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Victims were teachers, daughters, engineers-to-be

By LANE DEGREGORY
Published April 18, 2007


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BLACKSBURG, Va. -- They gathered at dusk, thousands of students and faculty filling the drill field. They punched holes in paper Pepsi cups and threaded candles through. Even gusty winds couldn't extinguish their flames.

Tuesday afternoon was the president's time. In the evening, the governor spoke. But the dark was for Virginia Tech's students. And the 32 who are gone.

"We had to come out tonight. It's an honorable end for the victims, and a celebration of the Hokie spirit," said Logan Thompson, a 19-year-old mechanical engineering student from Stephen City, Va. "A lot of people went home already. But we wanted to stick around for this service. Look at it all."

The crowd gathered in front of the school's war memorial. The classroom building where most of the shootings took place was in the background, shrouded by yellow police tape. "This is the first time most of us have seen that building since it happened," Thompson said.

By 8:15 p.m., the shoulder-to-shoulder crowd was so thick even State Police were having trouble weaving through. Nearly everyone wore orange and maroon - Hokie colors - and pinned ribbons on their sweatshirts. They brought daisies and tulips, American flags and cards.

They came to remember. And to mourn. A band leader. A belly dancer. A Holocaust survivor, a devout Christian and an atheist. Honors students. Graduate students. Freshman, seniors and faculty. The victims were their hall mates, their classmates, their professors and their friends.

"These past two days have been trying for all of us," said Adeel Khan, the school's student body president. "With the entire country watching the details of this horrific event, we've come here tonight to heal. And to commemorate the members of this community we've lost."

They were supposed to wait to light the candles. But by the time Khan was done speaking, the whole field was illuminated. Students held cell phones beside their flames, to capture the sight.

From opposite ends of the field, two trumpets played taps, answering each other across the dark. The field of thousands stood silent for one minute ... five ... eight ... The only sounds were sniffles and muffles sobs.

Profiles of some of the victims

STUDENTS

Henry Lee: Freshman, computer engineering
Henry Lee's Facebook page says he hates "anyone who says LOL out loud." He signed a petition to stop fire drills. He belonged to Facebook groups called, "I wish I were your derivative so I could like tangent to your curves!" and "Calculus and Alcohol Don't Mix: Don't Drink and Derive!" Lee, from Roanoke, Va., was an agnostic, played racquetball and Frisbee, liked hiking with friends and watching Family Guy. Watched martial arts and Chinese movies. Never read a book "unless it's assigned."

Jarrett Lane, 22: Senior, civil engineering
The day before he was killed in class, Jarrett Lane, of Narrows, Va., had accepted an offer to become a graduate student in the University of Florida's Civil and Coastal Engineering Department. He planned to start classes in Gainesville this fall. Lane's Facebook page says his interests included, in this order: God, adventure, fellowship, competition, sports, success. "I'm a Christian," he wrote. "I get along with a lot of people, but I have only a few close friends." He liked Christian alternative rock, some R&B, The Simpsons and any movie "with Will or Adam in it."

Ryan Clark, 22: Senior, biology, English, psychology
Clark was called "Stack" by his friends, many of whom he met as a resident assistant at West Ambler Johnson Hall, where the first two shootings took place. Clark was from Martinez, Ga., just outside Augusta. He was a fifth-year student working toward degrees in biology and English, and a member of the Marching Virginians band. "I don't think I ever saw him mad in the five years I knew him," friend Gregory Walton, 25, said after learning from an ambulance driver that Clark was among the dead. Clark is survived by parents, Stan and Letitie Clark, his twin brother, Bryan, and his sister, Nadia. Bryan Clark told the Augusta Chronicle that his brother was looking forward to graduation. "He was staying just until we could come to graduation," he told the newspaper. "Just wrong place, wrong time, I guess."

Leslie Sherman, 20:Sophomore, history and international studies
Sherman was one of about 50 students who lived in Main Campbell, an honors residence hall. Lara Jones lived there, too, and considered Leslie "a dear friend." "She was just another of those really well-liked people. No one ever had a bad word to say about her," Jones said. "She was so friendly, positive." Sherman loved running, history, foreign languages and making friends laugh.

Caitlin Hammaren, 19: Sophomore, international studies and French
"She was just one of the most outstanding young individuals that I've had the privilege of working with in my 31 years as an educator," said John Latini, principal of Minisink Valley High School in Westtown, N.Y., where she graduated in 2005. "Caitlin was a leader among our students."

Reema Samaha, 18: Freshman
Samaha's Facebook page shows a woman with long dark hair and khol-lined eyes posing in formal dresses, dipping on the dance floor, performing in a play. It says she loved "belly dancing, shoes, my dog, eating, you know?" Her favorite bands were Incubus, Deathcab for Cutie and Radiohead. The last thing she wanted people to know about her: "I still have a blankie."

Emily Hilscher, 19: Freshman, animal and poultry sciences, equine science
Hilscher was known around her hometown of Woodville, Va. as an animal lover. She lived on the same dorm floor as victim Ryan Clark.

Minal Panchal, 26: Master's student in building sciences
Panchal's friends and family were not sure she had been killed until Tuesday afternoon. Friend Vishu Divela, 25, said Panchal's older sister, who lives in Washington, D.C., and her mother, who lives in New York, traveled to Blacksburg late Monday to search for her at hospitals in the area. The police told them Tuesday afternoon that she was one of the victims. Divela, who graduated from Virginia Tech in January, met Panchal when he picked her up from the airport in August 2006 when she arrived in Virginia from Bombay, India. Divela described Panchal as "really funny, bubbly." She listed architecture, buildings and nature as her passions on her Web site and said she liked to read, sketch, watch movies and talk to friends "any place any time."

Ross Abdallah Alameddine, 20: Sophomore, English major
Friends created a memorial page on Facebook.com that described Alameddine, of Saugus, Mass., as "an intelligent, funny, easy going guy." Alameddine's mother, Lynnette Alameddine said she was outraged by how victims' relatives were notified of the shooting. "It happened in the morning and I did not hear (about her son's death) until a quarter to 11 at night," she said. "That was outrageous. Two kids died, and then they shoot a whole bunch of them, including my son."

Daniel Perez Cueva, 21: From Peru
Cueva was killed while in a French class, said his mother, Betty Cueva. Perez Cueva was a student of international relations, according to the Virginia Tech Web site.

Mary Karen Read, 19: Freshman
Read was born in South Korea into an Air Force family and lived in Texas and California before settling in the northern Virginia suburb of Annandale. Karen Kuppinger said her niece had struggled adjusting to Tech's sprawling 2,600-acre campus. But she had recently begun making friends and looking into a sorority. At Annandale High School, Mary was an advanced placement student in the international baccalaureate program and excelled in photography. She played clarinet in the school band and was in the homecoming court last year. Her family started calling Read as news reports surfaced. By dark, Mary's father, Peter Read, was driving more than 200 miles to Virginia Tech. That's when his cell phone rang. He expected it to be Mary saying she was fine. Instead, it was his wife, Cathy, telling him Mary was dead.

Matt J. La Porte, 20, Dumont, N.J.: Freshman, university studies
LaPorte attended Virginia Tech on an ROTC scholarship. He loved art and music and planned to join the Air Force after college, hoping to become an officer.

Juan Ortiz, 26, Bayamon, Puerto Rico: Graduate student in civil engineering
No further information available.

Daniel O'Neil, 22
No further information available.

Jeremy Herbstritt, 27, Bellefonte, Pa.
No further information available.

PROFESSORS

Christopher James Bishop, 35: Foreign languages and literatures (German)
Bishop taught German at Virginia Tech and helped oversee an exchange program with a German university. He earned bachelor's and master's degrees in German and was a Fulbright scholar at Christian-Albrechts University in Kiel, Germany. According to his Web site, Bishop spent four years living in Germany, where he "spent most of his time learning the language, teaching English, drinking large quantities of wheat beer, and wooing a certain fraulein." The "fraulein" was Bishop's wife, Stephanie Hofer, who also teaches in Virginia Tech's German program.

G.V. Loganathan, 51: Civil and environmental engineering
Loganathan was born in the southern Indian city of Chennai and had been a civil and environmental engineering professor at Virginia Tech since 1982. Loganathan, 51, won several awards for excellence in teaching, had served on the faculty senate and was an adviser to about 75 undergraduate students.

Kevin Granata, 45: Engineering science and mechanics
The head of the school's engineering science and mechanics department called Granata one of the top five biomechanics researchers in the country working on movement dynamics in cerebral palsy. Granata, 45, leaves a wife, Linda, and three children aged 11 to 14, his brother said. Jeff Harrington, deputy business editor at the St. Petersburg Times, was a classmate of Granata's at a Catholic high school in west Toledo: "He could transform in an instant from studious to boisterous. And when he did, his laugh would fill the room. ... He was surprisingly strong and not averse to jumping into situations to help out. If this had been 9/11, I could see him taking the Todd 'Let's Roll' Beamer approach of storming the cockpit. I half-wondered if he had tried to charge the Virginia Tech gunman as he opened fire."

Jocelyne Couture-Nowak: French instructor
Couture-Nowak was instrumental in the creation of the first French school in a town in Nova Scotia. She lived there in the 1990s with her husband, Jerzy Nowak, the head of the horticulture department at Virginia Tech.

Sources: Associated Press, New York Times, Times staff writers Meg Laughlin, Bill Adair, Wes Allison, Madhusmita Bora and Anita Kumar and news researchers Carolyn Edds and Caryn Baird.

[Last modified April 18, 2007, 02:36:49]


Share your thoughts on this story

Comments on this article
by Mary 04/18/07 01:40 PM
My Thoughts are with all the families at this sad time but you have a strong Community that was seen and felt across the miles on your News Channels God Bless You all
by christina 04/18/07 01:10 PM
it made so very sad for the of the victim and there families and friends and i am paying for them.
by melinda 04/18/07 10:22 AM
My heart goes out to all of families. may God Be with you all at this time.
by Catherine 04/18/07 10:17 AM
My sympathies and prayers to parents and loved ones of Virginia Tech students who were callously murdered. I am the mother of 09/11/01 Victim who was murdered on the 105th floor of North Tower. God help us!
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