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William M. Chace
1988–1994
B.A., M.A., Ph.D. (1938–)
“I really believe the small liberal-arts institutions, in providing
quality of education and intensity of experience, are simply not
duplicated.”
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Although William Chace had lived
in California for more than 25 years before coming to Wesleyan as president, his
origins were nonetheless in the East. He was born on September 3, 1938, in
Newport News, Va., and received his bachelor’s degree in English from Haverford
College in 1961. A specialist in 20th-century literature,
particularly in James Joyce, he received master’s and doctoral degrees in
English from the University of California, Berkeley. His published books include
James Joyce: A Collection of Critical Essays, The Political Identities
of Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot, and The Critical Eye: Examinations of
American Culture.
When he won a Woodrow Wilson
National Fellowship to teach at Stillman College, his experiences there
confirmed his decision to become a teacher. He was also arrested during a civil
rights demonstration, the only white among the 450 arrested. Upon returning to
Stanford, he taught the first course in black literature there in 1968.
Chace then taught at Berkeley and at Stanford
before joining the administration at the latter institution. He was associate
dean of the school of humanities and science from 1981 to 1985 and then vice
provost for academic planning and development at Stanford from 1985 until he
came to Wesleyan in 1988.
Chace strengthened the academic program and
refocused the mission of the university. He developed a five-year master plan,
the University Plan, to integrate academic and financial development. This
resulted in a reduction in the size of the administrative staff, a six percent
reduction in the size of the faculty, and a large reduction in annual operating
expenses. The consolidation caused dissent, particularly among the faculty,
which Chace attempted to ameliorate by encouraging faculty participation in
decision making.
In cutting costs while strengthening the
academic program, particularly the curriculum for first-year students, Chace
liked to say that he was “sharpening Wesleyan’s silhouette.”
In 1994, Chace resigned to become president of
Emory University.
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