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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. 1 {□ Violent crimes ■ I ——---;-> NIGHT CRIMES Q Nonviolent crimes # j (6 p.m.-6 a.m.) □ o CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS Sunday, Nov. 11 ® LARCENY OF CANDY, 902 BARNWELL ST. The complainant said someone broke the front glass of a Capstone vending machine. Estimated loss is pending an inventory. Reporting officer: R.A. Whitlock. ® MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, 1300 BLOSSOM ST. The victim said someone broke off the right mirror of her 2001 black Honda Accord. Estimated value: $200. Reporting officer: J. A. Clarke. O LARCENY OF FRATERNITY CHARTER AND PLAQUE, 1313 BLOSSOM ST. The complainant said someone took a fraternity charter and Horseshoe plaque from an unlocked common area in the McBryde dorm. Estimated value: $530. Reporting officer: J.A. Clarke. ® AUTO BREAK-IN, 1328 WHEAT ST. The victim said someone took the following items from his unlocked 1998 < burgundy Jeep Wrangler: a Motorola Talkabout cell phone, 35 CDs, a brown leather wallet, a MBNA Mastercard, a Wachovia debit card, a First Palmetto debit card, a South Carolina driver’s license and $3. Estimated value: $378. Reporting officer: E. Pereira. Monday, Nov. 12 (D NON-SUSPICIOUS FIRE, 614 MAIN ST. Reporting officer J.R. Merrill notified fhe Columbia Fire Department about a Douglass dumpster fire, which firefighters put out. ® MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, 700 ASSEMBLY ST. The victim said someone broke out the rear passenger-side window of her 1998 blue Ford Explorer. She said nothing seemed to be missing. Estimated damage: $200. Reporting officer: J.D. Patterson, o ACCIDENTAL DAMAGE, 600 BULL ST. The victim said the mechanical arm closed on her car when she pulled into Bull Street Garage, causing dents and scratches around the left mirror and roof. Reporting officer L.R. Morales, o LARCENY OF CHECK CARD, 1328 WHEAT ST. The victim said someone stole his Bank of America check card from his wallet in the locker room at the Blatt P.E. Center. He said he had the card canceled, but it had already been used at Structure. Reporting officer: J.D. Rosier. Manhunt is on for intended ‘20th hijacker’ BY PETE YOST AND MELISSA EDDY ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — A Yemeni man who tried but failed repeatedly to get into the United States was sup posed to be the 20th hijacker on Sept. 11, the FBI said. The man is now the focus of a worldwide man hunt. Ramzi Omar, also known as Ramsi Binalshibh, is thought to have intended to be part of the hi jacking team that commandeered United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed in southwestern Pennsylvania. He was never able to enter the country, despite three attempts by Mohamed Atta, the suspected ringleader of the 19 hijackers, to get him into the country before r~"'...... Sept. 11, FBI Director Robert Mueller said Wednesday. “We believe he was the 20th hi jacker,” he said. The FBI director said the teams that hijacked and crashed four commercial airlin ers had five members each except the United flight that crashed in a Pennsylvania field while on a flight path to Washington. Mueller’s assertion about Binalshibh marks a change from earlier suggestions by federal au thorities that a man arrested in Minnesota, Zacarias Moussaoui, might have been the 20th hijacker. Justice Department and FBI of ficials wouldn’t comment about Mueller’s remarks. A month ago, Vice President Dick Cheney said Moussaoui, who was taken into custody the month before the hijackings, might have been intended as part of the terrorist crew that commandeered Flight 93. Mueller said there was no in formation on the computer seized from Moussaoui that links him to the Sept. 11 attacks. That prompted officials to consider other suspects as the 20th hijacker, officials said. At a security conference in Germany on Wednesday, FBI offi cial Michael Rolince said: “As an investigator, I’m convinced there were supposed to be five people on this plane.... Whoever that fifth person was is probably still alive. “Clearly, we are looking into the pool of people who crossed paths with the hijackers” to find the 20th hijacke4 said Rolince, FBI section leader for interna tional terrorism. U.S. officials, speaking on con dition of anonymity, said infor mation recently obtained from Osama bin Laden operatives now in custody has helped provide a clearer picture of the hijacking plot and plans for follow-up at tacks. German authorities have is sued international arrest war rants for three suspected accom plices of the hijackers: Binalshibh; Said Bahaji, a German national; and Zakariya Essabar of Morocco. All three left Hamburg shortly be fore the Sept. 11 attacks. Attorney General John Ashcroft has said the three had extensive connections to Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi, the suspected pilots of the hijacked planes that crashed into the World Trade Center in New York City, and Ziad Jarrah, suspected of flying the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania. Advisement DARS could be in place in two years CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 and has served to identify sev eral bugs that need to be worked out in the system. “I think it would free up some of the advisement time for more high quality discussions be tween the student and the facul ty member,” Miller said. “It would provide more instanta neous accurate information so that when you sit down with your adviser you don’t sit 20 minutes looking through a cat alogue, you are able to spend 20 minutes talking about what it is that you want to do.” DARS is expected to be com bined with Visual Information Processing (VIP) in two or three years. The forums are the first in a series of events aimed at getting better publicity for student gov ernment and to show that “Student Government actually can do something.” “I think some of the things we do are not seen by the student body or they are internal correc tions,” Stauffer said. “If students complain, they need to have a voice for their complaints. We are the loudspeaker for that voice.” Student Government also plans to pressure the state leg islature next semester with everything from “a muffin with a little card in it to a full fledged lobbyist packet” to encourage legislators to not cut the uni versity’s budget or raise the higher educations price index. “I think it is time for us to take a more active role in stu dent life, listen to concerns and try to voice them,” Stauffer said. “You can go along walking around campus, walking down Greene Street and grumble all you want, but we are finally giv ing you a place to say something that will make change happen. [Students] should be there for that.” Comments on this story?E-mail gamecockudesk@hotmail.com. Win A Scooter! ) Fa// Sa/e } Haw/a Prepress! Ray-Ban Revo Anarchy Costa Maui Jim & More 'No puchase required See store for full details Drawing held 12/20/01_I " . . -.1 ' I • Free Shuttle to Campus • 24 Flour Fitness Center w/ Free Weights • Resort Style Pool w/Hot Tub • Free Tanning Bed • 24 Flour Multimedia Center • 24 Flour Game Room w/Pool Table • Basketball and Sand Volleyball ' M. .-*»• ._‘_*• «■***•■:***'• **••* fc -M&. fuss n . .■ I- J--•’ u ■1 11 ■“ "x | ( BRAND NEW APARTMENT HOMES J 1 H • Washer find Dryer in Every Apartment ( • Private Bedrooms with Individual lock & key • 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance • 2 & 4 Bedrooms • Furnished Apartments with Individual Leases STERLING lYERSITY I . 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