Alumni Board Spring 2008 Meeting Agenda

Antioch Alumni Association Board

Weston Hall

February 29-March 2, 2008

*All sessions will be held in Weston Hall unless otherwise noted. Continental breakfasts will be available on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday in Weston.

Friday, February 29, 2008

8:00 a.m. Breakfast CLOSED

8:30 a.m.-9 a.m. Welcome and Introductions, Approval of Minutes by Nancy Crow, President

9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. State of the College Panel Discussion TBD

10:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m.

Strategic Planning for the Future Roles and
Goals of the Alumni Association and the College.

12:30 p.m. -1:30 p.m. Lunch in Cafeteria Students, faculty and
staff invited

1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Ad Hoc Committees:

Governance & Legal–Chair: Ellen Borgersen

Admissions–Chair: Kristen Pett

IT–Chair: Michael Heffernan

Accreditation/Faculty Liaison–Chairs: Dave Thelen/Catherine Jordan

3:15 p.m.-5:15 p.m. Community Meeting 113 McGregor

5:30p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Community Supper. Speaker: Alumni Board President Nancy Crow “Where we are now, where we are not and where we are going.” Cafeteria.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

8:00 a.m. Breakfast CLOSED

8:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Group I Committees:

Association–Chair: Mike Brower

Communications–Chair: Christian Feuerstein

Development–Chair: Matthew Derr

10:30 a.m.-10:45 a.m. Break

10:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Group II Committee Meetings

Nominating (Closed Session to discuss Award nominees/Secretary Nomination)–Chair: Tim Klass

Reunion–Chair: Bradley Wilburn

*Working Lunch for Board Members

1:00 p.m-3:00 p.m. RDPP Panel

3:15 p.m.-4:15 p.m. Group I Committee Reports

4:15 p.m.-5:15 p.m. Group II Committee Reports

5:15 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Wrap Up

7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. People Of Color Mixer & Networking Social

Where: Coretta Scott King Center Lobby
What: Community building and social networking activity
Point Person: Daniel Solis y Martinez and Shelby Chesnut

7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. White Anti-Racist Meeting & Networking Social

Where: Birch
What: Community building and social networking activity
Point Person: Lauren Hind

10:00 p.m. Community Dance

Where: Dance Space
What: Fun
Point Person: Jamila Hunter

Sunday, March 2, 2008

8:00 a.m. Breakfast
8:30 a.m.-9:30 a.m. Wrap Up
9:30 a.m.-12:00 noon CRF Board Meeting

A Letter to the Antioch Community from the ACCC

Dear fellow Antiochian,

As you’ve probably heard by now, some exciting developments took place over the break. The Antioch University Board of Trustees has agreed to explore the feasibility of granting full independence to Antioch College. If such a move is approved, the College will have its own board of trustees, one devoted exclusively to supporting the innovative approach to curriculum, co-op and community governance that makes Antioch such a vital and creative force in higher education. The goal that so many in the Antioch community have strived for is at last within sight .

We are the directors of a new non-profit group – the Antioch College Continuation Corporation – that has been formed specifically by alumni of the College to negotiate its complete independence. We came together quickly in December, when it became clear that major donors would not support the Agreements in Principle previously approved by the University trustees. That agreement, the donors felt, kept in place an unnecessarily complicated governance structure that has failed to serve the best interests of the College. Although our group is new, we are not newcomers to this process: We have been actively involved in the community-wide effort to save the College since last June, and have been working closely with the Alumni Board to find a way to keep Antioch open.

We created our group, in the best traditions of Antioch, to be as inclusive as possible, while providing the financial resources and educational expertise needed to demonstrate to the trustees that independence is in the best interests of the entire University. All nine of us are Antioch alumni. Both of our co-chairs are former presidents of the Antioch College Alumni Association, and three others of us are currently serving as elected members of the Alumni Association Board of Directors. One of us is a former community manager, and one is an emeritus member of the faculty and a former Dean of Students.

Our goal is to negotiate an agreement with the University trustees, no later than the end of February, that would transfer all assets of the College to the ACCC on July 1 of this year. If such an agreement is approved, the ACCC will work closely with the Antioch community to create a new Board of Trustees, recruit a world-class president, and mobilize the resources essential to stabilizing the College and building on its tradition of excellence and innovation. As a group, we have personally committed $8.5 million to this goal, and already have an additional $11 million on hand in cash and pledges. We have also formed committees with open membership to begin addressing a range of transitional issues from technology to governance; these committees are co-chaired by College faculty and alumni, including Alumni Board leaders.

Our executive committee visited campus in December – we encourage you to listen to the podcast of our community meetings at and talk to those on campus with whom we met. In addition, most of us will be on campus on January 26 for a full day of meetings with the entire community – students, faculty, staff, and Adcil. We look forward to meeting with you, to answering any questions you have about these remarkable developments, and to working together to make the goal of an independent Antioch College a reality.

Sincerely,

Frances Degan Horowitz ’54 (co-chair)
Eric Bates ’83 (co-chair)
Laura Markham ’80 (secretary)
David Goodman ’72 (treasurer)
Steve Schwerner ’60
Catherine Jordan ’69
Lee Morgan ’69
Barbara Winslow ’68
Terry Herndon ’57

Tentative Agenda for ACCC Visit to Campus

Saturday, January 26

  • 8:30 to 9:30 — Breakfast planning meeting for ACCC
  • 10 –12 — Community meeting in Kelly Hall
  • 12 – 1:15 — Lunch in caf
  • 1:30 to 2:30 – ADCIL
  • 2:45-3:45— ACCC committee meetings
  • 4 – 5— Executive committee meets with Toni Murdock and Tom Faecke
  • 6 – 7:30 — Dinner with faculty in Antioch Inn
  • 7:30 – 9 — Meet with students in dorms (two ACCC members per hall)

Sunday, January 27

  • 9 – 10 — Breakfast planning meeting for ACCC
  • 10 – 12 — Smaller group meetings with WYSO, AEA, Glen Helen, King Center

Antioch University Board of Trustees and Donors Explore Transfer Possibility

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

YELLOW SPRINGS, OHIO – The Antioch University Board of Trustees announced today that it has approved a resolution instructing Chancellor Toni Murdock to begin exploring the possibility of transferring the ownership of Antioch College to a separate, free-standing liberal arts institution with its own board of trustees.

Under the resolution, the Chancellor will immediately convene “a work group of administrators and others with the expertise and experience necessary to examine the feasibility of such a transfer of the College and to identify the major issues affecting the University’s interest in such a transaction.” If feasible, it would be transferred to the Antioch College Continuation Corporation, an independent, Ohio non-profit corporation that has been formed by a group of College alumni, major donors, former trustees and emeritus faculty.

After exploring the feasibility of such a transfer and negotiating with authorized representatives of the new corporation, the Chancellor will present a draft letter of intent laying out the proposed terms of any such transfer to the University trustees for consideration “as soon as possible but not later than its regularly scheduled meeting set for February 21-23, 2008.” If an agreement is reached that satisfies both parties, the transfer would take effect on July 1, 2008.

“This action taken by the University trustees replaces the Agreements in Principle recently negotiated with the Antioch College Alumni Board of Directors,” said Art Zucker, chair of the University Board of Trustees. “The goal, if feasible, is to reach an agreement that provides the College with a fully independent board exclusively devoted to continuing its financial stability, sustainability and academic excellence.”

Nancy Crow, who helped negotiate the earlier agreement with the trustees as president of the Antioch College Alumni Association, hailed the new development. “We are thrilled to be able to join forces with the leaders of the Antioch College Continuation Corporation,” Crow said. “Their efforts represent what the Alumni Association has been working so diligently to achieve over the past six months. We will coordinate our efforts under the guidance of the new corporation to build on our detailed plan for continuing and enhancing College operations.”

Both parties to the discussion acknowledged that there are a host of issues to be sorted out before any transfer can be considered or approved. “But this is an exciting and potentially historic moment for the entire University.” said Frances Degen Horowitz, co-chair of the Antioch College Continuation Corporation and president emerita of the City University of New York Graduate Center, who graduated from Antioch College in 1954. “Working closely with the entire Antioch College community, we are confident that we can raise the necessary resources to stabilize the College and secure its standing as one of the nation’s foremost liberal-arts institutions.”

Horowitz noted that directors of the new corporation have already pledged to contribute more than $7 million by the end of December, 2007, to be held in trust until a transfer is approved. “As we proceed with our negotiations,” she added, “we will need immediate and substantial financial support from alumni and all friends of Antioch College. Working together, we have an unprecedented opportunity to restore the College to its roots and establish a substantial endowment for the College to ensure its long-term sustainability.”

In addition to Horowitz, the Antioch College Continuation Corporation is co-chaired by Eric Bates, deputy managing editor of Rolling Stone magazine, who graduated from Antioch College in 1983. Both Bates and Horowitz are former presidents of the Antioch College Alumni Association and former members of the Antioch University Board of Trustees.

Joining them as directors of the Antioch College Continuation Corporation are seven other graduates of Antioch College:

• Laura Markham (secretary), PhD, clinical psychologist and editor of Your Parenting Solutions; former member of the University Board of Trustees; Antioch ’80

• David Goodman (treasurer), businessman and principal of North Arrows LLC and e-Solar Properties LLC; Antioch ’69, Stanford MBA, ‘71

• Catherine Jordan, president of Achieve Minneapolis and chair of the accreditation task force of the Antioch College Alumni Board of Directors; Antioch ’72

• Steve Schwerner, emeritus Antioch College professor and former Dean of Students; current member of the Antioch College Alumni Board of Directors, Antioch ’60

• Lee Morgan, president of The Antioch Company, Antioch ’66

• Barbara Winslow, associate professor of adolescence social studies and women’s studies at Brooklyn College; former member of the Antioch University Board of Trustees; current member of the Antioch College Alumni Board of Directors; Antioch ’68

• Terry O. Herndon, entrepreneur and businessman; Antioch ’57

The prior Agreements in Principle reached with the Alumni Association in November called for the lifting of the suspension of operations of the College provided that certain financial benchmarks were met. Under the new approach, however, the University will no longer operate the College beyond June 30, 2008. Any College operations beyond that date would be the sole responsibility of the new corporation. In the event that an agreement is not reached between the parties, the Board has further directed the Chancellor to study and report back to the Board on the feasibility of the University’s own plans to reopen the College after the June 30 suspension of operations.

“The Chancellor is currently studying whether a transfer of operations can be accomplished in a way that protects the interests of the University while also ensuring the viability of the College,” said Zucker. “No final decision has been made by the Board, but we are taking a serious look at the issue and are working closely with directors of the new corporation to afford this endeavor every chance of success.”

Directors of the Antioch College Continuation Corporation expressed enthusiasm for the current state of negotiations. “I joined this endeavor because I believe it represents a significant step forward for Antioch College,” said Steve Schwerner, who worked at Antioch from 1976 to 2003. “If we can reach agreement on a transfer, the College will finally have the autonomy and resources it needs to be able to move forward.”

Antioch College is Currently Accepting Applications for Transfer Students!

Antioch College will remain OPEN!

We are very excited to let you know that the suspension of operations has been lifted. Read the news here.

We are currently accepting applications for transfer students. For more information, please call (937) 769-1100 or email us today at Admissions!

In the near future, we hope to be accepting applications for first-year students as well.
Please stay tuned for more information. In the meantime, we welcome all prospective students to be in touch with your questions.

To apply to Antioch College you will need to submit the following:

1. We use The Common Application. You can immediately download a transfer application from The Common Application. Applying online will be available soon!

2. A personal essay of approximately 500 words.

3. A College Instructor Evaluation (this can also be downloaded from The Common Application).

4. A College Official’s Report (this can also be downloaded from The Common Application).

5. An official sealed transcript from your college or university.

All application materials should be sent to:

Office of Admissions and Financial Aid
Antioch College
795 Livermore St.
Yellow Springs, OH 45387