College suspension creates Co-op quandry

Limited opening hours at the library, closed administrative buildings and overall “continental” meals at the caf stand out among the direct results of the downscaling of operations at Antioch College following the announcement that the school would close by June 2008. Less prominent in current community discussion, the co-op office too is taking hits that will take rebuilding if efforts to keep Antioch open are successful.
Over the past five years, the numbers of Antioch students employed across the country and abroad through the co-op office varied between 200 and 300 per semester. Now the number is less than 30 students.
With the pending closure of the college, student’s priorities have changed. Where the chance to work a term on an organic farm or assist a congress person on Capitol Hill would make upperclassmen pack their bags for New Zealand or Washington D.C, they are now concerned with graduating, having a more transferrable repertoire of classes, or they simply want to experience one more year of community life on campus. Although some schools can transfer co-ops into four to eight academic credits or a vocational internship, in many colleges they are not easily equated into the curriculum. Thus, most students decline the unique opportunity.
The decrease of co-oping students creates a problem for the colleges Co-op office, that in the current model has contractual obligations to the majority of employers featured on the list of annual job offerings. What happens now to all of the Co-op employers, communities, and students who would have normally taken part in the co-op program?
The immediate reaction of co-op employers to Antioch’s closure varied, said Eric Miller, Assistant Professor of Co-operative education and alumnus of the college. “Some simply hired the next volunteer on the waiting list, some expressed deep hurt and shock,” Miller recalls from his interactions with employers over the last two months. “Others decided to tentatively wait to see what will happen. This is the group we really need to encourage to stick with us because they’re the most flexible.”
Regardless of the adaptability of some employers, with just upwards of 30 students willing to fill positions on the current job list, it is likely the co-op office will lose co-op employers in the short run. Many employers are not overly dependent on Antioch, according to Miller, “but some full-time employers are always waiting for the next Antiochian to come along.”
For those who are just one co-op away from graduation, the college has decided to allow a pre-Antioch job experience to count as a co-op credit, and is also offering a limited co-op term next fall.
“If I have anything to say,” advises Miller, “it would be to stay optimistic – there are many Co-op employers who are doing more than just crossing their fingers, as am I, so we may all have another chance for a co-op.”

The Illuminati Corner*

My comrades and compatriots, in observance of the harvest moon and the lunar eclipse, the sorcerer lizards in the highest echelons of the defense establishment have once again turned their evil eyes onto our little piece of the world, and through their operatives dismissed former President Lawry, and sent security officers to prowl his office for sensitive materials that might undermine their quest for domination. This grim harvest also involved a surprise three-day weekend for anyone involved in any attempt to prevent Antioch’s closure, allowing ample time for the shape-shifters to pilfer any useful documents from the offices of development and alumni relations.

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Pillow Talk at Antioch

Jeff Wood '88 & Lynda White '88We met on our first official day as Antiochians in September 1984. Jeff was sitting on the upper level walkway between the kitchens of Mills when Lynda pulled up behind the dorm. A warm hello and some help carrying Lynda’s belongings to her room was the first of many moments we would spend together that Fall. Our attraction to one another was immediate, spending the day together talking and laughing into the evening and on into sunrise. We discovered and cemented a deep friendship during that quarter, all while miraculously managing to keep our young hormones (mostly) at bay. There were obviously enough tell-tale interactions and lengthy massages exchanged in the human habitrails of the Mills TV room to get rumors flying; we were immortalized in a multi-panel cartoon called “Mills Street Blues” which showed up in a few places around campus. According to a few sources, our unrequited lust was considered legendary at the time, but we kept it platonic and said goodbye that December as our Antioch schedules sent us our separate ways until the following Fall quarter of 1985.

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