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Page 30 text:
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Page 29 text:
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DEDICATION MR. MCRRIS BEIN The 1961 Thoroughbred staff takes great pleasure in dedicating this year- book to Mr. Morris Bein, Associate Professor of English at the University of Louisville. Mr. Bein received his BA. in English in 1938 from the University of Louis- ville. He wrote his master's thesis on Don Passos and obtained his degree in 1940. Mr. Bein got his Secondary School Certificate from the University of Kentucky in 1939. From 1953 to 1954 he studied on a Ford Fellowship at Columbia University. Mr. Bein has been teaching English at the university since 1947. Through the years he has shown a tremendous interest in his work and his students. He has devoted much time from his busy teaching schedule to campus life, for he has been Chairman of the Board of Student Publications since 1951. In this capacity Mr. Bein has been instrumental in solving many of the problems which arise in the publication of the Cardinal, Thoroughbred, and the other campus publications. Due to his excellent leadership, a high level of journalism has been maintained. Presently, Mr. Bein is serving as President of the Louisville Chapter of the American Association of University Professors and he is doing his post-doctorate work. This native New-Yorker is now married and has three children. For his outstanding teaching career, for his valuable guidance to the student publications, for his efforts to promote the best interest of the university, the 1961 staff is privileged to dedicate this yearbook to Mr. Morris Bein. 23
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Page 31 text:
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THE PRESIDENT With his diploma in one hand and his new wife in the other, Philip Davidson began teaching in the high schools of Mississippi, where he remained for three years. He had graduated with a B.S. from the University of Mississippi in 1922. From 1925 until 1927 he taught in the history department of the University of Illinois while working on his doctorate in history, which he received in 1929 at the University of Chicago. Dr. David- son held positions as Professor of History and Head of the Department at Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Geor- gia. At Vanderbilt University he was Dean of the Graduate School and Senior College, and Provost of the Uni- versity. The President came to the University of Louisville from Vanderbilt in June, 1951. In June, 1954, President Davidson received the honorary degree of Doctor of Literature from the University of the South. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he has served on the Lectureship panel of this honorary, as well as the Board of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. He is also a member of Omicron Delta Kappa and the Newcomen Society. In Louisville he is a member of the Norton Infirmary Psychiatric Council, the Board of Directors of the Louisville Chamber of Commerce, the Board of Directors of the Louisville Fund, the Board of Directors of the Louisville Philharmonic Society, the Louisville Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, and the B. Speed Museum. A member of the Rotary Club of Louisville, Dr. Davidson was President of the Nashville Rotary Club from 1950 to 1951. He has served on various committees in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. He was General Chairman for Brotherhood Week in Kentucky Q National Conference of Christians and Jewsj in 1954 and 1959. From 1954 to 1958 he served as President of the Kentucky Branch of the English- Speaking Union. Dr. Davidson is the author of two books: History of Georgia and Propaganda and the American Revolu- tion. He also contributes to This Is The South. The President's chief relaxation, besides hunting and fishing, is found in his workshop, where he has turned out ambitious reproductions like an Eighteenth Century cherry tripod table. He and his son Philip, in college at the time, even constructed a boat one summer. Philip is now married and has three children, the David- sons, daughter also has three children. Both families live in Nashville, Tennessee. President Davidson and his wife have only one child left in Louisville: Splinters, their black cocker spaniel. 25
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