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Tuesday, December 7, aoio | The Red & Black
CRIME NOTEBOOK
Student kicks water
fountain, arrested
A University student
was arrested Saturday
after he “kick[ed] a water
fountain off the wall” in
Morris Hall, according to
a University Police report.
Andrew Lankford, 18,
was arrested and charged
with underage possession
of alcohol and criminal
trespass at 3:46 a.m. after
police responded to a fire
alarm.
Upon arrival, a com
plainant told police he
had seen Lankford kick a
first-floor water fountain,
according to the report.
Lankford later told
police he kicked it
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closing
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before the
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dess
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tance
20 Infuriated
22 Street with
out an exit
24 Scoundrel
25 Smelly
26 Nerd
29 Derek and
Diddley
30 Left-hand
side ledger
entry
34 Armed
conflicts
35 E-mail
laugh
36 Trouble
maker
37 “Much _
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ened yams
40 about; <
be on the
go without
much pur
pose
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porter
43 Charged
atom
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unsettled
45 Weirdo
46 Wildebeest
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water
48 Make
unclear
50 Naughty
51 Lowered in
value
54 Slender
plant part
58 Above
59 Consumers
61 Frilly trim
ming
62 Refer to
63 Motherless
calf
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Police Documents
because he was “upset
because he had lost his
cell phone and wallet,”
according to the report.
Lankford also told
police he had a “medium
sized whiskey drink” earli
er that evening.
He was placed under
arrest and transported to
Clarke County Jail.
Student arrested after
urinating in front of
officer
A University student
was arrested after mistak
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wildly
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7 Final bill
8 Piano piec
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clock
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title
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today
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poet
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over
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ing a bush for the bath
room early Sunday morn
ing.
Mitchell Moon was
arrested and charged with
underage possession of
alcohol on Sunday at 1:58
a.m. After witnessing
Moon urinating in the
bushes, the officer report
edly noticed a strong odor
of alcohol coming from his
breath.
A check of Moon’s
license showed he was
under the age of 21. He
was then placed under
arrest and transported to
Clarke County Jail.
Compiled by
Jacob Demmitt and
Adina Solomon
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NEWS
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AJ REYNOLDS | The Red a Buck
▲ The new Special Collections Library will house rare manuscripts and
moving image archives. The library is expected to open in fall 2011.
Library to enhance interaction
By JULIA CARPENTER
The Rf.d & Buck
Bill Potter said he believes researching
with the University libraries’ special col
lections should be an interactive student
experience.
And with construction of the new
Special Collections Library slated for
completion next fall, he said he hopes to
give University students the opportunity
to work closely with these materials.
As associate provost for operation of
the University libraries, Potter has await
ed the opening of the new library since
construction began in January.
“These are really fantastic collections,
and we don’t really have the space to let
students use them, and the new building
will give us that space,” he said. “Of
course, they need to be preserved, but
more importantly, they need to be used.”
The new building will house three spe
cial collections libraries: the Hargrett
Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the
Richard B. Russell Library for Political
Research and Studies and the Walter J.
Brown Media Archives and Peabody
Awards Collections.
In the past, these rare manuscripts
and print and moving image archives
were housed in the Main Library in
cramped and subpar conditions, but the
new building will provide better storage
facilities for the fragile materials.
“Our current storage isn’t that opti
mum for preserving film and video, so the
new storage is going to be a real boon to
us,” said Ruta Abolins, director of the
Walter J. Brown Media Archives and
Peabody Awards Collection. “The new
storage will be temperature and humidity
controlled.”
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53 Greek let
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54 Threesome
55 Marathon
56 Religious
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57 Pari of the
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60 Sense of
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