BLACKSBURG, Va. - The chilling images of the gunman who
was responsible for the massacre at Virginia Tech silenced crowds near campus as
they played on television screens.
Mourners, who wished to remain anonymous, console each other
on Wednesday, April 18, 2007, [AP]
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When the video of Cho Seung-Hui brandishing weapons, gripping a hammer and
reciting his angry, violent manifesto aired Wednesday night on "NBC Nightly
News," some stared grimly at the screens. Many shook their heads. Others cried.
"Seeing those pictures - that just makes it more real," said Laura Sink,
22, an elementary education major, as tears rolled down her face. She was
gathered with about 50 others at a restaurant just steps away from the campus
where 32 people and Cho were killed Monday.
Most public places on Virginia Tech's campus were already quiet, because so
many students have left for home. But a few gathered around a TV at a student
center coffee shop.
Heather Brennan, a master's student who watched the report in the campus
student center, said, "It's just as he planned. He knew exactly what he wanted
to do and he did it."
At Rivermill, a downtown restaurant, one patron objected strongly when the
restaurant turned its television to NBC because she didn't want her 9-year-old
daughter to see it.
"We turn her face away from the TV" to shield her as much as possible from
news of the shootings, said Teresa McCartny of Blacksburg, her voice rising.
David F. Kibler, a professor of civil engineering who knew eight of the
victims well, said he didn't see news footage of the items in the package sent
to NBC ¡ª- and didn't want to. But he said it was more proof that Cho was
disturbed.
"It's clear that he murdered 32 people in cold blood. There's not much more
to it than that," Kibler said. "It's difficult to explain this to anyone,
especially to students who are trying to return to their
studies."