The
UT bomb threat earlier this month may have created a wave of displeased
evacuees on campus, but for areas around the university, businesses boomed.
Numerous dining places located on Rio Grande, Guadalupe, and San Antonio streets, as well as those on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, served as refuges during the emergency evacuation that urged thousands of students and faculty to leave campus.
Numerous dining places located on Rio Grande, Guadalupe, and San Antonio streets, as well as those on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, served as refuges during the emergency evacuation that urged thousands of students and faculty to leave campus.
Amanda
Voeller, neuroscience freshman, represented one of the many individuals solely
focused on staying dry that particular rainy Friday.
“It
seemed like most people were going to The Drag, so my friend and I started
walking in that direction. We didn’t go to Whataburger because we were hungry;
we just wanted to go inside because it was raining,” Voeller said.
Although Voeller stayed temporarily, the packed environment appeared
composed, as she recalls.
“Whataburger
was relatively calm, especially considering the fact that bombs [were expected]
to go off soon. About three quarters of the people were eating, and because of
it, [my friend and I] couldn’t find a place to sit,” she said.
Since
the UT Police Department sent the emergency text message around 10:00
a.m., many students and faculty headed towards nearby eateries for breakfast
and lunch, not knowing the duration of their departure from campus.
For Melissa Victory, human development and family science freshman, traveling with friends and finding places to eat proved stressful.
For Melissa Victory, human development and family science freshman, traveling with friends and finding places to eat proved stressful.
“The
local businesses that are a little off The Drag and do not accept Bevo Bucks
didn’t necessarily benefit. I had nothing but my id on me, as did many of my
friends, and therefore our destinations for food were limited,” Victory said.
Melissa
and her group didn’t return to campus on an empty stomach though.
“We
ended up getting sandwiches from Schlotzsky’s Deli at the corner of Martin
Luther King and North Lamar boulevards. They had a large sign on their window
advertising Bevo Bucks. We were excited and enjoyed our meal,” she said.
That Schlotzsky’s Deli experienced a lot of business that day, more so than the
employees expected.
“We
were setting up to open the doors because we open up at 10 a.m. We had no idea
what was going on,” Lili Campos, Schlotzsky’s Deli manager, said.
Campos
remembers the overwhelming amounts of students rushing in and ordering off the
menu.
“Everyone
wanted to eat for some reason, and I didn’t know why. [The students] were
talking among themselves as to what was going on. About 75 percent of the
students purchased something, most notably, the Cinnabon cinnamon rolls,”
Campos said.
While
many dining establishments flourished with UT evacuees, among the most popular
locations included the famous coffeehouse chain, Starbucks.
“It
was a pretty slow morning compared to what it usually is,” Emily Schmerl,
barista at Starbucks on 10th Street and Congress Avenue, said.
The
influx of students, Schmerl identified based on numerous laptops and backpacks,
mended the morning’s stagnant sales by making their own purchases.
“Most
of the people bought a drink. It all evened out actually, because I think our
sales from the morning came to what they usually are,” Schmerl said.
The
Starbucks at 24th and San Antonio streets dealt with a large crowd
as well. UT journalism professor Robert Quigley recollects his time there.
“I
had just finished a meeting with a member of the tech community when I heard
the alarm sound and noticed the text message alert from UT. From my table, I
could see the stream of students coming off campus and heading toward the West
Campus area,” Quigley said. “I evacuated in place. Since I was already at
Starbucks, I figured I would just stay there.”
Quigley’s
decision included ordering another coffee which according to him, seemed
rational.
“By
the time my order was ready, the line wrapped all around the building and there
was no room to move. I estimated there were at least 200 to 250 students packed
into the coffee shop,” he said.
The number of students at the Starbucks actually helped Quigley post more about the
emergency situation on Twitter.
“I
wanted to share the mood of the students who were evacuating and to give a
clear take on the mood of the students. The students were very calm and were
taking it in stride,” Quigley said. “My tweets reached the Associated Press,
which called me for quotes and AP Radio, which recorded my observations.”
The
employees working at Café Medici on Guadalupe Street expected their usual
morning routine, until the siren went off that is.
“Honestly,
it was like a typical busy morning-like coffee rush. We heard the siren and had
no idea [what was going on],” Thomas King, Café Medici manager, said. “We had
gotten word from students who gotten in showing us the text, leading to a line
going out the door.”
King
said when there was no way to look over everything; he called other employees
for extra help.
“There
were entire classes that came together and there were some professors who tried
to conduct their classes before they realized that it wasn’t going to work
out,” he said.
Although
the amount of assistance increased significantly, the ratio of people to sales
didn’t meet expectations.
“Our
sales were high, but they weren’t that high. A lot of people were looking for
places out of the rain,” King said. “I think people just wanted to drink something
warm.”
With the evacuation spanning at least two hours, both
evacuees and businesses benefited from each other; sales increased in most
dining areas, while students and faculty discovered locations to ward off the
rain and their hunger, and most importantly, ensuring their safety.
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