|
Category: 24. Community service; sports and athletics.
JENK007. Jenkins, Venita. UNCP's
Indian logo draws critics. Fayetteville Observer Wednesday,
9 May 2001.
1 photograph
Publication type: Newspaper article
Electronic access: Fayetteville Observer Web site
(www.fayettevillenc.com
). Use Search.
The End
Racial Bigotry NOW Web site, managed by Linda LeMonde, a member
of the Wendat tribe, includes UNC-Pembroke in its list of schools using
racist mascots. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued
a statement on April 16, 2001, asking that non-Native schools' use of
mascots, logos, or names referring to Native Americans be eliminated because
it is disrespectful and offensive to Native Americans and others
who are offended by such stereotyping.
Even though UNC-Pembroke was founded in 1887 as a normal
school to educate the Croatan (now Lumbee) Indians, Linda LeMonde states,
It's wrong to use an ethnic group as a sports token. . . . Many
schools have chosen to change, and I certainly hope that UNC-Pembroke
will come into the 21st century.
UNC-Pembroke's mascot was an Indian brave until 1991,
when Chancellor Joseph Oxendine initiated a process which changed the mascot
to a red-tailed hawk (1992) and changed the school's logo from a war-dancing
Indian to the profile of an Indian with an eagle in the background.
The article includes remarks from Lumbee students who see the
logo and mascot as recognition of past and present Lumbee pride in the
university and do not find them degrading. Current Chancellor Allen
Meadors states, If the American Indians for whom this school was
founded want the [mascot and logo] to stay, those who are involved in
this decision should honor that.
Additional Subjects: University of North Carolina at Pembroke
| Sports mascots
This annotation was last edited on: June 20, 2002
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net |