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Interview: Sally LaPointe shows her softer side Reviews: BCBG Max Azria and Richard Chai {page 27} NEW YORK FASHION WEEK NEW YORK September 9-11, 2011 www.metro.us WEEKEND We remember #1 FREE DAILY NEWSPAPER IN NEW YORK CITY THOMAS E. FRANKLIN/THE RECORD (BERGEN CO. NJ)/GETTY IMAGES {pages 08-14} Inside: Memorial poster honoring 9/11 victims

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Interview:

Sally LaPointe shows her softer side

Reviews:

BCBG Max Azria and Richard Chai {page 27}

NEW YORK FASHION WEEK

NEW YORKSeptember 9-11, 2011www.metro.us

WEEKEND

We remember

#1 FREE DAILY NEWSPAPER IN NEW YORK CITY

THOMAS E. FRANKLIN/THE RECORD (BERGEN CO. NJ)/GETTY IMAGES

{pages 08-14}

Inside: Memorial poster honoring 9/11 victims

www.metro.us02

1new york WEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

WWW.METRO.US/MIXTAPE

THE EMERGENCE

OF A ROCK RECLUSE

WWW.METRO.US/THEWORD

TERESA GIUDICES

VOW RENEWAL

WWW.METRO.US/ORANGE

EXTRA GUM GOES

ALL WILLY WONKA

ONLINETODAY

NYCs #1 FREE DAILY

METROLIVE BLOGS

FROMGROUND

ZERO:

WWW.METRO.US

/911

Metro will be

providing continuous

Sept. 11 coverage all

weekend long and

live blogging from

the World Trade

Center on Sunday

for the 10-year

memorial service.

Gone, not forgotten:NYPD honors fallen

Officers family members givenspecial medallions Children of9/11 mourn parents lost Zadrogafamily: Theres still work to be doneThis Thursday, the NewYork Police Departmenthonored the officers killedon Sept. 11, 2001 with asomber ceremony at Lin-coln Center.

After brief remarks,Mayor Michael Bloombergand Police CommissionerRaymond Kelly handed me-morial medallions to fami-ly members of those offi-cers who have passed away.

After each name wasread, it was met with a pro-found applause.

Joel Perry, who lost hisbrother, Police Officer JohnPerry, in the attacks, tookhis daughter on stage to ac-cept the medallion.

I never met him, saidAutumn Perry, 12, of heruncle. But I know he was

a great man, a hero.It was hard growing up

without her, said PatriciaSmith, 12, who lost hermother, Officer MoiraSmith, nearly 10 years ago.

Twenty-three officerswere killed on Sept. 11, butthe 50 police officers whodied of illnesses contractedafter working at GroundZero were also honored.

Jim Ryan accepted themedallion on behalf of hisbrother, Sergeant MichaelW. Ryan, who died in 2007.

Its great that werehonoring them, buttheyre not out of ourthoughts or our memo -ries, he said.

Clock is ticking

Even though its been ten

years since 9/11, first re-

sponders are still fighting

for health care coverage

for illnesses they say they

contracted at Ground Zero.

I was shocked they didntinclude the cancers, saidJoseph Zadroga, father ofJames Zadroga, the firstemergency responder todie of illnesses related toGround Zero exposure, andfor whom the Zadroga Actwas named. Cancer is notcovered under the ZadrogaAct. Zadroga stands atright, with his wife, Linda,and sons daughter, TaylorAnn Zadroga.Theyre making them waityears for help, but theyrenot going to live that long.

Casey Ryan, 11, honored her father, Sergeant Michael W. Ryan, who died in 2007 after

working at Ground Zero. I miss him, she said. But we can never be separated.

Politician demands probeover arrest of fellow polNEW YORK. Harlem Council-man Robert Jackson, co-chair of the City CouncilsBlack, Latino and AsianCaucus, said Thursday hewill ask for a formal inves-tigation into the NYPDsactions when Brooklyn

Councilman JumaaneWilliams was arrested atthe West Indian Day pa-rade. Williams called thearrest racial profiling, butMayor Michael Bloombergchalked it up to a misun-derstanding. METRO/AB

Tales of arape trialNEW YORK. PatrickKirkland, a juror in the tri-al of two NYPD officers ac-cused of rape, said he metwith accused rapistKenneth Moreno after ac-quitting him. The juror isnow telling all in a new

piece available forpurchase on Gothamist,called Confessions of aRape Cop Juror.

The 70-page e-bookdescribes private jury con-versations, including specu-lation that any sex mighthave been consensual.Moreno whispered thankyou, writes Kirkland in thetell-all. METRO/AB

Williams

EMILY ANNE EPSTEIN/METRO

I liked being upthere to representher. I felt proud.PATRICIA SMITH, OF HER MOTHER,OFFICER MOIRA SMITH

As you know, ourlosses did not endon 9/11.RAY KELLY,NYPD COMMISSIONER

If he were heretoday, I would tellhim that I love him.CASEY RYAN, OF HER FATHER,SERGEANT MICHAEL W. RYAN

EMILY ANNE [email protected]

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04 new york www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011NYCs #1 FREE DAILY

Its MetroChallengeweekend!

After more than a month of dailytraining, Saturday is the big day

Grueling uphill race Metroswinners run for those killed on 9/11

The Metro Challenge trio will begin the seven-mile run up Camelback Mountain in the

Poconos, followed by an obstacle course, including a rope wall. Members of the armed forces,

plus members of the FDNY and NYPD, will also compete.

This Saturday at 11:30a.m., three MetroChallenge winners willparticipate in the first-everCivilian Military Combine,a race and obstacle courseto honor the victims of theSept. 11 attacks. For thepast month, ourchallengers have beenmeeting at 7 a.m. everyday to train for the race atCrossFit gym in theFlatiron District. Metroasked our three winnershow theyre feeling theday before the race, esti-mated to take two hoursto complete. METRO

Ready to rumble

Esther Carpenter Esther raised money forthe NY Firefighters Burn

Center Foundation:

What a wonderful oppor-tunity this has turned outto be! A month ago I wouldnever have felt confidentenough to complete thisrace. But (training) hasstrengthened me bothphysically and mentally.

Sean Smith Sean is running for hiscousin, who died on 9/11:

I hope Im prepared for therace. I know that what Iprobably will endure dur-ing the race tomorrow isnowhere near the pain andsuffering that my familyand friends I lost 10 yearsago went through duringtheir final moments.

Robert Hawthorn Rob is running in memoryof his friend, Chris Woden-

shek, a Cantor Fitzgerald

employee who died on

9/11. He raised money for

the Semper Fi Fund:

Knowing how to properlycondition myself for thisrace gives me that much-needed confidence for Sat-urday.

www.nyuci.org U [email protected]

Know Your Options, Know Your Risksfor Gynecologic Cancers

Presented by NYU Cancer Institute, an NCI-designated Cancer Center

Leslie R. Boyd, MDAssistant Professor

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Stephanie V. Blank, MDAssistant Professor

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Moderator, John Curtin, MD

Professor

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Bhavana Pothuri, MDAssistant Professor

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Thursday, September 15, 20116:00 PM to 7:30 PM

550 First Avenue (at 31st Street)Alumni Hall A

RSVP requested. Please visit www.nyuci.org/rsvp

or call 212-263-2266. Please provide your name,

phone number, the name of the lecture and number of people attending.

In recognition of Gynecologic Cancer Awareness Month, this program will shed light on women-centric cancers such as cervical, endometrial and ovarian. Our panel of experts will create a forum for a comprehensive discussion, examining the role of risk factors, prevention strategies, diagnosis and treatment options for these particular cancers affecting women across the globe. Lifestyle decisions, hereditary risks and updates in targeted therapies will all be discussed, in addition to exploring exciting new research studies just on the horizon.

CityMD Contact Info

CityMD... your health is important AND so is your time

WWW.CITYMD.NETCOME IN FOR A FIRST AID KIT!

05news www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

Funding provided by grants from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

DONT ASSUME IT WAS LEFT BY ACCIDENT. IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING. TELL A COP OR AN MTA EMPLOYEE OR CALL 1-888-NYC-SAFE.

NYCs #1 FREE DAILY

President Barack Obamasaid on Thursday the Unit-ed States faces a nationalcrisis and pressed Con-gress to urgently pass ajobs package of tax cutsand government spendinghe is proposing to revivethe stalled economy.

The cost of Obama'splan would be $447 billion,a Senate Democratic aidetold Reuters.

With his poll numbersat new lows amid voterfrustration with 9.1 per-cent unemployment, Oba-ma was poised to use ahigh-stakes address to Con-gress to pitch a sweepingeconomic plan that is criti-cal to his re-electionchances but he faces an up-

hill fight with Republicans.It will provide a jolt to

an economy that hasstalled and give companiesconfidence that if they in-

vest and hire there will becustomers for their prod-ucts and services. Youshould pass this jobs planright away, Obama said ina televised speech.

Taking aim at Republi-cans who have consistentlyopposed his initiatives,Obama said it was time tostop the political circusand actually do somethingto help the economy.

Obama, who pushedthrough an $800 billioneconomic stimulus packagein 2009, said his AmericanJobs Act would cut taxes forworkers and businesses andput more constructionworkers and teachers onthe job through infrastruc-ture projects. REUTERS

Obama hopes American Jobs Act will be OKd by endof the year Says its time to end the political circus

JOE RAEDLE/GETTY IMAGES

Zagat bought by Google

Business. Google

While much of Zagats content is free and available

to anyone, some content remains behind a paywall and

it was unclear if Google would remove it.

Jobs plan includestax cuts, spending

100 millionactiveusers onTwitterSAN FRANCISCO. Only abouthalf of Twitters 200million-plus registeredmembers log on daily, butthe microblogging websiteis chalking up growth of40 percent every quarterin mobile device usage,Chief Executive Dick Cos-tolo said on Thursday.

Twitter, one of a coterieof Internet social network-ing services like Facebookand Google Inc.sembryonic Google+, isgearing up for a hotly an-ticipated initial public of-fering. But Costolo told re-porters they would do soonly on their own terms.

We want to be able toremain independent, growthe business the way wewant to and not be behold-en to public markets untilwe feel like we want tobe, Costolo said atTwitters offices. REUTERS

Its a majorleadership momentfor Obama. Hesrunning out ofmonths beforevoters settle in onwhether hispresidency hasfailed.TERRY MADONNA, POLITICALSCIENTIST AT FRANKLIN ANDMARSHALL COLLEGE

Quoted

Google Inc. has bought Zagat, the popular dining

recommendations and ratings authority. Zagat,

which polls consumers and compiles reviews about

restaurants around the world, will be a cornerstone

of Googles local offering in tandem with its

mapping services and core search engine. REUTERS

06 news www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011NYCs #1 FREE DAILY

6,000 euros thats theprice disgraced fashion de-signer John Galliano willhave to pay for anti-semitic slurs uttered at theLa Perle bar in Paris.

The court decided toimpose on him a penaltyof a suspended fine, so thefine will not actually haveto be paid, his lawyer, Au-relien Hamelle, said onThursday. The former cre-ative director for the Diorfashion house will, howev-er, have to pay a symbolicone-euro fine to each ofthe victims who have beeninsulted and to each of thefive local associations thattook civil action.

An icon has been de-bunked, and it was all hisfault, reacted Yves Bed-douk, attorney of one ofthe victims. And thats thereal price for him.

Hamelle thanked thecourt at the Palais de Jus-tice. The court here tookinto account ... the fact thathe was sick at the time ofthe event of a triple addic-tion to alcohol. Now Mr.Galliano is ... looking for-ward to the future and hopethat people will, with time,understand and forgive.

Fashion icon is finedfor anti-semitic slurs

John Galliano has been convicted by a French court for statementsdisparaging Jews Analysis: Can the ex-Dior head continue his career?

PASCAL LE SEGRETAIN/GETTY IMAGES

John Galliano walks the runway for Christian Dior during

the Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2011.

Whats next?

In fashion, timing is

everything. So the irony is

lost on no one that John

Gallianos guilty verdict for

a series of racist rants was

announced on the first day

of the Spring/Summer 12

ready-to-wear shows.

This happened just daysafter Karl Lagerfeld en-dorsed Marc Jacobs as Gal-lianos replacement at Diorin an exclusive interviewwith Metro. Clearly, fashionhas moved on. But the question is, will Gal-liano do the same? Judging

by the number of sympa-thetic stories about hisdownfall, the answer is yes.He may never head anothercouture house, but the ma-jority of the fashion worldstop editors, stylists and cor-porates will forgive him.Many already have, comingto his defense with soundbites about how he isntnormally an anti-Semite (isit possible to turn that onand off?) And presumably, shopperswill pardon him too. Hiswedding dress for KateMoss, featured in AmericanVogue, was a blogospherehit. MWN/KH

AURLIE [email protected]

METRO WORLD NEWS IN PARIS

A PENTHOUSE WITH A

PURPOSE: METRO TOURED

A SOLAR HOUSE BUILT BY

CCNY STUDENTS. SEE WHY

THIS CUTTING-EDGE URBAN

DWELLING COULD WIN A

NATIONAL SOLAR

DECATHLON.

ON THE WEBSITERIGHT NOW

FBI raidsUS solarstart-upLOS ANGELES. FBI agentssearched the offices ofSolyndra, the U.S. solarstart-up that received mil-lions of dollars in federalloan guarantees beforefiling for bankruptcy thisweek.

The search Thursdaycomes amid intensifying

pressure on the Obamaadministration, whichchampioned Solyndra asbeing at the forefront ofsolar technology whenPresident Obama visitedthe firms facility in 2010.

The FBI said it wassearching for materials,including documents, butdid not offer specifics.DOE officials confirmedthe search but alsodeclined to give any addi-tional information.REUTERS

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ATES

[Sept. 11] is very compli-cated because it was theworst day in my life,worst day in the life of mycity to some extent, Iimagine, the country orpretty close to the worstday for the country. Andin some ways it was thegreatest day, the most glo-rious day because of thedisplay of bravery and for-titude and strength thatpeople showed. ... Every-one remembers wherethey were when the

attack on the twin towersand on Washington andover the skies of Pa. hap-pened. ... It is a definingevent for us; and rightnow, as we enter into thesecond decade of the 21stcentury, its the mostdefining event and itshad tremendous implica-tions for us, and its hav-ing implications for usthat we still dont quiteunderstand. RUDOLPH GIULIANI, FORMER NEWYORK CITY MAYOR

MESSAGES OFREMEMBRANCE

I think no one haslost sight of fact thisis the nal restingplace of 40 heroes,and theyll be thereforever. This is theirsacred ground. ...You never knowwhen youll becalled on to do anact of courage, butin the meantime,we can do little acts

every day. Thesepassengers gavethe last measure oftheir lives forpeople inWashington.Continually and tothis day, I will bealways moved bywhat they did andtheir sacrice.

GENE STILP, FLIGHT 93 MEMORIAL ACTIVIST

Words matter Those of ordinary Americans have filled Metros pages as we mark the10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks But at times of national crisis, it is often the words ofour leaders that matter most Here, they reflect on a decade that changed America

As we approach the 10thanniversary of the Sept.11, 2001, terroristattacks, the safety and se-curity of the Americanpublic remains our high-est priority. While threatsremain, our nation isstronger than it was on9/11, more prepared toconfront evolving threatsand more resilient thanever before. ... Homelandsecurity is a shared

responsibility, and every-one plays an importantrole in helping to keepour communities safeand secure. We remindour federal, state [and] lo-cal partners, and the pub-lic, to remain vigilant andto report any suspiciousactivity to local lawenforcementauthorities. JANET NAPOLITANO, SECRETARYOF HOMELAND SECURITY

This Sunday, as wereflect back on the past,let us remember not onlythe agony and anguish ofthe attacks but how wechanneled our pain intosomething positive andpowerful. Let us remem-ber not only the day thattime stood still but thedecade we have spent re-covering, rebuilding andrenewing. Let us remem-ber not only how thetowers fell, but how werose up determined todefend our freedoms.And let us rememberthat when we unite asAmericans, and when we

put patriotism ahead ofpartisanship, there is nochallenge that this coun-try cant meet. That that is the ultimatelesson of our past decade.And I believe theultimate way we canhonor those we lost is toapply that lesson to allthe challenges ournation faces. So that thelegacy of 9/11 will be feltnot just here in LowerManhattan but acrosseach and every one ofour 50 states for decadesand centuries to come. NEW YORK CITY MAYOR MICHAELBLOOMBERG

YOUR SITE FOR 9/11 NEWSADD YOUR OWN TRIBUTE

AND MEMORIES

911.METRO.US

FROM POLITICAL LEADERS

ALEX WIGGLESWORTH [email protected]

READ MORE ON PAGE 10

www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

08 9/11: 10 YEARS LATER

Every day, private security officers like me protect the millions of people who visit, work and live in our city.

We protect businesses, transportation hubs and just about every key site in the city.

In emergencies, we are your eyes and ears because we often are rst on the scene.

On 9/11, everythingchanged. Our workchanged too.

10 Years after 9/11,Were Working Hard to Keep YYou safe

32BJ SEIU 101 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10013 212.388.3800 www.seiu32bj.org

Terrell Hubbard.

we honor all who perished

on 9/11, including

Twenty-four members of 32BJ.

www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

10 9/11: 10 YEARS LATER

This Sept. 11,Michelle and Iwill join thecommemora-tions at Ground Zero, inShanksville and at thePentagon. But even ifyou cant be in NewYork, Pennsylvania orVirginia, everyAmerican can be part ofthis anniversary. Onceagain, 9/11 will be a Na-tional Day of Service andRemembrance. And inthe days and weeksahead, folks across thecountry in all 50 states will come together, intheir communities andneighborhoods, to hon-or the victims of 9/11and to reaffirm thestrength of our nationwith acts of service andcharity. ... Even thesmallest act of service,the simplest act of kind-ness, is a way to honorthose we lost; a way toreclaim that spirit ofunity that followed 9/11.On this 10thanniversary, we still face

great challenges as a na-tion. Were emergingfrom the worst econom-ic crisis in our lifetimes.Were taking the fight toal-Qaeda, ending thewar in Iraq and startingto bring our troopshome from Afghanistan.And were working to re-build the foundation ofour national strengthhere at home. None ofthis will be easy. And itcant be the work of gov-ernment alone. As wesaw after 9/11, thestrength of America hasalways been the charac-ter and compassion ofour people. So as wemark this solemnanniversary, letssummon that spirit oncemore. And lets showthat the sense ofcommon purpose thatwe need in Americadoesnt have to be afleeting moment. It canbe a lasting virtue notjust on one day, butevery day. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

As firefighters and emer-gency medical personnel,we deal with a crisis as ithappens. We pull peopleout of burning buildings,we administer first aid,we get their hearts beat-ing again. We deal withthe first wave of trauma.Mental health profession-als are there for thesecond wave of trauma.They are the ones whocome in and help afterweve gone home. Theyhelp with the problemsthat are not visible to thenaked eye sufferedboth by victims and firstresponders. Theseproblems might seem lesscritical, but they are actu-ally harder to deal with,and they dont disappearin a day. FDNY COMMISSIONERSALVATORE J. CASSANO, ONMHA-NYCS 9/11 HEALING ANDREMEMBRANCE PROJECT

This anniversaryoffers us an op-portunity to re-flect the valuesof the God to whom wehave given our allegiance.Let us remember thosewho were lost and memori-alize this day bycommitting our lives tothe things that make forpeace drawing closer tothose who suffer, cultivat-ing understanding in themidst of suspicion, findingtruth in the arguments ofthose with whom wedisagree, embracing somemeasure of personal sacri-fice today to make a betterworld for our children andgrandchildren tomorrow.Let us gather one decadefrom now not amidst theruins of all that has beentorn down but in themidst of that new world ofpeace and security for all,which we have built uptogether. PAX CHRISTI USA

9/11 impacted the

American Muslim

community in two

ways. The attacks were

on our country and

faith. As we grieved

for the lives of the

innocent, we had to

deal with our faith

being tarnished. It has

been a challenge for

many Muslims;

however, 9/11 did

start a national

conversation about

Islams place in

America. After 10

years, I am confident

that the conversation

has reinforced our

nations pluralism.

RUGIATU CONTEH, OUTREACHAND COMMUNICATIONSDIRECTOR, COUNCIL ONAMERICAN-ISLAMIC RELATIONS,PHILADELPHIA CHAPTER

As the Tenth An-niversary of the9/11 attacks ap-proaches, Jewishindividuals and familieswill join others in variouscommunal observancesand memorials. Thedeath and devastation ofSept. 11 impacted peopleof virtually everyreligious and ethnic back-ground, and so it iscertainly fitting that wecome together across so-cial divisions and joinone another inremembering and affirm-ing our kinship. ... On9/11, the horrible attacks

not only took thousandsof innocent lives but im-pacted millions ofpeople. One cannot, infact, begin to adequatelyquantify the fallout afterthe evil of that day psychologically, spiritual-ly, socially, economically,politically, etc. Life hascontinued there havebeen joyous moments,creative achievements,scientific advances and somuch more over thisdecade but it is notwrong to reflect on theattacks on 9/11 as a hur-ban a devastation and to reach into our pastfor tools to approach thepresent. RABBI SIMKHA Y. WEINTRAUB,LCSW, RABBINIC DIRECTOR,JEWISH BOARD OF FAMILY ANDCHILDRENS SERVICES AT THE NEWYORK JEWISH HEALING CENTER, ONAPPROACHING THE 10TH YARHZEITOF 9/11 AS JEWISH FAMILIES

FROM RELIGIOUS LEADERS

From the

president

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

AND MESSAGES ONLINE

WWW.METRO.US

Sept. the 11 was amonumentalday in ournations history.It was a significant dayand it obviously changedmy presidency. I wentfrom being a presidentthat was primarilyfocused on domesticissues to a wartime presi-dent, something I neveranticipated norsomething I ever wantedto be. I had been notifiedthat a plane hit theWorld Trade Center. Atfirst I thought it was alight aircraft and my re-action was, man, eitherthe weather was bad orsomething extraordinaryhappened to the pilot. Ithen informed some of

my staff members to pro-vide help to New YorkCity, whatever help theyneeded to take care ofthis incident and thenwalked into theclassroom. The classroomwas full of kids who werereading. And in the backof the classroom was afull press corps andstaffers and some adults

and Im intently listeningto the lesson. And I felt apresence behind me. AndAndy Cardss Massachu-setts accent was whisper-ing in my ear, A secondplane has hit the secondtower. America is underattack.FORMER U.S. PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH, AS TOLD TONATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

Ten years ago,members of al-Qaeda used fourpassengeraircraft as weapons to killnearly 3,000 people onSept. 11, 2001. The UnitedStates governmentsresponse was to answer vi-olence with violence. Inthe ensuing wars, hundreds

of thousands more peoplehave been killed. New YorkYearly Meeting of the Reli-gious Society of Friends(Quakers) urges everyoneto recognize this anniver-sary as an occasion toremember that there arealways alternatives to vio-lence and that there is aSpirit in every human be-

ing, which responds withgratitude to these alterna-tives. ... We testify to theworld that we disown allwars and fighting withoutward weapons for anycause whatsoever. Theseare never necessary. Thereare no just wars. Amongthe weapons we renounceare the tongue and the

pen, when these are usedto provoke prejudice andhatred. Neither will we besilenced by fear when weare called to witnessagainst evil masqueradingas good. We seek to build aworld in which a justpeace is possible. RELIGIOUSSOCIETY OF FRIENDS (QUAKERS),NEW YORK YEARLY MEETING

From a service leader From a former

president

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES

Come. Hear. Reect. Share. Express. Create. On the afternoon of September 11th, the Collegiate Churches of New York* will open our sanctuary doors from

12:30 3:30 to those in the city seeking a safe space to voice the feelings the day may evoke.

For a listing of the days events visit: collegiatechurch.org

*Fort Washington Collegiate Church 729 West 181st Street New York, NY 10033

*Marble Collegiate Church 1 West 29th Street New York, NY 10001

*Middle Collegiate Church 50 East 7th Street New York, NY 10003

*West End Collegiate Church 368 West End Avenue New York, NY 10024

Intersections International 274 5th Avenue New York, NY 10001

o f H O P E a n d H E A L I N G

www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

12 9/11: 10 YEARS LATER

Iawoke to a day like anyother, save for the factthat it was my birth-day. I left for work a lit-tle later than normal. Inthe car, I nonchalantlytuned the radio to the sta-tion on which I depend tonavigate my way throughthe notorious traffic ofWashington, D.C. As I ap-proached the city, thenews flash of the crash atthe first of the twin towershit the airwaves. I immedi-ately felt a sense of dreadand thought it was a ter-rorist act even while theannouncer called it a freakaccident.

Subdued and anxious, Ihurried to my military du-ty station in Washington

and arrived shortly afterthe second strike. All en-trances and exits to thebase were sealed for securi-ty purposes soon after. Myco-workers and I could seesmoke billowing in thedistance from the direc-tion of the U.S. Capitolbuilding, and we heard re-ports of another incomingplane but communica-tion lines were cloggedand we werent able tosend or receive calls.

Not long after, our com-manding officer addressedthe troops. He said that lifeas we had known it hadbeen forever changed. Our

nation would never be ableto go back to the innocenttimes we had enjoyed be-fore this day. Listening tohim was a surreal experi-ence, but facing the horrordirectly gave us a commonpurpose.

Eventually, the base wasopened and personnelwere allowed to go home.Our family trickled home,changed people with nointerest in celebratingbirthdays, only shock atthe events of the day. Seek-ing comfort that darknight, I walked outside andlooked up into the eerilystill and silent sky.

Facing the horror directlygave us a common purpose

Diana Ogilvie, a musician for the US Navy band based in Washington, DC,gives an exclusive account to Metro of the birthday she will never forget

BY DIANAOGILVIE MUSICIAN FOR THE US NAVY BAND BASED IN WASHINGTON, D.C.

9/11 was ourPearl Harbormoment weknew we hadenemiesU.S. Justice Department

employee recalls the day of

chaos and panic near the

White House on 9/11

Allen Payneworked at theJusticeDepartment in abuilding two blocksfrom the White House.We were shocked andangry when the planes

hit the WTC, he recalls.And then we realizedthat we might be next.Rumors soon swirledthat the White Houseand the StateDepartment had been at-tacked. Governmentworkers were soon toldto go home as heavilyarmed police cordonedoff the area, backed upby helicopters andarmed vehicles. It wasfrightening walking pastthe White House, seeingpeople run out and peo-ple moving everyone,says Payne.

This started his walkhome shared by tensof thousands of otherWashington workerswho had no other way ofreaching their homes. Istopped in [upscaleneighborhood] George-town, where the barswere open. They werepacked with peoplewatching the news onTV. Then, crossing overthe bridge, he saw thesmoke rising from thePentagon. 9/11 was ourPearl Harbour moment,he reflects. We knewwe had enemies andknew they could be un-conventional, but whocould have expectedthis? We used to thinkwe were insulated fromviolence.

ELISABETH BRAW

Payne

A view from the executive offices of the Department of Veterans Affairs in

Washington, D.C., shows the White House in the foreground and a cloud of s moke billowing from the Pentagon after it was

attacked on Sept. 11, 2001.

ROBERT TURTIL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Life as we hadknown it had beenforever changed.Our nation wouldnever be able to go back to theinnocent times wehad enjoyed beforethis day.

Quoted

September 10-12 and September 17-19 12:01AM Saturdays to 5AM MondaysService between Manhattan and Brooklyn suspendedTravel alternatives: In BrooklynFree shuttle buses provide alternate service. Transfers available between free shuttle buses and trains at:t Lorimer St (tMarcy Ave and Hewes St + and .t Myrtle-Wyckoff Avs .t Broadway Junction " + and -

Between Manhattan and BrooklyntTake special weekend . service between Metropolitan Av and 57 St-6 Av ' stationtOvernight, take ' or + via a transfer at Delancey-Essex St and Broadway Junction

In ManhattantTake the M14 for - stations along 14 St

We know that service changes are inconvenient, but theyre necessary to maintain a system that runs 24/7. The MTAs construction program will make your service safer, faster, better.

Weekend Service Changes

-

2011 Metropolitan Transportation Authority

9/11 MEMORIALEVENTS IN NYC THIS WEEKEND:Sept. 9: Queensborough Com-munity College honors the10th anniversary of those wholost their lives with an artshow. The college will show-case Nine Eleven Works, anart tribute. Admission is freeto the public, and it will rununtil Oct. 21. The college is lo-cated at 222-05 56th Avenuein Bayside.

Sept. 11: Vigil inRemembrance and Hope At 5:30 p.m., a student masswill be held at St. ThomasMore Church on St. JohnsUniversity campus inJamaica, Queens, in hopes ofachieving peace in the world.Then, at 6:30, a vigil will be-gin at the Great Lawn oncampus. The event is free tothe public.

Sept. 11: In recognition ofthe 10th anniversary of theSept. 11 tragedies, The NewYork Botanical Garden is of-fering a free All-GardenPass admission from 10 a.m.to 12 p.m. on Sunday only. AllNew Yorkers, particularlyBronx residents who may bein search of a way tocommemorate the anniver-sary locally, are invited to en-joy the Botanical Garden. Itsa beautiful venue that natu-rally lends itself to both quietcontemplation and familysharing.

Sept. 11: 9/11 Healing&Remembrance Memorial Service The United Community Bap-tist Church is planning a me-morial service for those wholost loved ones at 2701 Mer-maid Avenue in ConeyIsland.

Sept. 9: Trinity Church, locat-ed at Broadway and WallStreet, in conjunction with St.Pauls Chapel, at Broadway atFulton Street, presents A Dayof Choral Concerts.

The Trinity Choir, withchoirs from New York, Boston,Pennsylvania andWashington, D.C., willalternate performancesthroughout the day at bothchurches, uniting at 8:30 p.m.for a final performance at Trin-ity Church.

Sept. 9: At 6 p.m., the Ameri-can Society for MuslimAdvancement, along with theCordoba Initiative and the In-terchurch Center, will co-hostIn Good Faith: Stories ofHope and Resilience torecognize 10 years ofinterfaith work andaccomplishments by variousgroups and individuals sinceSept. 11, 2001. Imam FeisalAbdul Rauf, founder of Cordo-ba Initiative and the man who

helped create Park51, themosque and community cen-ter near Ground Zero, helpedorganize the event. It will be-gin at 6 p.m. at theInterchurch Center at 475Riverside Drive.

Sept. 10: An interfaith servicecommemorating 9/11 willtake place at Integral Yoga In-stitute, 227 West 13th Streetfrom 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Spiritualcounselors will be available tolisten to or pray with individu-als before and after the serv-ice. Admission is by donation.

Sept. 10: Poetry Reading at Trinity ChurchAmericas leading poets Marie Howe, Major Jackson,Cornelius Eady, J. ChesterJohnson and others willread poems of grief, remem-brance and reconciliationfrom 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.

Sept. 10: FDNY honors fallen heroes This year, the 343 FDNY mem-bers who gave their lives on9/11 will be honored by theirfamilies and their co-workersat St. Patricks Cathedral in

Midtown. The ceremony willofficially begin at 2 p.m. withthe arrival of the families andFDNY members.

Sept. 11: Throughout the day,Trinity Wall Street will offerprayers and reflections at St.Pauls Chapel and TrinityChurch honoring those whowere killed in the attacks onthe World Trade Center, thePentagon and aboard UnitedFlight 93. Also, at 1:30 p.m.this Sunday, the TrinityRingers will ring the towerbells in a peal attemptdesigned to last more than 3hours. From1:30 p.m. to 2:30p.m., the bells will be audiblefrom Trinitys churchyard.

Sept. 11: Legendary musicianand activist Pete Seeger willhost a concert at NYU from 2p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The concert,Love Wins, will also featureappearances and performanc-es by Such As Us, Bakithi Ku-malo, Sharon Benson, KennMoutenot, James Cannings,Dina Richardson, Laleh, Cecil-ia St King, Spook Handy,David LaMotte, Marian Logu-idice and Parrots for Peace.The concert will be held atNew York UniversityRosenthal Pavilion, KimmelCenter, 60 WashingtonSquare and tickets are $35.All proceeds will go tosupport scholarships for 9/11responders and theirchildren.

Sept. 11: Staten Island honorstheir heroesAll names of Staten Island resi-dents who died will be read atthe eighth annual 9/11 memo-rial service in Staten island. Aviolinist and a childrens choirwill perform; there will also bea dove release. The memorialservice takes place at theNorth Shore WaterfrontEsplanade adjacent to the Stat-en Island Ferry Terminal andthe Richmond County Ballparkat St. George.

GRACE SERVERA ANDCARLY BALDWIN

STATEN ISLAND

MANHATTAN

BROOKLYN

BRONX

QUEENS

New Yorkerswill rememberthis weekend

HeresMetros guideto events acrossthe city

Some of the many messagesreaders posted toMetros 9/11memorial site at911.metro.us

Troy MoslemiMy sons due date wason 9/11, and I was at acourt hearing trying toget a case continued so Icould attend the birthof my son. A fewminutes before 9am, Iwas listening to a Mia-mi DJ talk about an air-plane accident in NewYork, but I had to rushinto the courthouse tobe at the hearing ontime.

Doug ScaliseI remember visitingGround Zero for thefirst time when Imoved to NYC, a groupbroke out into the Na-tional Anthem, and itreally hit me how muchthis single eventimpacted all of us. Itwill continue to rever-berate forever and wewont forget those thatwere lost to thistragedy.

Mike Krohmaly [I] was sick that day lay-ing in bed. Mothercalled me to turn on thenews, at that momentthe second planecrashed into the tower.[I] continued to watchfor several days. Just re-member how closeeveryone became toeach other during thoseweeks and monthsafter. I live an hour westof Shanksville PA, I re-member hearing fighterjets scramble over myhouse on that night.Will be a scar forever.

Luisa Caro-TaverasI can remember thatmorning, as if it wereyesterday....and thedays that followed,how hope became de-spair & then hopeagain; when strangersbecame friendly faces& we all shared thesame pain and thesame strength. Allthose beautiful soulswatch over us now.

Jill PerkinsI remember I was onlyin 8th grade when ithappened. I grew up inthe aftermath of 9/11.What an eerie day. I re-member my dad toldme on 9/11 look at theTV screen...because bythe end of the weekthat image will bebranded in there forev-er. I can still close myeyes and picture it.

Jennifer UtterbackI remember getting outof the shower andthinking that some pi-lot had made a terriblewrong decision. I stillremember going to myoffice in Mexico andcrying as I continued towatch the coveragewith huge speculationand looking to makesome sense out of theunthinkable. My heartwent out and continuesto go out to all of thefamilies. The amazingdisplay of courage andsolidarity is the only les-son I can find in thisgreat tragedy.

Annemarie Heeran Never Forget my broth-er Charles FrancesXavier Heeran (Tower 1,Cantor Fitzgerld.)

GOD BLESS all the 9-11 Families. I lost mybrother when I was ajunior in college ... hardto believe it will be 10years! My wish is tohave one more coversa-tion with him to tellhim I love him. I wouldnever in my life thinkthis would happen tomy family. This haschanged me so much.LIVE, LAUGH & LOVE!NEVER FORGET!

Yourmemories

911.METRO.US

YOUR SITEFOR 9/11

NEWS SHARE

YOUR OWN

TRIBUTE AND

MEMORIES

www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011

14 9/11: 10 YEARS LATER

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While working forSteven Soder-bergh is an easychoice for MattDamon the two haveteamed up on the threeOceans movies, Cheand the Informant! the eclectic directorspitch for their latest col-laboration, Contagion,gave Damon pause. Hesent it over to me with anote saying, Read this andthen wash your hands,Damon remembers.

The warning was well-founded, though, as Con-tagion covers somenerve-rattling subjectmatter: A new virusquickly spreads through-out the world, quickly be-coming an epidemic,while scientists and doc-tors race to find a cureand governments work tokeep society from fallingapart. What surprisedSoderbergh the mostabout the film was howeasy it was to get made.Everyone felt there was aplace for an ultrarealistic

film about this subject.Nobody hesitated, the di-rector says. It all hap-pened very quickly un-characteristically quickly,actually, considering what

the business is right nowfor adult dramas.

Working on the moviehasnt had much impacton Damons disaster pre-paredness. Hes always

been bad about stuff likethat. After the North-ridge quake, I put theflashlight by my bed forlike two weeks, and thenforgot about it, he ad-

mits. Now that hes a par-ent, however, some of hisbehavior has certainlychanged. Im probablymore protective than Iveever been now that I havechildren, he says. Mywifes name for me is RedAlert. I sometimes justcheck to see if the kidsare breathing.

As for Soderbergh,working on Contagioncertainly has made himmuch more aware of themicroscopic dangersaround him. I dontknow if my behavior haschanged. Im just reallyaware of it now, he says.I was handed some lipbalm by one of the make-up people which I tooka Kleenex and cleaned off,but who knows if thatworked. So dont get nearmy mouth. Having gonethrough it, Im always go-ing to be conscious of itnow.

NED EHRBAR

METRO WORLD NEWS IN LOS ANGELES

Jory Emho (Anna Jacoby-Heron) and her father, Mitch Emho (Matt Damon), ee a global

outbreak of a mysterious disease in the thriller, Contagion.

Matt Damon goes

VIRALActors latest film,

Contagion, covers aglobal outbreak of amysterious illness

The director, StevenSoderbergh, sent himthe script saying:Read this and then wash your hands

Fear thegermsTaking the movieout into the worldhas producedsomesurprisinglyentertainingmoments even if theyare at the audiences ex-pense. It was fun

during the preview towatch the lights come

up and 400 people re-alize that theyre

next to a bunch ofstrangers and

that theyvetouchedeverything,Soderbergh

says, a mischievous glintin his eye. You couldtell they werent happy.

All-stardisasterDamon is only one partof the massive, big-name cast Soderberghassembled forContagion, making itsomething like abrainier descendent ofthe star-studded disas-ter films of the 1970s

like The Poseidon Ad-venture and The Tow-ering Inferno. PlayingDamons wife and Pa-tient Zero isGwyneth Paltrow, whiletheir The Talented Mr.Ripley co-star, JudeLaw, pops up as anopportunistic blogger.On the disease-fightingside, Marion Cotillardplays a World Health

Organization investiga-tor, while Kate Winsletand LaurenceFishburnes CDCofficials work stateside.For Fishburne, theappeal of the projectwas simple. I wasblown away by howsmart it was, because alot of what is beingmade now is kind ofstupid, he says.

CLAUDETTE BARIUS

The FighterPart DeuxWarriorDirector: GavinOConnorStars: Joel Edgerton,Tom HardyRating: PG-13Grade: Being billed as this

years The Fighter,

the mixed martial

arts drama Warrior

pits two estranged

brothers against

each other as they

each surge through

the ranks of a multi-

million-dollar fight-

ing championship.

Though that sounds

like an attempt at

selling cinematic bru-

tality to jacked-up

MMA fans, director

Gavin OConnor

(Miracle) spins a

emotionally intense

story that delves into

family dysfunction

and forgiveness de-

spite its predictable

arc and bloated run-

ning time.

STEVE GOW

Review

For Warrior, actors TomHardy and Joel Edgertonface off as mixed martialarts fighters and brothers trying to punch, kickand grapple their way to abetter life. But just becausethey can pass for lethalcage-fighters on screendoesnt mean either isready for a career change.Any one of you guys couldbeat me up right now,Edgerton says, sizing up thereporters and publicists inthe room.

While hes still in peakshape for his next role,Hardy agrees, explainingthat the first thing theylearned was how little theyknew. You know that wetrained because now weknow even less about fight-

ing than we did when westarted, Hardy says. Youdont go swaggering, be-cause it will come home toroost. Its normally the qui-etest guy in the room.

If leaked online footageis any indication, the quietguy taking Hardy downthese days is ChristianBale, whose Batman takeson Hardys freakishlystrong Bane in The Dark

Knight Rises, currentlyfilming though the onlything Hardy will say aboutthat project is that hecant talk about it at all.

The third of ChristopherNolans Batman films isntthe first time Bale has got-ten in Hardys way, so tospeak, as Warrior wasoriginally set to come outlast year, but an unfortu-nate coincidence led to itbeing delayed. Edgerton ex-plains: As they got closerto any kind of finishedform of the movie, thisfilm called The Fightercame out a little familydrama that centers arounda bit of fighting. Theyrecompletely differentmovies, but on a trailer oron paper, the supposition

is theyre the same thing.How big of a delay are

we talking? Hardy actuallyfilmed Warrior beforejoining Nolans Incep-tion. So while Warriorand The Dark Knight Ris-es have meant lots ofweight training and bruisesfor Hardy, hes had somerest in between. It waslike putting on a pair ofslippers and a robe and,like, rubbing myself inlavender oils, Hardy saysof the break. It was heav-en, to be honest. No onewas trying to hit me in theface. Heaven.

17films www.metro.usWEEKEND, SEPTEMBER 9-11, 2011NYCs #1 FREE DAILY

NED EHRBAR

METRO WORLD NEWS IN LOS ANGELES

Two street-fighting men

Can both of them win? Tom Hardy, left, plays the younger

brother to a mixed martial arts champ, played by

Joel Edgerton.

Joel Edgerton and Tom Hardy go toe to toe as warringbrothers in the mixed martial arts drama Warrior

CHUCK ZLOTNICK

FOR MORE METRO

MOVIE COVERAGE

WWW.METRO.US/MOVIES

You dont goswaggering,because it willcome home toroost.TOM HARDY, ON TRAINING FORWARRIOR

Quoted

Be one of the first forty (40) customers at each of the following Time Warner Cable Stores: a) 46A East 23rd Street (Manhattan); b) 2554 Broadway at 96th street (Manhattan); c) Queens Center Mall (90-15 Queens Blvd, Elmhurst, NY); or d) 2865 Richmond Avenue (Staten Island, NY) on Thursday, September 15, 2011 starting at 6:00 p.m. ET and you will receive up to two (2) tickets to the advanced screening of Dexter to be held on Monday, September 26th. Offer available to qualified Time Warner Digital Cable residential customers within the Time Warner Cable NY & NJ service area who subscribe to Showtime and are in good standing. Time Warner Cable and Showtime Networks Inc. are not responsible or liable for, and are hereby released from, any and all costs, injuries, losses or damages of any kind, including, without limitation, death and bodily injury, due in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, to the use of the tickets or attendance at the performance. Limit one (1) pair of admission tickets per Time Warner Cable residential account. Tickets are not redeemable for cash or credit. TICKETS CANNOT BE SOLD, TRANSFERRED, AUCTIONED OR TRADED FOR ANY REASON. YOU WILL BE REQUIRED TO PRESENT VALID PHOTO ID TO CLAIM YOUR TICKETS. Sign up for Showtime and get $25 cash back after three (3) months of paid service. All qualified $25 claims will be paid in the form of a $25 Visa prepaid debit card. Offer expires 12/31/11. To receive your $25 prepaid debit card, print your name and address on a 3x5 card and mail it along with your three (3) months paid service bill dated between 6/1/2011 and 3/31/2012 indicating your new Showtime subscription to: Time Warner $25 Rebate Offer, Dept. TW, P.O. Box 430796, El Paso, TX 88543-0796. Offer available to new Showtime subscribers only. Minimum of 3 months Showtime subscription required. Limit 1 Showtime offer per household in any 12-month period. This cannot be combined with any other offer. Prepaid card will be mailed to you within 8-12 weeks after the receipt of docs. Keep a copy for your files. Card can be used wherever Visa prepaid debit card is accepted. To obtain cash from your card, visit a participating Visa member bank and present your card and ID. Your response must be postmarked by 4/14/2012 and received by 4/28/2012. To receive all services, Digital TV, remote and lease of a digital set top box are required. Some services are not available to CableCARD customers. Not all equipment supports all services. All services may not be available in all areas. Subject to change without notice. Some restrictions apply. Other premium movie services available for an additional charge include HBO, Cinemax, and Starz. SHOWTIME and related marks are registered trademarks of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. DEXTER Showtime Networks Inc. All rights reserved.

*Tickets will be given out on a first come, first served basis while supplies last.

Time Warner Cable invites you to the season premiere screening of

DEXTER Season 6!

Get your tickets September 15th at 6pm at the following Time Warner Cable stores*:9_Tg\eba7\fge\Vg-')48!%&eWFg!HccXeJXfgF\WX-%(('5ebTWjTlTg,)g[Fg!DhXXaf-DhXXaf6XagXe@T__\a8_`[hefg,#$(DhXXaf5_iW!FgTgXa