The Sentinel-Record

Pryor Center expands, integrates mission at U of A

- FROM STAFF REPORTS

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History at the University of Arkansas is once again officially a part of the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences.

“Today, in some ways, we’ve come full circle,” said Arkansas Chancellor Joe Steinmetz.

The center started in 1999 as part of the Department of History in Fulbright College.

“It was essentiall­y a tape recorder in my desk drawer,” said Jeannie Whayne, professor of history and the first director of the center.

The initial concept was developed by former U.S. Sen. David Pryor and his wife, Barbara, who provided seed money in the form of a $220,000 gift. A $2 million gift from the Tyson Family Foundation in 2005 created an endowment for the renamed David and Barbara Pryor Center for Arkansas Oral and Visual History.

The financial support enabled the center to buy new equipment and become a part of the University Libraries Special Collection­s. The center now fills a suite of offices and studios at One East Center Street on the Fayettevil­le Square. The center has a staff of five full-time and two parttime employees, digital video studios and editing suites, plus additional equipment to produce documentar­y-quality video interviews anywhere in the state and beyond.

The Pryor Center has been supervised by the U of A chancellor’s office since 2009, which changed with Steinmetz’s announceme­nt. The center is once against part of Fulbright as its own entity under the supervisio­n of Dean Todd Shields.

“This is the right move at the right time for the Pryor Center,” Steinmetz said. “Fulbright College has students and faculty with a wide range of interests who will directly benefit from closer access to the oral and visual history archives already produced by the Pryor Center.

“These students and faculty also have expertise that can help advance and amplify the Pryor Center’s mission to collect, preserve and connect. Really, Fulbright College is the natural home for the Pryor Center, and this move will create a mutual benefit for everyone involved.”

The Pryor Center has an online archive of about 70 video interviews, with transcript­s of hundreds more and still more being processed. It is home to the KATV archive, which is comprised of 26,000 hours of film and video documentin­g 50 years of the day-to-day history of Arkansas, all needing to be digitized and made easily accessible online.

“These are priceless resources for students and faculty in history, journalism, political science, sociology — in fact, virtually all of the humanities,” Shields said. “Our hope is that in joining Fulbright College, the Pryor Center will be able to continue growing, enhance its community and academic outreach through new partnershi­ps with faculty and student researcher­s, and receive expanded support through the college.”

Shields also announced the beginning of a new community program — the Pryor Center Presents speaker series.

“I’ve been working with Dean Skip Rutherford of the Clinton School of Public Service, who has developed an outstandin­g public speaker series,” Shields said. “He very generously shared ideas and ‘lessons learned’ that will help us shape our own program starting this fall to build stronger connection­s between the public and the Pryor Center.”

Randy Dixon, director of the Pryor Center, said he is excited about the opportunit­ies the move presents.

“Being able to connect with the academic side of the university more effectivel­y is a definite plus,” Dixon said. “Not long ago a graduate student contacted us, almost by accident. She was working on a documentar­y about Joycelyn Elders and knew that we had a video interview with her, but was not aware we also had hundreds of news stories about her in the KATV archive. Obviously, this was helpful. My hope is that many more students and faculty will realize we are a valuable resource, ready for them to use.”

“At the same time, being part of Fulbright College is an opportunit­y for the Pryor Center as a teaching resource,” Dixon added. “For anyone who wants to learn about oral and visual history and how to produce it — this is the place to be.”

Chancellor emeritus Dan Ferritor will be serve as a transition adviser to help facilitate the center’s integratio­n into Fulbright College and launch new programs.

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