If there was ever any doubt that President Bollinger continues to seek fealty and submission by the Marching Band, all you need to know is that, as punishment for defying the order to kill Orgo Night, the Columbia administration has cut all $15,000 of university funds from the Marching Band's budget. The Band gets $10,000 directly from the athletic department, and the balance of it's $15,000 annual budget comes from the university, until now. Cutting off funds to the band is the most blatant way for Low Library to exert pressure and try to beat the band into submission.
The Columbia Band Alumni Association will be raising funds to provide to the Marching Band outside the university's process. So, instead of donating money to the University, donate directly to the band alumni association. Make a statement to support free speech.
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
Thursday, April 19, 2018
Ann Thornton Extends Orgo Night Ban
Head Librarian, Ann Thornton, made her decision today that
Orgo Night has no value and that the sanctity of Butler 209 cannot tolerate the
presence of the Band for a half hour twice per year. Why? No
reason. It's just the way she feels. Forty years of tradition be
damned. It's her library, and she does not want the band to be
there. Other stress reducers, including bringing in cookies, and puppies
and frisbees, are permitted.
Why? Because Ann Thornton says
so.
What are the consequences?
A large number of otherwise engaged and active alumni are now angry,
disappointed, and will make no donations to the University. Reunion classes in May will spend their time
talking about Orgo Night and how the University has killed off the tradition
for no reason and has taken away one more connection we had to Columbia.
Students will understand that the University is all about
stress and the no-fun mentality of this administration.
It is sad. Despite the
outcry, the University administration, and particularly President Bollinger and
Dean Valentini, have given Ms. Thornton permission to run roughshod over
students, alumni, and University Tradition.
The administration should expect that this issue will
continue to be a source of discussion among alumni and will be a black mark on
Columbia for years to come.
And for what? We
really don’t know. And that is, indeed,
sad.
The Time Has Come
To: Columbia
University Administration and Influencers
The time has come to restore one of Columbia’s few
traditions. For forty-plus years, the
Marching Band’s Orgo Night show has been a beloved and much anticipated event
each semester. The University continues
to promote Orgo Night in admissions literature as a fun and entertaining break
from finals studying, and it is cited in published surveys of unique college
traditions. The time has come to acknowledge
that the decision in December of 2016 to ban the Orgo Night show from taking
place in its traditional venue (Butler 209) was a mistake. It is time to recognize that the current Band
leadership takes an appropriately sensitive approach to writing the script for
the Orgo Night show and has not included material in the show or in advertising
materials for many years that would justify punitive action from the University
Administration.
The Band had to organize the show clandestinely this past
winter in order to stage the show in Butler 209, but it went off without any
issues or complaints. The cited reason or
the original decision to ban the show from Butler has been debunked – there is
plenty of quiet study space available elsewhere for those students who wish to
avoid the distraction of the show. No
student has ever been caught by surprise that the Orgo Night show is happening
in Butler 209 at midnight on the Thursday immediately before the start of
finals week. There really is no
legitimate reason to continue to ban the Band from Butler.
Meanwhile, the decision has angered hundreds of otherwise
supportive alumni. At this year’s
Homecoming festivities, members of the Band Alumni Association and others
circulated petitions supporting the Band and criticizing University
administration for its decision instead of discussing more positive
subjects. Many alumni have refused to
make donations, including legacy gifts and annuities, in protest over the
attack on the Orgo Night tradition.
Engaged alumni who volunteered with the ARC or university committees have
resigned. The Orgo Night decision has
had negative ramifications for the University and it will continue to generate
negative publicity, ill feelings, and disaffected alumni.
Reversing the decision will ameliorate these negative
consequences and prevent their continuation into the future. Reversing the decision will have no negative
consequences on campus, and in fact will restore a beloved campus Tradition
that current students can pass down to their own children.
Abraham Lincoln famously said: “So
soon as I discover my opinions to be erroneous, I shall be ready to renounce
them.” This is an instance where a bad
decision needs to be reversed.
It is time.
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