At The Vigil
2007.04.17.
Crowd is gathering in front of Burruss Hall following the candlelight vigil. Norris Hall, the place of the second shooting on the morning of the previous day is just to the right of this building...
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-05
Haeyong Chung
eng
At The Vigil
2007.04.17.
Virginia Tech students on the steps of Burruss Hall following the candlelight vigil.
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-05
Haeyong Chung
eng
At The Vigil
2007.04.17.
A view of the crowd that had gathered at the candlelight vigil on the Drill Field of the Virginia Tech.
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-04
Haeyong Chung
eng
At The Vigil
2007.04.17.
People at the candlelight vigil.
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-04
Haeyong Chung
eng
Dr. Steger
2007.04.17.
Dr. Charles Steger, the Virginia Tech President is holding a candle at the candlelight vigil.
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-04
Haeyong Chung
eng
At The Vigil
2007.04.17.
A kid holding a lit candle at the candlelight vigil on the Virginia Tech campus.
Photo courtesy of Ivan V. Morozov
Ivan V. Morozov
2007-09-04
Haeyong Chung
eng
CCC Hosts Vigil for V-Tech
<b>MOURNING: At the official UC Irvine vigil for Virginia Tech administrators offered support to students.</b>
By Anam Siddiq
Staff Writer
In a vigil hosted by the Cross Cultural Center and UC Irvine Student Affairs, candles were passed out to hundreds of students, faculty and friends who had gathered on April 23 to give a final salute to all those killed and injured at the hands of one unstable man.
Exactly one week earlier, the sun rose in Blacksburg, Virg. on a truly unfortunate scene. By the next week, the tragic events that had occurred at Virginia Polytechnic Institute were common knowledge, and although students across the campus had already held numerous vigils, UCI felt compelled to officially honor the victims in a formal ceremony.
The event, advertised by the CCC, was also publicized by e-mails sent by Chancellor Michael Drake and included speakers from UCI administration, including Vice Chancellor Manuel Gomez and Dean of Students Sally Peterson. Irvine Mayor Beth Krom and Orange County Human Relations Representative Ken Inouye were also asked to speak at the vigil, as well as two student representatives, ASUCI President Stephanie Johnson and Korean American Student Association Rep Rheela Kim.
At 6:45 p.m., student musician Andrew Heringer began the ceremony with penetrating music played on his acoustic guitar. At the end an uncommonly serene silence befell Ring Road as the chattering crowd delved into quiet contemplation.
Peterson was introduced, and emphasized that the program was one of remembrance. As she listed the names of the victims, the wind rustled through the crowd and blew out the candles.
Gomez then read a message from Drake, who was in Washington, and assured the crowd that in the aftermath of this terrible event, the administration would "redouble [its] efforts to confirm the safety of the students and faculty on this campus." Gomez continued, saying that even though Irvine is one of the safest cities in the world, UCI and Virginia Tech shared many similarities, including "stunned sorrow and common grief." He further reminisced upon some of the heroes of the Virginia Tech shootings and requested the crowd to pray for killer Cho Seung-Huis' family who was said to be feeling "helpless, hopeless and lost."
Krom expressed her belief that "sometimes it takes a tragedy to bring a community together," and as proof she brought a family who worked for the Kids Who Care Club, a foundation that makes quilts for kids who have undergone major surgeries. The children who made a beautiful quilt with patches for each victim which was going to be sent to the university from the City of Irvine.
Inouye verbalized the importance of refraining from letting the actions of a single individual reflect an entire ethnic community, reminding the students that despite everything "today, and for every tomorrow, we are all Americans."
After the student speakers had expressed their sympathy for the tragedy and rallied the students to work together as a community, Associate Dean of Students and Director of the Cross Cultural Center Ana Gonzalez related the rest of the week's events, which included emotional distress, relief and open discussions about the Virginia Tech shootings. She also urged everyone present to write on the two boards set up for the students to express their thoughts, sentiments and prayers. By the end of the day, the boards were covered with such things as personal notes from students to artwork by sororities and fraternities.
The vigil appropriately ended with Diedre Butler's "In the Arms of an Angel," the most heart-rending part of the entire ceremony. Some people were moved to tears and sought comfort in the arms of friends, while others sat in deep reflection. Blair Hollingsworth, a first-year drama major attending the proceedings, described the entire vigil as "beautiful and well-planned."
The deaths of 32 people tragically killed on that terrible day brought a community together. Members of the crowd were drawn closer to each other as a group and all race, ethnicity, gender and religious differences were forgotten as students left their identities as UCI Anteaters and became one with the Virginia Tech students. As Gomez so rightfully put it, "This evening, we are all Hokies in spirit."
--
Original Source:<a href=http://www.newuniversity.org/showArticle.php?id=5754>New University - April 30, 2007</a>
Anam Siddiq
2007-08-19
Sara Hood
Zachary Gale <newueic@gmail.com>
eng
Vigil
Thousands of faculties,staffs and students of Virginia Tech stood on the drillfield for vigil.
Original Source:æ–°åŽç½‘
<a href="http://www.southcn.com/news/international/specialreports/qj/tp/200704180623.htm">http://www.southcn.com/news/international/specialreports/qj/tp/200704180623.htm</a>
æ–°åŽç½‘
2007-08-15
Na Mi
eng
Sorrowful moment
People mourned for the victims on the drillfield. Vigil on April 17
Original Source:hqchinadaily.cn
<a href="http://egsky.cn/default.asp?distype=normal&tag=%E7%BE%8E%E5%9B%BD">http://egsky.cn/default.asp?distype=normal&tag=%E7%BE%8E%E5%9B%BD</a>
环çƒåœ¨çº¿
2007-08-15
Na Mi
eng
Vigil on April 17
On April 17,a student of Virginia Tech wrote message on one of the posters on the drillfield before vigil.
Original Source:æ–°åŽç¤¾
<a href="http://world.people.com.cn/GB/1029/5627794.html">http://world.people.com.cn/GB/1029/5627794.html</a>
å•æ˜Žå“
2007-08-15
Na Mi
eng
Miami reacts to Virginia Tech tragedy
<b>Students hold candlelight vigil, show support for Blacksburg</b>
By: Megan Weiland
Posted: 4/20/07
Following closely on the heels of sophomore Beth Spiedel's death and the two-year anniversary of a tragic off-campus house fire, Miami University's community is now confronted with what has been termed by Virginia Polytechnic Institute students as a "college Columbine."
"We are all feeling enormous sadness and grief at the thought of what happened in Virginia," said Miami University President David Hodge. "It's overwhelming to know that 33 people died (Monday) and I think it causes fear for us as we live in this modern era, where it is hard to understand what would possess a person to do something like this. It's a feeling of vulnerability."
Friday, April 20, college campuses across the country will be joining together for an "Orange and Maroon Effect" Day, when all Americans are encouraged to wear Virginia Tech's colors to show support.
"This tradition began in 2002 to encourage the wearing of school colors to sporting events," said Kristen Lucia, a graduate student at Miami who received her bachelor's degree from Virginia Tech in 2004. "We had two games a year, one where you had to wear orange, and the other maroon."
Lucia added that the shirts were sold for only $5, and the first year caused a national shortage in orange T-shirts because of the popularity. It became a tradition at the school as well as across the nation to show "Hokie pride."
"I think we have two choices," she said. "We can dress in black, mourn, and sink into the shadows. Or we can dress in bright orange and stand together. The actions of one person will not affect our unity."
Lucia said that many people from Virginia Tech are worried about how Monday's event will change the way others view their school.
"Everyone's fear right now is that people will think VA Tech is unsafe, but there was nothing anyone could have done to prevent this," Lucia said. "The first thing on our lips was, I want to be in Blacksburg not I want to get away from there but I want to be there with them."
Miami students and faculty gathered together Tuesday night for a candlelight vigil honoring and remembering the students who were killed at Virginia Tech Monday.
"A college student is a college student no matter where you go to school," said Stacey Brozio, a junior East Asian language and culture major who planned the event. "Whether we believe in something higher or not, we share a common belief in humanity at this vigil. We're here in support for each other and for Virginia Tech."
With more than 200 people in attendance, several students and faculty members shared thoughts, memories and wrote sympathy cards to families of the victims and the shaken community.
"My own personal loss was very great," said sophomore Kristen Vliet, who lost a friend in the shooting. "There are just some things in life that don't make sense. There's no way we can look back at the victims of the fire and have it make sense. There's no way we can look back at Beth (Speidel) and have it make sense. What does make sense is that we're here grieving together."
Both Wal-Mart and the Faith Lutheran Church and Campus Ministry donated candles, which were placed around the reflecting pool behind the Shriver Center at the conclusion of the vigil.
"The hardest part for me is when people forget," said Paige Glattly, a first-year psychology major. "We need to remember the families. It changed the rest of their lives. They will remember this every minute of every day."
President Hodge expressed his joy at seeing the Miami community gathering together and encouraged them to continue to talk through the grief.
"We as college students didn't really have a voice when Columbine happened," said junior Paul Morrow. "We didn't have a platform to express our grief like we do here."
Jane Lindsay, a first-year whose two friends live in West Ambler Johnston Hall at Virginia Tech, said talking about her feelings with those friends and with others is a way of showing support.
"Virginia Tech is so similar to Miami," Lindsay said. "It's not even a city, just a small town and a close community, like Blacksburg."
Other students spoke on questioning their faith and having moments of utter disbelief that this would happen.
"You have a finite amount of time in life," said Sarah Baumert, a senior accounting major. "You never get that time back and it's wonderful of these students at Miami to give that time. The people that came out are saying you don't have to talk, just know we're here."
Miami's security assessment
Miami is one of many universities in America right now re-evaluating its security policy and procedures.
"I've gotten a number of e-mails from parents wanting to protect their kids," Hodge said. "I feel the exact same way."
Currently, the university's security policy involves emergency phones in locations across campus, 24-hour patrol by Miami University Police, campus crime alerts via e-mail and use of the myMiami homepage. Hodge added that in an emergency the administration could utilize the Miami Metro system, radio frequencies and local TV. He encouraged students and faculty to read tips on what to do in an emergency, available on the MUPD Web site.
"Miami has been as prepared as we could for all situations," Hodge said. "I don't know that anything would have even made a difference at Virginia Tech. Two hours is really a short period of time. People don't realize how much time it takes to put a campus on lockdown."
According to Hodge, a new hotline number, similar to the lines available at Middletown and Hamilton campuses, was added Tuesday to relay emergency information. They are also looking into the possibility of text messaging campus alerts.
"We do have multiple layers of communication on campus that just depend on the situation," said Richard Little, senior director of university communications. "E-mail can be very spotty in terms of reaching the whole community. It requires sending 25,000-30,000 e-mails and hoping people check them."
Little mentioned the employment of phone trees to notify staff and students in the area of the campus phones who would, in turn, notify others. The method of text messaging would require all students to register their cell phones with the university and keep the information updated.
"Nothing is perfect," Little said. "Nothing can reach a whole campus in an instant and we have to be careful not to spread panic. The question is not the means of communication, but making sure you have the right information."
According to Miami's Web site, MUPD members are trained to respond and handle different emergency situations.
"We have all kinds of training and drills," Little said. "You sit down and imagine the unthinkable because someday that unthinkable could happen. I wish we could do something to make sure this never happens again but I also know that isn't a reality."
Miami's Student Counseling Service posted a link on its Web site Wednesday offering suggestions and information on coping with the Virginia Tech tragedy.
"Grief affects us in several different ways," said Kip Alishio, director of the Student Counseling Service. "It breaks through the normal setting and makes us feel vulnerable. A vast majority of people will get what they are needing from significant others, the natural resources in their lives. You should seek professional resources when those natural resources are non-existent."
Alishio added that Miami does have procedures for faculty to report concerns about a student.
"We do get consultation requests from faculty who have students who have submitted disturbing works or were acting in a suspicious way," he said. "We decide how to approach or intervene if we find it necessary. A student may go through a mandatory psychological screening to determine if they are a risk to themselves or others."
The Web site, sponsored by the American Psychological Association, suggests talking about feelings, taking frequent breaks and helping others do something productive.
--
Original Source:<a href=http://media.www.miamistudent.net/media/storage/paper776/news/2007/04/20/FrontPage/Miami.Reacts.To.Virginia.Tech.Tragedy-2870651.shtml>The Miami Student - April 20, 2007</a>
Megan Weiland
2007-08-14
Sara Hood
"Skotzko, Stacey Nicole" <skotzksn@muohio.edu>
eng
Grieving nation copes with tragedy
<b>BU assessing safety, mental health concerns</b>
By: Barbara Rodriguez
Posted: 4/18/07
Boston University officials are still assessing how Monday's deadly shootings at Virginia Tech will prompt any changes in BU's security and mental health services.
Officials will be monitoring the campus "climate" during the next few days, speaking with the Office of Residence Life and other departments that work with students, said Dean of Students Kenneth Elmore.
More than 100 BU community members gathered on Marsh Plaza yesterday afternoon at a candlelight vigil to remember the victims, many of whom were Virginia Tech students and a few professors.
Cho Seung-Hui, a 23-year-old Virginia Tech senior from South Korea, shot and killed 30 people in an academic building around 9:15 a.m., two hours after he killed two students in a residence hall Monday morning on the Blacksburg, Va. campus. Cho injured more than 15 others and shot and killed himself following the second shooting, police say.
Marsh Chapel officials have been talking with students in person and through email, said Marsh Chapel dean Robert Hill. Representatives from the Florence & Chafetz Hillel House and the Newman House, which houses the university's Catholic Center, were also available at the vigil.
"I was surprised by the number [of people at the vigil]," Hill said.
Elmore and BU Police Department Chief Thomas Robbins attended a city safety meeting at the Boston Police Department headquarters yesterday afternoon where representatives from 19 area schools discussed ways to improve safety protocols and communication among city and local agencies, Elmore said.
"We will be in a continual assessment," addressing BU's training response, how departments communicate with each other and the various city and state agencies they work with, he said.
"We know we've got a network of public safety," Elmore said. "It is still important to assess [BU's] crisis response."
BU officials are continuing to offer chaplain and counseling services. Marsh Chapel officials are inviting students to gather at 11 a.m. today at the chapel for another moment of prayer, Hill said.
"Our hearts really go out to the people in Virginia," he said. "We know what it means to grieve."
Many faculty members, parents, students and staff contacted the Dean of Students Office yesterday with suggestions and concerns about how BU could handle a campus shooting, Elmore said.
Elmore, who hosts weekly conversations with students in the Howard Thurman Center, will focus the first portion of Friday's discussion on the shooting, while a behavioral medicine representative will be present for counseling.
"There's lots of issues about violence and people's personal safety," Elmore said.
The Albert and Jesse Danielson Institute, one of BU's psychological facilities, is also offering students counseling services despite an extensive waiting list to be treated, said Clinical Director Dr. Jorge Stavros.
Stavros said if students contact the Institute with an "acute reaction" to the shootings, the office will make an appointment for them immediately. As of last night, no students had contacted the Institute in regard to the shootings.
Elmore is encouraging BU community members of the BU community to reach out to others and alert officials if they suspect someone behaving suspiciously.
"If it doesn't feel right to us, we have to report it," he said. "I'm always encouraging students to be mindful about their own personal safety."
--
Original Source:<a href=http://media.www.dailyfreepress.com/media/storage/paper87/news/2007/04/18/News/Grieving.Nation.Copes.With.Tragedy-2849522.shtml> The Daily Free Press - April 18, 2007</a>
Barbara Rodriguez
The Daily Free Press
2007-08-14
Sara Hood
Matt Negrin <editor@dailyfreepress.com>
eng
Candles on the drillfield
After the vigil,people left candles and flowers on the drillfield to express their sadness and grief.
Jinfeng Jiao
2007-08-13
Na Mi
eng
UM honors fallen Hokies at Vigil
By: Greg Linch // News Editor
Issue date: 4/20/07
A light, somber wind blew through campus Wednesday evening as the University of Miami paid tribute to the 33 students and staff who lost their lives Monday at Virginia Tech.
The gentle breeze ever so slightly rustled the branches that hang over the University Center Rock as Shajena Erazo, the Student Government executive secretary, read the names of the fallen.
A line of 33 student leaders clutched candles lit to memorialize each of the victims, in addition to the gunman.
They faced hundreds of their peers, who packed the area between The Rock and the UC to pay their respects, also holding candles.
UM President Donna E. Shalala offered her sympathies and repeatedly emphasized the two ACC universities were very much the same.
"Tonight we are Virginia Tech. We share their horror and their grief," she said. "Tonight we are Virginia Tech. We are their brother and their sisters."
At the end of her remarks, Shalala let out three words that reverberated in Blacksburg a day earlier as thousands chanted: "Let's go Hokies." Akin to how she began the chant earlier in the day at the Hug the Lake event, Shalala slowly enlivened the crowd to speak in unison as candles glimmered and wax dripped onto cut up paper cups.
SG President Danny Carvajal spoke prior to Shalala, saying the university was there for Virginia Tech-a sister school.
"We are confident Virginia Tech will heal and prevail," he said.
Carvajal also asked students to sign a banner and a scrapbook to be sent to Va. Tech with the baseball team this weekend (please see pg. 19).
--
Original Source:<a href=http://media.www.thehurricaneonline.com/media/storage/paper479/news/2007/04/20/News/Um.Honors.Fallen.Hokies.At.Vigil-2871059.shtml>The Miami Hurricane - April 20, 2007</a>
Greg Linch
2007-08-09
Sara Hood
Greg Linch <greglinch@gmail.com>
eng
One week after the events at Virginia Tech UNLV students held a vigil.
Licensed under <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/"> Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5</a>.
Photo Taken by Ricardo Estrada
Ricardo Estrada
2007-07-20
Chad Newswander
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5
Permission:
Ricardo Estrada
estrad14@unlv.nevada.edu
eng
Ignite-LA, a Southern California young adults ministry shows support for those at Virginia Tech by holding a special memorial service for those who lost their lives on April 16th.
This is image of a collection of personal notes of prayer and encouragement, written by individuals in the congregation, that were later sent to Virginia Tech along with a banner that had similar notes written on it.
Orginia source: <a href=" http://www.flickr.com/photos/nmly/469204121/in/set-72157600114401206/"> http://www.flickr.com/photos/nmly/469204121/in/set-72157600114401206/</a>
Photo Courtesy of Raul Moreno Jr.
Raul Moreno Jr.
2007-07-05
Chad Newswander
Permission:
Raul Moreno Jr.
eng
This photo was captured at the Ohio University vigil for the Virginia Tech victims.
Original source: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465093377/in/set-72157600093950887/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465093377/in/set-72157600093950887/</a>
Photo Courtesy of Cuong Nguyen
ohio university, vigil, university vigil, candlelight vigil
2007-06-28
Chad Newswander
Permission:
Cuong Nguyen
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465093377/in/set-72157600093950887/
eng
This photo was captured at the Ohio University vigil for the Virginia Tech victims.
Original source: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465094395/in/set-72157600093950887/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465094395/in/set-72157600093950887/</a>
Photo Courtesy of Cuong Nguyen
Cuong Nguyen
2007-06-28
Chad Newswander
Permission:
Cuong Nguyen
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465094395/in/set-72157600093950887/
eng
This photo was captured at the Ohio University vigil for the Virginia Tech victims.
Original source: <a href=" http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465087372/in/set-72157600093950887/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465087372/in/set-72157600093950887/</a>
Cuong Nguyen
2007-06-28
Chad Newswander
Permission:
Cuong Nguyen
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465087372/in/set-72157600093950887/
eng
This photo was captured at the Ohio University vigil for the Virginia Tech victims.
Original source: <a href=" http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465088664/in/set-72157600093950887/"> http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465088664/in/set-72157600093950887/</a>
Photo Courtesy of Cuong Nguyen
Cuong Nguyen
2007-06-28
Chad Newswander
Permission:
Cuong Nguyen
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bond159/465088664/in/set-72157600093950887/
eng