Chicago Alumni, Along with One Current Student on Co-op in Chicago, Leaflet Outside the Annual Conference of the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association

Chicago alumni of Antioch College, along with one current student on co-op in Chicago, leafleted Friday outside the annual conference of the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association (of which Antioch University is a member) to draw the national educators’ attention to ongoing efforts to keep Antioch College open. Conference attendees, who were trustees, administrators, and professors from colleges and universities across the country, expressed support for the college’s continuous operations. Representatives of at least seven institutions, including one college president, signed postcards to Antioch University trustees, encouraging the trustees to remain open to all avenues to save the college. Many of the educators were unaware of Antioch’s plight before the event, expressing concern and surprise over the situation – others mistakenly believed that the college had already closed. Numerous Ohio educators were very familiar with the situation and expressed solidarity with the college (“this could happen to us” said a representative from the University of Dayton). There are plans for another leafleting Monday at the conference. Video of the Friday action is now available.

Antioch University Board of Trustees and the ACCC to Meet

ANTIOCH UNIVERSITY
News Release
April 10, 2008
Upon receipt

Contacts: Lynda Sirk Director of Communication, Antioch University • 937-769-1222

YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio – Antioch University board Chair Art Zucker and Frances Degen Horowitz, co-chair of the Antioch College Continuation Corporation, announced today that the Trustees and the ACCC have agreed to meet in person. While details are being worked out, both Zucker and Horowitz stated that the meeting will occur as soon as possible. “We are pleased to have this opportunity to meet together,” Zucker and Horowitz said. “We look forward to a constructive discussion and appreciate everyone’s patience as we move forward.”

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NonStop Antioch has New Home and Staff

 

COLLEGE REVIVAL FUND, INC.

NONSTOP ANTIOCH HAS NEW HOME AND STAFF

CRF Opens New Offices Across from Antioch College Campus

and Announces Plans for Fund-Raising

For Immediate Release

CONTACT: 443-864-0514 • press

April 10, 2008– Antioch alumni working through the College Revival Fund, Inc. (CRF) announced today that they have opened new offices in Yellow Springs, Ohio for “Nonstop Antioch.” These offices are at 716 Xenia Avenue, right across the street from the Antioch College campus. The CRF is a 501(c)(3), tax-exempt non-profit corporation founded by members of the Antioch College Alumni Association. Since last June, the CRF has raised over $19.5 million dollars for a continuing, independent Antioch College.

CRF Acting President Ellen Borgersen said today in a statement, “The Antioch University Board of Trustees has shown that they are unworthy to and unwilling to carry on the Antioch College educational mission. The attack on Antioch College is an attack on experiential liberal arts education, shared governance, tenured faculty, and unionized staff. It is up to the students, faculty, staff, alumni, and townspeople of Yellow Springs to carry on the historic mission of Antioch College, and Nonstop Antioch is the vehicle that will organize alumni support for that effort.”

Nonstop Antioch is a movement to organize alumni, students, staff and faculty to keep the spirit of Antioch College alive and operating in Yellow Springs, no matter how long the negotiations between the University Trustees and the Antioch College Continuation Corporation (ACCC) drag on, or how they turn out. In late February, the CRF committed at least $1 million to support this movement and assure faculty that they would be financially supported if they committed to stay in Yellow Springs for the 2008-2009 academic year to teach and plan for an independent Antioch College. The faculty who have made this commitment are excited at the opportunity to reclaim the Antioch mission for themselves, after years of mismanagement and abuse at the hands of a hostile Chancellor and a distant, disinterested Board of Trustees.

The CRF has hired Risa Grimes, former Director of Institutional Advancement at Antioch College, as its Executive Director. Ms. Grimes’ first order of business is hiring the entire College Institutional Advancement staff, all of whom were laid off on April 2. Joining Risa Grimes are Aimee Maruyama, Director of Development and Alumni Relations; Fred Kraus, Director of Research; Cheri Robbins, Database Manager; and Wendy Ernst, Major Gifts Officer.

“These amazingly capable people have become a powerful fundraising machine under Risa Grimes’s superb leadership,” Borgersen said. “Their phones have been ringing off the hook. Everyone in higher education fundraising is talking about the people who raised over $18 million for an independent Antioch College in less than six weeks, even though it was scheduled to close.”

Borgersen continued, “We are very glad that the University laid them off, which allowed us to hire them, liberate them, and set them loose on fundraising for Nonstop Antioch. Just watch what they can do, now that the University administration is out of their way.”

Since the University Board of Trustees announced the suspension of operations in June 2007, alumni across the country have rallied to their alma mater’s defense. Alumni chapters have grown worldwide. The Alumni Board is continuing with its fundraising and planning efforts. For additional information on the Antioch College Alumni Association and the College Revival Fund, visit the Antioch College Alumni Association web site, antiochians.org.

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Leafleting Event in Chicago – Friday, April 11, 2008

What: ANTIOCH COLLEGE ALUMNI- CHICAGO CHAPTER LEAFLET AT the 113th Annual Meeting of The Higher Learning Commission; Exhort University Board of Trustees to Meet With ACCC and to Implement the “10-10” Plan

When: Friday, April 11, 2008

Where: 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m., 113th Annual Meeting of The Higher Learning Commission, Hyatt Regency Chicago, 151 East Wacker Drive, Chicago IL USA 60601

Why: Members of the Antioch College alumni-Chicago chapter invite members of the media to join them as they pass out leaflets at the 113th Annual Meeting of The Higher Learning Commission at the Hyatt Regency Chicago. They are demanding that the University Board of Trustees meet with the Antioch College Continuation Corporation (ACCC) face-to-face, Board to Board, as soon as possible. The Higher Learning Commission is a regional accrediting body for colleges and universities and Antioch University is a member.

Recently, Antioch University forfeited an agreement to create an independent Antioch College by dragging out negotiations in an effort to profit from the College’s current difficulties.

“The issue is not about money – it’s about time,” said Eric Bates, co-chair of the ACCC, which was formed to negotiate independence for the historic liberal arts institution. “As a result of the University’s repeated foot dragging it would now be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to receive the necessary regulatory approvals to continue operating the College next year as a separate entity. Through its needless delays, the University has squandered a historic opportunity and created a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

While the University chose to forfeit the ACCC’s offer of $12.2 million for the College, the group emphasized that there is still one alternative that would enable the College to continue operating next year. More than a month ago, the ACCC offered to make an immediate contribution of $10 million in return for ten seats on the nineteen-member University Board of Trustees. This plan has been dubbed the “10-10” plan. The offer stands in stark contrast to the dismally low contributions by the current board, which reportedly totaled less than $25,000 in the current fiscal year.

The ACCC noted that it has yet to hear a response to its “10-10 plan,” which it is still prepared to discuss. “This is the only remaining arrangement that can enable the College to continue operating next year while creating a truly philanthropic board for the University,” Bates said. “This is not a hostile takeover – it is a remarkably generous and well-intentioned offer by an experienced and supportive group of alumni, six of whom are former University trustees. We remain mystified as to why the board has not acted on this win-win solution that could be enacted within a matter of hours.”

Ellen Borgersen, Vice-President of the Antioch Alumni Board and Acting President of the College Revival Fund, Inc. (CRF), said in a statement: “The suspicion that the University Board of Trustees was negotiating in bad faith and not interested in saving the College has, unfortunately, been confirmed. Over the past four months, the ACCC labored mightily to put together an offer that would be a win-win solution for the University and the College, as well as for the community and for everyone who believes in what Antioch stands for.”

Since the proposed closure of historic Antioch College was announced last June, the CRF has raised over $18 million to date for a continuing, independent Antioch College with tenured faculty.

Contact:
press

More Info: antiochians.org

An Update from Pete Townsend

Thanks for asking, thanks for caring about Antioch.

In order to follow the faculty lawsuit, you kind of need a blow-by-blow.

When we re-filed the suit, we included a motion for a preliminary injunction which would prevent AU from selling anything while the suit was in process. The suit includes a permanent injunction, to be imposed if we win the suit.

The judge decided to have an evidentiary hearing (on April 1) to help him rule on the preliminary injunction.

On Wednesday, 26 March AU deposed Bob Devine. Bob did a great job! Nothing was brought out that we don’t already know about.

On Wednesday, ACCC presented a motion to not be deposed (in Xenia, OH). Our lawyer moved they should be deposed.

On Thursday, 27 March we deposed Paula Trichler (BOT member and friend of the College). On Thursday, 27 March the judge allowed ACCC to avoid the deposition. I haven’t had time to read Paula’s deposition, but I have been told that not much was learned that we don’t already know about.

Without the ACCC deposition we decided we couldn’t go forward, so on Friday, 28 March we withdrew our motion for a preliminary injunction, leaving in place our suit for a permanent injunction. That eliminated the evidentiary hearing on April 1.

On Monday, March 31, the judge ruled that we have 14 days to file an amended suit without the preliminary injunction, and AU has 14 days to file a response. So that’s where things stand right now with the faculty lawsuit.

Why did ACCC ask not to be deposed? Maybe because they knew the GROUND WAS ABOUT TO SHAKE! Lawsuits need clarity in order to suceed, and April 1 would have been a terrible time for us to be in court, because so much shaking was going on.

On Friday, 28 March, at 12 noon, a press release from ACCC came out stating that ACCC was stopping negotiations to buy the College, but would do a deal of $10 million for 10 seats on the BOT.

On Friday 28 March at 3:04 PM Lynda Sirk sent out a 3 page press release announcing that AU was not suprised that negotiations were not successful, that AU had negotiated in GREAT GOOD FAITH, but ACCC was just not up to the task, that the College was a broken pile of junk, and that AU would fix things in 2012, just as AU had told the world when they announced the closing in June. Don’t worry, the good AU angel has everything under control. Sirk’s press release included lots of details, and totally broke the confidentiality agreement, which means ACCC can now give details of negotiations.

Then on Saturday, March 29, Lynda Sirk and Mary Lou LaPierre sent out a press release stating that AU was selling the College to anyone who could come up with $12.2 million. Absolutely amazing! That was covered in SW Ohio Sunday papers and the Seattle Times, and resulted in a great student mock-up of an e-bay page with the college up for sale.

Then on Monday, March 31, AU said the College wasn’t for sale to the general public, just to alumni.

Amidst such turmoil it is really good that we didn’t end up in court on April 1.

My guess is that ACCC knew there was going to be huge changes just before April 1, and that it would be hard for us to put on a good case in the midst of all those changes.

So where are we? Making motions and going through normal court processes. The next thing, in about 6 weeks, will be more depositions.