Guns and memory of mass shooting collide
at Texas campus
Send a link to a friend
[August 01, 2016]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Half a century
ago, a sniper perched on a University of Texas tower unleashed a killing
spree that left 16 dead, and for the first time since then the school
will hold an official memorial for an event that shocked the nation.
But overshadowing the anniversary of the Aug. 1, 1966 tower shooting is
the start of a new law backed by Republican lawmakers to allow more guns
in more places at public universities.
The lawmakers say the "campus carry" law, which goes into effect August
1, could prevent another mass shooting, while many survivors of the
university tower shooting half a century ago see it as a chillingly
wrong-headed approach that could spark more killing.
The campus carry law allows those over 21 with a concealed handgun
permit to take guns into classrooms and several parts of the campus.
"Guns do not have a place on campus. A university is a battleground of
words and ideas, and not of weapons," said John "Artly" Fox. In 1966, he
was a 17-year-old student who crossed one of the killing fields on
campus to help carry a pregnant woman shot by sniper Charles Whitman to
safety.
"The university could be criticized. Obviously, 50 years is too long.
But back then, no one knew how to handle situations like this," he said
in an interview in late July.
The Texas shooting in which Whitman, a 25-year-old former Marine who
brought a cache of weapons to the tower's observation deck about 250
feet (76 meters) in the air, was considered one of the seminal events of
the era and the first U.S. mass shooting of live, national TV news.
Whitman was killed by police after he unleashed 90 minutes of terror by
shooting more than 40 people from one of the highest spots in the Texas
capital.
Unlike the mass shootings in recent months and years that are followed
by vigils, remembrances and counseling, the remnants from the carnage
were quickly cleaned up and students soon returned to their business.
Fox went home after his act of heroism and did not meet the woman he
helped pulled to safety, Claire Wilson James, until a few years ago as
part of documentary that was being put together on the shooting.
James, then eight months pregnant, survived the attack but lost her
baby. Last year, she lobbied unsuccessfully to have Texas lawmakers halt
campus carry.
On Monday, the university will unveil a stone monument selected by a
committee of the victims that bears the names of those killed when it
holds its first official ceremony. It will turn off the tower clock for
24 hours, starting from 11:48 a.m., when the first shots rang out from
the perch 50 years ago.
The school did not know how to respond in the aftermath of the shooting,
with many thinking the best response was to get over it, not talk about
it and just carry on.
[to top of second column] |
A stone memorial to the 16 people and one fetus who died in the
August 1, 1966 mass shooting is seen ahead of it being officially
delegated at a ceremony on August 1, 2016 to mark the 50th
anniversary of the killing at the University of Texas in Austin,
Texas, U.S. on July 27,2016. REUTERS/Jon Herskovitz
Survivors found each other in an informal 2014 remembrance and
through the making of a documentary called "Tower" on the shooting
that came out this year, with many saying in the movie they still
feel emotional scars from that day. They formed a group and pressed
the school to mark the event ranked by news services AP and UPI as
the number 2 news event in 1966 behind the Vietnam War.
Gregory Fenves, who became president last year after joining the
university's administration in 2008, said the school has tried to
keep the anniversary ceremony separate from the start of campus
carry. He has spoken to shooting survivors about the memorial.
"A lot has changed as a society and for institutions since then. We
understand the healing process, and closure," he said in an
interview.
"One of the lessons is that we do need to deal with the trauma and
we need to support the survivors and recognize those who were
killed," he said.
Texas follows eight other states that allow people to carry
concealed weapons on public post-secondary campuses, according to
the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Diana Mendoza, who graduated from the university in 2015 and now
works at the school, visited the stone memorial on Thursday ahead of
its dedication and said it was about time to have an official
ceremony.
She is also staunchly opposed to the new campus carry law, which she
said is more likely to bring violence back to the school than
prevent it.
"Ah Texans and their guns. I am Texan born and raised and campus
carry is ridiculous," Mendoza said. "This could easily happen
again."
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; editing by Diane Craft)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|