Willie the Wildcat (cont.)
Several decades before this, beginning as early as 1922, a real wildcat named Touchdown
supplied the mascot symbolism at games. And, from 1906 to 1909, Boscoe, a black Labrador,
represented K-State at baseball and football games.
In the 1960s, Sigma Chi fraternity members played Willie. Later that decade, the mascot
looked like Mickey Mouse, and K-State wanted a new image.
Jim Hagan '50, '66, '68, a sculptor and artist, created a newer, meaner-looking Willie.
Hagan made two Willie heads out of coyote and wolf hair. The first head lasted from
1967 until 1980. The second lasted until 1993.
In 1993, the Kaw Valley Catbacker Club donated the fifth Willie head. The new head
was rounder and made out of artificial fur. Willie received a face-lift again in fall
1997.
This Willie head, still used today, has gray fur with two white stripes to resemble
the Powercat logo. The current head weighs 5 pounds. For more than 50 years, one tradition
with Willie has remained the same: the identity of Willie is still kept a secret.