Will fantasizes about Antioch, From Dan Fallon, Vice Chair, Antioch Board of Trustees.

Charlotte Observer, Wed, Aug. 01, 2007

Column Mis-characterized Ohio College and Misjudged its Future

George Will has used his highly refined intelligence to establish a solid career by isolating silly incidents, defining them as “liberal,” and then belittling them to the delight of his partisan audience. But even his admirers are likely to agree that his attack on Antioch College (July 15, “Liberalism without learning”) went over the top.

His characterization of this rugged icon of progressive American philosophy as “repressive liberalism unleavened by learning” fits the fantasy he describes, while veering madly off course from the subject of his essay. Some clarification is in order.

Passionate discussion by the board of trustees concerning suspension of operations at Antioch College left little doubt that the difficult vote was not based upon failure of the college’s academic program, but rather on an unsustainable business model that threatened its financial basis. A flawed financial strategy can be repaired. The board’s decision marks the fourth time in its more than 150 years that this college has suspended operations, only to reopen as a more vigorous institution. The board expects Antioch College to open its doors to coming generations of students no later than 2012, secure enough to sustain its existence indefinitely into the future. To achieve that goal, the college needs now to generate the endowment that in its storied history it never secured.

I graduated from Antioch College in a different era, when my fellow students included Eleanor Holmes Norton and Stephen Jay Gould, to mention only two whose names are widely recognized. Times change, but even with dwindling
enrollment a demanding Antioch College faculty has been rewarded by outstanding graduates, as indicated, for example, by the college’s recent ranking among national leaders in the production of Ph.D. degrees, and in its consistent placement for the last decade among the top institutions in the country on the most envied dimensions of the National Survey of Student Engagement.

A splendid academic innovator, Antioch College is a leader. It developed co-operative education, academic study abroad, outcomes-based assessment of rigorous liberal education outcomes, and collegiate governance that treated students from their first moment on campus as responsible participating adults in an organic community focused in inquiry, knowledge and growth.

A landmark of progressive collegiate education, its permanent absence would leave a searing void in the landscape of U.S. higher education. The board I have observed does not intend to let that happen. We spent years of analysis, deliberation and investment meeting our fiduciary responsibility to Antioch College. The wrenching and conscientious decision we made to suspend operations came at the end of a long chain of actions to benefit the college and was taken in the conviction that at this moment only this step could secure its future.

Instead of childish gloating over what he calls the dotty talk of plans by the board of trustees to re-open Antioch College on a financially secure basis, Will should rejoice that there are Americans committed to preserving the legacy of Horace Mann and Arthur Morgan, two giants of practical American idealism. I am now working, as are thousands of alumni and many others, to rebuild this special, necessary and academically challenging presence in American higher education.

Dan Fallon
Vice Chair
Antioch University Board of Trustees

Who Should Control Antioch? – Inside Higher Ed

Ever since Antioch University announced plans last month to suspend the operations of Antioch College, Steve Lawry has been a man in the middle.

As president, he had pushed hard to raise money to keep the college going and was seen as a strong advocate for the college — the storied liberal arts institution known for its progressive values and co-op program — within the university. Many students, alumni and faculty members who distrust the university’s chancellor and board trust Lawry, even though he didn’t explicitly break with the university administration. He was expected to play a key role in planning the college’s revival, while helping current students and employees adjust to the college’s disappearing for several years.

Lawry’s role changed on Thursday, when he announced that he was resigning, effective at the end of the year — and called for the college to have its own board. By itself, calling for the college to have its own board may not seem significant: The university’s chancellor has talked about the idea of creating boards for the college and other units of the university.

But in an interview Friday, Lawry was explicit about the powers that he believes the board for the college needs: full control over the budget, endowment, curriculum and the hiring and firing presidents. Without that control, he said he believes that plans to revive the college at some future point in time won’t attract donations and are doomed to fail.

“Skeptical alumni will not give financial support until the college is governed by a properly empowered board,” Lawry said. In taking that approach, he was largely endorsing the views of alumni who have been raising money that they say they will not give to any entity controlled by the university.

In a separate interview Friday, Toni Murdock, chancellor of the university, reiterated her belief that the college needs its own board, but also stressed that regardless of how much power is delegated, key decisions would be made in concert with her, and final authority would rest with the university’s board. “We are one corporation and all the assets are owned by one corporation,” she said.

Their differences over governance are coming at a crucial time for Antioch. The university is trying to take new steps to persuade dubious alumni to trust the board. For example, the university is planning a series of Webcasts at which financial information about the decision to suspend the college will be shared.

Those efforts do not appear, at least yet, to be winning over many of the angry alumni. And a new dispute may further damage relations. Reports are circulating on the campus that Antioch University will shutter the Coretta Scott King Center for Cultural and Intellectual Freedom, a center for which the late civil rights leader and Antioch alumna gave permission to use her name. People involved in the creation of the center in 2005 say that King was specifically promised that the center’s future would be secure — and some see the uncertainty about the center’s future as a betrayal of King and of the college’s values.

Questions of Governance

Antioch was founded in 1852, with Horace Mann serving as its first president, and for most of Antioch’s history, the college was the institution. The college played a role in the abolitionist movement and was an early institution to admit students who were women or black. In the past few decades, however, Antioch became a university, opening campuses around the country, and a distance education unit as well. Unlike the college, these units are not residential, not focused on undergraduates, and do not have a system of tenure. These campuses have attracted students — boosting total Antioch enrollment to 5,000, only a few hundred of whom are enrolled at the college, in Yellow Springs, Ohio.

As the university has grown, it has remained governed by a single board. Trustees and university administrators say that by nurturing the new campuses, the board has spread Antioch’s philosophy and promoted financial stability. But many at Yellow Springs believe that the board spends so much time on the other campuses that it ignored the heart of the institution, setting up the current crisis in which the board says that there is not enough money to keep the college going.

In the interview Friday, Lawry said that there is a direct relationship between the university’s governance and the decision to suspend the college’s operations.

“I don’t think there’s any question about that. This board is limited in its ability to really focus in a direct way on the needs and problems of any of the campuses. So I think that there’s evolved a kind of detachment,” he said.

He stressed that he believes such a change would help all of Antioch’s programs, not just the college. And — based on fund raising work and discussions he has had with hundreds of alumni — he was firm that a separate board for the college would not work if it reported to a universitywide board.

For Antioch College to come back, he said, a new board needs to attract a certain caliber of trustee “willing to give time and money.” Having approached such people, he said, “if those powers are shared or retained ultimately by the university board, you are not going to attract people to the board.”

Asked about an appropriate role for the university central administration and board, Lawry said he could see roles in supervising a joint Ph.D. program in leadership that was recently created involving multiple campuses, or looking for ways that the different campuses might collaborate.

Lawry declined to discuss in detail the discussions he had with Antioch University leaders and trustees prior to the university board’s decision to suspend the college’s operations. But several sources who were parties to those discussions confirmed that Lawry had a plan — shot down before the meeting at a session with the chancellor and the heads of the other campuses — that would have avoided suspending operations by making budget cuts and raising more money, in part through the governance changes Lawry is now advocating in public.

The analysis Lawry offers about governance is consistent with what critics of the university’s central administration have been saying for years — although it may carry more weight coming from someone who had had a position of real authority at the institution.

Susan Eklund-Leen, a professor of cooperative education, said she was pleased that Lawry is going public with the depth of his concerns about governance, and she called it “critical” that the college president report to a college board, and not a central administration. “Right now, everything from the president of the college for the board is filtered through the chancellor, and at this point, it’s safe to say that the university administration is not supportive of the college,” she said.

Eklund-Leen said that she was concerned about the impact of Lawry leaving. “With Steve’s departure I worry more about the coming year than I had previously. With the messages we have received from the board and the university administration I feel like we’ve lost our only ally.”

Murdock, the chancellor, said she agreed that the university has grown in ways that make it hard for a single board to provide enough leadership for all of the campuses. She said boards for individual campuses would have “a huge responsibility for fund raising” and that they would probably make curricular and presidential hiring decisions, although these would be “in coordination with the chancellor.”

While Murdock said that university leaders believe that some power must be delegated, she referred to the campus boards under consideration as “quasi governing boards” and said that “there would still be one oversight board.” She also stressed that the university’s board is just starting to consider these ideas, and has not made any final decisions.

Murdock rejected Lawry’s view that alumni will not get behind Antioch College fund raising if the college reports to a university board. “I know Steve feels very strongly about that, but I’m not of the same thought,” she said.

“I have been in contact with other alums, who do not hold [a separate board] as their priority,” Murdock said. These alumni, she said, “believe that because the college has had such a difficult history in balancing their budget, managing their funds, that there is a feeling that there needs to be greater oversight in order to assist them to try to reach an area of sustainability.”

The Coretta Scott King Legacy

As Antioch debates governance, it is also considering the fate of various parts of the campus — and of the Coretta Scott King Center for Cultural and Intellectual Freedom, which was created to provide programs to promote diversity. King features prominently in the college’s materials about itself, testimony to Antioch’s record of educating black women when relatively few non-historically black colleges did so. King and her family carefully guarded use of her name, and she agreed to have her name associated with the Antioch program only after extensive discussions.

Many of those involved with those negotiations believed that King was explicitly promised that the program was secure — which she specifically asked about because Antioch’s financial difficulties were well known at the time of the negotiations.

Dana Patterson, director of the center, confirmed Friday that she has been told by Antioch officials that unless she is able to quickly raise a lot of money, the King center will “go offline with the college” when the college’s operations are suspended next years. The future of the center would depend on the college, she said. Patterson, who is new in her job, was not involved in the negotiations with King.

Barbara Winslow, an alumna who was a donor to the center and formerly was an Antioch trustee, said that the potential closing of the King program made her “even more distraught” than she already was about the suspension of the college. “The commitment of our college to civil rights may be symbolized by Coretta Scott King,” said Winslow, a professor of education and women’s studies at Brooklyn College. “The college’s historic commitment to civil rights and racial justice is so enormous. To the outside world, this looks like questioning the college’s commitment to its past.”

Paula A. Treichler is the Antioch trustee who was designated to lead the delegation that spoke with King about the center. Treichler, a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is not only an Antioch alumna, but grew up around the campus, as her parents taught there. Her mother was King’s adviser.

Treichler said she was “deputized” by the board to reassure King, who was worried about “the instability” at the college. With the full support of the university, Treichler said she told King that “her name and the center would be protected.” Treichler said she saw the King programs as a perfect fit for Antioch and Yellow Springs, once a key stop on the Underground Railroad.

In not assuring the center’s future, she said that Antioch leaders have “betrayed” the promise they made to King.

Murdock, the chancellor, said that the university “really hasn’t made a decision” on the King center. She said she would like to work “to determine whether we can keep it operating and sustainable and look at it in terms of how the university could serve the center, and how the center could serve the university until we re-open the college. We really need to talk about it — and see if there is a role that the center can serve at the university.”

Asked whether the university had made commitments to King, Murdock said that “we need to get our legal counsel to see what the documents state. We haven’t looked at that issue yet.”

— Scott Jaschik

Financially Strapped Antioch College will Lose its President at Year-end.

Business First of Columbus – 10:16 AM EDT Friday, July 27, 2007

Financially strapped Antioch College will lose its president at year-end.

Steven Lawry told the liberal arts school’s chancellor Thursday that he will leave the Yellow Springs college given the board of trustees’ decision to suspend Antioch’s operations next July.

Chancellor Toni Murdock asked Andrzej Bloch, dean of faculty, to take over as interim president in January.

Lawry arrived at Antioch in 2006 from the Ford Foundation, where he was director of its Office of Management Services.

“I look forward to contributing in other ways to the advancement of the kinds of values Antioch has traditionally taught and honored–engaged citizenship, free and open intellectual inquiry, and respect for human dignity,” Lawry said in a release on his resignation.

Antioch College in June said it would close next July in hopes of shoring up its finances so it could reopen in 2012. Trustees said the college has struggled amid falling enrollment and revenue, yet faculty and alumni
claimed other factors–including a curriculum overhaul and the college’s governance structure–contributed to the downfall.

Antioch, which was founded in 1852, was noted in education circles for its nontraditional curriculum and its liberal stands. It boasts famous alumni, including Coretta Scott King, actor John Lithgow and Rod Serling, creator of the “Twilight Zone.”

AU Board of Trustees Announces Web-based Financial Discussion on the Suspension of Operations at Antioch College

Published Wednesday, July 25, 2007

By Arthur J. Zucker Chair, Antioch University Board of Trustees

Dear Antioch Community,

Based on what the Antioch University Board of Trustees has heard, from Antiochians during Alumni Weekend and through a variety of communications, we’ve concluded that we haven’t effectively communicated the process leading up to the Board’s decision on June 9 to suspend operations at Antioch College. It’s reasonable that all Antiochians should understand the rationale behind that decision and we intend to share all the financial details that led to this decision.

To accelerate this process, we will provide a web-based financial discussion that will take place on Thursday, August 16, at 8:00 PM Eastern Time. By using this technology, all interested parties will be able participate. Following this, we have scheduled a special board meeting on Saturday, August 25, in Cincinnati. The morning session will be a town hall meeting, followed by an afternoon session with invited participants from key stakeholder groups.

Antioch University Chancellor Toni Murdock and I will conduct the August 16 web-based presentation to share with the Community all of the financial information that served as the basis for the Board’s resolution – information which demonstrates clearly that the current business model cannot be sustained. During this presentation, we will provide the facts and figures that were seen, studied and discussed by Board members between the November 2006 and June 2007 meetings.

You can join the conversation in real time through Internet access. In the next few days, information will be provided on how to join the presentation. You can find this on the Antioch College website, www.antioch-college.edu. This process will also provide the opportunity to send questions to Chancellor Murdock and/or to me via e-mail, before, during and after the presentation. Following the web seminar, we will post the conversation, as well as questions and answers, on the Antioch College website so anyone can access the information in the future.

Overview of Antioch College Finances (www.antioch-college.edu)
Web Presentation by:
Board Chair Art Zucker and Antioch University Chancellor Toni Murdock
Thursday, August 16, 2007
8:00PM EDT/5:00PM PDT

This web seminar is open to all interested parties. The goal is to provide financial information that will enable us all to understand the rationale for the Board’s decision. From this point we can then, collectively, begin the efforts to re-build
Antioch college. To participate: Log onto www.antioch-college.edu. Further details will be posted on the website in the near future.

The August 25 special board meeting, to be held in Cincinnati, is the next step in the process of working together to re-build Antioch College. It is felt that starting this re-building process cannot wait until our regularly scheduled meeting in October, and it’s critical that we have the participation and support of Antioch College’s key stakeholders
in this process. The meeting in Cincinnati will consist of two parts:

•The first part will be an open forum where any member of the Antioch Community will be able to provide their vision for the future of Antioch College.

•Given the morning conversation, the second part of the day has been set aside for invited stakeholder representatives to meet with Trustees. This will involve a facilitated discussion to continue charting a strategic plan leading to the reopening of the College.

Specifically, the Cincinnati sessions will include:
Open Forum Meeting With the Board of Trustees (www.antioch-college.edu)
9:00AM – 11:30AM EDT, location to be determined.
Saturday, August 25, 2007

The forum will allow alumni, current students, faculty, staff, Yellow Springs business and community leaders, donors and others to share their visions with the board and senior administrative leadership. Please visit www.antioch-college.edu after August 3, 2007, for further information on the guidelines for the meeting, details on the format and meeting location.

Stakeholder Discussion Session with the Board of Trustees (www.antioch-college.edu)
1:00 – 5:00PM EDT, location to be determined.
Saturday, August 25, 2007

Key stakeholders representing the Alumni Association, faculty, staff and students, and Yellow Springs Village leadership will be invited to attend the afternoon session.. Names of key stakeholders will be submitted to the Board and the individuals will participate in a facilitated discussion with the Antioch leadership team. This meeting will focus on the process to move toward re-opening Antioch College by 2012. Please visit www.antioch-college.edu in upcoming days for additional information on the meeting format and for further details on the meeting agenda. It is important to recognize that the Board has made the decision to suspend operations as of July 1, 2008. The Board will not reverse that decision. The Board has instructed the senior leadership to develop a plan leading to re-open the College at the earliest possible time, with a target date of 2012. This plan will require the involvement and cooperation of all of Antioch College’s stakeholders. It is hoped that during this meeting we will begin the process of working together collaboratively.

Sincerely,

Arthur J. Zucker
Chair, Antioch University Board of Trustees

Antioch Alum Responds to George Will Op/Ed., July 16

George Will is in fact correct, founded in 1852; Antioch’s first president was Horace Mann-the father of American public education. Antioch was indeed among the first nonsectarian colleges, among the first to offer equal compensation and opportunity to male and female faculty, among the first to offer an equal curriculum to women and blacks. At the time that Antioch made those choices, it was roundly criticized by the reactionary social commentators of the day just as it is today by Mr. Will and his ilk.

Without question, Antioch has faced financial challenges throughout its history. Yet even with modest financial resources it has proven to be one of the great academic incubators among American liberal arts colleges. Mr. Will makes note of just a few of our noteworthy alumni. A complete accounting of the contributions of our graduates to health care, scientific invention, artistic excellence, and social justice would be excessive in this brief reply, but what is worth noting is that such a small and as Mr. Will suggests insignificant college should produce so many people who have contributed so much to our collective quality of life.

This is a time of distress and concern for those of us who feel the survival of Antioch in imperative. The scathing rebuke of a one-hundred and fifty year-old college and its students throughout the generations offered by Mr. Will is at best wholly unfair and at worst mean spirited. Antioch has been a beacon for progressive thinking, yes and as a result it has always and will remain a lighting-rod for those who benefit from the status quo.

Mr. Will’s alma mater Trinity College has a deservedly fine reputation. It was historically a member of an elite class of liberal arts colleges that for generations educated the privileged in American society. Although it has had more presidents in the past ten years than Antioch, it has generally been a well funded and ably led institution. Antioch is not struggling today because its brand of education is out of favor as Mr. Will suggests, it has failed to thrive because it has never been a wealthy college and of late, when the financial stakes became very high, it has not been ably led.

While Mr. Will may find it “heartening” that Antioch will in his view close, we hope that thinking individuals with predilections leaning to the right or the left of the political spectrum would disagree. It is a chilling thought to consider the loss of a college of such significance as well as a possible warning sign to other progressive colleges. In a nation where institutions like Bob Jones and Liberty are growing and becoming wealthier, we hope that those who have a more expansive view of what the landscape of American higher education should look like will rally to the defense of Antioch.

Mr. Will is right about one more item. Antioch will not be missed. We intend to make sure that Antioch College will in fact not close. It is our fondest wish, as the very proud alumni and friends of Antioch, to prove George Will wrong. We are grateful for the motivation he has provided as we embark on saving and strengthening one of the most important educational institutions in the nation.

Matthew Derr
Antioch College Class of 1989

Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Alumni Board of Directors, July 10

Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors
Antioch College Alumni/ae Association
By dial-in conference call
4:00 p.m. EDT July 10, 2007

Committee members present

Nancy Crow, President
Ina Frank, Vice President
Rick Daily, Treasurer
Mike Brower, Chapters Committee
Ellen Borgersen, Governance Committee
Athena Frederick, Communications Committee

I. Reports from the President
A. John Feinberg is still on an airplane, and can’t serve as Recording Secretary. At Nancy’s request, Rick will serve for this meeting. The minutes of this meeting, once corrected by the group, should be sent to “webeditors@antiochians.org.” for public posting.
B. Nancy has a letter from Steve Lawry, labeled “confidential” which merits discussion among a larger body. She will ask Steve for permission to expand its reach.
C. A special meeting of the Antioch University Board of Trustees will be held on August 24-26; location is likely to be Chicago.
D. Reunion Committee: Nancy has reappointed Bradley Wilburn to serve as Committee Chair, and asked him to make sure that we have a strong, dramatic reunion in 2008.
E. Nominating Committee – Nancy has a call in to Susan Opotow to ask whether she will serve as chair of the Nominating Committee.
F. Anecdote: Nancy reported that at Denver’s Cherry Creek Arts Festival – a ceramicist from YSO was in attendance. When asked what will happen to Antioch, the ceramicist replied: “The Alumni are going to save the College!”
II. Nancy Crow letter to Art Zucker
A. Addressees: The sense of the Committee is that Nancy should talk with Art, and ask who else should get this letter.
B. How detailed should it be?
1. Offer to work with various task forces vs. presentation of an alternative plan
2. Nancy thinks we should come into the August Board Meeting with as detailed a proposal as we can possibly get. The consensus is that we should be working on this detailed plan.
C. Ellen: Our plan needs to take into account moving parts that work together:
1. Plan for an interim period of reduced operations; relaunch of full operations, and sustained operations. we work with faculty.
a) Faculty (E. Miller) have been focused on legal plans and negotiations, and not on curriculum.
D. Nancy: Board of Trustees has concluded that suspension is required.
E. Ellen: There are documents out there that are being used to plan the “new Antioch”
F. Should we demand transparency from the Board of Trustees? Better message: We need to be where decisions are being discussed and made, which we believe means more participation than having our Chair serve ex officio on the Board of Trustees.
G. Specific fundraising targets: we avoid specificity for now; plan to have a good number by late August.
H. Communicate the sense of urgency among the alumni/ae.
1. E.g., Faculty Layoff notices: We don’t yet know what the terms of the layoff notices are, how much notice is being given and what rehiring rights or preferential rights any current faculty members may have if the College is shut and reopened.
I. The Business Plan and the Curriculum Plan are two separate issues, and need to be treated as such.
J. “Closing” vs. continuing operations. We can’t tie ourselves into a position that we’re going to guarantee that the College will not close.
III. Committee Assignments.
A. Nancy has sent out a full list of Committee and task group assignments, and will republish it.
IV. § 501(c)(3) status. Motion to create separate corporation to become a § 501(c)(3) organization, which will take the money, and serve as the College Revival Fund. The mission of the College Revival Fund is to develop a business plan for the College, build a separate governing board for the College, and to raise funds for the continued operation of the College.
V. Treasurer’s Report. Rick reported that the total of pledges and donations is still roughly $525,000. He is busy doing data entry, cross-referencing donations with pledges.
VI. Chapters. Mike Brower reported that before the BOT announced suspending Antioch College we had 7 Alumni/ae Chapters around the country each of which had held at least one meeting. Today, the web page “chapters@antiochians.org” lists 16 Chapters, which means we more than doubled the number of Chapters in one month. Mike reported that he has a list of another half a dozen or more cities in which organizers are working and planning for their first meeting. Very soon we should have over 2 dozen active chapters — or even more if we count the separate Chapters being formed in various boroughs of New York City, probably soon to be followed by separate locations in greater LA. By a month from now we could easily have 30 active chapters in the US and also in Paris and London!
VII. Fundraising (Ina). Ina reported that at last night’s meeting, a donor announced his intention to relocate his pledge to the Revival Fund from the Annual Fund. People are incredibly motivated to act now to raise funds, to capture the momentum on the fundraising front.
A. Foundations. On the foundation front, we need two years minimum of “in the black” balance sheets. We have begun research done on the likely donors. The Alumni/Individual piece is critical to credibility.
B. Corporate relations. Terry Blackhawk has taken on Corporate Relations.
C. Marketing Sub-Committee. We need someone whose job is marketing, media relations, mini-DVD concept. Mike will ask the Chapters to identify a seasoned marketing professional to come on board.
D. Fundraising Plan. Ina will send out a summary fundraising plan within the next day.
VIII. Public Relations. Athena described her efforts to coordinate media relations issues.
IX. Governance. Ellen sent her committee list around via e-mail. Everyone likes the “Antioch 3.0” concept. She will put together a concept paper on this topic for immediate circulation.
X. Association Board Meeting. Brief discussion of whether there should be a meeting of the ACAA Board before our scheduled November Meeting. Rick moved that we have a conference call meeting of the full Board within 2-3 weeks. The motion was seconded and adopted by all voting. Nancy will look at rescheduling the Fall Alumni/ae Board Meeting to coincide with the Board of Trustees meeting.