Struggle to preserve Fighting Sioux nears end

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - Six years after the NCAA deemed it hostile to American Indians, the University of North Dakota's Fighting Sioux nickname has hardly gone quietly through the courts or the state Legislature.

But the end of its life was in sight Wednesday as state lawmakers prepared to give final approval to legislation that would allow the school to drop the nickname and its logo, which shows the profile of an American Indian warrior.

State law that took effect last March requires UND teams to be known as the Fighting Sioux, but the law has caused scheduling problems and could affect the school's bid to join the Big Sky Conference. Since August, the NCAA has banned UND from hosting postseason tournaments and has said the school's athletes may not wear uniforms with the nickname or logo during postseason play.

Although the measure being considered Wednesday prohibits the school from adopting a new nickname or logo until January 2015, UND may in the meantime retire its contentious moniker, which it has used for athletics since the 1930s.

"Being forced to change what you're called doesn't mean changing who you are," said Democratic Sen. Mac Schneider of Grand Forks, a former UND offensive lineman. "We are the University of North Dakota, and we'll always be fighting."

The NCAA in 2005 listed the university among a group of schools with objectionable American Indian nicknames, logos and mascots. UND is the only school still fighting the NCAA over the issue.

Some schools were allowed to keep such nicknames, provided they received tribal support. In UND's case, however, the Spirit Lake Sioux tribe endorsed using the nickname and logo - but The Standing Rock Sioux's tribal council declined to support it.

Cheered on by nickname supporters, the school sued the NCAA in an effort to keep the moniker. The lawsuit was later settled out of court.

Brian Faison, the university's athletics director, has said the nickname's continued use has made it difficult to schedule rival schools, including Minnesota and Wisconsin, and has cast doubt on whether UND will be allowed to join the Big Sky Conference in July.

The North Dakota Senate voted 39-7 on Tuesday night to approve the legislation allowing the school to drop the name, sending it to the state House, which has been more hostile to the idea of dumping the nickname.

Rep. Al Carlson, R-Fargo, the House's Republican majority leader, promised the bill would be taken up Wednesday. Should it be approved, Gov. Jack Dalrymple has said he would sign it.

Carlson wants to keep the Fighting Sioux name and was the primary sponsor of the legislation that became law last March requiring UND to use it.

Rep. Stacey Dahl, R-Grand Forks, said she expects the House will agree to repeal the requirement. Dahl wrote a provision in the bill that requires UND to wait three years before adopting a new nickname and logo.

"There is a deep sense of loss and sadness that really cannot be dismissed or, really, underestimated," Dahl said. "Let's let everything settle. Let everyone, for lack of a better term, cool off."

The university and the North Dakota Board of Higher Education did not object to Dahl's proposal, board president Grant Shaft said.

Duaine Espegard, the vice president of North Dakota's Board of Higher Education and a former Republican state senator from Grand Forks, said Tuesday that he probably would have supported Carlson's earlier pro-nickname bill but now supports its repeal.

"I didn't understand, at the time, all of the ramifications. But I do understand, and I think you all do today, the ramifications of this law, and today it's time to repeal the law," Espegard said. "Let's move the University of North Dakota forward and get by this very divisive thing."

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