CHARLIE BARNES
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THE HONORABLE RESPONSE IS SOMETIMES
A CLEAR, SOLID 'NO'
You've seen Stephen Hawking on television. He's that man in
the wheelchair, with the flat, mechanical voice that replaces
his paralyzed vocal cords. Lou Gehrig's disease has robbed Hawking
of his ability to speak. Yet he is arguably the world's most
brilliant astrophysicist.
In 1999, a science reporter asked him, "Do you expect time
travel or travel through different dimensions in the universe
to be possible in the next 1,000 years?"
Hawking's one-word answer: "No."
He knows that any other answer may leave the matter in doubt.
His "No" mirrors closely the answer given by our Seminole
Tribe of Florida a century and a half ago, when they were ordered
to leave their homes.
"No," they said. They knew negotiation would gain nothing.
The government wanted to move all Indians out of Florida. The
Seminoles were determined not to go.
The Indians who did surrender were driven west along the infamous
Trail of Tears.
Those who did not perish along the way were fated to brutal poverty.
A few hundred warriors and their families refused to surrender
and slipped back into the swamps. From that small band grew the
great Seminole Tribe of Florida.
The Seminoles are winning. In fact, they may have already won.
That happened because they never stopped looking for victory.
Mere survival was never the goal.
If we were searching for a symbol, surely this one resonates
most powerfully.
The issue of Indian names for sports teams is political, but
it is not an issue of right vs. left, liberal vs. conservative.
Florida State draws passionate support from alumni and friends
across the broadest ranges of the political spectrum.
For decades, FSU has engaged the issue of our Seminole symbol
with sensitivity, forging respect and trust between the Seminole
Tribe of Florida and the university.
One figure in this story who towers above all others is Bill
Durham.
For nearly 40 years, Durham has made the faithful presentation
of a Seminole symbol a major focus of his life. Prosperous owner
of a Tallahassee insurance company, Durham is pleasant and self-effacing,
but he is the personification of the principle that "Nothing
Is Ever Accomplished By A Reasonable Man."
Yes, Durham is unreasonable. A quarter century ago he insisted
that the Seminole Tribe of Florida be consulted about every nuance
of the Seminole symbol.
Osceola and Renegade do not do ribbon cuttings, they open no
new malls and they do not promote unbelievable deals on new and
used cars and trucks.
The standards to which the riders must adhere are unreasonable.
The security precautions, and the demands made on the entire
crew, are unreasonable.
And now that we face a battle over the appropriateness of our
honored symbol, we find that we owe considerable gratitude to
this unreasonable man.
Things might have been different. Osceola might have been available
for hire, for kids' parties and the like. We could have had an
Indian "mascot" who ran to the opponents' sidelines
and mock-wrestled their mascot.
Instead, the dignity of Osceola and Renegade enables both liberal
and conservative political minds to unite in support of our honored
symbol.
When we are asked about changing the honored symbol of our university,
why not respond with the answer favored by one of the most brilliant
men alive today?
"No" said Hawking, and so should we all say, simply,
"No."
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