Virginia Tech Memorial Thread

I heard about that, it is awful. There have been a lot of shootings within in 06-07 school year...I can't say I feel to safe going to college. Specially one where I have no family in the surrounding area. :hmmph

 
I watched MSNBC, CNN and FOX News all day with tears streaming down my cheeks. Juat sat there...watching... So very sad for the students, athletes, parents, faculity, everyone...I just kept seeing Columbine in my mind. All those kids running away from the school. That anniversary is Friday, the 20th. Those of us in Colorado remember it well plus the shootings just last fall in Platte Canyon.

What the hell is wrong with people????? :madash :madash

This is not a good week for this country as far as events go. OKC bombing, Columbine and now this...just makes me sad.

 
Some things just don't seem that important anymore.

Virginia Tech cancels spring game

Posted: Apr.17, 2007, 12:57 pm EDT

BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) -- Frank Beamer grew up about an hour from Blacksburg, played football for Virginia Tech and has become the very familiar face of the university as the man who built the Hokies into one of the nation's elite football programs.

But on Monday, Beamer was like so many others -- glued to the television and watching as the details of mass murder on the campus he loves slowly dribbled out.

On Tuesday, he canceled his team's last three spring practices and Saturday's spring game, which is always a big draw at Lane Stadium. None of his players were hurt in the shooting spree that left 32 victims and the gunman dead.

"There's things more important than football right now," he said after attending a somber convocation. "There's a lot of grieving families here and there's going to be a lot of grieving families here Saturday. I just thought it was the right thing to do."

The school Tuesday also postponed a baseball game against William & Mary that was to have been played Wednesday. Five spring sports teams will participate in ACC championships as scheduled, the school said.

Beamer was in his office when news of the shootings broke, and when he was cleared to leave at about noon, there was no way to avoid watching. He said he tried to work out when he got home, but the phone kept ringing, so finally he just watched.

"The most amazing thing is you know what this place is like," he said in his spacious football office. "And all of a sudden you have a massacre."

He said he imagines the school's reputation will take a beating in the coming days as the nation remains gripped by the details of the murders, but that he expects the best of Virginia Tech will come forth, as well.

"If I know anything about Hokies, and I think I do, I think what's going to happen is we're going to become closer, show even more respect for each other," he said. "We're going to be even more proud and it's going to draw us closer together."

Men's basketball coach Seth Greenberg has a daughter, Paige, who's a freshman at Virginia Tech and was unharmed.

"I'm numb right now thinking about the parents coming to campus to identify their children," Greenberg told ESPN.com on Monday. "It's hard to put into words. What would drive someone to do this?

"This is the most peaceful, tranquil and safe environment. But this shows that there is nowhere that you're safe from tragedy or this type of senseless violence. It's devastating."

The convocation Tuesday packed Cassell Coliseum, and more than 20,000 people who didn't fit in the basketball arena watched on a huge video screen inside Lane Stadium.

As the service was winding down, English professor Nikki Giovanni led the crowd in a chant of "Let's go Hokies," the crowd's volume increasing with each verse.

"I think what took place at the end of the ceremony, people wanted to let it out and say, `Hey, this one guy's not going to beat us,"' Beamer said.

"We're hurt, but this one guy's not going to dictate how we're going to act."

 
UNL reacts in wake of Virginia Tech shootings

Students and staff with ties respond to the incident.

story image 1

Paul Velander, a Blackburg native, is still waiting to hear from all of his friends. Photo Courtesy of Husker Media Relations.

by James McCave, NewsNetNebraska

In a time when upcoming finals would normally be the concern on campus, the Virginia Tech shootings have taken over.

Members of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's community have spent the day reaching their friends and family in Blacksburg, Va.

Monday has been especially difficult for Cornhusker basketball player Paul Velander. Velander and his family are from Blacksburg.

Understandibly distraught, Velander still has not heard whether his friends from back home are safe.

"A friend of mine was on (the Virginia Tech) campus this morning and was close to some of the shootings. He saw some of it and the wounded being attended to," he said.

Velander said that he wouldn't be surprised if he knew a victim because he lived there for 18 years and knows quite a few people.

Staff on campus are affected as well.

Kevin Van Cott, an associate professor in chemical and biomolecular engineering at UNL, acquired his doctorate from Virginia Tech.

"I know some faculty at Virginia Tech," Van Cott said. "I talked with one at home earlier who said he missed it, he was at home getting ready for work."

Van Cott also said he found out from the conversation that everyone he knew when he was there was safe.

There are some individuals at UNL that have less obvious ties to Virginia Tech.

Cree Menefee expresses concerns about friends who are still missing. She has been able to contact some of them through the phone and internet. Photo by Meg Schudel, NewsNetNebraska.

One of these is Cree Menefee, a speech-language pathology and audiology major at Nebraska, has 24 friends that are currently students on the Blacksburg campus. Several of them were students that graduated from her high school.

Menefee has started looking online to find out about the safety of her friends.

"There's a list of a few of them that are found and are okay," Menefee said. "Through networks a bunch of us from different universities around the U.S. are trying to figure it out."

Menefee has used Facebook in her efforts to make contact with her missing friends.

 
I am very sad today to here of the accounts from several people that were involved in the tragedy at Virginia tech campus.

Football is very important to me, but loss of life so foolishly is far more important.

Please pray for the families the college and the community. I also hope that if anyone out there is confused or disturbed that they seek help and try to work through lives problems instead of trying to see how many innocent people that they can take with them.

We are seeing WAY to many school related tragedies. Moms and dads , teach your children to love and be gentle humans. The world could sure use some more of them.

 
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amen. Prayers and sympathy to those involved. I have a close friend from Blacksburg, and it hasn't been easy for him.

 
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