![]() Second of two articles. 26-Aug-20 – Potential removal of the iconic Native American statue – as the focal point of Lane Tech College Prep High School’s Memorial Garden – has developed into a generational donnybrook between war veterans and older alumni – and students, faculty, and a conservative school council. In early August, the Lane Tech School Council unanimously agreed to start a process to remove the warrior statue from the Memorial Garden after principal Brian Tennison directed the organization to address the “Indian” issue with a vote. However, a plaque attached to the base of the war monument simply states: “In reverent tribute to those Laneites who gave the last full measure of devotion for justice and the American way of life, this memorial is solemnly dedicated.” Vietnam veteran John Schwan, retired chairman of the Lane Tech Century Foundation, which raised more than $2 million for restoration of the campus as part of the school’s Centennial Celebration, and older alumni leaders are staunchly against the statue’s removal. A recent survey of 9,135 Lane Tech alumni, faculty, students, parents, and community members found that 52.5 percent want the Indian name and symbol to be discontinued, while 47.5 percent staunchly believe they should be preserved. Of the 9,135 people surveyed, 59.6 percent were older alumni, including many graduates from the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Since 1945, some 80,000 Lane Tech alumni have attended the school. Many Lane military veterans say saving the Shooting the Stars statue is “a fundamentally correct cause.” Lane Tech’s historic military leaders include John Charles Stetson, Secretary of the United States Air Force; Anthony Watson, Commander of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, and Richard Mies, a nuclear submarine commander. Comments from some of Lane’s old military guard follow...
“The liberal Lane Tech School Council is destroying 100 years of tradition that honors Native Americans and their culture,” said a 1980s Lane Tech graduate and former football star who asked not to be quoted by name. “Generations of alumni helped make Lane Tech the School of Champions and continue to support it.” Even owners of the mighty Chicago Blackhawks professional hockey team have refused to bend and will not change the name of one of the oldest National Hockey League teams. New mascot name: Warrior? Champion? Turtle? If the historic Shooting the Stars statue and other Native American icons are banished from the Lane Tech campus, what should the school and alumni choose as its new mascot name? One misguided alumnus reportedly suggested the name “Myrtle the Turtle.” However, an informal Home Front poll of older alumni, military friends, and readers generated the following names to replace the iconic Indian: Warriors, Cavaliers, Knights, Gunners, Riflemen, Archers, Dog Faces, Troopers, Commandos, Rangers, Raiders, and Centurions. Vietnam veteran Karouzos, the 1965 Lane graduate, said: “I have not heard any complaints as to the symbolic names of the Michigan State Spartans or the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Would not the current day Native Americans find a way to be proud if Lane were to keep everything the same and the school merely change the mascot name to ‘The Americans?’ After all, Indians are the first true Americans.” One other name comes to mind. Why not simply go with “The Champions?” After all, isn’t Lane Tech known as the School of Champions for the hundreds of sports victories and championship awards that adorn its halls?
Other Lane Tech baseball greats include Chicago Cubs catcher John Felske, Class of 1960, who managed the Philadelphia Phillies from 1984 to 1987, and Buzz Capra, Class of 1965, who pitched for the New York Mets and the Atlanta Braves from 1971 through 1977. Lane athletes have gone on to compete in the National Football League and the Olympics. The mascot or symbol? A simple Gold Star representing the military war heroes of Lane Tech. Imagine the star symbol – similar to the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys’ – emblazoned in gold on Lane’s sports uniforms, sweaters, and T-shirts. Don DeBat is a 1961 Lane Tech graduate.
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