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POLICE REPORT 1 I These reports are taken directly from the USC Police Department Compiled by Alexis Stratton. Each number on the map stands for a crime corresponding with numbered descriptions in the list below. DAY CRIMES (6a.m.-6p.m.) □ Violent O Nonviolent NIGHT CRIMES (6 p.m.-6a.m.) ■ Violent • Nonviolent CRIMES AT UNKNOWN HOURS ES Violent © Nonviolent Thursday, Oct. 2 ® AUTO BREAK-IN, PETIT LARCENY, DIRT PARKING LOT, PICKENS AND WHEAT STREETS. The victim said someone broke the rear driver’s-side vent • window and removed several items, including a gray JanSport book bag with four textbooks and a calculator. Total estimated value: $455. Reporting officer: Clinton. <® MALCIOUS INJURY TO REAL ^ PROPERTY, MCBRYDE, 618 SUMTER ST. The complainant said that between 10:30 p.m. Thursday and 1:00 p.m. Friday someone damaged his doorknob. Estimated damage: $50. Reporting officer: T. Brewster. o SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY, USC BAND HALL, 511 MAIN ST. The victim said someone left an obscene written message on the front windshield of his vehicle. Reporting officer: D.W. Friels. Friday, Oct. 3 ©LARCENY OF WALLET, PANDINI’S, RUSSELL HOUSE, 1400 GREENE ST. The victim said that while sitting at Pandini’s, someone removed her purse from her chair. Among the items in her purse were a wallet, a key chain, checkbooks, two credit cards, dorm keys and a birth certificate. Total estimated value: $70. Reporting officer: J.L. Meador. Saturday, Oct. 4 5 MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, KAPPA ALPHA LOT, 521 LINCOLN ST. The victim said someone broke his front windshield. There was also damage on the frame. Total estimated damage: $350. Reporting officer: J.L. Meador. © TRESPASS AFTER NOTICE, LAW SCHOOL, 1112 GREENE ST. Reporting officer J.L. Meador saw Kenneth Grinstead sleeping outside of the east law school doors. Grinstead was - ' trespass notice of USC property on Sept. 27 by officer Pardue. Grinstead was arrested for trespassing after notice. Q AUTO BREAK-IN, LARCENY OF CELL PHONE, STROM THURMOND WELLNESS AND FITNESS CENTER PARKING LOT, 1020 BLOSSOM ST. The victim said someone entered her unsecured vehicle and removed her black leather purse, silver Sprint cell phone and $40. Total estimated value: $210. Reporting officer: T. Means. Sunday, Oct. 5 O LYNCHING, 600 SUMTER ST. The victim said that while on the 600 block of Sumter Street, four to five white males assaulted him by striking him on the head several times. The same males then took the victim’s left shoe and threw it. At that time, the victim notified USCPD for assistance. Upon the arrival of reporting officer E. A. Adkins, the victim told Adkins that his shoe was taken and tossed. Adkins observed that the crowd that was on scene was now just a small group of people who were helping the victim find his shoe. Adkins asked the victim what had occurred, and the victim said that some “frat” guys took his shoe and tossed it. While on the scene, Adkins asked several bystanders if they saw who tossed the shoe. None of the bystanders knew. Adkins and the victim did not locate the shoe. The victim declined a report at the scene. The victim then reported to USCPD headquarters to file a report about the lynching. The victim completed a statement. Adkins did not observe any injuries on the victim. The victim described the subjects as white males, 18 to 21 years of age. The victim thinks he was assaulted because he was wearing a necklace with a Clemson University tiger paw. 0 MALICIOUS INJURY TO REAL PROPERTY, SNOWDEN AND DOUGLAS, 614 MAIN ST. The complainant said someone used a rock to break out the glass of the door between Snowden and Douglas residence halls on the west side of the building. Estimated damage: $200. Reporting officer: D.W. Friels. 0 MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, GREEK VILLAGE LOT, 514 LINCOLN ST. The victim said someone broke the passenger’s-side front window of her vehicle with an unknown object. The object caused damage to the door frame as well. Estimated damage: $200. Reporting officer: J.L. Meador. Monday, Oct. 6 # MALICIOUS INJURY TO REAL PROPERTY, ALUMNI HOUSE, 1731 COLLEGE ST. The complainant said someone threw a water bottle through a window on the south side of the Alumni House. Estimated damage: $100. Reporting officer: G. Kerwin. <§> MALICIOUS INJURY TO REAL PROPERTY, MCMASTER COLLEGE, ROOM 116,1615 SENATE ST. The complainant said someone damaged the door of Room 116. The screws holding a metal bracket were stripped out. Estimated damage: $10. Reporting officer: G. Kerwin. Tuesday, Oct. 7 0 ILLEGAL USE OF TELEPHONE, WUSC, RUSSELL HOUSE, THIRD FLOOR, 1400 GREENE ST. Two victims received repeated phone calls of an obscene and sometimes threatening nature. Both victims provided reporting officer J. A. Clarke with written statements. * BRIEFLY - 4 Librarian elected for another term USC Librarian David C. McQuillan has been elected to his fourth two-year term as chairman of the Geography and Map Libraries Section of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA). McQuillan, a map librarian at USC’s Thomas Cooper Library, has been a member of the IFLA for 12 years. During that time, he has served three times as chair of the Geography and Map section. His term will run until 2005. National council taps USC director Ana Lopez-De Fede, director of the Division for Health and Family Studies at USC’s Institute for Families in Society, has been named to the Advisory Council for the Elimination of Tuberculosis. The council reports to the National Coaltion for Elimination of Tuberculosis (NCET). Lopez-De Fede was a consul tant for NCET on a project titled “TB in America: Disparities in the Southeast.” She is working on a study with Muriel Harris, a researcher in USC’s Institute for Families in Society, on tuber culosis among African Americans in South Carolina. 3 students to study at Tokyo university Three USC undergraduates are part of the first National Science Foundation-funded un dergraduate research program in chemical engineering in Japan. The three — Melanie Timmons, a fourth-year student from Lexington — plus one stu dent from the Massachussetts Institute of Technology and one from Nortlr Carolina State University will collaborate with Japanese faculty members at the University of Osaka and Sophia University in Tokyo, as well as Kyoto University in the second and third years of the $650,000 research project. USC’s NSF proposal was put together by professors of chem ical engineering Michael Amiridis and John Van Zee. The grant will create a Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) Site in Japan and will pay for study abroad semesters for nine un dergraduates anti two graduate students in the second and third years of the grant. Researchers earn cancer-study grant USC College of Pharmacy re searchers Theresa Smith and Michael Wyatt have received a $145,000 grant from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health to study how chemopreventive agents, known to inhibit the growth of cancer, afFect the repair of DNA. The study will look at what can be done to prevent DNA _ damage from occuring. The in ability of a call’s DNA to repair itself after being damaged can lead to the development of can cer cells in the body. The USC study, one of the first of its kind in the U.S., could lead to a better under standing of how diet can pre vent cancer and also repair DNA within cells. Parents sentenced in death of 4-year-old in Pennsylvania CARLISLE, PA. (AP) - The par ents of a 4-year-old boy who starved to death were sentenced Tuesday to five to 10 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter, aggravated as sault and endangering the wel fare of a child. Anthony E. Thomas told the judge he “was sorry for what hap pened” to Quincy Thomas, who died at a hospital in 2002, his attorney said. “We understand why the jury concluded what they did in re gards to involuntary manslaugh ter,” but an appeal of the aggra vated assault conviction is planned, defense lawyer Karl E. Rominger said. Shenique T. Thomas’ attorney read a statement saying she “knows now she should have tak en Quincy to the doctor, and she’s sorry she didn’t.” Prosecutors say Quincy weighed just 20 pounds when he died at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, and that mattress stuffing and building in sulation was detected in his di gestive tract and beneath his fin gernails. The couple’s four other children, all girls, are in foster care. N.Y. man longs to be reunited * with pet tiger after mauling BY LARRY NEUMEISTER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK — A man who raised a tiger in his New York apartment limped out of a courthouse on a badly bitten leg Tuesday, wishing he could be reunited with his wild pet. "I’d love to see my tiger,” Antoine Yates said of the 400 pound cat, Ming, as he left state court, released without bail. "He didn’t really attack me. He got con fused and I got caught in the cross pp fire.” Yates, 31, faces a charge of reck less endangerment and two counts of possession of a wild animal. Conviction for reckless endanger ment carries a sentence of up to seven years. Judge Melissa Jackson reject ed a prosecutor’s argument that Yates should be held on $15,000 bail because he lied about his in juries to doctors and then fled to Philadelphia. Yates, a bitten arm hanging in a sling, appeared tired as he de scribed how Ming, an orange and white Siberian-Bengal mix, at tacked him last Wednesday in an , apparent attempt to get at a pet kit ten in the apartment. Animal control officers, police and Bronx Zoo workers on Saturday captured the 20-month old tiger, which had been kept in the fifth-floor apartment in Harlem since he was a 6-week-old cub. They also found a 5-foot-long al ligator. Both were tranquilized and removed to sanctuaries. Assistant District Attorney Jeremy Saland said Yates was a "man trying to create an animal sanctuary in his apartment.” He suggested that Yates had once had a pet lion. Tired of dorm life... ■ • Study Area • Tennis Courts • Lounge Area * Swimming Pools • Multi Station • State"of “tke'art Computer Lab Fitness Center • Fax & Modem Station ol“4 Bedroom linked to USC Campus Apartments 100 Riverbend Drive ^94*2948 rwt Columbia_^ www. da i lygamecock. com Ain ffp Hfffr f N.E. 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