Appalachian School of Law Shootings http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian News Stories in the week after the Appalachian School of Law Shootings en Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#001 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital and a third student was upgraded from fair to good condition. The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree. Former student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged in the attack. Police said he recently flunked out.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#004 <p><span class="normal">Ted Besen says he had yearned to become a defense attorney, but changed his mind in the wake of the slayings of the dean, a professor and another student at the Appalachian School of Law.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I don&#8217;t ever want to defend someone like him,&#8221; Besen said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span><span class="tackle">The former Marine and police officer was among several students who tackled former classmate Peter Odighizuwa on the school&#8217;s front lawn after last week&#8217;s shootings.</span><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">When classes resume Wednesday at the school, Besen, 37, and others said they&#8217;ll return with mixed emotions.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;You just feel violated somehow,&#8221; Besen said Tuesday at a nearby restaurant.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I&#8217;ve been having bad dreams,&#8221; said 42-year-old Mary Kilpatrick. &#8220;I guess there&#8217;s no more security in law schools than there is any other place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kilpatrick said she and about 20 other students spent most of Monday in the school lounge, scrubbing blood stains from the rug and rearranging furniture.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s therapeutic being back here; it keeps my mind off of things,&#8221; Kilpatrick said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police say Odighizuwa shot Dean L. Anthony Sutin and Professor Thomas Blackwell in their offices last Wednesday, then opened fire in the school lounge, killing student Angela Dales and injuring three others.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, 43, had recently learned he&#8217;d flunked out for the second time. He&#8217;s charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. Prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re going to have an unofficial class reunion the day he gets the chair,&#8221; said Matthew Harvey, who spent the week driving between memorial services with other students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school reopened Tuesday, holding a two-hour counseling session and discussing the class schedule for the rest of the semester.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Outside, faculty and students wrote good-bye messages in memorial books that will be given to victims&#8217; families.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I keep expecting Dean Sutin to come back,&#8221; said 22-year-old Melanie Page. &#8220;I just miss them all so much.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Associated Press Online http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#005 <p><span class="normal">Ted Besen says he had yearned to become a defense attorney, but changed his mind in the wake of the slayings of the dean, a professor and another student at the Appalachian School of Law.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I don&#8217;t ever want to defend someone like him,&#8221; Besen said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span><span class="tackle">The former Marine and police officer was among several students who tackled former classmate Peter Odighizuwa on the school&#8217;s front lawn after last week&#8217;s shootings.</span><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">When classes resume Wednesday at the school, Besen, 37, and others said they&#8217;ll return with mixed emotions.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;You just feel violated somehow,&#8221; Besen said Tuesday at a nearby restaurant.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I&#8217;ve been having bad dreams,&#8221; said 42-year-old Mary Kilpatrick. &#8220;I guess there&#8217;s no more security in law schools than there is any other place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kilpatrick said she and about 20 other students spent most of Monday in the school lounge, scrubbing blood stains from the rug and rearranging furniture.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s therapeutic being back here; it keeps my mind off of things,&#8221; Kilpatrick said. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police say Odighizuwa shot Dean L. Anthony Sutin and Professor Thomas Blackwell in their offices last Wednesday, then opened fire in the school lounge, killing student Angela Dales and injuring three others.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, 43, had recently learned he&#8217;d flunked out for the second time. He&#8217;s charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. Prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re going to have an unofficial class reunion the day he gets the chair,&#8221; said Matthew Harvey, who spent the week driving between memorial services with other students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school reopened Tuesday, holding a two-hour counseling session and discussing the class schedule for the rest of the semester.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Outside, faculty and students wrote good-bye messages in memorial books that will be given to victims&#8217; families.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I keep expecting Dean Sutin to come back,&#8221; said 22-year-old Melanie Page. &#8220;I just miss them all so much.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Atlanta Journal and Constitution http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#006 <p><span class="normal">The murder-suicide Friday at Broward Community College in South Florida was more than the third school shooting in the past week, according to a Marietta counselor and other psychologists.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Florida shooting &#8212; coupled with Wednesday&#8217;s fatal shooting at a Virginia law school and the Tuesday shooting at a New York City high school &#8212; may indicate that pent-up stress from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks may be pushing the emotionally vulnerable over the edge.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Put another way: We may be unraveling at the fringes.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The cause, though, is under scrutiny. Is Sept. 11 by itself pulling at the fabric of our nation, or was U.S. society beginning to fray before the attacks on New York and Washington?</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8216;One more straw&#8217;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Michael Popkin, president of Active Parent Publishers and a family counselor in Marietta, said stress is cumulative and that the Sept. 11 attacks &#8220;added a point or two to everybody.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It was just one more straw on the camel&#8217;s back,&#8221; Popkin said. &#8220;For people on the brink, it was the straw that broke the camel&#8217;s back. People are striking back instead of coping with it.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">On Friday in Davie, Fla., a man shot and killed his ex-girlfriend before killing himself at Broward Community College, authorities said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">According to student and eyewitness Joe Fazio, &#8220;It looks like she was shot in the back of the neck. Then I heard the second gunshot. I turned around and the guy was laying on the ground.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In Grundy, Va., on Wednesday, 43-year-old Peter Odighizuwa, a Nigerian student facing suspension, is charged with killing a dean, a professor and a student at the Appalachian School of Law. In New York, 18-year-old Vincent Rodriguez was arrested for allegedly shooting two classmates Tuesday because he believed they harassed his girlfriend, police say.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In December, a factory worker in Goshen, Ind., shot seven co-workers, then killed himself with a 12-gauge shotgun, several hours after he had quarreled with another employee over a female co-worker, police said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Violence not new</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Even before Sept. 11, internal violence strafed America&#8217;s psyche. The horrific shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado in 1999 and the deadly 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City provided grim evidence of the country&#8217;s deep anxiety long before commercial airliners became diabolical weapons of mass destruction. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Author and researcher James Garbarino, co-director of the Family Life Development Center at Cornell University, argues that recent shootings are more indicative of the country&#8217;s cultural path before terrorism planted itself here, notwithstanding more flag-waving, talk of reordered priorities and families reconstituting themselves.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Looking beyond the ephemeral to the core is in order,&#8221; Garbarino wrote in an e-mail in response to an interview request. &#8220;Mostly, the violent events that made the news in the last week are part of &#8216;business as usual&#8217; in violent America.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In short, talk is cheap.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Rarely does deep and enduring social and personal change come out of such declarations and resolutions,&#8221; Garbarino wrote.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Attitudes, not behavior</span></p> <p><span class="normal">For instance, the heroic treatment of firefighters and police officers has not created a surge in applications nationwide. After the attacks, military recruiters reported more people interested in joining the service. Ultimately, however, it has not coincided with an increase in the number of contracts signed, a Defense Department spokesman said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Researcher Robert Putnam, who has been cataloging the country&#8217;s civic disengagement (voting less, joining less, reading less, trusting less), wrote for next month&#8217;s issue of the American Prospect that &#8220;though the immediate effect of the attacks was clearly devastating, most Americans&#8217; personal lives returned to normal relatively quickly.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Generally speaking,&#8221; Putnam wrote, &#8220;attitudes [such as trust and concern] have shifted more than behavior has. Will behavior follow attitudes? It&#8217;s an important question. And if the answer is no, then the blossom of civic-mindedness after Sept. 11 may be short-lived.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8216;Desk rage&#8217; up at work</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Still, there&#8217;s stress out there. The al-Qaida threat remains. Osama bin Laden&#8217;s still out there &#8212; or not, who knows? The markets haven&#8217;t gotten traction and layoffs are real.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At work, so-called &#8220;desk rage&#8221; is popping up because of the Sept. 11-induced recession, according to a study by Integra Realty Resources, a New York real estate advisory and appraisal firm.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Stress over America&#8217;s slowing economy is showing up in the workplace,&#8221; Integra President Sean Hutchinson said. The survey reports that 10 percent of employees say they work in an atmosphere where physical violence has occurred because of stress, with 42 percent saying yelling and verbal abuse occurs in their workplace.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The ingredients are in place for more drug use, alcohol abuse and cigarette smoking, said George Mason University counseling expert Fred Bemak. Under the surface of everything we do is the threat of more terrorism &#8212; even if a Jan. 7-9 Gallup poll shows fewer Americans fear terrorism than they did just two months ago, Bemak said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re one event away from having psychological and social and family chaos.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">For children and adolescents, the uncertainty is particularly perplexing because some see their parents unable to cope, Bemak said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Augusta Chronicle (Georgia) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#007 <p><span class="normal">A white hitchhiker was run over by a black man who wanted him to pay gas money, authorities said Monday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Jasper County Sheriff Billy Rowles, who investigated the 1998 case of James Byrd Jr. - a black man dragged to death by three white men - said race or revenge does not appear to be behind Friday&#8217;s killing.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Ken Bimbo Tillery, 44, went to a Jasper trailer park Friday night and asked for a ride home. Blake Little, 34, and three others offered him a lift in Mr. Little&#8217;s pickup after agreeing on a price of $5 for gas, police said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The price increased to $50 by the time they arrived in Pineland, 130 miles northeast of Houston, police said. Mr. Tillery fled and was chased.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;A couple of the guys jump him and beat up on him, then the driver of the car runs over the guy,&#8221; Sheriff Rowles said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Mr. Little was arrested Sunday on murder charges. The sheriff said all the men were suspected of drinking and smoking crack cocaine.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two shot at law school released from hospital</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY, Va. -</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">School Dean L. Anthony Sutin, professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree. Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Schizophrenic killer flees with young son</span></p> <p><span class="normal">LITTLE ROCK -</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police and relatives searched Monday for a convicted killer diagnosed with schizophrenia and his 5-year-old son.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police said Monday they have few leads on the whereabouts of Louis Peyton Sr., 35, of Maumelle, and his son Louis Peyton Jr., who goes by Luke.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Maumelle Police Chief Sam Williams said the father apparently picked up the boy from school Wednesday afternoon.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The boy&#8217;s mother, Amber Roach, of Ozark, has not lived with him and his father for the past few years. Luke and his father live with the boy&#8217;s grandfather, who said he was afraid his son&#8217;s medication was no longer working because a doctor told him it wears off after two days.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">- Edited from wire reports</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Charleston Daily Mail (West Virginia) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#008 <p><span class="normal">Gunman attacks Israeli civilians</span></p> <p><span class="normal">JERUSALEM - A gunman opened fire on Israelis waiting for a bus on a busy, rain-slick downtown street this afternoon, wounding at least 20 people before he was shot dead by police, officials said. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Palestinian security sources said the gunman was Saeed Ramadan, a member of the Al Aqsa Brigades, which is linked to Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat&#8217;s Fatah movement.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Israeli authorities said they held Arafat and the Palestinian Authority responsible and a strong Israel response was likely.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A source in the Al Aqsa Brigades said the attack was revenge for the killing - widely attributed to Israel - of the group&#8217;s leader, Raed Karmi, in the West Bank town of Tulkarem.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The shooting came hours after Israeli commandos killed four members of the militant Islamic group Hamas in a raid on their hideout and explosives lab in Nablus in the West Bank. The Islamic militant group said in a leaflet it would respond with an &#8220;all-out war&#8221; against Israeli soldiers and settlers.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Program seeking cure for anthrax</span></p> <p><span class="normal">SAN JOSE, Calif. - A coalition of scientists and technology companies is asking people to use their computers&#8217; extra processing power to help search for a cure for anthrax.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The project follows similar efforts to hunt for extraterrestrial life and a cure for cancer. It is being launched today to help Oxford University researchers find ways to treat anthrax that can no longer be treated by antibiotics.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The project is based on the premise that the average personal computer uses between 13 percent and 18 percent of its processing power at any given time.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Participants download a screen-saver that runs whenever their computers have resources to spare, and uses that power to perform computations for the project.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The screen-saver can be downloaded at http://www.intel.com/cure.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Students hurt in shooting released</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY, Va. - Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Chicago Tribune http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#009 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last Wednesday have been discharged from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">On Sunday, Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, left the Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said a hospital spokeswoman. A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded to good condition from fair.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder. He had recently flunked out of the law school, police said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Christian Science Monitor (Boston, MA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#010 <p><span class="normal">Violent crime on college campuses has taken a disturbing jump, forcing many schools to make safety a concern along with grade inflation and the food in dining halls.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Even before a recent spate of shootings, new statistics showed that the murder rate on college campuses almost doubled in 2000. Burglary and drug arrests were up as well.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Even so, the 20 people killed that year represented a level close to the annual average for the past decade. The number was accentuated by a low murder rate in 1999 - 11.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Although the latest figures are a year old, they represent some of the most comprehensive statistics ever released on crime on American colleges and universities. They come at a time when campus safety has resurfaced as a national concern.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Within the past week, shootings on two campuses have left five dead - three at Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., and two in a murder-suicide at Broward Community College near Fort Lauderdale, Fla.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;People forget that until 10 years ago people didn&#8217;t think crime happened on college campuses - an image that schools certainly wanted to project,&#8221; says S. Daniel Carter of Security on Campus, a nonprofit group that promotes university safety.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">The most recent statistics on campus crime, released Friday, come from the US Department of Education (DOE). Though figures for 2001 won&#8217;t be out until next January, the 2000 numbers give a sharper picture of violence on college greens and in dorms - and offer administrators and parents reason for both concern and consolation.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Safe still</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">The overriding observation from the latest numbers might be how safe schools remain. Despite the increase in the homicide rate, authorities point out that there were about .14 on-campus murders per 100,000 students compared with a murder rate in the general population of about 5.5 per 100,000 people.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;One murder is too many, but looked at in comparison to national crime data, college campuses are relatively safe places,&#8221; says David Bergeron, chief of policy and budget development at DOE&#8217;s office of post-secondary education.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">While murders loom large, other categories of campus crime are raising concern, too. Burglary, for instance, rose about 3 percent and arson was up 9 percent between 1999 and 2000. Liquor arrests grew 4 percent while drug arrests grew 10 percent.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Each year, colleges are required to release statistics on crime as a result of the Clery Act, passed by Congress 11 years ago. Until recently, however, the data was not collected and disseminated by the federal government.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Changes to the reporting act in 1998 required DOE to start doing so in 2000. Mr. Bergeron says 6,270 institutions reported their data this year (available on the department&#8217;s website at www.ope.ed.gov/security).</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Some of this year&#8217;s biggest increases may not be due to worsening crime, but simply better reporting and tougher enforcement on campus. That&#8217;s probably the case, for instance, with liquor and drug arrests, according to Mr. Carter.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Yet private, nonprofit four-year schools - normally considered sanctuaries of security - do have some reasons for concern.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Take robberies and burglaries. Even though the increase and overall number of them was small, the jump was sharper at private four-year schools.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Robberies on those campuses grew from 501 in 1998 to 581 in 2000 - a 16 percent increase. Burglaries went up a similar amount.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;The overall numbers are small,&#8221; says Mr. Bergeron. &#8220;But when we looked at it year after year it raised concerns that students at those institutions may be being identified for their potential as easy money.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Assaults have been rising at private schools as well. While the number of aggravated assaults at all institutions dropped about 5 percent, private four-year schools saw an 8 percent increase.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">What crimes are down</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Still, there was some good news in all the numbers. Manslaughter and forcible sex offenses were about the same or down slightly from the year before.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">All categories of hate crimes were mostly unchanged and at fairly low levels. Illegal weapons possession arrests dropped about 16 percent, and auto theft fell as well.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Many of these numbers, however, remain difficult to verify. Carter, for instance, calls the sex-offense figures, which have remained steady since 1998, &#8220;ridiculously low&#8221; when compared with private victimization studies.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re still working on getting accurate, stabilized crime statistics,&#8221; he says. &#8220;This is the second year ever for having them collected by the federal government. We&#8217;ve seen some dramatic improvements, but it&#8217;s still somewhat early.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">In a bid to prevent bad publicity, schools still play down crimes by disregarding reports, miscoding files, or even refusing to maintain a public crime log, Carter and others say. Forcible sex offenses, for instance, are sensitive and still underreported - particularly at smaller schools, according to Carter.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">By contrast, larger state universities seem to be reporting more consistently in the past. &#8220;Most four-year state universities are not having the same types of shenanigans,&#8221; he says.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">(c) Copyright 2002. The Christian Science Monitor</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#011 <p><span class="normal">ABROAD</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two shooting victims released from hospital</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY, Va. - Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokesman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Apt. fire kills woman, injures 8 firefighters</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">CHICAGO - A fire sent flames shooting out windows of a high-rise apartment building in Chicago early Monday, killing one woman and injuring eight firefighters.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The cause of the fire on the 14th floor of the 47-floor building was not immediately determined, Fire Department spokesman Patrick Howe said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The victim was a woman in her 50s, the Cook County Medical Examiner&#8217;s Office said. Investigators were still working to identify her.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Three firefighters were treated in a hospital for burns and upgraded to fair condition Monday afternoon, a Fire Department spokesman said. Five others were treated and released, he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">SNAPSHOTS</span></p> <p><span class="normal">U.S. warplanes struck an anti-aircraft artillery site in southern Iraq Monday in response to &#8220;hostile Iraqi threats&#8221; against pilots and aircrews patrolling the skies over the region, American defense officials reported Monday. The raid amounted to another in a long series of low-level skirmishes with Iraqi forces that have taken place since 1992, when the United States established &#8220;no-fly&#8221; zones over northern and southern Iraq after the Persian Gulf War.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A major electricity blackout hit at least five Brazilian states Monday, hampering commerce and industry in six key cities for more than two hours. A transmission line failure at the country&#8217;s Itaipu hydroelectric dam was to blame; the facility is the largest single source of power in Brazil.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Daily Press (Newport News, VA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#012 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, Ky., was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales were slain in the shooting spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, a native of Nigeria, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons counts in the shootings.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police said Odighizuwa had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The private law school, which opened five years ago in a renovated junior high school, has an enrollment of about 200 students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Knoxville News-Sentinel (Tennessee) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#013 <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two students released from hospital</span></p> <p><span class="normal">KINGSPORT - Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, Ky., was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales were slain in the shooting spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, a native of Nigeria, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons counts in the shootings. Police said Odighizuwa had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The private law school, which opened five years ago in a renovated junior high school, has an enrollment of about 200 students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Lexington Herald Leader (Kentucky) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#014 <p><span class="normal">Two Lexington men were killed yesterday morning when the vehicle in which they were riding spun out of control on Interstate 75 and was hit by a tractor-trailer. At 2:50 a.m., a Geo Tracker attempted to merge onto I-75 at the Corinth interchange when the driver lost control and spun into the path of the tractor-trailer. The driver, Ty L. Cruse, 24, and a passenger in the back seat, John R. Wilkinson, 25, both of Lexington, were pronounced dead at the scene. A front-seat passenger, Adel S. Rayan, of Lexington, was taken to the University of Cincinnati Hospital. The driver of the tractor-trailer was not injured. Police are still investigating. Kentucky State Police said the front-seat occupants were wearing seat belts. Investigators do not know whether alcohol was a factor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Grundy, Va.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">2 law school shooting victims released: Two victims injured in a shooting at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., last week were released from the hospital on Sunday. Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke, Va., and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood, Va., were discharged from the Wellmont-Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport. A third victim, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, has been upgraded to good condition at the Wellmont-Bristol Regional Medical Center. Beans, a graduate of Berea College, is expected to make a full recovery. Three others&#8212;the school&#8217;s dean, a professor and another student&#8212;were killed in the shooting. Peter Odighizuwa, a former student who had flunked out, has been charged with murder and other offenses.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Newsday (New York) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#015 <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">Wounded Students Improve</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded last week in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens. A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain. Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder. Police said he had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">11 Slain in Jammu-Kashmir</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Eleven members of a Muslim family, including eight children, were killed when gunmen barged into their house in India&#8217;s rebellion-torn Jammu and Kashmir state yesterday and opened fire, police said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Though police initially blamed militants fighting Indian rule in India&#8217;s only Muslim-majority state, the chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir said the deaths in Poonch district were the result of a local feud.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Three people were arrested on the basis of information provided by local people, a Jammu police official said. They implicated a former police officer who had deserted a year ago.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">None of the guerrilla groups fighting Indian rule in Jammu and Kashmir claimed responsibility for the attack.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#017 <p><span class="normal">WASHINGTON&#8212;The Federal Trade Commission plans to propose today new rules for reducing the annoyance of unwanted telephone solicitations as it begins to push for the establishment of a national &#8220;do-not-call&#8221; registry.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">With a registry, people could make a single call to get their names removed from many telemarketing lists. The agency is also expected to propose that telemarketers be barred from blocking any identifying information from caller-ID equipment so people could know who is calling.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">If approved, the rules could be in place in a year. But first they would be subject to public comment, and the Direct Marketing Association has signaled its strong opposition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">FTC Chairman Timothy Muris says he envisions a toll-free number that people could call to opt out of solicitation lists.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Ex-con killer, son, missing</span></p> <p><span class="normal">LITTLE ROCK, Ark.&#8212;Police and relatives searched yesterday for a convicted killer diagnosed with schizophrenia and his 5-year-old son.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Maumelle Police Chief Sam Williams said Louis Peyton Sr., 35, of Maumelle apparently picked up his son, Louis Peyton Jr., who goes by Luke, from school Wednesday afternoon and neither has been seen since.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The boy&#8217;s mother, Amber Roach of Ozark, has not lived with him and his father for the last few years. The boy and his father live with Fred Peyton, the boy&#8217;s grandfather and Louis Peyton Sr.&#8217;s father.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In 1989, Louis Peyton was convicted of first-degree murder in the death of a friend. He served two years of a 10-year sentence before he was paroled to a mental health facility. Psychiatric evaluations after the killing led to his diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Least-affordable housing</span></p> <p><span class="normal">SANTA CRUZ, Calif.&#8212;San Francisco no longer tops the list for least-affordable housing in the nation, a distinction that now falls an hour and a half to the south to Santa Cruz.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">That result comes from the National Association of Home Builders, which compiles the list each year by comparing family incomes and home prices for metropolitan areas around the country. The latest survey is based on third-quarter numbers for 2001.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Santa Cruz metro area&#8217;s median income is $65,000, and the median home price is $420,000, up $5,000 from the previous quarterly survey.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">San Francisco dropped to second, as its median home price fell $10,000 to $520,000, still the most expensive median home price in the country.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In fact, nine of the 10 least-affordable markets in the nation are in California.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rampage victims recover</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY, Va.&#8212;Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week that left three people dead have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> Richmond Times Dispatch (Virginia) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#018 <p><span class="normal">Two of the three students wounded last week in a shooting at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy have been discharged from the hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Claire Brown, 38, of Roanoke, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Grundy, were released from Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., on Sunday, a hospital spokeswoman said yesterday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The third wounded student, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, Ky., remains at Bristol Regional Medical Center in fair condition, according to hospital officials.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Brown was shot in the abdomen and arm, Short was shot in the back, and Beans, initially identified by authorities as Stacy Bean of Berea, Ky., was shot in the chest.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">All are expected to recover.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The three women were on the first floor of the law school last Wednesday when a gunman shot them. Three other people - the law school&#8217;s dean, a professor and a student - were killed in the shooting rampage.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A student who had been dismissed for poor grades has been charged with three counts of capital murder and three counts of attempted capital murder.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The law school, closed since the shootings, is scheduled to reopen today when the faculty, staff and students gather for a &#8220;town hall&#8221; meeting to discuss plans for the remainder of the semester.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Regular classes will resume tomorrow.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Richmond Times Dispatch (Virginia) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#019 <p><span class="normal">Charlotte Varney, the secretary of Buchanan First Presbyterian Church, is not a member of the church. Articles about the shooting at the Appalachian School of Law, which appeared Friday and Sunday, indicated she was.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">* * *</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A headline on a story on farm policy in yesterday&#8217;s Metro Business section misspelled the word sowing.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Roanoke Times & World News (Roanoke, VA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#020 <p><span class="normal">Two women who were injured in Wednesday&#8217;s shooting at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy have been released from the hospital, and a third victim&#8217;s condition has been upgraded, officials said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Clair Brown of Roanoke and Martha Madeline Short of Clintwood were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., spokeswoman Amy Stevens said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Brown, 38, spent many years working as a licensed respiratory therapist before entering law school last year. Short, 37, earned a master&#8217;s degree in urban planning from Virginia Tech and worked for the Mount Rogers Planning District Commission in Marion. She later spent six years as a grants writer for the town of Wytheville.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stacey Bean, 22, of Paducah, Ky., has been upgraded to good condition at Wellmont Bristol Regional Medical Center.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Seattle Times http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#021 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage last week at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., have been released from a hospital. A third student was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh told his listeners yesterday that an electronic ear implant has partially restored his hearing. Limbaugh went deaf last year because of an autoimmune inner-ear disease.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">People</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani is out of office, but he won&#8217;t be leaving the public stage soon. His first book, focusing on management principles, is due out this summer, and he&#8217;s scheduled to appear in a Super Bowl television ad thanking Americans for helping New York after the terrorist attacks.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> St. Petersburg Times (Florida) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#022 <p><span class="normal"> Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder. Police said he had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> University Wire http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#024 <p><span class="normal">Lake Worth, Fla. Deming, N.M. Mount Morris Township, Mich. Does anyone know what these American towns have in common?</span></p> <p><span class="normal">You should.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Each was the site of school gun violence that resulted in a loss of life during the past three years.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Who really cares?</span></p> <p><span class="normal">You should.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The recent tragedy at the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., should sicken and frighten us all. A dean, a professor and a student are dead and three others are wounded after a suspended student opened fire there with a semiautomatic handgun last Wednesday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Does it need to be said that this incident could just as easily have happened at the University of Pennsylvania? Surely, with our Ivy League snobbery, we understand that such a tragedy, if anything, is more likely at a place like Penn: &#8220;If a student at the Appalachian School of Law could care so much about his education, clearly a Penn student&#8230;&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Nonetheless, what&#8217;s even more sickening and frightening is the way in which we have simply come to accept gun violence&#8212;including and especially gun violence at schools&#8212;as a part of modern American society. Columbine shocked us, both in its scope and its efficiency. But since then, school shootings seem prosaic. Like a bad storm, we expect to get one every few months. Then&#8212;like after a bad storm&#8212;we clean up the mess and forget about it.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Does anyone remember the names of three California towns&#8212;Oxnard, Santee and El Cajon? These were some of the bad storms of 2001.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">I will admit that in my position it&#8217;s very easy to paint oneself as the crusading moralist, blasting one&#8217;s peers for their contemptible apathy. No doubt most of you are apathetic, and that is contemptible, but to be perfectly honest I&#8217;m not much for crusading or morality. Adherence to either is much less glamorous in practice than in thought.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But gun violence is an issue important enough to demand the attention and energy of everyone&#8212;including the apathetic. We are all aware of the facts. &#8220;A gun in the home is 22 times more likely to kill a family member or friend than it is to be used against an intruder.&#8221; &#8220;On average, 10 children a day are killed in the US by guns.&#8221; And my personal favorite: &#8220;57 percent of handguns are stored unlocked, and 55 percent are kept loaded. 30 percent of handgun owners keep their guns unlocked and loaded.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Many of us are cognizant of the &#8220;American cowboy&#8221; image abroad, too. In 1996, there were 9,390 handgun deaths in the U.S., compared to only 30 in Great Britain, 15 in Japan and two in New Zealand.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Some of us might even know that studies show a strong correlation between guns and the incidence of suicide and domestic abuse.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Has there ever before been such an extensive body of incontrovertible evidence or a people so reluctant to take action?</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Or counterarguments so stupid?</span></p> <p><span class="normal">I&#8217;ve seen some strange headlines the past week and a half: &#8220;Pres. Bush Chokes on Pretzel&#8221; and &#8220;Punxsutawney Phil a Terrorist Target?&#8221; But show me &#8220;Kung Fu Master Kills [insert any number greater than one]&#8221; or even &#8220;Knife-wielding Maniac Kills [insert any number greater than two]&#8221; and I&#8217;ll rethink. Until then, I&#8217;m decided: Guns kill people a hell of a lot better than people do.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It&#8217;s not that I&#8217;m unsympathetic to the Constitutional argument. You show me a member of a well-regulated militia that is popularly recognized to be necessary to the security of our free state, and I would gladly vote to allow him to have his pistol or rifle for use against our government in the event that they attack us with their bombers and tanks.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The problem of gun violence in schools merely highlights a larger problem in our country&#8217;s gun laws. Right now, most states don&#8217;t even require a permit to purchase either handguns, rifles or shotguns. Nor do they mandate registration or licensing. We are so far from where we need to be.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Allowing ourselves to grow accustomed to school gun violence&#8212;and all gun violence, for that matter&#8212;will not fix this problem. It won&#8217;t just go away. Our moral outrage, if kept to ourselves, will do nothing.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Instead, Americans favoring better gun control must pledge their support for organizations, like the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence and the Anti-Gun Coalition of America, and hold state lawmakers accountable for their votes on current legislation aimed at closing the so-called &#8220;gun show loophole&#8221; that allows unlicensed gun sellers to circumvent required background checks.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Let&#8217;s stop being the silent majority.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Who really cares about gun control and the safety of our schools?</span></p> <p><span class="normal">We do.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">(C) 2002 Daily Pennsylvanian via U-WIRE</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Washington Times http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#025 <p><span class="normal">MENINGITIS KILLS PRISON INMATE</span></p> <p><span class="normal">RICHMOND - A Lunenburg Correctional Center inmate died from bacterial meningitis two days after he was scheduled to be paroled, the Department of Corrections announced yesterday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">James Ball, 45, of Hampton died last Thursday, spokesman Larry Traylor said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">No one else at the 1,100-inmate prison near Victoria has come down with symptoms, Mr. Traylor said. All inmates and staff at the prison who came into contact with Ball were given Cipro, a powerful antibiotic.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Ball became so ill that he was sent to a hospital in South Hill on Jan. 3 and then transferred to the Medical College of Virginia Hospitals in Richmond later that day, he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Ball had been in prison off and on since 1991 for crimes including maiming, use of a firearm in a felony, attempted arson and parole violations, Mr. Traylor said. He was to have been paroled Jan. 15.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">POLICE: FIRE THAT CAUSED DEATH WAS ACCIDENTAL</span></p> <p><span class="normal">MCLEAN - The fire that killed a man at a McLean home appears to have been an accident, Fairfax County police said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A man checking on the welfare of his 32-year-old son at 1612 Simmons Drive on Sunday found a body inside the residence. Police said the fire might have been caused by a space heater.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The body still has not been identified, and the cause of death remains unknown. Police said an autopsy will be performed.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">NO BOND FOR MAN HELD IN SHOOTING AT MOTEL</span></p> <p><span class="normal">ARLINGTON - A Marine Corps sergeant from Fort Knox, Ky., has been arrested and charged in the fatal shootings of his wife, his 5-year-old daughter and his wife&#8217;s friend, police said yesterday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Arlington County police Sgt. Jim Daly said a motel guest heard a woman scream Sunday night at the Cherry Blossom TraveLodge. Motel workers called police, and officers who responded at 8:15 p.m. found one woman dead in one room and another woman and the girl with gunshot wounds in another room, Daly said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The second woman was pronounced dead at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, and the girl was transported to Washington Hospital Center, where she was pronounced dead shortly after arrival, Sgt. Daly said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Killed in the shooting were the man&#8217;s wife, Maya Lajuan Davidson Cooper, 22; Marie Gault, 20; and Desiree Cooper, 5. All three were from Arlington. It is not clear which woman was in which room.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sgt. Zachary Cooper Sr. of Fort Knox, Ky., was charged with one count of murder and is being held without bond in the Arlington County Detention Center. The investigation is continuing.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Investigators did not have a motive for the shooting.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The three slayings were more than Arlington had in all of 2001, when the county had two homicides, Sgt. Daly said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It was the second triple homicide in the history of the county. The first was in 1995, Sgt. Daly said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">TWO RAMPAGE SURVIVORS RELEASED FROM HOSPITAL</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY - Two students wounded in last week&#8217;s shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., according to a hospital spokeswoman.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, Ky., was upgraded from fair to good condition, she said. All three were expected to make a full recovery, she said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales were slain in the shooting spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Dismissed student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, a native of Nigeria, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons counts in the shootings. Police said Mr. Odighizuwa recently had flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The private law school, which opened five years ago in a renovated junior high school, has an enrollment of about 200 students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press State & Local Wire http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#026 <p><span class="normal">Stacey Beans plans to be home in a couple of days to recuperate before returning later this semester to the Virginia law school where she was shot last week, her mother said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s been positive just watching her,&#8221; Bobbie Wrinkle said of her daughter who was released from Wellmont Bristol Regional Medical Center in Bristol, Tenn.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two other students injured Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke, Va., and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood, Va., were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Beans, a 1997 Paducah Tilghman High School graduate, was shot once in the chest during a shooting rampage at Appalachian School of Law last Wednesday in Grundy, Va. The dean, a professor and a student were killed.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Beans has remained positive, her mother Bobbie Wrinkle said. &#8220;She&#8217;s been a real trouper,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I am proud of her.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Classes at the law school are scheduled to resume this week. Beans will recuperate in Paducah before returning to school as soon as she can, Wrinkle said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A couple of her professors who visited Beans over the weekend offered to provide tutoring if needed. Beans was one of the top students at the school, Wrinkle said. &#8220;She&#8217;s looking forward to going back to law school,&#8221; she said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Beans still plans to do an internship in May with Circuit Judge Bill Cunningham, whose circuit includes Caldwell, Livingston, Lyon and Trigg counties.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press State & Local Wire http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#027 <p><span class="normal">Ted Besen glares over the crumbs of his sandwich, still angry about the former classmate who police say killed his school&#8217;s dean, a professor and another student in a shooting that shattered the peace of this tiny coal town.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;You just feel violated somehow,&#8221; Besen, 37, said Tuesday at a restaurant near the Appalachian School of Law. </span><span class="tackle">The former Marine and police officer was one of several students who charged Peter Odighizuwa, tackling him on the school&#8217;s front lawn, after the shootings last week</span><span class="normal">.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">When classes resume Wednesday at the Appalachian School of Law, Besen and others said they&#8217;ll return with mixed emotions. For certain, they said, nothing will be the same. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I&#8217;ve been having bad dreams,&#8221; said Mary Kilpatrick, 42, a third-year student from Kingsport, Tenn. &#8220;I guess there&#8217;s no more security in law schools than there is any other place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, 43, is accused of gunning down Dean L. Anthony Sutin and Professor Thomas F. Blackwell, 41, in their offices last Wednesday, and of opening fire in the school lounge, killing Angela Dales, 33, and injuring three others, police said. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, a former teacher from Dayton, Ohio, had recently learned he&#8217;d flunked out of school for the second time. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Authorities have charged him with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. Prosecutor Sheila Tolliver is seeking the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re going to have an unofficial class reunion the day he gets the chair,&#8221; said Matthew Harvey, 24, who spent the week driving between memorial services with other students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kilpatrick said she and about 20 other students spent most of Monday in the school lounge, scrubbing out blood stains in the rug and rearranging furniture.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s therapeutic being back here; it keeps my mind off of things,&#8221; Kilpatrick said. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school reopened on Tuesday, holding a two-hour counseling session and discussing the class schedule for the rest of the semester. President Lucius Ellsworth announced that Marquette University Professor Jeffrey Kinsler has been hired to take over Sutin&#8217;s class on constitutional law.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kinsler, who was planning to join the law school staff in the fall, will share teaching duties with both schools this semester, Ellsworth said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Outside, faculty and students wrote good-bye messages in memorial books that will eventually be given to the victims&#8217; families. They stepped out on the school&#8217;s front steps and released yellow and green balloons, watching quietly as the balloons rose above the hills and disappeared into a clear blue sky.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I keep expecting Dean Sutin to come back,&#8221; said Melanie Page, 22. &#8220;I just miss them all so much.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Wounded students Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Grundy both have been released from the hospital. Stacey Beans, 22, of Berea, Ky., was discharged from Wellmont Bristol Regional Medical Center Tuesday. All three plan to spend time with family before returning to school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But the memories will last forever.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Besen said he can still hear the shrieks of fleeing students when gunfire first ripped through the school. His wife had applied to Appalachian Law School in hopes of also pursuing a legal education, but now it&#8217;s likely they&#8217;ll move away after he graduates in June.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Besen said he was thinking of working as a defense attorney when he applied to the Appalachian School of Law. But Odighizuwa has changed his mind.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I don&#8217;t ever want to defend someone like him.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press State & Local Wire http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/22#028 <p><span class="normal">Ted Besen says he had yearned to become a defense attorney, but changed his mind in the wake of the slayings of the dean, a professor and another student at the Appalachian School of Law.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I don&#8217;t ever want to defend someone like him,&#8221; Besen said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span><span class="tackle">The former Marine and police officer was among several students who tackled former classmate Peter Odighizuwa on the school&#8217;s front lawn after last week&#8217;s shootings.</span><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">When classes resume Wednesday at the school, Besen, 37, and others said they&#8217;ll return with mixed emotions.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;You just feel violated somehow,&#8221; Besen said Tuesday at a nearby restaurant.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I&#8217;ve been having bad dreams,&#8221; said 42-year-old Mary Kilpatrick. &#8220;I guess there&#8217;s no more security in law schools than there is any other place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Kilpatrick said she and about 20 other students spent most of Monday in the school lounge, scrubbing blood stains from the rug and rearranging furniture.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s therapeutic being back here; it keeps my mind off of things,&#8221; Kilpatrick said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Police say Odighizuwa shot Dean L. Anthony Sutin and Professor Thomas Blackwell in their offices last Wednesday, then opened fire in the school lounge, killing student Angela Dales and injuring three others.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa, 43, had recently learned he&#8217;d flunked out for the second time. He&#8217;s charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. Prosecutors say they will seek the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We&#8217;re going to have an unofficial class reunion the day he gets the chair,&#8221; said Matthew Harvey, who spent the week driving between memorial services with other students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school reopened Tuesday, holding a two-hour counseling session and discussing the class schedule for the rest of the semester.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Outside, faculty and students wrote good-bye messages in memorial books that will be given to victims&#8217; families.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I keep expecting Dean Sutin to come back,&#8221; said 22-year-old Melanie Page. &#8220;I just miss them all so much.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#029 <p><span class="normal">It seemed like a risky proposition: building a law school in a small struggling coal town isolated by the rugged Appalachian Mountains.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But with area mines closing and the young moving away to find work, town officials pushed ahead, opening the Appalachian School of Law in 1997 inside an old brick school house.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We needed this, anything that could help,&#8221; said W.H. Trivett, 77, mayor of the blue-collar town of about 1,100.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It took time for the new students to gain acceptance in the close-knit community where many residents&#8217; families had lived for generations.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We had to get used to people from different cultures living here - and they had to get used to us,&#8221; said Richie Mullins, 35, who sells law school text books out of his bicycle store on Main Street.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But any lingering doubts students and faculty may have had about their neighbors&#8217; feelings disappeared last week as the town responded after a disgruntled former student allegedly walked into the school and shot to death the dean, a professor and a student.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In the days that followed, signs of support appeared throughout Grundy.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;ASL our thoughts and prayers are with you,&#8221; read a banner in the parking lot of Rife&#8217;s TV.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A grocery in nearby Vansant donated ham biscuits, cookies and soda pop to the Baptist church for a memorial service.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Loweda Gillespie, 61, tied yellow ribbons around store fronts, telephone poles and trees.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We wanted to let them know we&#8217;re family,&#8221; Gillespie said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Dean L. Anthony Sutin, 42, and Professor Tom Blackwell, 41, were slain in their offices Wednesday. Law student Angela Dales, 33, died later at the hospital. Three other students were wounded.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span><span class="tackle">The gunfire sent terrified students running from the building before classmates tackled the alleged shooter.</span><span class="normal"> Peter Odighizuwa, 43, who had been dismissed from the school because of failing grades, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. The prosecutor said she will seek the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Residents attended memorial services throughout the week, placing flowers on the school&#8217;s concrete sign as victims&#8217; families and friends wept in small, shivering circles.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s so heartwarming to see this,&#8221; school president Lucius Ellsworth said Saturday. &#8220;There&#8217;s no doubt that out of this tragedy, this community has united.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">For decades, officials wanted to build a law school in southwest Virginia to create jobs and provide a legal resource for the remote mountain area.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;In all rural areas, there is a real lack of legal education,&#8221; said Ellsworth, a former education official in Tennessee and vice chancellor of Clinch Valley College in Wise. Before the law school came to Grundy, there was no other law school within a three-hour drive.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Appalachian School of Law now has about 200 students. The American Bar Association granted it provisional accreditation last year. And everyone at the school - students and faculty alike - is required to support the town with 25 hours of community service per term.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Students, many of whom are older and looking for a second career, tutor Grundy school children.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;These kids, the way they&#8217;re allowed to work with the public, I&#8217;m sure they&#8217;re getting a better education than they could in other places,&#8221; Trivett said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Among the faculty, Blackwell was one of the most involved. His children regularly helped out at the Mountain Mission School, a local agency for orphans and children of extreme poverty. He and his wife, Lisa, sang in a church choir, and he was on a committee to find a new pastor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Y&#8217;all have become our family,&#8221; Lisa Blackwell said at a memorial service for her husband Friday. &#8220;We have more love here than we could possibly have asked for.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Blackwell&#8217;s funeral was planned for Monday in Dallas, where the family lived before moving to Grundy. A private memorial service for Sutin was held Sunday at the local high school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He came to Grundy because he thought he could use his talents to help people in Appalachia, and to help boost the economy of a small coal town,&#8221; said Kent Markus, Sutin&#8217;s former Harvard Law School roommate and one of about 500 people who attended the service. &#8220;He was trying to help the sons and grandsons of coal miners.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At the law school, classes were expected to resume Tuesday. The faculty shuffled around schedules to cover Blackwell&#8217;s classes, and Paul Lund, who has been assistant dean, was appointed to fill Sutin&#8217;s role until a new dean can be hired.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;As horrific as this has been, I&#8217;m certain the institution will be stronger,&#8221; Ellsworth said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#030 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder. Police said he had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Associated Press Online http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#031 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales, 33, were slain in the spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, has been charged with murder and attempted murder. Police said he had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Daily News Leader (Staunton, VA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#032 <p><span class="normal">Seidle heard gunshots</span></p> <p><span class="normal">By Dawn Linsner</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Staff Writer</span></p> <p><span class="normal">WAYNESBORO - &#8220;Go, go, go &#8230; now!&#8221; shouted David Seidle&#8217;s classmate, bursting through the doors of the computer lab just after lunch Wednesday afternoon.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The frantic warning was the last thing the Appalachian School of Law student expected to hear after settling down at a de-stressing computer game after lunch at the McDonald&#8217;s down the street Jan. 16.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But within minutes, Seidle was rushing out of the building through a back exit and into a parking lot, where he crouched behind cars for protection.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We heard three or four big bangs and then we kind of thought it was over, but then there were a couple more, so we kept going,&#8221; said Seidle, 23, a second-year student at the college where another student killed three people Wednesday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;When something so foreign is happening right beside you, you just act on instinct.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Seidle, a Waynesboro native, was in disbelief when he learned that his professor, Thomas Blackwell; L. Anthony Sutin, dean; and classmate, Angela Dales, were slain in the rampage.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Everybody knows everybody here &#8230; and we pretty much get along despite our differing political views,&#8221; he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">According to the Associated Press, former student Peter Odighizuwa opened fire, killing three and injuring three other students after his notice of his dismissal from the school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Peter O,&#8221; as he was known to classmates, was being held in the Buchanan County Jail on three counts of capital murder and three counts of the use of a firearm in the commission of a felony.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">When Seidle&#8217;s parents got his phone message about the incident, they made the five-hour drive to meet Seidle and his friends in Grundy.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">After four days of candlelight vigils, memorial services and lots of talking, Seidle said he and his close-knit second family of 170 students are ready to hear definitive news about the continuance of classes - both Blackwell and Sutin were teaching this semester - and safety at the school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;They have really pulled together in this tiny town with only one street and a small school,&#8221; said Seidle&#8217;s mother, Martha.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The tragedy rocked the intimate school and small town more than it might have a large university, Martha Seidle said. The perpetrator wrote occasionally for the underground student newspaper that her son co-edits.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He&#8217;s been to a few parties here, and I used to sit behind him in some classes,&#8221; Seidle said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">He fears that some of his classmates and friends will leave the school because of the incident but hopes they won&#8217;t because they are all each others&#8217; support system.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;I&#8217;m confident that we&#8217;ll bounce back from this and that it won&#8217;t mean the end of the school,&#8221; he said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Gradual Return</span></p> <p><span class="normal">n Appalachian School of Law will reopen Tuesday, when staff, students and community members meet to discuss coping strategies for the rest of the year.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">n Regular classes will resume for the 170-person student body Wednesday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Inside</span></p> <p><span class="normal">n Community embraces law school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Page A3 A</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Associated Press</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The hallways of the Appalachian School of Law in Grundy were deserted Friday afternoon.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Daily Press (Newport News, VA) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#033 <p><span class="normal">Friends and colleagues said they will remember the dean of the Appalachian School of Law for being a brilliant lawyer, but the fondest memories, they said, will be of his wit.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">L. Anthony Sutin, 42, was one of three people shot to death Wednesday by a disgruntled student at the small law school in the mountains of western Virginia. v</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He came to Grundy because he thought he could use his talents to help people in Appalachia, and to help boost the economy of a small coal town,&#8221; said Kent Markus, a former Harvard Law School roommate and one of about 500 people who attended a private memorial service Sunday afternoon in an auditorium at Grundy High School. &#8220;He was trying to help the sons and grandsons of coal miners.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sutin, a 1984 graduate of Harvard Law School, left a position at the U.S. Department of Justice to help start the fledgling school to ease a shortage of lawyers in the region and to foster economic renewal in Appalachia.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Former Attorney General Janet Reno said Sutin had a knack for lightening intense moments with his humor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Tony could make me laugh at the tensest of moments,&#8221; she said in a letter read at the memorial service. &#8220;He could make me smile in the saddest. And he knew just which to do and when to do it.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sutin held several positions in the Justice Department between 1994 and 1999. He first founded and served as deputy director of the Community Oriented Policing Services, which was created to carry out former President Clinton&#8217;s effort to put 100,000 more officers on the streets.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">He was serving as assistant attorney general for legislative affairs when he left the Justice Department.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> Winston-Salem Journal (Winston Salem, NC) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#037 <p><span class="normal">Peter Odighizuwa left his impoverished homeland of Nigeria nearly 20 years ago, seeking, like others before him, the American Dream.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Two years ago, he found his way from Chicago to the coalfields of southwest Virginia. His purpose was to attend the Appalachian School of Law, founded by people who envisioned a need for a center of learning and a way to bring economic development into this impoverished region.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Since its founding in 1994, the tiny law school in a former junior high school has become a magnet, drawing to its two-building campus an unusually diverse mix of faculty and students, most outsiders from the coal country. Odighizuwa was one of about 200 students, being led into the legal profession through a curriculum that emphasized community service and conflict resolution. Odighizuwa shattered that dream last Wednesday when he shot and killed three, including the law school&#8217;s dean, and wounded three others in a tragedy that left this community and law school reeling, asking why, and wondering about their future.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Grundy is a tiny town of about 1,300 tucked into the razor-back hills of southwest Virginia. It is hard to get to, and hard to forget.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Zeke Jackson, a second-year student and president of the law school&#8217;s Black Law Students Association, said: &#8220;Peter was welcomed here, like the rest of us, with open arms by people who go out of their way to help us - this law school and town embraced Peter and his family because they were strapped, maybe more than most of us.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;This is a second-chance school, with a first-class faculty, and the people around here take to you, once they know you&#8217;re a student here. This whole thing is a real setback for everybody. If only I had known he was that far out, I would have done something,&#8221; Jackson said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"> Odighizuwa and his wife and children were known throughout the town. He was called &#8220;Peter O.&#8221; He worked at the Food City, and his wife worked at the local hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Those who share the law school&#8217;s dream are trying to figure out what went wrong. James Wayne Childress, a lawyer and graduate of the law school&#8217;s first class, said, &#8220;This calamity runs against the thread of our basic mission, which stresses how the law is an instrument for alternative conflict resolution.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Childress described himself as &#8220;a country lawyer,&#8221; and he is a member of the school&#8217;s Alumni Association board. Like others involved with the school, he worries that the shooting will harm the school&#8217;s reputation and efforts to help the local economy, which &#8220;was just getting beyond growing pains.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sue Ella Kobak, a local lawyer who defends indigent clients, said that the tragedy &#8220;reinforces the image of Appalachia as a violent place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">To her, &#8220;the bigger picture is more important, the lesson to be learned from this, how law schools, everywhere, put an inordinate amount of competitive pressure on students.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa is said to have been disgruntled because he had been expelled from the law school for bad grades.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Odighizuwa is black, his victims white. But most students said that race wasn&#8217;t a factor in the shootings.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"> Kenneth Brown, a first-year student and graduate of N.C. Central University in Durham, said: &#8220;I came here thinking this was hood country, as in the hoods the KKK wears, but I have found this to be a most welcoming place. There is nothing racial about the fact that all of the victims of Peter&#8217;s crime were white. This is just another, the latest human tragedy, only magnified by where it took place.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At a memorial service last week, mourners started with a prayer, read aloud in unison: &#8220;Almighty God. Give us all new life, new laughter, new awareness of the beauty of life. Raise us up, as images of hope to the despairing, and bring us to a softness in a world hardened by evil.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"> Later that day, Childress put the prayer in simpler terms, more in keeping with the humble surroundings of Grundy and its little law school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;When the fan blades get cleaned off and things cool down,&#8221; he said, &#8220;we&#8217;re going to be a stronger and better law school and community because of this.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press State & Local Wire http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/21#039 <p><span class="normal">Two students wounded in a shooting rampage at the Appalachian School of Law last week have been released from a hospital.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Rebecca Brown, 38, of Roanoke, and Martha Madeline Short, 37, of Clintwood, were discharged Sunday from Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport, Tenn., said hospital spokeswoman Amy Stevens.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A third student, Stacey Beans, 22, of Paducah, Ky., was upgraded from fair to good condition.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Stevens said all three were expected to make a full recovery.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The school&#8217;s dean, L. Anthony Sutin, Professor Thomas Blackwell and student Angela Dales were slain in the shooting spree.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, a native of Nigeria, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons counts in the shootings. Police said Odighizuwa had recently flunked out of school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The private law school, which opened five years ago in a renovated junior high school, has an enrollment of about 200 students.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Associated Press http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/20#041 <p><span class="normal">It seemed like a risky proposition: building a law school in a small struggling coal town isolated by the rugged Appalachian Mountains.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But with area mines closing and the young moving away to find work, town officials pushed ahead, opening the Appalachian School of Law in 1997 inside an old brick school house.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We needed this, anything that could help,&#8221; said W.H. Trivett, 77, mayor of the blue-collar town of about 1,100.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">It took time for the new students to gain acceptance in the close-knit community where many residents&#8217; families had lived for generations.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We had to get used to people from different cultures living here - and they had to get used to us,&#8221; said Richie Mullins, 35, who sells law school text books out of his bicycle store on Main Street.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">But any lingering doubts students and faculty may have had about their neighbors&#8217; feelings disappeared last week as the town responded after a disgruntled former student allegedly walked into the school and shot to death the dean, a professor and a student.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">In the days that followed, signs of support appeared throughout Grundy.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;ASL our thoughts and prayers are with you,&#8221; read a banner in the parking lot of Rife&#8217;s TV.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A grocery in nearby Vansant donated ham biscuits, cookies and soda pop to the Baptist church for a memorial service.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Loweda Gillespie, 61, tied yellow ribbons around store fronts, telephone poles and trees.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;We wanted to let them know we&#8217;re family,&#8221; Gillespie said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Dean L. Anthony Sutin, 42, and Professor Tom Blackwell, 41, were slain in their offices Wednesday. Law student Angela Dales, 33, died later at the hospital. Three other students were wounded.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span><span class="tackle">The gunfire sent terrified students running from the building before classmates tackled the alleged shooter.</span><span class="normal"> Peter Odighizuwa, 43, who had been dismissed from the school because of failing grades, is charged with three counts of capital murder, three counts of attempted capital murder and six weapons charges. The prosecutor said she will seek the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Residents attended memorial services throughout the week, placing flowers on the school&#8217;s concrete sign as victims&#8217; families and friends wept in small, shivering circles.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;It&#8217;s so heartwarming to see this,&#8221; school president Lucius Ellsworth said Saturday. &#8220;There&#8217;s no doubt that out of this tragedy, this community has united.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">For decades, officials wanted to build a law school in southwest Virginia to create jobs and provide a legal resource for the remote mountain area.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;In all rural areas, there is a real lack of legal education,&#8221; said Ellsworth, a former education official in Tennessee and vice chancellor of Clinch Valley College in Wise. Before the law school came to Grundy, there was no other law school within a three-hour drive.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Appalachian School of Law now has about 200 students. The American Bar Association granted it provisional accreditation last year. And everyone at the school - students and faculty alike - is required to support the town with 25 hours of community service per term.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Students, many of whom are older and looking for a second career, tutor Grundy school children.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;These kids, the way they&#8217;re allowed to work with the public, I&#8217;m sure they&#8217;re getting a better education than they could in other places,&#8221; Trivett said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Among the faculty, Blackwell was one of the most involved. His children regularly helped out at the Mountain Mission School, a local agency for orphans and children of extreme poverty. He and his wife, Lisa, sang in a church choir, and he was on a committee to find a new pastor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;Y&#8217;all have become our family,&#8221; Lisa Blackwell said at a memorial service for her husband Friday. &#8220;We have more love here than we could possibly have asked for.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Blackwell&#8217;s funeral was planned for Monday in Dallas, where the family lived before moving to Grundy. A private memorial service for Sutin was held Sunday at the local high school.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He came to Grundy because he thought he could use his talents to help people in Appalachia, and to help boost the economy of a small coal town,&#8221; said Kent Markus, Sutin&#8217;s former Harvard Law School roommate and one of about 500 people who attended the service. &#8220;He was trying to help the sons and grandsons of coal miners.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At the law school, classes were expected to resume Tuesday. The faculty shuffled around schedules to cover Blackwell&#8217;s classes, and Paul Lund, who has been assistant dean, was appointed to fill Sutin&#8217;s role until a new dean can be hired.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;As horrific as this has been, I&#8217;m certain the institution will be stronger,&#8221; Ellsworth said.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Atlanta Journal and Constitution http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/20#043 <p><span class="normal">ENRON 1. Auditor fired Arthur Andersen fired the auditor who ordered Enron documents shredded. Then Enron fired Arthur Andersen. The White House, meanwhile, refused to release documents on its energy task force meetings with Enron.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">MIDDLE EAST 2. Calm is shattered Relative calm ended in the Middle East. A Palestinian gunman killed six Israelis and wounded 30 others at a bat mitzvah party. Israel responded with an air attack on Palestinian offices in Tulkarem, killing a policeman and injuring 30.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">DETAINEES 3. More sent to Cuba More detainees were taken to Guantanamo Bay (right) from Afghanistan, while human rights groups complained about confining them in 8-foot-tall cages. U.S. officials said they are illegal combatants, not POWs, but are nonetheless being treated humanely.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">AMERICAN TALIBAN 4. No treason charge John Walker, the only American known to have fought for al-Qaida, was charged with conspiring to kill U.S. citizens in Afghanistan. But the Justice Department decided against charging him with treason, lessening the likelihood of a death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">INDIA AND PAKISTAN 5. Powell intercedes Secretary of State Colin Powell visited leaders in India and Pakistan, expressing confidence that tensions have lessened between the two nuclear players. India agreed to talks with Pakistan, but both sides refused to pull back troops.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">NIGERIA PROTESTS 6. Many arrested Police in Nigeria arrested dozens of labor activists after two days of street protests and violence over a hike in fuel prices. The government said the increases were necessary to prevent shortages. By the numbers $700 million: Sale price of the Boston Red Sox $56 million: Four-year deal for Larry King at CNN</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">LAW SCHOOL SHOOTING 7. Spree kills three A shooting spree on the campus of Appalachian School of Law in Grundy, Va., left the school&#8217;s dean and two others dead. Charged with murder was Peter Odighizuwa, 42, a former student who met with the dean to discuss his recent dismissal.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">ATLANTA BRAVES 8. Trade contentious The Braves traded fan favorite Brian Jordan to the Los Angeles Dodgers to get boomer batter Gary Sheffield. Jordan says he was stabbed in the back by management. Management says it needed more hitting power and had to give up Jordan to get it.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">PRESIDENT BUSH 9. Fall leaves bruise President Bush passed out and fell to the floor when a pretzel temporarily lodged in his throat as he snacked while watching NFL football at the White House. Doctors said he was OK, but he wore a bruise on his face the rest of the week.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">1970s KILLING 10. Five are charged In another odd echo from the &#8216;70s, five former members of the Symbionese Liberation Army were charged with killing a woman during a bank robbery 27 years ago. Likely to testify at trial is heiress Patty Hearst, who was kidnapped by the SLA. 89,000: Jobs lost in Georgia last year 1:Years out of the last five in which Enron paid taxes</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> <p><span class="normal">This week Secretary of State Colin Powell and other world diplomats gather in Tokyo for a conference on the reconstruction of Afghanistan. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan visits Afghanistan. John Negroponte, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, visits the Middle East, including a stop in Syria.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Augusta Chronicle (Georgia) http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/20#044 <p><span class="normal">Rain and drums drowned out the words of two dozen Ku Klux Klansmen on Saturday at a rally held days after a wooden cross was burned on the lawn of the town&#8217;s first black mayor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The rally, the first public Klan event in the region in decades, fell on Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee&#8217;s birthday and two days before the observance of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">About 800 people attended a diversity festival Saturday held to counter the Klan event. Mayor Roland Dykes received a standing ovation.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">At the Klan rally, about 400 people watched from behind yellow police tape, chanting and playing drums to drown out the Klan&#8217;s remarks.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">School shooting victim remembered at funeral</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRUNDY, Va. -</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Law student Angela Denice Dales, one of three people slain at her school Wednesday, was remembered Saturday as a woman who loved to learn and who taught a lesson in her death.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Hundreds of friends and family attended the funeral for Ms. Dales, the single mother of a 7-year-old girl. Ms. Dales, 33, was shot to death along with the dean and a professor at the Appalachian School of Law. Three other students were wounded and remained hospitalized in fair condition Saturday.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The suspect, former student Peter Odighizuwa, 43, is in jail on capital murder and attempted murder charges.</span></p> <p><span class="normal"></span></p> The Baltimore Sun http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~lambert/guns/appalachian/2002/01/20#045 <p><span class="normal">The Crisis</span></p> <p><span class="normal">John Walker Lindh, the 20-year-old American captured with Taliban forces in Afghanistan, was charged with conspiring to kill U. S. citizens and providing support to terrorist groups, counts that do not carry the death penalty.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Richard C. Reid, who allegedly tried to explode a jetliner with a bomb in his shoe, pleaded innocent to nine counts, including the charge that he was a member of Osama bin Laden&#8217;s al-Qaida terror group.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Baltimore-Washington International Airport was chosen by the Federal Transportation department as a test of how luggage screening and other security measures will be handled at the nation&#8217;s other major airports.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Secretary of State Colin L. Powell visited India and Pakistan to try to persuade them not to go to war, and Afghanistan, to voice U. S. support for the war-ravaged country. Videotapes found in Afghanistan showing five purported al-Qaida terrorists making martyrdom statements were released by Attorney General John Ashscroft who asked for help in identifying and finding the men, saying, &#8220;They could be anywhere in the world.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">After a month in custody charged with lying to investigators about having an aviation radio in his hotel room near the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, Egyptian Abdallah Higazy was released when another hotel guest, a private pilot, said the radio was his.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Britain arrested 13 in an anti-terror probe, charging that two are al-Qaida members.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Bosnia handed six Algerians suspected of having terrorist links over to U.S. military authorities, though that country&#8217;s highest court had ruled that the suspects, most employees of various Islamic humanitarian groups, be released.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">U.S. Special Forces began arriving in the Philippines to help in that country&#8217;s battle with Islamic separatists linked to Osama bin Laden.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Nation</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A pretzel apparently lodged in President Bush&#8217;s throat while he was watching the Ravens-Dolphins game, triggering a reaction that caused him to faint, bruising his face when he hit the floor.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A key figure in the Novatek International Inc stock-rigging scandal, Vincent D. Celentano, was fined $350,000 by the Security and Exchange Commission and barred from ever running a U. S. public company . . . Former executives of the Sunbeam corporation agreed to pay $15 million to settle a stockholder lawsuit accusing them of inflating he value of the appliance maker&#8217;s stock . . . An internal memo warned Enron executives of accounting irregularities months before they led to the company&#8217;s downfall.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Five former members of the radical Symbionese Liberation Army were named as suspects in a deadly bank robbery in California 27 years ago. One of them, Sara Jane Olsen, later received a 10-year sentence for conspiring to blow up a Los Angeles police cars.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">A student at the Appalachian School of Law, went on a shooting rampage at the Grundy, Va., campus, killing the dean, a professor and another student.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">President Bush named 17 Americans from the fields of medicine, law and religion to his Council on Bioethics, to advise him on delicate issues of science versus morality, beginning with the issue of human cloning.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The former home of Rosa Parks, a civil rights heroine who sparked the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott half a century ago, has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Facing possible bankruptcy, Kmart named turnaround specialist James B. Adamson as its new chairman.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Security and Exchange Commission proposed that an outside group monitor the accounting industry. Bankrupt Enron fired Arthur Andersen as its accountant.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The World</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Hundreds of thousands fled a volcanic eruption that sent lava flowing into Goma, Congo, a city on the border of Rwanda.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">U. S. and Colombian law enforcement officials grabbed $8 million in cash and arrested three dozen suspects in the United States and Colombia in what they said was an assault on a major drug money laundering operation.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Sierra Leone and the United Nations agreed to form a special court to try people accused of atrocities during the West African country&#8217;s decade-long civil war which the government declared over in a celebration that featured a bonfire of rebel weapons.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Seven Bolivians, including two police officers, were killed as poor farmers protested a crackdown on the sale of coca leaves, the raw material of cocaine.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Region</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The Redskins fired coach Marty Schottenheimer an replaced him with former University of Florida coach Steve Spurrier.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Gov. Parris N. Glendening asked the General Assembly to put off the final installment of a state income tax cut in order to help balance his $22.2 billion budget.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Richard N. Dixon resigned as state treasurer, blaming worsening diabetes.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">No. 1 Duke ran away from No. 3 Maryland in the second half, winning the ACC basketball showdown 99-78.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Baseball commissioner Bud Selig indicated Washington may be first in line for a relocated team in 2003.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">The tenant of a Glen Burnie woman was arrested for killing the woman and her daughter-in-law. The bodies of Laverne May Browning and Tamie Browning were found in the trunk of a car parked at a nearby apartment complex.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">Quote</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8220;He&#8217;s the mayor, I&#8217;m a judge. It&#8217;s apples and oranges. He&#8217;s the last person I&#8217;d ask advice of or be influenced by. I&#8217;m not involved in how city government runs. This is not Hillary and Bill.&#8221;</span></p> <p><span class="normal">&#8211;Baltimore District Court Judge Catherine Curran O&#8217;Malley, reacting to an ethics panel ruling that she may not hear cases in which police witnesses testify because her husband, Mayor Martin O&#8217;Malley is their boss.</span></p> <p><span class="normal">GRAPHIC: Photo(s), 1. Final flyby for Galileo: Images from NASA&#8217;s Galileo, spacecraft show Jupiter during the 1994 impact of fragments from, comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. Galileo made a flyby of Jupiter&#8217;s moon Io on, Thursday. The flyby was the last and closest for the craft, which, NASA plans to crash into Jupiter in 2003.; , 2. Redskins Spurrier named coach; , 3. Violence spreads in Mideast: Relatives mourn during a funeral for, the victims of a Palestinian attack on a coming-of-age party for an, Israeli girl. The attack left six dead and more than 20 hurt. In, retaliation, Israel destroyed a Palestinian security post and, surrounded Palestinian Leader Yasser Arafat&#8217;s headquarters.; , 4. Baltimore District Court