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johndahl

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Posts posted by johndahl

  1. UND has the premier energy and environmental research facility in the world.

    That's perhaps stretching it a bit. If they really want to expand, why not move out of town? Their limited interaction with other university departments doesn't require them to be on campus, whereas student activities like sports are best placed near the students. I seem to recall them adding the "Environmental" to their name after a flap about burning PCBs in town, once others in the scientific community came forward about the dangers of burning chlorinated phenols in the middle of a city. Plus, if they stay in town, expansion capability will always be limited, especially considering the equipment and space much of their competition already have available to them.

  2. Roughriders would be a great name - a tie to the state, unique among colleges, etc. There would be no need to "buy out" Red River High" as nobody owns any particular rights to the name, and I doubt they'd be anything but flattered that UND agreed their name was great.

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  3. Even absent any change in division classification or desire to join a specific conference, the issue was not going to get better over time. It's been going on for decades now, and has become more contentious every few years.

    In all honesty, I like "Cavalry" in part because it has a little "screw you" connotation to the Indian tribes that forced this upon us. I was a supporter of keeping our team name, but realized the fight to do so would only get harder with time.

    John

  4. Roughriders is sound in that it has strong state ties, and nobody will ever object (Cavalry is sound for the same reasons). It's not a rodent or small game bird, and not some ephemeral crap like "Blizzard" or "Wild" that will be hard to identify with.

    Go Roughriders!

  5. It is also their job to realize when the fight is no longer winnable, and will forever be an ongoing struggle the University doesn't need to add to its other challenges. Their perspectives are necessarily different than ours, in that they aren't fans or alumni first but have to put the long term health of the school first. I certainly didn't want the name changed, but have to believe they all honestly believed that UND will be stronger ten years from now, with this controversy behind them.

    John

  6. I fear that all the Sioux tribes will have achieved in all of this is to hasten their march into obscurity, and earn the hatred and resentment of the majority of their neighbors.

    The inability of the politically correct to see the true consequences of their actions appears to yet again be destroying something they believed they were fighting for. I will not mourn the transition away from Sioux names, customs, and culture in the Grand Forks community, or in the upper midwest.

    John

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