San Antonio Express-News

Tensions boil at Ut-austin tours over ‘The Eyes of Texas’

- By Kate Mcgee TEXAS TRIBUNE

Dozens of students at the University of Texas at Austin who give campus tours to prospectiv­e Longhorns are refusing to work this week over a dispute about a plaque with “The Eyes of Texas” lyrics hanging in the Admissions Welcome Center.

The dust-up over the plaque is the latest example of Ut-austin officials standing by “The Eyes” over pleas that the university distance itself from the song because it originated at a minstrel show where students likely wore blackface. It's also the latest in a series of clashes over the school's alma mater song in a nearly yearlong controvers­y that has frequently pit administra­tors and alumni against students. Recently, nearly 180 faculty have signed a new petition calling for the song's removal.

Just this week, a threatenin­g incident was reported to Ut-austin police in which a student-led online event about “The Eyes of Texas” was crashed by an unknown man on camera wearing a bandanna over his mouth and nose and who appeared to be loading a large gun.

Ut-austin officials did not respond to a request for comment about the incidents, nor did they respond to written questions.

Students say protests over the song are not going away. Kendall Walker, a Ut-austin senior who is part of the student strike in the admissions office, said she thinks administra­tors wrongly assumed the issue would die down after the school formed a committee this past year to study the song's origins. Ut-austin President Jay Hartzell has repeatedly affirmed that the university will keep the song.

“I think this is the tip of the iceberg honestly,” Walker said. “This is the beginning of it and people resisting that decision and not accepting a committee of people deem(ing) the song isn't racist. There's a whole generation of students and minority students that are equally and more mad than we are and don't want to enter a space that predetermi­ned their opinions don't matter.”

Members of the Texas Tour Guides said the song has created a divisive environmen­t on campus and wanted the plaque to be removed to ensure all student employees and prospectiv­e students feel comfortabl­e in the Welcome Center, according to more than six students who work or volunteer as tour guides and spoke to the Texas Tribune.

The guides sent a letter to the university on April 19, asking for a plan detailing for the plaque's removal by May 1 — otherwise, they said they would stop giving tours virtually or in person.

Tour guides said they suggested replacing the plaque with something symbolizin­g another university tradition that is more inclusive.

The admissions office would

not commit to removing the plaque and told students via email on April 29 that they did not have to work as a tour guide if they had concerns.

“We understand you may no longer desire to serve in this role based on your feelings about the University’s long-standing school song. If you no longer wish to serve as a Texas Tour Guide, please inform your supervisor so that your request can be processed,” wrote Miguel Wasielewsk­i, director of admissions.

The plaque stays

The request to remove the plaque from the Welcome Center came months after admissions renamed the tour guide group. Previously called “the Guides of Texas,” intended to sound similar to “The Eyes of Texas,” the admissions office decided to separate itself from the name last July, according to an email sent to students by the admissions office and obtained by the Tribune.

“We feel that in order to have an inclusive space where everyone feels safe and welcomed that a name change is necessary,” wrote Noemi Gomez, student program coordinato­r in the university’s admissions office.

The tour guides estimated that the strike includes roughly 55 students, about half of all the guides.

Student tour guides compared the university’s action over the plaque to its recent announceme­nt that members of the Longhorn marching band are required to play “The Eyes of Texas.” The university said if they opted against playing the school song, they can

join a separate, newly created band where it won’t be required.

Walker, who is Black, said she is often asked on tours by Black families about her experience on campus.

“I (used to) stand up there and say, ‘I feel welcomed. I feel heard.’ … The way that I feel has completely flipped in the past 12 months,” she said. “We bring in students into this university and showcase this university in a way other students cannot. They reap so many benefits of having our presence there but can’t honor something that makes us overtly uncomforta­ble. It’s just super hurtful.”

Multiple students who spoke to the Tribune said they’ve had uncomforta­ble conversati­ons with prospectiv­e parents and students about the controvers­y over the past year, yet they have not received any guidance for how to deal with questions about the song while giving tours. In some instances, students said, questionin­g has gotten aggressive.

“It definitely has been an added, like, burden on my mental health to go get dressed and put on my tour guide polo and go out and talk to families that are oftentimes like predominan­tly white, about like things like racial justice here on campus,” said Jeremiah Baldwin, a tour guide and sophomore at Ut-austin.

‘A targeted incident’

In another sign of escalating tensions, a student group recently reported an online threat related to the dispute over the song.

Last week, the Texas Orange Jackets hosted an online Zoom conversati­on with professor Alberto Martinez about his report on the song, which identified

links to Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee. According to students on the call and Martinez, as he was presenting, an unaffiliat­ed person with a gun joined the call but was removed by moderators.

A perceived threat

A screenshot of the Zoom call shared with the Tribune shows the man wearing a black beanie and a face covering over his mouth and nose while holding what appears to be a large black gun.

“The fact that a conversati­on about changing a song inspired someone to bring a gun to a Zoom call is just ridiculous,” said Irene Ameena, a senior leader in the Texas Orange Jackets. “And shows that this isn’t just some small debate. This is something that’s violent, like it is violent to bring a gun and show it to people.”

“Given the sensitive nature of the matter discussed on this call, we believe this was a targeted incident,” Texas Orange Jackets wrote in a statement on the Facebook page for the event. “We unequivoca­lly condemn the racism and violence that have been brought up in conversati­ons about this song and again call on the university to remove the ‘Eyes of Texas’ as the official school song of the university.”

Swift opposition

Walker said she knew students who didn’t sing “The Eyes” even before student athletes brought attention to the matter by demanding the school do away with the tradition last summer in the wake of the death of George Floyd at the hands of police.

Recently, a petition calling on Ut-austin leaders to remove the song has circulated, with nearly 180 faculty as of Tuesday morning threatenin­g not to attend graduation­s and university events unless it’s confirmed the song won’t be played.

Disclosure: Facebook and University of Texas at Austin have been financial supporters of the Texas Tribune, news organizati­on that is funded in part by donations from members, foundation­s and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism.

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