Past Events
2009
- 11/18/2009 "We Surely Owe a Debt to these Long Downtrodden People"
- 11/18/2009 GIS Day Open House 2009
- 10/29/2009 Celebrating the Arkansas Experience: Archives Month Open House 2009
- 9/11/2009 John Bell, Jr. Reception
- 4/29/2009 Life and Death of the Oldest Newspaper West of the Mississippi
- 3/29/2009 Mandala: A Spiritual Experience of Tibet
- 3/26/2009 Office of Scientific and Technical Information Databases Training
- 2/26/2009 Suffering Doesn't End Once the Killing Has Stopped
- 2/25/2009 Jim Crow in the Natural State: A Look at White Supremacy in Arkansas History
2008
- 12/4/2008 Zome Day 2008
- 11/19/2008 GIS Day Open House 2008
- 10/29/2008 Mysteries, Mistresses & Murder: 3 Arkansas Authors
- 9/16/2008 Mullins Library 40th Anniversary
- 5/19/2008 George Dombek Donates Painting
- 2/8/2008 Walkin' Talkin' Gallery Tour
2007
- 11/30/2007 Zome Day 2007
- 11/14/2007 GIS Day 2007
- 11/13/2007 A Giant Step: 1960 Little Rock Film
- 11/6/2007 Native American Symposium Kickoff 2007
- 10/25/2007 Special Collections 40th Anniversary
- 9/15/2007 Before Little Rock: Successful Arkansas School Integration
- 4/27/2007 Pryor Center Reception
- 3/2/2007 The Architecture and Landscapes of Arkansas: A Heritage of Distinction
- 2/21/2007 The Photographic Mission of Ralph Armstrong
2006
- 11/15/2006 GIS Day Open House 2006
- 10/23/2006 Archives Week Open House
- 10/12/2006 Face to Face: The Borchard Collection of British Self-Portraits in the 20th Century Reception
- 10/12/2006 All That Remains: Forensic Anthropology & the Medicolegal Investigation of Death
- 2/22/2006 The Universe Provides, a talk by Evelyn C. White
Renowned reporter, writer and teacher Roy Reed spoke on the history of the Arkansas Gazette on April 29 at Giffels Auditorium in Old Main at the University of Arkansas. The program, titled "The Life and Death of the Oldest Newspaper West of the Mississippi," began with a reception at 3 p.m., followed by a lecture at 3:30 and a book signing immediately thereafter. Reed's latest book, Looking Back at the Arkansas Gazette: An Oral History, was recently published by the University of Arkansas Press. The program was co-sponsored by the Special Collections Department of the University of Arkansas Libraries, the University of Arkansas Press, and the university’s Walter J. Lemke department of Journalism.
Reed began work as a reporter for the Arkansas Gazette in 1956. He was hired by the New York Times in 1965, where he covered the civil rights movement, including the historic Freedom March to the Alabama state capitol in Montgomery. He said that reporting on the civil rights movement made 1965-1966 "two of the most exciting years" of his working life. In 1969 he opened a Times bureau in New Orleans, where he reported on the rapid social, political and economic changes in the South and other parts of the nation. After a stint at the Times’s London bureau in the mid-1970s, Reed returned to Arkansas and taught journalism for 16 years at the University of Arkansas Journalism Department. After retiring from teaching, he continued to write books and occasional pieces for newspapers and magazines. In addition to his history of the Gazette, Reed is the author of Looking for Hogeye (1986), a collection of essays about the South, and Faubus: The Life and Times of an American Prodigal (1997), which was a New York Times Notable Book for 1997.
Considered one of the greatest newspapers in the country, the Arkansas Gazette was Arkansas’ first newspaper and the oldest surviving newspaper west of the Mississippi River when the paper was closed and sold in 1992. It was established in 1819, 17 years before Arkansas became a state. The Gazette was known for its liberal and progressive stance in a conservative Southern state. It was inextricably linked with the state’s history, especially in its anti-segregation position and criticism of Gov. Orval Faubus during the Little Rock Central High School integration crisis.
Reed collected interviews with Gazette editors, reporters and staffers for the David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History, which is a unit of the Libraries' Special Collections Department. Interviews from the Gazette oral history project can be found online at http://libinfo.uark.edu/SpecialCollections/pryorcenter. Reed compiled and edited these interviews into the book. Jack Nelson, retired Washington bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times, described the book as "fascinating reading with superb editing and commentary by Roy Reed, laced with telling and often humorous anecdotes about a period when folks still talked seriously about newspapers having souls."

