November 3, 2009 11:37 AM

Ole Miss Head Not Just Whistlin' Dixie

(AP)  University of Mississippi football fans who refuse to stop chanting "the South will rise again" are on the verge of losing one of their favorite fight songs, the school's chancellor said Monday.

Ole Miss Chancellor Dan Jones said "From Dixie With Love" will no longer be played at games if fans continue the racially-offensive chant.

Last month, Jones asked the band to abruptly end the tune to discourage the chant, but he says that didn't solve the problem.

Jones said fan reaction during Saturday's game against Northern Arizona would decide the fate of the song, which blends the Confederate Army's fight song, "Dixie," with the Union Army's "Battle Hymn of the Republic." It's been played by the university's band for about two decades.

"From Dixie With Love" (performed by University of Mississippi Band)

"The University of Mississippi is a warm and welcoming place. So many have worked hard to make sure our image moves forward, and we don't want anything to hurt that," Jones said during a luncheon sponsored by the John C. Stennis Institute of Government and the Capitol Press Corps.

"If the chant continues, we will discontinue the music that's associated with it," he said.

All of the university's head coaches, including football coach Houston Nutt, have endorsed the effort to end the chant, said athletics director Pete Boone.

"The chant 'the South will rise again' reflects negatively not only on the university but also on the progress we have made in athletics over the past two decades," Boone said in a recent statement. "We join the super majority of the Ole Miss family in calling for discontinuing the chant."

Jones said the words in the phrase are "harmful" because they've been used by integration opponents in the past. For years, the university has worked to rid itself of an Old South image that included the 1962 violent standoff over James Meredith's admission as the university's first black student.

"I think the vast majority of our students don't understand the significance of this. I think most of the students who are participating in saying those words, don't know how painful they are," Jones said.

The move to abolish the chant began in October when the Ole Miss student government association passed a resolution to change the phrase to "to hell with LSU." The Faculty Senate later took a vote in support of the association and Jones.

Ole Miss has worked to improve its image as a racially diverse environment for decades after the 1962 admission of James Meredith as the school's first black student led to a deadly standoff.

Geoffrey Yoste, 45, a former Ole Miss instructor and retired Army National Guard major, said he agreed the chant is divisive and should stop, but he believes the university has mishandled the situation.

Yoste said Ole Miss officials should have held a convocation for freshmen to discuss what's acceptable on campus, rather "trying to tell a bunch of 21-year-olds what they can't do."

"I would hate for the Ole Miss band to stop playing 'From Dixie with Love.' That would be a terrible tragedy. Even opposing teams that visit, they just think it's something new and special," Yoste said.


<For more info:
Letter from Chancellor Dan Jones (DMOnline.com)
By Associated Press Writer Shelia Byrd

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by RealDeal100 November 6, 2009 9:46 PM EST
This controversy is about a school fight song. It has nothing to do with slavery. And apparently some of you don't know much about Ole Miss - not a whole lot of rednecks there. Lots of preppy rich kids, yes, but rednecks, no. It is a school that prides itself on its tradition - the wonderful things that have happened at Ole Miss over the years -- and that tradition has NOTHING to do with slavery. This is about a SCHOOL AND A SCHOOL FIGHT SONG! News Flash, this school is IN THE SOUTH!!! THE SOUTH RISING AGAIN has to do with hoping the school (which is in the south) will rise again in FOOTBALL!!!!!! Not slavery!! I'm amazed that time is even spent on this!!!! Has anyone taken time to ask the black football players what they think - they don't think their school is racist! They love Ole Miss and the people of Ole Miss love them!! That is abundantly clear!!! There's always some little group that can twist the meaning of ANYTHING you give them and turn it into something racist! None of these students ever owned slaves and I'm sure all know that it was a horrendous thing that happened YEARS AND YEARS AGO, but I'm equally sure that these young people CANNOT FATHOM how someone would turn what they are doing into something racist!! But one of the people commenting earlier is right, the kids are doing things now because somebody told them they couldn't. You get a bunch of 18 to 21 year olds together - that's what happens! Especially when it's something as ridiculous as this. How many things have to be taken away before the people who are complaining are satisfied? How long do the Mississippians of today have to pay for the past of their ancestors? None of the young people at this school have ANYTHING to do with the horrendous things that went on in the past. However, there have been MANY MANY years since slavery was around and 2009 -- why not look at all the GOOD THINGS that have happened since then. And there are a lot of them. Do we EVER GET TO MOVE ON? Stop catering to the FEW who are going to ALWAYS find something to be unhappy about no matter what is done to try to satisfy them!!!! Think of the hundreds of thousands of alumni and fans - black and white - who get chills up their spine when Dixie is played because they are so proud of their team and their school and who love it the way it is!! A big happy family - blacks and whites together!
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by padams10 November 3, 2009 2:03 PM EST
I have an ancestor buried in this country and 3 ancestors buried overseas. They all fought for "their country" ... including the Confederate great-great grandfather. I am just as proud of him as I am of the 3 killed in WWI and WWII. For crying out loud ... it's tradition at this school ... and J U S T a beautiful musical piece that involves two inspirational songs. Is this the only way this Chancellor figures he can get 15 minutes of fame? To try to bend a campus to HIS will?? I pray he does not get HIS way ... I am soooo sick of individuals taking things away the majority. Just like the prayer before a game ... here we go again!!
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by scoobydob November 3, 2009 3:12 PM EST
This really isn't about any of your ancestors personally.
by nordeck52 November 3, 2009 2:01 PM EST
The chant is only offensive if you believe that the Civil War was all about slavery. Because the Civil War was about a number of issues (slavery being the most controversial, granted), the chant is not offensive.

At VA Tech they had the "stick it in" cheer at the football games, that they banned because of the obvious double entendre. Which is worse, this chant or the one at Ole Miss?
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by scoobydob November 3, 2009 3:09 PM EST
we had the ole peanuts popcorn munch,munch,munch eat it Fulton eat it. there was also a hip flex move that went with it.
by vernique November 3, 2009 1:58 PM EST
Hard for me to believe that any black athlete would choose to play for Mississippi. For that matter any college in the south.
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by Constitionalist November 3, 2009 1:22 PM EST
I'll bet over half the students do it just to pi$$ him off.
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by hambonehd November 3, 2009 12:51 PM EST
What a crock.. What's the big deal?
Get over it people.
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by BomburBomburson November 3, 2009 12:42 PM EST
If there is one thing I hate, it's Ole Miss, since I'm from LSU.

But I am behind the students of Ole Miss on this. FIGHT for your way, Ole Miss students! FIGHT THIS, show them your strength and pride! The chancellor needs to respect the will of the students in this, and he is so ignorant that he doesn't understand the chant, and the harkening back to the beauty of grandeur of the South -- not the slavery -- then he's absolutely unfit to run a Southern university. If he won't stop his attempt to blackmail the students, then use your power and get the bum thrown off campus!

Chancellor versus Ole Miss students: My money's on the STUDENTS.
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by endurorob_5 November 3, 2009 12:12 PM EST
We really have become an oversensative bunch.
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by koko98-2009 November 3, 2009 11:36 AM EST
Didn't Senator Stennis filibuster and then vote against every Civil Rights bill that came down the pike during the '60's? These rednecks are too attached to their defeated culture to really let it go.
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