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Experience the electrifying atmosphere of PFL Africa's historic event in Cape Town, where nearly 5,000 fans witnessed ...
To the untrained eye, a patch is a patch. But in the world of sports cards, a few small words on the back of the card can mean the difference between a piece of sports history and a meaningless swatch ...
It’s a game that never fails to go to the dogs, in the best way possible. This Saturday, for one night only, the Sioux Falls Stampede will transform into the Fighting Wiener Dogs.
The Sioux City Police Department is selling pink patches to support breast cancer research and education.
Update: UND club tennis team no longer allowed to sport retired “Fighting Sioux” logo The club team is a student organization, separate from the UND Men’s and Women’s Division I programs.
The PREMIER Center will echo with barking come Saturday as the Sioux Falls Stampede hosts its annual Wiener Dog Races.
Those who continue to claim to be Sioux fans and to engage in identify theft of the artificial Sioux image are unlikely to show any support for what the real Sioux people now are fighting for.
ND should have left ‘Red Tomahawk’ image on its 4,000-plus highway signs The Fighting Sioux nickname controversy was one of the most contentious in North Dakota history. It boiled for decades.
Yes, the Fighting Hawks. North Dakota was famously known as the Fighting Sioux from 1930 until the university retired the nickname in 2012, ending a seven-year battle with the NCAA.
Of the many mystifying decisions handed down by the NCAA, the curious case of North Dakota’s Fighting Sioux nickname is right up there with the former prohibitions on cream-cheesed bagels. In ...
The University of North Dakota felt the only way to keep the Fighting Sioux trademark, which the NCAA requires, was to market the product.