Antioch College closes; Former profs keep on teaching

<p>DAYTON -- Former teachers at Antioch College, which is temporarily closing amid financial problems, plan to teach in coffee shops, bookstores and parks to keep alive the spirit of the liberal arts school known for producing graduates with a passion for free thinking and social activism . . .</p>

<p>. . . the school will have no administrators, but all members of the school community -- faculty, students, staff, union workers -- will have a say in making decisions . . .</p>

<p>. . . Located about 15 miles east of Dayton, Antioch College is known for its pioneering academic programs that produce students with a passion for free thinking and social activism. Famous alumni included Coretta Scott King and "Twilight Zone" creator Rod Serling.</p>

<p>As</a> Antioch College closes, former profs continue teaching - Cleveland Metro News – The Latest Breaking News, Photos and Stories from The Plain Dealer</p>

<p>If only HYPMS can donate 0.1% of their endowments to the college, this won't even happen</p>

<p>But they won't.
Capitalism, baby.</p>

<p>this is sad..my uncle went to antioch and then harvard for grad school..</p>

<p>I suspect that one key factor behind Antioch's struggles is that so many East and West coast students won't consider a Midwest college, even for a nanosecond (barring a handful of notable exceptions, e.g., U. of Chicago, Northwestern, WUSTL).</p>

<p>There are many terrific colleges that get overlooked when students flip past the heartland schools in their guidebooks without so much as a glance. </p>

<p>Students should keep in mind that, when making grad-school admission decisions, adcoms are looking for diversity, just as undergrad admission officials are. They want to admit applicants from a broad swath of institutions. So being a star at colleges like Beloit, Coe, St. Olaf, Lawrence and many others in the Midwest can provide not only a superb undergrad experience but also perhaps a leg up for those planning to continue their formal education elsewhere.</p>

<p>Sally notes,"I suspect that one key factor behind Antioch's struggles is that so many East and West coast students won't consider a Midwest college, even for a nanosecond (barring a handful of notable exceptions, e.g., U. of Chicago, Northwestern, WUSTL)."</p>

<p>Response: Are you kidding? There are dozens of desirable schools selected by both east and west coast students. How about: Ohio State, Cincinnati, Michigan,Michigan State, Wisconsin, Indiana, Oberlin, Grinnell ( which is becoming the "in" lac), University of Illinois, Illinois Institute of Tech, SAIC and hundreds of other smaller schools.</p>

<p>But Sally...perhaps even CC has a part in this when some very good LACs and small universities aren't available on CC's alphabetic list. Finding info or asking questions is hard when no one knows about these schools.</p>

<p>also, antioch's heyday was back when communal living and what essentially were alternative forms of education were fashionable. once the hippies graduated and grew up, they had a hard time finding young people to carry on the legacy.</p>

<p>We don't live that far from Yellow Springs, and we keep meaning to do a road trip just to enjoy the small-town college atmosphere (coffeehouses, bookstores, etc.)</p>

<p>Guess we should go sooner rather than later.</p>

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Former teachers at Antioch College, which is temporarily closing amid financial problems, plan to teach in coffee shops, bookstores and parks to keep alive the spirit of the liberal arts school known for producing graduates with a passion for free thinking and social activism .

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<p>Boy, those professional college students will do anything to avoid getting a real job now won't they? I used to live near Yellow Springs and the town had a tendency to not be very big on yard work, tree pruning, grass cutting, every yard was overgrown. I am positive it was to hide the marijuana crops.</p>

<p>I hope HaHa Pizza stays open, that place was a mainstay. Along with the Birkenstock and bong shops.</p>

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I used to live near Yellow Springs and the town had a tendency to not be very big on yard work, tree pruning, grass cutting, every yard was overgrown. I am positive it was to hide the marijuana crops.

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<p>I doubt it. No one with half a brain would grow marijuana in their front yard.</p>

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I doubt it. No one with half a brain would grow marijuana in their front yard.

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<p>You've never been to Yellow Springs have you? It's a Haight-Ashburyesque time warp in a tiny town in the middle of Ohio. You'd be surprised what you see. The hippy culture was alive and well the last time I lived near by about 15 years ago.</p>

<p>That is really, really cool of the professors.</p>

<p>Yellow Springs is a cool town.</p>

<p>Having grown up in Ohio, I wouldn't think this has to do with people from other places not going to the school. I think it has to do with Ohians not going. Antioch, as awesome as it may theoretically be, had a bad reputation among many people in the area. Also, as I believe was pointed out in the thread started when the news of Antioch closing was first announced, Antioch is not exactly conducive to creating magnates who will later donate millions of dollars.</p>

<p>George Will writes: </p>

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WASHINGTON -- During the campus convulsions of the late 1960s, when rebellion against any authority was considered obedience to every virtue, the film "To Die in Madrid," a documentary about the Spanish Civil War, was shown at a small liberal arts college famous for, and vain about, its dedication to all things progressive. When the film's narrator intoned, "The rebels advanced on Madrid," the students, who adored rebels and were innocent of information, cheered. Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, had been so busy turning undergraduates into vessels of liberalism and apostles of social improvement that it had not found time for the tiresome task of teaching them tedious facts, such as that the rebels in Spain were Franco's fascists.</p>

<p>That illustrates why it is heartening that Antioch will close after the 2007-08 academic year. Its board of trustees says the decision is to "suspend operations" and it talks dottily about reviving the institution in 2012. There is, however, a minuscule market for what Antioch sells for a tuition, room and board of $35,221 -- repressive liberalism unleavened by learning.</p>

<p>Founded in 1852 -- its first president was Horace Mann -- Antioch was, for a while, admirable. One of the first colleges to enroll women and blacks, it was a destination for escaped slaves. Its alumni include Stephen Jay Gould, Coretta Scott King and Rod Serling, whose "Twilight Zone" never imagined anything weirder than what Antioch became when its liberalism curdled.</p>

<p>In 1972-73, Antioch had 2,470 students. In 1973, a protracted and embittering student and employee strike left the campus physically decrepit and intellectually toxic. By 1985, enrollment was down 80 percent. This fall there may be 300 students served by a faculty of 40.</p>

<p>In 1993, Antioch became an international punch line when it wrote rules to insure that all sexual conduct would be consensual, step by minute step: "If the level of sexual intimacy increases during an interaction ... the people involved need to express their clear verbal consent before moving to that new level." Does consent to a touch cover a caress? Is there consent regarding all the buttons?</p>

<p>Although laughable, Antioch was not funny. Former public radio correspondent Michael Goldfarb matriculated at what he calls the "sociological petri dish" in 1968. In his first week, he twice had guns drawn on him, once "in fun" and once by a couple of drunken ex-cons "whom one of my classmates, in the interest of breaking down class barriers, had invited to live with her." A true Antiochian still, Goldfarb says: "I do think I was made stronger for having to deal with these experiences."</p>

<p>Steven Lawry -- Antioch's fifth president in 13 years -- came to the college 18 months ago. He told Scott Carlson of The Chronicle of Higher Education about a student who left after being assaulted because he wore Nike shoes, symbols of globalization. Another left because, she told Lawry, the political climate was suffocating: "They all think they are so different, but they are just a bunch of conformists."</p>

<p>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?</p>

<p>**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.</p>

<p>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.**</p>

<p>"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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<p>Yeah, when you take a bunch of intellectually mediocre, idealistic kids and create a college out of them, you'll create little but a thick haze of smoke.</p>

<p>Idealism is wonderful, but I wonder how long this will last. Where is the $ coming from to pay the profs? Surely the kids aren't expected to pay $35k for a discussion in a coffee house? And housing? And the accreditation? Unrealistic and impractical.</p>

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They all think they are so different, but they are just a bunch of conformists.

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<p>That would indeed be a suffocating atmosphere. I think smart students who seek colleges in the Midwest know well enough to pass over mismanaged colleges.</p>

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You've never been to Yellow Springs have you? It's a Haight-Ashburyesque time warp in a tiny town in the middle of Ohio. You'd be surprised what you see. The hippy culture was alive and well the last time I lived near by about 15 years ago.

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<p>It's like growing money. And if the cops don't get you someone's bound to steal it.</p>

<p>Having been through Yellow Springs recently, Antioch's closing is long overdue. The campus was a shambles. No amount of money could revive it or restore it to its "glory" days of the late fifties and sixties, or even seventies. The Antioch Shakespeare festival was world renowned and its former venue is a shambles. It's abundantly apparent no one was minding the store.</p>