Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
10:45 pm Saturday, July 26, 2003

A wheelbarrow full of fan fury

By By Buddy Bynum / editor
July 20, 2003
Ole Miss Chancellor Robert Khayat just thinks he has it bad. Look at what's happening over in Georgia, where a controversy is brewing over sentiments that seem to run much deeper than changing a mascot.
As The Associated Press reported the other day from Atlanta, "Hundreds of growling mad Georgia Bulldog fans rallied at the state Capitol Tuesday, demanding the school president be fired for asking athletic director Vince Dooley to leave."
Earlier, about 200 Georgia fans marched outside the state Capitol to protest a decision by university president Michael Adams to dump Dooley when his contract expires next summer. Georgia hasn't seen this much excitement since Lester Maddox the ax-handle-wielding firebrand of redneck politics was elected governor.
The fans dressed in red and black and chanted Damn sorry Dog!'' about Adams. They delivered a wheelbarrow full of signatures to the Board of Regents office nearby.
What else can I say except, thanks, thanks, thanks and I love you, I love you, I love you,'' Dooley told several thousand at a Bulldog Club meeting, according to AP.
Dooley led Georgia to a national football championship in 1980 and was truly a great coach. His fans are obviously more loyal to him than CIA Director George Tenent is to President Bush.
One Georgia fan, identified as Billy Powell of Fort Valley, made the most pointed comments of the day, directed at Adams. He likened the university president to Satan.
He's a very egocentric and arrogant man,'' Powell told the crowd. Nothing but a demon from hell unleashed this controversy at the University of Georgia.''
Khayat may be criticized in some quarters for the decision to eliminate Col. Rebel from the sidelines of Ole Miss football games, but I haven't heard anyone liken him to Lucifer. The Ole Miss chancellor did write an editorial piece that ran in Mississippi newspapers explaining what the university is trying to accomplish with the mascot change. Nothing devilish in that, just an effort to move Ole Miss forward into the new century.
I'm on record as supporting the move to a new mascot at Ole Miss and, hey, if Vince Dooley retiring somehow helps Mississippi's two SEC universities beat the Georgia Dogs more often, then I'm for that, too.
What the Georgia episode says is that we care about college football in the South maybe even more than we care about academics. That's why athletic directors and football coaches are paid so much more than, say, English professors. And, we love the legendary characters like Dooley, or Bear Bryant or Johnny Vaught who have helped make college football what it is.
Legends die hard, and noisily, down here.
While the president of the University of Georgia is trying to get Vince Dooley off its campus, the former principal of Amite County High School apparently was trying to get some of his students onto college campuses. Trouble was, they may not have had the academic credentials.
According to AP, the Amite County School Board upheld the suspension of former high school principal Charlie Floyd, who was suspended without pay on Oct. 10 for allegedly changing grades in an attempt to help about 45 students attend a university. The story didn't say, but presumably, he was boosting their scores.
Isn't that sort of like, well, cheating?
Former schools superintendent Mary Russ also claimed that Floyd, the school's track coach, neglected his duties as full-time principal to pursue non-school activities and held track events for private groups on school property without fully explaining the events to the board.
School board attorney Cynthia Davis would not comment, except to say the school district had "complied with the statute and the letter decision has been delivered to Mr. Floyd." How many times have you heard a school board attorney say a district has never compiled with a statute and doesn't intend to?
Floyd denied any wrongdoing.

Also on Franklin County Times
Housing authority PILOT is waived
Main, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — City councilmembers recently voted to waive a payment in lieu of taxes, often called PILOT, from the Russellville Housing Authority. Pu...
Playground safety concerns are addressed
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
March 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — City officials say steps are being taken to improve safety at the playground in City Lake Park after parents raised concerns about dama...
Petition: Accountability sought from AHSAA
High School Sports, Main, Red Bay Tigers, ...
By Brady Petree and Bernie Delinski For the FCT 
March 11, 2026
RED BAY — A petition created by a Red Bay man calls for the Alabama High School Athletic Association to replay six state semifinal basketball games af...
State’s positive CWD cases nearly doubles
Franklin County, News
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
March 11, 2026
The total number of positive cases of chronic wasting disease (CWD) found in white-tailed deer almost doubled in Alabama following the end of the 2025...
Pace crowned Miss RHS
News, Russellville
By María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimew.com 
March 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Lily Cate Pace was crowned the new Miss RHS during the 44th annual Miss RHS Pageant. Pace, a senior at Russellville High School who is ...
Scholars Bowl team competes at nationals
News, Phil Campbell
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 11, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Snow and ice kept the Northwest Shoals Community College Scholars Bowl team from attending a January qualifying tournament, but it sti...
The gimmick that became a calling
News
Chelsea Rutherford For the FCT 
March 11, 2026
Rick Revel was just 15 when he stood backstage at the Grand Ole Opry and received career-shaping advice from country icon Roy Acuff — if you want to m...
Read Across America celebrated
Franklin County, News
In the Community
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 11, 2026
Elementary schools throughout the county marked Read Across America Week with activities. At Vina Elementary School, firefighter Justin Epperson and E...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *