The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 26, 1994 - 7 Last inmate in Detroit jail escape recaptured DETROIT (AP)-- The last of 10 inmates who escaped in August from a state prison in Detroit was recap- tured Monday night, police said. Tyrone Garland, 32, was arrested about 11:30 p.m. during a raid on an east side home led by Deputy Police Chief Benny Napoleon. Garland was found hiding under a bed and was arrested without incident, Napoleon d during a telephone interview. A 44-year-old woman and a 36- year-old man were arrested with Gar- land. Police planned to charge them with harboring a prisoner, Napoleon said. Garland was serving a 20- to 60- year sentence for second-degree mur- der at the Ryan Regional Correctional Facility when he and nine other in- tes escaped Aug. 21. "We never gave up searching for him," Napoleon said. "He may have forgotten about us but we didn't for- get about him." City and state police and the FBI participated in the raid, which came after half an hour of surveillance con- firmed Garland was in the house, Napoleon said. Police received a tip on Garland's *ereabouts from another law en- frctement agency that Napoleon de- clined to identify. Eight of the 10 were recaptured within 10 days of escaping; all are being held at the State Prison of South- ern Michigan. The ninth, Kevin Hatcher, was found dead of a drug overdose the day after the breakout. Garland was being held at police tdquarters and was to have been teed over yesterday afternoon to state Corrections Department offi- cials, Napoleon said. "We have completed the circle; then there were none," he said. "They're all in custody. It makes us feel real good. It's the end of a very long diligent search." 'Son-of-a-Bush' ahead in Texas governor race The Baltimore Sun HOUSTON - "Don't elect that son-of-a-Bush," warn bumper stick- ers in support of tart-talking Texas Gov. Ann W. Richards. But Texas voters may be about to spurn that advice and their good ol' gal governor in the grandest grudge match of this election year. Richards, one of the Democratic Party's shining stars, is in serious trouble in her re-election fight against George W. Bush, the eldest son of the former president. The latest public poll shows Bush 3 percentage points ahead. In fact, with only two weeks left in the '94 campaign, Republicans have a good chance to win the governor- ships of the nation's four most popu- lous states - California, New York, Texas and Florida (where another Bush son, Jeb, is running strongly). More than political bragging rights are at stake. A big-state Republican sweep could make it that much tougher for President Clinton to gain re-elec- tion in 1996, as Bush, a key political adviser to his father in 1992, happily points out. His strategy for the closing days of the race here, Bush said in an inter- view, will be to "highlight Bill Clinton and the need to have a governor in Texas in 1996 who understands that Clinton has not .been good for Texas and has not been good for America." Bush denies that his candidacy is about -avenging his father's defeat. But he acknowledges "the irony" that his campaign is in some ways a rerun of the 1992 presidential race, and that his opponent is someone who zoomed to national prominence by bashing his father. Richards' syrupy Texas accent and silvery hairdo gained attention at the 1988 Democratic National Conven- tion when she unloaded a sassy, sneer- ing attack on the then-vice president: "Poor George, he can't help it," went her most memorable line. "He was born with a silver foot in his mouth." Two years later, she was elected governor. During her term, the state's economy has rebounded and the state budget is now in surplus, thanks in part to the lottery she pushed. School test scores are up and crime is down, but the governor is caught in vicious political cross- currents. Civil disturbances break out in Kentucky AP PHOTO Lexington Fayette Urban County police in riot gear walk down a street in Lexington, Ky. yesterday. As many as 500 people roamed the area, overturning police cars and throwing rocks, following the fatal shooting of a Black 18-year- old by a police officer. Police said the man was shot accidentally while being arrested at his home in connection with a Sept. 30 street shooting. The officer involved was relieved of duty pending an investigation. DNA tests used to examine famous deaths HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) - High-tech tests are inspiring new in- vestigations of the deaths of famous people, including Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth, to answer the question "Who dunnit?" and see if the history books are right. Descendants of Booth, along with two historians, have filed a petition in Baltimore Circuit Court asking to exhume remains from a city cemetery to see if it really is Booth who is buried there. Similar investigations already have looked into the deaths of Presi- dent Zachary Taylor, Louisiana po- litical legend Huey Long, the ax-mur- dered parents of Lizzie Borden and the victims of Colorado cannibal Alfred Packer. "There has been a surge of in- creased recognition at what our fo- rensic sciences can do. It's possible to, do things that we couldn't do 15 years ago," said Douglas Ubelaker, curator of physical anthropology at the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of Natural History. A cautionary note is sounded by Clyde Snow, a forensic anthropolo- gist in Norman, Okla., who analyzed bones found in 1985 at the Little Bighorn battlefield in Montana. Far- fetched stories often surround the lives of famous historical figures, he said, and exhumations should only be done if reputable historians be- lieve it could shed light on a certain historical issue. "I don't know that just because somebody out there has some doubts about what happened that we should jump in and dig people up," Snow said. Ubelaker and colleague Doug Owsley were approached by Booth's relatives and historians who think another man is buried in Booth's grave. They think Booth escaped cap- ture and lived another 38 years be- fore dying in Oklahoma in 1903. Advances in DNA testing of soft tissue and preserved bone can help provide genetic fingerprints to aid in identification, Ubelaker said. Also, scientists' knowledge of trauma and post-mortem changes in the body has increased in recent years. Scientists also have sophisticated means of comparing skulls with pho- tographs of the deceased, he said. And chemical analysis of bones can determine what a person ate before death, or if they ingested a poison or other chemical. "It's kind of a growing trend," Walter Birkby, a forensic anthropolo- gist at the University of Arizona, said of forensic investigations of histori- cal figures. "It's just a realization that the forensic sciences can answer some questions that have been around for many, many years." More conclusive results were ob- tained from the 1991 exhumation of President Taylor in Kentucky. Dr. George Nichols, the state's medical examiner, determined that the presi- dent died of natural causes, not arsenic poisoning as a writer speculated. TWO WISCONSIN-Michigan student tickets. Great seats! Melanie 913-8771. WANT TO BUY one student tkt. for Wis- consin game. Call 517/694-5612 eves. WANTED 5.6 Wisconsin vs. U-M. tix. 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The RAND Graduate School (RGS) announcement Is ilifilglic FREE Seminar on Medical Admissions Featured Topics Include: - How Schools Evaluate You * Coursework Suggestions - Strategiestor Admission + Free Guide to Medical Schools Presented by EXCEL Test Preparation Wed., OCT. 26th 7:30 PM MICHIGAN UNION PENDLETON ROOM No Charge-All Students Welcome I food & entertain. I FISH DOCTOR'S. aquarium! Next to WNashtenaw. 434-1030. Everything for your putt-putt golf on RGS invites applications for it's doctoral degree program in Public Policy Analysis. The Deadline for academic year 1995-1996 is February 1, 1995. An integral part of RAND, RGS is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. Curriculum consists of rigorous multidisciplinary coursework, including quantitative methods, economics, social sciences, technology and policy workshops, and on-the-job training (OJT), leading to the dissertation and award of the Ph.D. in public Policy Analysis. Students typically receive OJT support equivalent to doctoral fellowships. A master's degree or equivalent post-bachelor's degree training and experience is required for admission. A representative of the RAND Graduate School will be at the Career Planning & Placement Office, 3200 Student Activities Building, on Thursday, October 27, 1994. TIOS SELLS MICHIGAN'S finest Mexican style food and the world's hottest sauces. Stop by 333 E. Huron, or call 761- 6650. We Deliver! MR. ULMINAL ~A~