The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 10, 2001, Page 2, Image 2
POLICE REPORT
I
i Each numbered symbol on the map represents a single crime that
corresponds with the numbered descriptions in the list below it.
DAY CRIMES f □ Violent crimes ■ ^ NIGHT CRIMES
(6a.rn.-6p.rn.) Yq Nonviolent crimes 0 f (6p.m,6a.m.)
M O CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS
II. I f \ L.4 r i \ , !''' \ Ms P
Friday, Sept. 28
® LOST PROPERTY, 4 MEDICAL
PARK DRIVE. (OFF MAP) The
complainant said she lost an
Altell numeric pager. Total
estimated value: $30. Reporting
officer: J.A. Clarke.
Thursday, Oct. 4
® MALICIOUS INJURY TO
PERSONAL PROPERTY, 714
ASSEMBLY ST. Someone
damaged a construction crane at
the site of the future Strom
Thurmond P. E. Center. Total
estimated damage: $30,000.
Reporting officer: J.A. Clarke.
® LARCENY, 600 MAIN ST. The
complainant said the following
items were taken from Snowden
Residence Hall: a 2.5 lbs. General
brand fire extinguisher, a five
pound dry chemical extinguisher
and a 10-pound dry chemical
extinguisher. Total esimated
value: $95. Reporting officer: M.L.
Gooding.
Friday, Oct. 5
® LARCENY OF BOOK BAG, 1523
GREENE ST. The victim said
someone took his green Eastern
Mountain book bag from LeConte
College Room 123B. An Audiovox
cell phone was also taken. The
victim said the suspect was a
black male wearing a white T
shirt, blue shorts and a blue
and-white baseball cap. Total
estimated value: $70.
Reporting officer: L. Forte.
Sunday, Oct. 7
O ILLEGAL USE OF
TELEPHONE, 615 SUMTER ST.
The victim said someone left
a threatening message on her
answering machine. Police
gave her a log to document
the calls. The investigation
continues. Report ingofficer:
C.N. Ettenger.
Monday, Oct. 8
O AUTO BREAK-IN, 1300
BLOSSOM ST. The victim
said someone broke out the
driver's-side window of his
1997 white Chevy Cavalier. A
Pioneer radio player and 25
CDs were missing. Total
estimated value: $925.
Reporting officer: J.A.
Clark©
O LARCENY OF CELL PHONE,
611 MAIN ST. The victim said
someone took the following
items from his room
in McBryde Building F: an
Audiovox cell phone, $5 and a
Wachovia Visa check card.
Total estimated value: $46.
Reporting officer: C.N.
Ettenger.
O MALICIOUS INJURY TO
REAL PROPERTY, 1400
BLOSSOM ST Responding
officer M.R. Glass responded
to a call about a burglary in
progress. When Glass
arrived, the officer found that
the victim and the suspect
were having a domestic
dispute. The suspect damaged
the entry door to the victim's
East Quad apartment.. The
suspect was arrested and
charged with malicious
injury to real property. Total
estimated value: $300.
Reporting officer: M.R. Glass.
Q MALICIOUS INJURY TO
PERSONAL PROPERTY, 1400
GREENE ST. The complainant
said someone took the front
brass door from
a mailbox in the Russell
House Post Office. The
contents of the mailbox were
unknown, but the mailbox
was empty when it was
inspected. The responding
officer called the student
whose mailbox was damaged.
Total estimated damage: $150.
Responding officer: J. A.
Clarke.
Baptist Student Union gets approval for new site
BY CRYSTAL SMALLS
THE GAMECOCK
The Baptist Student Union’s re
quest to purchase property for a
new building was approved by the
executive board.
This is the second relocation in
BSU’s history. The group’s first
building was located on 700
Pickens St., across from the
Women’s Quad. BSU had to move
out of this building after calling it
home for several years.
BSU was forced to move out of
its old building after calling it
home for 34 years because of the
its poor condition, the same rea
son it moved out of its first build
ing.
In the beginning of 2000, BSU
temporarily moved to Wayne
Street in the parsonage of South
Side Campus Church in the
Olympia Community.
"Over the last year and a half,
it was estimated that it would be
less expensive to relocate instead
of rebuilding,” Poster said. The old
site is now in the process of being
sold, and profits from the sale
should help renovate the future
building.
On Sept. 10, it was decided that
BSU will move into a new build
ing at 819 South Main St., between
Sandy’s and South Carolina
Bookstore. This building, former
ly known as the Crowson-Stone
Printing Company, also needs ren
ovations. The South Carolina
Baptist Convention donated
$725,000 to cover costs, and BSU
also received donations from
alumni.
Rev. Jane Poster, who has been
BSU’s advisor for the past 30
years, is excited about the open
ing of the new building. “We will
be remodeling over the next two
years,” Poster said. “Our new lo
cation will change how we do min
istry. We can reach pockets of stu
dents that we haven’t been able to
reach previously."
Stephanie Veal, a senior and a
-1
member of BSU for four years,
said, “The new building will en
able BSU to administer in a vari
ety of ways. It gives students a
place to gather.”
BSU’s relocation is happening
at the same time other buildings
on campus are scheduled to.
emerge.
The new Norman J. Arnold
School of Public Health Complex
will be located in the same area,
along with the Strom Thurmond
Fitness and Wellness Center and
the new arena.
All four sites are expected to be
♦ BSU, SEE PAGE 3
Anthrax
unlikely
in S.C.
BY KIM BACA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBIA — There is no
threat of anthrax to South
Carolinians and there’s no
need to stock pile antibiotics or
gas masks, state Department
Health and Environmental
Control officials said Tuesday.
“Getting enough anthrax
spores in quantity and dissem
inating widely enough to make
people sick, there has to be just
the right conditions,” said Dr.
Jerry Gibson, DHEC’s director
of Bureau of Disease Control.
The agency has received
several calls from residents
concerned about anthrax since
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
“We’re in constant contact
with CDC, getting constant
health alerts, updates on
what’s going on in Florida,”
said DHEC Director Earl
Hunter. “As soon as they know
more about the cause was
there, we’ll be in a better posi
tion to look out if there is any
thing similar going on here.”
Should an outbreak occur,
the South Carolina Emergency
Preparedness Division has a
terrorist-response plan that
lays out lines of responsibility
among state agencies to limit
confusion in an attack.
Gibson’s advice is for South
Carolinians to be alert and watch
for severe flu-like symptoms.
Anthrax can be contracted
from soil or farm animals, par
ticularly sheep and goats. But
because there aren’t large of
populations of these animals in
South Carolina, contraction of
anthrax is rare, Gibson said.
Symptoms depend on how
the disease was contracted.
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MEDIC AL UNIVERSITY
of south Carolina
STUDY BEING CONDUCTED IN DOWNTOWN COLUMBIA
Trinity
Episcopal
Cathedral
Atom /row Stair lima
Sunday Worship
7:13, !l & 11:30 a.in.—Cathedral
11:30 a.m.& <i:00p.m.—
Keenan (’.ha|wl
Weekday Eucharist in
Keenan Chapel
771-7300
www.lrinityepiscopalcathedral org
Dutch Fork Christian Church
Wednesday Sunday Worship Rev. Jeff Stapleton
Supper 6:00 Sunday School 90 N‘*r,h R“H W
Cost: $3.00 9:00 am Irmo, SC
Casual Bible Study Contemporary Worship 781-2211
7:00 pm 10:15 am www.dutchfork.com
9:00 8 11:15am - Worship Services i
10:00am - Lifeline Contemporary Service 1
10:00 & 11:15am - Sunday School \
[3407 Devine St } ^ 256-8383 1~~ | www Shandon umc org|
Adult Bihlc ('!»« <»:>Uiim » Hoi) Communion 111:30am VU-mlnr F^rUtT^Tthcrai^Turch MUwmrTswm^
St. Thomas More Catholic Center
Rev. Tim Lijcwski Mass Schedule Sacrament of Penance
Chaplin Saturday 4:30 pm Saturday 3:00 pm-400 pm
Sunday 11 am, 7:30 pm or by appointment
Sr. Julienne Gu tr OSU
Director of Chrifjian formation Ncwr.'an Club Tuesday 7:00 pm 1
1610 Greene St. 799-5870 (Across from School of Nursing)