14 years and the pain is still there, especially for those people who are the families of the victims. >> yeah. andrea, for those of us who lived and worked in this city on that day, it is always a day to reflect, a very somber day. but even 14 years later the triumph, that spirit is clearly in the air here in lower manhattan and new york city and around the country for that matter because there's a shining gleaming example of how americans respond to acts of terror. there is one world trade right there. 1776 feet and the activities taking place now with the reading of the names of the people lost 14 years ago is going on just underneath that building there. we are a few blocks away. and i can tell you that today is one of those days where people feel there's a sense of celebrating, clearly want to honor those people who lost their lives on that day but some interesting things in the city to report today. the stock exchange was the opening bell was rang by a bunch of kids who were born on
credited with saving her life and he will throw out the first pitch tonight at the all-star game. and members of christina taylor-green, born on september 11th, and court of the los angeles scout green and former of a yankees manager, dallas green and now gabrielle giffordss intern who hired hernandez to work for her less than a week before the attack and is with us at chase field. a man credited with saving a life. how is your life? >> it has been hectic and busy because of what happened and i have had a lot of opportunities i never would have had before to speak to, especially young people about the response of getting involved and getting an education. i'm very busy but loving every second of being able to talk about things that are important to me. >>shepard: everybody was impressed with your poise and i
taking a look around the nation, a statue honoring the youngest victim of the tucson shooting was unveiled at a baseball park in arizona. 9-year-old christina taylor greene, born on september 11th, 2001, was killed in january along with five others in the mass shooting in tucson. on friday an angel statue was dedicated in her memory at a ballpark and renamed greene field in her honor. it includes steel from the world trade center, part of the pentagon, and a stone from the flight 93 crash site. green played a second base role there for a team and the dedication was followed by her team's opening day game. surveillance video shows a pregnant woman being dragged during a robbery. the woman wearing a striped sweater you will see here walked out of the front door of a texas drugstore wednesday. they walked by a man who
today in tucson, federal judge john roll will be laid to rest. this is the second of six funerals for those killed in saturday's shooting. it comes a day after 2,000 people attended the funeral for the 9-year-old youngest victim, christina taylor green. nbc's miguel almaguer is live in tucson. and miguel, particularly having to do with christina taylor green's death, it seems that everybody is focused on how to talk to children, including the white house, about what happened. >> yeah, chuck, that's right. and christina taylor green was nine years old, born on september 11th, her father said she was born on a tragic day, and died during a tragedy here in tucson. michelle obama and barack obama, the president and first lady were at a memorial service for her on wednesday. and michelle obama released an open statement to parents
years later in greenberg, kansas. many people consider this to be the modern-day version of the star-spangled banner, the flag that survived an onslaught. it's on tour across the united states leading up to the tenth rn saers saer of the 9/11 attacks. it's been to sporting events, eventually will become part of the collection of the national 9/11 memorial museum. which is being built at the world trade center. so where this is, it's being delivered to the st. elizabeth ann seton catholic church in tucson, arizona, which is where christina green will be buried. at least the funeral will take place for christina green in an hour and a half. christina green was born on september 11th, 2002001. let's listen in.
the desert area. he found a black bag in sort of a dry riverbed area. he picked it up and took it to a friend's house, called the police, and now they have retrieved this bag. they don't know whether it's the right one, but it could be a key piece of evidence if it is. they'll be testing it to look for fingerprints, dna, hair and fibers, this kind of thing, to see whether this was the one that he left the house with that day. ali? >> all right, susan. thanks very much. i know you're working on every little development that comes out of this as we all try and understand more about it. let's go to some live pictures of st. elizabeth seton catholic church in tucson, arizona. you'll see -- there are a number of cameras covering this service. you'll see the shots changing a lot. an hour from now, the funeral mass will be said for christina taylor green, who was born on
mark theeson, former bush speechwriter. and in washington, karen tumulty, in washington, the "washington post" political reporter. karen, on the point that you made, and the point that pete was making, i want to listen to the president's comments on christina, the girl who's being buried in less than two hours. >> christina was given to us on september 11th, 2001, one of 50 babies born that day to be pictured in a book called "faces of hope." on either side of her photo, in that book, were simple wishes for a child's life. i hope you help those in need, read one. i hope you know all the words to the national anthem. and sing it with your hand over your heart. [ applause ]
>> there you have it, that is the national 9/11 flag. quite a remarkable flag that you're looking at. it was a flag that flew over the world trade center, came down on september 11th, 2001, the very day christina green, the picture you see in the corner of the screen, the very day she was born. she died saturday in the rampage in tucson. the flag was heavily damaged, so what happened is tornado survivors in greenburg, kansas, patched it together. it's now on tour across america. ending up on september 11th, 2011, ten years after the attacks, at the national september 11th memorial museum. it has been taken to arizona right now, and it is being, as you see, displayed there at the st. elizabeth ann seton catholic
parts of it were stitched together by tornado survivors in greensburg, kansas, seven years later. and a lot of people think of it symbolically as a modern-day version of the star spangled banner, the flag that survived the attack. currently on tour across the united states, this flag is leading up to the tenth anniversary of 9/11. it's been on display in small towns, flown over major cultural and sporting events across the country and it will become part of the permanent collection of the national september 11th memorial museum being built at the world trade center. obviously it has been brought to arizona now to fly over the funeral mass for 9-year-old christina taylor green. you probably know this by now, it's been said many times, but it doesn't escape irony that she was born -- she was one of the children born on september 11th, 2001. she was invoked heavily in president obama's remarks at the memorial service last night in
saturday, 9-year-old christina green who was just elected to her student council. she was hoping to be a positive part of the future of america, and she has become just that. she loved baseball. she was the only girl on her little league baseball team and she loved to wear red, white and blue. i should tell you christina was born on september 11th, 2001. she thought of her birthday as a day of hope, a time to find goodness in america, and as her mother said, her light shines on all of us today. saturday's events were not just