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                <text>Elizabeth Nowrouz</text>
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                <text>By: Elizabeth Nowrouz&#13;
&#13;
Posted: 4/19/07&#13;
&#13;
It has been three days since April 16. Three days since maroon and orange became not just a team&amp;#39;s colors, but a show of courage and defiance in the face of a national tragedy.&#13;
&#13;
While the students, faculty and families struggle to pick up the pieces, schools like UMW are making every effort to just show their support.&#13;
&#13;
It has been called the Columbine of college, and international news is still saturated with images of the victims, the shooter and a campus in mourning. Many students at the University of Mary Washington, located just 200 miles from the Blacksburg campus, had personal connections to Virginia Tech.&#13;
&#13;
When senior Susan Alexander found out about the shootings, she immediately began contacting her high school classmates at Tech. It was not until the next morning that she discovered a close family friend was one of the victims.&#13;
&#13;
"She was in her French class," Alexander said. Reema Samaha was a Virginia Tech freshman attending class in Norris Hall on Monday morning.&#13;
&#13;
The two families had known each other for years, Alexander said, and "we would all spend our summers together."&#13;
&#13;
Alexander returned to her hometown of Centreville to find it "transformed."&#13;
&#13;
"There are signs and banners everywhere, because two of the victims were from there, but so was the shooter," she said.&#13;
&#13;
Junior Nicole Halloran, who organized a vigil Monday night and has helped plan another for tonight, had many friends and classmates at the school.&#13;
&#13;
"We should show solidarity," Halloran said. "This is one of the best and only ways to do that. This could have happened anywhere."&#13;
&#13;
In the hours after the events unfolded, there was already a second vigil planned, this one by senior Jennifer Welsch and junior Jessica Thiel.&#13;
&#13;
Thiel did not have any close friends or relatives at Tech, but felt she needed to pay her respects. The girls&amp;#39; Facebook group asked students to meet at the fountain in Palmieri Plaza at 9 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
"What if someone walked into my class and started shooting," Thiel said as she passed out candles to the quickly forming crowd. "It&amp;#39;s a Virginia school, I had to do something."&#13;
&#13;
Thiel addressed the crowd, many of them wearing Virginia Tech colors, and asked them to form a circle and join hands.&#13;
&#13;
She began to pray for "the students who woke up this morning and thought it was any other day, who walked into class, but didn&amp;#39;t get to leave."&#13;
&#13;
Thiel had barely begin speaking when the group from Ball Circle arrived at the fountain, and the circle grew to accommodate them.&#13;
&#13;
When the prayer was finished, the students, who had numbered over 200, passed a bucket of orange Gatorate powder around, each person emptying a scoop into the fountain. As a chorus of "Lean On Me" spread through the crowd, the water slowly began to turn Hokie Orange.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Kyle Ott, who attended Monday&amp;#39;s vigil, had actually been in Blacksburg when the shootings took place.&#13;
&#13;
"My girlfriend goes to Tech, so I drive down Saturday afternoon," Ott said. "She had a meeting at 10, and the campus went on lockdown while she was there."&#13;
&#13;
Ott was not on campus, but could not get near because of the police.&#13;
&#13;
"I was concerned about her and that she&amp;#39;d go outside," he said. "A girl from her sorority was killed, but she was fine and I left at like noon."&#13;
&#13;
Though the responses have been mostly from students, many UMW faculty and staff had connections to the events as well.&#13;
&#13;
Jack Bales, the reference and humanities librarian, is the parent of a Virginia Tech student. His son Patrick is a sophomore there. Jack Bales spoke of his experience in an e-mail.&#13;
&#13;
"My son [called me and] asked me, &amp;#39;Dad, have you heard the news,&amp;#39;" Bales said. "He told me about the first shooting."&#13;
&#13;
Bales&amp;#39; son lives in West Ambler Johnston Hall, the site of the first shooting. His dormitory, like the rest of the campus, was locked down after the second shooting.&#13;
&#13;
Families and friends struggled to get in touch with students at Tech all day. Cell phones stopped working early in the day, and so many of the victims&amp;#39; names did not come out until Monday night or Tuesday morning.&#13;
&#13;
Associate Vice President for Business and Finance Richard Pearce is a Virginia Tech alumnus and parent. His daughter Darcey, a senior at Virginia Tech, was out of the area on Monday, but Pearce himself was at Radford University, a 15-minute drive from Blacksburg.&#13;
&#13;
Pearce was at a function for accepted students at the university when he heard of the shootings.&#13;
&#13;
"Everyone there was just glued to the TVs that whole morning," he said "The crowd was just numb. Even in the dining hall, it was just quiet."&#13;
&#13;
Rick Hurley, vice president for administration and finance, who has assumed presidential duties, has been working with students and faculty to come up with an appropriate response to the events.&#13;
&#13;
His first action was to increase police presence on campus.&#13;
&#13;
"We weren&amp;#39;t worried, but we wanted to send a message to the students," Hurley said. "We wanted to do what we could to give a higher level of comfort."&#13;
&#13;
Situations like this, Hurley said, always raise questions about local security.&#13;
&#13;
"We have a crisis management team that can come together at a moment&amp;#39;s notice, as it did last week," he said, referring to the incidents with UMW President William Frawley.&#13;
&#13;
"We contact academic buildings and residence halls, and have the residence staff get in touch with as many people as possible," he said. "For a school as small as we are, we can do that. It&amp;#39;s an old-fashioned system, but it works."&#13;
&#13;
Hurley has been working with students on campus to plan memorials to the victims. In addition to the state-wide vigil planned for tonight, Governor Kaine has declared Friday to be the national day of mourning.&#13;
&#13;
"We are hoping to set up a line of students from the bell tower to Goolrick," he said. "Everyone will hold hands and observe a moment of silence."&#13;
&#13;
"We all hear that we should not take our good fortune for granted," Bales said. "But until something like this happens, we all probably do."</text>
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