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MONICA LLOYD, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Thanks for joining us for a new edition of CNN Student News. I'm Monica Lloyd. A memorial tribute: The Virginia Tech community comes together to honor those killed in Monday's shootings. An international reaction: The effects of the Virginia Tech tragedy are being felt by some people halfway around the world. And alternative sources: Pedal power is just one way a man in Hong Kong is trying to harness energy.

First Up: Tragedy at Virginia Tech

LLOYD: First up today, Virginia Tech is still coming to grips with Monday's deadly shootings. The gunman responsible for the attacks was identified Tuesday as Cho Seung-Hui, a 23-year-old English major who university officials described as a loner. Also on Tuesday, the university held a convocation, or formal assembly, to pay tribute to Cho's victims. The president and first lady joined thousands of students, faculty and staff as they mourned those killed in Monday's attacks. Kyung Lah has the latest from Virginia Tech.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

KYUNG LAH, CNN REPORTER: Tears of shock and sorrow. The close-knit community of Virginia Tech brought closer by tragedy. President Bush was on campus to pay tribute to those lost just one day after a Monday that began like any other.

PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: By the end of the morning it was the worst day of violence on a college campus in American history. And for many of you here today, it was the worst day of your lives.

LAH: The student responsible, 23-year-old South Korean national Cho Seung-Hui. A senior. An English major who had previously given others cause for alarm. A professor who had him in class said his writings were full of violence and anger.

LUCINDA ROY, FORMER ENGLISH DEPARTMENT CHAIR, VIRGINIA TECH: I was so uncomfortable that I didn't feel I could leave him in the classroom, because some of the other students seemed to be uncomfortable.

LAH: As details emerge about the killer, family and friends of the victims remember their loved ones.

BRYAN CLARK, TWIN BROTHER OF VICTIM RYAN CLARK: An angel, just a person that could never be replaced.

LAH: And families of the wounded survivors hold their sons and daughters even tighter.

LAH: What were your first words to him?

SUZANNE GRIMES, SHOOTING VICTIM'S MOTHER: That I loved him, and I was so glad to see him.

LAH: And from the campus community, strong signs that hope will prevail.

STUDENTS: Let's go Hokies! Let's go Hokies!

LAH: And we're learning more about how Cho obtained at least one of his weapons. According to a gunshop owner in Roanoke, Virginia, he purchased a 9mm Glock from him on Friday, March 13th using a credit card and paying $571. In Blacksburg, Virginia, Kyung Lah, for CNN Student News.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

Spoken Word

NIKKI GIOVANNI, VIRGINIA TECH DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR: We are Virginia Tech. The Hokie nation embraces our own and reaches out with open heart and hands to those who offer their hearts and minds. We are strong and brave and innocent and unafraid. We are better than we think and not quite what we want to be. We are alive to the imagination and the possibility. We will continue to invent the future through our blood and tears, through all this sadness, we are the Hokies. We will prevail, we will prevail, we will prevail. We are Virginia Tech.

Candlelight Vigil

LLOYD: Late Tuesday, students, faculty and staff gathered for a candlelight vigil at the Virginia Tech Drill Field, where once again their strength as a community was on display.

International Reaction

LLOYD: The effects of the Virginia Tech tragedy are being felt far from the school's campus in Blacksburg. With tens of thousands of Indians enrolled as students at colleges across the U.S., Monday's attack is getting a lot of coverage on news reports in India. Seth Doane explains how the campus shooting is resonating with people halfway around the world.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CNN, IBN ANCHOR: And, of course, the college campus shooting in the U.S. is the big story we are tracking through the day today on CNN, IBN.

SETH DOANE, CNN REPORTER: The Virginia Tech shooting dominates the TV news broadcasts here in India, thousands of miles away from the tragedy. But it's a story that hits close to home for some: One of those killed, a professor,- from the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

Close to 80,000 Indians are currently students in the United States - that's according to the U.S. Embassy here in New Delhi. So, news of the school shooting made the front pages of papers here in India. Virginia Tech says well over four hundred Indians were enrolled as students there as of this fall - that's the highest percentage from any country outside of the United States. At this New Delhi college, studying in the U.S. is on the minds of some students. So is the Virginia Tech shooting.

VIVEK SETHI, 25: It certainly would have additional apprehensions on the minds of students - even from Indian origin who plan to go to the U.S. and study - that they are unsafe and such a tragic incident can take place in any institute.

DOANE: But most said the tragedy wouldn't change their minds in the long term.

SREE SEN, 22: A lot of people do want to go to the U.S., but I don't think that something like this will really effect their decision. Because considering that we live in a world where we are exposed to a lot of violence - that this is an incident that can happen anywhere.

DOAN: News of the death of professor G.V. Loganathan - of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and the reports that a student of Indian origin has been missing since the attack, have connected many Indians to the tragedy half a world away. Seth Doane, CNN, New Delhi.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

Thinking Green

LLOYD: Switching gears now, Earth Day is coming up this Sunday. The special day aims to raise awareness about environmental problems, like searching for ways to create energy using renewable resources, or resources that can replenish themselves naturally over time. James MacDonald introduces us to a man in Hong Kong who's providing energy by harnessing the power of the wind.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

JAMES MACDONALD, CNN REPORTER: To have a wind farm, you need a steady breeze and lots of space. Hong Kong has neither. But this inventor still believes he can harness wind power among the shelter of the skyscrapers.

LUCIEN GAMBOROTA: When we try to match this technology and the local conditions we have, then it fits perfectly.

MACDONALD: Lucien Gamborota designed these so-called micro-turbines. His innovations are getting attention in a city with a perpetual smog problem, and a renewed interest in green power. This idea was inspired by his own hefty summer electricity bill.

GAMBOROTA: A thousand U.S. for one month! You know, I don't have a castle, I have just a flat, and I started thinking, what's wrong with that?

MACDONALD: His solution involves a set of small plastic wheels attached to a generator. Working with engineers at the University of Hong Kong, they tested the technology at different wind speeds, ranging from typhoon conditions to slight breezes.

MICHAEL LEUNG, HONG KONG UNIVERSITY: These micro-wind turbines have the characteristics that it starts moving and starts working at very low wind speeds.

GAMBOROTA: 1.5 metre per second. 1.3.

MACDONALD: As low as 1 metre per second, about two-miles-an hour, the system starts generating electricity. The faster the turbines spin, the more juice they add to the battery. To help power a small apartment, you'd need a set of about 60, costing around $100 U.S. dollars in all. If wind power isn't for you, Gambarota has another invention, but this one involves a little more work.

MACDONALD: I may be quickly running out of energy, but my efforts aren't going to waste. My exercise is helping power this gym. This bike generates electricity. Half of it goes to power those lights, the other half gets stored in a battery.

GAMBOROTA: Let me show you the heart of this technology.

MACDONALD: Gym chain California Fitness has installed his technology on 13 machines at this location with plans to wire up the whole facility for human power.

STEVE CLINEFELTER, PRESIDENT, CALIFORNIA FITNESS: What we're finding is that when people know that he way that they're exercising here is actually producing electricity and helping the environment. It is one additional motivation for the workout.

MACDONALD: Customers seem to appreciate the extra incentive.

CUSTOMER: Considering all the waste we give, we can give some of our energy back to proper use.

MACDONALD: Gambarota's ideas may represent only a tiny amount of electricity in the overall picture. But by creating low-cost green power technology that nearly anyone can use, he thinks it's well worth the sweat. James MacDonald, CNN, Hong Kong.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

Shoutout

CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS: Time for the Shoutout! What typically uses up the most energy in an American home? If you think you know it, shout it out! Is it: A) Heating and cooling, B) Water heater, C) Lighting or D) Dishwasher? You've got three seconds -- GO! These are actually in order from what uses the most energy to the least, with heating and cooling accounting for almost 50 percent of home energy bills! You can test your energy knowledge further with our free Earth Day quiz at CNN.com/EDUCATION. That's your answer and that's your Shoutout!

Promo

LLOYD: After you take our Earth Day quiz, why not send us an I-Report on what your school is doing to celebrate Earth Day? Teachers, you can send us text stories, photos and videos about your students' conservation efforts, all at CNN.com/EDUCATION.

Before We Go

LLOYD: Before we go, an adoption story from the animal kingdom. A play date between a tiger and a dog may seem like a bad idea, but this pint-sized pooch is actually getting in some parenting. That's because Susi, a miniature Pinscher, has adopted Siera the tiger as her pup. Siera was born late last year, and although she's already bigger than her adopted mom, her owner says playtime remains a level playing field.

Goodbye

LLOYD: And that'll bring this edition of CNN Student News to a close. Thanks for watching. I'm Monica Lloyd.