Due to the on-going discussions about our lack of a mascot, I found a recent post on the ‘Lafayette Memories’ Facebook page kind of interesting. Since some prob don’t venture into the fb world, thought I’d share it here:
1982: LAFAYETTE HISTORY.
WHAT DOES A ‘RAGIN’ CAJUN’ LOOK LIKE?
From the Lafayette Daily Advertiser of August 20th, 1982:
SO THAT’S WHAT A USL RAGIN’ CAJUN LOOKS LIKE?
Ever wonder what a Ragin’ Cajun is supposed to look like? So did the University of Southwestern Louisiana, which claims it as a mascot.
After a months-long contest, the university today announced the winners of its Ragin’ Cajun mascot design contest. USL will use the mascot for athletic events and on sports-related publications and promotional material.
Anne Sargent of New Iberia took the first place prize of $1,000 with a rendition of a shotgun-carrying hunter figure riding a giant crawfish, gripping the creature’s feelers as reigns.
“This Ragin’ Cajun can be a fun part of the USL football games,” Sargent writes in her explanation of the design. “The crawfish he is riding on can be constructed around a three-wheeled vehicle. He can lead the football team onto the field before games, riding the crawfish.”
Second place prize of $100 went to Fern Martin, a Lafayette advertising illustrator. Her rendition shows a menacing figure restraining a large alligator with a chain leash.
A committee of USL students, faculty and alumni evaluated the 80 different renditions submitted in the contest. According to committee chairman Fred Packard, a professor of art at USL, the committee reached a quick consensus on the winner.
Packard said that Sargent’s design was chosen because of the concept of the Ragin’ Cajun riding a crawfish. The awards were made on the basis of concept rather than the specific visual representation presented.
Ideas for the Ragin’ Cajun figure ranged from amalgams of different animal parts (among them crawfish, pelicans, raccoons, armadillos), to an “E.T.C.” (extraterrestrial Cajun) to human figures in a variety of costumes and attitudes.
Lafayette Daily Advertiser 8/20/1982.