FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
Contact: Anne D. Neal or Charles Mitchell, 202-467-6787
ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND STANDARDS WIN AGAIN AT DARTMOUTH
Alumni Stand Up to Electioneering, Vote Down New Constitution
HANOVER, NH (November 3, 2006)—Dartmouth alumni have
decisively rejected a proposed new constitution for alumni governance. The
American Council of Trustees and Alumni, which has long supported concerned Dartmouth alumni,
applauded the vote.
“This vote is another signal victory for academic freedom
and standards,” ACTA president Anne D. Neal said. “The new constitution would
have imperiled future reform candidacies and silenced concerned alumni.”
The voting was held from September 15 until October 31. A
two-thirds “yes” vote was needed for ratification, but a whopping 51 percent of alumni voted “no.”
ACTA has been supporting concerned alumni at Dartmouth for over a
decade. ACTA National Council member William K. Tell, Jr. spearheaded the
creation of Dartmouth Alumni for Open Governance in the 1990s. In 2004 and
2005, ACTA lauded
the election of alumni petition candidates—T.J. Rodgers, Todd Zywicki, and
Peter Robinson—to the Dartmouth Board of Trustees on platforms of free speech, academic
excellence for undergraduates, and support of athletics. All three opposed
the proposed new constitution because it would have imposed burdensome new
requirements on future petition candidates.
The campaign to enact the proposed constitution began in
May, when the leaders of the Dartmouth Association of Alumni announced
that they were “postponing” the scheduled elections for their own offices. ACTA
protested this move in a June
1 letter, which resulted in media coverage in the New York Times, New
Hampshire Union Leader, Boston Globe, and many other outlets.
Student newspapers
from across the political spectrum and the leaders of the New
Hampshire Young Democrats and Dartmouth College Republicans all opposed the
new constitution
ACTA also expressed
concern this fall over electioneering on the part of the Dartmouth administration, which had promised
to remain neutral. The irregularities included:
- A
recent graduate said
that during his senior year he was called into a meeting with two
administrators and berated about an e-mail he had written opposing the new
constitution;
- A
student employee also said
that his supervisor—a Dartmouth
administrator—called him in for a meeting in which he was verbally
“attacked for what [he] had written” about the proposed constitution on a
website;
- Four
mass e-mails (links: one
and two, three,
four)
encouraging a “yes” vote were sent to alumni using Dartmouth e-mail servers;
- Dartmouth president James Wright voted—in
his capacity as a Dartmouth
trustee—to recommend that alumni vote “yes” on the proposed constitution;
- Wright
also endorsed the proposed constitution in a speech,
going on to accuse concerned alumni of uttering “many misleading
statements” and “attacks on Dartmouth’s alumni volunteers”; and
- Concerned
alumni said the online
ballot was biased. For each provision on it, the Executive Committee
of the Dartmouth Association of Alumni inserted a large multi-colored
statement endorsing or rejecting the proposed change. No such statements were
available to other viewpoints.
“It is extremely telling that the new constitution failed by
18 points, despite a massive internal effort to have it passed,” Neal
concluded. “Dartmouth
alumni have spoken, clearly showing that majority sentiment favors more
openness to alumni concerns and petition trustee candidates. We hope the
insiders who pushed so hard—and lost—have gotten the message.”
The American Council of Trustees and Alumni is a
nonpartisan, nonprofit, national organization dedicated to academic freedom,
academic quality, and accountability. ACTA has a network of trustees and alumni
around the country including those from Dartmouth.
ACTA has issued numerous reports on higher education, including How Many
Ward Churchills?, Intellectual Diversity: Time for Action, The
Hollow Core, and Losing America’s Memory: Historical Illiteracy in the
21st Century. For further information, contact ACTA at (202)
467-6787.
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