jtstang wrote:DiamondM wrote:Finally, endowing the SMU mascot is an excellent idea.
I think nature has taken care of that issue.
Well said
Moderators: PonyPride, SmooPower
MustangStealth wrote:What an interesting coincidence on those last two letters... are we in the twilight zone?
Kappas Are Yummy wrote:"Meadows filth"? You're a serious a-hole dude.
MustangStealth wrote:That would be one of the same people listed as being behind this: "John Gibson in development" (unless we have hired a new John Gibson). I believe he is a Red Raider, and has been sent here on a secret mission to undermine SMU traditions and support -- by trying to make us more like them.
KnuckleStang wrote:For the record, I am myself a proud Meadows graduate, and have no problem referring to this person as Meadows Filth.
Also, what is the Mustang Band director's name, and how can it be that he is "not opposed to the idea" of changing the mascot.
Eloquently put, DiamondM.
DiamondM wrote:Here is what I sent to Scot and to the Daily Campus editors:
When I first read the proposal to replace Peruna with a full size Mustang, I tried to envision how it would work. I really did. I thought, ├óΓé¼┼ôLet’s set aside tradition for a moment, and think about the practical pros and cons of this.├óΓé¼┬¥ But, then I realized that the point is that you can’t just set aside tradition without a really good reason to do so. Therefore, I’ll return to the practical considerations in a moment, but let’s start with the issue of tradition.
I have no doubt that an informal straw poll of your average, uninvolved SMU students and alumni will find support for replacing Peruna with a full size Mustang. This is a symptom of a problem that has troubled me since I became a student at SMU in 1990: the failure of the university and its students to take the time and energy to teach, learn, understand, respect, embrace, and defend its traditions. How many times have we heard some student or alumnus complain that SMU doesn’t have any ├óΓé¼┼ôcool├óΓé¼┬¥ traditions like XYZ university? Or that we should start some new tradition because our mascot, fight song, colors, band, whatever is stupid? The thing is, the reason why certain traditions at XYZ university seem ├óΓé¼┼ôcool├óΓé¼┬¥ is because the students and everyone associated with the university (a) know about them, and (b) participate in them. Most traditions may seem silly or stupid to an outsider (or an uniformed insider), but when even the seemingly silliest tradition (Aggie yell practice, Stanford’s tree mascot, Woo Pig Sooie are just some examples) becomes ├óΓé¼┼ôwhat WE do,├óΓé¼┬¥ not only do people associated within the university support that tradition, but outsiders start to admire the tradition because so many are committed to and participate in it. If you want a ├óΓé¼┼ôcool├óΓé¼┬¥ tradition, start participating in the many traditions we already have.
And so it goes with Peruna. If SMU students were taught the history of Peruna, they might just embrace the tradition of the small, feisty, yet accessible mascot. In some ways, a small yet spirited horse is a much better symbol of a small, private university who is often the underdog than a full-sized Mustang. And even if that weren’t the case, just as a soft fluffy collie is Texas A&M’s mascot and a goat is Navy’s mascot, Peruna is MY mascot. That is what makes him special ├óΓé¼ΓÇ£ he’s MINE and he’s YOURS. What we have here is just another case of tradition-envy (├óΓé¼┼ôtheirs is bigger than mine├óΓé¼┬¥) thinly veiled by laudable goals of environmental and historical consciousness.
Now to the practical part. This proposal suggests that the new and ├óΓé¼┼ôimproved├óΓé¼┬¥ Mustang will never have a rider, and rightly so. As we all recognize, once you put a rider on a horse, it’s a Texas Tech Red Raider, a Traveler, or somebody else’s mascot, but it’s not a Mustang,. Without a rider, the new Mustang will not be able to run across the field. Period. No handler can run with a full size horse, and no conference in the world is going to let us just have a horse run across the field on his own. So where does that leave us? With a heavily sedated large livestock animal standing on the sidelines tied to a post or in a pen. Ooooh, sounds inspiring. That really reflects the spirit of the wild Mustang, doesn’t it?
Plus, a full size riderless Mustang also eliminates the very important ambassador role that Peruna serves on the Boulevard and at other local appearances. Peruna is mobile, approachable and accessible to kids and adults alike. A full-size Mustang simply cannot perform this function.
Finally, endowing the SMU mascot is an excellent idea. It costs money to feed, care for, and transport the mascot (more for a full-size horse than for Peruna), and more funding is always better. But why do we have to discard a 75 year old tradition to start a Peruna endowment? Let’s support the traditions we already have, both financially and emotionally. I’ve said it once, and I’ll say it again: Peruna is MY mascot.