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POLICE REPORT These reports are taken directly from the USC Police Department Compiled by Adam Beam. 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 □ Violent © Nonviolent I Monday, Nov. 3 <$> AUTO BREAK-IN, LARCENY OF KARAOKE MACHINE, GATEWAY ACADEMY, 1600 BLOCK OF WHEAT STREET. The victim said someone took a karaoke machine and four CDs. The victim said her boyfriend admitted to taking the items. Estimated value: $225. Reporting officer: S. Alexander. ® ILLEGAL USE OF PHONE, HARASSING, EAST QUAD, 1400 BLOSSOM ST. The victim said he received several harassing phone calls form his ex-friend. Reporting officer: D.W. Friels Tuesday, Nov. 4 ® SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY, BATES HOUSE, 1423 WHALEY ST. The complainant said Henry Best tried to enter Bates House. Best was denied, but asked a student who agreed to sign him in. The student rode with Best on the elevator, but they got off on different floors and the student lost contact with Best. Best was described as “sketchy” looking by Housing staff. Best asked a female Housing staff member, “I know you all have had a problem with sexual assaults lately; is this still a coed dorm?” Housing staff then said Best picked up his identification and left the building. Reporting officers J. A. Clarke and J.M. Simmons then tracked down the student, who told them that Best claimed to be an alumnus, “class of ’81,” and “just wanted to look around.” The student claimed to have never seen Best before. ® LARCENY OF TELEVISION, MCMASTER COLLEGE, 1106 PICKENS ST. The complainant said someone broke a chain that was connected to a black cart holding a television and VCR and then walked out of the building. A .witness said that on Monday at 2:30 p.m. she saw the subject pushing a black cart with a television and VCR on it down the hall. Total estimated value: $980. Reporting officer: J.M. Simmons, d) SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY, RUSSELL HOUSE BOOKSTORE, 1400 GREENE ST. The manager witnessed two people acting suspicious who tried to take merchandise out of the store. The manager notified USCPD, and several units responded within two to three minutes. The units were unable to locate the subjects. The manager said the two subjects left the store and were seen leaving with two other people in a white car, possibly a four-door Pontiac. Reporting officer: J.A. Clarke. (D LARCENY OF TEXTBOOKS, RUSSELL HOUSE, 1400 GREENE ST. The victim said someone took his blue and black backpack, which contained four books. Estimated value: $300. Reporting officer: J.M. Simmons. O INDECENT EXPOSURE, INTERSECTION OF BULL AND BLOSSOM STREETS. The victim said she saw someone expose himself to her. The victim then saw the subject travel westbound on Blossom Street. Reporting officer: G. Kerwin. (s) AUTO BREAK-IN, LARCENY OF TEXTBOOKS, BATES LOT, 1423 WHALEY ST. The victim said someone broke out the driver’s side rear-door window of his truck and that three textbooks were taken. Estimated value: $283. Reporting officer: G. Kerwin. ® PETIT LARCENY OF BICYCLE, STROM THURMOND WELLNESS AND FITNESS CENTER, 1020 BLOSSOM ST. Someone cut the lock from a streetlight pole, taking one burgundy Schwinn World Tourist bicycle. Bolt cutters were left at the scene. Reporting officer: S. Alexander. Wednesday, Nov. 5 ■* © MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, ROOST PARKING LOT, 103 S. MARION ST. The victim said someone slashed the tire on her car. Estimated value: $65. Reporting m • ■ officer: G. Kerwin. @ PETIT LARCENY, SLOAN COLLEGE, 911 PICKENS ST. The victim said someone took his red, black and gray Timberland book bag, which contained a calculator and books. Estimated value: $155. Reporting officer: D.W.'Friels. * @ PETIT LARCENY, RUSSELL HOUSE, 1400 GREENE ST. The victim said someone took his cell phone. Estimated value: $150. Reporting officer: D.W. Friels. @ MALICIOUS INJURY TO PERSONAL PROPERTY, L LOT (OFF MAP) The victim said someone damaged the license plate on his car by bending it out, of shape. Reporting officer: Calvin Gallman. ® AUTO BREAK-IN, PETIT LARCENY, 1600 WHEAT ST. The victim said her driver’s-side ^ frontwindow was broken out '2 and that several items were . " taken. Estimated value: $117. Reporting officer: E.A. Adkins. @ LARCENY OF CELL PHONE, GAMBRELL HALL, 817 HENDERSON ST. The victim said someone took his cell phone. Estimated value: $50. Reporting officer: J.L. Meador. Former POW Jessica Lynch raped while held captive in Iraq^ l. BY ALLISON BARKER P’ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PALESTINE, W.VA. — Former prisoner of war Jessica Lynch was raped by her Iraqi captors, a new authorized biography of the Army supply clerk says. The 20-year-old private, who was hailed as a hero after her cap ture and rescue, has no memory of the sexual assault, but medical ft v records cited in the book.— “I Am a Soldier, Too: The Jessica Lynch Story” — indicate it occurred. “Even just the thinking about that, that’s too painful,” Lynch told Diane Sawyer in an ABC “Primetime” interview set to air Tuesday, the day the book is to be released. The book covers Lynch’s ordeal between March 23, when her 507th Maintenance Company convoy was attacked, and her rescue April 1 by U.S. commandos. “The book does cover the sub ject” of rape, family spokesman Stephen Goodwin told The Associated Press. “It’s a very dif ficult subject.” Goodwin said Lynch and her family would let the book speak for itself. “It’s important to tell the story and let it be known, but she’s not going to talk about it anymore,” he said. The 207-page book was written by former New York Times re porter Rick Bragg. In the book, excerpts of which appeared in the New York Daily News on Thursday, Bragg writes that Lynch “lost three hours” af ter her convoy was attacked in Nasiriyah after making a wrong turn. “She lost them in the snapping bones, in the crash of the Humvee, in the torment her enemies in flicted on her after she was pulled from it,” he writes. “The records _ do not tell whether her captors as saulted her almost lifeless, broken body after she was lifted from the wreckage, or if they assaulted her and'then broke her bones into splinters until she was almost dead.” In the ABC interview, Lynch corrected early reports that she fired her rifle to fend off her at tackers.. She said her weapon jammed and she was unable to fire' a single round. She also said she. was not slapped while being treat-,, ed in the hospital. Mohammed al-Rehaief, the at Iraqi lawyer credited with helping to save Lynch, has said he went to the U.S. Marines after seeing her being slapped in the hospital. EdVenture CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 fire safety with a real, 24-foot fire engine, in which they can pretenc to drive, listen to 911 calls and ^ dress up like firefighters. To teach ■* about the five most common fire starting incidents, the museuir features a fire-safety theater where parents and children have to crawl out and meet at a light post just outside the theater door. Cothran said South Carolina has consistently been in the top 10 for child deaths in fires. Furthermore, the Body Works exhibit was de veloped to combat growing child hood obesity and diabetes by teaching children how to eat right and stay healthy, Cothran said. Most of the exhibits and all of the outreach programs, including nine field-trip programs, are based on South Carolina educational cur riculum and help prepare students for the Palmetto Achievement Challenge Test each spring. “South Carolina has some is sues with education in general, and we’re hoping to address some of those with our museum,” Cothran said. The museum tries to live by its slogan: “At EdVenture, every body’s a kid.” USC students are encouraged to get involved by attending Saturday’s ribbon-cutting cere mony or volunteering to work the floor, at the library or at the Educational Leadership Center. For more information, caill Julia Kennard at 779-3100. Comments on this story?E-mail gamecockudesk@hotmail.com I For the USC vs. Clemson Game November 22,2003 "'N ^ZJ ^» § Students may have their Id cards scanned to enter the lottery on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, (November 10,11,121 from 0:00am-4:00pm in noom 205 in the nussell House. This will be during student distribution for the Florida Game. /* £ A list will be posted of the students who will be eligible for a Mi ticket by 9:00am in the Russell House on November 17th. Students f ■ -■ can pick up their tickets on November 17,18, and 19. _ L/ W V* •* ^ ~ 7 ' Mi