adding: “We regularly review the effectiveness of our safety
measures in line with best practice in the sector.”
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