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		 Victims' 
		relatives gather 14 years after September 11 attacks on U.S 
		
		 
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		[September 11, 2015] 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Relatives of 
		the nearly 3,000 people killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks are due to 
		gather in New York, Pennsylvania and outside Washington on Friday to 
		mark the 14th anniversary of the hijacked airliner strikes carried out 
		by al Qaeda militants. 
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			 The ceremony in New York will follow a familiar pattern. The names 
			of those killed will be read aloud at the empty footprint of the 
			World Trade Center Twin Towers toppled by two hijacked airliners on 
			the sunny morning in 2001. 
			 
			Hijackers crashed two other commercial jets into the Pentagon in 
			Arlington, Virginia and into a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. 
			The New York ceremony will be punctuated by moments of silence to 
			mark the times when each of the four planes crashed and the towers 
			fell. 
			 
			In Washington, President Barack Obama is set to observe a moment of 
			silence to mark the anniversary at the White House. Obama also will 
			hold a town hall-style meeting with military service members at Fort 
			Meade, an army base in Maryland. 
			 
			Defense Secretary Ash Carter is due to host a private remembrance 
			for relatives of those killed at the Pentagon. 
			
			  Relatives of the 40 passengers and crew members who died aboard 
			United Airlines Flight 93 are set to gather at the newly dedicated 
			Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville. 
			 
			The passengers are believed to have fought back against the 
			hijackers, who crashed the plane upside down at nearly 600 mph (965 
			kph). 
			 
			In New York, the buzz of increased commerce from new residential and 
			business towers has returned a large degree of normalcy to the area 
			known after the attacks as Ground Zero. Next to the 16-acre 
			(6.5-hectare) site where the Twin Towers stood is the newly opened 1 
			World Trade Center, the tallest skyscraper in the Western 
			hemisphere. 
			 
			
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			"We are not going to deviate from how it was done in the past. We'll 
			start at 8:46 a.m. and the reading of names by family members won't 
			likely be done for a few hours," Michael Frazier, a spokesman for 
			the 9/11 Memorial in New York, said of Friday's ceremony. 
			 
			The first plane slammed into the North tower at 8:46 a.m., followed 
			by a second plane hitting the South tower at 9:03 a.m. 
			 
			The Justice Department said on Thursday a 20-year-old Florida man 
			had been arrested and accused of plotting to detonate a 
			pressure-cooker bomb at a memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, to 
			commemorate the Sept. 11 attacks. 
			 
			(Reporting by Daniel Bases; Editing by Will Dunham) 
			
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
			Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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