http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/native-groups-look-retire-cleveland-indians-chief-wahoo-n137176 Amid the controversy surrounding the Washington Redskinsâ team name, some Native American groups hope public outcry turns toward a different teamâs symbol, more than 300 miles to the northwest: Chief Wahoo, the bright red, wide-grinning face of the Cleveland Indians baseball team. âItâs been offensive since day one,â Robert Roche, a Chiricahua Apache and longtime opponent of the Indiansâ team name and logo, told NBC News. âWe are not mascots. My children are not mascots. We are people.â Roche said his group, People Not Mascots, is preparing to file a federal lawsuit against the Indians over the team name and logo. He expects the suit to be filed by the end of July. The Cleveland Indians declined to comment to NBC News. Groups like People Not Mascots hope that new pressure will be applied to the Indians following last Wednesday's decision by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which stripped the Redskins of its trademark and declared the team name to be âa racial slur.â The 2-1 vote came after widespread protests â from several news organizations to President Obama. Chief Wahoo's growing list of critics includes U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat from Ohio who signed a letter with 50 other Senators opposing the Redskinsâ team name. Brown supports keeping the Indians name but thinks the team should retire Wahoo, a spokeswoman said this week. The Redskins said it will appeal Wednesdayâs ruling. The team won an appeal that challenged a similar 1999 trademark ruling. âWeâve seen this story before. And just like last time, todayâs ruling will have no effect at all on the teamâs ownership of and right to use the Redskins name and logo,â said Bob Raskopf, the teamâs trademark lawyer. However, intensifying objections could hit a professional teamâs bottom line if fans pressure sponsors to abandon the team, said David Carter, executive director of the Sports Business Institute at the University of Southern California. âTeam sponsors, more so than league or venue sponsors, may feel the heat from fans and advocacy groups due to their primary attachment to the franchise,â Carter said. The Redskins could see sponsors walk away and corporate sales dry up if the team is seen as racist, Vanderbilt University economics professor John Vrooman told NBC News, but the trademark ruling is unlikely to affect the other professional sports teams that use Native American-inspired names or logos such as Chief Wahoo. âThis decision will probably not have a domino effect, because the Redskins name is uniquely a disparaging racial slur,â Vrooman said. In fact, some professional teams have developed amicable relationships with Native American communities. Andrew Johnson, executive director of the American Indian Center in Chicago and a Cherokee, said his group has a good relationship with the Chicago Blackhawks hockey team, whose team name and logo reference a Sauk Indian who resisted the seizure of his peopleâs land in Illinois. The team last year gave the center a $60,000 grant so it could build athletic facilities, it invites Native American veterans as guests of honor to several games a year and it discourages fans from showing up in feathers and face paint, Johnson said. âIf you went to a Hawks game 20 years ago, you would see all the costumes and comical stuff. You really donât see too much of that today,â said Johnson, whose center serves the 100 tribes located in the Chicago area. âThe Blackhawks have made an overt effort not to televise them. They try to discourage it.â Less galling to some is the fact that the Black Hawk was a person, while the Indians and Redskins â and the âtomahawk chopâ used by fans of the Atlanta Braves â are generalizations, Johnson said. âI think if you look at the two most disparaging symbols you have Chief Wahoo and the Redskins,â he said. Chief Wahoo, in his current form, has been used by the Cleveland Indians for more than 60 years. The team last year began giving more prominence to an alternative logo, a block letter C, causing speculation that Wahoo is on his way out â something the team has denied. In Cleveland, there seems to be general support for Chief Wahoo, said Mike Brandyberry, managing editor of the website Did The Tribe Win Last Night?, and any controversy about the symbol isn't a topic of daily conversation. Last year, the site agreed to publish an essay from a fan who called for retiring Chief Wahoo, but it also offered to publish any responses from fans wanting to keep the logo. âWhen you think of the Cleveland Indians, you think of Chief Wahoo.â âWe didnât receive one,â Brandyberry said. âI would say the majority of Indians fans and Clevelanders support Chief Wahoo,â but added that he personally is ambivalent about a logo change. A movement on Twitter, #DeChief, began in March encouraging fans to remove Chief Wahooâs likeness from hats and memorabilia on their own. Another social media campaign, #keepthechief, was created to support the logo. Bob Rosen, president of the Indians fan organization The Wahoo Club, is firmly in the latter camp. âChief Wahoo is smiling, heâs happy. I donât look at it as degrading â itâs a symbol of a positive thing,â said Rosen, 54, whose group has about 1,650 members. âWhen you think of the Cleveland Indians, you think of Chief Wahoo.â