FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
Contact: Anne D. Neal or Charles Mitchell, 202-467-6787
THE GRINCH COMES TO HAMILTON
Students Protest as Scandal Reverberates Nationwide
CLINTON, NY
(December 22, 2006)—Despite significant student demand, Hamilton College
has scuttled a vibrant new center to study Western civilization and Alexander
Hamilton. The creation of the new center was announced with fanfare earlier
this year, only to be dropped in
the wake of faculty objections. Since the announcement, Hamilton has increasingly drawn the ire of
national commentators who say the
university has allowed faculty politics to trump student needs.
“Students and alumni may rightly say the Grinch
has come to Hamilton,”
said Anne D. Neal, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni.
“Instead of giving students a new center of learning, Hamilton is taking
educational opportunities away—and
drawing negative national attention as a consequence. It’s simply inexcusable!”
In a recent speech at
the University of Notre Dame, Neal condemned the college’s actions. ACTA has been working
with concerned
Hamilton alumni for years
to effect reforms on the campus.
Hamilton also received harsh criticism in an article
appearing in the national magazine The
New Criterion and a recent syndicated column, which called the college’s
move an example of the “toxic spirit” that “clearly lives on at Hamilton”—among
others.
The national publicity joins a chorus
of student complaints, including two recent editorials
in the Hamilton Spectator, the student newspaper, bemoaning the death
of what was to be the Alexander
Hamilton Center.
In an editorial, students took the
college to task: “Hamilton
students have lost a great educational opportunity
because people could not compromise.” According
to the editorial:
We have lost, among other things,
the opportunity for internships, fellowships, research stipends and a
greater dialogue with other institutions of higher learning, in correspondence with the Center’s mission to open up
communication with outside colleges and universities and engage in serious
scholarship.
Another student columnist later added that the Center “would
have significantly enhanced the students’ educational experience at Hamilton.” He added:
Yet again, many professors, because of their ideological biases, personal
vendettas and politics, have deprived students of this great intellectual opportunity. They have ideological blinders on and
cannot see that this center would greatly benefit the students, Hamilton and
the larger academic community.
“Clearly, this is not just a local issue,” ACTA’s Neal said. “Hamilton’s
distaste for intellectual diversity
is the symptom of a much larger problem on our nation’s college campuses.”
In her speech at Notre Dame, Neal noted that the Alexander Hamilton
Center “would have been a part of a
growing group of such centers nationwide, including the renowned James Madison
Program at Princeton headed by Professor Robert George.”
But now, she said, the Center’s fate has become an example of a “prevalent
culture on the modern campus that is politicized, one-sided, coercive, and
manipulative.” She continued:
This situation is the product of
nearly three decades of postmodernist transformation
of the academy. Whereas political bias used to be considered the enemy of
dispassionate teaching and scholarship, postmodernism has turned partiality
into a virtue….
Too often the ambitions of the
postmodernist academy reflect narcissistic faculty interests rather than
student needs; academic freedom without academic responsibility; political
agendas in the name of teaching students to think critically.
According to its charter,
the Alexander Hamilton Center was to be devoted to the “study of freedom,
democracy and capitalism…within the larger tradition of Western culture.” Hamilton announced the creation
of the Center on September 6. It then announced
a $3.6 million pledge from a life trustee on October 13. But in the process,
the Hamilton
faculty voted overwhelmingly to condemn the Center.
Amid the controversy, a dean sent an e-mail
on Nov. 27 saying that “now is not the time to proceed with the establishment
of the center on campus.” An announcement was also posted on the Hamilton website
saying: “Hamilton College has announced that the Alexander
Hamilton Center
will not be established at this time due to a lack of consensus about
institutional oversight of the Center as a Hamilton program.”
“Hamilton
is due for a serious course correction,” Neal concluded. “It has just hired a new
dean for diversity issues, but if it
continues to neglect diversity of thought, its reputation will be seriously
harmed.”
The American Council of Trustees and Alumni is a bipartisan,
national nonprofit dedicated to academic freedom, academic quality, and
accountability in higher education. ACTA has a network
of trustees and alumni across the country and has issued numerous reports 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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