Korea sex
BLACKSBURG -- An orange paper fish stuck outside the door to Room 2121 of Harper Hall bears the n... The killer: Who was he?...
BLACKSBURG -- An orange paper fish stuck outside the door to Room 2121 of Harper Hall bears the names "Joe" and "Seung-Ho," a bright, promising note to a new school year.
It went up in August when Joseph E. Aust and Cho Seung-Hui moved in. Cho barely said a word after that. On Monday, he took his guns and -- still silent, witnesses say -- killed 32 students and faculty.
"I didn't really know him at all," Aust said. "I tried to make conversation with him in August or so, and he would just give one-word answers and not try to carry on a conversation."
Aust didn't learn Cho was an English major -- one whose creative writing features talk of rape and pedophilia and angry desires to kill -- until yesterday.
Aust, 19, of Maryland, is a sophomore and an electrical engineering major. He said Cho, 23 and a senior, "was always really, really quiet. . . . He didn't really talk to anybody."
"I would notice a lot of times, like, I would come in the room and he'd be just kind of like sitting at his desk, just staring at nothing. It seemed a little odd, but I would pass it . . . off like he was just weird," said Aust.
At Tech, Aust and Cho lived in one of three, two-person rooms that, along with a small bathroom, make up each suite at the dorm. The suite looks lived-in but fairly clean. There are plastic bottles of hand soap on the sink and a can of spray disinfectant below.
"I didn't really see him," Aust said. "I was sleeping at the time. I could hear him get up, and I looked at my clock and noticed what time he was waking up'cause he makes a lot of noise, usually."
He said Cho seemed to go through his normal morning routine: went to the bathroom, dressed and took his medicine. Aust said Cho had prescription medication, but he did not know what it was. Cho also wore contacts and used eyedrops.
Aust said that Cho did not keep normal student hours. He went to bed relatively early, about 9 p.m., and arose around 7 a.m. However, Aust said that in the past couple of weeks, "he'd been getting up earlier and earlier -- about like, 5:30, 6."
Grewal said he was up all Sunday night and Monday morning studying. He said he was in the bathroom about 5 a.m. when Cho came in and used a toilet.
Neither Aust nor Grewal ever saw Cho with a friend of either sex. "I never saw him with anybody. . . . He seemed like a guy who didn't have a lot of friends," Grewal said. "He didn't speak to any of us, his roommates."
He did listen to all kinds of music, including rock, rap and classical. Aust and Grewal said Cho frequently worked out with weights at a campus gymnasium.
Neither knew what reason he would have to be at either building where the shootings took place. And they never saw him with firearms or ammunition.
Aust said that when he returned to his room Monday after class, nothing was out of the ordinary, except for an electric screwdriver on Cho's desk. Aust, Grewal and two other suite residents left the building Monday and watched news coverage. Grewal's roommate was out of town, he said.
"They were asking questions of everybody," Grewal said. They took brown bags with red tape out of Cho's room, presumably his clothing and other belongings. Aust said they took Cho's computer, too, before leaving about midnight.
One play, called "Richard McBeef" features violence and profanity, with a teenager protagonist chanting "Must kill. Must kill," referring to his stepfather. In the play, the teen attempts to suffocate the stepfather.
Ed Falco, who teaches the playwriting class, said he couldn't talk about Cho or his work. He said the university's lawyers asked staff not to talk about Cho as long as the investigation continues.
"I actually didn't believe it," he said. "I would have gone as far as telling the cops that he did not seem capable of anything like this," he said. "He was a pretty small kid. . . . I just thought he was a quiet guy."
Harper Hall is an L-shaped four-story structure about 300 yards from West Ambler Johnston Hall, known on campus as West AJ, where two people were gunned down early Monday morning.
Other Harper residents said they barely knew Cho. Brittany Irving, a sophomore from Mechanicsville who lives a floor above Cho's quarters, said he was unknown to her until yesterday.
Resident advisers usually have a room to themselves, but Miles said a crowding problem meant he had to double up with Clark at the beginning of the year. "He couldn't have been nicer about it. He said he didn't need the room that much anyway and to use all the space I needed. He just went out of his way to make me feel comfortable and like someone cared."
The confrontation with Cho, from what Miles has heard, simply involved Ryan stepping down the hall and asking Cho to keep an early morning argument to a minimum.
Cho had confronted Emily Hilscher, a freshman student from Woodville in Rappahannock County. She died in the same burst of gunfire that killed Ryan, according to friends and Rappahannock Sheriff's Maj. Chris Williams.
Hilscher was remembered yesterday as "smiling, happy, outgoing and friendly," said Will Nachlas, who shared three classes with the equestrian enthusiast and resides in West AJ.
Eddie Royal, a Virginia Tech football player, attended Westfield High School with Cho but said he didn't know him. "It's a scary thing to think about, that a person who had the potential to cause such harm was so close to you," Royal said.
"When I saw his picture, he looked familiar. I don't think I ever talked to him," Glennon said. "I talked to some people from high school who had classes with me, and they told me they don't think they ever heard him say a word. According to my friends, he was definitely quiet."
In the Centreville neighborhood of neatly kept three-story town houses where Cho Seung-Hui's family lives, neighbors described them as people who kept to themselves and were polite.
This is cache, read story here
