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Crime Log ― Dec. 17 – Jan. 23

A picture of a Campus Safety car.
Photo courtesy of Courtesy of Creative Commons

PETTY THEFT ― GROVE MODULARS

Reported Jan. 17, 10:33 p.m., occurred between 3:30 and 8 p.m.

A student reported a camera as possibly stolen after leaving it in a Grove classroom. Officers made contact with the professor teaching the student’s class and discovered the professor had found the camera, which he returned to the student.

HIT AND RUN ― ROSECRANS AVE.

Reported Jan. 21, 10:51 p.m.

A resident of the La Mirada apartments heard a hard crash coming from outside the building and looked out the window to see a car driving away. Campus Safety assisted the resident in making a report to the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, which is continuing the investigation.

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About the Contributor
Christian Leonard
Christian Leonard, Editor-in-Chief
Christian Leonard is a junior journalism major whose affinity for chickens is really getting out of hand. He can often be found singing in the office, wrapped around a book, or arguing for the classification of cereal as a soup. [email protected] I came to Biola a nervous freshman, not really sure what I wanted to do during my time at university. Years of prayer and waiting seemed fruitless, until an academic counselor recommended I contact the Chimes, since I had shown a modest interest in journalism. I figured it was worth a shot, so I got in touch with the news editors. After a brief chat, I left, figuring I would write for them the following semester. I was assigned my first story a few days later. The following semester, I became a news apprentice, stepping into a full editorship my sophomore year. Through the experience, I gained a greater appreciation for the bustling community that is Biola—its students, its administration, and its culture—and a deeper desire to serve it through storytelling. As my time as news editor drew to a close, I was encouraged to apply for the editor-in-chief position, a prospect which both intimidated and thrilled me. Yet I ultimately saw it as a way to better support the publication through which God showed me His desire for my life. Now, as I oversee the Chimes, I am committed to upholding myself and the newspaper to standard of excellence, and to helping train the next generation of student journalists.
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