News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education
Oct. 7
The allegations sound like the exploits of Mötley Crüe:
Women and men stripping to their underwear on a tour bus.
Drunken band members urinating in elevators.
A drummer giving lap dances.
Such behavior was routine for the University of California at Davis’ Cal Aggie Marching Band, according to the student group’s director. And, as the San Francisco Chronicle reported Monday, Director Tom Slabaugh found he had little power to stop the madness, even after filing a sexual harassment complaint against his own band.
The allegations in California are the latest in a string of incidents that have raised questions about the behavior of athletic marching bands. The University of Wisconsin at Madison suspended its band Friday as a result of “serious hazing allegations,” “alcohol use” and “sexualized behavior.” Last month, the marching band at Prairie View A&M University was suspended after an anonymous person claimed band members had been hit and had their heads shaven during hazing rituals.
“It is a part of the culture [of marching bands], and it’s got to stop,” said George Edwards, head marching band director at Prairie View.
“It’s not just the small schools,” he added. “It’s large schools as well.”
Edwards suspended the band for the Prairie View’s football game against Texas College, required members to receive training on hazing and removed several members from the organization. One member, who had reportedly stopped paying tuition and was therefore no longer considered a student in good standing, agreed never to return to the campus, Edwards said.
Edwards, who has led the band since 1984, said this was the first time he’s ever suspended the entire band. He said he wanted to send a strong message of zero tolerance to the band, which has been selected to play at the Tournament of Roses parade in 2009. Absent a strong signal, Edwards said, he’s worried students would be in danger.
“Somebody can lose their life behind it, and it’s not worth it,” Edwards said. “To lose a kid over some silliness is unacceptable. I just don’t want it to happen on my watch.”
California Takes No Public Action
While Prairie View and Wisconsin took public action in response to serious allegations about band behavior, it’s unclear what – if anything – Davis has done since Slabaugh filed a complaint in May. Janet Gong, senior associate vice chancellor of student affairs, said privacy laws prevented her from discussing any specific action the university may have taken since Slabaugh’s complaint was made.
“If students abridge the expectations of the university, whether they are part of an organization or part of a team, there are a range of behavioral sanctions that the university can employ, understanding again responsibilities for due process,” Gong said.
What’s clear, however, is that the band as a whole has not been suspended.
“They were at the football game this last Saturday night, and performed in a responsible way I might add,” Gong said.
At Davis, the Cal Aggie band is a student organization, and Slabaugh did not have the authority to suspend or remove band members – even though he felt that was warranted in some cases, according to Chad Carlock, his lawyer. Slabaugh’s requests for more authority haven’t led to any changes, Carlock said.
“There’s been so far mostly hand-wringing about whether to implement his suggestions,” Carlock said.
In the four years prior to Slabaugh’s 2007 appointment, the band had interim leadership that provided “advice and counsel,” Gong said. While Gong acknowledged that student organizations like the band “have probably the most autonomy and freedom of any of our university entities,” she stressed that such organizations are still subject to university rules.
Director Says He Felt Powerless
Slabaugh, who is directing media inquires to his lawyer, has been on stress-related leave from the university since September, Carlock said. Prior to Slabaugh’s hiring, university officials mentioned that they wanted to put someone in place that would have greater oversight of the band, his lawyer said.
“My understanding is that [increased oversight was] discussed to some extent,” Carlock said. “I think part of the reason that he’s a little frustrated is that he understood part of his charge was to see what needed to be done and do it, and he hoped to get the backing to do that.”
California-Davis officials refused to provide a copy of Slabaugh’s complaint to Inside Higher Ed, saying the document detailed a “personnel matter.” Carlock, however, said the San Francisco Chronicle’s story accurately portrayed Slabaugh’s concerns. In the complaint, Slabaugh attached photos of band members with their pants down at an April picnic, and another photo with an equipment manager simulating oral sex on a trombone player, the newspaper reported.
Slabaugh also discussed a Christmas card he’d received from the trombone players. The card, which featured a picture of Santa Claus, read “I saw you masturbating,” the Chronicle reported.
It is increasingly uncommon for college-level marching bands to be run by students, as is the case at Davis. Mark Spede, director of bands at Clemson University, said marching band is now administered as a for-credit course at most institutions.
“That particular band [in California] is one of only a handful around the country that operates under those constraints,” said Spede, who directs the Athletic Band Task Force for the College Band Directors National Association. “Most of your band programs will be run by a director of the marching band; and they are a full-fledged faculty member, and certainly would have the authority to remove people from the course, to fail them or give them a lower grade based on behaviors.”
Spede said he views the recent allegations of hazing and harassment as isolated incidents.
“I think this is actually remnants from what things were like a long time ago,” he said. “My impression is you’re seeing the last vestiges of stuff like this. These are issues that colleges and universities have been dealing with pretty proactively in the recent past.”
But Susan Lipkins, a psychologist who studies hazing, says the practice is still going strong in just about any “hierarchical structure,” including marching bands. And in places where hazing happens, she says it’s getting worse.
“I have seen in the last 10 years that hazing has become more violent and more sexualized,” said Lipkins, who runs a Web site called Insidehazing.com.
Lipkins, author of Preventing Hazing, said she was pleased to see Wisconsin officials suspend the band for hazing allegations. She called the sanction “a huge statement,” but she questioned whether colleges have created systems to truly deal with hazing and abuse.
“They don’t really give opportunities to report,” she said. “They don’t really encourage it, they don’t really have a system of investigating, they haven’t created an atmosphere where people are rewarded for reporting.”
Wisconsin’s band, which was still on suspension as of Monday, was placed on probation for similar allegations of sexual hazing and harassment in the fall of 2006. Asked if the university started any new educational programs or additional oversight after that incident, Wisconsin officials declined to comment.
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Tulips are sometimes red. (I thought one non-sequitur comment merited another.)
Doug, Professor and Director of Writing at University of Denver, at 12:00 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
From the several stories and multiple comments I have read regarding this problem, I wonder that perhaps this university will have to “disband” its band program for several years and when it is finally allowed to return, only as a director-led organization. 18-22 year-olds are adults only in the legal sense. They’ve certainly shown themselves incapable of running something like a band program. They need a real adult to be the leader.
Carlo, at 1:00 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
As an old -time band geek, I want to inform you all in academia that marching bands have been behaving this way since the beginning of time — even in the high schools — as far as stripping down on the bus goes — let me tell you — when you are in a heavy band uniform, and have marched a parade or played and marched a football game, you are sweating half to death, have horse dookie on your shoes — because they always put the bands behind the horses in the parades — the first thing you want to do is peel the uniform off and privacy be damned! You head off to that bus and that is the first thing you do. As for urinating in elevators, this is not news — I could write a book about college marching band escapades, and it would make “Animal House” look like a tame story! This type of behavior has been going on since God was a boy, even at the most prestigious of colleges and universities — when you accept an internship, or practicum placement or a teaching job working in a marching band, you better have a really thick skin, because if you do not they will chew you up and spit you out — what is so interesting is that the students who are in marching bands whose behavior is so villified, they are the ones that end up the most successful, educated and respected professionals and people — Believe it or not, stupid antics aside, Marching band taught me to have pride in myself, nurtured a talent in music, taught me how to work together with other people as a unit, and made me proud to be a part of a group — not to mention having 100+ automatic friends who helped you and looked out for you — Life lessons and fond memories I carry to this day decades after my college years -The best thing for administration to do is to reprimand the ones who go seriously overboard (make all the band geeks scrub the inside of the elevators down on campus, and the urinating in them will not happen again) — Make them police themselves — to do otherwise will make them rebel in a “revenge of the nerds” style — this is the way it will always be with marching bands — and do not tell me the administration did not know this behavior was happening all along...mgp
maria pena, at 3:10 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
Who gives anyone the right to treat someone like that. This is someone who is there to help teach and educate you as college students. No one should be forced to see nudity, be harassed in front of his family, or treated disrespectfully. Just because he was trying to abide by the rules of common decency does not give students the right to ridicule, taunt, humiliate and degrade him. The fact that the University has allowed students to dictate behavior is outrageous. They have allowed the students to choose how the campus is viewed and to bully a professor off of the campus. He left in September and yet the band continues to perform, travel, showing the students who is in charge and what the University deems acceptable. I would never want any of my friends or loved ones to ever attend that University.
lnor, at 3:10 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
maria pena seems to be arguing that band hazing and ‘pranks’ like urinating in elevators somehow make band members better persons and more successful later in life. The link here escapes me. Is she saying that healthy camaraderie and creative but non-demeaning and safe behaviour couldn’t have the same benefits?
j.p. sousa, at 4:05 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
I don’t know what band Maria Pena was in, but none of the bands I was in were ever quite that bad. Oh sure, there were antics, but every director I’ve ever worked under have had control of the band. One of them had a group on the suspension list on the Chronicle website, but I guarantee it didn’t get this bad before those suspensions happened to those students. No one ever treated the director with such disrespect. No one would dare.
Carlo, at 6:30 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
MARIA PENA writes, “what is so interesting is that the students who are in marching bands whose behavior is so villified, they are the ones that end up the most successful, educated and respected professionals and people.” Any evidence for this claim? And, is it the band or the urinating in elevators [vandalism] and hazing that accounts for this record of personal success? Can my 16 year old get the same benefits without the marching and music part?
cts, at 6:35 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
First off, the SF Chronicle is a one-sided hack job written by a piece of garbage only looking to rile things up. Second, the Cal Aggie Band-uh! is our proper name. I have no idea what the UC Davis Marching Band is. Third, the band-uh! is fully aware of the gravity of this situation and is trying desperately to clean things up. The officers are wroking WITH the university to help iron out the issues. Obscene or “sexualized” posters were removed. Band-uh! antics will be monitered and dealt with accordingly. If anything this a good thing as it provides an opportunity for us to renew our image and get back on good terms with UC Davis. Right now everything is great because they know WE ARE TRYING and that to them is sign that soon the band-uh! will again be an organization they will be proud to say is the cornerstone of the campus and surrounding town. This is a student-run organization and they had a staff director to help with university affairs and that director felt that he deserved more authority. That’s what this is, a power struggle that can be exploited because of questionable decisions made by a few members in the organization of about 200 bandsmen. We must also note that the director did not specifically voice his concern with the band-uh! If he had I’m sure we would not be in this situation. The Band-uh! is working WITH the university to clean up its act in response to Slabaugh’s complaint, not this trash that appeared in the SF Chronicle. What I have said is accurate but I am just a member of the organization, not an authority of the band-uh! and what I say I do not say as a representative of the band-uh! or the University of California at Davis. It is strictly the opinion of one person that happens to be in the band-uh! in question.
Agbandsmen, Bone7! at UC Davis, at 8:45 pm EDT on October 7, 2008
Anyone who actually takes the time to read this is and thinks less of my school is hereby invited to stay in my house and I’ll introduce you to almost a hundred Band-uh students I work with or take classes with. After meeting them and seeing what our school is really about you’ll see why almost everything on this campus is student run, why we’re the forty-forth highest school in the country and why I’m almost as proud to call most of the leadership in the band-uh my friends as I am to come here in the first damn place. You really should question why the person who wants more power over an entity is the person bringing up a few problems about it in the first place. This article has diminished my view of the SF Chronicle, what was the last good paper in the area.
Mark Morris, UC Davis, at 4:50 am EDT on October 8, 2008
I come from a university most widely known of late for its drinking-related deaths. In the past three semesters our student population has experienced an administrative backlash due to these incidents. Now, a portion of our student body feels more alienated and is more likely to act out. I believe that in cases of student misconduct the administration should take action, but never with blanket sanctions. As an avid marching member of numerous organizations for the last fourteen years I can attest to the hierarchy within any marching organization, and, as a lower member in that chain, there is some amount of mental stress. But that hierarchy must be present for the organization to function. Furthermore, it must be lead from within the marching members by the veterans in order to uphold the fundamental principles of the marching unit: pride, discipline, and unity just to name a few.I do not want to be confused as an advocate for hazing. I just want to make the point that administrative disciplinary action can sometimes go too far. We must be cautious when taking action that we do not break down the hierarchy within these organizations. The rookies need both physical and mental experiences to break them down so that they bond together and ultimately make the group stronger. Harmful hazing is one thing, but beware the witch-hunt mentality.
Justin Tollefson, Show Coordinator — Maverick Stampede Winter Drumline at MSU Mankato, at 11:30 am EDT on October 8, 2008
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JImmy Little, at 10:36 am EDT on October 7, 2008