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Indian Tribe Offended by Illini's Insensitive Display of Terrible Football

The Olgala Sioux Tribe demanded the return of the Chief Illiniwek costume from the University of Illinois Thursday, according to the Chicago Tribune, apparently as a result of its extreme embarassment to be associated with the Big Ten's worst football program. Zing!

The Tribune says the Sioux garb was "donated" (for a mere $3,500) at a halftime ceremony in 1982 by 93-year-old Sioux Chief Frank Fools Crow and a "medicine man." It doesn't say what the South Dakota-based tribe could possibly have to do with Illinois in the first place, which is one of the complaints the tribe's resolution addresses, aside from generally feeling, "[t]he antics of persons playing 'Chief Illiniwek' perpetuate a degrading racial stereotype that reflects negatively on all American Indian people." As does the incredibly bad performance of the Illini team under Coach [Redacted]. Aw, snap!

A spokesman from the university's "Council of Chiefs" - 27 former mascots - said the school still has an original suit it used before the Olgala tribe donated the current version, much as the university still has its tradition of consistent Big Ten success from 1914-28 under coach Robert C. Zuppke. Burn! The same spokesman called the request "disappointing," the same sentiment expressed by administration over falling attendance at Memorial Stadium - Bam! - and admitted being close to tears, mirroring the feeling fans have felt throughout the football team's 5-18 run under [Redacted]. Ooooh! The donated Olgala suit consisted of "moccasins, blanket, peace pipe pouch, breastplate and war bonnet with 90 eagle feathers," the last of which were replaced in 1990 with "painted turkey feathers," according to the Tribune's citing of the school's Web site. That switch happened to correspond with the last time the Illini won, or came close to winning, the Big Ten (the 2001 outlier screws up the rhythm here, so shaddup, spoilsports!). Last Spring, the NCAA declared the imagery "hostile and abusive," which is also how Illinois fans describe the 39.5 percent completion rate of freshman quarterback "Juice" Williams. Oh, no he did'n!

Et cetera.


Illinois football: it's a crying shame.
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0 recs  |  Comment 7 comments

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Stereotypes
I know that the Native Americans are against perpetuating stereotypes but doesn't asking for the costume back make them Indian givers?

by Henry Gomez on Jan 22, 2007 12:14 AM EST reply actions   0 recs

I'm sorry, I'm not familiar with that term.
If I was, I would think that was a pretty awesome observation, Henry Gomez.

by SMQ on Jan 22, 2007 1:04 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Websters:
Main Entry: Indian giver
Function: noun
a person who gives something to another and then takes it back or expects an equivalent in return

by Henry Gomez on Jan 22, 2007 2:00 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Er...
'Seinfeld' reference, Gomez. I know what an 'indian giver' is. Sorry about that.

by SMQ on Jan 22, 2007 3:18 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Sorry
Must be one of the one or two episodes I haven't seen.

by Henry Gomez on Jan 22, 2007 3:34 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Okay, you wanna get nuts? Let's get nuts!...
Jerry unwittingly offends an Native American girl he wants to date by giving Elaine a cigar store indian and doing a bunch of "bury the hatchet" and "peace pipe" jokes in front of her, eventually gets the girl to go out with him anyway, and has to catch himself from using the everyday terms "scalper" and "reservation" in conversation. She gives him her TV Guide to replace the one Elaine took from Frank Costanza's obsessive collection. Later she asks Jerry to give the TV Guide back because she's writing some article about cover boy Al Roker:

"You want it back? What are you, some kind of an in..."

"A what?"

"Um, someone who gives someone else something and later asks for it back."

"You mean...an indian giver?"

"I'm sorry, I'm not familiar with that term."

I never understood why she was so angry about this exchange. He was obviously taking great pains to avoid saying anything that would offend her, what's the problem? They would have gotten back together at the end of the episode if not for Kramer, who bought the Indian from Elaine's boss and rode by Jerry and the girl in a cab doing the hand-to-mouth whoop. Kind of a weird moment from Michael Richards, in retrospect.

by SMQ on Jan 22, 2007 3:54 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Now you did it...
I'm going to have to watch that one.  Maybe they have it on itunes.

Hilarious.

by Henry Gomez on Jan 22, 2007 10:43 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

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