Virginia Tech marking 10 years after shooting that killed 32

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BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) — Ten years after a mentally ill student fatally shot 32 people at Virginia Tech,
survivors and families of the slain are returning to campus to honor the lives that were lost that day.

Virginia Tech is holding a series of events Sunday to mark the anniversary of the deadly campus shooting
on April 16, 2007. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe and U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine will be among the 10,000 to
20,000 people expected at the Blacksburg campus for the solemn occasion.
Kaine, who was governor at the time of the shooting, said he still vividly remembers the horrors of that
day, but has also grown close to many of the survivors and the victims’ families.
"We’re going with a lot of different emotions, but we wouldn’t be anywhere else," said Kaine,
who is attending the service with his wife, Anne Holton.
The shooting at Virginia Tech was, at the time, the deadliest mass shooting in recent U.S. history. A
massacre that claimed 49 lives at an Orlando, Florida, nightclub surpassed it last year. It forced
schools across the country to rethink campus security and reignited the debate over gun control that
rages to this day.
On Sunday morning, McAuliffe and his daughter participated in a wreath-laying ceremony at 9:43 a.m._the
time when Seung-Hui Cho’s rampage in Norris Hall began. The Roanoke Times reports (http://bit.ly/2pqps3w
) that the pair, along with former Virginia Tech President Charles Steger and current President Timothy
Sands and his wife, walked around the memorial, stopping at every one of the 32 stones arranged in a
semi-circle, each engraved with the name of a victim.
The ceremony will be followed by a commemoration event featuring remarks from Kaine and a reading of the
names and biographies of the 32 slain students and faculty members.
Later, students, faculty and visitors will gather for a candlelight vigil. At 11:59 p.m., a candle at the
April 16 memorial that was lit at midnight will be extinguished and carried into Burruss Hall. The
events were planned by current students over the last 18 months, said Mark Owczarski, a Virginia Tech
spokesman.
Leading up the anniversary, the atmosphere on campus has been one of reflection and remembrance,
Owczarski said. Most of the current students were in elementary school when the shooting occurred, but
understand that the "tragedy is part of Virginia Tech," he said. Counselors have been
stationed at commemoration events throughout the weekend to provide support.
"It is together – as a community – that we endure difficult times," Tech President Tim Sands
said in a recent email to students and staff.

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