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Home » News » National

Friday, November 20, 2009

Tribe battles to keep logo for Fighting Sioux

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ON ICE: The Fighting Sioux logo remains on the jerseys of the University of North Dakota hockey team, after tribal members won a temporary restraining order to keep the nickname from being retired.

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By Valerie Richardson

The most prominent defenders of the University of North Dakota's right to call its teams the Fighting Sioux are neither alumni nor hockey fans.

They're Sioux.

A group of Spirit Lake Sioux won a temporary restraining order last week to stop the North Dakota University System from retiring the nickname and logo, one of the last in the country associated with an American Indian tribe. A hearing for a preliminary injunction is slated for Dec. 9 in Ramsey County District Court in Devils Lake, N.D.

Most such university team names have been abandoned in the face of criticism that they were offensive or derogatory, but that view isn't the only one in Indian country. Some tribal members take pride in their association with the Fighting Sioux and worry that eliminating the moniker "will cause isolation and a diminishing of public interest, knowledge and respect for Sioux history," according to the complaint.

"There are more members of the Sioux tribe that support this than oppose it," said Frank Blackcloud, a Spirit Lake Sioux and member of the tribe's Committee for Understanding and Respect, which brought the complaint.

The committee's decision to weigh in on the Fighting Sioux nickname is the latest - and most ironic - twist in a decades-old debate over the university's nickname and logo.

While Spirit Lake Sioux members are fighting to save the name, they're meeting resistance from largely nonnative groups like the faculty Senate, the College Anti-Racism Team and even the state Board of Higher Education.

Board President Richie Smith, who has come out in favor of retiring the logo and nickname, called the judge's decision to issue the restraining order "bizarre."

All this has Patrick Morley scratching his head.

"It's definitely a turnaround," said Mr. Morley, a Grand Forks, N.D., lawyer representing the Committee on Understanding and Respect.

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