TARABA STATE UNIVERSITY PROHIBITS THE WEARING OF FACE CAPS, EARRINGS, TINTED HAIR, AND OTHER ITEMS BY STUDENTS

 

 

 

 

 

A new directive has been given to students by the Taraba State University administration.

Indecent clothing is completely prohibited for students on the campus of the college by the authorities.

 

The school administration said that as a result of the decision, students will no longer be permitted entry into the school grounds if they are not appropriately dressed.

 

The warning, which was included in a notice distributed over the weekend, advised students who enjoy walking around campus in miniskirt, face caps, rolled sleeves, transparent clothing, mini and skimpy dresses, and other clothing that exposes sensitive body parts to immediately stop doing so or risk being expelled.

 

The vice chancellor, professor Sunday Paul Bako, personally signed the circular, which also instructed professors at the school to prevent students from entering lecture halls if they are discovered to be wearing unsuitable clothing.

 

According to a circular, students at the school "are strictly prohibited from wearing tattered and dirty jeans with holes or obscene subliminal messages; shirts without buttons; shirts that are improperly buttoned; rolling of the sleeves or flying collar; and wearing of face caps or complete face covering with very dark glasses."

The circular also mentions other prohibited behaviors, such as "wearing of tight fitting apparels; wearing clothes that reveal sensitive parts of the body; wearing shirts and tops with obscene, obnoxious, or seductive inscription; wearing 'baggy, saggy, or ass level' clothes and any other form of indecent trousers; and wearing of body piercing and tattooing."

 

While male students are "banned from wearing earrings and necklaces, including plaiting, weaving or bonding of hair," female students were warned not to wear "poor, unkempt, extremely fake hair or colored artificial hair, brightly tinted hair/eyelashes/brown, fixing of long eyelashes, fixing of artificial dreadlocks," among other things.

The school administration bemoaned that the students had been flouting the dress code and pledged that no one would be spared going forward.

 

The vice chancellor of the university urged the deans, heads of departments, and faculty officers to see to it that students follow the guidelines by dressing suitably at their various colleges, schools, and faculties.

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