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! | Warehouse Sale MAR 25 - MAR 27 Monday-Wednesday 10 AM-9 PM Fashions from the pages of the J.Crew Catalog up to 70% off!! Carolina Coliseum 701 Assembly St. Columbia, SC 29201 i Directions: t 1-126: Enter on Elmwood Ave. Turn Right on Assembly St. Go approximately 14 traffic lights. Coliseum is on the comer of Assembly and Blossom Streets. From 1-77: Take Exit #6 Shop Rd. Shop Rd. becomes George Rogers Blvd., then Assembly St. Coliseum will be the comer of Assembly and Blossom Streets. (We accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, J.Crew Credit Cards, Cash and Check (xoith proper ID) Includes Irregulars, Damaged & Customer Returns I POLICE REPORT Each number on the map stands for a crime corresponding with numbered descriptions in the list below. DAY CRIMES (6a.m.-6 p.m.) □ Violent O Nonviolent NIGHT CRIMES (6 p.m.-6a.m.) ■ Violent # Nonviolent CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS El Violent © Nonviolent Tuesday, March 19 O AUTO BREAK-IN, 1705 COLLEGE ST. The victim said someone took her black Pioneer CD player with remote from her green 1995 Mustang. The victim also said the passenger window was partly open, but the doors were locked. Estimated value: $300. Reporting officer: J.D. Patterson. Q LARCENY OF VIDEO GAME SYSTEM, 500 SUMTER ST. The victim said someone took a Microsoft Xbox with controllers and a video game and a Sega Dreamcast with controllers. There were no signs of forced entry. Estimated value: $550. Reporting officer: J.R. Merrill. Wednesday, March 20 © ILLEGAL USE OF TELEPHONE, 918 BARNWELL ST. The victim said an unknown female caller left a threatening message on her answering machine. The caller threatened to physically hurt the victim if she didn’t stop bothering the caller’s friend. Reporting officer: J.B. Coaxum. © AUTO BREAK-IN, 1328 WHEAT ST. The victim said someone broke her rear passenger-side window and tried to take her car stereo. Reporting officer: J. A. Clarke. © MALICIOUS INJURY TO REAL PROPERTY, 1700 PENDLETON ST. The complainant said someone knocked down and ran over a parking sign at USC Parking Services. Estimated value: $200. Reporting officer: J.B. Coaxum. © LARCENY OF BICYCLE, 500 ASSEMBLY ST. The victim said someone took her Schwinn bicycle from the School of Music. Estimated value: $250. Reporting officer: J. Taylor, Jr. o AUTO BREAK-IN, 1300 BLOSSOM ST. The victim said someone broke the front passenger-side window of his , blue 1995 Ford Bronco. Missing were two subwoofers and a car stereo, a woofer box, two amps, a radar detector and 72 CDs. Estimated value: $2,230. Reporting officer: J.A. Clarke. Thursday, March 21 O INFORMATION, 1400 GREENE ST. The complainant said a male in dark clothes tried to get into the Russell House, but the door was locked. The male ran when he saw the complainant. Reporting officer: R.A. Whitlock. Hijackers, anthrax might be linked BY NANCY BENAC THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON - The gov ernment is investigating a re port from medical authorities that one of the Sept. 11 hijack ers was treated three months before the terror attacks for a lesion that could have been caused by exposure to anthrax, U.S. officials said Saturday. The information is con-< tained in a memorandum pre pared by experts at the Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies who stud ied a Florida doctor’s treatment of hijacker Ahmed Ibrahim A. A1 Haznawi, the officials said. The memo concluded that an thrax was the most likely diag nosis for the man, said Tim Parsons, a spokesman for Johns Hopkins University’s school of public health. naznawi, a pussiuie Saudi national, was one of the hijackers on United Airlines flight 93, which crashed in rur al Pennsylvania. Exposure to anthrax by one of the hijackers would raise the possibility they had handled# anthrax and could have had a role in the bioterror attacks last fall that killed five people. The four anthrax-tainted let ters that have been recovered, each dated “09-11-01,” were postmarked Sept. 18 and Oct. 9. The New York Times re ported Saturday that A1 Haznawi was treated for a le sion on his leg in June by Dr. Christos Tsonas, who cleaned the sore and prescribed an an tibiotic. The man said he de veloped the sore after bumping into a suitcase. After the Sept. 11 and bioterror attacks, Tsonas concluded that A1 Haznawi’s lesion was consis-^ tent with exposure to anthrax, the Times said. 41