이름은 C 오른쪽 먼저 크기 있어야 80 305 CAMPUS AND AREA University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1984 Five inmates escape through air shaft Police search continues for fugitives From Staff and Wire Reports LANSING — A man sent to prison for the robbery of a Lawrence jewelry store was among five inmates who escaped from the Kansas State Penitentiary yesterday by crawling through an air shaft and dropping more than one story to freedom outside the prison walls. Lawrence Eugene Lane, 33. St. Louis, was sentenced to 10 to 20 years in prison for the 27. Oct. 1982, jewelry makers Juweliers, 800 Massachusetts St The other fugitives were identified as Thanh Bam Pham, 20, serving a life term for two counts of first-degree murder; John Allen Purdy, 23, serving a life term for murder; George Jones, 24, serving a life term for first-degree murder and aggravated robbery; and Arzo Tucker Jr., 28. serving 15 years to life for aggravated kidnapping, sodomy, rape and robbery. MORE THAN 90 law enforcement officers launched a two-county manhunt for the convicts. Police officers used bloodhounds to track the convicts and airplanes and helicopters to scan the rolling hills of northeastern Kansas. Authorities patrolled highways, searched businesses and fields and set up at least one roadblock on the Centennial Bridge leading into Missouri from Leavenworth. Late yesterday afternoon, Capt. Bass Cassidy, of the Douglas County Sheriff's Department, said that the department was monitoring the progress of the manhunt but did not have any extra men on duty. Leavenworth County resident refused to let in a strange man who came to the door and asked to use the telephone, Buford said. Reports of other sightings indicate the five inmates probably split up, he said. said. THE SEARCH WAS concentrated about six to eight miles southwest of Lansing,Buford said. Prison spokesman Troy Baker said the prisoners escaped about 1 a.m. Monday by inching their way through an air shaft intake from a cellhouse within the prison walls. within the prison. "Once inside, they lowered themselves down and came out through an intake in the wall," he said "Once out the opening, they were outside the prison walls." the prison walls. The opening, about one and a half stories above the ground, is about 10 inches wide and $4\frac{1}{2}$ feet long, he said. All the convicts are built slightly as the tallest 5-feet-8$\cdot$2" and were able to squeeze out the narrow gap, he said. David Barclay, assistant to State Corrections Secretary Michael Barbara, said the inmates lived in open cells within the dormitory, which was locked. An 11 p.m. bed check showed that they were all accounted for. The fugitives are considered dangerous, Baker said. "THEY CUT THEIR way through a heavy wire screen door leading into an equipment room and from the equipment room gained access to the air shaft," he said. "They had to cut through the wire door and then had to cut through bars at the end of the air shaft." "We don't know that they're armed, but we consider any fleeing felon to be dangerous," he said. The breakout is the biggest at the prison since September 1981, when seven convicted murderers and rapists escaped. Larry Weaver/KANSAN Frank Krug, 1428 Ohio, walks a 15 foot slackrope tied to two trees on the patio on thatPyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St. Krug. Lawrence senior, said yesterday that he was teaching himself to walk tightropes. This was his third lesson. County gets $218,000 in tax case By LAURETTA SCHULTZ Staff Reporter Douglas County will receive about $218,000 as its share of a $22 million property tax settlement reached last week between Kansas and a group of railroads, an attorney for the state said yesterday. The Douglas County Commission unanimously accepted the terms of the state settlement yesterday. The settlement will require the three railroads that operate in the county to pay off part of a $700,000 tax bill they ran up in the past four years while their suit against the state went through federal courts. "Our estimate is that Douglas County will get about $218,000 in addition to what has already been paid," said Carol Bonebrake, attorney for the state in the case. "It will cost about $300,000 it will be close to that." BONERBAKE SAID THAT SATA Fe Railway Co., Union Pacific Systems and St. Louis Southwestern Railways would end up paying about $516,000 of the total tax bill for 1980-B3. "Douglas County is not going to collect all the taxes they billed," she said. "But about $516,000 will be paid." The $16,000 figure includes about $298,000 that already has been paid to the county in the last four years, Bonebrake said. In 1980, the railroads fitted suit, claiming their property was being assessed for property taxes at higher rates than other commercial and industrial property. Lower assessment rates will translate into lower tax bills for the railways across the state. THE SETTLEMENT NOW must be approved by the U.S. District Court. Police crack down on bicycle violations Staff Reporter KU police records showed that 30 citations were issued for running stop signs. Four were issued for riding on the sidewalk. By JOHN REIMRINGER Bicyclists on campus were issued 34 citations during the first 20 days of September as a result of a crackdown on traffic violations by the University of Kansas Police Department. KU police begin strictly enforcing traffic regulations each fall a few weeks after school starts, Lt. Leanne Longaker of the KU Police Department said yesterday. Police get complaints about bicyclists from motorists and pedestrians. "It's probably more noticeable every year because we've had more bicyclists every year," Longaker said. The enforcement is aimed at all vehicles, not just bicycles, she said The number of tickets issued to bicyclists, as well as the number of complaints about bicyclists, has grown since the enforcement began, she said. Extra officers have been placed on regular patrols sporadically during the past weeks, Longaker said. Officers also have been stationed on foot at intersections to make people aware that traffic was being monitored. Since the enforcement began, KU police have not received any reports of accidents or injuries involving bicyclists, Longaker said. The fine for uncontested bicycle violations is $12.50 for running stop signs and riding on the sidewalk. A $1 fee to cover court costs is added to the fine, bringing the ticket to $17. Bicycles younger than 18 years old and bicyclists involved in accidents must go to court if they receive a ticket "My original purpose was to protest what I thought was wrong," said the professor, Arthur Thomas. said the problem. "I don't intend to pursue it any further," said Thomas. "I made my stand." Mariano Fiallo, president of Nicaragua's Supreme Election Council, will be the Rose Morgan Professor of political science in the In the letter, Thomas requested that his name be removed from the Latin American Area faculty and from any future publicity. THOMAS, ARTHUR YOUNG Distinguished Professor of business, compared Failios' appointment to "having appointed a member of a Nazi puppet government to have visited painting the late Hitler." Sept. 12 letter to Charles Stansler, director of the Center for Latin American Studies. teach at the center. The professor who had voiced opposition to the appointment said yesterday that his feelings had not changed but that he didn't "want to stir the waters any further." He said yesterday that he and Stansister had a cordial meeting last week but that he stood by his objections to the appointment objections to the appearance of "He was very nice and very kind, but we did end up still disagreeing." Thomas said. Current or prospective faculty members should be judged only on their academic credentials, the University Senate Executive Committee said yesterday in response to objections to the appointment of a Nicaraguan government official to teach at the University of Kansas. Center for Latin American Studies next semester "WHAT I SEE here is a sort of difference of perceptions as to the degree of awfulness of the government involved," he said. academic affairs, last week said that she would not revoke Fiallo's appointment as a visiting professor. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, also defended the appointment. Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for SenEx members decided at a regular meeting Thursday to issue a statement, said Arno Knapper, SenEx chairman. "We are concerned by the widely publicized objection by a faculty member to the appointment of Dr. Mariano Fiallo as a visiting professorship at the University of Kansas," the SenEx statement said. SenEx responds to Fiallos protest "WE REAFFIRM THE principles of academic freedom, the absence of which would destroy the intellectual environment of any university. There is only one way that the faculty is capable of judging current or prospective faculty members; on the basis of their academic credentials Their political views, religious beliefs, or the physiological characteristics are simply irrelevant," it said. 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