Korean Student Identified as V.T. Shooter

UPDATE #5: The Washington Post has a good article up about the Virginia Tech shooting. From reading that and just watching the news today this guy was clearly nuts or mentally ill, but clearly being Korean had little to do with it. He had some serious issues that many teachers had noticed before the shooting happened. The drum beat of possible reprisals against Koreans is continuing:

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said Tuesday the government hoped the Virginia Tech shootings, allegedly carried out by a 23-year-old South Korean native, would not “stir up racial prejudice or confrontation.” (…)

The diplomat said there was no known motive for the shootings, and added that South Korea hoped that the tragedy would not “stir up racial prejudice or confrontation.”

Korean President Roh Moo-hyun and Korean born UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon also offered apologies and condolescences for the shootings. I seriously doubt there will be any “racial prejudice or confrontation” and it kind of makes apologies (which aren’t necessary) and condolescences seem hollow if that is what the reason is that they are offering such statements.

______________________________________

UPDATE #4: The Joong Ang Ilbo has an interview posted with the wounded Korean student:

Among Cho’s victims in the deadliest shooting in American history was a Korean graduate student who was shot three times. His injuries were not considered life-threatening.
“Shortly after the lecture began, he came in,” said Park Chang-min, 27, a master’s degree candidate in civil engineering. “He shot the professor first and then started shooting the classmates. Blood was all over the place quickly and it was chaos. “I could tell that he was an Asian, but because of his mask and hat, it was hard to see his face,” Park said. “There were about 15 students in our classroom. The shooting took place in a split second, and I had no time to
hide. He then moved on to the next classroom.”
Park said he got as low as possible instinctively and he did not even realize he’d been shot in the arm.
“Police came into our classroom after time passed and things were all quiet,” Park said. “We were told to raise our hands if were are okay, and only three, including myself, stood up.”
Park was sent to the Montgomery Regional Hospital for treatment.
The South Korean Embassy in Washington dispatched Consul Choi Seung-hyeon to the scene.
“Except for Park, there were no other Korean victims in the shooting,” Choi said, at the time.

There are also concerns from Korean students that they may be targeted for reprisals:

After news reports about the killer’s possible identity, concerns grew among Korean students about discrimination.
Located 390 kilometers (240 miles) southwest of Washington D.C., Virginia Tech has 26,000 students.
The school has 1,600 Asian students, including 763 Korean undergraduate and graduate students.
“I am worried that the Americans will treat all Asian students, including Koreans, as criminals,” said Lee Seung-wook, head of Virginia Tech’s Korean student association, before the gunman was identified as a Korean.

I for one would be very surprised if any serious reprisals take place. If anyone wants to talk about racially motivated reprisals how about the aftermath of the 2002 armored vehicle accident in Korea where GIs and foreigners were attacked on the street including kidnapped and paraded on TV. Or the signs put up in windows denying admittance to Americans or foreigners in general. Some how I doubt anything like that is going to happen after this tragic incident. Like past shootings these maniacs come in all shapes and colors.

__________________________________________

UPDATE #3: It appears Cho may have targeted the engineering department because he had failing grades and had to transfer over to an English degree:

On a chat room of (mostly Asian) engineers that I’m on, someone posited that the killer was probably a “real major” (i.e., engineer, scientist, etc.) who played too many video games, “got horrible grades and had to transfer to english.” This hypothesis was put forth by someone who didn’t know about the killers’s anti-engineer department ramblings, so I’d say it’s a pretty decent speculation that he wanted (and failed) to be an engineering major. It would explain the note.

________________________________________________

UPDATE #2: The Chosun Ilbo has a report up on the shooting. They have identified one Korean student as being injured in the attack:

The shootings have horrified the U.S. The death toll is expected to rise as some of the injured are in critical condition. Korean student Park Chang-min, who is in the civil engineering doctorate program, was slightly injured in the hand and waist, head of the university’s Korean student association Lee Seung-woo said. Park is not in serious condition. Some 450 Korean students study at Virginia Tech – 150 in the master and doctorate program and 300 in the undergraduate school.

Here is more from the Korea Times.

______________________________________________

UPDATE #1: South Korean media was already exploiting the tragedy by drawing not so funny cartoons before they realized it was a Korean shooter.

______________________________________________

The Marmot’s Hole has a whole lot on the announcement that the shooter responsible for killing 33 people yesterday at Virginia Tech is in fact a Korean student. The shooter’s name is Cho Seung-hui and is 23 years old and first came to the United States in 1992 with his parents. His parents run a shockingly a dry cleaning business in Centerville, Virgina and his sister attended Princeton University.

The Washington Post has good blog updates going on as well on this that is worth checking out. They say the students in Cho classes knew him as the question mark kid:

Classmates said that on the first day of an introduction to British literature class last year, the 30 or so English students went around and introduced themselves. When it was Cho’s turn, he didn’t speak.

The professor looked at the sign-in sheet and, where everyone else had written their names, Cho had written a question mark. “Is your name, `Question mark?”‘ classmate Julie Poole recalled the professor asking. The young man offered little response.

Cho spent much of that class sitting in the back of the room, wearing a hat and seldom participating. In a small department, Cho distinguished himself for being anonymous. “He didn’t real out to anyone. He never talked,” Poole said.

“We just really knew him as the question mark kid,” Poole said.

I’m watching the news right now and they are saying this guy is a V.T. student and had a reputation as a loner and a problem student. He is suspected of making prior bomb threats on the school and even starting fire before this incident. Supposedly he was using the bomb threats and the fire as experiments into testing the response time of the police and firefighters. They are also reporting that he bought the gun five weeks go, indicating that he has had this planned for quite some time.

Cho left a note at the scene of the first crime where he murdered two students in their dorm room with one of them suspected of possibly being his ex-girlfriedn. In the note he wrote about “rich kids” and “deceitful charlatans”. His body found at the scene of the second crime had the words “Ismail Ax” written in red ink on one of his arms. BoingBoing was able to find this out about what “Ismail Ax” means:

-Ismail is an Islamic prophet.
-AX may also stand for the Alpha Chi Omega women’s fraternity, which I found does have a chapter at Virginia Tech.

This is how the New York Post broke it down:

The reference may be to the Islamic account of the Biblical sacrifice of Abraham, where God commands the patriarch to sacrifice his own son. Abraham begins to comply, but God intervenes at the last moment to save the boy … Abraham uses a knife in most versions of the story, but some accounts have him wielding an ax.

A more obscure reference may be to a passage in the Koran referring to Abraham’s destruction of pagan idols; in some accounts, he uses an ax to do so.

One of BoingBoing’s commenters left this link to a Flickr page with a picture of Cho sayinig he went by the name Ismail because his Korean name was hard to pronounce:

Michael over at the Metropolitician also has a very good post up explaining his thoughts on the shooting. Here is a sample:

There is going to be serious national shame, expressed through the shock of this “representative of the culture” – even if the kid had been living in the States most of his life. There will be Korean media pointing at the parents, expressions of shock that “a Korean could do such a thing” (despite the fact that violence in the schools and against women are actually rampant in Korean society), and the glee that many people here in South Korea have at pointing out “American” character traits whenever horrible things happen in the US will be inevitably tempered.

Because the flip side of the logic now applies, like a mofo.

So how will this play out in South Korea? I think it will play out much like how Michael suggested:

I wouldn’t even be surprised if this is used as more ammo to show just how much America can “corrupt” good Korean youth. Just like Western porn is responsible for Korean boys (and girls!) conspiring to rape and sexually extort the victims that have made the news in a couple of pretty scandalous cases over the last few months.

Michael also offers some very insightful commentary about how he has been asked in the past by college professors why Korean students in the US are most likely to be problem students. He also shares this fact that the world wide record for the worst shooting rampage in history is held by a Korean man named Woo Bom-gon who killed 57 people in South Korea in 1982 after an arguement with his girlfriend. Sound familiar? Lot’s more good stuff, go and read the rest.

Overall as others have suggested we shouldn’t jump to conclusions and blame the entire Korean race for the actions of one lone crazy man, unlike the Korean media which loves the paint the entire US military due to the action of a very small few that commit crimes in South Korea. So far at least in the US media I don’t see anyone blaming Koreans in general and most of the debate is now centered around gun control and not the stereotypical angry Asian man pissed off because someone stole his girlfriend.

For more good postings on this make sure to check out DPRK Studies posting on what to do about mass shootings and One Free Korea who has a good posting going on as well about crazy Cho.

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CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

Nomad,

Don't forget that one of surviving victim is Korean PHD student. Park Changmin is international student.

Bobbo
Bobbo
17 years ago

Marmot's is down…isn't that interesting?
I wonder if the K gov. is in "Censorship" mode?

CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

Don't forget one of victim was born and raised in Korea when her father was an Active duty Air Force Officer.

Following is from Time Vicitm's list

Mary Karen Read, 19, of Annandale, Va., according to her aunt, Karen Kuppinger, of Rochester, N.Y. 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. She considered a handful of colleges, including nearby George Mason University, before choosing Virginia Tech. It was a popular destination among her Annandale High School classmates, according to Kuppinger.

She had yet to declare a major. "I think she wanted to try to spread her wings," said Kuppinger, of Rochester, N.Y. 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. Kuppinger said the family started calling Read as news reports surfaced. "After three or four hours passed and she hadn't picked up her cell phone or answered her e-mail … we did get concerned," Kuppinger said. "We honestly thought she would pop up."

CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

Also, Mary Read is half Korean by reading the article about her mother. Her mother has Korean name of YonSon.

http://www.democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll

trackback
17 years ago

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17 years ago

[…] Drop:  Korean Student Identified as V.T. ShooterPosted 2 hours agoThe Marmot’s Hole has a whole lot on the announcement that the shooter […]

CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

I guess Korean media is not too concern much about half Korean Mary Karen Read. They only care about full Korean.

ChickenHead
ChickenHead
17 years ago

This seems to be causing a great deal of national shame right now. Several Koreans have apologized to me today.

I have had a number of Koreans worriedly ask me what the result of this will be. It seems they are expecting average Americans to take to the streets in nation-wide anti-Korean demonstrations.

I have been telling them that when a GI commits a crime in Korea, everyone yells, "Yankee go home!" but in America, people will probably blame the person and not the country of his ethnicity. (Even more so now that I find he grew up in America).

I think this afternoon, I'm going to spread a rumor that lynchings of Koreans have started across America and over 3000 had been killed and dismembered by noon. Naw. That would be too cruel.

I'm sure Americans will not blame Korea for the actions of one crazy Korean and I hope Korea learns that all GIs are not represented by one drunk idiot on the subway.

J!

Argus
Argus
17 years ago

On CNN a FBI psychological profiler said Cho's past writings reveal he was angry at older male authority figures, and room-mates said the Korean perpetrator had a propensity to stalk females. His narcissistic rage wanted to bring others down with him. I told this to a Korean today, she said:

"Oh, that's a normal Korean male." She elaborated: Koreans are 'waterghosts'. When they drown in failure, they will take everyone down with them."

CNN also said, this is a time for healing. Thus, any public talk criticizing Koreans in general is now off-limits. We must paint the Korean offender as an anti-social loner, and not an indication of the general Korean character structure. Koreans will enjoy a wonderful immunity from social criticism for a least ten years. A great boon to the Korean-American community and Korean/US relations. It's time for a group hug.

THM
THM
17 years ago

This is terrible. Unfortunately the actions of this young man are going to have a negative impact on more than just the families, students, and faculty of the university; it's going to affect the country and the entire Asian community.

I received the following email from the President of the Chinese Students and Scholars Association at my university today:

"It has published that the gunman of Virginia Tech disaster is a Korean. I received a call from the Consulate General of our Government in Chicago this afternoon. Mr. Jiang, the consul was very worried about the security of the Chinese community in America, including our university. According to his experience, there might be some negative impact on our community. Please take care, do not attend parades and limit your party time in the coming weeks.

We are very sorry to hear about this disaster. Take care and hope everything goes well.

CSSA"

Silly Sally
Silly Sally
17 years ago

THM,

You are projecting Asian tribal values onto Americans. There will,however, be no negative effect against Asians in America.

The Asian community in America will enjoy a rise in preferential treatment by whites eager to demonstrate anti-racism. White Americans and Koreans will sing arm-in-arm in candle-light vigils to commemorate this tragedy next year. Asians will enjoy an Oprah Winfrey effect: Americans like Oprah's awestruck audience … will be eagar to morally outdo the other in elevating the "Asian" to an almost saintly status.

One day a Korean-American will be president of the People's Republic of North America.

Kate
Kate
17 years ago

Sad case. A few years ago wasn't there a case of a Korean man starting a fire on a train and killing over a 100 people. It was at the same time as the massive demonstations over the 2 girls death and I was surprised (not really) that there was no public outpouring.

The Koreans have nothing to be ashamed about in the VT case, it could be any student really.

But as far as the gun opponents go, I do think the fire incident is telling. It could have been worse without the gun perhaps if this student was determined to causse mayhem.

Silly Sally
Silly Sally
17 years ago

GI,

No mass reaction after 9-11? Are you psychotic? We were stampeded into Iraq by a 9-11 backlash after being told Saddam Hussein was developing weapons of mass destruction and cooperating with Al Quaida. We were told Iraqis were begging to be Americanized. We lost our civil liberties in the hysteria.

You are in no mental position to determine who is a nutcase.

Silly Sally
Silly Sally
17 years ago

Kate,

You say Koreans should NOT be ashamed. But, in reality … they are.

There is no collective Korean guilt for the pain caused, but there is ethnic shame — by an embarrassing overt act exposing a secret collective will that tellingly reared its ugly head during the worldcup soccer games: the ethnic impulse to murder inferior races … whether symbolically through sports or literally. Something we discern in the implacable Korean HATRED of Japan, and compulsive antagonism against America. If you notice media interviews of Korean-Americans, they will uniformly remark, "We thought it was a Chinese man". A subtle misdirection away from the malevolent inner-pride system secretly nourished by 99% of Koreans.

That is why Korean-students will run back to the homeland fearful of Americans savvy to Korean's notorious racism … or snuggle up to the Americans for a tearful group-hug pretending to be sincere multiculturalists for protection.

I absolutely endorse treating Koreans in America with civility. It's the right thing to do. But, don't fool yourself about the Korean attitude concerning other races.

It's not pretty attitude.

Silly Sally
Silly Sally
17 years ago

[Ed. DELETED PERSONAL ATTACK]

ChickenHead
ChickenHead
17 years ago

GI!

You, of all people, should not spread this misinformation!

"As far as gun control this guy didn’t even use assault rifles to commit this crime."

Assault rifles are rather rare and difficult to obtain in America. Converting a semi-automatic rifle (such as an AR-15) into an assault rifle (fully automatic M-16) requires a bit more effort than most are willing to do… and maybe less useful considering the limited benefit full-auto has for the average, untrained nutjob.

O.K., O.K., I'm nitpicking… maybe you actually meant "assault rifle"… but the gun-grabbers will have their fantasy reinforced thinking you meant an AR-15 or MAC-90 when you said assault rifle.

And, as to your comment:

"Imagine if teachers were allowed to carry 9mm on campus maybe things would have been different."

…I already did.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appalachian_School_o

Funny how the media doesn't report this kind of thing much.

J!

Dan
Dan
17 years ago

As expected, the postings on this matter made for interesting reading.

Sally; Your responce to Kate, I couldn't agree with you more or say it as well as you did.

GiKorea, your are correct. A 9mm and a 22 do not equal heavily armed. I carry more fire power when I go to the back forty and shoot cans. Sadly the KN student didn't shoot cans. I tend to think he was a nut job who saw no future for himself and any futher attempt to explain would be fruitless.

I hope the Korean People watch the American reactions to this sad event, and perhaps learn something. I hope and expect a different reaction to this than the Korean People expect.

I will now go and blow off some steam by expending about sixty pluse rounds into a dirt bank. Too bad his fellow students were not armed. There would be fewer dead students today.

usinkorea
17 years ago

I'm trying to avoid the hysteria. I'm trying to get into batten down the hatches mode, because except for the Korean angle, whenever one of these big, traumatic events happens, hysteria rules the day and the only good that comes out of is the media getting really fat in the wallet that month….

….but this, "Now all Koreans (Asians) are going to feel the backlash" is starting to annoy me.

9/11 should be a definative sign here, and the fact people are going out of their way to ignore it is annoying. If Americans were going to go hog wild on an ethnic group post-traumatic event, the Muslim or Arab-looking population in the US would have dropped by 10 or 20 or 30% by now due to the amount of them getting killed or tarred and feathered in the street.

9/11 was an attack on the nation as a whole. Passenger planes knocking down two skyscrapers was much more stunning than a school shooting (which we've kind of had several times before).

But………woe is it to be Asian in the US after the VTS…..

Please…..

usinkorea
17 years ago

On another note….

There could end up being a negative South Korea backlash due to this shooting, but not the way people are thinking about it…

This event has generated a lot of interest across the nation about Korea, and people are googling around….

….and that probably isn't going to end up a good or neutral thing for Korea.

Traffic to my anti-US/USFK issue site went to the moon yesterday, and there is a steady stream today. And it won't just be my site or some of the K-blogs like much of the work GI Korea has done on certain issues.

Since 2002, people in academia and the think-tanks have taken anti-Americanism in Korea seroiusly when they use to ignore it. Google searches post-2002 will turn up a fair amount of researched pieces and/or items coming from big name official sources rather than just a bunch of bloggers (though in my experience, we get it right in the analysis department more than the think-tank types).

steve
17 years ago

Turns out Cho wasn't the 1st Korean to run amok and go on a killing spree:

"Then there's the interesting fact that the record holder for the worst shooting in world history, Woo Bom-gon (우범근), is also Korean, this time a Korean national who lived in Korea. …:

"South Korean spree killer. Has argument with girlfriend. Being a police officer, Woo Bum-Kon robs the police armory and goes on a drunken 8 hour shooting spree through three villages, leaving 57 dead and 35 wounded before he suicides with two grenades in Uiryong. The Korean interior minister resigns. (28 Apr 1982.)…."

From the blog: http://metropolitician.blogs.com/scribblings_of_t

GI Korea
17 years ago

Chickenhead, the way the media has been covering this you would think the killer had an uzi and an AR-15. Most of the gun control crowd doesn't even know how had it is to get fully automatic weapons and criminals get these type of weapons simply because they are criminals and don't follow the law. I have hardly seen any mention in the media that the guy pulled this off with two very basic hand guns.

Are the gun control crowd going to deny our right to own basic hand guns now?

Notice how liberals complain about losing their civil liberties due to the PATRIOT Act (even though I don't know what these civil liberties we lost are) but they have no problem taking away Americans right to protect themselves guaranteed by the Constitution because it is a liberty they don't agree with.

trackback
17 years ago

[…] « Korean Student Identified as V.T. Shooter Red Devil Fan Base Expands […]

PSL
PSL
17 years ago

One aspect that I want to add that was not mentioned here but probably alluded to, is the fact that Koreans (and Asians as a whole) are culturally taught to feel collectively for what happens to one of them. I saw comments previously on this blog and others which critisized Koreans for embracing Heinz Ward or Toby Dawson as their own and wondered if they would do the same if there was an event that had a Korean with negative spin to it. Well, that question is answered.

It never ceases to amaze me that just when I think I got things figured out about a culture or an ethnic group, I learn new things everyday.

trackback
17 years ago

[…] story.  Unfortunately the AP released this article the same day that South Korean college student Cho Seung-hui went on a killing rampage on the Virginia Tech campus. The AP’s reporting on No Gun-ri and […]

CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

GI,

I know Mary Read's father. He is a retired USAF officer who served several tours in USFK or with 7th AF. Mary was born during one his earlier tour in Korea.

Now, I see ROK media is turning their attention to Mary instead of SeungHui.

BTW, my background was pretty similar to SeungHui. I immigrated to US when I was 9 years old. I grew up in middle class suburb. My parents owned a dry cleaner. I also had a sister who was super achiever. (SeungHui's sister is Princeton student.)

PSL
PSL
17 years ago

And CPT Kim,

"I guess Korean media is not too concern much about half Korean Mary Karen Read. They only care about full Korean."

Comment like this will not win you any brownie points with anyone. I take it by your name you are a US citizen with Korean ethnicity serving in the US Army. There is an old Korean saying, "You are spitting while lying down face up."

The real problem with the Korean media is that they care TOO MUCH about Koreans, half-Korean or not. My guess is that the Korean media did a quick search of last names and came up with all the Kim, Park, Lee, etc. I wonder how much leg this story would have had, if the killer was not Korean and no Korean victims were involved. I am sure the list of names of the 32 other victims will not be mentioned by name except Mary Karen Read.

BTW, here is Mary's article in the Korean media:

http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/20070

Me
Me
17 years ago

All you have to is to watch a Korean Drama which involves guns and this alone explains why no Korean anywhere should EVER have a gun

Leon LaPorte
Leon LaPorte
17 years ago

My question is:W hen is USFK going to apologize and how can money be made from this?

It must have been the ghost of the 2 little girls that forced him to exact his revenge on behalf of all the citizens of Corea that have been wronged for the last 50 some odd years.

Dae Han Min Guk! (and be the Reds)

(I'm waiting and am sure I will hear this, or something similar, from a Korean in the next month or so)

CPT KIM
CPT KIM
17 years ago

PSL,

I was trying to point out that ROK media was focusing more on the shooter being Korean than the two victims who are Koreans. I rather see media report about victims than the the shooters.

I am not here to win any brownie points with anyone.

Jerry
Jerry
17 years ago

It kind of annoys me to see that students in Korean colleges are holding vigils, and Korean press is reporting on it ONLY because it was a nutcase of Korean heritage that did this. If it was a nutcase of any other heritage, it would have all been twisted to evil America allows something to happen to Korean students at VT.

This is not and should not be allowed to become a racial or nationalistic thing.

As a side note, the Chosun Ilbo labels the shooter as a Korean-American. As I understand it, he's still a Korean citizen and both his parents are Korean. How's he Korean-American? I've lived in Korea longer than he was alive. Does that make me an American-Korean? I don't think so.

Me
Me
17 years ago

Its true! Until the Koreans found out the shooter was Korean, the tackful Korean press already printed out Anti-american Cartoons

Hey Korean TV played Anna Nicole Smith Playboy porn videos while everyone else in the world wondered how she died, whose the father of her kid, where she should be buried, what color of lip gloss she had on

Jerry
Jerry
17 years ago

We may have a self-fullfilling prophesey developing. If Koreans and Korean-Americans keep appologizing for this, the other nut cases may start to believe that all Koreans really are responsible for this and begin to harrass and blame people who had nothing to do with it, purely do to their ethnic background. Bet I'm right. I know I'm getting pretty tired of Koreans telling me how terrible it is that a Korean did it. Guess what's really important to them is now what happened, but who did it. How sad.

Jerry
Jerry
17 years ago

oops, "due", not "do". I should have known better. You can tell I'm not an Englishee teacher. Not even going to try to correct the other misspelled words.

Leon LaPorte
Leon LaPorte
17 years ago

Hey Jerry, Don't you make me go all Korean on yo' ass! 😉

Me
Me
17 years ago

Its time to Ban jerry NOW. We here cant have no good english speaking people write here now huh?

trackback
17 years ago

[…] a few sites that I use and I will be updating later this evening and as more information comes in.Gi KoreaUPDATE #5: The Washington Post has a good article up about the Virginia Tech shooting. From reading […]

trackback
17 years ago

[…] as I expected the Korean media has begun to blame the incident on US racism and culture corrupting a poor Korean […]

trackback
17 years ago

[…] a few sites that I use and I will be updating later this evening and as more information comes in.Gi KoreaUPDATE #5: The Washington Post has a good article up about the Virginia Tech shooting. From reading […]

PSL
PSL
17 years ago

If any good can come from the tasteless cartoon from Seoul Shinmun, it is that it is being innundated with nasty posts in its message board. Some of it is quite funny: one even advised that the artist, Baek Moo-Hyun and its editor slash their wrist, some arguing them to simply hang up their pen and die, or close its doors. Baek Moo-Hyun, BTW, is an ultra-liberal and he has long been a target from the conservative Koreans, and this is giving them great ammunition. The newspaper put a self-imposed two week moratorium on its cartoon section.

NC47
NC47
16 years ago

An article related to VA Tech:

http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/15/tech.suicide/ind

shattered
shattered
16 years ago

Two more Cho Seoung Hui caught.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,375442,00.htm

ChickenHead
ChickenHead
15 years ago

Possible Korean-on-Korean shooting in America.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090408/ap_on_re_us/r

Isaac Harrison
13 years ago

i think that gun control is a must because more guns means more deaths ";,

Albion
13 years ago

I have found out a thing new on many different information sites day-to-day. It’s always stimulative to see content of other writers and learn somewhat a thing from their site. Appreciate your giving.

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