Chief Wahoo is a trademarked logo for the Cleveland Indians baseball team. The illustration is a Native American cartoon caricature. The logo has drawn protests from some members of Native American tribes and the NAACP and is opposed by the U. S. Commission on Civil Rights. However, the logo remains popular among fans of the Cleveland Indians.
Although the club had adopted the name "Indians" starting with the 1915 season, there was no acknowledgment of this nickname on their uniforms until 1928. In the years between the team's 1901 formation and the 1927 season, uniforms contained variations on a stylized "C" or the word "Cleveland" (excepting the 1921 season, when the front of the club's uniform shirts read "Worlds [sic] Champions"). According to baseball historians, the 1928 season saw modified club uniforms whose left breast bore a patch depicting the profile of a headdress-wearing American Indian. In 1929, a smaller version of that same patch migrated to the home uniform sleeve, where similar incarnations of the early design remained through 1938. For 1939 the club wore the Baseball Centennial patch on the sleeve. Various other patches were worn for the next few years, none of them featuring Indians.
Russell Charles Means (born November 10, 1939) is an Oglala Sioux activist for the rights of Native American people. He became a prominent member of the American Indian Movement (AIM) after joining the organization in 1968, and helped organize notable events that attracted national and international media coverage. The organization split in 1993, in part over the 1975 murder of Anna Mae Aquash, the leading woman activist in AIM.
Means has been active in international issues of indigenous peoples, including working with groups in Central and South America, and with the United Nations for recognition of their rights. He has been active in politics at his native Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and at the state and national level.
Since 1992, he has acted in numerous films and released his own music CD. He published his autobiography Where White Men Fear to Tread in 1997.
Means was born in Wanblee, South Dakota, a community located in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, to Theodora Feather and Harold "Hank" Means. He was baptized Oyate Wacinyapin, which means "works for the people" in the Lakota language. His Oglala Sioux parents met as students at an Indian boarding school.
Edward "Wahoo" McDaniel (June 19, 1938 – April 18, 2002) was a Choctaw-Chickasaw Native American who achieved fame as a professional American football player and later as a professional wrestler. He is notable for having held the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship a record-tying five times.
Wahoo was born in the small town of Bernice, Oklahoma in 1938. His father worked in oil and he moved to several towns before settling down in Midland, Texas while Wahoo was in middle school. One of his baseball coaches was George H. W. Bush. The name "Wahoo" actually came from his father who was known as "Big Wahoo". He was a problematic teenager but he was accepted to the University of Oklahoma to be part of Bud Wilkinson's Sooners football program. After his retirement from wrestling he became an avid fisherman. He enjoyed fishing Lake Amistad in Del Rio, Texas which was one of his favorite fishing spots.
McDaniel's college career was somewhat marred by injuries early on but by his senior year, he was one of the top players on the Oklahoma team despite being caught drinking after games and skipping classes. He played linebacker for the American Football League's Houston Oilers and Denver Broncos but really became a star when he was traded to the New York Jets in 1964. He was a crowd favorite and made 23 tackles in a single game against his former Denver Broncos. He was picked by the Miami Dolphins in the 1966 American Football League expansion draft, as the team's major name player. During the 1968 season, he knocked out two police officers in an altercation and was traded to the San Diego Chargers. Wahoo never played a game for San Diego and started wrestling full-time.
Tully Arthur Blanchard (born January 22, 1954) is a semi-retired second generation American professional wrestler. He is best known as an original member of the Four Horsemen.
He worked for most of the major professional wrestling organizations in the United States: the National Wrestling Alliance, American Wrestling Association, World Championship Wrestling, and the World Wrestling Federation (now known as WWE). As of March 31st, 2012, Tully Blanchard was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as a member of the Four Horsemen.
As the son of wrestling promoter and former American Wrestling Association star Joe Blanchard, Tully Blanchard was involved in professional wrestling at a very young age. He began selling programs and refreshments at the arenas at the age of ten, and worked as a referee when he was older. Blanchard attended West Texas State University, where he played American football, first as a quarterback and then as a defensive end, alongside fellow future wrestlers Tito Santana and Ted DiBiase.
Richard Morgan Fliehr (born February 25, 1949) is an American professional wrestler, better known by his ring name Ric Flair. Also known as "The Nature Boy", Flair is considered to be one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time with a professional career that spans 40 years. He is currently working for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), and is noted for his lengthy and highly decorated tenures with the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), World Championship Wrestling (WCW), and the World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment (now known as WWE). Flair is officially recognized by WWE, TNA and PWI as a 16-time World Heavyweight Champion (seven-time NWA Champion, seven-time WCW Champion and two-time WWF Champion) although his actual tally of World Championship reigns varies by source—Flair considers himself a 21-time world champion.
In World Championship Wrestling (WCW), he also had two stints as a booker—in 1989–1990 and 1994. Flair also became the first and only man to have won the WWF Championship in a Royal Rumble match, when he accomplished this in the 1992 edition of the event. In 2012, Flair became the first ever double inductee in the WWE Hall of Fame, first inducted in 2008 for his individual career, and for a second time in 2012 as a member of the Four Horsemen. He is also an NWA Hall of Famer (class of 2008). Flair's hair styles and mannerisms are based on those of Buddy Rogers, who previously and famously used the "Nature Boy" gimmick in the 1950s and '60s. Coincidentally, Flair also followed Rogers in becoming the second man to win both the WWF and the NWA World Heavyweight Championships.
Sound off: What should the Cleveland Indians do about Chief Wahoo?
Chief Wahoo Controversy
Russell Means talks about Chief wahoo on the Morning Exchange
Chief Wahoo McDaniel vs Baron von Raschke
Chief Wahoo Protest 2014
Chief Wahoo Controversy Both Sides of the Issue
Indians ask fans their feelings about Chief Wahoo
Tully Blanchard vs. "Chief" Wahoo Mcdaniels
chief wahoo bobblehead dance
Group holds protest over Chief Wahoo logo before Cleveland Indians home opener
Ric Flair Vs. Wahoo McDaniel
Chief Wahoo
5PM:Is Chief Wahoo no longer primary logo for the Cleveland Indians?
AIM's Chief Wahoo Protest/Rally 2014 - "Fear The Chief Guy" - Opening Day
Plot
When song-and-dance man Harry Van returns from World War I, he finds work hard to come by. His greatest success comes as straight man in a phony vaudeville mind-reading act with the tipsy Madame Zulieka. While on tour in Omaha he meets acrobat Irene Fellara, and they have a brief romance. Twenty years later while Harry is on tour in Europe with a troupe of leggy blonde dancers, his train is stopped at the Swiss border and he finds himself stranded in the Alps in anticipation of World War II hostilities. Harry and his chorines take refuge in an Alpine hotel with a group of disparate travelers who are also marooned there. Among them are an American pacifist, British newlyweds, a cancer researcher, a German munitions manufacturer, and a beautiful blonde expatriate Russian aristocrat who looks suspiciously like the Irene of two decades earlier.
Keywords: acrobat, alps, anti-war, aviation, based-on-play, blonde, bomb, cancer-research, cheap-hotel, chorine
The Biggest Thrill They Ever Gave You! Norma and Clark together in the romance of a "ham" song-and-dance man and a "red-headed liar from Omaha."
Imagine! Norma Shearer as a "lady in tights"...who escapes from the honky-tonks into the rich world a Munitions King can give her! Clark Gable, the man in her life, whom she loved and left...and whom she finds again.
Harry Van: [to the waiter] Seems to me everyone would be happier in Europe if they learned how to make a decent cup of coffee.
Harry Van: [to the waiter] Get me a scotch, and, uh, put ice in it. If you haven't got any ice, go out and scoop up some of that beautiful white snow.
Irene Fellara: Did I ever tell you of my escape from the Soviets?::Achille Weber: You've told me about it at least eleven times, and every time it was different.::Irene Fellara: Well, I made several escapes. I am always making escapes, Achille. When I worry about you and your career, I have to run away from the terror of my own thoughts. So I amuse myself by studying the faces of the people I see. Just ordinary, casual, dull people. That little English couple for instance - I was watching them during dinner, sitting there close together, holding hands. And I saw him in his nice, smart British uniform shooting a little pistol at a huge tank. And the tank rolls over him. And his fine, strong body that was so full of the capacity for ecstasy... is a mass of mashed flesh and bones. A smear of purple blood, like a stepped-on snail. But before the moment of death, he consoles himself by thinking, "thank God she is safe. She is bearing the child I gave her. And he will live to see a better world." But I know where she is. She is under a house that has been racked by an air raid. She is as dead as he is. But he, he died in action against the enemy gloriously. But she died in a cellar, not so very gloriously. There will be many who will die this way in this war, won't there Achille? [he does not respond] You don't say anything! Probably you are bored. But I like to think about these things, Achille. And it makes me so proud to think that I am so close to you, who makes all this possible.::Achille Weber: That's all very interesting, my dear. But before you waste too much sympathy on these little people like your English friends, just ask yourself this: why shouldn't they die? And who are the greater criminals - those who sell the instruments of death or those who buy them and use them? It is they who make war seem noble and heroic, and what does it all amount to? Mistrust of the motives of everyone else! A dog-in-the-manger defence of all they've got, greed for the other fellow's possessions! Oh, I assure you, Irena, for such little people, the deadliest weapons are the most merciful.
Irene Fellara: I am so happy for you.::Achille Weber: Happy? Why?::Irene Fellara: All this wonderful death and destruction everywhere. And you promoted it.
Harry Van: The world you live in isn't a world of facts and figures, it's a world of dreams. Maybe that's what I like about you Irene.::Irene Fellara: And maybe you're wrong my darling. Maybe we two cheap people, with our cheap lives, maybe we're the only ones in this crazy world who are real.
Harry Van: [at a train station] Well, we gotta be pulling out now babe.::Irene Fellara: I know, but not together.::Harry Van: No, not together. You go your way and I go mine. But I got a hunch we'll see each other again. Sometime.
Irene Fellara: Oh, 'Kak Stranna!' How strange!
Irene Fellara: I told you then that I wasn't everybody. It's true; I'm nobody. But I learned it was no use telling the truth to people whose life was a whole lie.
Harry Van: It's a pleasure to be entertaining, but you can't get away with it.
Quillary: While you sit here eating and drinking, their planes dropped fifty thousand kilos of bombs on innocent people. Heavens knows how many were killed; how much of life and beauty is forever destroyed. And you sit here eating and drinking with them, the murderers. It was their planes from the very field down there. Assassins!
Sound off: What should the Cleveland Indians do about Chief Wahoo?
Chief Wahoo Controversy
Russell Means talks about Chief wahoo on the Morning Exchange
Chief Wahoo McDaniel vs Baron von Raschke
Chief Wahoo Protest 2014
Chief Wahoo Controversy Both Sides of the Issue
Indians ask fans their feelings about Chief Wahoo
Tully Blanchard vs. "Chief" Wahoo Mcdaniels
chief wahoo bobblehead dance
Group holds protest over Chief Wahoo logo before Cleveland Indians home opener
Ric Flair Vs. Wahoo McDaniel
Chief Wahoo
5PM:Is Chief Wahoo no longer primary logo for the Cleveland Indians?
AIM's Chief Wahoo Protest/Rally 2014 - "Fear The Chief Guy" - Opening Day
AIM's Chief Wahoo Protest/Rally 2014 - "Celebrating Indians" - Opening Day
Opie & Anthony - Cleveland Indians Demote Chief Wahoo Logo (01-09-2014)
CHIEF WAHOO PROTEST/CLEVELAND BASEBALL.2009/PART/6/6
Retire Chief Wahoo
Is Chief Wahoo Racist? (Part 1 of 2)
Leave Chief Wahoo ALONE! - Cleveland Indians Commentary
CHIEF JAY EAGLE VS CHIEF WAHOO MCDANIEL # 1
Chief Wahoo McDaniel vs Dick Murdoch Battle in Puerto Rico
AIM's 2013 Protest Against Chief Wahoo Logo and Name, Opening Day: Interviews
AIM's Chief Wahoo Protest/Rally 2014 - Interviews - opening Day
10 Questions for Sherman Alexie
OCCUPY CLEVELAND 11-11-11 INTERVIEW ABOUT RACIST CHIEF WAHOO .
Ron Garvin, Wahoo McDaniel wrestling promo
Glory Days TV - Wahoo & Arn 10-26-85
CHIEF WAHOO PROTEST/CLEVELAND BASEBALL/2009 PART 2/6
CHIEF WAHOO PROTEST/CLEVELAND BASEBALL/2009/PART 4/6
CHIEF WAHOO PROTEST/CLEVELAND BASEBALL/2009 PART 5/6
OCCUPY Cleveland..Clevelander Talks About Racist Chief Wahoo logo
CHIEF WAHOO PROTEST ON BASEBALL OPENING DAY 2007 PART 2 OF 3