Thanks to a student-led initiative, the University of Nebraska’s academic medical center– known for producing not student-athletes, but student health care leaders – has officially claimed the Labrador retriever as its mascot.
Although UNMC Labs gather on different fields than Cornhuskers, Mavericks and Lopers, Nicole Kent, student senate president and student regent at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said the mascot gives UNMC students “something that connects us and something to rally behind as a UNMC community.”
“I’m so excited to be a UNMC Lab,” she said.
Today, Kent and other student senate leaders will celebrate the Lab mascot on the UNMC Omaha campus during Pups and Popsicles, a De-Stress Week event, scheduled from 11 a.m. to noon at the Ruth and Bill Scott Student Plaza green space. Therapy dogs from Paws for Friendship also will be on hand.
The UNMC Bookstore plans to have Lab apparel and other merchandise in the near future.
UNMC Chancellor Jeffrey P. Gold, MD, said he was proud of the new UNMC mascot, especially since its creation was driven by UNMC student leaders.
“It’s a great day to be a Lab,” he said. “Our new mascot is a sign of student spirit at UNMC and, with its nod to our cutting-edge science, celebrates UNMC’s commitment to transforming lives in Nebraska and beyond.”
Kent said the idea for a mascot came about as UNMC student senate leaders were interacting with student colleagues from the other University of Nebraska campuses. It hit them that UNMC was the only campus without a mascot.
So last year, student senate leaders proposed a mascot contest to build community among the students.
UNMC students can easily stay separated in their many different academic programs, Kent said. “We wanted something for students from all of our colleges and all of our campuses to be able to rally around.”
With the support of the Office of the Chancellor and Office of the Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, the students moved ahead. At the beginning of this school year, they opened a selection process for submissions, receiving almost 50 ideas.
Then, a student senate committee, working with UNMC Strategic Communications, narrowed the submissions to four finalists and polled students on their favorite.
Labs came out the clear winner.
The winning concept – of a dog wearing laboratory safety goggles and a white coat – was submitted by Caroline Seilstad, a UNMC graduate studies student, and is based on Ellie, a 16-year-old black Labrador that has attended campus events over the years. The graphic image of the Lab plays on UNMC’s clinical care and research, along with the dog breed’s loyal, curious and caring nature.
Designed by the creative staff in UNMC Strategic Communications, the official Lab logo – with a dog wearing a lapeled white coat – is an image befitting any university mascot.
Said Kent, “We are honored to be the UNMC Labs.”