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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 2002)
Ir&uid/'tO' be/ ctvx/A wierCGCLW? Stand Up and Serve Volunteer Opportunity Fair MSC Flagroom September 9 & 10 10am - 3pm Come meet community agencies and student service organizations! Volunteer Services Center - Student Activities - 845-1133 ☆ ^3* large 1 $ topping 7 After 9pm — “"l ■ 99 ■ ■ 49 i From Campus: Take Texas ave south to Southwest parkway We are in the Kroger shopping center next to subway. 2418 E Texas Ave. Texas A&M University SB large 1 toppings * 2 for *1 1 §§ 3 for 5 1 6 §2 4 for s 21§2 Hours: Mon-Tues 11 am-1am Wed-Sat 11am-2am closed on Sunday W w George Bush I I I I.. Large 2 topping 2 liter drink and cheese stix or cinnamon stix SH 99 12 V'' Moltewpan Of. Welfborrvf*d Southwest Pkwy 693-2825 carry-out special Large 1 $y^ Topping ^+ 99 '~ as *cf! P j 2 3S> Pickup only No Experience Necessary Attend an orientation clinic Clinics take place at 7:00 p.m. in room 281. Flag Football: TONIGHT CoRec Softball: September 16 Volleyball: September 30 Making money has never been more fun! jJCEC recsjMrts. te/m/. edi/ 6A Tuesday, September 10, 2002 nati 1 he battai NYPD names on wall unveiled at ceremon] 4 4 NEW YORK (AP) — The names of the 23 New York Police Department officers who lost their lives at the World Trade Center were unveiled on a memorial wall during a ceremony Monday. To the sound of bagpipes play ing “Amazing Grace.” the names were unveiled at Battery Park City on the huge granite wall as Gov. George Pataki, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and families and friends of the deceased officers looked on. Two NYPD officers who died in 2000 in the line of duty also were added to the wall. The officers killed "will never be simply a list of names. ITiey will be remembered as officers who performed heroically on the — darkest day that our city has ever seen.” said Bloomberg. The wall ‘‘will help keep their memo ry alive.” Pataki said that the officers’ families were "still missing them so much, getting used to lire reality without them. The cerem Banner,” sun* lire New 'i They will be remembered us officers who per- formed heroically ort the darkest day our * city has ever seen — Michael Bloom hero called up to tfu emony to recci The World separated from the memorial. >n> opened with the "StarSpis b> a uniformed police office ork C ity Police Memorial Wi or\ every officer who has 4 the line of duty in tfvc depan-j history. Thirty-seven Authority of New York aa; Jersey police officers alv Sept. 11. in 2(H)I, the S'! PI) officers killed in the ^ duty were tire 23 who lost lives at the World Trade (j nut w.is more lives lostthr Other year in the NYPD’shst Hie police depr retired tlx* officers’ badges bers. which were cmhL. beside tfK*ir names, l anule, .* (XKiium oik by one dunnga vc replicas of iIk hadgev. I radc Center victims' names i ihe i>tfKr 580 fallen offtetnia Residents prepare whili Gustav nears N.C. coas SPORTS CAPE HATTERAS, N.C. (AP) — High w-aves pounded the beaches Monday as Subtropical Storm Gustav head ed toward the North Carolina coast, and authorities warned coastal residents to prepare for possible flooding. “This will be no worse than a bad nor’easter for residents along the coast. But they need to be aware that it’s coming and prepare for it,” said Tom Ditt. a spokesman for the state Division of Emergency Management in Raleigh. Because the summer holi day season is over, Ditt said, officials were less concerned about preparing evacuation routes than they were about warning residents to tie down lawn furniture. A tropical storm warning was in effect from Cape Fear. N.C., northward to Currituck Beach, N.C., the National Hurricane Center said. High surf and dangerous rip currents were likely Monday all along the Eastern Seaboard from New Jersey to the central Florida coast, said forecaster Richard Pasch. Gustav had sustained wind of 45 mph. and it was expected to strengthen w ithm the next 24 hours. Pasch said. Waves rose 8 to 10 feet high off the coast near Cape Hatteras. "The water is very' churned up and huge waves are rolling in from off shore.” said Keith Matthews, an employee of the Avon Fishing Pier. “I patched up part of a roof that was blow n off this morning, and secured all the furniture. We hope it just blows on through.” Unlike the more common tropical storms, which are formed by warm air. subtropi cal storms have a combination of warm air in the lower half of the weather system and cold air on top. said hurricane specialist Stacy Stewart. Subtropical storms arc not common, with typically only one or two forming every year. Stewart said. Subtropical s\or Gustav Position 32.1 N. 74.4W Sustained winds 45 mpr Movement WNW lOmpf Troptcatf stcxrn wa£T •■■■■• Trotxcaf storm warre PENN ; 80 Attorney thrown off case, accused of client-sex in jail SEATTLE (AP) — Defense attorney Theresa Olson, a fiery advocate who sometimes cries openly when she loses a case, was visiting a mur der-defendant client behind bars when jail guards looking through a window reported see ing them having sex. Olson was thrown off the case by the judee The episode could delay an already lone- postponed murder trial. It has also thrown a spotlight on conduct that only recently was offi cially recognized by the American Bar Association as an ethical breach The alleged affair has derailed Olson’s other wise distinguished career and frustrated those who want to see Sebastian Burns and Atif Rafay stand trial in the 1994 clubbing deaths of Rafay s family. The trial was delayed for nearly ^ ^ fnU * hl w . h Y ha !, an amazin *' Ski. pathetic case," said Lis W.ehl. a University of Washington law professor How long „ takes Burns' new lawyers to get un to speed on the case will determine whether , is delayed beyond its April 28 trial date. lie state bar association is investieatino jail commander’s report about the alLed^lal nince in a jail interview room Aug. 10 and son could face a range of punishments ill the way up to disbarment. ‘ments all the Washington state has had an exnlieif . against lawyer-client affairs for two years The state Supreme Court added the n.i^ • r ‘, lrs ' case of Lowell Halverson a fo™„, u gh ' 01 the Whose license was susoended bar President code of ethics for state courts a rule exprc"'.' hibiting lawyers from striking up affairs \oin clients. The rule took effect in February. Ihe ABA said it has no national statist' how many lawyers have been disciplined 7- ing sex with their clients. Such trysts typically involve male knoer- female clients who are going through a cli'° r “ not a 26-year-old. male triple-murder def® 5 and his married. 43-year-old counsel. You don’t think about this and think, this poor vulnerable guy who got sucked int^ relationship,” said Boston University La^ ethics professor Nancy Moore, who lobbi^ ABA to adopt the rule. “But it still creates a'■ fiict of interest that makes the lawyer less cap of exercising independent judgment. Wiehl, the UW law professor, asked ti 11 ' example: What could happen to the client 11 relationship turned sour ? . c Olson, a 15-year veteran of Seattle sp defender s office, is considered an effects eccentric lawyer who wears ruffled petticoat homemade clothes in court. Burns had been sole client tor nearly three years. j Burns walked away silently when asked a her during a break in a recent court hea Olson s boss. Bob Boruchowitz, declined a whether she’d be fired. # •She’s not giving interviews,” her att° lodd Maybrown, said Friday. “At this point -, on vacation from the office, and she will & 1 couple more weeks.” Rafay’s mother, father and sister wete c beaten to death with a baseball bat in their I 11 eight years ago. Ut r ' 42 ^' r< Join us ^ followed by aBihi^ n ngS for a FREE Meal seized e nd m)rs First Presbyter Tan chn i’ ' sl "*'v P- ' 10 ° — 82 , 8078 r 3 • www.fpebryt