The convoluted (and sometimes controversial) chronology of 鶹Ƶ’s mascot
Compiled by Jan Senn, Photos courtesy of Special Collections & Archives
There are multiple versions of this tale—and several claims to be the “first official mascot”—but we consulted previous histories and 鶹Ƶ’s digital collection to piece together the puzzle using primary sources whenever possible. Here’s our attempt to tell the story of how 鶹Ƶ arrived at its moniker and mascot—while grappling with the question, “What exactly is a Golden Flash, anyway?”
1920–25 鶹Ƶ Normal College establishes its first “real football team with full equipment [and] honest-to-goodness coach” in 1920 (1921 Chestnut Burr), but goes without scoring—or a name—until they call the 1923 team the “Silver Foxes,” after the silver fox ranch adjacent to campus that is co-owned by the school’s first president, John McGilvrey (1923 Chestnut Burr). The 1923 team scores the college's first touchdown and receives this accolade: “The Silver Foxes . . . created a fighting spirit that will live—an undying determination that will make the football record at 鶹Ƶ in the future a thing of joy” (1924 Chestnut Burr). There is no mention of a silver fox (1) ever attending a game.
1926–27 The Board of Trustees dismisses President McGilvrey in January 1926, after his repeated attempts to advance the school’s standing antagonizes the Ohio legislature and the president of The Ohio State University. Acting president T. Howard Winters supposedly institutes a contest (with a $25 prize) to select a new name for 鶹Ƶ athletic teams, and Golden Flashes wins (The Years of Youth by Phillip R. Shriver). However, the Nov. 29, 1927 鶹Ƶr and the 1927 Chestnut Burr still refer to the athletic teams as the Silver Foxes.
1928 The name Golden Flashes appears without ceremony in the Jan. 13, 1928 鶹Ƶr and in the caption for the basketball team in the 1928 Chestnut Burr. However, an ad appears in the June 1, 1928 鶹Ƶr: “Name still open, to be decided Wednesday. ‘Give Kent’s Athletic Teams a Name Contest’ will be decided once and for all at the Recognition Day Banquet . . . at the time to be named, the Orphans of Kent will officially have a name.” Names to be voted on include the already recognized “Silver Foxes” and “Golden Flashes,” but “Hurricanes” and “Warriors” are strong contenders.
“Golden Flashes,” which apparently wins again, is said to be derived from the popular California Golden Bears at the University of California, Berkeley, national champions in 1920. Oliver Wolcott, who played football at 鶹Ƶ in 1922 and became sports editor of the Kent Courier-Tribune, perpetuates its use in his columns (as recalled in a recording, circa 1983, by Richard "Moose" Paskert ’49, athlete, coach and administrator in the athletics program for more than 40 years). 鶹Ƶ teams use the symbol of a lightning bolt (2) for many years.
1941 The Sept. 25, 1941 鶹Ƶr claims that at the evening’s pep rally, “Mascot to be Surprise: Feature of the evening is to be the first appearance of a mascot on the Kent Campus.” Georgie Starn, young son of head coach Rosie Starn, leads a three-month-old German shepherd puppy named “Kim” onto the stage. The dog has been offered as a mascot by Jack Kauvar, sophomore cheerleader, to “cavort at all the Blue and Gold games.” However, subsequent issues of the 鶹Ƶr report that Kauvar is accepting donations to pay for the dog’s hospital bills (Oct. 9), that he doesn’t have time to keep Kim any more and needs to find him a good home (Oct. 15), that three people have offered to raise the puppy (Oct. 16) and finally that Kauvar has loaned Kim to the Sigma Tau Gamma Fraternity, but will continue to see that he is fed (Oct. 23).
1955 The cover of the December 1955 Kent Alumnus is a photo of a golden retriever puppy wearing a cape branded with a “K” (3). The caption reads: “Four-month-old 鶹Ƶ Golden Flasher I is the university’s first official mascot. A gift of the Ravenna Kennel Club, our mascot is a golden retriever from the Cheyenne Golden Kennels in Kansas and will weigh eighty pounds when full grown.” For a time, the dog appears at all home games, but develops a bone disease and has to be replaced (Paskert recording).
1957–61 An ad for postcards of Golden Flasher II appears in the Jan. 23, 1957 Daily 鶹Ƶr, and the 1958 Chestnut Burr notes that “By selling dinks to freshmen and mums for Homecoming, the Golden K group [formed to encourage student support at athletic activities] makes enough money to care for the KSU mascot, Golden Flasher II.” However, a three-month disagreement between the Golden K and the Student Council over expenditures results in Golden K “gifting” the dog to the council, which then debates what to do with it (Feb. 9, 1961 Daily 鶹Ƶr). Golden K eventually gives the dog away and asks to use the funds formerly allocated for its care to make “a mascot out of a person dressed in a costume.” Council holds the funds in reserve until Golden K can be more specific about the project and its cost (June 1, 1961 Daily 鶹Ƶr).
1968–74 Grog, the caveman character from the popular comic strip B.C., arrives on the scene. Conceived of in the spring of 1967 by Joe Joyce ’69 and Gene Ferrara ’74 of the Chestnut League (the revamped spirit organization formed in 1964), he doesn’t show up at games until the fall of 1968 (Feb. 26, 1969 Daily 鶹Ƶr). In the meantime, Chuck Ayers ’71, cartoonist for the Daily 鶹Ƶr, requests permission to use Grog as 鶹Ƶ’s mascot from its creator, cartoonist Johnny Hart (March 4, 1971, Daily 鶹Ƶr).
The eight-foot-tall, 50-pound costume is made of wood supports and furry cloth by Esser Costume Co. of Pittsburgh for $500 ( 1978 Homecoming supplement, Daily 鶹Ƶr).
“It was heavy and hot‚” says then 鶹Ƶ baseball player Ron DeGrand ’74, who wore the costume in 1970–72 at both football and basketball games. “I would be wringing wet after a basketball game. But nobody could figure out what a Flash was, so Grog was as good a mascot as any.”
Despite misadventures when the costume temporarily goes missing several times, Grog (4) continues to amuse fans until 1974, when he is phased out as mascot by the athletic department. He still shows up as a logo on DuBois Bookstore bags for years afterward.
1971–74 During the tenure of head football coach Don James, the athletic department introduces a western-themed horse and rider (5) for all Dix Stadium games. The horse cantors up and down the sidelines during the game and up the 50-yard line following a touchdown. Gary Urchek ’77, whose father was friends with Don James, rode his Arabian stallion, Raffstar, for one season, but says he also borrowed a golden palomino at the request of the athletic department (who called it Golden Flasher). His sister, Diane Urchek Coe ’76, ’86 MEd, took over the next season and also rode Raffstar, as seen in a photo (6) from the 1974 Chestnut Burr (Paskert recording, Urchek interview).
In 1972, members of a Name Change Committee mount an effort to change the athletic team name. “It’s a dynamic name and an original one,” protests sports writer Dave Wolfson ’72 in the April 7, 1972 Daily 鶹Ƶr. “Ask current team members and past members, and the overwhelming majority will favor keeping the current nickname. They carried the name of ‘Golden Flashes’ with pride and they are not ready for it to be needlessly thrown out.” The name stays.
1977 A golden retriever mascot returns to the scene and is proclaimed KSU’s “first official mascot” (Oct. 14, 1977, Daily 鶹Ƶr). The 19-week-old golden retriever—donated by the Blue and Gold Club, a KSU booster organization—is named “MAC the Flash” by Karen Fuller ’73, who wins a “name the mascot” contest held by the athletic department and WKNT radio. “There was no poll or contest for students to help decide what mascot would be selected,” Terry Barnard‚ sports information director says. “But‚ officially, Flash represents the intercollegiate athletic department, not the student body” (Oct. 6‚ 1978 Daily 鶹Ƶr). He remains the mascot (7) at least until 1979.
1981–83 After the golden retriever, the mascot reverts back “to costumed individuals roaming about in attire with lightning bolts” (Paskert recording), perhaps based on a drawing of a superhero brandishing lightning flashes and signed “Hinkel ’81” (8). The costumed characters apparently go under various names‚ including Freddie Flash‚ Golden Flash‚ Flashman and Captain Flash (9)‚ as seen in a photo from the 1982 Chestnut Burr.
1985 To increase school spirit and introduce a new era during the university’s sesquicentennial, the athletics department hatches an elaborate and carefully scripted campaign to unveil “鶹Ƶ’s first official mascot, Flash—The Golden Eagle” during the Oct. 12 Homecoming game against the University of Texas-El Paso (Oct. 15, 1985 Daily 鶹Ƶr). Terry Barnard‚ then director of Athletic Marketing and Communications‚ says an eagle was chosen because the university wanted something proud and “there is nothing prouder than an eagle” (Sept. 3, 1985, Daily 鶹Ƶr). A new logo also includes an eagle.
Many people prepare for the reveal, including students in the Kent Technology Education Club who put in more than 300 hours to construct a giant egg (10) out of fiberglass and resin, which is brought onto the field at halftime. As the band plays, the egg opens, a student in a golden eagle costume (11) runs to the 50-yard line, and a live golden eagle flies from the band tunnel to a perch on centerfield. The 23-year-old golden eagle, formerly named Wembli, is christened as “Flash” (12) during the festivities. It lives in Baden, Pa., with its handler, Earl Shriver Jr. and appears at select home events until the mid-90s.
Additional costumes are made, such as this 1986 one (13) for basketball games. Although the golden eagle is met with some scorn by students who object to having no part in creating “a unique mascot,” (Oct. 22, 1985 Daily 鶹Ƶr), it endures, in updated versions, as the school’s official mascot (14).
2008 A new live golden eagle, Flash, makes its debut as 鶹Ƶ’s official mascot on Jan. 23, 2008, prior to a men’s basketball game with Akron (15). Hit by a truck in California‚ the rescued bird was sent to Back to the Wild, a wildlife rehabilitation and nature education center in Castalia, Ohio. It is disabled and unable to return to the wild, says Mona Rutger, founder of Back to the Wild, who uses fees from renting the eagle to benefit the center’s mission.
However, a representative from PETA, contacted by someone concerned about the eagle’s role at sporting events, writes a letter urging 鶹Ƶ to use a costumed mascot instead. Rutger says the eagle preens its feathers and eats after the games, signs that it is not stressed. Still‚ she agrees that having a bird at a sporting event isn’t ideal (June 18, 2008 Summer 鶹Ƶr).
Flash Today
“From what I understand‚ there are no plans to use a live animal as a mascot‚” says James Tunney ’15, who handles the scheduling for Flash in both human and inflatable form. “Life is easier with a human inside a furry suit. I think we’re going to stick with that.”
Facts about Flash
- Flash is always referred to as a male‚ no matter the sex of the person inside the suit.
- There is one main Flash for football games (scheduled from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.) and alternate Flashes for one-hour events.
- Students who audition for Flash (preferably 5'5" to 5'9") are scored in eight categories: enthusiasm‚ creativity‚ interaction with students‚ reaction to surroundings‚ portrayal of emotion‚ animation‚ ease of movement‚ overall appearance and presence.
- The Flash mascot costumes are built by Scollon Productions Inc. in White Rock, S.C.
- Each suit is washed after use if the event is over one hour in length; the bicycle helmet inside the Flash head is disinfected once a week, as are the feet; and the fur on both the head and suit is brushed two to three times per month or as needed. So Flash is fresh!
Flash attends all football, men’s/women’s basketball and volleyball matches; select wrestling, gymnastics, baseball and softball games; and campus and community events when needed.
For more information or to hire Flash for a corporate or private event, contact ksuflashesmascot@gmail.com, call 330-672-3970, or fill out the .