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Pep Band will no long play at athletic events

Thanks to a multi-million dollar private donation, the University currently is in the early stages of forming a marching and concert band. With the formation of the new band, the athletic department has decided not to allow the Virginia Pep Band to continue its performances at athletic events.

Band leaders were informed April 24 that longtime donor Carl Smith and his wife had donated $23.5 million to the University, $1.5 million of which will go toward the new marching and concert bands.

The new band will march at football games beginning in 2004 and will act as a traditional concert band in the spring, and also will perform at other athletic events. The University does not currently have a full concert band.

Pep Band leaders met with Athletic Director Craig Littlepage and Amy Cronan, chief of staff in the President's Office, in April to discuss the status of the pep band.

"Mr. Littlepage explained they would no longer have access to venues for playing," Cronin said. "We made it clear they could keep playing at non-athletic venues."

Band members said they still want to support University athletics and students.

Cronan and Littlepage "said 'you are no longer needed and no longer welcome at athletic events,'" Pep Band Director Scott Hayes said. "We are going to try to support U.Va. athletics the best we can without being inside. We'll continue playing for first years moving in and at community events like the Charlottesville 10 miler, the United Way Day of Caring, AIDS walk and Albemarle county fair."

The Pep Band's exclusion from athletic events begins immediately.

"Reactions vary from being very sad to anger," Hayes said. "The problem was that a lot of people's perceptions of the event were changed because our instruments were locked up and we couldn't get to them and a lot of people had their own personal instruments in the closet," he added.

Hayes said the Pep Band found their loss of privileges very sudden.

"We asked to at least play for the following year," Hayes said. "They said once the new band gets together they can't support both financially. Our existence as an existing music ensemble is a threat to the marching band. It would make it harder to recruit for a marching band. They are not going to have any band together until fall of 2004, so there will be no band for a year."

According to Cronan, the University music department currently is coordinating a search for a band director.

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