Our View: Last-ditch Antioch Effort Good to See

by Dayton Daily News, Editorial, Wednesday, August 29 2007

The trustees of Antioch University have done the right thing in giving Antioch College alumni a chance to raise enough money to keep the college going next year.

But the road from here is sharply uphill — and treacherous.

The university had little to lose in offering this chance. But it’s talking about only a two-month window. The alumni have until October to come up with a credible plan and a credible bankroll.

The university trustees came in for a lot of criticism when they announced their decision to close the college from 2008 to (at least) 2012. They did that for financial reasons. And they did it without letting anybody know beforehand that such a decision was in the works.

Some contributors complained. Members of the family of Horace Mann, the founder, complained. (See their letter at antiochians.org.) Former trustees complained.

Alumni and faculty were particularly quick and vocal in complaining.

The alumni association almost immediately began an effort to raise money. It has come up with about $8 million. One figure often used for what Antioch really needs is $50 million.

Obviously, that’s not set in stone. But if the school is just barely scraping by, it will have special difficulty attracting students. As it is, Eric Fingerhut, Ohio’s chancellor of higher education, has publicly wondered how small the school can get and still meet the basic standards required for it to have the state’s blessing.

The good news is that a striking degree of agreement has emerged within the Antioch community on steps the university should take. The alumni association agrees, for example, with college President Steve Lawry that the college needs its own board of trustees. And many see a need to recombine the college with Antioch University McGregor, the continuing-education school.

Another matter generating much agreement is the school’s physical condition. Authorities and others believe that among the most common reason that students choose not to attend after having been accepted is that they visit the campus and realize that it just doesn’t measure up to other schools. The problem is not simply that it lacks certain amenities, but that what it does have is not in good shape.

One area that all who are working to save the school should agree upon is in the political realm. Antioch has a reputation for a certain repressiveness coming from the political left, an excessive dedication to political correctness. Some don’t see this as a major problem in attracting students; they believe Antioch’s political niche is big enough for a small school.

To adopt that mindset would be wrong-headed for two reasons:

• The school’s appeal is fragile enough that any potential problem must be confronted.

• A public commitment to free inquiry and genuine intellectual freedom should be made and enforced just as a matter principle.

At any rate, it’s good to see everybody pulling in the same direction, at least for now. Relations between the alumni and the trustees seem to have improved, after much communication, including a Cincinnati meeting over the weekend. Now there’s mainly a lot of work to be done.

Maybe it’s too soon to be using the phoenix metaphor, about the mythical bird that is reborn from its own ashes. Antioch, after all, has neither died nor been reborn. And yet the announcement of the college’s death has sparked some life.

Reprieve Is Possible for Antioch

by Scott Jaschik for Inside Higher Ed, Tuesday, August 28 2007

It can’t be called a reprieve, at least not yet. But for the first time since the June announcement that Antioch College’s operations would be suspended after the coming academic year, the Antioch University Board of Trustees is on record saying that there might — and the key word is might — be a way to keep the college operating.

The board released a statement Monday saying that it had agreed to give alumni leaders until October to develop a business plan that would demonstrate the “financial and academic feasibility” of keeping the college running. For now, the plan to suspend operations and the declaration of financial exigency for the college remain in place. But the board is now willing to consider a new plan in October that would not involve a suspension of operations. The board’s willingness to even consider a change of course follows two months in which board leaders have said that there could not be any realistic plan to keep the college running — but those two months have also seen Antioch College’s alumni base mobilize, raise money, and demand more control over the college, which they fear has not been well managed by the university and its board.

Recent relations between the university board and the college’s supporters have been tense, at best. But Monday’s announcement appeared to signal a cease fire, with both sides speaking respectfully of the other and hopeful that the college’s operations might not be suspended.

Antioch has a notable history in American higher education. It was founded in 1852, with Horace Mann serving as its first president. The college played a role in the abolitionist movement and was an early institution to admit students who were women or black. In the 20th century, Antioch was among the pioneers in “co-op education” in which students alternated positions of work all over the country with their education at the Yellow Springs, Ohio, campus. More recently, however, Antioch’s history has been troubled and sometimes controversial. The campus — designed for 2,700 students — has seen fewer and fewer students, such that only 300 were expected this fall, before the suspension announcement.

The college’s long association of liberal politics attracted more students in the ’60s than in the ’90s, when a policy requiring explicit verbal consent before any sexual act made the college a favorite target of pundits seeking to mock political correctness. In recent decades, the college that to many is the heart of the institution played a less central role in the university, which created campuses from California to New England — boosting total Antioch enrollment to around 5,000. But with that growth, many college alumni and professors came to believe that the attention of the board had shifted too far away from the undergraduate institution that once was Antioch.

In an acknowledgment of the tensions over how the college fits into the university, Monday’s board announcement said that trustees had also approved plans “to consider the possibility of establishing a board of trustees for Antioch College with significant authority within the framework of a larger Antioch University.” Just how significant that authority would be remains to be seen and could be a key issue in the weeks ahead. Supporters of the college have said that it needs a board with just about total authority — control of top appointments, the endowment, the budget — while university officials have talked about the need for all decisions to ultimately be reviewed by the university board.

Nancy Crow, president of the Antioch College Alumni Board, said she believed that her group’s plans — which focus on increased fund raising and student recruitment, and governance reforms — can be viable. “I consider this very significant,” she said. The announcement “offered hope for uninterrupted operations” at the college, she said.

Crow said that trustees clearly appreciate “not just the passion, but the the real thoughtfulness” of alumni who have pushed to keep the college open. She stressed that the goal was not a one-time fix, but a plan that would sustain the college indefinitely. “We’re playing for the long term,” she said.

Mary Lou LaPierre, vice chancellor and chief spokeswoman for the university administration, stressed that much remains uncertain. She said that the alumni who have been pushing to keep the college open have not had full access to the college’s financial records, which they will now receive to help them. At the same time, she said, specific benchmarks will be developed to be sure that any plan is realistic in terms of keeping the college running. Those benchmarks will involve fund raising, budgets and student recruitment.

“If they show that this could be done, the board might make a different decision,” she said. Board members are concerned about the long-term situation, LaPierre said. Trustees don’t want to approve a plan that would “just keep it going from one year to another, from crisis to crisis.”

Ultimately, she said, board members decided that they “had to give them a chance” to come up with a plan.

Timing remains a big issue. While courses are being offered this year, the college has expected students who aren’t seniors to focus on transferring, while faculty members search for new jobs. Board members discussed timing “at great length,” LaPierre said, given that people will need to make plans one way or another, and that the college can’t recruit new students until it knows that there will be a place for them to enroll in the fall.

Crow said that the alumni chapters, which have been galvanized by the debate over the college’s future, will be ready to shift immediately to student recruiting, should their plan to keep the college open be accepted.

STATEMENT FROM NANCY CROW, PRESIDENT OF THE ANTIOCH COLLEGE ALUMNI BOARD

“The Antioch College Alumni Association looks forward to working with the Antioch University Board of Trustees, University administration and the Antioch community in crafting a viable plan for the survival and continued operation of Antioch College.  We especially appreciate the Board of Trustees’ candor and openness as we enter into this noteworthy partnership.

We recognize that time is short and the task is large.  But the commitment and passion expressed this weekend by College alumni, students, faculty, staff and Yellow Springs residents provides an inspiring foundation as we continue our work throughout the next several weeks.”

–Nancy Crow
President, Antioch College Alumni Board

ANTIOCH UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND UNIVERSITY LEADERSHIP TO WORK WITH ALUMNI BOARD

by Lynda Sirk, Director of Communications, Antioch College, Monday, August 27, 2007

ANTIOCH COLLEGE NEWS RELEASE
EMBARGOED UNTIL 11:00 AM EASTERN

Productive weekend results in intent to work together.

YELLOW SPRINGS, OHIO – Following an extraordinary and special meeting focused on listening to the Antioch community, the Antioch University Board of Trustees approved a resolution to work with the College Alumni Board to allow the Alumni Boardto demonstrate, by the October 2007 Board of Trustees meeting, the financial and academic feasibility of the College Alumni Board’s proposal for the continued operation of the College.

The Trustees stipulated that the Alumni Board’s proposal will need to develop a realistic business plan with required benchmarks as established by the Trustees, the Chancellor and the University Leadership Council and created in cooperation with the College Alumni Board.

To assist with the plan’s creation, the Board resolved to “work closely with the Alumni Board to provide due diligence access to all appropriate data, consistent with state and federal regulations.” At the Board of Trustees’ direction, Board Chair Arthur Zucker will appoint representatives of the Board of Trustees and University administration to work in conjunction with the Alumni Board.

Chair Zucker emphasized the basis of the decision focused on the unprecedented energy,sharing of constructive ideas, and commitment of time and money to the College by its alumni and other stakeholders.

“We want to engage the alumni,” he said, “and take advantage of the opportunity this renewed enthusiasm presents and to see if the Alumni Board can further develop their proposal to ensure the continued viability of the College.” However, Chair Zucker also cautioned “in addition to a business plan, there is much more work that needs to be done,not the least of which, is the need to raise millions of dollars in a very short time period to assure that there are sufficient funds to pay for the continued operation of the College.”

The Trustees accepted the College Alumni Board’s offer to contribute to “various costs including, but not limited to, the support of the efforts of the current College Development office.”

Further, the Board affirmed through their resolution that no actions will be taken by the Trustees to endanger the financial stability and academic excellence of Antioch University McGregor or any of the other University campuses.

In a separate vote, the Board of Trustees stated its commitment, through the work of its Governance Committee, to consider the possibility of establishing a board of trustees for Antioch College with significant authority within the framework of a larger Antioch University. The Committee is scheduled to provide a progress report to Board of Trustees in October.

Chairman Zucker strongly emphasized his appreciation to the entire Antioch community for their constructive input, energy and willingness to participate in support of the College.

Contacts: Lynda Sirk
Director of Communication Antioch College
937-769-1222

Mary Lou LaPierre
Vice Chancellor for University Advancement
206-276-1166

Descendants of Horace Mann Exhort UBoT to Vote in Favor of the Alumni Board Proposal

From: The Mann-Dole Family
To: Board of Trustees of Antioch University
Date: August 24, 2007

We are writing on behalf of our extended family which has deep ties to Antioch College. Four of the below co-signers are direct descendants of Horace Mann. Eight members of our family across three generations are Antioch alumni (Marjorie Welsh Dole ’46; Arthur A. Dole, Jr. ’46; Barbara Dole Acosta ’84; Steven Mann Dole (w) ’73; Margaret Welsh ’28, deceased; Harvey Welsh ’22, deceased; Barbara Mann Chandler ’42, deceased; and John Chandler ’42, deceased). This extended family includes educators, community activists, scientists, peace activists, homebuilders and social workers who have been profoundly influenced by the values embodied in Mann’s famous exhortation, “Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humankind.”

In the past, our family has donated substantial funds as well as several invaluable pieces of furniture (desk and dining room table) and memorabilia belonging to Horace Mann. We made these donations specifically to Antioch College to preserve the legacy of Horace Mann and to support the mission of the college. John and Barbara Chandler were both particularly generous supporters during their lifetimes and included a sizeable gift to the College in their will. Their intent was to allow others the opportunity to be exposed to the same liberal ideals they received during their college educations. They would join us in feeling bitterly disappointed and betrayed by the misappropriation of the resources we have donated through the years.

Our family strongly opposes the threatened closure. We reject the Board of Trustees’ reasoning for this closure, and we stand firmly opposed to any plan that would threaten the Antiochian principles of democratic community governance and academic freedom. It is the trustees’ responsibility, in our view, to assure that the Yellow Springs campus remains open as a residential college with a full-time, tenured faculty. There appears, however, to be a conflict of interest between the well-being of the satellite campuses and that of the college. We therefore support the position that Antioch College be goverened by an independent board of trustees.

We exhort the board to vote in favor of the Alumni Board Proposal. We pledge to continue our financial support to Antioch College only under these conditions, and will actively oppose anything less.

Signed,

Arthur A. Dole, PhD, ABBP (’46)
Marjorie Welsh Dole, MS (’46)
Barbara Dole Acosta, PhD (’84)
Kenn Chandler (Horace Mann descendant)
Janet Chandler, MS (Horace Mann descendant)
Richa (Horace Mann descendant)
Marty Chandler Miller (Horace Mann descendant)

Antioch College Alumni Association to Present Plan to Keep Antioch College Open

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Students, Faculty, Staff, Townspeople Speak to University Board of Trustees in Community Forum

Contact: Mark Reynolds, (312) 351-5868 • press@antiochians.org

The Antioch College Alumni Association will formally present its business plan for the continued operation of Antioch College to the Antioch University Board of Trustees this afternoon, in a meeting from 1 to 5 pm at the Holiday Inn Cincinnati Airport, 1717 Airport Exchange Blvd.

Invited stakeholders including current Antioch College students, alumni, faculty, staff and Yellow Springs residents will also participate in the meeting.

Citing financial exigency, the University Board of Trustees voted in June to suspend operations at the College at the close of the 2007-08 school year.  Since then, Antioch College alumni across the country have raised more than $8 million in cash and pledges to maintain continuous operations with a tenured faculty at the 153-year-old Yellow Springs institution.  The Alumni Association’s business plan proposes the establishment of a separate board of trustees to oversee Antioch College.

Earlier this morning, more than 30 alumni, students, faculty, staff, former trustees and townspeople presented testimony to the University Board of Trustees urging the continued operation of Antioch College.  Descendents of Horace Mann, the founder of Antioch College, submitted a letter pledging their continued financial support of the College only upon acceptance of the Alumni Association’s proposal.

Spokespeople will be available at the Holiday Inn Airport all afternoon.  For addtional information on the Antioch College Alumni Associaiton, visit www.antiochians.org.