The Tower Aglow - University of Texas at Austin (Photo credit: philipbouchard) |
At least the projectile didn't come from the tower.
Legal liability for the Virginia Tech massacre: Have reforms birthed by the U of Texas tower shootings made a difference?
Jim Castagnera
Part 2 in a series
In August 1981, just out of law school and fresh from a bar exam, I reported for duty as an assistant professor of business law at the University of Texas, Austin. Not long into the fall semester, I learned that when the Texas Longhorns won, the 307-foot tower dominating the campus glowed burnt-orange. As attractive as the tower was, I also soon learned that it was closed to visitors. By contrast, in 1966 the 28th floor observation deck hosted some 20,000 tourists annually. Here's why.
Addressing what went wrong before and during the tower massacre changed the way not only the
Identifying and treating the mentally ill student
On
Within days of the August 1 shootings, the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, founded decades earlier on the U.T. campus, ramped up efforts to improve availability of services for psychologically troubled members of the campus community. Student-counseling services were expanded, including services aimed specifically at patients in “crisis situations.”
The university closed the tower for two years, then closed it again in 1975 following a series of sporadic suicide jumps from its heights.
Today, every campus has its counseling center and its policies on threats of violence and suicide. Yet costly, high profile lawsuits involving students’ violence toward themselves and others abound. Universities still struggle with responsibility for campus safety and the individual rights of students, specifically whether to treat or expel such students. And, as the VTU tragedy demonstrates, identification and prevention remain elusive goals.
From Keystone Kops to campus police departments
According to author Gary Lavergne, who wrote a book about the tower shootings, “The university (in 1966) had no real police department, only a few unarmed men who spent most of their time issuing parking permits.” Today, the U.T. System Police website states, “Our official creation as a police agency occurred in 1967 and was largely the result of a sniping incident on
During the 1967 session of the Texas Legislature, authorized the
Nonetheless, as the VTU tragedy bitterly attests, campus police and city SWAT teams are no magic shield, when pitted against a determined mass killer.
To read Part 1 in the series, click here.
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