Adolph Reed, Sr. (1921 -2003) died on January 3 after a brief illness. Reed
was a resident of Fayetteville since 1971, when he joined the political
science faculty at the University of Arkansas. He retired with the title
professor emeritus in 1994. 
A native Arkansan, like so many others of his generation in the late 1930s
Reed migrated to Chicago, where he worked as a railroad dining car waiter
and sat in on classes at the University of Chicago. The vibrant social and
political world of the city's black South Side remained a central formative
experience in his life. He was a veteran of World War II, where he saw
action in the Normandy invasion and the Battle of the Bulge. He was involved
in protests by black troops against discrimination in Charleston, SC and in
Manchester, England. He never ceased to remark on the contradiction of
having been sent to fight the racist Nazis in a racially segregated United
States Army. 
After the war, Reed was among the ranks of the millions of World War II
veterans who made use of the educational benefits provided by the G. I. Bill
of Rights. He completed his undergraduate education at Fisk University in
Nashville, TN. He then pursued post-graduate education at New York
University and American University. 
Prior to coming to the University of Arkansas, Reed had served on the
faculties at Arkansas A. M. & N. College in Pine Bluff (now the University
of Arkansas-Pine Bluff) and Southern University in Baton Rouge, LA. He also
held visiting professorships at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill and the University of California at San Diego. He also served on the
Arkansas and Louisiana State Constitutional Convention Committees. 
At Southern University in 1962, Professor Reed emerged as one of the most
articulate voices in a faculty protest against the university
administration's heavy-handed responses to students' civil rights activism.
These events, and his role, are chronicled in Adam Fairclough's book, Race
and Democracy: The Civil Rights Struggle in Louisiana, 1912-1972. 
His actions in the Southern University controversy were consistent with a
lifelong commitment to social justice and demonstration of the courage of
his convictions. While at Fisk, he was editor of an independent radical
newspaper in Nashville called "Give Me a Name". In the late 1940s in New
York Reed was active in the American Labor Party, and in 1948 he was a
delegate at the Progressive Party Convention that launched Henry Wallace's
presidential campaign, in which Reed was also active. He was among the
thousands who attended the famous September, 1949, concert in Peekskill, New
York, to show support for singer Paul Robeson and to protest right-wing mob
and police attacks against Robeson supporters on the site weeks before. In
the early 1950s he was a political reporter for the New York Compass. 
Reed remained convinced that both major parties are too beholden to
corporate interests, which he frequently described as the basis for the
"perverted priorities" of American politics. In recent years he became an
active supporter of the new Labor Party, created in 1996, and its project of
building a politics in this country based on a working class economic agenda
that cuts across other potential social divisions. All his life he lamented
what he perceived as the ruling class's success in inducing too many poor
and working people to "identify the wrong enemies". He stressed the roles of
the news media, education system and organized religion in perpetuating that
situation. 
These convictions shaped his approach to intellectual and political life. He
was widely known among colleagues and in the political science profession as
a person of uncommon honesty and integrity, a witty and engaging raconteur,
big band jazz aficionado, a biting critic and a generous friend. Although he
never shied away from expressing intellectual and political disagreements,
he refused to take differences personally and could maintain friendships
with those with whom he differed sharply. His teaching philosophy was simply
to encourage students to think independently. 
These qualities endeared him to generations of students, scores of whom
retained close relations with him well into his retirement and their own
middle age. His former students recall him as a brilliant, engaging
lecturer, even when they disagreed with his views, and a common refrain of
students from the beginning of his teaching career to its end was that he
opened their eyes to the world and altered the course of their lives.
Illinois Congressman Danny Davis, for instance, credits Reed for having
shaped his political outlook. 
Professor Reed was an important force in the development of a generation of
b lack political scientists. He was a founding member of the National
Conference of Black Political Scientists and a prominent voice in the
organization throughout its formative years. He was also a founding member
of the American Political Science Association's Caucus for a New Political
Science. 
Reed was born in Little Rock and spent his early years in Dumas. He attended
Little Rock's Dunbar High School. He was the son of Alphonso Reed, a
prominent educator, and Mary Reed. He was married once, to Clarita Macdonald
Reed of New Orleans, Louisiana. He is survived as well by a son, Adolph
Reed, Jr. of New Haven, CT, who is also a professor of political science at
the New School for Social Research in New York City, and a grandson, Touré
F. Reed, of Bloomington, IL, a professor of history at Illinois State
University. 
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that contributions be made to the
Debs-Jones-Douglass Institute, 1532 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036. 

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