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         Sports Mascots:     more books (100)
  1. Meet Cort the Sport (Cort the Sport Adventures) by Aimee Aryal and Chris Halligan, 2006-06-01
  2. Cort Spells it Out (Cort the Sport Adventures) by Aimee Aryal, 2006-06-01
  3. Hello, Mr. Met! by Rusty Staub, 2006-07
  4. Pushing some buttons: helping students understand the American Indian mascot issue.(Teaching Notes): An article from: Radical Teacher by Sudie Hoffmann, 2005-12-22
  5. Hello, Ralphie! by Aimee Aryal, 2007-08-01
  6. Hello CavMan! by Aimee Aryal, Gerry Perez, 2004-02
  7. Dancing at Halftime: Sports and the Controversy over American Indian Mascots by Carol Spindel, 1980
  8. Mascot Madness! (Schooling Around!) by Andy Griffiths, 2009-02-01
  9. The Native American Mascot Controversy: A Handbook by C. Richard King, 2010-10-16
  10. How 'Bout Them Cowboys! by Aimee Aryal, 2007-08
  11. Hello Testudo! by Aimee Aryal, 2003-01
  12. Indians As Mascots in Minnesota Schools by Pat Stave Helmberger, 1999-01-01
  13. More Than Beards, Bellies and Biceps: The Story of the 1993 Phillies by Robert Gordon, Tom Burgoyne, 2006-03-01
  14. Nickname Mania: The Best of College Nicknames and Mascots and the Stories Behind Them by Mark T. Jenkins, 1997-12

41. Native American Sports Mascots
Stop using Native American cultures for sports mascots.
http://www.ethicalego.com/native_american_as_mascots.htm

READ ABOUT THIS BOOK
Brooks column for 3 Sep 2001
Don’t use Native Americas for team logos and mascots.
“We believe respect for self and others is foremost,” is a part of Vallejo High School’s vision statement. Beside that statement is a picture of an Apache Indian. They named the Apache for the school’s team name, logo and mascot. Does anyone see a contradiction there? As children we played the game of cowboys and Indians. Mostly everybody wanted to be the cowboys, because the game always ended with the Indians defeated and dead. Why did most American children believe those were the right rules for the game? Movies, television shows and cheap cowboy books about the old west taught them that it was not just okay, but good and honorable to kill Indians singularly and in groups. Glamorizing that wanton destruction of Native Americans and their culture was American cultural message about that group’s worth. The cowboys in those old movies spat out the word ‘Redskin’ as both an offensive name and a negative racist description for the indigenous people. The impact of those old film’s one-sided negative characterizations of Native Americans persist today. Americans were not satisfied to just destroy many of those Native American nations as functioning cultures. They continued to dishonor them by using them in logos, and as images of fierceness for amateur and professional sports teams. It is unconscionable that we citizens allow the sports team in our nation’s capital to call themselves “Redskins.”

42. College Sports Mascots - Sports IS
College sports mascots Articles. Native American Sports Mascot Issues The issue of Native American figures as mascots for sports teams.
http://sportsis.itopsites.com/college-sports-mascots.html
sports sports Resources Add URL Buy Sports Tickets Online Buy and sell sports, concert, theater and event tickets. StubHub.com is the guaranteed ticket marketplace. College Sports Mascots Articles
Native American Sports Mascot Issues
A collection of websites covering the issue of use of Native American figures as mascots in athletics and sports teams...( Continue Reading Bumstead the Bear - Phoenix College Mascot
Here is a picture of Bumstead the Bear, the Phoenix College Mascot....( Continue Reading Great audience for College Sports in Boston
College sports in Boston attract students supporting their "home" team....( Continue Reading Native American Mascots in Athletics
The issue of Native American figures as mascots for sports teams...( Continue Reading Professional Sports - College Sports - A.S.U. Sun Devils
Sports and recreational activities in the Phoenix, AZ Area. This is your source for professional and collegiate sports teams in Phoenix....( Continue Reading College Sports Mascots Directory Links sports on demand youth football a teacher copeland sports store ... football jersey Popular Search Terms: Sports IS Sports IS
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.

43. ESPN.com - ESPNINC/PRESSRELEASES - Special On Native Americans And Sports Nov. 1
sports mascots The debate over the use of Native American mascots, sports mascots segment I have some Black American friends who are very big
http://espn.go.com/espninc/pressreleases/991110otlnativeamericans.html
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ESPN Inc. The Magazine ESPN Radio ESPNEWS ESPN Wireless ... ESPN Zone SPECIAL SECTIONS Fantasy Games Contests ESPN Classic SportsFigures ... Training Room Monday, November 15 'The Native American Sports Experience'
November 10, 1999 Jackson uses teachings of the Lakota Sioux in his coaching. Hosted by Bob Ley from the National Museum of the American Indian in New York City, Outside the Lines: The Native American Sports Experience will look at the role sports play in the history and lives of Native Americans. Segments include:
  • Phil Jackson Phil Jackson, the former Bulls' and current Lakers' coach, uses teachings of the Lakota Sioux in his coaching. He would burn sage to cleanse the team of negative energy and show game film intercut with clips from a movie about a Sioux warrior. Jackson says he decorated the Bulls' team room at the Berto Center with Native American artifacts to reinforce in the players' minds that their journey together each season was a sacred quest. Is he using these same coaching techniques with the Lakers? Rick Telander
  • Leaving the reservation Many Native Americans find it difficult to leave their reservations particularly women, especially when they are teenagers or mothers. LeAnn Montes, a Chippewa Cree from the Rocky Boy reservation in Montana, is leaving her two-year-old daughter on the reservation to play basketball and pursue an education at the University of Montana. Three of the four seniors on her high school team had children when they won Montana's 1998 Class C State Championship. Many Native Americans are not able to adjust to living away from the reservation and return before receiving their college degrees. Montes says she needs a degree to leave the alcoholism and poverty of her reservation and create a better future for her and her daughter. - Kelly Neal
  • 44. Inside Higher Ed :: Racism And Ignorance
    It is hard to have a serious public discussion about sports mascots American Indian sports mascots exist under a double bubble of mythological padding.
    http://insidehighered.com/views/2005/08/09/spindel
    @import url( "/design/ihe/stylesheets/meta-normal.css" ); Print this page E-mail this page News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education Saturday September 17, 2005
    Views
    News Home Advertisement Aug. 9
    Racism and Ignorance
    By Carol Spindel Eighteen colleges are now on the mascot pariah list
    Related stories
    E-mail Print In Whose Honor? The mascot debate is actually the latest in a long series of battles over who controls American Indian culture. Since most of us never learned the history of white/Native relations in our country, the issue seems to have sprung out of nowhere. Until I wrote a book about sports mascots, I never knew the history of forced assimilation. But culture was as much a battleground as land. The U.S. government conducted a strenuous campaign to wipe out American Indian cultures, religions, and languages. American Indian children were forcibly taken from their families to boarding schools where they were physically punished if they spoke their tribal languages or tried to maintain their religious observances. In a country that prides itself on religious freedom, the First Americans had none until 1934. Before this, Native people faced sanctions even when trying to conduct ceremonies and dances on their own reservations. One of the few historical incidents many of us do know about, the tragic massacre at Wounded Knee, took place because American Indians were gathering to dance at a religious ceremony that the government was determined to suppress.

    45. Editorial Matters
    Many sports mascots were adopted at a time in this country when Native peoplehad no voice. Now they have a voice. Some newspapers have already heeded that
    http://editorialmatters.lee.net/articles/2005/07/29/vp_views/previous_vp_views/v
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    LINKS Lee newspapers Editor and Publisher Readership Institute Poynter ... Poynter's Journalism links Reporter's desktop Virtual newsroom library Ideas Vp Views Lincoln adopts new policy on Native mascots and nicknames Lee editors and newsroom staffs especially those in areas with significant Native American populations and history would do well to take a fresh look at the usage of Native mascots and nicknames in sports and other coverage. The Lincoln Journal Star recently announced a change in its policy, thoughtfully considered after the Native American Journalists Association called on news organizations to adopt restrictions by 2004. Kathy Rutledge, editor in Lincoln, asked Sports Editor John Mabry and News Editor Jim Johnson, a NAJA member, to develop a recommendation. After researching the issue, gathering readers' views and organizing a staff discussion, they recommended a change, as Kathy explains in the column below. This type of decision often engenders more debate in the newsroom than it does among most of the public but you'll find those with an opinion quite willing to share it.

    46. The Lantern Online
    Some sports logos are now nogos, Activists say that mascots like QUOT;Chief The fight against racism in sports mascots took a different twist in 2002
    http://www.thelantern.com/news/2004/07/13/Sports/Some-Sports.Logos.Are.Now.NoGos
    document.write(''+''); The Lantern Extras: Paying for College Student Resources Scholarships Movies ... GradZone Current Issue: document.write(currentissuedayname + ', ' + currentissuemonthname + ' ' + currentissueday + ', ' + currentissueyear);
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    var story_id = 692989; Home Sports
    Some sports logos are now no-gos
    Activists say that mascots like "Chief Wahoo" are racist stereotypes
    By Edward Mauler Published: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 Dressed as a Seminole warrior and riding horseback - galloping across the gridiron - a man attempts to ignite the Florida State crowd at a collegiate football game.
    As the Cleveland Indians take the field during a recent baseball game, players wear uniforms with the toothy Chief Wahoo sewn onto their sleeves and hats.
    While the Atlanta Braves rally in the late innings against their opponent, fans in unison perform the "tomahawk chop" to the rhythm of a presumed Native American song.
    "The tomahawk chop - there is no such ceremony in Native American history and it makes us appear as savages," said Dan Montour, co-chair of the National Coalition Against Racism in Sports Mascots. "It puts off a lot of the ceremonial songs and makes (Native Americans) appear warlike."
    Montour is a Native American student at Ohio State and works with the American Indian Student Services to bring awareness to a growing trend in the sports world to make sports team mascots less insulting to minorities such as Native Americans. Along with the famous tomahawk chop in Atlanta, Montour said Chief Wahoo of the Cleveland Indians is equally distasteful.

    47. NPR : Commentary: Why I Hate Sports Mascots
    Commentator Frank Deford pays a visit to his friend the Sports Curmudgeon, andcomes away with an earful about sports mascots.
    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1787765

    48. IllinoisLeader.com
    Such is the case with the U of I sports mascot Chief IIliniwek or any AmericanIndian sports mascots. Throughout history, American terms and symbols for the
    http://illinoisleader.com/printer/article.asp?c=9857

    49. STAR - 1999 NAACP RESOLUTION IN OPPOSITION TO NATIVE AMERICAN MASCOTS
    1999 NAACP RESOLUTION IN OPPOSITION TO NATIVE AMERICAN MASCOTS oppressed peopleand their cultural traditions, as sports mascots and symbols.
    http://www.racismagainstindians.org/Resolutions/Resolutions_NAACP.htm
    1999 NAACP RESOLUTION IN OPPOSITION TO NATIVE AMERICAN MASCOTS NAACP against Racist Mascots
    Champaign County Branch NAACP
    July 14, 1999 For immediate release For more information contact:
    Cleveland Jefferson, President.
    212 261 7000 (Room 1730) until 7/15
    217 352 7166 after 7/15
    Imani Bazzell, Project Coordinator.
    The National NAACP attendees of its 1999 Annual Convention voted unanimously and without debate for a resolution calling to reject the use of Native Americans, and all historically oppressed people and their cultural traditions, as sports mascots and symbols. This resolution was put forward by the Champaign County Branch of the NAACP of Illinois, to fulfill its April 22nd 1998 commitment to take such a resolution all the way to the National NAACP. Champaign County is home to Illinois' flagship University which still has an Indian mascot: "Chief Illiniwek". "We are pleased that the national NAACP has not just reaffirmed its position on the use of Native American names, symbols, etc. but has voted unanimously to call upon all chapters, members and friends to take personal action as well as join in coalition with others to eliminate these practices.", explained Imani Bazzell, Champaign County Branch Project Coordinator. "As a local chapter, it is now incumbent upon us to provide leadership and support to the national office and affected chapters around the country as they begin to implement the resolution", she added.

    50. Retire The Chief Home
    oppressed people and their cultural traditions as sports mascots and symbols . of American Indian people through the use of sports mascots.
    http://www.retirethechief.org/Archives/issue0203.html
    A forum for discussion on retiring Chief Illiniwek Welcome to RetireTheChief August, 2003 Vol. 2, No. 3 Home Welcome News Letters ... TEN REASONS TO RETIRE THE CHIEF
    3. Bad Publicity - National Views
    Nationwide disdain for the Chief reflects poorly on the UofI
    Regional and National Opinion Wall Street Journal , Frederick Klein, 11/17/00: Native Americans are pained by the Chief [Illiniwek] and his ilk, and wish they'd go away. The Chief's fate shouldn't be decided by a vote... Sports are supposed to be fun, and neither they nor the ceremonies that surround them should cause distress. The university should rise above the Chief's supporters and detractors and ease him into retirement.
    Klein is a U.I. graduate (1959). Chicago Tribune , editorial titled "Retire The Chief", 3/7/01: By now board [of trustees] members should recognize that their athletic teams' controversial symbol has become too great a distraction... the University of Illinois is, after all, an academic institution. It is a fine one. Imagine how much better it might be if all that energy were focused on issues that actually enhanced the school's reputation. National Education Association Advocate Online (Gurleen Grewal), 1/2000

    51. School Mascots Madwell Sports Mascots
    Maydwell Mascots is a Toronto based mascot costumes company that strives to beone of the best producers of corporate, college, university school and sports
    http://www.maydwell.com/school-mascots.htm
    Mascots
    Mascots
    "Thank you to the team at Maydwell Mascots in producing the Canada Goose
    mascot for the Eaton Center. We are very happy with the mascot and service.
    Maydwell Mascots did an excellent job and met our needs completely.
    The mascot was used in the Santa Clause parade and received a great response.
    Thank you Maydwell for making this happen and we will definitely
    recommend you to anyone looking to have a mascot made."
    Tish / Carol (Partners)
    Stop Tyme Productions
    Toronto, Ont. CDA
    "Maydwell mascots were able to bring to life a thought, an idea, a dream. The
    creation of “Soft Serve Sammy” mascot brought both us and our customers excitement and increased traffic flow in our business. Kids are constantly asking their parents to visit our establishment in order to see and play with Sammy. The extra touch that Maydwell mascots provided us has encouraged us to consider the creation of an additional mascot to our family. Thanks Maydwell for bringing our imagination to full life. We and our entire community of clients thank you as well as Sammy."

    52. SPORTS MASCOTS
    Startup Guide Moonwalk Rental Directory Top » Catalog » 14 ADVERTISINGINFLATABLES » sports mascots My Account Cart Contents Checkout
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    53. Tw325.html
    Harjo s presentation, Team Spirits Confronting Indian sports mascots, willbegin at 7 pm in the Main Lounge of the Memorial Student Center,
    http://www.iwu.edu/~iwunews/newsrlse/tw407.htm
    November 7, 2001
    Contact: Kate Weber, 309/556-3181 Team Spirits:
    Confronting Indian Sports Mascots

    EDITOR'S NOTE: A press conference will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 12 in the reception room of Presser Hall, 303 University Ave. BLOOMINGTON, Ill. Suzan Shown Harjo, president and executive director of the Morning Star Institute in Washington D.C., will speak on the topic of Native American team mascots at Illinois Wesleyan University on Monday, Nov. 12. Harjo's presentation, "Team Spirits: Confronting Indian Sports Mascots," will begin at 7 p.m. in the Main Lounge of the Memorial Student Center, 104 E. University St., Bloomington. The program is free and open to the public. Harjo's presentation will be followed with a response from Charles Springwood, IWU assistant professor of anthropology. Springwood recently co-wrote a book, "Beyond the Cheers: Race as Spectacle in College Sport," with C. Richard King, and co-edited, also with King, "Team Spirits: The Native American Mascots Controversy." Prior to serving as president and executive director of The Morning Star Institute, a national, non-profit Indian rights organization for native peoples' cultural and traditional advocacy and arts promotion, Harjo served as executive director of the National Congress of American Indians from 1984 to 1989 and communications director, legislative assistant and coordinator of the National Indian Litigation Committee from 1975-1976. She is also a poet, writer, lecturer, curator and policy analyst whose works have been widely anthologized and published.

    54. Mascot.Org Performer FAQ
    to network with other mascots and learn about the business of sports mascots.If you cannot afford the camps, networking with your local sports mascot
    http://www.mascot.org/performerFAQ.html
    Performer Frequently Asked Questions
    When will I get paid?
    Payment usually arrives 4 weeks after the event. Be sure to file all paperwork immediately following event. If we do not receive your paperwork within 2 weeks of the event, checks may be delayed.
    Checks cannot be issued without paperwork.
    Forms we need are:
    o TMO independent contractor Agreement
    o IRS W-9 Form completed with signature
    o Job Sheet for each event
    o Possibly client specific paperwork pertaining to the character played Where does my check go?
    The address stated on the IRS W-9 form is where your check is sent. If you move or change address please send us an updated W-9 form so that we may change you information for future mailings Its been more than 4 weeks where's my check?
    We encourage everyone to check with our office to insure we've received your paperwork. Missing job sheets are the #1 reason for late checks. Occasionally, there are delays in mailing checks for other reason. For instance, if our clients are very late in paying, it may delay paying talent (unfortunately). We make every effort to pay within a reasonable timeframe. What Tax Paperwork will I receive?

    55. Sports Mascots - Bee 03 - Basketball
    High quality die cut vinyl sports teams mascots decals.
    http://gallery.bcentral.com/GID4508723P1950086-Sports/Basketball/Sports-Mascots-
    Custom Signs Decal Junky Decal Application Instructions ReturnTo Home Page Site Map View Cart
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    Sports Mascots - Bee 03 - Basketball
    Price: High quality die cut vinyl sports teams mascots decals.
    Size: 6'' x 4.24'' 8'' x 5.66'' ( price +$2.00) 10'' x 7.07'' ( price +$4.00) 12'' x 8.49'' ( price +$8.00) 14'' x 9.90'' ( price +$14.00) 18'' x 12.73'' ( price +$24.00) White License Plate ( price +$6.00) Black License Plate ( price +$6.00) Decal Color: White Black Red Blue Yellow Silver Gold Pink Brown Orange Purple Etched Glass ( price +$4.00) Facing: Right Left
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    56. Sports Mascots - Bulldog Head 02 - Bach Text
    High quality die cut vinyl personalized sports teams mascots decals.
    http://gallery.bcentral.com/GID4508723P3941726-Bulldogs/Sports-Mascots-Bulldog-H
    Custom Signs Decal Junky Decal Application Instructions ReturnTo Home Page Site Map View Cart
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    Sports Mascots - Bulldog Head 02 - Bach Text
    Price: High quality die cut vinyl personalized sports teams mascots decals.
    Size: 10'' ( price +$4.00) 12'' ( price +$8.00) 14'' ( price +$14.00) 18'' ( price +$24.00) White License Plate ( price +$10.00) Black License Plate ( price +$10.00) Decal Color: White Black Red Blue Yellow Silver Gold Pink Brown Orange Purple Etched Glass ( price +$4.00) Facing: Right Left Text Arched Top: Text Bottom:
    Quantity: High quality die cut vinyl personalized sports teams mascots decals.

    57. Fighting Spirits: The Racial Politics Of Sports Mascots -- King And Springwood 2
    This article explores the racial politics of sports mascots through a comparativeaccount of the uses of Indianness at Florida State University and the
    http://jss.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/24/3/282

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    Journal of Sport and Social Issues, Vol. 24, No. 3, 282-304 (2000)
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    Fighting Spirits: The Racial Politics of Sports Mascots
    C. Richard King Charles Fruehling Springwood This article explores the racial politics of sports mascots through a comparative account of the uses of Indianness at Florida State University and the centrality of Confederate symbols at the University of Mississippi. It avoids the temptation of romanticizing resistance as well as easy, if not impulsive, condemnations. Instead, employing a neo-Gramscian and poststructural framework, it seeks to complicate prevailing understandings of sports mascots. It details the contours of imperial Whiteness and the competing efforts to reformulate Euro-American identity emergent in its wake. At the same time, it theorizes the awkward alliances often

    58. Journal Of Sport And Social Issues -- Sign In Page

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    59. Commentary: Deere Did 'holy Work' For All Native Americans - UMC.org
    was the issue of Native American symbols being used as sports mascots. to denounce Native American sports mascots at the 2004 General Conference,
    http://www.umc.org/site/c.gjJTJbMUIuE/b.872815/k.47E/Commentary_Deere_did_holy_w

    United Methodist News Service
    Features Video Stories Photo Gallery ... Weekly Digest Related Articles Kenneth Deere, Native American leader, dies at age 69 Church caucus protests Indian mascots Task force acts to sharpen focus on native spirituality Resources General Commission on Religion and Race Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference Psalm 82 Home ... July
    Commentary: Deere did 'holy work' for all Native Americans July 7, 2005 A UMNS Commentary
    By the Rev. Alvin Deer*
    When the Rev. Kenneth Deere lost his bout with cancer on June 23, I lost a friend. On June 27, we celebrated his life at his home church of Salt Creek, a place he dearly loved. During his 27 years of serving in the Washington-based United Methodist Commission on Religion and Race, Kenneth would long for the simpler life of Salt Creek, in rural Holdenville, Oklahoma. It was a place he went many times to re-center himself before returning to the battle for equality and dignity for all Native Americans. Kenneth Deere was a veteran. Not only did he serve honorably in the U.S. Marine Corps, but he served on other front lines not that familiar to Americans. He was in Washington when the American Indian Movement took over the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1972, and he offered assistance as clergy during the siege at Wounded Knee in 1973.

    60. National Catholic Reporter: American Indian Mascots Should Go
    Yet some sports columnists still name antimascot activists as whiners and A little investigation reveals that people against Indian sports mascots
    http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1141/is_17_41/ai_n12417648
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    ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports American Indian mascots should go National Catholic Reporter Feb 25, 2005 by Rich Heffern
    Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. A sports-page headline screams: "Cowboys scalp Redskins to maintain lead." The logo of the Cleveland "Indians" is a buck-toothed, big-nosed caricature of a Native American. The University of North Dakota bookstore sells sweatpants with the word "Sioux" stenciled across the backside. For several years, a T-shirt graphically showing a Native American having sex with a buffalo has been worn by North Dakota State University fans. Yet some sports columnists still name anti-mascot activists as whiners and "fusspots." A little investigation reveals that people against Indian sports mascots truly aren't a tiny, whiny liberal minority. In a survey by Indian Country Today magazine, for example, 81 percent of respondents reported use of American Indian names, symbols and mascots are predominantly offensive and deeply disparaging to Native Americans.

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