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Subject:

AEJ 95 HoldenV MAC Team nickname controversies

From:

Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sun, 28 Jan 1996 20:48:59 EST

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text/plain

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The Sports Team Nickname Controversy: A Study in Community and Race
 
     Relations
 
 
        The problem of assaultive, racially hateful speech -- for example,
 
     crossburning and verbal terrorizing of people of color -- has been the
 
        focus of much scholarly debate in recent years.[1] Less thoughtful
attention,
 however, has been paid to a related, perhaps less dramatic, issue: sports
 
          teams' use of Indian names, a use some people find offensive.
        In communities across the country, team names such as "Braves,"
 
  "Redskins," "Indians" and "Fighting Illini" have met with organized
 
     opposition from Native American groups and others who say such nicknames
 
          amount to "racial imaging of indigenous peoples" and promote
discrimination
 and negative stereotyping.[2] The protesters also claim that the use of
 
        Indian names fosters a climate in which racial harassment can occur and
 
         that the names represent an appropriation of Native culture and
 
 spirituality. They have demanded that the nicknames be abandoned and
 
       replaced with names that are not race-based. Some of these efforts have
 
          been successful. For instance, Marquette University in Milwaukee has
 
       dropped its "Warriors" nickname, and Stanford University long ago did
away
 
          with the Stanford Indians.[3] Some schools, such as the University of
 
     Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin, have elected not to play with or
 host teams with nicknames deemed derogatory, at least non-conference
 
       teams.[4] And three major daily newspapers -- the (Portland) Oregonian,
the
 
          (Minneapolis) Star Tribune and the Salt Lake City Tribune -- have
decided
 
          to
 
The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
abandon "Redskins" and other controversial Indian team nicknames in their
 
          pages.[5]
        In many cases, however, teams and their supporters have resisted changing,
 and many have not in fact changed. Thus conflict has arisen over the
 
        issue. But while the controversy has raged at an emotional level,
 
    especially in the college and general-interest press, it seems to have
 
        inspired little scholarly attention.[6] Perhaps the issue seems too
trivial
 
          to warrant investigation and analysis.
        This essay contends the nickname controversy is far from trivial. Rather,
 the conflict represents an important social struggle that is bound up with
 the idea of words as political weapons and language as a battleground on
 
          which crucial symbolic wars are fought. As such, it can be seen in
part as
 a struggle by an under-represented group for self-definition and material
 
          power as well as for an effective voice in public discourse.[7]
        In an effort to provide some thoughtful reflection and empirical evidence
 
          on the nickname controversy, this essay has asked several questions
about
 
          the nature of the conflict in general and the media's role in
particular.
 
          What and whose interests seem to be at stake in the controversy? What
 
        meanings have interested parties attached to the issue? What seems to
be
 
          the role of newspapers in communities dealing with the nickname issue?
How
 do media professionals see their organization's role The Sports Team
 
       Nickname Controversy
 
vis-a-vis social change and race relations in their communities?
        The research focuses on the debate over the "Redskins" nickname of Central
 High School in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and the University of North
 
        Dakota "Fighting Sioux" nickname. The focus seems particularly apt
because
 of the large Native American population in the area and the historic
 
       significance of Indian-white struggles in the Great Plains region. The
 
         research also explores the decisions by the Oregonian and Star Tribune
to
 
          restrict the use of sports-related Native American nicknames in their
pages
 
          . The research uses newspaper accounts to reconstruct the histories
of the
 Redskin and Sioux controversies and uses interviews with editors and
 
       writers to gain insight into the editorial decision-making that went into
 
          coverage of and commentary on the issue.
        As the researchers read accounts of the conflicts and talked with editors,
 it became clear that the controversy was an example of what British
 
      sociologist and media critic Stuart Hall has called the "politics of
 
      representation."[8] A brief exposition of the concept might be useful
here.
 
The Politics of Representation
        Representation, Hall notes, is the interpretive and active process of
 
        cultural production in society, a process by which we attach meaning to
 
         events and identities in the world. The The Sports Team Nickname
 
    Controversy
 
process of representation and the creation of cultural meaning, which take
 
          place above all in the mass media, are central activities in social
life.
 
          Hall suggests that these may be the central activities, situated at
the
 
         heart of politics, economics and other structures typically thought to
be
 
          centers of power.
        In Hall's view, the process is so closely linked to power that it can be
 
          seen as a politics; hence, the politics of representation. "There is
[a]
 
          struggle over meaning, and that struggle counts historically, it
matters
 
          historically," Hall argues.
[A]ll meaning is a struggle for meaning, all meaning is the establishment
 
               of one meaning against another [and] we are always battling, as
it were, to
 carve out and hold for a period of time what [some aspect of the world]
 
               should mean to us. And each time we do that, we are struggling
to keep
 
              aside and push to the margins of the frame, other competing
explanations
 
               and interpretations.[9]
 
        He observes that an important contemporary manifestation of the politics
 
          of representation is the struggle of previously marginalized groups,
 
      identities, voices, ethnicities and so on for access to the field of
 
      representation. He suggests that these new entities understand well the
 
          central role of culture in society. They recognize that access to
economic
 and political power, without access to cultural power and representation,
 
          is almost meaningless. Otherwise, "[t]he capacities of
history-making
 
         would still be tied up in somebody else's institutions," he argues.[10]
Of
 
         course, the downside of all of this, and one
The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
Hall mentions but does not stress, is that the politics of representation
 
          can easily become the politics of misrepresentation or the politics of
 
        assimilation by the dominant culture. Nevertheless, these are risks
that
 
          social movements and groups must take when they seek access to the
cultural
 arena.
        The team nickname controversy would appear to be in part a struggle over
 
          the cultural meaning and identity bound up in a name. The struggle
might
 
          be seen as an effort to control the images, activities and traditions
 
       suggested by the name, both for those who challenge the use of the
 
    nicknames and those who resist changing or abandoning them.
        To put it more pointedly: The team nickname controversy is a power
 
      struggle, one in which the less-powerful parties (Native Americans and
 
        their supporters) are seeking to recover access to the means of cultural
 
          decision making, and the dominant parties (for example, certain team
 
      owners, university administrators, conservative alumni and media managers)
 
          are seeking to retain that decision-making authority. The nature of
the
 
          power struggle becomes clearer when we consider the linguistic
companions
 
          of Native names such as Illini and Braves -- Badgers, Wolves, Bison,
 
      Cardinals, Bears, Hurricane and other representatives of the natural
world.
  In symbolic terms, Native people are grouped with animals and natural
 
         forces, a grouping that, given the Judeo-Christian world's attitudes
toward
 nature, suggests a belief that
The Sports Team Nickname Controvery
 
Native people, too, should be subject to Western use and control.
        An examination of the public conflict in Grand Forks over two major team
 
          nicknames helps show how the controversy can serve as an example of
the
 
         politics of representation.
 
        The Central High School Redskins and the UND Fighting Sioux In early
 
          1990, pressure by a Grand Forks anti-racism citizens group concerned
about
 
          discrimination in some public schools focused official attention on
the
 
         problem.[11] Team nicknames such as Redskins and Fighting Sioux were
 
   identified as problem areas. A school district advisory committee on
 
       cultural diversity concluded that Central High School's nickname,
Redskins,
 was derogatory and should be changed. Soon thereafter about 100 people
 
          attended a school board public forum to discuss the issue, submitting
 
       petitions for and against a name change. About 25 students and some
 
      parents rallied a week later before classes to keep the Redskins name.
        In June 1991, the school board voted 6-2 to drop the Redskins nickname and
 logo as well as the Warriors nickname and logo used at two local
 
   elementary schools and a junior high school. A committee made up of
 
      students and adults was formed to select a new Central High team nickname.
 In October 1991 a group The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
of Central parents, students and alumni (many of them prominent local
 
       citizens) organized a petition drive to restore the name or put the issue
 
          to a district-wide vote, citing the importance and meaning of the
 
   traditional name. "Redskins Forever" signs
appeared in windows and on lawns all over town, and nickname supporters
 
         sported "Redskins Forever" sweatshirts. Dozens of letters, pro and
con,
 
          poured into the Grand Forks Herald, but the Herald (as well as the
Dakota
 
          Student, the University of North Dakota student newspaper) editorially
 
        supported the school board's decision.
        Some members of the Grand Forks community were not pleased with the
 
      Herald's support of a name change. In an interview, Herald Editor Mike
 
         Jacobs said that he was visited by one prominent local citizen (whom he
 
         declined to name), who, in protest of the paper's stance, declared "God
 
         damn it, we won!"[12] The suggestion, Jacobs said, was that Indians
had long
 
          ago lost all claim to sovereignty to the white man, and changing the
 
      Redskins nickname was not a decision Native people should make.
        The petition drive gathered nearly 4,000 signatures, but in December 1991
 
          the board voted 7-2 against rescinding its decision to change the
name. In
 early 1992 Grand Forks Central students voted to replace the Redskins name
 with the name Maroon and Grey. (More recently, it was changed again, to
 
          the Knights).
The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
        Then, in November 1992, a group of Native American students at the
 
     University of North Dakota began a petition drive demanding that the
 
      university drop its Fighting Sioux team name. A few weeks before, several
 
          fraternity members had harassed
Native American dancers, including children, on a Homecoming parade float
 
          by yelling racial insults and doing the "tomahawk chop." The
          petition-drive leaders argued that the Sioux nickname encouraged such
 
       behavior and insulted Native people. The debate continued for several
 
        months, through university-sponsored cultural diversity forums and in
the
 
          pages of the student paper. The paper's editor, Robert Huschka, wrote
 
        vigorous editorials supporting a name change, but the Grand Forks Herald
 
          took a more moderate stance. In a March 7, 1993, opinion-page column,
 
        Herald Editor Jacobs wrote that while he personally favored dropping the
 
          Fighting Sioux nickname, the decision was not his to make but, rather,
that
 of the "whole community" and ultimately UND President Kendall Baker. In
 
          an earlier editorial, on April 3, 1991, Jacobs had written that "there
are
 
          both pejorative and descriptive names. `Redskins'. . .seems to fit
into
 
          the first category. `Sioux'. . .seems to fit in the second category."
        UND President Baker, too, seemed to perceive ambiguity in the situation.
 
          After visiting tribal leaders at regional reservations in 1993, Baker
 
       decided not to order a name change. In a speech and statement issued to
 
          the whole university, he said The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
he had concluded that the Native community itself was divided on the issue
 
          (as were UND alumni, some of whom threatened to withdraw support if
the
 
         name were changed).[13] Baker said his decision was not based on a
fear of
 
         losing financial support nor
was he bowing to majority sentiment. Rather, he said, he wanted to reach a
 decision that would not damage what he called one of UND's greatest
 
      assets, "namely its strong sense of community and family." He said
symbols
 and traditions helped hold the UND extended family together. "This is
 
         what makes us strong," he said. Baker said his decision was also
 
   influenced by his own "strong and deeply rooted commitments to diversity,
 
          opportunity and, especially, education." He promised he would use the
 
        nickname controversy as a springboard for educating athletes, incoming
 
        students and others about Native culture and outlined a variety of
programs
 to that end.
        Despite Baker's decision, the controversy crops up from time to time at
 
          UND, although it has not yet become a university-wide issue again.
Native
 
          students and faculty members in particular are disappointed that the
 
      cultural diversity programs Baker promised have not been visible. Mike
 
         Saunders, a leader in the movement to change both the Central High
Redskins
 and Fighting Sioux nicknames and now an Indian Studies instructor at UND,
 
          says the plan to educate athletes about Lakota culture has not been
carried
 out. As for cultural sensitivity training for new The Sports Team
 
     Nickname Controversy
 
students, Saunders says, "Maybe it's been done, but I haven't heard about
 
          it."[14]
 
The Role of Newspapers in the Controversy:
The Views of Media Professionals
        This essay takes it as almost axiomatic that the mass media serve as a
 
         forum, although an imperfect one, for public discourse on issues of
social
 
          importance. They also provide, sometimes unintentionally, an arena
for
 
         under-represented groups to engage in the politics of representation
and to
 struggle for some measure of control over the creation of the meanings
 
         most vital to their own welfare. Moreover, whether the media shape,
 
      reinforce or reflect public opinion, public discourse and public policy,
 
          they have historically been and continue to be one of the most
influential
 
          institutions in American society.[15] Thus, it makes sense to examine
the
 
        media's role in the nickname controversy.[16]
        An abundant literature exists in support of claims that mainstream media
 
          content in the United States tends to represent the views of the rich
and
 
          powerful, reinforce racial and gender stereotyping, and marginalize
and
 
         distort the messages of social movements.[17] These claims, while they
might
 
          be more or less valid, are not the direct concern of this research.
The
 
          focus has been on the editorial process behind media decisions on how
to
 
          deal with the team nickname controversy -- both to gain The Sports
Team
 
         Nickname Controversy
 
insight into the ways media people develop their stances vis-a-vis news
 
         coverage and commentary on social issues, and to better understand the
 
        nickname issue itself.
        Editors from the Grand Forks Herald and the Dakota Student were
 
  interviewed about the controversies in Grand Forks, and
editors from the Star Tribune and the Oregonian were interviewed about
 
        their decisions to stop using certain team nicknames in their pages.
Each
 
          editor was asked several questions, including: How do you see the
role of
 
          the newspaper in the community in general and in a social controversy
in
 
          particular? Does the newspaper lead public opinion, reflect it or do
 
       something else? What and whose interests appear to be at stake in the
 
        nickname controversy? What meanings have people attached to the issue?
 
          How do you understand the issue? The Star Tribune and Oregonian
editors
 
          were also asked about the impetus for changing their policies on using
 
        certain team names and the source and authority for the decision.
 
1. Mike Jacobs, editor, Grand Forks Herald
        Jacobs said the newspaper's role is to stimulate public opinion on social
 
          issues although not always to recommend what should be done.[18] "The
 
    newspaper presents issues and ways of dealing with them to reach
 
  conclusions to the betterment of the community," he said. But, he added,
 
          newspapers are "creatures of The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
context," which means they should not "insult public opinion."
        Jacobs said that the Herald's editorial positions are not intended to
 
        reflect prevailing opinion in the community ("we don't always agree")
but,
 
          rather, to "stimulate discussion across a broad range of issues." He
also
 
          noted that, while the Herald
is owned by the Knight-Ridder newspaper chain, those in charge of the paper
 have autonomy to determine editorial policy.
        Jacobs resisted the suggestion that his views on the nickname controversy
 
          were important because of his status as editor. He insisted he is not
a
 
          community leader, adding that with rare exceptions, "I am not
consulted or
 
          briefed [by city leaders], nor do people ask me to do things."
 
 Nevertheless, he was willing to share his personal views as well as those
 
          of the newspaper.
        The community conflict over the Central High Redskins name in particular
 
          was a "deeply divisive issue" in Grand Forks, Jacobs said. "It called
into
 question the majority community's understanding of the relationship
 
      between the races, not even in a community context but in a historic
 
      context," he said. People were upset at what seemed to be an effort by
 
         some to rewrite history. While there was a certain emotional
attachment to
 the Redskins name, Jacobs said, a more fundamental issue was at stake: the
 role of Indians in the community.
        "This is an especially resonant issue on the Great Plains, The Sports Team
 Nickname Controversy
 
given the historical understanding of the past and what occurred here,"
 
         Jacobs said, referring largely to the so-called Indian wars. For many
who,
 like Jacobs, grew up in the Great Plains region, that understanding is not
 factual but mythical, he said. It has to do with a reified image of the
 
          Sioux people as emblems
of honor and power, he suggested. In reality, however, Indians in the
 
        Great Plains have been deprived of voice, Jacobs said. "When they've
been
 
          heard from, it is at pow wows, on highway signs, in athletic contests,
but
 
          never in a completely cultural way," he said. What Jacobs seems
suggest
 
          here is that the use of Indian names for sports teams is part of the
larger
 picture of the white world's exercise of cultural sovereignty over
 
     Indians. In the athletic arena, Indians are mythologized as Sioux, Warrior
 
          s, Braves and, more murkily, as Redskins. The breadth of Native
culture,
 
          from the Native perspective or anyone else's, is obscured, even
 
 annihilated.
        As mentioned earlier, the Herald editorially supported changing the
 
      Redskins name. Herald management allowed staff members to write editorial
 
          columns on the issue and asked staffers who were nickname supporters
not to
 wear "Redskins Forever" sweatshirts to work, as some had been doing.
 
        "They were asked not to wear the sweatshirts because we thought it was
 
        inappropriate to wear that kind of apparel to work when the [nickname
 
       controversy] was such a big issue and there were Native The Sports Team
 
         Nickname Controversy
 
Americans on staff," Jacobs explained.
        By Jacobs' own admission, however, the editorial stance on the Fighting
 
          Sioux nickname controversy was weaker. "The Sioux controversy was a
vastly
 more complex issue," Jacobs said. He noted the ambiguity of the Sioux
 
         name itself, that it is accepted
by some but not all Native Americans as a legitimate name, and said the
 
         nature of the debate over the nickname indicated that many others
believed
 
          the issue to be complex.[19] Jacobs said he does think the term
"Fighting
 
        Sioux" is redundant. The Sioux represent "a proudly independent people
who
 had an extraodinarily insightful religious relationship with creation,"
 
          Jacobs said. "They were people you didn't want to mess with."
        He said he personally favored dropping the Sioux nickname (his suggested
 
          replacement was "Eagles"), but the other two members of the Herald's
 
      editorial board (the publisher and the editorial page editor) disagreed,
 
          and, in this case as in others, the majority view prevailed. "My own
 
       prediction is that the Sioux name won't survive" in the long run, he
said.
 
        Jacobs said he has thought about the Star Tribune and Portland Oregonian
 
          policy of stopping the use certain team names in their papers but has
not
 
          taken any action. "It's not clear which names would be involved," he
said.
  "It's also not clear that it's the newspaper's responsibility or right to
 say you can't call yourself whatever you please." He said that were such
 
          The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
a decision to be made, he himself would be the one to make it.
 
2. Robert Huschka, former editor, the Dakota Student
        Huschka, now a copy editor at the Minot (North Dakota) Daily News, was
 
         editor of the Dakota Student from 1992 to 1994, the
period in which the Sioux nickname controversy reached its peak. His
 
       editorials argued for dropping "Fighting Sioux" for a less controversial
 
          name. Huschka said he saw the issue as one of cultural relations on
campus
 and of respect.[20] Acknowledging that the term "respect" could be used many
 
          ways, he suggested that the issue really had to do with respect for a
 
       minority opinion, that of Native Americans. "I don't think [the
opponents
 
          of a name change] could comprehend how the nickname could be
trivializing
 
          to Native Americans," Huschka said.
        He said that the Sioux nickname is not one that is "obviously racist,"
 
         such as Redskins, but that it is clearly one that is linked to Native
 
       Americans and, even more, to a specific people and its issues. While the
 
          validity of the Sioux name is a debate going on within the Lakota
culture,
 
          Huschka said, "that's their issue and not one we should base our
decisions
 
          on."
        At the time of the controversy on the UND campus, Huschka said, he was
 
         well aware that his editorials were at odds with the views of about 90
 
        percent of the student body. "But this was not an issue that could be
 
        solved by the majority," he explained. The Sports Team Nickname
 
  Controversy
 
"It's an issue of minority rights."
        Huschka's point is an important one that is often overlooked in the debate
 over team nicknames. Majority rule seldom leads to change, at least
 
       thoughtful change that involves the interests of a marginalized minority
 
          group such as Native Americans. To argue
that a community or a student body should decide whether to change a
 
      nickname some find offensive is to say in effect that the name should not
 
          be changed. Viewed this way, the question echoes a classic conflict
in
 
         democratic societies: Should a minority's fundamental rights, however
they
 are understood, trump the will of the majority? Although the rights-based
 tradition of American law and policy has often provided an affirmative
 
         answer to this question, this dimension of the team nickname issue
seems to
 be consistently overlooked in popular debate.
        Huschka said the Sioux nickname issue needs to be resolved before the
 
        various cultural groups on campus can come together. "When the basic
 
       symbol of the university is one that some people consider derogatory, how
 
          do you expect people to get past that?" he asked. He said that if it
had
 
          been his decision alone, the Dakota Student would have tried
restricting
 
          the use of the Sioux nickname in the paper. Unlike many commercial
papers,
 however, the Dakota Student functions more democratically, and Huschka sai
 
          d many on his staff were not convinced that dropping the name from
news
 
         stories was something the paper should do.
The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
        Huschka noted other differences between the student and commercial press.
 The commercial paper's primary job is to inform, but the student paper's
 
          "first and best role is to take on the administration on certain
issues, to
 act as an advocate and the voice of students," Huschka said. Temporarily
 
          lapsing
into his student-editor role, he criticized UND President Baker's decision
 
          to retain the name as essentially a sellout. "Baker had to know what
the
 
          right decision was," Huschka said. "He's sensitive and incredibly
 
    intelligent. But he was just entering his second year when he made his
 
         decision, and he didn't want to pay the political price or the
financial
 
          price." Huschka argued that Baker could have "ridden out the storm"
 
      stirred up by a decision to change the name but chose not to.
          "Unfortunately," he said, "the people Baker sees as his constituents
are
 
          the alumni and the Board of Higher Education, not the students."
 
3. Julie Engebrecht, executive sports editor, Star Tribune
        In January of 1994, the Star Tribune in Minneapolis announced that it
 
        would no longer use certain team names in its news columns.[21] "We
wanted to
 
          be leaders in the community on this issue," Engebrecht said. "The
Star
 
         Tribune is big on building communities now, and we need to be in a
 
    leadership role to make this happen." The process leading to the decision
 
          to drop the names, however, was long and complex.
The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
        After the Oregonian changed its policy in 1992, people at the Star Tribune
 talked about doing something similar, but upper management declared that
 
          the paper should be in the business of reporting the news, not making
it,
 
          Engebrecht said. She said she and the assistant sports editor, Howard
 
        Sinker, wanted a policy
change but were rebuffed by the paper's editor and publisher. (Sinker's
 
         personal convictions were so strong that when he covered the 1991 World
 
         Series between Atlanta and Minnesota, his front-page stories omitted
any
 
          reference to "Braves," Engebrecht said, adding that no one even
noticed.)
        Then, in May of 1993, Deputy Managing Editor Steve Ronald had some
 
     thoughtful discussions with Native people at a Native American Journalists
 
          Association meeting and mentioned it to Engebrecht and Star Tribune
Editor
 
          Tim McGuire. More talks ensued, and the publisher finally agreed to
start
 
          working with the sports staff to establish a new policy, Engebrecht
said.
 
          The decision was not made collectively, she added. "If it had been
done on
 a democratic basis, it would never have happened."
        The names on the "don't use" list include Redskins, Indians, Braves,
 
       Chiefs and Redmen, but Engebrecht said she is considering adding
"Fighting
 
          Sioux" to the list.
        At first, there was considerable resistance in the sports department to
 
          the new policy, she said. Some argued that omitting the names meant
the
 
          paper would be creating reality The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
rather than reflecting it. Engebrecht pointed out, however, that the
 
       changes were no different from other style changes people now take for
 
        granted, "such as the way we refer to women." Other critics saw the
move
 
          as part of the "political correctness" movement, but, Engebrecht
contends,
 
          people invoke the "PC" label
mainly when they want to curtail debate on an issue. Some believed the
 
         changes would be difficult to implement. "It's not hard at all,"
 
   Engebrecht said. She said reporters and copy editors have been diligent in
 making sure the policy is implemented.
        Finally, Engebrecht noted, some men in particular seemed to feel something
 like, "You're messing with my sports," or even worse, "a woman is messing
 
          with my sports." Engebrecht said that she became a symbol of the
woman
 
         outsider coming into a male realm to interfere with sports reporting.
"It
 
          was hard going through it, but not hard believing in it," she said.
She
 
          said she has long been involved in the Native American community and
felt
 
          the new policy was the right ethical stance for the paper.
        Engebrecht said the newspaper had not intended to announce the policy
 
        publicly, at least not until it had been in place for a few months, but
was
 forced to do so. One unhappy reporter leaked the information to the other
 Twin Cities news media, so the paper had to respond with an announcement.
 Engebrecht said she thinks the reporter believed other media would protest
 the The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
policy and force the paper to back down, but they generally voiced respect
 
          for the Star Tribune's decision. "We hadn't wanted to call attention
to
 
          it," Engebrecht said. "We just wanted to do it because it was the
right
 
          thing to do."
The new policy remains controversial, however, even outside the newspaper.
 "Any time I walk into a room, it comes up," Engebrecht said. "I hadn't
 
         realized the issue aroused such passion." She said she has received
 
      letters from all over the country, with more expressions of support than
 
          criticism. The Star Tribune has lost a few subscriptions as a result
of
 
          the policy, Engebrecht said, but the number is insignificant. As for
her
 
          own circle of friends, the ones who disagree "object quietly," she
said.
        Engebrecht said she has perceived a "gradual awakening of consciousness"
 
          on the sports staff and finds that most reporters and editors are
taking
 
          the changes in stride. To illustrate this, she noted that one of her
 
       editors who had been most opposed to the change recently declared at a
 
        Native American panel discussion that it was "just another style change
and
 not that hard to do." The editor's articulation of support in a public
 
          forum was "a big moment" for her, Engebrecht said.
 
4. John Killen, Dennis Peck and Wilda Wahpepah, the Oregonian
        Peck, sports editor at the Oregonian, said the staff began The Sports Team
 Nickname Controversy
 
to discuss the issue of nicknames at around the time of the 1991 World
 
        Series, "when TV viewers were treated to Jane Fonda doing the `tomahawk
 
         chop.'"[22] Peck said several assistant city editors had just returned
from a
 
          sensitivity training workshop and had questioned whether the paper
should
 
          show photographs of people doing the chop or refer to it in stories.
Talks
 about the nicknames quickly followed, he said.
        City Editor Killen added that he had had several conversations about
 
       derogatory nicknames with staff writer Wahpepah, a Native American, and
had
 also attended the Multicultural Management Program at the University of
 
          Missouri School of Journalism. All this led to reflection, he said,
"and
 
          one day, it occurred to me to suggest that we stop using the nickname
 
       `Redskins.'" Initially, "Redskins," which Killen calls "a clear-cut
racial
 epithet," was the only name under discussion. The decision on a policy, h
 
          owever, was then-editor William A. Hilliard's to make, Killen said.
 
      (Hilliard became the first African-American president of the American
 
       Society of Newspaper Editors in 1993).
        By all accounts, the debate over the nickname issue, both inside and
 
       outside the paper, was lively and often heated. While many were
initially
 
          opposed to a policy on nicknames, Killen said, several changed their
minds
 
          after discussing the issue. "That said, we probably should have had
even
 
          more [discussion]," The Sports Team Nickname Controversy
 
he said. "When Hilliard's decision was made, lots of people said they'd
 
          heard nothing of the discussion."
        Peck said that about a month after the discussions ended, Hilliard drafted
 a letter to readers announcing the new policy and included "Indians,"
 
        "Braves" and "Redmen" among the names the paper would no longer use.
        "The newsroom was pretty evenly split," Peck said. "Certainly, the sports
 department was almost unilaterally opposed, saying nothing offensive was
 
          meant by the nicknames (focusing primarily on Braves and Indians)."
Copy
 
          editors were not as strong in their opposition, however, and "people
of
 
         color in the newsroom were united in their praise of the policy," he
said
 
          (but Wahpepah noted she knew of one minority editor opposed to the
policy).
 
        Killen said that while many people have come to accept the new system,
 
         "there are people sitting in the newsroom
today . . . who don't like the policy." Opponents argued that the policy
 
          was a form of censorship; that the paper should not be telling
          organizations what to name their teams; that the paper was being too
 
      politically correct ("no one means it as a racial epithet," as Killen
 
       described the argument, "so it shouldn't be perceived as such"), and that
 
          some Native Americans are not offended by the names and even use them
 
       themselves.
        Killen described the supporters' arguments this way: It is The Sports
 
         Team Nickname Controversy
 
not censorship to refuse, as a courtesy, to use a word a cultural and
 
       ethnic minority finds offensive; in refusing to use the names, the paper
is
 making a legitimate editorial decision; majority groups should not presume
 to understand or decide what offends and does not offend a minority group,
 and the fact that members of a minority group may use certain names as
 
         slang does
not give others the right to use the names.
        The Oregonian did not invite readers' opinions on the matter before
 
      issuing the policy, Killen said, but it did seek advice from Native
groups.
  Most if not all of the pressure for change came from within, he said.
        After the announcement, the paper received several telephone calls, many
 
          from readers opposed to the policy. "There was a significant backlash
at
 
          first," Peck said. "We must have received close to 1,000 complaints
from
 
          readers, decrying our political correctness and our perceived
censorship.
 
          However, after several weeks, the calls and letters ceased, and those
in
 
          favor of the change began to respond."
        Wahpepah said she handled several calls on the Saturday after the
 
    announcement, "and a surprising number of callers claimed Indian ancestry,
 
          mostly on their grandmother's side, and mostly Cherokee. The usual
line
 
          was, well my great-grandmother was Cherokee and I'm not offended by
this."
        Nevertheless, the decision eventually won praise from The Sports Team
 
        Nickname Controversy
 
others. The paper won an award in 1992 for its stance from the Oregon
 
        Indian Education Association, and the following year Hilliard received
an
 
          award from the Native American Journalists Association.
        Killen, Wahpepah and Peck agree that the Oregonian has taken a justified
 
          leadership role in the issue of team nicknames.
"Newspapers have always believed they have a responsibility to reflect the
 
          community, but that has usually meant the predominantly white and
middle
 
          class community," Wahpepah said. "Editors will come up against these
kinds
 
          of issues more and more, if they follow through on their stated
commitment
 
          to become more diverse both in the newsroom and throughout the pages
of the
 paper."
        Killen added that he believed the Oregonian was issuing a wake-up call to
 
          other media with its decision. "Essentially, I felt that a situation
had
 
          developed where the media had become blind to what they were doing and
 
        someone had to do something to wake people up and think about it," he
said.
  "We were all trapped in the old way of thinking and weren't considering
 
          that maybe we were doing something wrong."
 
Conclusion
        While all sides of the nickname controversy have become keenly aware of
 
          the media's ability to provide a forum for public The Sports Team
Nickname
 
          Controversy
 
discourse on issues of social importance, Native American activists seem to
 have a particular edge here. As Hall suggests, it is the formerly
 
     marginalized groups who are engaging most energetically and effectively in
 
          the politics of representation. There also appear to be hints of a
new
 
         sensitivity, at least among some journalists, to the concerns and
 
   complaints of Native peoples. This sensitivity is reflected in part by
 
          the heavy newscoverage of issues such as the nickname controversy,
coverage
 that permits activists to keep their demands in the public eye. It may be
 revealed even more in the policies on team nicknames announced by
 
    newspapers such as the Star Tribune and the Oregonian. The nickname
 
      controversy itself may be seen as a first step toward a more effective
 
        voice for Native Americans over a wide range of issues.
 
 [1] For a representative collection of viewpoints, see Mari J. Matsuda,
Charles R.
 
        Lawrence III, Richard Delgado and Kimberle Willi
ams Crenshaw, Words That Wound:
 
      Critical Race Theory, Assault
ive Speech and the First Amendment (Boulder,
 
          Colo.: Westview
Press, 1993).
[2] See the 1994 Resolution of the National Coalition on Ra
cism in Sports and the Media
 
            (Minneapolis) passed July 26,
1994, at the Unity 94 conference in Atlanta.
[3] See Barbara Kessler, "Sp
orts Teams Throughout the Nation Wrestle With the Mascot
 
          Is
sue," Dallas Morning News (reprinted in the Grand Forks Herald, May 8, 1994
).
[4] See Barbara Kessler.
[5] See Richard Leiby, Washington Post, Nov
. 6, 1994, F1. The Des Moines Register is
 
           reportedly consi
dering a similar move. Telephone interview with Julie Engebrecht,
 
 
 
       executive sports editor, (Minneapolis) Star Tribune, Nov. 16, 1994.
 
[6] This situation may be changing. The August convention of the Associa
tion of Education
 in Journalism and Mass Communication featured two sessi
ons largely devoted to the
 
       nickname controversy. See Bever
ly Ann Deepe Keever, "The Communicative Roots of Cultural
 
            B
ias: A Cross-Disciplinary Analysis," (convention paper available from AEJMC
, 1621 College
 St., Columbia, SC 29206) and "Recovering Identity: Native
Americans Respond to Media and
 
            Sports Team Stereotyping" (t
aped convention program available from Visual Aids
 
   Electron
ics, 2012 Tomlynn St., Richmond, VA 23230).
[7] Perhaps it is not too muc
h of a stretch to find some comparisons with the NAACP's
 
           hi
storic campaign for legally sanctioned school desegregation and just repres
entation in
 
            the language of the law.
[8] See "The Politi
cs of Representation," Pub. No. 93031, Silha Center for the Study of
 
 
          Media Ethics and Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. The
"Politics of
 
  Representation" was a talk presented at the 19
87 Silha Lecture on April 3, 1987, at the
 
            University of Min
nesota.
[9] Hall at 3.
[10] Hall at 16.
[11] The accounts of the Reds
kins and Sioux controversies are taken largely from articles
 in the Grand
 Forks Herald and the Dakota Student.
[12] Interview with Mike Jacobs, S
ept. 20, 1994, at the Grand Forks Herald office.
[13] UND Memorandum, Off
ice of the President, July 27, 1993. All statements attributed
 
 
     here to Baker are from this memorandum.
[14] Quoted in "Reclaiming t
he Issues," Native Directions (a publication of the UND
 
         Ind
ians Into Journalism Initiative), Vol. 2, No. 1 (Autumn 1994) at 12.
[15]
        Many contemporary scholars have emphasized the role of the media as a pote
nt
 
       influence in American life. See, for example, Phillip J
. Tichenor, George A. Donohue and
 
            Clarice N. Olien, Communi
ty Conflict and the Press (Beverly Hills: Sage
 
      Publications,
1980), especially at 77-89. See also John Fiske, Media
 
       Matte
rs (University of Minnesota Press, 1994).
[16] The research focused on ma
instream rather than alternative media because the former
 
            w
ould seem to have a potentially greater impact on public policy and have th
e ability to
 
            reach a larger audience whose minds might not
be made up on the team nickname issue.
[17] For one of many summaries of
media criticism, see J. Herbert Altschull, Agents of
 
          Power: T
he Media and Public Policy, 2d ed. (White Plains, N.Y.: Longman,
 
 
    1995).
[18] The following account is based on an interview with Jacob
s Sept. 20, 1994, at the
 
            Grand Forks Herald office.
[19]
For instance, Richard Pemberton Jr. writes that "`Sioux' is the recognized
name for
 
            the Indian tribes living in the Dakotas, but, like
 so many names Native American tribes
 
            bear, it is ethnocent
ric, inaccurate, and useful only for classification. In traditional
 
 
          times, the Sioux formed three major groups: the Santees, the Yank
tons, and the Tetons. As
 an English convention, we now identify the vari
ous tribes as part of either the Lakota or
 Dakota nations." "`I Saw That
 It Was Holy': The Black Hills and the Concept of Sacred
 
            La
nd," 3 Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 287 (1985).
[2
0] The following remarks are based on a telephone interview with Huschka o
n Sept. 21,
 
            1994.
[21] The following account is based on
a telephone interview with Julie Engebrecht on
 
           Nov. 16, 199
4.
[22] The comments attributed to Dennis Peck are from a Nov. 16, 1994,
fax communication.
 The comments of the John Killen and Wilda Wahpepah ar
e from separate faxes received Nov.
 
            21, 1994.


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