custom ad
NewsMay 13, 2007

BLACKSBURG, Va. -- The image most people have of Kevin Sterne is harrowing: a photo showing a tourniquet wrapped around his wounded leg as rescue workers rushed him out of Virginia Tech's Norris Hall. But Saturday, there was a new image of the 22-year-old former Eagle Scout: jubilant and full of life as he limped across the stage at the university's Cassell Coliseum using a crutch and displaying a grin to accept his degree in electrical engineering...

By KRISTEN GELINEAU and SUE LINDSEY ~ The Associated Press
Kevin Sterne leaned on his crutch as he carried his diploma back to his seat during an undergraduate College of Engineering graduation ceremony Saturday at Virginia Tech at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Va. Sterne was wounded when Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and then himself April 16 on the Virginia Tech campus. (Carolyn Kaster ~ Associated Press)
Kevin Sterne leaned on his crutch as he carried his diploma back to his seat during an undergraduate College of Engineering graduation ceremony Saturday at Virginia Tech at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Va. Sterne was wounded when Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people and then himself April 16 on the Virginia Tech campus. (Carolyn Kaster ~ Associated Press)

BLACKSBURG, Va. -- The image most people have of Kevin Sterne is harrowing: a photo showing a tourniquet wrapped around his wounded leg as rescue workers rushed him out of Virginia Tech's Norris Hall.

But Saturday, there was a new image of the 22-year-old former Eagle Scout: jubilant and full of life as he limped across the stage at the university's Cassell Coliseum using a crutch and displaying a grin to accept his degree in electrical engineering.

The crowd rose to its feet and cheered Sterne in that moment during the Saturday morning commencement ceremony at the College of Engineering.

It was one of several campus ceremonies in which individual colleges and departments handed out diplomas to students, including posthumous degrees to those killed in the April 16 attack at a dormitory and classroom building.

The College of Engineering was hit particularly hard, with 11 students and three professors killed in the shooting.

Beth, mother of slain Virginia Tech student Emily Jane Hilscher, cheered to the crowd after being presented with a posthumous diploma for her daughter during an undergraduate College of Agriculture and Life Science graduation ceremony Saturday at Virginia Tech at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Va. To the back and left was Dr. Tony Webb, second from right was Emily's father Eric and far right was Emily's sister Erica. (Carolyn Kaster ~ Associated Press)
Beth, mother of slain Virginia Tech student Emily Jane Hilscher, cheered to the crowd after being presented with a posthumous diploma for her daughter during an undergraduate College of Agriculture and Life Science graduation ceremony Saturday at Virginia Tech at Cassell Coliseum in Blacksburg, Va. To the back and left was Dr. Tony Webb, second from right was Emily's father Eric and far right was Emily's sister Erica. (Carolyn Kaster ~ Associated Press)

Engineering dean Richard Benson was overwhelmed with emotion, his voice breaking at times, as he spoke about the slain.

"Forgive me," Benson said quietly as he paused to collect himself while commemorating professor Kevin Granata, who was shot in a hallway as he tried to save students during the rampage in which 33 people were killed, including the student gunman.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

The widow of G.V. Loganathan accepted a teaching award in honor of her husband, a man Benson said students fondly regarded as the best professor they ever had, the kindest person they ever met and incredibly wise.

Another slain professor, Dr. Liviu Librescu, a Holocaust survivor, was remembered by the dean for his "profound courage" in blocking his classroom door so his students could escape out the windows. He was among those killed by Seung-Hui Cho, who later took his own life.

At an English department ceremony, nearly all of the 135 graduating students and many faculty members stood when asked if they knew someone killed or injured in the shooting spree. The crowd of several hundred rose and applauded loudly as posthumous degrees were awarded to sophomore Ross Abdallah Alameddine and senior Ryan Clark. Clark was one of two students killed in a dormitory before the gunman moved to the classroom building.

English professor Nikki Giovanni read "We are Virginia Tech," a poem she penned hours after the rampage that infused a campus convocation with strength the day after the shootings.

She was inspired, she said Saturday, by the desire to convey that "what we do is more important than what is done to us."

The individual school ceremonies continued the theme of striking a balance between celebration and sorrow that began with a university commencement event Friday night.

While one engineering student's mortarboard read "This 2 shall pass," and one bore the name of victim Jarrett Lane, another graduate's said "4 HIRE." Students tossed around an inflatable beach ball and booed when it was confiscated.

Faces were somber as the dean commemorated the dead, but graduates broke out in cheers and tossed their mortarboards in the air as the ceremony concluded.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!