Someone left a stack of papers at the Hulett Library calling for the local schoolâs grimacing âRed Devilâ mascot to switch to a hawk, sparking outcry in the town beginning Wednesday.
But itâs difficult to tell whoâs behind the proposed change. Even the most vehement opponents of the movement either donât know or wonât say.
A note accompanying the pamphlet gives a list of names of people who can provide âinformationâ but doesnât call those people proponents.Â
The three sources of âmore infoâ the note lists are Crook County School District 1 Board member Hannah Ista, Jeanie Haas and Mel Bears.
Ista and Haas did not return phone call requests for comment by publication time. Bears told Cowboy State Daily sheâs not involved in the movement: her name was probably placed on the note since she works at City Hall and itâs a hub of information and fliers.Â
She went on to say that âthe Haases are good people.âÂ
This controversy surfaces in town every 10 years or so, Bears added.Â
Brian Neiman, of Hulett, ignited a Facebook-borne resistance to the change when he posted photographs of the pamphlet to his page early Thursday.Â
He told Cowboy State Daily that he found the pamphlet at the local library, and heâs been working all day to confirm who is behind the effort.Â
âIf they want to make change, theyâre going about it entirely wrong,â said Neiman. âThere needs to be public discussions, open forums, community involvement between parents, alumni staff. And then everything can be taken to the school board.âÂ
The pamphlet encourages people to attend an Oct. 20 school board meeting and says a âfinal vote will be taken.â
But school board members hadnât heard of the proposal until Wednesday or Thursday, according to the ones who spoke to Cowboy State Daily.Â
âI havenât seen anything that says weâre doing anything with it,â school board trustee Toby Connally said in a Thursday phone interview. As to whoâs behind the change, Connally said, âno clue.âÂ
Trustee Steve Blakeman said he âjust found out about itâ and doesnât know where it came from. Trustee Marlene Edwards echoed that.Â
Treasurer Thayne Gray didnât know about it until contacted by Cowboy State Daily, and voiced doubts that Ista could be behind it based on her earlier commentary during board meetings.Â
Board Chair Chase Williams first heard of the proposition Wednesday, and he received about a dozen phone calls from residents â all opposed to the change â he said.Â
Though a new situation, Williams said heâs now expecting a huge turnout at the next board meeting, in Moorcroft on Monday at 6 p.m.Â
âI Think Itâs Stupidâ
Lifelong Hulett resident Sally Waugh, who attended the local high school in the early 1970s, told Cowboy State Daily that Hulett residents donât think of the âRed Devilsâ mascot in religious terms.
âThe hills around here are beautifully red, and when the dust devils blew with the wind, they were red,â said Waugh. âThey werenât brown. They werenât tan. They were red⌠It has nothing to do with religion.âÂ
She said the school adopted the emblem in the 1950s.Â
Of the proposed change, Waugh said, âI think itâs stupid.â
She theorized about the motives and impacts of the movementâs proponents but declined to say whom she believes those proponents are.Â
The Cost Though
Connally ventured no sentiments but spoke of the cost of the proposition.Â
âAs far as changing a mascot, youâre looking at spending a million dollars,â he said. âBy the time you change all your uniforms, all the writing on a field, all the writing on a basketball court; bleachers, repainting a whole bunch of stuff in a school â I donât believe itâs feasible anyhow.âÂ
Speaking in his personal capacity and not as school board chair, Williams said he opposes the change, since the mascot is intertwined with the âlocal history.âÂ
âSome people donât love the Red Devil mascot,â said Williams. âOn the flip side of the coin, if we start to whitewash history and change these school mascots to what makes people feel better, it doesnât do justice to the history thatâs already been made. The hundreds and hundreds of students who went through Hulett High School and graduated and moved away probably view themselves as Hulett Red Devils and not as a Hulett whatever.âÂ
But whether to change it will be up to the prevailing feeling among the residents, not his own thinking, he said.Â
Positive And Inspiring
The pamphlet notes that the community is dedicating a new athletic field and has new family recreation facilities.Â
These changes also yield âa unique opportunity to align our school mascot with values that truly represent our aspirations for our youth,â says the pamphlet.
Changing from the âRed Devilsâ to the âHulett Hawksâ would â(honor) our existing school colors while providing a positive, inspiring symbol for our students and community,â says the pamphlet.Â
The document claims âmost Hulett citizens have never been comfortable with the âRed Devilsâ mascotâ but have hesitated to voice those concerns out of respect for tradition.Â
The pamphlet touts the facets of hawks, which have sharp eyesight, soar above obstacles and challenges, show remarkable patience, master thermal currents and are loyal to their mating partners.Â
Students could be involved in crafting the new logos. Town halls could seek design preferences, and the current red background could remain, the flier says.Â
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Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.