Artist's rendition of the Perelman Building
My network, (CNBC), broke the news this morning that Ron Perelman was donating $100 million to Columbia Business
School.
The story got me thinking about how Universities and non-profits
often only really draw the big bucks after they establish a reputation as being
one of the best.
Let me back up a bit here before I connect this to Columbia
athletics. Columbia alums my age and older know that the B-School used to be
the black sheep in the Columbia grad school family. While the law school and
med school were always top 5 ranked programs, the business school was barely in
the top 25 as recently as 1988. Despite the boom in Wall Street during most of
the 80’s, the school seemed moribund and trapped inside the odd-looking Uris
Hall directly behind Low Library.
But with the school’s continued resurgence as the 90’s
began, Columbia started putting more of an effort into boosting the business
program. By the end of the 90’s, it was a top 10 program.
And then, it started attracting big donors, the kind of
donors who like to donate entire buildings. And there you have the biggest
single reason why Columbia has chosen to expand into Manhattanville in the
first place.
Yes, yes… lots of other schools and administrators needed more
space. But the B-school was shooting for big donations from guys like Perelman,
Henry Kravis, and Warren Buffett, (two down, one to go. Buffett has still not
ponied up massive cash to his Alma Mater). Take a real good look at the
blueprints for the new space uptown and it’s obvious the business school is the
big dog of the expansion.
Simply put, Columbia Business School is reaping the rewards
of its success. The trouble with that is, schools like this end up getting more
and more donations and soon the job of expanding and building to suit all those
big ticket donors can be impossible.
But that’s a problem that’s generally good to have.
Considering Columbia football’s struggles for the last half
century, it’s amazing that it has roped in as many dedicated donors as it has. The
uptick in those kinds of donations in recent years is even more impressive.
When you talk Columbia football donors, you’re still mostly
talking about Bill Campbell and Robert Kraft. I don’t mean to leave the other
somewhat lesser known names out, but that’s the deal.
But if you think the donations to CU football are impressive
now, wait until we start winning, (I know, we’re waiting for 52 years already…
but you get my point). I predict 2-3 winning seasons in a row or just one Ivy
title will open some floodgates that could result in one or more of the
following items checked off our collective wish lists:
1) Parking garage at Baker Field
2) Practice field on campus, (Manhattanville)
3) Free pizza to go along with the free beer in the
pregame picnic area, (okay, that may have been a little stretch).
Old Argument
For those of us who consider ourselves longtime fans, we all
might think we are among the first people to have started the call for removing
the Ivy football postseason ban.
Well, we’re probably wrong.
A reader just sent me an interesting NY Times article about
the Yale football team voting unanimously to urge the league to end the
postseason ban.
The dateline on that article? January, 1961!
5 comments:
The next new thing to be built at BAC will be a new locker room building. These folks are still in the "new " one that I used in 1964!
Glen Hubbard, the bête noire of the left, is a tremendous Dean and has helped the business school immeasurably.
My sense is that the Columbia Business School has many brilliant and successful dedicated alumni and friends in the Metropolitan New York Area and elsewhere whose goal is to establish the Columbia Business Goal as the number one ranked business school in the world. After all, New York City is the Big Apple, Rockefeller Center, Wall Street, Central Park, the new Yankee Stadium, etc. and Boston is ......I'm not sure the M'ville expansion was driven by the Columbia Business School, but if that is the case now, then it obviously benefits all Columbians including of course the Columbia Football Family.
If they put up a parking lot, you could tailgate, and then there would be no need for pizza. Build it and they will come......
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