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POLICE REPORT Each numbered symbol on the map represents a single crime that corresponds with the numbered descriptions in the list below it. DAY CRIMES / □ Violent crimes ■ ^ NIGHT CRIMES (6 a.m.-6 p.m.) | Q Nonviolent crimes 9 / (6p.m.-6a.m.) □ © CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS I A-HA- LA" U4I A /, gl WwvE^t: _j l‘>,‘ ELMWOOD ST I CALHOUN ST. \ / V VV-Yv 4 *■■■ .. Hi .1.1/ \ || RICHLAND ST. Ml bJWt. \B B\ i V - '•••.. I BLANDINGST. \ 2 TATLORST (/> „ So TAYLOR ST. HAMPTON k 1| I | 1 o | \ WASHINGTON ST. | r GERVAISST. 1 * ! I I COLLEGE S| ” i|l®,. y.\T%r./ */ Wednesday, Aug. 22 O INCORRIGIBLE CHILD, 1322 HIBISCUS ST. Complainant, Mary Lue Porterfield, said suspect, a minor, is out of control, continuously lying and staying out all night. Suspect filed a false carjacking report with this jurisdiction. Complainant wishes to file a petition with family court. Reporting Officer: J.C. Forsythe. Tuesday, Aug. 21 O DISORDERLY CONDUCT, 900 ASSEMBLY ST. Officer was dispatched when a call was received about a person sleeping outside on the grass. Anthony Morrison was found to have a strong alcohol odor on his person and was placed under arrest. Reporting Officer: M.P. Moore. Q GRAND LARCENY OF MOTOR VEHICLE, 1811 WAVERLY ST. Complainant, Jack Fletcher, said he saw the unlisted suspect park the listed vehicle, a U-Haul, at the listed location and flee the scene on foot. Reporting officer circulated the area and located the subject who admitted to Monday, Aug. 20 H TRESPASS AFTER NOTICE, DISTURBING SCHOOLS, USC LAW SCHOOL Students complained that Franklin Joseph Alexander was harassing students at the Law School, even after given a trespassing warning. Alexander was arrested, then began to act obnoxiously. Reporting Officer: J.R. Merrill and R.C. Osborne. □ STALKING, 700 GREENLAWN DRIVE, APT. 2105 (OFF MAP) Complainant Joann S. Kruger said unlisted suspect continued to make unwanted contact with her at incident location. Complainant said she’s afraid for her safety and wishes to obtain a restraining order. Reporting Officer: J.C. Forsythe, o INDECENT EXPOSURE, 7333 GARNER’S FERRY ROAD (HAMPTON INN) (OFF MAP) Complainant Lora B. Seward said she observed unlisted suspect masturbating in the comer by room 115. Reporting Officer: J.C. Forsythe. Sunday, Aug. 19 O TRESPASSING AFTER NOTICE, BATES HOUSE Residents complained that Joe i James Allen was charging students for use of his hand truck as students moved into the dorm. Reporting Officer: J.L. Taylor, Jr. 0 THEFT FROM A COIN OPERATED DEVICE, 1705 COLLEGE ST. USC Parking reported a parking meter missing. It was found in bushes near B.A. Building by reporting officer. An unknown amount of money was stolen after the meter was dug up and the head broken off. Reporting Officer: Leonard Forte. @ AUTO BREAK-IN, LARCENY OF MONEY, 1320 HEYWARD ST. An unknown person(s) smashed the driver’s side windows out of vehicles belonging to David Morre and Tim Glowienka. A wallet containing a driver’s license, a Visa card and $50 cash was stolen out Moore’s vehicle. A wallet containing a driver’s liscence, insurance card and a Visa card was stolen out of. Glowienka’s. Reporting Officer: J.B. Coaxum. Join Student Media, Third Floor, Russell House GARNET” & BLACK Interest Meeting Thursday, Aug. 23 Russell House 205 For more info, call 777-1149 Grant to fund after-school programs BY MARY HARTNEY THE GAMECOCK USC's College of Education has received a grant of nearly $1 million to fund an ini tiative for after-school programs and com munity schools. The donation, totaling $993,125, is the sec ond-largest private foundation grant in the university's history. The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation donated the money, which the College of Education will use to help pri mary and secondary schools nationwide create after-school programs. The program, which will be named the Resource Network for After-school and Community Education, will strengthen the after-school and community partnerships initiative Congress launched in 1997 by giv ing $40 million to community learning cen ters. One of the first grants went to Columbi a's Hand Middle School, where USC Presi dent John Palms announced the grant on Monday. Dr. Terry Peterson will direct the re source network at USC during its five-year tenure. He will work with state and feder al agencies to develop partnerships between schools and their communities. Peterson will also become an educational foundation senior fellow with USC. Peterson was a top adviser to former U.S. Secretary of Educa tion Dick Riley and was his education ad viser during Riley's term as governor of South Carolina. Palms said the grant will set the College of Education apart as an international leader in the movement to establish safe af ter-school programs. I “This initiative and the leadership of Ter ry Peferson will put USC's College of Edu cation at the forefront of the after-school and community school movement and bol ster the university's capacity to improve public education strategies for South Car olina,” Palms said. Les Sternberg, the dean of the College of Education, agreed with Palms. “Hopefully, [the program] will establish the school as the center of the community's overall function,” he said. He said if school-age children don't have after-school programs, they tend to get into trouble “It's very, very important in terms of what it will mean... to kids in our schools and in after-school programs,” Sternberg said. Peterson expressed similar sentiments. “More than 8 million children come home from school and do not have adult su pervision,” he said. “And this is a critical time of day when most kids get into trou ble. We want to ensure that these kids have a place where they are safe and where they can go for academic enrichment and to do their homework.” The after-school centers are often called “homework centers” and were established after the 1998 South Carolina school reform law giving aid to academically struggling students. The resource network has a satellite of fice at the College of Charleston. -1 lani difranco I with special guest bitch and animal I thursday, October 18 1 I township auditorium I I Columbia,sc I I v huDBto irnoDuciuNs revelling Q reckoning n AND AC ENTERTAINMENT J\ available now on righteous babe records Don’t miss your chance to receive a FREE $5 Gift Certificate! Each Saturday from now until September 3, the first 500 shoppers to stop by the mall customer service center will receive a $5 Columbia Mall gift certificate. Add that to your refund check and the valuable coupons they will be handing out and your refund will go into overdrive! "Visit customer service lower level, near Dillard’s or our website for details. -- Columbia Mall Dillard’s, JCPenney, Rich’s, Sears and over 100 stores and restau rants including a Food Court and Kid’s Play Area Two Notch Road at Parklane Rd, near 1-20 • 788-4676 Shop Monday - Saturday 10am-9pm • Sunday Noon-6pm Visit our website: www.Shopcolumbia-mall.com CBL & ASSOCIATES PROPERTIES, INC., NYSE: CBL ■ taking the vehicle. Subject was detained for questioning and released to his mother. This incident is not gang-related. Reporting Officer: B. Carter. B LYNCHING, 3303 ROSEWOOD DRIVE (OFF MAP) Victim Vanderbilt Singleton reported that two males asked him to step outside his residence. After stepping outside, the unlisted subjects struck the victim about his body with their feet and fists. Subject #2 presented a pocketknife and threatened to do further bodily harm to the victim. The subjects fled in an unknown direction. Victim was transported to Richland Memorial Hospital. Reporting Officer: K Scott. El STRONG-ARMED ROBBERY, 1800 GREENE ST.Victims said they were walking west when the unlisted suspects walked up behind them. The suspects told the victims to give up their purses. The suspects took the purses and fled in an unknown direction. Total value: $177. Reporting Officer: M. Spires.