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Antiochians Chapters

Archive for December, 2007

As Progressive Education Fades, Vermonters Mobilize

by Kevin J. Kelley for Seven Days, Wednesday, November 28, 2007

VERMONT — Throughout its 150-year existence, Ohio’s Antioch College has produced an eclectic group of graduates. The college’s best-known alum is Coretta Scott King, widow of slain civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Antioch is also the alma mater of “Twilight Zone” creator Rod Serling. Then there are lesser-known names, such as Robert Manry, who sailed a 13-foot sailboat across the Atlantic Ocean.

But in the Green Mountain State, we’re more familiar with names such as Jeb Spaulding, the state treasurer; Elizabeth Skarie wife of Ben & Jerry’s Jerry Greenfield; and Casey Murrow, son of famed newsman Edward R. Murrow. These and other dedicated Vermonters who attended Antioch College are taking part in a national campaign to save the 155-year-old Yellow Springs-based school from closing, due to declining enrollment and an insufficient endowment. Two hundred thirty students attend today’s Antioch, compared to more than 2000 in the 1960s.

Local Antioch alums and dropouts alike say they’re moved to help rescue the college because of what they see as congruence between Vermont’s ethic of neighborliness and town meeting-style democracy, and Antioch’s commitment to participatory governance. They also say the school’s pending end marks a disturbing trend in progressive college closings.

“Antioch has an amazing spirit of community,” says Jill Wolcott, a member of the Class of ’74 and co-organizer of the Vermont/Upstate New York Chapter of Antioch Alumni. The Shelburne resident says her current involvement with Charlotte’s co-housing movement and with the Waldorf School in Shelburne can be traced to her experience at the unconventional college.

“Antioch does give people a belief in their own self-determination and their responsibility for their lives,” she adds.

Skarie says the college forms “part of my identity I’ll never shed” — even though she left Antioch in 1971 only a year and a half after enrolling. “I went because it’s a politically active school,” the Williston resident and philanthropist explains. Skarie runs a foundation with Greenfield. She eventually received a nursing degree from Cornell — and returned to Antioch for a Master’s in counseling.Robin Lloyd

At an October 18 meeting at the Burlington home of Robin Lloyd — a former Antioch student who is known in Vermont as a longtime peace activist, filmmaker and publisher of the progressive online journal Toward Freedom — local supporters mapped plans for fundraising on behalf of the college. Lloyd didn’t end up graduating from Antioch, but some of the roughly 160 Vermonters who did already have contributed to an $18 million pledge drive. Wolcott, head of the local alumni chapter, says she can’t specify the sum of these private donations.

The fundraising effort was enough to persuade Antioch’s trustees to shelve their June decision to close the school next year. But the trustees also warned earlier this month that at least an additional $45 million must be raised by 2010 if the college is to remain open. The college also operates a New England graduate school in Keene, N.H., as well as campuses in Seattle, Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.

Fundraising poses special challenges for a school whose graduates practice its ideal of social justice, Skarie notes. “It’s hard for Antioch to be financially viable because the students who become lawyers tend to work for Legal Aid and the doctors end up treating a lot of patients for free,” she notes.

Amanda CalderIt’s vital that the school continue to operate as “a bastion of progressive education,” says Amanda Calder, a Shelburne resident who graduated from Antioch earlier this year. The termination in 2002 of Goddard College’s residential undergraduate program acted as a “motivator” for her involvement in the save-Antioch campaign, says Calder. “We can’t keep losing these progressive institutions,” she adds, noting that New Hampshire’s Franconia College — a school with a similar philosophy — has been shuttered as well.

Lloyd says her life has been strongly influenced by Antioch’s pioneering co-op program, through which students leave campus to work in a variety of settings while continuing their studies. She recalls traveling to Africa with her father, anti-colonialist campaigner William Lloyd, as part of the co-op program while she was enrolled at Antioch in 1957 and 1958. She transferred to Brandeis University in Massachusetts after marrying a student there. She still remembers learning the Horah, an Israeli folk dance, in an Antioch campus gathering spot affectionately known as Red Square.

Minnesota Chapter Potluck, January 19, 2008 at 4PM

Minnesota Antioch College Alumni Chapter
“Non-Stop Antioch”

Appetizer Potluck & Video screening of

“The Antioch Adventure”

January 19th, 2008 4pm

At the home of Ann Adams & Sally Ehlers

 

720 Bachelor Ave., Mendota Heights, MN 55118

For questions and directions call
651-452-2734

Shelby P. Chestnut

November 18th Meeting of VT/Upstate NY Alumni Chapter

*For more detailed notes and comments on this meeting, download this PDF.

We met Sunday November 18 at 4 pm at Robin Lloyd’s house in Burlington.

There was lots to talk about. More detailed notes will be coming soon.

This was our agenda, which was sent out to VT alumni by email:

4:00 pm Gather, reconnect, have tea and cookies, cider and cheese.

4:20 pm Update with Jill and Amanda, back from YSO and trying to keep up with everything.

Much has happened since we last met. The Board of Trustees reversed its decision and lifted suspension, but there seem to be different interpretations of the agreement between the Board of Trustees and the Alumni Board. The Alumni Board has recently stood up to the Board, demanding that they continue to act in the spirit of the agreement. Also, Jill’s been working with the Greening Antioch group of alums, faculty, students and townspeople.

4:45 pm Conversation by Speakerphone with Mike Brower, member of the Executive Committee of the Alumni Board; chance to ask him everything that we still don’t understand….

5:15 pm What can we do to support Antioch College? Should we be making good on our pledges and helping to fundraise? When can we recruit new students?

5:45 pm What activities and events should our chapter plan?

If you haven’t read the latest, please check out the following:
Antioch College Alumni Association website.

Inside Higher Ed story on the lifting of the suspension.

Interim President Andrzej Bloch’s letter to the faculty (later retracted)

Notes of October 20, 2007 gathering of the Vermont/upstate NY Chapter

*For more detailed notes and thoughts on this meeting, download this PDF.

Our first Chapter gathering was inspiring and exhilarating and I think we all felt it was a great success! Eighteen people attended, fifteen of which were alumni ranging from graduation year 1939 to 2007 and from nearby towns of Morrisville, Montpelier, Milton, South Burlington, Burlington, Shelburne, and Charlotte.

We shared potluck supper and gathered in a circle where we each named two or three things that have proved valuable to us in our post-Antioch lives. There were many shared themes and memories: finding Antioch, co-op experiences were a big one and the life lessons that came from them. We remembered, too, things like late night wholewheat donuts, walks to Young’s Dairy, dancing in Red Square. We all agreed on the uniqueness of Antioch, the importance of the participatory governance we experienced, and the great teaching.

Then we turned the evening over to Aimee Maruyama from the Office of Alumni Relations. Aimee was articulate and encouraging about current events, offering perspectives on how we got here in the first place and what might come next. We discussed various questions and also solutions.

Several alumni, including two high school teachers, signed up to help with admissions recruitment efforts, in anticipation of the BOT reversing its decision and the need to spread the word with college-bound students. Several also pledged and/or donated to the Antioch College Revival Fund.

We await the October 25-27 meeting where the Antioch College Alumni Board will present its business plan to the Antioch University Board of Trustees. Amanda Calder, ’07, and Jill Wolcott ’74, will both be in Yellow Springs for the Board meetings. We will be attending open meetings of the BOT, a community dinner in the Caf, alumni homecoming events, and some of the Peak Oil conference put on by Community Solutions.

Amanda and Jill plan to share our experiences in Yellow Springs at a next chapter meeting. Alums expressed interest in getting more information about the Alumni Board’s business plan. We are thinking of having someone familiar with the plan come to give a presentation of it, perhaps at several locations in the state (Montpelier, Brattleboro, and Charlotte?). We are eager to support a separate chapter (or chapters?) in Southern Vermont—there are many alumni in that area for whom Charlotte was just too far.

You will be receiving a more detailed summary of the discussion soon.

For a non-stop Antioch College,

Jill Wolcott and Amanda Calder