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Arkansas and the SEC: Champions of innovation

Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:23 am
Posted by Porker Face
Eden Isle
Member since Feb 2012
15367 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:23 am
From the fine folks that brought you the following modern conveniences:

Fiber optics (Robert D. Maurer BS Physics, '48, PhD '51)

Heart pacemakers (John Walter Keller Jr., BSEE ’46; MS Math ‘48; MS Physics ‘50)

Wide-area bar code reader (Several engineering professors)

Variable annuity life insurance (Harold Dulan, E.J. Ball and Lewis Callison)

Fulbright Scholar Program (Senator J. William Fulbright, BA '25)

Modern-day surface and air transportation (Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century [TEA-21] and Wendell H. Ford Aviation Investment Reform Act for the 21st Century [AIR-21]) (Rodney Slater, JD '80)

Herbicide (George Templeton, Roy Smith, David TeBeest)

Dillard's Department Stores (William T. Dillard, BA '35)

Discovering the geometry of large molecules (John Pople and Walter Kohn, 1998 Nobel Prize)

Radio City Music Hall (Edward Durell Stone, PhDFA '51)

Discovering Vitamin E (Dr. Barnett Sure)

The Master of Fine arts in Creative Writing degree (William Harrison and James Whitehead)

Genetically engineered rice to feed starving countries (Dr. Marinus C. Kik)

comes a new technological breakthrough. A UA physicist discovered a new magnetic state that will be used to improve battery life and computer memory. This new state will replace the historic combination electronic/magnetic setup currently used with a magnetic-only field.

Do some learnin'

So keep laughing at those "redneck cousin-frickers up among the hills", as long as you thank us every time you turn on a vehicle, change the channel, or use a computer
Posted by TabledTiger
Venice
Member since Apr 2013
2254 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:24 am to
Posted by BrerTiger
Valley of the Long Grey Cloud
Member since Sep 2011
21506 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:24 am to
quote:

Arkansas and the SEC: Champions of innovation


Print the T-shirts.

I look forward to the next 20 years of Arkansas' innovative ways of not winning a SEC title in football.
Posted by dkreller
Laffy
Member since Jan 2009
30352 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:25 am to
Too bad ya'll fricking suck at football.
Posted by Buck_Nasty
Corndog Nation
Member since Feb 2013
1724 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:27 am to
Posted by c on z
Zamunda
Member since Mar 2009
127462 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:28 am to
No one being put on the moon.

No care.
Posted by Buck_Nasty
Corndog Nation
Member since Feb 2013
1724 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:29 am to
Posted by Porker Face
Eden Isle
Member since Feb 2012
15367 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 10:31 am to
Nice of y'all to respond in kind by presenting your own universities' accomplishments

Oh wait, I guess you are with your shitty posts
Posted by Latarian
Thug POS
Member since Jul 2010
27605 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 11:04 am to
FOOTBALL > starving children
Posted by Run DMC
somewhere in Louisiana it's tricky
Member since Jan 2007
5781 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 3:25 pm to
WTF!!! You didn't mention the main fact of all.... If it weren't for WAL MART, Arkansas wouldn't even be a state!
Posted by Tammany Tom
Mandeville
Member since Jun 2004
3205 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 3:38 pm to
quote:

Radio City Music Hall (Edward Durell Stone, PhDFA '51)


When the stock market crashed in 1929, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. held a $91 million, 24-year lease on a piece of midtown Manhattan property properly known as "the speakeasy belt." He decided to build an entire complex of buildings on the property-buildings so superior that they would attract commercial tenants even in a depressed city flooded with vacant rental space.

The search for a commercial partner led to the Radio Corporation of America, a young company whose NBC radio programs were attracting huge audiences and whose RKO studios were producing and distributing popular motion pictures that offered welcome diversion in hard times. Rockefeller's financial power and RCA's media might were joined by the unusual talents of impresario S.L. "Roxy" Rothafel.

Since 1933 more than 700 movies have opened here. They include the original King Kong; National Velvet, the film that secured Elizabeth Taylor's hold on the silver screen; White Christmas; Mame; Breakfast at Tiffany's; To Kill a Mockingbird, starring former Radio City usher, Gregory Peck; Mary Poppins; 101 Dalmatians; and The Lion King.
Posted by TRUERockyTop
Appalachia
Member since Sep 2011
15869 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 3:54 pm to
Posted by CapstoneGrad06
Little Rock
Member since Nov 2008
72251 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 4:16 pm to
BUSINESS
Bernard Madoff, former American businessman, convicted of operating a Ponzi scheme (attended, but did not graduate)
Winton M. Blount, Chairman of Blount International and former Postmaster General
David G. Bronner, Director Alabama Pension Systems
Samuel DiPiazza, former Chief Executive Officer of PricewaterhouseCoopers
James M. Fail, chairman of Bluebonnet Savings Bank
Joe McInnes, Dir - Ala Dept of Transportation; Exec Vice President-Blount International
Janet Gurwitch, former Executive Vice President of Merchandising at Neiman Marcus, co-founder of Gurwitch Products, the manufacturer of Laura Mercier Cosmetics
Thom S. Rainer, president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources
Marvin Mann, former president and CEO of Lexmark International
Neal Selman, former Executive Vp and Executive Creative Director of Draftfcb
Dana R. Garmany, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Troon Golf

ENTERTAINMENT
Norbert Leo Butz, Broadway actor
Debra Marshall, former WWE and WCW diva
Cristin Duren, Miss Florida USA 2006
Jim Nabors, actor
Ray Reach, jazz pianist, singer, arranger and composer, director of Student Jazz Programs at the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame
Steve Sample, Sr., jazz arranger, composer and educator
Sela Ward, actress
Tom Cherones, director of Seinfeld
Madeline Mitchell
Ashley Crow, actress
Madeline Mitchell, Miss Alabama USA 2011 and Miss USA 2011 (2nd runner-up)
Michael Emerson, actor
Sonequa Martin-Green, actress

GOVERNMENT, POLITICS, and SOCIAL ACTIVISM
William Brockman Bankhead, US House of Representatives (1917-1933), (1933-1940), Speaker of the House (1936-1940)[5]
Maryon P. Allen, United States Senator from Alabama (1978), wife of James B. Allen[6]
James B. Allen, United States Senator from Alabama (1969-1978)[7]
John W. Abercrombie, United States Congressman from Alabama (1913-1917) and President of the University of Alabama (1902-1911)[8]
Cynthia Bathurst, 1974, animal rights activist and founder/director of Safe Humane Chicago[citation needed]
Bill Baxley, Lt Governor of Alabama 1983–1987
Robert J. Bentley, current Governor of Alabama, elected 2010
Don Black, founder of Stormfront[citation needed]
Hugo Black, US Supreme Court Justice (1937–1971)
John A. Caddell, lawyer, later president pro tempore of the Board of Trustees[citation needed]
H. L. Sonny Callahan, U.S. House of Representatives Alabama's 1st district, (1985-2003)
N. Lee Cooper, 1997-1998 President of American Bar Association
Frank Minis Johnson, Jr., federal judge whose opinions were critical to the American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968)
Henry De Lamar Clayton, Jr., (1857–1929), member of House of Representatives
Morris Dees, civil rights attorney, founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center
Carl Elliott, Alabama's 7th congressional district representative, 1949 to 1965
Jim Folsom, governor of Alabama from 1947 to 1951 and 1955 to 1959
Millard Fuller, founder of Habitat for Humanity International
Charles Graddick, Attorney General of Alabama (1979–1983, 1983–1987)
Lino Gutierrez, Diplomat, United States Ambassador to Argentina (2003-2006), United States Ambassador to Nicaragua (1996-1999)
Howell Heflin, 1971-77 Ch J Ala Sup Ct, 1978-97 United States Senator from Alabama - grad law school 1948
Vivian Malone Jones, first African-American graduate
Stephanie Kopelousos, Transportation Secretary, Florida Department of Transportation (2007-2011).
Autherine Lucy, (1956), first African-American student to be admitted to the University after winning in Lucy v. Adams; suspended after 3 days due to racial hostilities; her expulsion was overturned in 1980, and in 1992, she earned her Masters degree in Elementary Education
Champ Lyons, Jr, Assoc Justice, Ala Sup Ct 1998-present; grad Law School 1965. lyons
John Malcolm Patterson, Governor of Alabama 1959-63, Grad Law Sch 1948
Bob Riley, Governor of Alabama (2003–2011)
Percy Saint, attended University of Alabama (1888-1890); state district judge (1920-1924) in Franklin, Louisiana, and Attorney General of Louisiana (1924-1932)[citation needed]
Jeff Sessions, United States Senator from Alabama, 1997-present, grad Law Sch 1973
Richard Shelby, United States Senator from Alabama, 1987-present, grad both undergrad & law school (1963)
Don Siegelman, Governor of Alabama (1999–2003)
Donald W. Stewart, United States Senator from Alabama, 1979-1981
Ira B. Thompson, Alabama State Representative
George Corley Wallace, Governor of Alabama (1963–1967, 1971–1979, 1983–1987)
Robert Smith Vance, Federal Appellate Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, Chaired and de-segregated State Democratic Party, Assassinated December 16, 1989
Michael G. Vickers, United States Department of Defense, United States Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict, 2007-Present.

JOURNALISM AND LITERTURE

Mel Allen, sportscaster for the New York Yankees, best known as the "legendary voice of the Yankees' organization" and first host of This Week in Baseball
Rece Davis, ESPN sports analyst
Howell Raines, former executive editor of The New York Times; Pulitzer Prize winner for Feature Writing
Winston Groom, author, "Forrest Gump"; graduate 1965
Joe Scarborough,currently the host of Morning Joe on MSNBC
Kathryn Stockett, author, The Help

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, and ENGINEERING

Jimmy Wales - co-founder of Wikipedia
Mohammad Ataul Karim, World Renowned Physicist
Lafayette Guild, Medical Director for Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia during the American Civil War and a pioneer in the research of yellow fever.
Timothy Leary, psychologist, writer and drug activist
Robert M. Lightfoot, Jr., 11th Director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
Robert Van de Graaff, physicist, inventor of Van de Graaff generator
Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia
E.O. Wilson, entomologist known for work on evolution and sociobiology; Pulitzer Prize winner
Louis Rosen, nuclear physicist, the "father" of the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center
Justin Hill, founder of the Alabama Lunar Rover Project
Eugene Allen Smith (A.B. 1862), American geologist; president of the GSA 1913
Posted by Ray Zorback
Member since Jan 2013
248 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 4:56 pm to
nobody even wants to talk about the school they went to while looking at the masters of the sec
Posted by SEC. 593
Chicago
Member since Aug 2012
4047 posts
Posted on 5/6/13 at 5:34 pm to
Some would say this list is made even more impressive because of the disadvantage of attending/occurring at the University of Arkansas.

But I'm not some.
Posted by Rougarou4lsu
New Orleans
Member since Oct 2003
3079 posts
Posted on 5/7/13 at 12:42 pm to
quote:

So keep laughing at those "redneck cousin-frickers up among the hills",


You see, you yourself admit everyone's laughing
at the perception of the University of Arkansas
as being redneck cousin #!*&&#Ss. No one is running to their computer, (except the neck) to try and legitimize their university. All SEC schools are outstanding flagships of their state, and have many successful and famous alums. You obviously have an inferiority complex, probably because of your state, not your University.
To be honest. Arkansas is probably the last state
in the SEC we would choose to live. Sorry, but thats the truth. And you would probably be better served worrying about your own success,
rather than trying to ride the coattails of other people you don't even know.
Posted by CavalryAg07
ChiTown
Member since Jul 2009
2772 posts
Posted on 5/7/13 at 1:53 pm to
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