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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. | □ Violent crimes ■ 1 DAY CRIMES < —-— > NIGHT CRIMES (6 a.m.-6 p.m.) i O Nonviolent crimes » ) (6p.m.-6a.m.) □ © CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS | /i-L4j.crJ ! | , I" - \ t 11 i( It j M.!"]"j'"l i I 11 A y// ^ 1 ! 5 —ITt"Hi 1 :-H I / 4vV/ • - ^S Jelmwood .I v Jp Iv";IcalhounST.| ! I I | J ' \ ! /I \„.LZx.JrLA. \ \ y.| j ill# N \ | ^ RICHLAND ST. RICHLAND ST. . \|5I||\ }.j.!.i. 3 LAURtLST.1.1.].L_J.X.J X 5 - BUNDING ST. 1 ill —t-ryf X \H TA\LORST. * 1 . min TAYLOR ST. \ -4tn «, * > * “TT ■ Si .Ills! 1 limit) | : - ur)VST V > « <« w4.|».i.r| . fJ-H ^ GERVA.SST. | | “• r4 hhhhh: r4 _ * ! > 2 SENATE ST. 1 g V t±4i X 5 PENDUETONMTsi....j ! I S 8 s = |co I-< i — T /^Vil I I nr4 COLLEGE St. * H 2 I ^ i • Igrebme st./ ' :/ W-VyS I §1 DEVINE ST. b4*>^S*4^:''vjAJQ,Nr | g| BLOSSOM ST. o’ r [ ' ■ t*""" ” wHfiATdrr./ Jnl V ffrrffi i jZff' A1 (11 Ir^SQ: •, f - \~r+j£~ \ |\ Lj'lfcATAWBAST. \ \ I A* /VB^t-trt^ - ^(sjTLEYSijlfk#># / t j/T { L. nr4-JV^ v- ! ■ Heyward sT> i I £ /*./ % /•-, Jr i >n '/Vi ^ d» i | \W / ^ A*JL / ' V 0^1$ - >—L— < v\; , \ v- ^ A. H-l I * « kh ^ ^ /\r // .'/\ \ ,)5s?“\l.v^v'TTii I"" l~*¥**<L Wednesday, Nov. 21 O MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, 1321 WHALEY ST. The victim said someone entered his apartment and disturbed some objects. A computer case was broken and some information on his computer was changed. Estimated value: $20. Reporting officer: D. Hare Sunday, Nov. 25 © LARCENY OF CREDIT CARD, 902 BARNWELL ST. The victim said someone removed a MBNA Mastercard and a Wachovia check card from her Capstone room. Estimated value: $2. Reporting officer: D. Hare. Tuesday, Nov. 27 © MALICIOUS INJURY TO REAL PROPERTY, 1400 WHEAT ST. The complainant said someone broke out two windows of the Booker T. Washington auditorium. Estimated damage: $50. Reporting officers: N. Dehaai and J.D. Rosier. © AUTO BREAK-IN, 1300 BLOSSOM ST. The victim said someone broke out the passenger front window of her 1990 gray Honda Accord. A Sony CD player was missing. Estimated value: $200. Reporting officer: D. Hare. ® LARCENY OF TEXTBOOK, 1520 DEVINE ST. The victims said someone took two chemistry books, a French book, a marine science book and a CD player from their Patterson Hall room. Estimated value: $422. Reporting officer: D. Hare. ©AUTO BREAK-IN, 1423 WHALEY ST. The victim said someone broke the rear driver’s window of his 1989 blue Honda Civic and took his chemistry III textbook. Estimated value: $70. Reporting officer: D. Hare. O MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, 1423 WHALEY ST. The victim said someone broke the driver’s side window of her 1996 coral Honda Civic. The victim also said the suspect put a scratch on her left front fender. Estimated damage: $500. Reporting officer: J.D. Patterson. © ACCIDENTAL DAMAGE, 600 BULL ST. The victim said that while entering the Bull Street garage, the gate closed on the hood of his 1997 Chevrolet. Reporting officer: J.R. Merrill, o ILLEGAL USE OF TELEPHONE, 1400 GREENE ST. The victim said he has received three telephone calls and believes these calls are being made for the purpose of harassment. The victim was given a log to keep track of the calls. Reporting officer: J.R. Merrill. Wednesday, Nov. 28 © HARASSMENT, 514 SOUTH MAIN ST. The complainant said Teresa Pierce has been making unwanted phone calls and sending unwanted e-mails to him at his job. The complainant asked this to be stopped several times. Reporting officer: J.L. Taylor Jr. CATCH THESE STORIES ON THE NET: WWW.DAILYGAMECOCK.COM ♦ State, nation, and world briefs ♦ UVA honor committee under pressure to complete plagiarism trials ♦ University of Illinois graduate students stage strike over union restrictions ♦ Study indicates women more vulnerable to brain damage from Ecstasy Basketball Schedule difficult over next 2 weeks CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 is generated and energized by the students,” Odom said. “We are facing a pro-like sched ule over a two-week period,” Odom said, referring to games against East Tennessee State, Wofford, Col orado State, Providence, George town and Clemson. “That’s treach erous. It’s a good thing four of the matches are at home. We still have three left” Odom feels it’s imperative that students help out the team while they can before Christmas break. “We basically have a three-week time period between Thanksgiving and exams where there’s a window of opportunity to create excitement for the team before the student’s go home,” Odom said. Georgetown is ranked in the top 25, and Odom pleaded to get the game with the Hoyas on ESPN. Odom feels a big crowd is important. “ESPN is not going to come back here with a half-full arena,” he said. Odom’s first USC squad is 3-2, and the next few weeks could de fine his first season as a Gamecock. But he hopes he will find the strong fan support that helped convince him to take the job. “I think the love for the Gamecock is as strong as the love for winning itself, and we have to take advantage of that,” Odom said. “And I can’t think of a better time for our students to turn out for our basketball team." Comments on this story?E-mail gamecocksports(aihotmail.com. AIDS Day Students can get tested forfree today CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 PALSS Director of Develop ment Pat Patterson has been working with Brown, Columbia elected officials and statewide of ficials in the governor’s office to declare World AIDS Day in South Carolina. Patterson said AIDS has af fected him through his friends who have the disease. “Once you see how the disease has affected someone’s life, then you realize how hard it is to live in a world where there is still such a stigma attached to the dis ease,” he said. Patterson thinks it’s important for people to par ticipate in World AIDS Day. Jeff Crews, president of USC’s Bisexual, Gay and Les bian Alliance, thinks the World AIDS Day message should be spread. “Historically, the gay, les bian, bisexual community has been deeply affected by the virus. However, it certainly ef fects all populations and all com munities. We feel it is important to build awareness of treatment of HIV and AIDS and to advo cate the rights of those who do have HIV and/or AIDS,” Crews said. The Office of Sexual Health and Violence Prevention will of fer free AIDS testing for stu dents in the Russell House today from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. It will use the Orasure HIV test, which uses mucus from the mouth in stead of drawn blood. Comments on this story?E-mail gamecockudesk@kotmail.com. Afghanistan Suspected al-Qaida recruiter arrested CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 interrogators included Americans, said Cairo lawyer Montasser el-Za yat, who defends Islamic militant suspects. U.S. officials say Abdel Rahman is an al-Qaida recruiter. Stufflebeem said he had seen no U.S. intelligence reports to substantiate the capture of Abdel Rahman. In addition, a U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said U.S. intelligence had received credible reports that a Taliban intelligence chief had defected to the Northern Alliance “but we have not been able to cor roborate those reports yet.” Pentagon spokeswoman Vic toria Clarke refused to comment on captured figures, but said there have been defections among important Taliban figures, “an other sign that the Taliban con tinues to be degraded.” “There have been defections... of some of the more senior peo ple,” Clarke said Thursday, de clining to name them or say how many there were. niguuguuug uiecummuniguaii ger of lawlessness and possible reprisals from the Taliban, the Pen tagon has sent two units of about two dozen soldiers each to help guard U.S. military personnel help ing to repair airfields in Mazar-e Sharif and north of Kabul in Bagram, military officials said Wednesday. The soldiers are from the 10th Mountain Division, which has about 1,000 soldiers providing security at an air base the Ameri cans are using in Uzbekistan. Near the southern city of Kan dahar, more Marines and equip ment have been ferried in to bring their strength to slightly more than 1,000, Clarke said in a Thursday briefing. The Marines are the only sub stantial U.S. ground force in Afghanistan, though the Penta gon hasn’t ruled out eventually putting more Army troops there. For now, the Pentagon is content to seek information from local Afghans on the enemy’s where abouts and to bomb the caves, tunnels and other facilities in which they might be hiding. "COLUMBIA MALL PHfiEN |XCINEMA8" ^Theatres www.phoenixtheatres.com Two Notch & Parklane at Columbia Mall • First Run Films • Well Lit Parking • Large Auditoriums • Credit Cards at Box Office • Digital & Stereo & Surround Sound • Computerized Advance Ticketing For Nov. 30th Through Dec. 6th Shallow Hal (PG) Monsters, Inc. 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