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Kacey Beddoes
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tmf
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2008-02-18
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Issue Date:Wednesday April 18, 2007
Section: State & Local Section
The Student Government Association is hosting a candlelight vigil tonight to mourn the April 16 tragedy at Virginia Tech.
Monday's massacre at Virginia Tech began at a residence hall and moved across campus to Norris Hall, the university's engineering building, leaving 33 people dead and many injured. The shooting is considered the worst mass killing in U.S. history.
Throughout the day, students can send messages of hope on a banner in the Mountainlair. SGA will also be handing out orange and maroon ribbons, in support for Virginia Tech, according to a press release.
The vigil will then take place tonight at 9 p.m. in Woodburn Circle, weather permitting.
"We want to do our part on our campus to extend our condolences to those and their families at Virginia Tech," said SGA Vice President Jason Parsons. "We encourage all students and those in the community to come out."
SGA President David Kirkpatrick and President David C. Hardesty are scheduled to speak.
— tmf
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Original Source: The Daily Athenaeum
<a href="http://www.da.wvu.edu/show_article.php?&story_id=27582">http://www.da.wvu.edu/show_article.php?&story_id=27582</a>
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eng
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Leann Ray <Leann.Ray@mail.wvu.edu>
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Virginia Tech vigil held on campus today
candlelight vigil
condolences
messages of hope
wvu
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Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Contributor
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Kacey Beddoes
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John Davisson
Date
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2008-02-17
Description
An account of the resource
By John Davisson
PUBLISHED APRIL 16, 2007
Thirty-two dead and dozens more wounded in Blacksburg. A Journalism School student raped, cut, and burned in Hamilton Heights. These are the twin horrors—baffling, appalling, and without reason—that greeted Columbia's community on Monday.
Sadistic acts are lamentable and far-too-common features of the human experience. Each successive day brings with it reports of gut-wrenching atrocities, many on a greater scale than these two attacks, most eliciting a quieter outcry. But our empathy and fear operate in analogues, so it gives us special pause when senseless brutality impacts those bound to us through shared educational experience, whether at Columbia or a peer institution.
In these cases, we cannot help but ask why, how, and most alarmingly whether such incidents could recur, but the replies do little to diminish the widespread sense of confusion and grief. One wonders what train of thought led someone to butcher a room full of fellow human beings or brutalize a lone victim, but the causes seem to defy reason, and the savagery yields few good answers. Violence, author Jean Genet wrote, is a calm that disturbs you.
In the coming days, much will be said about prevention: what could have been and should be done to forestall such acts of cruelty. This is a good and crucial discussion, but, sadly, one that cannot erase the pain inflicted on the victims and those close to them. Time may bring a degree of distance and comfort, but investigation will only supply the how—never the root causes, the why.
We offer, as do all, our deepest condolences to those affected by these crimes, and we hope that the coming weeks will offer them some measure of healing.
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Original Source: Columbia Spectator
<a href="http://www.columbiaspectator.com/node/24875">http://www.columbiaspectator.com/node/24875</a>
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eng
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Tom Faure (tomfaure@gmail.com)
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Violence Without Reason
columbia
condolences
hamilton heights
journalism student raped
prevention