The Mercury News

Stanford band is suspended til spring

Group to get profession­al music director; members fear loss of irreverent character

- By Katrina Cameron kcameron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

PALO ALTO — The funloving and occasional­ly controvers­ial Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band — perhaps better known for antics like pulling off a Rose Bowl halftime show so offensive that ESPN cut away from it — is a thing of the past.

The band will be temporaril­y suspended through next spring and reconstitu­ted under a profession­al director, university officials said Friday. The members and other students received the news a week before finals.

A campus Organizati­on Conduct Board (OCB) found that the band recently violated the campus alcohol policy, as well as bans on drinking and traveling. The band was already in hot water for previous violations, and the board found the recent violations “incredibly troubling and indicative of a systemic cultural problem,” according to a

The school cited a lack of accountabi­lity in the organizati­on.

letter from the board.

“We do not feel that the current leadership or membership is capable of creating the necessary cultural change,” the OCB panel wrote in a letter. “We feel there is a total lack of accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity in the current organizati­on.”

The university said the band will lose its status as a registered student organizati­on. The suspension includes loss of access to the Band Shak, band funds and all benefits, rights and privileges members receive.

The OCB panel recommend a harsher punishment that would have required the band to be suspended and lose recognitio­n for nearly two academic years, but the provost imposed the shorter temporary suspension instead.

In a statement released Friday, the university said it will be looking “to develop a new organizati­onal framework under the leadership of a new music director.”

A current member of the Leland Stanford Junior University Marching Band who declined to use his name said there is no current music director. In the past, the music director was jointly selected by the administra­tion, alumni and band leaders.

The band member feared that “it will not retain any of its same character” under the new direction.

But Stanford University spokeswoma­n Lisa Ann Lapin assured that that would not happen.

“There will be a transition committee that will work over the next six months, including band alumni, but full compositio­n to be determined,” she said.

In May 2015, the band was barred from performing at away athletic events for the 2015-16 academic year as a result of an investigat­ion that found the band violated policies on sexual harassment, alcohol, controlled substances and hazing.

The band requested approval to attend this year’s Rose Bowl game based on its progress and meeting the university’s expectatio­ns. The request was granted, but it resulted in more trouble for the band. During that performanc­e, the band was booed off the field during its halftime show that included a makeshift cow costume, cow tipping, and the Farmers Only. com jingle.

The member, who performed in that halftime show on Jan. 1, said the band was “making a very good faith effort to address the issues,” but several members felt like the board set up the process with the intention that the band would fail.

“They basically put us through a series of hoops,” the band member said. “We participat­ed in all these trainings. They asked about our traditions, we submitted documentat­ion. They have been continuall­y displeased. They kept moving the target.”

He added that the current band members are paying for past allegation­s made against musicians and performers who are no longer in the band.

“A lot of those allegation­s stem from 2011. When that report came out in 2015, those band members were not in the band,” the band member said.

But the university reported violations as recent as this academic year.

The band faced alcohol violations on campus this fall quarter, said Lapin. There was also an off-campus trip to Lake Tahoe paid for with band funds.

The band and its traditions aren’t expected to be completely overhauled, though, as campus officials affirm that some things won’t change.

“Stanford treasures the band and its irreverenc­e, its scatter-band tradition and the tree and the dollies,” Lapin said. “No one expects those elements to change.”

 ?? SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z/PASADENA STAR-NEWS ?? The Stanford University Marching Band was barred from performing at away athletic events in 2015.
SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z/PASADENA STAR-NEWS The Stanford University Marching Band was barred from performing at away athletic events in 2015.

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