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Virginia Tech screws science department (AP)   Message List  
Reply Message #779 of 782 |
For 53 days, Virginia Tech science students and faculty have been
locked out of their labs. This is the uttermost inanity. --RB

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070609/ap_on_re_us/virginia_tech_norris_hall_3
http://ap.4r.st/20070609/ap_on_re_us/virginia_tech_norris_hall_3

Yahoo! News

Va. Tech students' research stalled

By SUE LINDSEY, Associated Press Writer
Sat Jun 9, 5:23 AM ET

Locked in the laboratories of the Virginia Tech building where 31
people died are the keys to its future — for its graduate students and
for the engineering program itself.

University officials announced this week they will reopen Norris Hall
this month to allow engineering programs with offices and laboratories
there to return to work, although no classes will be held in the
building again. The building had been locked and barricaded with a
chain-link fence since April 16, when student Seung-Hui Cho shot 30
people and himself in its classrooms after killing two in a dormitory.

Virginia Tech's specialized engineering science and mechanics
department — one of only three in the nation — is the primary occupant
of the three-story building. Department head Ishwar Puri said he made
a plea to university officials to find laboratory space as his
students fell further behind in their research, putting their funding,
and in some cases degrees, in jeopardy.

"I just didn't feel right holding their future hostage," he said.
"Their careers are now on hold."

Norris contains sophisticated equipment that cannot be moved. Nearly
half of the department's students used other labs. But Puri said the
work of 50 graduate students and some undergraduate students has been
held up along with research proposals from the department's 25 faculty
members.

Graduate student Nathan Post had tests under way in Norris on the
durability of a lightweight composite material the U.S. Navy is
preparing to use in ship hulls. He said Friday he may not be able to
complete his doctorate in December as planned because of the delay.

"I am so far behind schedule now that I am not sure if it will be
possible," said Post, of Barnard, Vt.

Virginia Tech announced after the shootings that students would not be
required to finish coursework or take final exams for the spring
semester, but Puri said stalled research can't simply be forgiven
because "it's the core of the degree."

In the future, he said, "there are questions that can be raised about
the quality of your degree, the integrity of your program."

A number of the engineering graduate students depend on grants and
contracts for financial support, Puri said. Such awards are based on
ideas that are generated as research is conducted.

"In order to be competitive, you've got to be able to show you can do
the work and you've got to generate the ideas," he said.

After the shootings, in which Cho also shot two students in a
dormitory, dozens of faculty members, students, alumni and others
contacted the school with suggestions for use of Norris Hall, ranging
from returning it to classrooms to making it a memorial to knocking it
down.

Puri said his goal was to get his faculty and students back to work,
whether in Norris or somewhere else. Had the university decided to
tear down Norris Hall and rebuild, he said, it could have taken at
least three years to get his department going again.

The decision to reopen Norris was not purely pragmatic, Puri said.
"It's a decision that's been made to ensure the survival of the program."

Puri said he expects many students and faculty members to feel
unsettled in Norris at first. He wants the entire building refurbished
so the recent repainting of walls and replacement of ceilings and
floors in a classroom wing where students and faculty members died
will not be a constant reminder of the attack.

"The tragedy is our building was violated," Puri said. "We lost
friends. We lost colleagues."

Of those killed, 11 students and three professors were in The College
of Engineering.

Still, Puri and Post said returning to the laboratories will help
students and staff with their emotional healing.

"I think that people don't realize how hard it has been for us," Puri
said. "We're mentally drained. We're emotionally exhausted. We just
want to get back to work."

Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The
information contained in the AP News report may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written
authority of The Associated Press.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070609/ap_on_re_us/virginia_tech_norris_hall_3
http://ap.4r.st/20070609/ap_on_re_us/virginia_tech_norris_hall_3




Sat Jun 9, 2007 7:09 pm

barticus888
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Message #779 of 782 |
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For 53 days, Virginia Tech science students and faculty have been locked out of their labs. This is the uttermost inanity. --RB ...
Randall Bart
barticus888 Offline Send Email
Jun 9, 2007
7:09 pm
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