By Keith J. Allen Arizona Daily Wildcat May 1, 1997 Police BeatA male student reported Monday that a female student urinated on his bedding in a sleeping porch at Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, 1801 E. First St.The student told university police that the bedding, on a rack in a corner of the sleeping porch, was urinated on between 1 and 3 p.m. The bedding included a feather bed, comforter, queen size pillows and carpeting on the floor. Police reports stated that the urination caused damage to the bedding. The student told police he confronted a female student and she admitted to urinating on the bedding. The male student told police he wanted to press charges unless the female student was willing to clean the bedding. Police reports stated that the male student showed police the bedding, and police saw no stains and did not smell an odor. However, reports stated police did not get closer than 3 feet from the bedding. Police attempted to telephone the female student Monday and left a message on her answering machine. The feather bed was valued at about $50, the comforter at about $50, the queen size pillows at about $30 and the carpeting on the floor at about $10.
A female student reported receiving a harassing e-mail message on her personal computer Monday at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house, 1775 E. First St. The student told university police that she logged onto her e-mail account and found a message stating "all girls in her sorority were bisexual" and "sex is the only cure for virgins." Police reports stated the message was from an individual whose e-mail handle was "pussyhunter." The student confirmed that a personal ad was placed on her behalf on the Internet server "hotmail.com" at 11:15 p.m., police reports stated. Reports stated that the ad was not placed by the student. The student received a reply to her personal ad about 11:20 p.m., police reports stated. Reports stated that the student sent a message to "pussyhunter" stating that she felt that the ad was harassing and to stop before the incident was reported to police. The student received another message from "pussyhunter" with an offensive sexual reference, police reports stated. The student contacted "hotmail" to request that the personal ad be removed and to attempt to find the identity of "pussyhunter." The student told police she would change her e-mail address. The student told police she thought "pussyhunter" obtained her address through a homepage, which she created for her sorority.
A male student reported a credit card and a $5 bill stolen Monday from his room at the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house, 1402 N. Vine Ave. The student told police a black man was walking around inside the fraternity house about 2:20 p.m. He said he confronted the man and asked him what he was doing in the house. The man said he was waiting for a friend to study with, police reports stated. When the student asked the man for his friend's name, the man said a name of someone not living in the fraternity, police reports stated. The man then left the house. The student told police he went back to his room where he noticed a Discover card and a $5 bill missing. The student said he canceled his Discover card. The student described the man as about 6 feet 3 inches tall and about 170 pounds. The man is about 20 years old with brown eyes and black, clean-cut, closely cropped hair. The man was wearing a red, white and blue Tommy Hilfiger shirt and blue jeans, police reports stated.
A male student reported a bag of fertilizer stolen Monday from the back of a UA pickup truck parked in the 1300 block of East South Campus Drive. The student told university police he parked the truck about 1:45 p.m. When he returned to the truck at 2:20 p.m., the 50-pound bag of fertilizer was gone. The fertilizer was valued at $14.
A male employee reported the front windshield of his car was shattered Tuesday while it was parked behind the American Indian Studies Program's Office of Community Development, 1621 E. Seventh St. The employee told police he parked his 1972 BMW Friday about 4 a.m. When he returned to his car Tuesday at 7:45 p.m., he found the front window of the car had been shattered in a "spider web fashion." Police were unable to determine how the damage was caused. The value of the damage was unknown.
Police Beat is compiled from official University of Arizona Police Department reports.
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