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The Fighting Whites Phenomenon: Toward an Understanding of the Media's Coverage
By Lynn Klyde-Silverstein
Assistant Professor Department of Journalism and Mass Communications Campus Box 114 University of Northern Colorado Greeley, CO 80639 (970) 351-2432 [log in to unmask]
Submitted to the Minorities and Communication Division AEJMC Convention 2003
The Fighting Whites Phenomenon: Toward an Understanding of the Media's Coverage
Abstract
The Fighting Whites, an intramural basketball team at the University of Northern Colorado, inspired a media frenzy during March 2002. Their name and mascot, a caricature of a Caucasian man, was an attempt to shed light on what many people considered a racist mascot in a nearby high school. Through interviews, this paper seeks to understand the media coverage afforded the team.
The Fighting Whites Phenomenon: Toward an Understanding of the Media's Coverage
The Fighting Whites, an intramural basketball team at the University of Northern Colorado, inspired a media frenzy during March 2002. Their name and mascot, a caricature of a Caucasian man, was an attempt to shed light on what many people considered a racist mascot at a nearby high school. The team made national and international headlines and eventually donated $100,000 to the university's scholarship fund. This paper seeks to understand the media coverage afforded the team. To do this, the author conducted interviews with key players, including journalists, team members, and those involved in the struggle to eliminate Native American mascots.
Literature Review Native American Mascots Several researchers have concluded that the use of Native Americans as mascots misuses religious symbols, stereotypes all Native tribes by erasing their differences, and misrepresents the United States' past by casting Natives as aggressive warriors (Davis, 1993; King & Springwood, 2000). Berkhofer (1978) writes that whites were able to classify all Natives into a stereotype because they had the power to do so. King and Springwood use this type of reasoning in their discussion of the Florida State University Seminole mascot. Florida State University adopted the Seminole as its mascot long before the first Native Americans graduated from the school in the 1990s (King & Springwood, 2000). Non-native fans who dress up in paint and feathers to "play Indian" display their power over Native Americans and keep stereotypes alive (King & Springwood, 2000). Charlene Teeters, the former University of Illinois graduate student who began protesting the school's Chief Illiniwek mascot in 1992, sees the mascot as a symbol of control by white leaders (Rosenstein, 1997). Cyd Crue of the National Coalition on Racism in Sports and the Media cited the seeming hypocrisy of allowing anti-Native American displays while punishing when used against other groups. He uses the example of the Stanford University band, which was disciplined when members dressed up as nuns for a halftime show at the University of Notre Dame, a catholic institution. As Crue says: "When we see people dressed up in black-face now, it's no longer acceptable. Why is it acceptable to dress up in red-face? This is nothing more than a red-face minstrel show. This does not honor Native Americans. It honors the White people. It's 'We won and we conquered this continent and we can use your image as we see fit'" (Hawes, 2001.) Davis (1993) examined protests and conferences that took place during Major League Baseball's World Series and the National Football League's Super Bowl, both held in Minnesota's Twin Cities in the early 1990s. According to local police, 500 people protested at the 1991 World Series pitting the Atlanta Braves against the Minnesota Twins, and 3,000 protested at the 1992 Super Bowl, which featured the Washington Redskins versus the Buffalo Bills. The protest at the Super Bowl, Davis says, was the largest Native American protest since the takeover of Wounded Knee in 1973. Davis also describes a backlash against activists who seek an end to the use of mascots. "This backlash is fueled by a pro-colonialist, ethnocentric, Western bias, where America is defined as a melting pot, but a melting pot where everyone must conform to Western and Christian culture because this culture is considered superior" (Davis, 1993, p. 19). The Media's Coverage of Native Americans In her examination of the media's coverage of Native Americans during the 20th century, Weston (1996) says two images of Native Americans have survived since the 17th century: the good Indian and the bad Indian. The "good Indian," or noble savage, is friendly, handsome, dignified and close to nature, while the "bad Indian" embodies those traits that Europeans feared most: nakedness, promiscuousness, and brutality (Weston). Until the 1960s, she writes, Native Americans were depicted in the media as stereotypically "good" or "bad" Indians, never as complex individuals. Furthermore, she writes, their lives were never portrayed in the proper context, which helped perpetuate stereotypes. For most of the early decades of the 20th century, Native Americans were talked about. The 1960s and '70s were a turning point in the coverage of Native American issues as Native Americans began to tell stories about their lives in major publications (Weston, 1996; Rosenstein, 1997). The media's images of the 1960s and '70s, however, were merely updated stereotypes (Weston, 1996; Koster, 1976). Koster (1976) says coverage of 1970s incidents like Wounded Knee and Pine Ridge only reinforced stereotypes. Koster blames this stereotypical coverage on ignorance and laziness. Journalists, he says, don't know much about the issues and don't take the time to learn (Koster, 1976). Weston (1996) writes that the conventions of journalism help reinforce stereotypes. These conventions include story selection, organization, headlines, and lack of context. While the images of native Americans in the news multiplied in the 1980s and '90s, the old stereotypes continued. More Native Americans talked back to the press during this time, however, and they made their views heard (Weston, 1996). Weston describes an even bigger shift in the coverage between 1989 and 1992. The press' portrayal of the protest against the University of Illinois' mascot showed Native American activists as oddballs who were spoken for by non-Native students (Weston). Weston adds that the arguments of the other side received more detailed coverage. Most of the coverage, she says, described Native Americans as mascots, not as people (Weston.) A change occurred in the coverage of professional teams' use of mascots in 1991 and 1992. Native Americans were now portrayed as legitimate leaders who spoke for themselves. This helped make the protestors' cause legitimate (Weston). In her examination of protests at the Super Bowl and World Series, Davis interviewed Native American activists about the media's coverage of the mascot issue. Natives who protest the use of mascots are often asked why they don't focus on more important issues, like poverty and health. Davis writes that the Native activists she talked with answered that the issues are connected. There is another reason, though. "It was noted that when the activists work on those other issues they do not receive such good media coverage" (Davis, 1993, p. 14). Some media outlets have taken a more active approach to the issue, refusing to publish racist nicknames or logos. Lincoln (Neb.) Journal Star editor Kathleen Rutledge said the decision to drop stereotypical images and nicknames was made "out of respect for Native people. Plain and simple" (Rutledge, 2003). She added that the Native American Journalists Association asked media outlets to eliminate the use of Native American mascots and logos (Rutledge, 2003). Other newspapers that have adopted policies that limit or eliminate the use of Native nicknames and logos include the The Portland Oregonian, Minneapolis Star Tribune, St. Cloud (Minn.) Times, Portland (Maine) Press Herald and Kansas City Star (Rutledge, 2003). Coleman (1992) writes that Native Americans must fight to rid society of racist mascots, just like African-Americans worked to eliminate "pickaninnies." She adds that Native Americans must define their own important issues, instead of allowing the press to do it for them (Coleman, 1992). As Rutledge (2003) writes, "Many sports mascots were adopted at a time in this country when Native people had no voice. Now they have a voice." That voice includes people like the Fighting Whites.
History of the Fighting Whites The story of the Fighting Whites begins in Eaton, Colo., a small town about six miles north of Greeley, which is the home of the University of Northern Colorado. In 2000, a group of activists led by UNC doctoral student Dan Ninham, a member of the Oneida tribe, began pressing Eaton High School to drop its mascot, which many consider racist. The mascot features a caricature of a Native American with a misshapen nose, an eagle feather and a loincloth. (see figure 1) Ninham and Francie Murry, an associate professor at UNC, started a group called Coloradoans Against Ethnic Stereotyping in Colorado Schools. The group presented its case to the Eaton School Board, which decided not to drop the mascot and refused subsequent invitations to meet with the activists. The Fighting Whites came into existence when a group of students and staff members at the University of Northern Colorado signed up to play intramural basketball under the name Native Pride. Scott VanLoo, director of the university's Cesar Chavez cultural center, came up with the name Fighting Whites. VanLoo, who is of Lebanese and Dutch descent, said he was frustrated by the fact that the Eaton School Board had dismissed the activists' pleas so easily. As VanLoo remembered: It seemed like they were doin' everything by the book. They were following all the protocol and rules, if you will, of the district. They had first, they had gone to the principal. They didn't get anywhere there. They went to the superintendent. They didn't get anywhere there. They went to the school board. And after a while, they finally got like five minutes of presentation time at the school board meeting. They went before an all-white male school board, did their presentation, and they kept getting this kind of "thanks but no thanks."
… So by that time, I was really frustrated. I'm not really a proponent of sinking to one's level to engage in a dialogue. But I thought, you know, I'm tired. I'm tired. I've been doin' diversity work not that long, three or four years, but it just is tiring to keep having to educate people and say the same things over, and see the same things. Especially in this community.
VanLoo took a satirical approach, converting Eaton's Fighting Reds to the Fighting Whites. He added a clip art image of a white man with slicked back hair and a necktie, and the mascot was born. (see figure 2) Although he invited several media outlets to the team's first game, VanLoo said no one showed up. The first article ran on Wednesday, March 6, on page 2 of UNC's student newspaper, The Mirror. Four days later, a story ran in the local paper, the Greeley Tribune, also on page 2. During the next two weeks, the Fighting Whites were an international phenomenon, with coverage by The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, The (Toledo, Ohio) Blade, CNN, the Today Show, and National Public Radio's All Things Considered, to name a few. Jay Leno joked about the team during his monologue on The Tonight Show. Team members appeared on Fox's Best Damn Sports Show Period, and Rush Limbaugh mentioned the story. Team member Solomon Little Owl, UNC's director of Native American Student Services, received hundreds of calls and e-mails from media outlets as far away as Canada, Japan, England, and Australia. He said he talked to at least 50 radio stations. Outlets like NBC news, Fox Sports Net and CNN visited the Native American Student Services center, a small house located in the center of the campus. Little Owl remembers: It hit the fan for that two-week span. We had … I mean we had crazy people. Reporters, news, radio. They were comin' in, comin' out, goin'. We just had people coming in just to see what it was like. Like a zoo…. People just come in, sit, have coffee and just observe. Some people would come in and they were photographers, so they would take pictures.
So many people wanted to purchase shirts featuring the Fighting Whites logo that the team set up a non-profit company and began selling merchandise online. The company was so successful that in January 2003, the team presented a check for $100,000 to the University of Northern Colorado. The money will help fund minority scholarships at the school.
Methodology This paper uses unstructured interviews to understand how key players interpreted the media's coverage of the Fighting Whites. Unstructured interviews, which are commonly used in qualitative research, provide more depth than structured or group interviews (Fontana & Frey, 1994). Unstructured interviews are more like conversations, allowing for follow-up questions and clarification. Seven people were interviewed. The journalists included Alicia Gallegos, who broke the story in the campus newspaper, The Mirror; Julio Ochoa, who covered the story for the town newspaper, the Greeley Tribune; and Chris Cobler, editor of the Greeley Tribune. Before the story about the Fighting Whites broke, the Tribune's sports section published an award-winning series on the Eaton mascot controversy and other mascot issues around the nation. Ochoa was not involved in that series. Also interviewed was Ken McConnellogue, then the university's media relations director and now interim vice president for university affairs. McConnellogue has been with the university for 10 years, before which he worked as a reporter at the Tribune. Two members of the Fighting Whites were interviewed: Solomon Little Owl, the university's director of Native American Student Services, and Scott VanLoo, the director of the school's Hispanic culture center. One representative of the Coalition to End Racist Stereotyping in Colorado Schools was interviewed. Beth Franklin is a professor at the University of Northern Colorado. The author conducted all the interviews during February and March of 2003, nearly a year after the Fighting Whites story broke. Cobler's interview was the only one done by e-mail. The others, which lasted from 30 to 75 minutes, were conducted in person and tape recorded, then transcribed by the author. Interviewing people who were involved in the issue in different ways allowed for a better understanding of the phenomena at play. This use of triangulation, or multiple methods of data collection, makes the findings more thorough (Denzin, 1970). Triangulation also was achieved through a three-step interpretation process: Interpretation occurred during the interviews, during transcription, and during the reading of interview transcripts. The interpretive process focused on a search for patterns among the interviews. As a supplement to the interviews, the author also read articles about the team online, in print and in scrapbooks kept by team members. One team member provided a folder full of e-mails he received about the team. He also provided phone message slips recording calls received during the media onslaught. These were helpful in understanding the impact that the media had on the team. This paper is not, however, an analysis of the media's coverage. As is common in qualitative research, I have made no attempt to be totally objective in my researching or writing (Fine, 1994; Maxwell, 1996). As Fleischman (1998) says, ethnographers must bring themselves into the text. According to Sultana (1995), researchers err when they attempt to remove themselves from their investigations. "It is because the researcher edits himself/herself out of the text that we often get so little information on such details as the researcher's expectations and presuppositions, or the surprises that were encountered in the field" (Sultana, pp. 116-117). Therefore, I feel it is important to explain my background and my opinion on the subject of mascots like the one used by the Eaton Reds. I am a white woman whose relatives came to the United States from Eastern Europe. For most of my life, I took nicknames like Redskins and Indians for granted. In my eight years as sports journalist, I never thought of not running certain logos or team names. It never occurred to me. It was not until graduate school, when I began studying feminist theory and looking at sexism and racism in language, that I started to take the issue of mascots seriously. I followed the story of the Fighting Whites closely, and when a symposium was held on the subject at my university, I successfully proposed that my department help sponsor the event. At the symposium, I served as moderator for a panel on the media's coverage of the issue. I included a section on mascots in a class on sports journalism during the summer of 2002. I now support efforts to eliminate racist or derogatory mascots and nicknames from sports teams. I hope this information helps readers formulate their own interpretations of this paper. Being involved in the phenomenon under study can have its advantages. My familiarity with the mascot issue, and with the local print media, helped me gain a rapport with the people I interviewed. It is important to establish rapport with participants in order to see the issue from their perspective (Fontana & Frey, 1994). Before conducting the interviews, I had worked with all of the participants except the Greeley Tribune reporter and the director of the Hispanic cultural center. I did, however, have a good relationship with the Tribune's editor and had sent several students to work at the paper. In order to give more voice to those interviewed, I have presented their words in an indented, single-spaced format usually reserved for longer quotes. Because so much of qualitative work is interpretive, however, I wanted to make the participants' voices stand out.
Findings Three patterns emerged from the interviews. The first involved the general public's reaction to the media's coverage of the Fighting Whites. The second involved the way the media covered the team. The third involved the effects the media's coverage had on the mascot issue itself.
The Public's Reaction There were generally three reactions to the media's coverage of the Fighting Whites. Some people, from all ethnicities, saw the satire in the idea and embraced the cause, buying merchandise and sending congratulations via telephone or e-mail. Others, including some Native Americans, reacted negatively and called it a waste of time. Many sent e-mails urging the team to stop focusing on mascots and begin focusing on more important issues. Many of these e-mails were several pages long. A third group, made up primarily of whites, embraced the team as a symbol of white pride. McConnellogue, the university's spokesperson during the media frenzy, explained: I think white people responded in two ways, you know. Some thought it was a serious thing and it was kind of a "it's about time that we have a white guy for a mascot." Some got the humor in it. I would say most got the humor in it. Some were angry about it.
As for why some people just didn't get it, McConnellogue offered this: I just put it down to bein' crackers. I don't know what else to say. I think that there are people out there who feel that, you know, being Caucasian now, you're under attack. However silly that is.
Some of the reactions were more scary than silly, as VanLoo remembered: Solomon, he got the majority of those coming in on his e-mail. It was funny, too. [laughs] I think one time, he called me up. He goes, "Hey, I just got this e-mail from this guy in South Texas who wants to invite us down there and take us on his boat. Spend some time on the beach." And I was like "Solomon, we're not goin' to South Texas [laughs] on an e-mail invitation to go spend any time with anybody. I mean, that's a setup to get murdered or something, I don't know." We only got a few. We did get a few e-mails back from people who bought shirts and they said "We thought this was some white power thing or white pride thing. Now I hear that this damn T-shirt's goin' towards…" So we got a little bit of that.
The white pride reaction forced the Fighting Whites to react in their own way. They added a statement on their official website explaining who they were and that the money was going to fund scholarships for minority students.
Coverage: 'Fluff' vs. Depth. Several of those interviewed commented that the media focused too much attention on the trivial aspects of the story and ignored the issue of mascots. One trivial aspect that got a lot of attention was the team's name. Although the team's T-shirts said "Go Fighting Whites," local reporters erroneously referred to them as the "Fighting Whities," and the mistake spread. Student reporter Alicia Gallegos took the blame: I think that was completely my fault. I thought I could have sworn, I even still swear till this day that when Scott VanLoo was telling me about the team, he said that they were the Fighting Whities. I could've swore that that's what he said. I talked to Solomon, and I'm pretty sure he must've repeated that back to me. So I'm not sure. I guess, I guess that's how it started. Like it was just miscommunication. And I know that was in the first story, that it was Whities. And maybe that's another reason why it caused such publicity because that was like more of a derogatory term than Whites. So maybe that even, you know, sparked it a little more. And then we ran a correction that they were called the Whites. And I don't think anybody read it. They wanted to call them the Whities. [laughs] … It would not, you know, stop. Even though they probably knew it was wrong.
A week after the story broke, the Greeley Tribune ran an informational box intended to end the confusion (Ochoa, 2002, 13 March). Other news outlets, however, continued to refer to the team as the Whities. The team eventually added a line of merchandise to its catalog featuring the name "Fightin' Whities." (See figure 3) Tribune editor Chris Cobler said the media focused too much attention on the name. Author: Was the national/international coverage warranted? Cobler: The issue is worthy of national attention. The intramural team probably is not. Author: Were there negatives and positives to the media's coverage? Cobler: The positives would be the media examined an issue of national importance. The main negative is the Fightin' Whites were easy to dismiss as a publicity stunt. People focused on trivial issues surrounding the team name and not as much as they should have on the central point.
All the coverage led a Denver radio station, KRFX, to create an alternative, rather risqué mascot, the Eaton Beavers. The station printed T-shirts, which were given out in Eaton and Denver. The Tribune included the station's stunt in a story that was accompanied by a student wearing an "Eaton Beavers" shirt (Ochoa, 2002, 14 March). VanLoo refereed to this type of coverage as "fluff" media. He likened it to mentions of the team on Rush Limbaugh and the Tonight Show. He prefers longer articles and interviews on public radio, which allow for a more in-depth discussion of the problems. One reporter who didn't just cover the sensational side of the story, he said, worked for The Denver Post. He was impressed with Coleman Cornelius' stories, and the amount of research she did before writing: And she talked to the professors, and she started really understanding the research behind it. And she wrote this superb article that included the history of the area and included the nations that were here that did get, um, relocated and were murdered and slaughtered and were in conflict with the Union Colonists in this area. And she also focused on the Lamar area and talked about the Sand Creek massacre and then tied that into how they're still called the Savages. And then she tied in how the Ute and the Pawnee were here in the area, what they went through with the Union Colonists and how that, you know, lends itself to right here in this area with Eaton and with Loveland. So it was a very well-written article. And a lot of the other media focused just on the novelty of the concept. And you got a lot of people that were writing very opinionated articles that really hadn't talked to too many of us.
Franklin said that the level of sensationalism varied with the type of medium. She said that although television can get the message out to more people, newspapers offer more of an in-depth examination of the issues. She also worries that her students don't read newspapers: But see, what I see is the majority of my students don't read the newspaper. So, you know, how does that really help? Because you can have arguments in the newspaper. …
And also, there's authority to a newspaper. And like, you know, I don't know who it was who would write the editorials against the mascots in The Denver Post. I mean, to me they're reasoned arguments and it's about educated people, you know, taking a position. Um, in the TV, I don't know. And I do watch, you know, Channel 9 and Channel 7. And Channel 7 came to a tremendous amount of stuff. They sent people to all the board meetings, but I don't know what effect that had exactly. So I don't know about that. … They just throw it out. But then I don't know if that changes anybody.
Effects of Coverage Although some of the coverage might have been lacking, according to those interviewed, the media's coverage had some positive effects. For instance, Little Owl and VanLoo have been nominated for an e-town award. Recipients are recognized on the e-town radio show, a weekly program carried by public radio stations across the nation. Another positive effect of the coverage was that it got a few more Native American voices in the news. The most common of those voices was Little Owl, who stated: I haven't heard so much positive. When you know, you hear about Native American stuff it's usually negative. What they've done bad, you know. So within a week's time a Native American voice came. It was incredible. So to me, I don't look at it as negative because it's positive. The world knew about it. The world don't know anything about Native Americans. They don't know anything about it and they had a chance to hear and see what was a Native Americans. So I think it was great.
This was part of the plan, according to VanLoo, who wanted the focus to be on the Native American team members. "The only plan that we did have is I came forward and I said 'Look, it's really important to me, as someone who's not Native, to support this. It's important to me that Native voices get into the media.'" All of those interviewed agreed that the team's media coverage raised awareness about the issue of mascots. Gallegos said she had seen that awareness grow among students: I think a lot of people had no idea about it. I know I didn't even really um, really even think about the importance of changing the mascots or even realize that there was a lot of Native American folks who were angry about it. So I think that it raised a lot of awareness. I think people. And, and they had said, you know, right away that it, that they didn't necessarily want to change, but they just wanted people to know about it. And I really think it did. I mean, even my roommates heard. You know, my friends around me, everybody's heard of the Fighting Whites. And that's what they tried to do. So I really think it did raise awareness. You know, even if it didn't change.
Ochoa added that at least one school – nearby Loveland — has started to investigate changing its "Indians" mascot: I would say it's definitely raised awareness. And it's, I guess the way they did it came across in a new way, you know? The issue was kind of beaten to death in a way. And no one was really looking at it. And then they came out with that, and all of a sudden it was a new way to look at it. People started talking about it again. I guess that raises awareness. Other schools in Colorado started to talk abut it. Loveland Indians – they started to talk about it, about changing, possibly.
Franklin, who coordinated the university's symposium on mascots, agreed:
And people felt differently about this. But I personally feel it was the biggest thing to draw attention to the, you know, the use of mascots that's come along in the last 20 years. So even though other people have been doing all this, I felt that really captured the national, um, limelight. And so it helped promote the issue tremendously.
VanLoo said that although much of the media's coverage focused on what he called "fluff," the spotlight gave him a chance to educate people about the issue. During the last year, he and Little Owl have been asked to speak to students of all ages in several states. As VanLoo said: That's been the most rewarding part for me is we've been contacted by everything from elementary schools to colleges and university classes that are using this topic and the materials to spark dialogue and discussion and take a look at things.
Raising awareness, however, does not necessarily mean change for the better, as McConnellogue said: You know, I think you have to ask yourself, too, at the end of the day, other than that raising of consciousness, what was the result? I mean, the Eaton Reds are still the Eaton Reds. The Loveland Indians are still the Loveland Indians. I know that this is, this is not an event, it's a process. I think effecting change is a long, sustained, unglamorous process. And I think when you have a short, intense, glamorous part of that it can lead to the illusion that this is how change happens. And I don't think that's so.
Conclusion McConnellogue's quote brings up a key point. He seems to combine all three patterns observed. The media's focus on events as opposed to issues often leads to sensationalism. Focusing on the events also might lead a media consumer to misinterpret a team's name for a symbol of white pride. The focus on getting the word out without checking all the facts can lead to mistakes like "Whities" instead of "Whites," which leads to more sensationalism. The fact that several Native American voices made it into the news relates to Coleman's (1992) cry for Native Americans to set the agenda themselves. Leigh Estabrook, a dean at the University of Illinois, says that myths about Native Americans are perpetuated because mascots are the only way many non-natives see Native Americans in the news (Rosenstein, 1997). When people like Solomon Little Owl make the news, they begin to counteract those perceptions. As McConnellogue said, however, it takes more than one news event to effect real change. The negative reaction some people had to the Fighting Whites also reinforces the literature, which shows a backlash against Native Americans who protest mascots. As Davis (1993) wrote, many activists feel that the mascot issue is the only one that ever receives major media coverage. Perhaps news outlets should begin taking a look at a variety of issues affecting Native Americans before the controversial events take place. In an editorial written in response the mascot question, Greeley Tribune editor Chris Cobler (2002) wrote that newspapers are at their best when they discuss and debate the important questions of the day. Those issues are usually more difficult to report on than colorful events, yet they might make the difference between "fluff" coverage and quality coverage. Limitations This study examined the coverage of one news event through the lens of seven interviews. The results are not meant to be generalized, but instead they are meant to allow readers an in-depth perspective on how those seven people saw the event. Because the findings and conclusions are based on the author's interpretations, another researcher might gain slightly different insights by examining the transcripts. This, however, is the nature of qualitative research. Further research This study sheds light on some intriguing questions that could be addressed in future research. A content analysis of newspaper stories about the Fighting Whites might lend clarity to the research. A comparison might be made between the coverage received by the Fighting Whites and activists like Charlene Teeters, who has been working for more than a decade on eliminating the University of Illinois mascot. I would like to continue studying this issue by conducting an in-depth analysis of the newspaper coverage received by the Fighting Whites. This analysis would examine one of the questions identified by this paper: Did the media's coverage of the team focus more on the issue of mascots or on the novelty of the team's name, and what does that say about news?
Figure 1: Eaton Fighting Reds mascot
Figure 2: Original Fighting Whites logos
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Source: http://www.cafeshops.com/fightinwhite
Figure 3: Fighting Whities logo
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