Arkansas
Former Library Artifacts Delivered to Tomlinson Family – Arkansas Tech University
Even at the age of 95 and even though he has lived outside the region for more than 50 years, Arkansas Tech University still resonates deeply in Everett S. Tomlinson Jr.
Dr. Russell Jones, ATU interim president, visited Tomlinson and his wife, Mary Alice, while Jones was in Arizona for the 2024 NCAA Convention earlier this month.
Jones delivered a portrait of Tomlinson’s father, Everett S. “Tommy” Tomlinson Sr., that was displayed inside Tomlinson Library and the plaques that resided at the main entrance of Tomlinson Library (later known as Tomlinson Hall) for decades.
“Arkansas Tech was Everett’s growing up place,” said Jones when recalling his visit with the Tomlinson family. “His mother passed away when he was 3 and he was raised by his father, Tommy Tomlinson. The son often came to campus with the father, so much so that Everett had a play area adjacent to Tommy’s office. Everett shared with me that when the library was under construction in the 1930s he snuck under a barrier and left his footprints in the concrete foundation shortly after it was poured. Today, two rooms of their home in Arizona are filled with Arkansas Tech memorabilia.
“As an institution, Arkansas Tech has great respect and care for the Tomlinson family,” continued Jones. “The opportunity to share some artifacts from Tomlinson Hall with them was a great privilege for me and a demonstration of the university’s commitment to maintain the legacy of the Tomlinson family at Arkansas Tech moving forward.”
Tomlinson Hall was the library at Arkansas Tech from the time of its construction in 1936 until the opening of Ross Pendergraft Library and Technology Center in 1999. The Arkansas Tech Board of Trustees voted in October 1954 to name the library for Everett S. Tomlinson Sr., who was a member of the horticulture and science faculty at Arkansas Tech from 1921-49.
Tomlinson served as interim president of Arkansas Tech following the resignation of James R. Grant in August 1931 and continuing until J.W. Hull took office in March 1932.
Following his retirement, the 1950 Agricola yearbook at Arkansas Tech was dedicated to Tomlinson. In writing the dedication, the Agricola staff described Tomlinson as “the modest little man who gave Tech its heart and soul.”
An expansion of Tomlinson Library was completed in August 1966. Since the opening of Pendergraft Library and Technology Center, Tomlinson Hall served a variety of administrative and academic functions.
The ATU Board of Trustees voted to demolish Tomlinson Hall and its neighboring structure, the Administration Building, during a special called board meeting on Monday, Oct. 2, 2023. That process began in late 2023 and will be completed in early 2024.
On Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2023, a crew from Kinco Constructors removed the cupola from the top of Tomlinson Hall in advance of the demolition of the building. Plans are being developed to permanently display the Tomlinson cupola on campus in honor of the Tomlinson family and in memory of the university’s former library.
Arkansas
VIDEO: Arkansas players press conference – Missouri week
Arkansas QB Taylen Green, OL Addison Nichols, DT Cam Ball and DB Doneiko Slaughter, preview press conference ahead of Saturday’s matchup against the No. 24 Missouri Tigers at Memorial Stadium in Columbia, Missouri.
Kickoff is set for 2:30 p.m. CT and the game will air on SEC Network. Check out our homepage for more coverage of the Hogs.
Arkansas
Hoop Hogs analytics update – 11/26
The No. 19 Arkansas Razorbacks are currently 5-1 on the young season after a 109-35 win over Marland-Eastern Shore on Monday night.
According to KenPom, Arkansas jumped from 40th to 38th following the victory over the Hawks. The Razorbacks efficient defensive night pushed them to sixth in defensive efficiency, up four spots from 10th.
“Defensively, we’re one of the best teams in the country and we want to continue to hand our hats on how we are defensively,” Arkansas associate head coach Chin Coleman said postgame. “And a lot of stuff that we do defensively, it doesn’t matter who we play, because it’s our scheme. It’s our schematics and it works. As long as we’re in the right spots and we’re doing what we teach, it’ll work against anyone.”
The Razorbacks eclipsed the 100-point mark, shot 55.6% from the field and hit three-pointers at a 44.1% clip. As a result, Arkansas’ offensive metrics received a major boost.
Freshman guard Boogie Fland was awarded team MVP from KenPom after the game. He had an offensive rating of 194.0 and scored 16 points on 3-of-5 shooting which included two makes from deep.
Arkansas
Johnell Davis, Karter Knox find their grooves in Arkansas basketball’s rout over UMES
FAYETTEVILLE — Arkansas basketball has been waiting throughout the first few weeks of the regular season for breakout performances from Johnell Davis and Karter Knox
Both players came to life for the Razorbacks (5-1) on Monday night, unleashing an offensive onslaught in a 109-35 romp over Maryland Eastern Shore. The 74-point win tied for the third-largest margin of victory in school history.
The usual suspects — Boogie Fland, Adou Thiero and Zvonimir Ivišić — all shined, but it was the emergence of Davis and Knox that powered the best offensive performance of the season. Knox led all scorers with a career-high 21 points, while Davis chipped in 16 to post his highest scoring output since joining the Hogs this offseason.
“If everybody is good, no one has to be great,” Arkansas assistant coach Chin Coleman said after the win.
“So we have a team that we feel like if everybody is good, we don’t have to have someone go in the phone booth, put on the cape and be Superman. We’ve got a good collective of guys that if everybody is good, no one player has to be great, so we need (Davis and Knox) to be good.”
Knox was a five-star recruit in the 2024 class, viewed as an elite scorer who could get to the basket in a variety of ways. Unfortunately, his jumper has been cold to start his collegiate career, and he entered Monday night 1 of 15 on 3-pointers.
But against UMES, Knox went 3 of 8 from long range. He made a pair of corner 3s and found time to paint the basket for easy points. After one 3-pointer, he exchanged words with the Arkansas bench, a sign of relief after failing to score more than six points through the first five games.
“It felt good to get going. I’ve been putting the work in the gym,” Knox said. “Teammates kept believing in me. They knew it was going to fall, tonight was the night.”
Davis’ early-season struggles have been puzzling. He averaged 18.2 points on 48% shooting last year at Florida Atlantic, but he hadn’t scored more than eight points since the Hogs’ season-opener. Coleman admitted during a recent press conference that Davis is adjusting to being surrounded by other top options, instead of being a clear-cut leader of the offense.
With Arkansas, Davis has been more of a stretch-the-floor shooter through the first three weeks. It makes sense, given that Davis shot 41.4% from 3 last season with the Owls, and he finally got hot Monday night by going 4 of 7 against the Hawks.
“We saw him the other day make 40 in-a-row. It was just a matter of time,” Coleman said. “The only thing in between him and making shots is air and opportunity. So he had an opportunity tonight, and he made them.”
The next question is how repeatable were these performances. Maryland Eastern Shore represents arguably the worst opponent on Arkansas’ schedule. Things are about to get much tougher, beginning with a Thanksgiving showdown against Illinois.
In their last matchup against a Power Four school, Davis and Knox combined for eight points on 2 of 12 shooting against Baylor. They could hold the keys to a first signature victory in the John Calipari era this Thursday.
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