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Sunday, July 15, 2007
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
Farewell, Antioch
by George Will
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Carlson reports that Lawry stopped the student newspaper's practice of printing "announcements containing anonymous, menacing threats against other students for their political views." Antioch likes to dabble in menace: It invited Mumia Abu-Jamal to deliver its 2000 commencement speech, which he recorded on death row in a Pennsylvania prison, where he lives because 26 years ago he shot a Philadelphia police officer first in the back, then three times in the face. Antioch's invitation was its way of saying ... what?

In an essay in the Chronicle, Cary Nelson, Antioch class of 1967 and now a professor of English at the University of Illinois, waxes nostalgic about the fun he had spending, as Antioch students did, much time away from campus, receiving academic credits. What Nelson calls "my employee resistance to injustice" got him "released from almost every job I had until I became a faculty member." But "my little expenditure was never noticed" when "I used some of Lyndon Johnson's anti-poverty money" to bus anti-Vietnam war protesters from Harlem to Washington.

Given that such was Antioch's idea of "work experience" in the "real world," it is unsurprising that the college never produced an alumni cohort capable of enlarging the college's risible $36 million endowment. Besides, the college seems always to have considered raising money beneath its dignity, given its nobility.

"Ben & Jerry could have named a new flavor for us," says John Feinberg, class of 1970 and president of the alumni board, with a melancholy sense of unfulfilled destiny. His lament for a forfeited glory is a suitable epitaph for Antioch.

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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Antioch College-Be Ashamed to Let It Die
I'm a 1963 Antioch College alum, proud of my college despite George Will (July 15). Will says Antioch sells "repressive liberalism unleavened by learning." Antioch produced Coretta Scott King and scientist Stephen Jay Gould. I was a classmate of Gould's; Antioch was scorned for its liberalism back then too.

Antioch's cooperative (work-study program) started in 1921. It rotates on-campus study with jobs off, enriching classroom learning with work experience. Will calls the small endowment proof co-op education has failed -- it didn’t turn out CEOs who can give millions.

But Antioch students have been inspired by founder Horace Mann's words, "Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity." Alumni have been drawn to community service, not the corporate ladder.

The big mistake was establishing Antioch University in the '70s, adding satellite campuses around the U.S. Many college alumni, myself included, feel the satellite system was a financial drain. Compounding this, the University Board of Trustees was given jurisdiction over all branches -- including that of Antioch College itself. It is the University Board that voted to close the college.

Will says students feel coerced into political correctness. That's regrettable, though not unusual at campuses today. Yet I've met many intelligent, well-spoken students in D.C. on "co-op." One stayed with my husband and myself while working as an intern.

Alumni are not ready to write Antioch's epitaph. We’re organizing to raise funds earmarked for the college alone, and to negotiate the establishment of an independent college Board of Trustees.

Our slogan is, "Be ashamed to let it die!" George Will should be ashamed for rejoicing in the closure of this historic and idealistic school.

Rochelle Hollander Schwab

Antioch lost
I was enrolled briefly at Antioch in 1984-'85 in a "self-generated" MFA program, where--and you think they the school wasn't interested in money--I paid $1500 every three months while I "wrote" my curriculum. I wanted to research how short stories and novels in the horror genre are adapted for film (video). My "adviser" never accepted any proposal I made, disparaged readings such as Poe's The Grotesque and Arabesque, and constantly told me the best thing I could do was enroll in courses at Rutgers in my home state of NJ that Antioch would accept as transfers. If I wanted to attend RU, I would've enrolled at RU. My "life experience" in teaching on the secondary- and college-levels for 15 years, including film and video classwork, local stage work in such shows as Dracula--were never approved for credits. I invested nine months and $4500 (plus two plane trips to Ohio) in Antioch for nothing. In 1987, I was contacted by the Antioch board to write a history of my association with the college, as part of a required evaluation being made by its accrediting committee (here it's MidAtlantic Accredidation). I was not flattering and am more than mildly surprised that the institution lasted another 20 years.
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