FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
Contact: Anne D. Neal or Charles Mitchell, 202-467-6787
ACTA Asks: Can’t Ivy League Graduates Make Up Their Own Minds?
HANOVER, N.H. (September 25, 2006)—Despite growing
alumni concern about fairness and due process, Dartmouth College administrators
have refused to respond to inquiries from the American Council of Trustees and
Alumni concerning questionable election procedures.
Graduates of
According to
But, before the
voting even began, 2006 graduate Nick Stork told the student
newspaper 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. Student employee Andrew Eastman also said that
his supervisor—a
In an August
23 letter to
On Sept. 9, Wright
himself violated the neutrality pledge when he voted—in his
capacity as a Dartmouth trustee—to recommend that alumni vote “yes” on the
proposed constitution. Wright also endorsed the constitution in a speech,
going on to accuse concerned alumni of uttering “many misleading statements”
and “attacks on
The day after the
trustees voted,
Concerned alumni say
the online ballot—which
will be available through Oct. 31—is also biased. For each provision on the
ballot, the Executive Committee of the Dartmouth Association of Alumni has inserted
a large multi-colored statement endorsing or rejecting the proposed change. No
such statements are available to other viewpoints.
“Can’t Ivy League
graduates make up their own minds?” ACTA’s Neal asked. “It truly is a sad
day when a college thinks it must force feed its own alumni on how to vote on
matters affecting the future of their alma
mater.”
ACTA has been
supporting concerned alumni at
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.
The Wall Street Journal has since
editorialized against the constitution, joined by
“At a time of many challenges in higher education, alumni and students can offer informed and thoughtful input,” Neal concluded. “We hope President Wright will reverse course and keep his promise to let the alumni debate this issue themselves. The administration’s electioneering is neither necessary nor appropriate.”
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
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