I've worked part-time for a Korean before....di masabtan ang utok...usab-usab... hehehehe....

I've worked part-time for a Korean before....di masabtan ang utok...usab-usab... hehehehe....

this is one sad news...

did he kill himself after he shot those people?
yes, he did.

hmmm.. ban koreans in america... welcome pinoys!! hehehe..
maypa kita maoy pa adtoon ug U.S. kay sa anang mga kitid ug mga utok nga koreano...
imagine, ang naka trigger sa iyaha kay RELIGION daw niya and base on reports nga
kung tagdon cya sa mga amerikano didto cya puy magpa dili2x.. murag dili jd gamay ug oten! hahahaha
*sigh, nako kalouy sa mga na.angul....
Schools have regular fire, earthquake and bomb drills don't they? Practice drills where the students and faculty are aware of what to do and how to survive during such a situation.
Maybe the school boards should also include "school shooters" as one of the worst case scenarios they should prep the students for.
What we do in life echoes throughout eternity~ Please support your lokal artists and their efforts to promote the Cebuano identity and culture!
man! hes a freaking psycho
I'M A PROUD KOREAN...I LOVE SHOOTING INNOCENT PEOPLE
Liviu Librescu, 76, was a Holocaust survivor who, his son said, will be remembered as a hero. He "blocked the doorway with his body and asked the students to flee," Joe Librescu told the AP. "Students started opening windows and jumping out." The elder Librescu, a professor at Virginia Tech, was recognized internationally for his research in aeronautical engineering, the head of the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department at Virginia Tech told the AP. He was born and received his advanced degrees in Romania. (Watch Librescu's son remember his heroic father)
Professor Edward Smith of Penn State University wrote:
"Professor Librescu was well known in the aerospace engineering community. I have known professor Librescu for the past 18 years, ever since I was in graduate school. We attended the same annual conferences and worked in the same research area (composite structures). He was a true gentleman. [He was] always very professional and 'formal,' dressed in a business suit and very serious about his work. Professor Librescu had a good sense of humor and had many friends in the aerospace community. We are all deeply saddened by this tragic loss."
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