|
 |
 |

PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
25, No. 14, Feb. 2, 2006

UI
appeals NCAA policy regarding Chief Illiniwek
On Jan. 31, the UI
filed an appeal of a National Collegiate Athletic Association policy
that prohibits the Urbana-Champaign campus from hosting post-season
NCAA championship competition because of the 80-year-old Chief Illiniwek
tradition.
The appeal was submitted Tuesday to the Executive Committee of the Indianapolis-based
NCAA, and it requests a stay in enforcement of the contested policy
until the academic year ends in May.
The appeal states: “This appeal is about the institutional autonomy
of NCAA member schools. It is about flawed rules and process. It is
about the association of member schools exceeding its charter. It is
about a policy that asks a member institution to decide between abandoning
an 80-year-old tradition cherished by many or face diminished participation
in NCAA championship sports by its student athletes.”
And the appeal notes with approval the NCAA’s concurrence with
the university’s argument in support of, and the NCAA’s
acceptance of, the names Illini and Fighting Illini for the school’s
athletic teams. It states: “The NCAA’s reversal of its earlier
position in regard to the names provided solace to hundreds of thousands
of students, alumni and friends of the university who proudly call themselves
Illini in a positive association with the largest public university
in the state of Illinois.”
The new policy regarding uses of American Indian imagery by NCAA membership
institutions was scheduled to go into effect Feb. 1, 2006, but the NCAA
has indicated it will stay enforcement for colleges and universities
with appeals pending.
Performances by Chief Illiniwek for the remainder of the men’s
and women’s basketball season are not affected.
Back
to Index

|