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FAMU Hazing Persisted Despite Suspensions, Probes

Florida Am University

By CHRISTINE ARMARIO   11/30/11 01:06 AM ET   AP

MIAMI -- Two decades ago, the now-ousted director of the Florida A&M band warned in a letter about the dangers of hazing among the famed "Marching 100" ensemble, saying "it would be very difficult for the university and the band should someone become killed or hurt."

In the following years, however, hazing seemed to become a bigger – if not a more public – problem. Police investigated several serious cases and students were arrested. Anti-hazing workshops were held. Dozens of band members were suspended. University officials and the marching band community were keenly aware of the persistent hazing, yet it continued and is believed to have played a role in the death this month of a 26-year-old drum major, Robert Champion.

Champion's death started a blame game of sorts, with the historically black college in Tallahassee firing its band director, Julian White, accusing him of "misconduct and/or incompetence." In turn, White released more than 150 pages of documents showing that he warned the university for years about what was going on.

The chair of the Board of Governors, which oversees Florida's public universities, wrote a letter to FAMU trustees Tuesday saying it would investigate whether the university administration took appropriate action to address White's concerns.

A former band member told The Associated Press on Tuesday that White looked for ways to eradicate a culture of hazing that existed in many instrument sections of the band. White invited band members to anonymously report hazing and even had police come along on some away games, former drum major Timothy Barber told AP.

In 2001, trumpeter Marcus Parker was paddled so severely that he ended up hospitalized with kidney damage. White had police escort the trumpet section off the field to be interrogated to show he would not tolerate hazing, Barber said.

About a dozen people pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and received probation in that case, though it's not clear what actions, if any, the university took to punish them.

After the arrests, White approached Barber for help in getting rid of hazing. One area he focused on: A white wall in the band's practice field where nicknames for the instrument sections were prominently displayed. Becoming a member of these groups – the clarinets were known as "The Clones" and the tubas were the "White Whales" – meant becoming part of a tradition and a band that has played Super Bowls, the Grammys and presidential inaugurations.

But some sections had their own violent initiation rituals. White bought buckets of white paint and asked Barber to cover up the section nicknames on the wall.

"Tim, we have to find a way to eradicate these subsections of the band," Barber said White told him. "Cover the names so they see this is not something supported by the band staff."

While White documented his efforts to stop the hazing, it's possible he could've done more on the front lines, according to Richard Sigal, a retired sociology professor at County College of Morris in Randolph, N.J., who has studied hazing.

"Maybe he just had a problem that was beyond his ability to control it," Sigal said. But in general, "If the person at the top issued a zero tolerance policy for hazing and oversaw what the people under him were doing, then there was no hazing."

The details of Champion's death are unclear. Authorities, the school and an attorney for his family said hazing played a role, but no one has been willing to shed any more light on what actually happened Nov. 19 after the football team lost to its rival Bethune-Cookman. Police have said only that Champion started vomiting and complained he couldn't breathe before he collapsed on a band bus outside their hotel in Orlando.

The university has announced an independent review and Gov. Rick Scott has asked state investigators to join the sheriff's department in its investigation.

University officials declined interview requests for this story, but president James Ammons, who earned his bachelor's and master's from FAMU, issued a statement late Tuesday.

"The university has a zero tolerance policy toward hazing. Period. But it is becoming increasingly clear that hazing continues to exist – at FAMU and across the country at other universities, colleges and other elements – because hazing survives and thrives in a culture of secrecy and a conspiracy of silence. I am committed to illuminating this dark corner of Florida A&M University and the American culture ... illuminating it and eradicating it."

White is fighting his dismissal, which is why he submitted the documents to the school, including dozens of suspension letters for hazing over the last decade, and communications alerting university police.

"Our incidents are few, but nevertheless hazing and harassment continues to be a problem," White wrote the then director of bands William P. Foster in 1989 after a hazing death involving a fraternity at Morehouse University. "It would be very difficult for the university and the band should someone become killed or hurt because of hazing."

In the weeks before Champion's death, White suspended 26 band members for hazing. On Nov. 17 – just two days before Champion died – he sent a letter to alumni, saying while most of them were positive and encouraging of former band members, some "return and perpetuate the myth of various sectional names."

"You should not return and look down on people who follow university regulations by not participating in sub-organizations," White wrote. "This is extremely important and I call on all alumni to assist the band and myself in eradicating all vestiges of hazing in the Marching `100' band.'"

Barber, who rose to head drum major and was in the band from 1996 to 2002, said he was never hazed, nor did he participate in it.

He said drum majors were like the generals of the band who tried to keep everyone in order, which makes Champion's death puzzling. At 26, Champion was likely one of the older band members because he didn't enter college until a year after high school and struggled at times to stay at the university because of his grades.

Barber in part blames alumni for not taking a stronger stand. Of about two dozen people contacted by The Associated Press, he was the first who agreed to openly speak about hazing within the band.

Barber went back to FAMU this year and practiced with Champion and the other drum majors. White told him Champion could become the head drum major. Barber also noticed the section nicknames on the white wall were still painted over.

"We need to do more," Barber said.

___

Associated Press writers Brent Kallestad and Gary Fineout in Tallahassee and legal affairs reporter Curt Anderson in Miami also contributed to this report.

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MIAMI -- Two decades ago, the now-ousted director of the Florida A&M band warned in a letter about the dangers of hazing among the famed "Marching 100" ensemble, saying "it would be very difficult for...
MIAMI -- Two decades ago, the now-ousted director of the Florida A&M band warned in a letter about the dangers of hazing among the famed "Marching 100" ensemble, saying "it would be very difficult for...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
06:49 PM on 11/30/2011
The late Dr. Foster (aka The Law) couldn't stop it; Dr.White couldn't stop it; FAMU didn't stop it. Shut the whole thing down--that WILL stop it. Starting a new program w/o the hazing customs is the best possible move.
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Yam716
For CurlTalk, Visit: lillian-mae
05:52 PM on 11/30/2011
Good for the former Band director.

Speaking from experience, at FAMU, you MUST keep your records! Their 'word', means nothing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
11:20 PM on 11/30/2011
Seems like White did just that, smartly; these documents are quite telling:

http://www.scribd.com/fullscreen/73778372?access_key=key-1yc2ieikgj199z3202de
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04:42 PM on 11/30/2011
Simply suspend the entire band. Reform the band after a one/two year delay and allow only new members to join. If the hazing happens again, repeat the process.
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Yam716
For CurlTalk, Visit: lillian-mae
05:54 PM on 11/30/2011
I don't think that would happen, as the band is one of FAMU's greatest selling points! It's legendary.

Something needs to be done though. Personally, I believe it will start with students who are in the band and refuse to be hazed.
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Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
07:21 PM on 11/30/2011
It should though. How can a tainted legend sell anything? A complete remake is in order.
01:47 PM on 11/30/2011
Some people on HP got on about the firing of the band director. I posted that he should be released from his leadership position because it is his job to manage what happens with the band both on and off the field. Now evidence of a regular routine of hazing has surfaced and this is another leadership issue.

As a HBCu this is a disgrace. Band members who are using methods that have nothing to do with playing music or marching in a line. We have to get away from mental and physical abuse to get students to feel like they belong to a part of an organization. Paying your dues should be attending practices, learning your craft and getting good grades, it should not be taking abuse in any form.
02:16 PM on 11/30/2011
He has tried to manage it (i.e. 150 pages of documentation). He can't do it alone and asked for help from administration which failed. I think his position should be reinstated because he did his job and stopped hazing when and how he could. He was a band director and not a babysitter and couldn't be everywhere at all times! The band members that inflicted this tragedy should be charged with murder and the administration that neglected to attend to this matter should be relinquished and possibly charged with involuntary manslaughter becuase of their negligence!!
03:23 PM on 11/30/2011
Trying and doing is not good enough when someone loses a life. To say he could not control his band members is to say he is a poor leader and his poor leadership indirectly lead to the death of a student.

Leaders and leadership mean responsibilty and higher pay. When you accept the position that means you have to be accountable. If you can't be accountable than you should not be in a leadership position. We are talking about the LIFE of a student, not someone who got a splinter while pledging to be in a band. The band director should lose his job and the band should be disbanded for a few years until the situation can be corrected. A life is not anything to play with.
04:13 PM on 11/30/2011
Then he should "dismiss" (students) whom he is unsuccessful in managing, in addition to maintaining a paper trail, if he is promoting zero tolerance. There is no excuse.
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Thomas Cunningham
Opinion, punditry, satire
03:41 PM on 11/30/2011
Being relieved of Band Director duties is different than firing a tenured professor. Due process must be observed. People jump to conclusions about hazing in THIS CASE, because hazing exists... but that doesn't mean hazing was actually involved IN THIS CASE. Robert Champion was a rising senior, who had been in the band for quite a while. Further, he was a drum major, a leadership position in the band. There are no conclusive autopsy results and no reports of bruising, etc. which would be consistent with hazing. The death is a tragedy, but we do not know the facts. People need to reserve judgement until much more is known.

Lastly, in college hazing, all parties who submit, as well as those who inflict, are adults. Adults will make up their own minds about how to behave. Dr. White has come under fire for being TOO aggressive in his zero tolerance stance on band hazing... going so far as suspending dozens of band members right before the performance in question. As a FAMU grad, who personally knows Dr. White, you are talking without benefit of full information. It's all well and good to bloviate on the internet, but you're way out of bounds in this.
05:19 PM on 11/30/2011
I am bloviating because that is what the blog is for. Yes they are all adults but the college campus band director is in a position to LEAD the band. Not just plan routines and songs, so the responsibility falls on him as the leader. As readers we are responding to what we read and we DO NOT have to wait to form an opinion. If that were the case than herman cain would not be on the news.
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Yam716
For CurlTalk, Visit: lillian-mae
05:58 PM on 11/30/2011
FAMU Alum here...

Good on Dr. White for keeping his records! That will definitely give him some leverage, though I believe he will, and should still sue. They fired him before doing a thorough investigation.
01:41 PM on 11/30/2011
Hazing seems to be used as a form of initation for a group as well as a way to prove worthiness, but instead it is used to humiliate some people while making others look good. It is because of hazing that I plan to avoid soriorities and fraternities when I transfer to a four year college. Isn't the fact that you are persuing a degree and participating in normal clubs and organizations enough to be proud of? If so, why join an exclusive group that makes you do such stupid things so you can be cool?
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victoriaj1908
"Well ha, ha, ha, bless your soul."
03:29 PM on 11/30/2011
I understand your point, but there are many benefits to being in a sorority or fraternity...now this band thing, I don't understand the hazing aspect of it at all.
05:42 PM on 11/30/2011
I also understand what you are saying. I do agree with Victoriaj1908. The feeling of acceptance and being part of something that is so deeply a part of your culture (frat,soro). I also feel that hazing has become a issue that keeps a lot of young people from desiring this connection and benefit. Ultimately its a tragic situation for everyone involved.
12:02 AM on 12/01/2011
I gained plenty of feelings of acceptance and being part of something that is so deeply a part of my culture by being a member of NSBE, AASA, NOBCChe, and now BGSA without paying >$500 to do so.
01:06 PM on 11/30/2011
Universities are cities, and since many authority figures at universities are entrenched in seats of power for a long period of time, they probably think that they can make their own rules with no consequences.
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Yam716
For CurlTalk, Visit: lillian-mae
06:02 PM on 11/30/2011
When I was in college, I realized it was a microcosm of the world :) It was enlightening.

The administration changed at least 3 times when I was there. Each change bought not only a new President, but everyone he wanted to lead (read: rule) by his side. He planted them in key positions and they reined until the next regime came. Rinse, Repeat.

And they do have consequences, but by the time they suffer them (read: fired), they've already made their money. For them, it's not a bad consequence to face. There is a LOT of money to be made in college administration positions!
12:12 PM on 11/30/2011
Charge the people responsible in jail and charge them with murder.
10:42 AM on 11/30/2011
I retired in 2007 after spending a quarter century in an inner city high school. I clearly remember that once upon a time, our school had several fraternal social clubs. One year they engaged in rather cruel, disgusting hazing on campus. The principal disbanded the clubs immediately. The school newspaper, which I supervised, ran an editorial supporting the principal's decision. I myself supported the principal even though some of my students considered me a killjoy.

My question to FAMU and other similar schools is why?

Couldn't we replace hazing with something more constructive? Maybe instead of hazing, recruits could perform some sort of community service. That is what FAMU and other schools should promote - This tragedy should be the opening for a positive, sane, safe, and constructive alternative to hazing.