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Antioch to suspend operations in 2008

YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio, June 12 (UPI) -- Antioch College, the little liberal Ohio college that produced Coretta Scott King, said Tuesday it will suspend operations after the next academic year.

The 155-year-old private school said in a news release that its board of directors voted Saturday to suspend its undergraduate residential program in Yellow Springs July 1, 2008, with the intention of reopening in 2012 as a state-of-the-art campus. During that time, it will determine the long-term viability and direction of the college, whose enrollment has fallen from more than 2,000 in the 1960s when it was a bastion of liberal activism to just a few hundred this year.

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Students can attend one more year on campus and then continue at other Antioch programs or transfer to other schools.

The school, whose first president was Horace Mann, has a rich history of encouraging its students to make a difference. It's motto is "Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity."

Besides King, its note-worthy alumni include suffragist Olympia Brown, author Silvia Nasar, actor Cliff Robertson, writer-producer Rod Serling, U.S. poet laureate Mark Strand, and Nobel Peace Prize-winning East Timor President Jose Ramos Horta.

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