The Albemarle school division denied
Thursday an allegation that officials at Albemarle High School warned
female students not to wear T-shirts promoting abstinence.
That allegation was made by the Rutherford Institute — a national
nonprofit legal organization based in Charlottesville dedicated to the
defense of civil liberties — in a letter sent to Superintendent Pam
Moran on Thursday morning. The Rutherford Institute is representing an
AHS student.
The T-shirts read “Virginity rocks” on the front and “I’m loving my
husband and I haven’t even met him! MyLifeMyCall.com” on the back. The
shirts are part of a campaign by Worth Your Wait, a nonprofit
abstinence education group based in Ruckersville.
In the letter to Moran, John Whitehead, the president and founder of
the Rutherford Institute, threatened legal action if students are not
allowed to wear the T-shirts.
But a statement released Thursday afternoon by the school division
said that the T-shirts are acceptable and that no warnings or other
administrative actions against students had taken place.
According to the school division’s version of events, several AHS
students wearing the T-shirts asked Principal Matt Haas in April if the
shirts were acceptable. Haas said they were.
“I appreciate the opportunity to share the full facts of this
situation, and can assure our students and their parents that Albemarle
County Public Schools works very hard to protect all the rights of our
students, including free expression, as we strive to provide a positive
and productive learning environment,” Moran said in a statement.
Whitehead agreed that Haas acknowledged the students’ right to wear
the T-shirts. But several lower-level school employees at AHS continued
to tell students to cover up the T-shirts, he said.
“Where there is smoke, there is fire,” Whitehead said.
Whitehead claimed victory Thursday evening and said that no legal
action would be taken as long as students are allowed to wear the
shirts.
“We’re happy that school officials agree with us and the students
can wear the shirts,” he said. “The schools can’t fight us on this
because the law is on our side. If the schools stick to allowing the
shirts, we’ll be fine. But if they divert from it, we’ll be back.”
Abstinence is part of the sex education curriculum throughout the state of Virginia.
Whitehead also said that a student at Charlottesville High School was asked to cover up a “Virginity rocks” T-shirt.
City schools spokeswoman Cass Cannon could not confirm that claim
but added that school officials were not even aware of the T-shirts
until media inquiries on the issue began coming in Thursday.
This is not the first time that a T-shirt has caused a controversy
in the area. In 2002, Alan Newsom, then a student at Jack Jouett Middle
School, sued the county school system after being forced to turn a
National Rifle Association T-shirt inside out. The shirt bore
silhouettes of three target shooters and the words “NRA Sports Shooting
Camp.”
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously that the
dress code at Jouett — which banned clothing with images of weapons —
was too broad. Newsom reached a private settlement with the school
system and the dress code was changed to allow images of weapons as
long as the weapons are not displayed in an unlawful, violent or
threatening manner. ![]()





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