BLACKSBURG, Va. -- Big cities, big places, they don't worry like this. Shooting sprees, mass death -- they don't become linked in the national consciousness to their moment of suffering. Small towns, little-known places, they often do. It's not fair, but it's still the way it is.

John Rowan, proprietor, Rendezvous Tattoos, Main Street, Blacksburg , America : "This is the last place in the world where you'd expect something like this to happen, and here we set a record for it, the worst shooting in the country."

The University of Miami baseball team came to play a series against Virginia Tech on campus this weekend. It was the first regular campus event since 32 students were shot to death by a fellow classmate. The Hurricanes were planning to bring an extra cop to Blacksburg so they'd feel safe.

A town of 40,000, more than half of them college students, a rural pocket of off-the-interstate America, a town with zero murders in the previous year, a place where the crime report for the year reads 22 burglaries, seven sex offenses, six weapons violations, 194 liquor law violations -- and Miami thinks this place is rough?

USA Today headline: "Prospective Students, Their Parents, Might Reconsider Their School Choice." The Akron Beacon Journal : "Virginia Tech went from a well-regarded public school to a name uttered in horror." Endless television and Internet pictures of Seung Hui Cho with a gun pointing dead at the camera, the American fascination with death and guns and murder, another grisly icon, Charlie Manson's gaze, John Wayne Gacy's clown costume, Ted Bundy's smile.

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