Duane Lockard, professor of politics, emeritus, of Princeton
University, died on June 19, 2006, from complications from
Parkinson's disease. He was born in the poor coal-mining town of
Owings, West Virginia; and, by the time he was eight, the Great Depression
had increased his community's poverty. One of his childhood chores
was to collect lumps of coal that fell from passing ore trains so his
family could have heat in their house. As a teenager, he pumped gas at a
filling station and, for a time, followed his father into the dark depths
of the mines. Although the older men were kind to him, he found it
oppressive to work in pitch blackness, hunched over in the small rooms
carved out by pickaxes. In an effort to escape, he tried to enroll in
Fairmont State Teachers College, planning to live at home and hitchhike
the 18 miles to the school. Alas, when he tried to register, he could
muster only half of the $30 tuition fee. Fortunately for future
generations of scholars and students, a compassionate and perceptive dean
recognized talent and allowed him to matriculate.