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Saturday, August 06, 2005
On this day:

Will the NCAA Permit the Illinois Fighting Illini to Display "Illinois" on Their Uniforms?



The NCAA has ordered "derogatory" references to Native Americans to be removed from uniforms or be publicly displayed during certain NCAA events.

The NCAA has already determined the following references to be unacceptably "derogatory":

# Alcorn State University (Braves)
# Central Michigan University (Chippewas)
# Catawba College (Indians)
# Florida State University (Seminoles)
# Midwestern State University (Indians)
# University of Utah (Utes)
# Indiana University-Pennsylvania (Indians)
# Carthage College (Redmen)
# Bradley University (Braves)
# Arkansas State University (Indians)
# Chowan College (Braves)
# University of Illinois (Illini)
# University of Louisiana-Monroe (Indians)
# McMurry University (Indians)
# Mississippi College (Choctaws)
# Newberry College (Indians)
# University of North Dakota (Fighting Sioux)
# Southeastern Oklahoma State University (Savages)

No word yet on whether the NCAA will bar any or all of the following twenty-eight references as unacceptably derogatory:

Alabama -Indian for tribal town, later a tribe (Alabamas or Alibamons) of the Creek confederacy.

Alaska -Russian version of Aleutian (Eskimo) word, alakshak, for "peninsula," "great lands," or "land that is not an island."

Arizona -Spanish version of Pima Indian word for "little spring place," or Aztec arizuma, meaning "silver-bearing."

Arkansas -French variant of Quapaw, a Siouan people meaning "downstream people."

Connecticut -From Mohican and other Algonquin words meaning "long river place."

Delaware -Named for Lord De La Warr, early governor of Virginia; first applied to river, then to Indian tribe (Lenni-Lenape), and the state.

Hawaii -Possibly derived from native word for homeland, Hawaiki or Owhyhee.

Idaho -A coined name with an invented Indian meaning: "gem of the mountains;" originally suggested for the Pike's Peak mining territory (Colorado), then applied to the new mining territory of the Pacific Northwest. Another theory suggests Idaho may be a Kiowa Apache term for the Comanche.

Illinois -French for Illini or land of Illini, Algonquin word meaning men or warriors.

Indiana -Means "land of the Indians."

Iowa -Indian word variously translated as "one who puts to sleep" or "beautiful land."

Kansas -Sioux word for "south wind people."

Kentucky -Indian word variously translated as "dark and bloody ground," "meadow land" and "land of tomorrow."

Massachusetts -From Indian tribe named after "large hill place" identified by Capt. John Smith as being near Milton, Mass.

Michigan -From Chippewa words mici gama meaning "great water," after the lake of the same name.

Minnesota -From Dakota Sioux word meaning "cloudy water" or "sky-tinted water" of the Minnesota River.

Mississippi -Probably Chippewa; mici zibi, "great river" or "gathering-in of all the waters." Also: Algonquin word, "Messipi."

Missouri -An Algonquin Indian term meaning "river of the big canoes."

Nebraska -From Omaha or Otos Indian word meaning "broad water" or "flat river," describing the Platte River.

North & South Dakota -Dakota is Sioux for friend or ally.

Ohio -Iroquois word for "fine or good river."

Oklahoma -Choctaw coined word meaning red man, proposed by Rev. Allen Wright, Choctaw-speaking Indian, said: Okla humma is red people.

Tennessee -Tanasi was the name of Cherokee villages on the Little Tennessee River. From 1784 to 1788 this was the State of Franklin, or Frankland.

Texas -Variant of word used by Caddo and other Indians meaning friends or allies, and applied to them by the Spanish in eastern Texas. Also written texias, tejas, teysas.

Utah -From a Navajo word meaning upper, or higher up, as applied to a Shoshone tribe called Ute.

Wisconsin -An Indian name, spelled Ouisconsin and Mesconsing by early chroniclers. Believed to mean "grassy place" in Chippewa. Congress made it Wisconsin.

Wyoming -The word was taken from Wyoming Valley, Pa., which was the site of an Indian massacre and became widely known by Campbell's poem, "Gertrude of Wyoming." In Algonquin it means "large prairie place."