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INDIANA DAILY STUDENT
PAGE 8
FIVE-YEAR: IU saw 4.9 percent tuition increase CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 class load. The pressure this put on Crane forced him to leave school to join the Navy. “I was working 40 hours a week trying to avoid student loans,” Crane said. “My grades suffered, and I became depressed. I failed out of school and joined the Navy for four years.” He hoped that when his time
PEEPING: Some Wright residents still worried CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 knowing that he had been caught, but you feel like you don’t know if someone is there,” said freshman Bonnie Seacott. “I’ve been to Ball State, and they are way more secured than us.” Freshman Maggie Rupel said a man fitting a different descrip-
GOETZE: Professor will retire in April 2007 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 PAT SULLIVAN • THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Truck driver Tyrone Williams leaves the federal courthouse in Houston in shackles in this March 21, 2005, file photo. Williams was convicted Monday, for his role in the nation’s deadliest human smuggling attempt, in which 19 illegal immigrants died from dehydration, overheating and suffocation inside a sweltering tractor-trailer.
Texas truck driver convicted in deaths of 19 illegal immigrants Jury will hear evidence for death penalty Wednesday By Juan A. Lozano The Associated Press
HOUSTON – A truck driver was convicted Monday in the deaths of 19 illegal immigrants who were crammed into a sweltering tractor-trailer in the deadliest human smuggling attempt in U.S. history. The jury will return Wednesday to begin hearing evidence on whether Tyrone Williams, 35, should get the death penalty. It was the second time Williams was found guilty in the case; an appeals court said the earlier verdict was flawed and ordered a new trial. The federal jury deliberated a little more than four days before convicting Williams on all 58 counts of conspiracy, harboring and transporting for agreeing to drive the illegal immigrants from South Texas to Houston in 2003. The more than 70 immigrants packed into the airtight trailer clawed desperately at the insulation, broke out the taillights and screamed for help as the heat climbed inside. Nineteen suffocated or died of
WRESTLER: Freshman falls from third story CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 said, reading from the report. When Bloomington Police Department officers arrived, Cameron “took off running and jumped over the wall” of the parking garage, Drake said. According to the report, Cameron smelled of alcohol when officers found him. Officers did not perform a Breathalyzer test. Drake said the two men Cameron was with disappeared sometime during the incident, and police have not yet found or identified them. Sheila Ankney, Cameron’s mother, said he has been improving since Sunday. He is still unconscious in the intensive-care unit, but he tried to open his eyes Monday, she said. A police officer called Ankney early Sunday with news about her son, she said. She, her husband and Cameron’s fa-
heat or dehydration. Williams abandoned the trailer at a truck stop near Victoria, Texas, about 100 miles from Houston. Defense attorney Craig Washington said his client was not responsible for the deaths because he didn’t know the immigrants were dying until it was too late. Washington blamed another smuggling ring member for causing the deaths by overstuffing the trailer. Prosecutors said Williams was responsible for the deaths because he didn’t free the immigrants or turn on the air conditioning. Williams showed no reaction when the verdict was read. He accepted a long hug from his lawyer before being led away by U.S. marshals. “I am deeply disappointed,” said Washington, a former congressman. Williams, a Jamaican citizen who lived in Schenectady, N.Y., is the only one of 14 people charged in the case to face the death penalty. Last year, a jury convicted Williams, but he avoided a death sentence because the jury couldn’t agree on his role in the smuggling attempt. An appeals court said the verdict did not count because the jury failed to specify his role in the crime.
ther arrived in Bloomington at about 7 a.m. Sunday morning, after driving from Cincinnati. “When you have a child in the hospital, a 2 1/2 hour drive can seem like two weeks,” she said. Though doctors are awaiting the results of a third CT scan to determine how well Cameron will recover, Ankney said she is still thankful for some things. “There are no broken bones; there’s no paralysis,” she said. “It’s a miracle.” The past 36 hours have been like a bad dream, but Ankney has received tremendous support from the hospital, IU and Cameron’s friends, she said. IU wrestling coach Duane Goldman visited Cameron in the hospital Sunday night, she said. “The wrestling team – they’ve been wonderful,” she said. “There are some wonderful students out there.” Ankney said she believes Cameron was just trying to help his friend in the parking garage, and when police arrived, he ran away with everyone else.
“informants,” as she calls them. Senior Kristin Kolodziej, who joined the ensemble in fall 2002, said she thinks that working with the informants gives her a new perspective. “Because you’re working directly with the source of the music, you get a stronger connection to it. These people show real spirit when they’re performing, which makes it come alive,” she said.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2006
of service was over, the Navy would be able to pick up the bill at the University, which would allow him to finish his education. When he returned to school, Crane expected the Navy to assume responsibility of his education cost, but because of a mix-up in paper work, he said he didn’t receive aid for two years and was forced to work again. His grades again suffered. Now that the Navy has given Crane support, he said his grades are up and gradua-
tion is around the corner. Senior Josh Davis, a cognitive science major, said the programs at IU do not provide a broad enough education for students. Davis could have graduated two years ago, but because of his interest in several other fields, he remains at the University. “Majors are too specific; students have to go out of their way to receive a broad education,” Davis said. “I could have graduated two years ago, but I was interested in philosophy,
anthropology, religious studies and folklore.” Davis will graduate next semester after five years at the University. He said major requirements make it hard for students to investigate different areas of study and wishes the school allowed more of a choice. “I was always told undergraduate was the place to receive a broad education,” Davis said. “Graduate school is where you go study a specific field.”
tion spied on her in the shower at Wright Lowe in October. “I was just taking a shower, and it was late at night,” she said. “There was this guy standing there. I was just in shock.” The only way to increase security would be to lock all bathroom doors, requiring all residents to take a key with them to use the restroom, said Pat Connor, Residential Programs and Services’ executive director. “I know some schools have
done that, and they’ve gone to that level of security, and it’s been met with some pretty strong resistance from the students,” Connor said. Although that could be an option, Connor said he thinks the best way to protect residents is to have them be more proactive in keeping dorms safe. Connor said he suspects the man got in Wright Harding by following other students in the doors and reached the bath-
room area because students often leave doors propped open within the residence hall. “I think it’s much better to have students be engaged in how to focus their role on keeping their environment safe,” he said. Wright Quad held a meeting to address the issue with residents Monday night. -IDS staff reporters Brian Spegele and Joanna Barnett contributed to this report.
That spirit, Kolodziej said, is also true of Goetze, who always takes part in concerts by dancing and singing right alongside the students the whole way through. “Mary has this passion for music that is unbelievable,” Kolodziej said. “Her energy is contagious.” Adjunct professor Kat Domingo, who was the associate instructor for the ensemble eight years ago, has continued to sing with the group long after it was required for the graduate program. She credits this to Goetze’s passion to her philosophy of viewing no cul-
ture as better than the next. “This is her effort to bring peace on the planet,” Domingo said. “This music is a way for people to understand the world better socially and politically.” Both Domingo and Kolodziej agreed that Goetze’s work is pioneering and has expanded the boundaries within the choral department. Kolodziej said she doesn’t know anyone else who has made these different cultures so accessible. After her retirement in April 2007, Goetze plans to continue her work. Aside from teaching at the University, she
has an ongoing series of DVDs and CD-ROMs she created that feature the translations, pronunciations and cultural information of the music she encounters. They are used by students all over the world, according to the International Vocal Ensemble Web site. And as for leaving the International Vocal Ensemble behind, she said she won’t ever be far. “I will become sort of a grandmother figure when I leave the group,” Goetze said. “I’ll serve the new directors any way that I can. I’ll always be a strong supporter.”
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