William E. Davis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William E. "Bud" Davis
Title Interim Head coach
Sport Football
Career highlights
Overall 2-8
Coaching stats
College Football DataWarehouse
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1962 Colorado

William E. "Bud" Davis is a former university president and Democratic politician and head football coach. He was an interim head football coach for the Colorado Buffaloes for the 1962 season. He has also been the Chancellor of Oregon university system, President of Idaho State University and University of New Mexico, and Chancellor Louisiana State University. However, he is best known for writing the book Glory Colorado! A history of the University of Colorado, 1858-1963 which was also his doctoral thesis and a nearly 800 page book.

Contents

[edit] Early career

After graduating from Loveland High school, Davis choose to attend the University of Colorado at Boulder (CU) to stay close to home and near his high school sweetheart, Pollyanne Peterson. He arrived in 1947 and declared he wanted "to be the world's greatest football coach"[1] and chose a physical education major and English minor. He was a reserve football player on the varsity team. After graduating in 1951, he remained at the University as assistant to the dean of men. He resigned the position to enlist in the United States Marine Corps.[1] The spring of his senior year he married Peterson.

In 1960, he completed his masters degree at the University of Northern Colorado in education administration and became CU's alumni director while working on his doctoral degree in education.[2] After Sonny Grandelius left Colorado with NCAA sanctions, Davis was hired to be the football team's interim head coach on March 27, 1962.[3] The team went 2-8 for the season and included an upset win over the Air Force as the last game of the season.[3][4] Colorado was a 21 point underdog in the game but ended up winning 34-10. The Bud Davis football era ended on January 3, 1963 when Eddie Crowder was hired to take the job permanently, though Davis had resigned the day of the Air Force game.[3]

[edit] Coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl Game Bowl Opponent Outcome Rank#
Colorado Buffaloes (Big Eight) (1962)
1962 Colorado 2-8 1-6 7th
At Colorado: 2-8 1-6
Career: 2-8
     National Championship          Conference Title
#Rankings from final Coaches Poll of the season.

[edit] Glory Colorado!

While working on his doctoral degree and coaching the football team Davis was writing his thesis. He received special permission from the doctoral thesis committee to bypass the standard format and write the historical narrative book about the history of the University of Colorado at Boulder until that point.[1] The name was chosen because the school song of the same name; which is set to the music of "Battle Hymn of the Republic" and he felt captured the school spirit.[1] He acquired the bulk of information for the book from student published and local city newspapers. It was published by Fred Pruitt, founder of Pruitt Press Inc., who was also a journalism professor, in 1965 and offered to print it at no cost. The book has been called the "primary historical reference for the University" (of Colorado at Boulder).[1] The book is no longer in print and was sold canvas bound for $8. an index to supplement the text was later published and distributed by the Associated Alumni.

[edit] Career

After receiving his doctoral degree in 1963, Davis left CU to become executive assistant to the president for student affairs at the University of Wyoming. In 1972, while president at Idaho State, Davis won the Democratic nomination for an open United States Senate seat in Idaho. He was defeated by Republican Congressman Jim McClure.[5] He has since also been the Chancellor of Oregon State system, President of Idaho State University (1965-75), University of New Mexico (1975-82), Chancellor Louisiana State University. He has published other works, including Miracle on the Mesa/A History of the University of New Mexico, 1889–2003[6] He currently is on the Board of Directors for Sunrise Bank of Albuquerque since 2005.[7]

[edit] Glory Colorado! Volume 2

Davis was commissioned by CU to write Volume 2 in 1999. It would cover the period from the first book to 2000. Davis wrote the book pro bono writing a majority of the book in the summer of 1999 while on break from Louisiana State University. He and his wife received free housing in Boulder during the summer and research expenses were covered by a donor to the CU Foundation.

[edit] Awards and honors

  • George Norlin Award, for distinguished service (1975)
  • University of Colorado Alumnus of the Century Award (1977)
  • CU Athletic Hall of Honor award (1980)
  • Davis Field on the Idaho State University campus is named after him.

[edit] Quote

  • "Universities perform miracles. They change lives. The University of Colorado made it possible for me to have a life of wild adventure."[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Allison Groff (1999-07-29). Alum Bud Davis takes on Glory Colorado! Vol. 2 (HTML) (English). CU.edu. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  2. ^ CU Distinguished Alumni by Category (HTML) (English). Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  3. ^ a b c Colorado Football Media Guide (PDF) (English). Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  4. ^ Plati-'tudes (HTML) (English). CUBuffs.com (2003-09-18). Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  5. ^ Ref Notes Data (HTML) (English). University of Toronto Data Library Service (2001-07-10). Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  6. ^ UNMPress Spring 06 Calatlog (PDF) (English). UNMPress.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
  7. ^ Steven A. Marcum (2005). 2005 Annual Report (PDF) (English). CapitalBanCorp.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-09.
Preceded by
Sonny Grandelius
Colorado Head Football Coaches
1962
Succeeded by
Eddie Crowder
Preceded by
Lawrence Gale
President of Idaho State University
1965–1975
Succeeded by
Charles Kegel
Preceded by
Ralph R. Harding
Democratic Party nominee, U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Idaho
1972 (lost)
Succeeded by
Dwight Jensen
Preceded by
Ferrel Heady
President of University of New Mexico
1975–1982
Succeeded by
John Perovich
Preceded by
E. Grady Bogue
Chancellor of Louisiana State University
1989–1996
Succeeded by
William L. Jenkins