If this site was useful to you, we'd be happy for a small donation. Be sure to enter "MLA donation" in the Comments box.

Niemeyer, Jerome (1942-2007)

From MLA Biograph Wiki
Revision as of 12:27, 9 May 2011 by Jlynch (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 2007 Mar 12 p. 1

Birth date: 1942

text of obituary:

Six die in Bluffton University team bus crash


Four students killed in accident during baseball squad's spring break trip

By Robert Rhodes

Mennonite Weekly Review

BLUFFTON, Ohio — In the chaos of the moments after the predawn crash, members of the Bluffton University baseball team tried to do the impossible: Lift their toppled bus from the shattered bodies of their teammates.

"We had guys stuck under the bus — legs, arms — and we had guys trying to pick the bus up," shortstop Ryan Baightel, 21 told the Toledo Blade newpaper.

The crash occurred around 5:30 a.m. March 2, when a chartered bus carrying the Bluffton Beavers men's baseball team plunged 30 feet from an overpass onto Interstate 75 near downtown Atlanta. The team was on its way to play Eastern Mennonite University at Sarasota, Fla., before playing several more games in a spring break tournament at Gainesville, Fla.

Killed were bus driver Jerome Niemeyer, 65, of Columbus Grove and his wife, Jean, 61; and Bluffton players Tyler Williams, 19, of Lima; Cody Holp, 19, of Arcanum; David Betts, 20, of Bryan, a member of Zion Mennonite Church in Archbold; and Scott Harmon, 19, of Lima.

Nearly a dozen of the 35 people on the bus were seriously injured in the crash, including Bluffton coach James Grandey, 29, who underwent facial surgery at Atlanta's Piedmont Hospital.

The bus had left Bluffton the previous night. Authorities said the charter, operated by Executive Coach Luxury Travel in Ottawa, plunged from the overpass after the driver apparently mistook an exit ramp for a regular lane.

In the predawn darkness, the bus, traveling at 60 mph, collided with a three-foot-high concrete barrier and tore through a fence before hitting the interstate 30 feet below.