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12 April 2016

Champion of International Education Retires from U of A

Professor Hoyt Purvis reads a 1970s Soviet newspaper
in which he was featured March 31.
Hoyt Purvis sits on his desk in an office that has accumulated every newspaper he has ever read and every piece of paper he has ever received. His office has been described as “one of the wonders of the world” by long-time friend Skip Rutherford, who suggested it be opened to the general public for tours.



“The same empty Diet Coke can that I encountered on my first visit stayed in the exact location for at least three years,” said Rutherford, Dean of the UA Clinton School of Public Service.

After more than 30 years teaching at the UofA, Purvis, 76, will retire at the end of this semester.

Purvis has become a fundamental part of the journalism department during his time at the UofA. He has brought his personal experiences, knowledge and passion to the university, former UA chancellor Dan Ferritor said.

“He lived out his passions each day through educating us,” said Brandi Moore, senior advertising and public relations student. “At the time, you might have thought it was silly that he took the time to check roll on each and every row of his lecture hall. But looking back, I see it more of a notion that he truly cared about who was there, who was willing to learn about something he enjoys, who was committed to being a journalism student. It was his way of rewarding those for their commitment to him.”

Although Purvis has followed a career in journalism, he is also recognized by his distinguished career serving as press secretary and special assistant to Sen. J. William Fulbright and by his position as council/senior adviser on foreign and defense policy to Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd.
Purvis brought an enormous amount of recognition to the university, Ferritor said.

“When you look at the two senators he worked with, Sen. Fulbright and Sen. Byrd, Hoyt was in the midst of American politics and American relations and he brought it to the university. How very lucky were we?” Ferritor said.

Purvis was involved in several major events while serving as senior adviser for Sen. Byrd. In 1979, Vice Chairman and Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping visited Washington and met with Sen. Byrd in his office.

Xiaoping was a very short guy, Purvis said, and he was sitting in a big stuffed chair in Byrd’s office. When the meeting was over and it was time to get up, Xiaoping was having trouble getting out of the chair because his feet wouldn’t reach the floor.

“So I decided the right thing to do was reach over and give him a tug to get out of the chair,” Purvis said. “I’ve always told my students that was my contribution to U.S.-China relations,” Purvis said.
After attending the University of Texas and moving on to graduate school, Purvis wanted to follow his goal of working in Washington D.C. because of his interest in politics and international relations.
“I admired Sen. Fulbright because of his involvement with international relations, educational and cultural exchange,” Purvis said. “I really wanted to work for Sen. Fulbright.”

Purvis was in constant contact with Lee Williams, the administrative assistant for Sen. Fulbright and contacted him once he arrived in Washington D.C.

“The time came where I was going to have to either get a job with Fulbright or do something else,” Purvis said.

While visiting Washington D.C., Purvis had the opportunity to meet with Williams and sit in on a foreign relations committee hearing about the Vietnam War. After the hearing broke, Williams asked Purvis to go back to Fulbright’s office and have lunch. At the end of the lunch, Purvis was offered the job as press secretary. He was 27 years old.

“He told me later on that Sen. Fulbright wanted to make sure that I was the right man and they had already decided before the luncheon that they were going to offer me a job,” Purvis said.

While Purvis was press secretary for Sen. Fulbright, Washington D.C. was overseeing matters related to the Vietnam War and other issues such as the Watergate affair.

“Every day was a busy, busy day,” Purvis said.
Hoyt Purvis and Sen. J. William Fulbright speak in 1986 at the UofA.
After being Fulbright’s secretary for six years, Purvis decided to leave Washington D.C and go back to Austin, Texas, to be on the faculty at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs and work on some projects, Purvis said.

“One of the things that was most important about the whole experience – Fulbright was a great guy to work for,” Purvis said.

Before becoming senior adviser for Majority Leader Byrd, Purvis worked on the Carter campaign and contemplated going back to Washington D.C and becoming part of the administration.

Then, he got a call from Byrd.

“He wanted to play a major role in foreign and defense policy matters and I had been recommended to him as someone who might be the staff member responsible for foreign and defense policy,” Purvis said.

After meeting with Byrd he was offered the job as council/senior adviser and foreign and defense policy. While working for Byrd, Purvis became a key figure in “many of the major foreign policy issues at the time,” Purvis said.

“I worked on the Panama Canal treaties, U.S.-Soviet relations, U.S.-China relations, Middle East, lots of big issues and had the opportunity to travel with Sen. Byrd to meet many of the important world leaders of that time,” Purvis said.

Purvis reflected on some of the experiences he was a part of while working for Sen. Byrd such as trips to China, the Middle East, Egypt, Japan and meetings with world leaders like Leonid Brezhnev and Anwar Sadat.

“We spent the 4th of July of 1979 meeting with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev,” Purvis said. “We flew on a special Soviet plane down to that region and we traveled over to the area where Brezhnev was staying and we were riding in the big black limousines, they cleared all the traffic off the roads, right in the Black Sea.”

Purvis worked with Sen. Byrd full time for more than four years but kept working on side projects for years after he left Washington D.C.

“I went back to UT and I was teaching there again but also working on some projects in Washington,” Purvis said. “Writing reports and speeches for several years after that.”

Purvis’s long legacy and remarkable experiences began years before he arrived at the UofA in 1982. A graduate from the University of Texas, Purvis served as sports editor and editor of the Daily Texan.
“You’re 20 years old and you’re the editor of a daily newspaper and writing editorials and covering stories and meeting people,” Purvis said. “I got to meet Martin Luther King and a lot of other interesting and famous people. It turned out to be a very good thing.”

During his time at UT, Purvis participated in the Texas-Chilean student leaders exchange where he was able to study at the University of Chile in Santiago.

“That was my first extended time abroad and I learned a lot from that experience and that had a lot of impact on my life,” Purvis said. “In a sense, I found out there was a lot to see and know in the rest of the world and it was important to understand the rest of the world.”

After receiving his bachelor’s degree and leaving UT, Purvis studied as a graduate student in France on a Rotary Fellowship for a year. He then went on to Nashville, Tennessee, where he became a graduate student at Vanderbilt and worked on reporting about school desegregation in the south, Purvis said.

Other aspects of Purvis’s journalistic career included his work as a political reporter for the Houston Chronicle. In the last 20 years, Purvis has written regular political and public affairs opinion columns for Northwest Arkansas newspapers. He has also done political commentary for the local KNWA station for the last 15 years.

Before becoming part of the faculty at the UofA, Purvis encountered his first teaching experience in Kenya where he taught journalism and was able to travel through most of Africa.

“I was continually in the process of trying to understand what was happening in the world, why it was happening and what it might mean,” Purvis said.

Though he was dividing his time between Austin and Washington D.C., his loyalty was still in Arkansas, he said.

“I was really happy when I had a chance to come back to Arkansas and when I came back, I didn’t leave,” Purvis said.

Purvis came to Arkansas during the commemoration for Sen. Fulbright. After his visit, the dean of Fulbright College contacted Purvis.

“He asked me if I would possibly be interested in being in the faculty here and to devote some time to help establish Fulbright Institute,” Purvis said.

After his arrival, Purvis began his work as director of Fulbright Institute of International Relations from 1982 through 2000 and started the International Relations major at the UofA.

“I’m very proud of the success that it has had. I’ve put a lot of effort and energy in that because I thought it was extremely important,” Purvis said. “Especially in a college honoring Sen. Fulbright, it seemed to me very important to have a strong international relations academic program.”

He worked on strengthening international emphasis on campus and assisted DeDe Long, director of the Study Abroad Office, in helping the study abroad program become stronger.

During his time in the journalism department, he has taught thousands of students through Media and Society, a prerequisite for all journalism sequences. It is the first class journalism students attend where they are introduced to the various types of media and where they learn the importance of it in today’s society. Purvis has become one of the first journalism professors students encounter when starting work on their journalism degree.

“He is such an exceptional professor. When he speaks, you are compelled to listen to what he says because he has had so many interesting experiences in his life,” Moore said. “His wisdom on politics, media and foreign policies is admirable. He has influenced me to engage myself deeper into our new realm of media especially in connection with politics.”

Read the full article by Andrea Zepeda with the Arkansas Traveler