
Virginia Tech baseball team returns to field against Miami
BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) -- On a day marked by tears and mourning, prayer vigils and tolling bells, life was beginning to return to normal on at least part of the Virginia Tech campus: the school's baseball field.
Friday night's game against the University of Miami was Virginia Tech's first sporting event since Monday's rampage by a student gunman.
"I think that students need to get back to normal," said junior Chance Hellmann, who wandered near the diamond with a friend hours before the game. His friend Nicole White, 20, was killed in the shooting.
"Anything that keeps your mind off this is a good thing," he said.
In certain moments, there was a strange sense of normalcy. A little boy played catch with his dad. Teens scrambled to scoop up foul balls. Fans shifted impatiently in the long lines to buy hot dogs and Cracker Jack.
But Friday was a day of statewide mourning, and even at the ball game, the pain from the slayings of 33 people, including 23-year-old gunman Seung-Hui Cho, was never
far from the surface.
Tears spilled down the cheeks of one player from the home team as a recording of Virginia Tech professor Nikki Giovanni's poem, "We Are Virginia Tech" echoed through the stadium. Several Hokies cried as the national anthem played.
Miami players and coaches wore black wristbands in memory of the victims during the three-game series against the Hokies.
Miami head coach Jim Morris drew raucous applause when he presented a $10,000 check on behalf of the university for the Hokie Spirit and Memorial Fund.
The rowdy crowd of more than 3,000 -- five times larger than average -- grew somber as they rose to observe a 32-second moment of silence.
Clutching a sign that read "4.16.07 Never Forget" senior Kristyn Heiser marveled at how the Hokies were able to play under the emotional circumstances.
"I think it's a symbol of moving forward and not letting this define who we are," said Heiser, 22.
Athletic director Jim Weaver echoed her sentiments.
"You've either got to move forward or you move backward," Weaver said. "We think it is the beginning of the healing process."
Freshman Andrea Hacker, 19, said the game would help her set aside the horrific memories from Monday, when she heard Cho's gunshots from a nearby building.
"Looking around, seeing the seas of orange and maroon -- it's a special time today," Hacker said.
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