ABSTRACT

In his memoir, One Hundred Semesters, former president of Wesleyan and Emory Universities William M. Chace reects:

e ’60s changed many things about Berkeley, about higher education, and about young people and their aspirations and hope. But embedded in those changes was the growth of right-wing hostility against what higher education, at its best, stood for and has always stood for. In time, that hostility emerged in full force.