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studyman的压码日记(新人)

smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 170 发表于: 2007-04-14
Wen puts personal diplomacy to the fore
By Mure Dickie and David Pilling in Tokyo

Published: April 13 2007 14:45 | Last updated: April 13 2007 14:45

With a tai chi practice in a Tokyo park, a baseball workout with students and a housecall on a “typical” Japanese farmer, Wen Jiabao, China’s premier, has put personal diplomacy to the fore of his ice-melting trip to Japan this week.

In a three-day schedule that also included a speech to parliament, talks with Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe and sessions with local businessmen, Mr Wen has carved out chances to flash his trademark fixed grin at ordinary Japanese.


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While such photo-op diplomacy is not new to Chinese leaders – Deng Xiaoping famously toured a Texas rodeo in 1979 – it has seldom been more needed than in Japan, where China’s image has been muddied badly by anti-Japanese demonstrations and bitter disputes over history.

The approach was on Friday endorsed by a tea ceremony master who served Mr Wen a bowl of the tart green brew under a scroll emblazoned with the Chinese characters for “mutual respect”.

Mr Wen’s carefully crafted “spontaneous” public performances seem to be working.

“I think it’s been pretty good. He’s really made an effort, and his [warm] performance has been pretty extraordinary for a Chinese leader,” said Noriko Hama, professor at Japan’s Doshisha Business School.

Personal outreach alone will not fix what is one of Asia’s most important but also most troubled relationships. Previous Chinese leaders have held chats with farmers and televised “townhall meetings” with Tokyo citizens, but still failed to prevent a half decade of diplomatic chill that only lifted last October.

Ms Hama said the friendly atmosphere could not conceal that little of substance has been discussed during Mr Wen’s trip and that Mr Abe’s conservative leanings would not allow him to make the concessions needed to maintain the momentum of rapprochement.

Even as Mr Wen was toasting Japan’s health, for example, Mr Abe’s party was ramming through legislation necessary to rewrite the country’s pacifist constitution.

“The worrying thing is that this was orchestrated as the beginning of something better, but this may be the end of the line,” Ms Hama said.

Still, Mr Wen’s mild-mannered public persona is itself at least a partial antidote to Japanese concerns about China’s emergence as a regional economic and strategic power.

“It’s good for Chinese leaders to show themselves in a more modern light,” said Shi Yinhong, professor of International Politics at Beijing’s Renmin University. “This kind of thing is not decisive, but it certainly helps.”

Mr Shi and other analysts argue that the prospects for Sino-Japanese ties now look good, not least because Mr Abe is unlikely to risk angering Beijing leaders by visiting Tokyo’s controversial Yasukuni war shrine.

“Abe is having so many problems that the one thing he can point to as a success is his China policy. If this turns sour, what does he have left?” said Gerald Curtis, professor of international politics at Columbia University.

Takao Toshikawa, a Japanese political analyst, said Mr Wen and Hu Jintao, China’s president, had carefully arranged a timetable of visits between the leaders of both countries that would make it virtually impossible for Mr Abe to visit Yasukuni shrine for nearly a year.

Mr Wen, at least, appears sure that his trip shows that the Sino-Japanese winter is over and spring has arrived. “Many people say the purpose of this 'ice-melting visit' has been accomplished,” he declared on Friday.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 171 发表于: 2007-04-14
China's foreign exchange reserves soar
By Richard McGregor in Beijing
Published: April 13 2007 03:00 | Last updated: April 13 2007 03:00
China's stock of foreign exchange reserves, already the world's largest, surged in the first quarter of this year to $1,202bn (£608bn,
[ 此贴被smy在2007-04-14 14:45重新编辑 ]
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 172 发表于: 2007-04-16
NEW YORK (AP) -- A powerful nor'easter pounded the East with wind and pouring rain Sunday, grounding airlines and threatening to create some of the worst coastal flooding some areas had seen in more than a decade.
The storm flooded people out of their homes in the middle of the night in West Virginia and trapped others. Other inland states faced a threat of heavy snow.
One person was killed as dozens of mobile homes were destroyed or damaged by wind in South Carolina. The storm system already had been blamed for five deaths on Friday in Kansas and Texas. (Watch boats used to rescue victims  )
The Coast Guard had warned mariners to head for port because wind up to 55 mph was expected to generate seas up to 20 feet high, Petty Officer Etta Smith said Sunday in Boston.
Airlines canceled more than 400 flights at the New York area's three major airports, said Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Kennedy Airport, on the wind-exposed south side of Long Island, had sustained wind of 30 to 35 mph with gusts to 48 mph, said weather service meteorologist Gary Conte.
The storm forced the cancellation of five major league baseball games Sunday and gave runners in Monday's Boston Marathon something to worry about besides Heartbreak Hill. The race-day forecast called for 3 to 5 inches of rain, start temperatures in the 30s and wind gusts of up to 25 mph. (Gallery: Storm moves across the U.S.)
"I don't like that," professional Kenyan runner Stanley Leleito said playfully, burying his head in his hands when told of the forecast. "The problem is that wind," he said. "But only rainy is OK."
Heavy rain and thunderstorms extended from Florida up the coast to New England on Sunday. Wind gusted to 71 mph at Charleston, South Carolina, the weather service said.
Storm warnings and watches were posted all along the East Coast, with flood warnings extending from North Carolina to the New York area. Winter storm warnings were in effect for parts of New England and eastern New York state.
More than 5.5 inches of rain fell in the New York region by Sunday evening, the National Weather Service said. Up to 6 inches had been predicted to fall by Monday, and Conte said Sunday night's high tide was likely to bring coastal flooding on Long Island and in parts of New York City.
Gov. Eliot Spitzer sent 3,200 National Guard members to potential flood areas. On Saturday he said the storm could cause the most flooding New York has seen since a December 1992 nor'easter, which washed away beach and sand dunes, knocked out power and left thousands of people temporarily homeless, their houses standing in feet of water.
Fallen tree limbs had cut off power to 1,500 households on Long Island and Fire Island Ferries suspended service to the island, off the south shore of Long Island.
Some residents of low-lying areas along the New Jersey shore packed up to leave.
"This is going to be bad," Shaun Rheinheimer said as he moved furniture to higher spots at his house on New Jersey's Cedar Bonnet Island.
Several highways were flooded around New Jersey. "We have crews out there helping disabled motorists, but my one word of advice is to stay home," said state Transportation Commissioner Kris Kolluri.
The storm also caused flash flooding in the mountains of southern West Virginia, where emergency services personnel rescued nearly two dozen people from homes and cars in Logan and Boone counties early Sunday. Two people were unaccounted for.
"It's about as bad as it can get," said Logan, West Virginia, Fire Chief Scott Beckett. "This thing came down at 2 or 3 in the morning, when people were sleeping in their beds. They just didn't know what was happening."
Some remained trapped in their homes because roads were blocked by high water or mud, said Dean Meadows, Wyoming County emergency services director.
"Our houses sit in the middle of the hill, and it's all around us. I'm surrounded, it's like a lake completely around us," said Samantha Walker, 29, who was visiting her grandmother in Matheny. "We can't get out even if we wanted to get out.
Gov. Joe Manchin planned to issue an emergency disaster either Sunday evening or Monday morning, spokeswoman Lara Ramsburg said.
Up to 2.5 inches of rain had fallen in southern West Virginia since early Saturday and streams were still rising Sunday, said weather service meteorologist Dan Bartholf in Charleston.
At least 3 inches of rain fell in eastern Kentucky, where a 50-foot section of highway collapsed near Pikeville, said State Police Sgt. Jamey Kidd. No vehicles were caught by the collapse, he said.
Dozens of homes were destroyed or blown off their foundations in several areas of South Carolina's Sumter County, but authorities didn't immediately know if the cause was a tornado or straight-line wind, said county emergency management director Robert Baker Jr. One person was killed and four were seriously injured, he said.
In central Florida, a tornado damaged mobile homes in Dundee but no injuries were reported, police said.
The storm also rained out Sunday's Washington Nationals game with the New York Mets at New York's Shea Stadium, the Pittsburgh Pirates home game against San Francisco, the Houston Astros at Philadelphia, the Kansas City Royals at Baltimore, and the Los Angeles Angels at Boston. Last weekend, snow dumped by another major storm system wiped out scheduled Mariners-Indians games at Cleveland for four straight days.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 173 发表于: 2007-04-16
ORLANDO, Florida (AP) -- NASA paid $26.6 million to family members of the astronauts who died on the space shuttle Columbia in 2003, a newspaper reported Sunday, citing recently released documents.

Documents obtained by the Orlando Sentinel through a federal Freedom of Information Act request show that former FBI Director William Webster helped negotiate out-of-court settlements with the families.

NASA obtained money for the settlement through a congressional appropriation in 2004, NASA spokesman Allard Beutel said.

The U.S. space agency had never before disclosed the settlement to protect the privacy of the Columbia families, Beutel told The Associated Press on Sunday.

"Everything has been done to help the families as much as can be done," Beutel said. "It's a public event, but yet it's very personal to them."

Webster told the Sentinel that the families did not wish to discuss the matter after it was settled.

"The members of the families wanted this to be a private matter," he said. "They were healing, and they were ready to discuss, properly, their rights. ... Everyone felt it had a better chance of coming together without seeing their name in lights."

The released documents did not note how much money each family received, but Jon Clark, husband of Columbia astronaut Laurel Clark, said the figures were on the "low side" of what families were seeking.

He said parents, children and spouses were all compensated and astronauts with doctoral degrees received a bit more than those who held master's degrees.

"It wasn't a lot of money. A few million [dollars] isn't much," he said. "We had to prove our loved ones were worth something."

An investigation found that Columbia was brought down in 2003 because a piece of insulating foam broke off the shuttle during liftoff and caused damage. Searing gases penetrated the shuttle upon re-entry, and it disintegrated over Texas. All seven astronauts aboard died.

The Orlando Sentinel also reported that two astronaut families had ordered preflight insurance policies through NASA, but the agency failed to obtain the additional coverage before the accident.

All the families threatened to go public before the agency paid the two families the additional insurance, the newspaper said.

Beutel said he was unaware of the details on the insurance policies.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 174 发表于: 2007-04-16
QUINCY, Illinois (AP) -- A man was charged with setting a house on fire in western Illinois early Sunday and killing five children, police said.
The bodies of four boys and a girl -- ages 8 months to 10 years -- found on the second story were likely family members, officials said.
Four other people, including a fire fighter, were injured in the blaze, authorities said. (Watch investigators examine charred house)
Zachary Q. Meeks, 27, was charged with five counts of first-degree murder, one count of aggravated arson and one count of arson, police said.
Authorities said they arrested Meeks after he was questioned about the fire that began around 3 a.m. in this community along the Mississippi River and about 90 miles west of Springfield. Authorities did not release a motive.
Rescuers arrived to find the two-story brick home engulfed in flames, which were shooting through the windows, authorities and neighbors said. The five bodies were found later.
The surviving victims' identities and details on how they were injured were not released.
One victim was airlifted to a Springfield hospital in critical condition, police Sgt. Doug Schlueter said. Two others were treated and released from Blessing Hospital, spokeswoman Chris Tysinger said.
A firefighter was recovering from burns to his face, said Keith Frank, an assistant fire chief.
Police said Meeks was being held in the Adams County Jail.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 175 发表于: 2007-04-16
(CNN) -- The BBC said Sunday it is "deeply concerned" about an unknown militant group's claim that it has killed a BBC reporter kidnapped last month in Gaza, but is treating the statement as a "rumor with no independent verification."
In a statement faxed to news agencies Sunday, the Tawad and Jihad Brigades promised to "distribute a video showing his killing to media channels soon."
Palestinian officials said they have no evidence or information that reporter Alan Johnston, who was apparently abducted at gunpoint on March 12, was killed.
Palestinian Interior Minister Hani Qawasame said Sunday that as far as he is aware, Johnston is alive, and Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat said that the kidnappers have made no demands.
The BBC has informed Johnston's family of the statement and is working with Palestinian officials to investigate the claim.
Johnston, 44, is the only Western journalist permanently based in Gaza.
The BBC organized a rally in the West Bank city of Ramallah on Thursday, one month after Johnston went missing.
Speaking at the rally, Mark Thompson, the BBC's director-general, issued an appeal "to all those who may have influence with the kidnappers to use their best endeavors to secure Alan's release, safely and speedily, and to ensure his return to his family and friends as quickly as possible."
Thompson told reporters he had met Wednesday with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Abbas told him that there is "credible evidence" Johnston is "safe and well," and that Palestinians authorities are "fully engaged with Alan's case and are working to resolve it as soon as possible."
Thompson said the BBC has had no direct contact with Johnston's captors and had not received any ransom demands.
Since 2004, 15 journalists -- including Johnston -- have been abducted by gunmen in Gaza, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
All were released unharmed, most within days of their kidnappings.
Johnston has been held longer than any other journalist abducted in Gaza.
The longest previous time in captivity was for Fox News' Steve Centanni and Olaf Wiig, who were held for two weeks in August.
Most of the kidnappings appear to be the work of "private individuals or groups seeking to exploit foreign hostages for political purposes or to use them as bargaining chips to secure the release of jailed relatives or to win government jobs," according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 176 发表于: 2007-04-16
China hits out as US launches trade cases
By Richard McGregor in Beijing and Eoin Callan in Washington
Published: April 10 2007 12:09 | Last updated: April 11 2007 01:50
China on Tuesday reacted harshly to a US decision to take it to the World Trade Organisation over piracy and copyright protection, saying it would “seriously damage” bilateral co-operation and harm business ties.
The statement from China’s commerce ministry followed the announcement by the US that it was lodging two cases with the WTO – on intellectual      property rights protection and market access for US movies, DVDs, books and music.
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The decision to file the cases amid pressure from Congress and Hollywood represents an ambitious attempt by the US to force politically sensitive changes to China’s tight media controls.
The response struck a significantly more combative tone than previous Chinese reactions to other trade disputes with the US, which appeared to accept that some tensions were part of the rough and tumble of being a global trading power.
Wang Xinpei, a commerce ministry spokesman, said the WTO action was “against the consensus reached between the two countries’ leaders on developing bilateral trade relations and properly handling trade problems”. He added: “China expresses great regret and strong dissatisfaction at the decision of the United States to file WTO cases against China over intellectual property rights and access to the Chinese publication market.”
The Chinese claim that the litigation violates a consensus between the two countries contrasts sharply with the Bush administration’s insistence that the actions are a sign of a maturing trade partnership. A US trade official said: “We have worked with China for many, many months to resolve our concerns about China’s compliance with its WTO obligations and we have acknowledged China’s progress in this area. Fortunately, we have the WTO to sort out tensions in a rational manner.”
Beijing’s stinging response bodes ill for the second meeting in May in Washington of the bilateral “Strategic Economic Dialogue”, set up by Hank Paulson, Treasury secretary, as a forum for top-level consultation.
The former chief executive of Goldman Sachs has sought to cultivate a consensual alliance with the Chinese leadership that builds on ties he developed as head of the investment bank.
The goal of that dialogue includes persuading China to open its financial services market and embrace reforms that would help address the record $233bn annual bilateral trade deficit with the US.
Trade data in Beijing showed a sharply below-consensus surplus for China of $6.87bn for last month. The March figure compared to a total surplus of $40bn for the first two months of the year. Economists said the March figures were an anomaly and did not represent a slowdown in the growth of China’s surplus. Stephen Green, of Standard Chartered in Shanghai, said the smaller figure was probably a result of exporters bringing orders forward out of concern about plans to cut export tax rebates following a separate US challenge at the WTO. Even with a smaller March number, the surplus for the first quarter of 2007 was $46.5bn, double that for the same period last year.
Goldman Sachs, in a note to clients, said the March surplus would maintain pressure on the renminbi to appreciate, which the bank said was a “more efficient” way to tackle imbalances.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 177 发表于: 2007-04-17
At least 33 people were killed today on the campus of Virginia Tech in what appears to be the deadliest shooting rampage in American history, according to federal law-enforcement officials. Many of the victims were students shot in a dorm and a classroom building.
“Today the university was struck with a tragedy that we consider of monumental proportions,” said the university’s president, Charles Steger. At least 22 people were injured, some critically.

Witnesses described scenes of mass chaos and unimaginable horror as some students were lined up against a wall and shot. Others jumped out of windows to escape, or crouched on floors to take cover.

There were two separate shootings on the campus in Blacksburg, Va., the first at around 7:15 a.m., when two people were shot and killed at a dormitory. More than two hours later, 31 others, including the gunman, were shot and killed across campus in a classroom building, where some of the doors had been chained. Victims were found in different locations around the building.

The first attack started as students were getting ready for classes or were on their way there. The university did not evacuate the campus or notify students of that attack until several hours later.

As the rampage unfolded, details emerged from witnesses describing a gunman going room to room in the residence hall, the West Ambler Johnston dormitory, and of gunfire later at Norris Hall, a science and engineering classroom building. When it was over, even sidewalks were stained with blood. Among those dead was the gunman, whose body was found along with victims in Norris Hall.

“Norris Hall is a tragic and sorrowful crime scene,” said a police official at Virginia Tech, Wendell Flinchum.

At a news conference in the afternoon, he and Mr. Steger tried to explain why authorities did not act to secure the rest of the campus immediately after the first shooting.

Chief Flinchum said that initially officials thought that the shooting was “domestic,” suggesting that it was between individuals who knew each other, and isolated to the dormitory. He said the campus was not shut down after the first shooting because authorities thought that the attacker may have left the campus, or even the state.

“We knew we had two people shot,” he said. “We secured the building. We secured the crime scene.” He later added: “We acted on the best information we had at the time.”

But two hours later, a gunman had gone to a classroom building on the other side of the campus and began killing those inside. He then killed himself, Chief Flinchum said.

The gunman has not been identified. According to a federal law enforcement official, the suspected shooter did not have identification and could not be identified visually because of the severity of an apparently self-inflicted wound to the head. He said investigators were trying to trace purchase records for two handguns found near the body.

At least 17 Virginia Tech students were being treated for gunshot wounds and other injuries at Montgomery Regional Hospital, and four of them were in surgery, according to a hospital spokesperson. At Lewis-Gale Medical Center, in Salem, Va., four students and a staff member were treated. Two were in stable condition, and the conditions of the other three were described as “undetermined.”

Officials said there may have been more injured and taken to other medical facilities.

The university has more than 25,000 full-time students on a campus that is spread over 2,600 acres. It was not clear how many of the victims had been notified of the dangers.

Some students complained that they had not been notified of the first shooting on campus for more than two hours.

Kirsten Bernhards, 18, said she and many other students had no idea that a shooting had occurred when she left her dorm room in O’Shaughnessy Hall shortly before 10 a.m., more than two hours after the first shootings.

“I was leaving for my 10:10 film class,” she said. “I had just locked the door and my neighbor said, ‘did you check your email?’”

The university had, a few minutes earlier, sent out a bulletin warning students about an apparent shooter. But few students seemed to have any sense of urgency.

Ms. Bernhards said she walked toward her class, preoccupied with an upcoming exam and listening to music on her IPOD. On the way, she said, she heard some loud cracks, and only later concluded they had been gunshots from the second round of shootings.
But even at that point, many students were walking around the campus with little if any sense of alarm.

It was only when Ms. Bernhards got close to Norris Hall, the second of two buildings where the shootings took place, that she realized something had gone wrong.

“I looked up and I saw at least 10 guards with assault rifles aiming at the main entrance of Norris,” she recalled.

Up until today, the deadliest campus shooting in United States history was in 1966 at the University of Texas, where Charles Whitman climbed to the 28th-floor observation deck of a clock tower and opened fire, killing 16 people before he was gunned down by police. In the Columbine High attack in 1999, two teenagers killed 12 fellow students and a teacher before killing themselves.

While few confirmed details about the gunman and the motive were clear, students told reporters at WTKR, a local television station, that the gunman had been looking for his girlfriend, and at one of the locations he lined up some students and shot them all, according to Mike Mather, a reporter for the station.

President Bush offered condolences this afternoon to relatives of the victims, and said federal investigators would help the Virginia authorities in any way possible. “We hold the victims in our hearts; we lift them up in our prayers,” Mr. Bush said at the White House.

President Bush was “horrified” at the news of the shooting, said Dana Perino, a White House spokeswoman, earlier in the day.

One student captured partial images, broadcast on CNN, using his cellphone video camera showing grainy dark-clad figures on the street outside of campus buildings. Popping sounds from the gunfire were audible.

“This place is in a state of panic,” said a student who was interviewed on CNN, Shaver Deyerle. “Nobody knew what was going on at first.”

He said that the shooting reminded him of the Columbine High School killings.

Today’s shooting at Virginia Tech comes in the same week, eight years ago, as the April 20 shooting at Columbine.

The police were slowly evacuating students from campus buildings and all classes have been canceled.

Families were told to reunite with students at the Inn at Virginia Tech, a facility of conference space and hotel rooms. The university community was told to assemble on Tuesday at the Cassell Coliseum to start to deal with the tragedy, a campus statement said.

Images on CNN showed police with assault rifles swarming several buildings, sirens blaring in the background and a voice over a loudspeaker warning people across the campus to take cover in buildings and stay away from windows. Many students could be seen crouching on floors in classrooms and dormitories.

Police evacuated students and faculty, many of them to local hotels, and witnesses said that some students were seen scrambling out of windows to get to safety. A Montgomery County school official said that all schools throughout the county were being shut down.

The shooting was the second in the past year that forced officials to lock down the campus. In August of 2006, an escaped jail inmate shot and killed a deputy sheriff and an unarmed security guard at a nearby hospital before the police caught him in the woods near the university.

The capture ended a manhunt that led to the cancellation of the first day of classes at Virginia Tech and shut down most businesses and municipal buildings in Blacksburg. The accused gunman, William Morva, is facing capital murder charges.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
级别: 总版主
只看该作者 178 发表于: 2007-04-17
凶手是中国上海人,24岁,去年8月才持学生签证到美国的。原因据说是女友和别人约会。杀死女友和其他31人后,自己对头部开枪自杀。

天呀,为什么是中国人?

可怜的中国的人,在国内连枪都没有见过。最优秀的中国人到最民主的美国不到半年,居然杀人不眨眼?造就了美国历史上“就大的校园枪击案”。

到底是什么原因?国内教育的严重缺失?还是国外人权主义的自由泛滥?还是可恶的“枪支政策”?

对学英语的兴趣打击很大。为中国人羞愧!
smy
级别: 荣誉会员
只看该作者 179 发表于: 2007-04-17
Police have a preliminary identification of the man who methodically shot and killed at least 30 people on the campus of Virginia Tech, but they are not yet ready to release it.

As the campus, and the nation, reel in the wake of the deadliest shooting in U.S. history, questions are many but answers are few.

Did the same gunman kill two people in a dormitory and then two hours later chain the doors of an academic building and begin to kill as many as he could?

Should campus officials have canceled classes after the first shooting, at the dorm? Authorities say they believed the dorm shooting was an "isolated incident" and were still investigating it when the slaughter occurred at the other campus building, Norris Hall. (Officials thought shooter had fled)

The gunman killed 30 people in Norris Hall classrooms before taking his own life.

University President Charles Steger told reporters Monday night that officers found the front doors of Norris Hall chained shut and that by the time they got to the second floor, the gunfire stopped.

A law enforcement source close to the investigation told CNN a .22-caliber handgun and a 9 mm handgun were recovered at the scene.

University police Chief Wendell Flinchum said at a Monday night news conference that authorities had a preliminary identification of the shooter at Norris Hall but were not releasing it. (Watch a security expert discuss campus safeguards )

Surviving by playing dead
The gunman was dressed "almost like a Boy Scout," said a student who survived by pretending to lie dead on a Norris Hall classroom floor.

"He just stepped within five feet of the door and just started firing," said Erin Sheehan.

She described the gunman as a young man wearing a short-sleeved tan shirt and black ammunition vest.

"He seemed very thorough about it -- getting almost everyone down -- I pretended to be dead," she said. (Watch student describe surviving by playing dead )

"He was very silent," said Sheehan, one of only four students in her 25-student German class who were not shot.

The gunman left but returned in about 30 seconds. "I guess he heard us still talking," said Sheehan.

"We forced ourselves against the door so he couldn't come in again, because the door would not lock."

The man tried three more times to force his way in and then began firing through the door, she said.

Student Tiffany Otey was taking a test inside Norris Hall when the shooting began. She and about 20 other people took refuge behind a locked door in a teacher's office.

Police officers with bulletproof vests and machine guns were in the area. (Watch a student's recording of police responding to loud bangs )

"They were telling us to put our hands above our head and if we didn't cooperate and put our hands above our heads they would shoot," Otey said. "I guess they were afraid, like us -- like the shooter was going to be among one of us." (Watch students react to shooting )

Some students leaped from windows to escape, said Matt Waldron.


"These two kids, I guess, had panicked and jumped out of the top-story window, and the one kid broke his ankle and the other girl was not in good shape just lying on the ground." (Watch gunfire on the campus )

Dormitory shooting two hours earlier
The day's first shooting, at the dormitory, left two people dead. That shooting occurred about 7:15 a.m.

The dormitory, West Ambler Johnston Hall, houses 895 students and is located near the drill field and stadium. (Campus map)

Flinchum said police were still investigating whether the dorm and Norris Hall shooting incidents were related.

At a news conference Monday afternoon, Flinchum did not rule out a separate shooter for the dormitory incident. (Watch the police chief explain where bodies were found )

At the time of the later shootings at Norris Hall, police were investigating a "person of interest" in the dormitory shootings, Flinchum said. But the man -- a non-student who knew one of the victims -- had not been arrested, and it is unclear if he has any link to the other gunman, he said.

Victims' identities being released
Courtney Dalton, an 18-year-old student who worked at West End Dining Hall, said a friend named Ryan Clark was one of the two dormitory victims.

She said Clark, a resident assistant at West Ambler Johnston Hall, had once worked at the cafeteria serving pizza.

"He was a happy person; this is really sad," she said, sobbing.

"All I can do is pray for his family now," she told CNN.com.

As of early Tuesday, the identities of two other victims had been released: G.V. Loganathan, a professor of civil and environmental engineering, and Ross Alameddine, a student from Saugus, Massachusetts.

Convocation on campus Tuesday
The university, which has more than 26,000 students, has scheduled a convocation for 2 p.m. ET Tuesday. Classes also have been canceled Tuesday. In Washington, the House and Senate observed moments of silence for the victims and President Bush said the nation was "shocked and saddened" by news of the tragedy.

Last August, the first day of class was cut short at Virginia Tech by a manhunt for an escaped prisoner accused of killing a Blacksburg hospital security guard and a sheriff's deputy.


Before Monday, the deadliest mass shooting in the United States occurred in 1991, when George Hennard drove a pickup truck into a Killeen, Texas, cafeteria and fatally shot 23 people, before shooting and killing himself.

CNN's Ashley Fantz and Jeanne Meserve contributed to this report.
努力不一定成功,但放弃一定失败.
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