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The Kansas City Chiefs logo features an arrowhead The drum used in the Chiefs’ chop. The Kansas City Chiefs are one of the professional sports teams involved in the controversy regarding the use of Native American names and imagery, but received less attention than other teams until 2013 when fan behavior at games, including stereotypical ...
A Native American rights group is planning a protest on Sunday urging the Kansas City Chiefs to retire the team's name and stop fans from using an in-game tomahawk chop ahead of Super Bowl LV in ...
The story of Super Bowl LIX isn't the Kansas City Chiefs' quest for a third straight title or even the Philadelphia Eagles' great run to an NFC championship. It's the officials. NFL fans are ...
Two Kansas City groups continue to protest the Chiefs’ use of Native American imagery in the team name and cheer.
Tribe of Micosay Harold Roe Bartle c. 1925, Scout Executive of the St. Joseph Area Council. Micosay was founded in 1925 at Camp Brinton near Agency, Missouri under the guidance of Harold Roe Bartle, who was the Scout executive of the St. Joseph Council, now Pony Express Council.
The Kansas City Chiefs' fans doing the tomahawk chop. The Chiefs first heard it in November 1990, when the Northwest Missouri State band, directed by 1969 Florida State graduate Al Sergel, did the chant. "It is a direct descendant of Florida State," said Chiefs promotions director Phil Thomas.
When the Kansas City Chiefs take the field at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, thousands of fans will see the culmination of five decades of striving for the NFL's ultimate stage: the Super Bowl.
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