You have a registered email address and password on pressherald.com, but we are unable to locate a paid subscription attached to these credentials. Please verify your current subsription or subscribe.
Zachary Queenan and Nicole Carter joined 40 sign-carrying people who held a silent protest against changing the use of the American Indian as a sports mascot in Skowhegan schools before a meeting of SAD 54’s education policy program committee and representatives of the Wabanaki federation in Skowhegan on Monday.
Skowhegan officials meet over mascot -
|
of
|
Share this photo
Zachary Queenan and Nicole Carter joined 40 sign-carrying people who held a silent protest against changing the use of the American Indian as a sports mascot in Skowhegan schools before a meeting of SAD 54’s education policy program committee and representatives of the Wabanaki federation in Skowhegan on Monday.
Show
Hide
Skowhegan officials meet over mascot -
|
of
|
Share this photo
Barry Dana, center, former chief of the Penobscot Nation, arrives with others who want Skowhegan schools to cease using an American Indian as a sports mascot to attend a meeting with members of SAD 54’s education policy program committee in Skowhegan on Monday.
Show
Hide
Skowhegan officials meet over mascot -
|
of
|
Share this photo
Members of SAD 54’s education policy program committee, back row, listen to representatives of the Wabanaki federation who want Skowhegan schools to cease using an American Indian as a sports mascot during a meeting in Skowhegan on Monday.
Show
Hide
Skowhegan officials meet over mascot -
|
of
|
Share this photo
Skylar Carter was among 40 people who turned out to support keeping the American Indian as a sports mascot in Skowhegan schools before a meeting of representatives of the Wabanaki federation and SAD 54’s education policy program committee on Monday.