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Interim President of The College of William and Mary in Virginia
W. Taylor Reveley, III, has been the dean of the W&M Law School and John Stewart Bryan Professor of Jurisprudence since 1998. He was appointed interim president of the College of William and Mary on February 12, 2008. Prior to his nearly ten years as dean, Reveley practiced law at Hunton & Williams in Richmond for 28 years and was a managing partner of the nationally recognized firm for nine years. Reveley also served as head of the firm's energy and telecommunications team. Reveley previously clerked for United States Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan Jr. He is also a trustee emeritus of Princeton University (where he served on the Board for 14 years) and is a current trustee of both the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Virginia Historical Society. Reveley holds an undergraduate degree from Princeton University and a law degree from the University of Virginia. |
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Taylor Reveley, recently named the interim president of the College of William and Mary, talks about the process of transition.
On Feb. 12, W. Taylor Reveley III got a surprise call informing him that he would become the interim president of the College of William and Mary.
Members of the Board of Visitors spent an entire day on campus listening to concerns related to the resignation of Gene Nichol as president.
W. Taylor Reveley III, the College of William and Mary’s recently named interim president, shared his ideas for moving the College forward.
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