The Michigan Daily - micnigandaily.com Monday, September 12, 2011 - 3A The Michigan Daily - micnigandaily.com Monday, September 12, 2011 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS EAST LANSING, Mich. MSU licenses new anti-fraud software People who try to hide their identities by changing their fin- gerprints could run into a road- block because of new technology that Michigan State University developed and is licensing to a security company. Engineering and computer sci- ence professor Anil Jain headed a team that developed the software. It's being licensed to Morpho, a unit of the Paris-based Safran group, Michigan State announced Friday. Terms of the deal weren't released. "The technology ... can help law enforcement and border con- trol officials detect these altered fingerprints," said university spokesman Tom Oswald. Jain says authorities world- wide encounter people who have surgery or other "extreme mea- sures to alter their fingerprints to avoid being identified by auto- matic fingerprint recognition sys- tems." KANSAS CITY, Mo. Suspicious male detained at Kansas City airport on 9/11 Security agents detained a man and shut down one of three termi- nals at the main airport in Kan- sas City yesterday after detecting suspicious items inside his carry- on bag on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The man was stopped about 9:30 a.m. at the Southwest Air- lines checkpoint at Kansas City International Airport. Trans- portation security agents who detected suspicious items in his bag asked to examine them, and he was detained when he refused, airline and law enforcement offi- cials said. The suspicious items tested negative for explosive materials,_ according to a statement from the Transportation Security Administration. A bomb squad and bomb-sniffing dogs remained on the scene yesterday after- noon, and passengers were being rescreened. SPARWOOD, British Columbia 3-year-old boy returned to family after abduction Police say a 3-year-old Cana- dian boy was returned safe to his own home four days after he was abducted. Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cpl. Dan Moskaluk said yesterday that Kienan Hebert was returned by the suspect to his home in Sparwood, British Columbia, after an emotional plea from his family. Police say someone called the police emergency dispatcher and told authorities they would find the missing boy at the home from where he was abducted. They believe the suspected kidnapper brought him back there. A search is now on for the suspect. ASUNCION, Paraguay Iran, Russia agree to greater nuclear cooperation Iran's official news agency is reporting the country has agreed to more nuclear coopera- tion with Russia. Iran's first nuclear power plant was built with Russian heln and after years of delays is to t 'a preliminary phase of ele, icity production today. ' he IRNA news agency re orted yesterday that Irani- an Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said important agree- ments were signed by both sides in nuclear and other fields. Salehi spoke after meeting with visiting Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko. Sale- hi did not elaborate. Currently there are no plans for Russia to help build another plant. -Compiled from Daily wire reports VIGIL From Page 1A The two vigils events suc- ceeded in bringing students together, Harper said. "One of the things that was clear 10 years ago that is clear tonight is that we are more sim- ilar than we are different," she said. Relaying a message from University President Mary Sue Coleman, Dean of Students Laura Blake Jones urged stu- dents to remember and reflect and to honor those who lost their lives on 9/11. Jones went on to recall her own memory of that day. "I lived on the West Coast, and I woke to a phone call from the East Coast telling us what had happened, and as a parent I spent time thinking, 'How are we going to break this news to our children?'" she said. "(9/11) changed our country and our world and undoubtedly impact- ed the childhood of adoles- cents." After Jones spoke, LSA senior Annie Sajid and School of Music, Theatre & Dance student Jonah Thompson took the podium to discuss how 9/11 affected their lives. A Muslim American from Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Sajid said she faced fears of dis- crimination in the wake of the attacks. But she said her family didn't let this fear discourage them. "My family took this chal- lenging time as an opportunity to bridge gaps instead of create them," Sajid said. "We would lead Islam 101 dialogues to raise other's consciousness. I encour- age our generation to do the same." Similarly, Thompson stressed the importance of social advo- cacy on any level. "Think about the things we say and the things we do, and challenge the assumptions that divide our community," Thomp- son told the crowd. "We have the potential, and we have the challenge. All that is left is for us to rise to it." The vigil, which concluded with a rendition of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind," was well-received by attend- ees as well Weinberg and Deit- zel, who expressed surprise at the turnout. "I couldn't be more pleased with how things went tonight," Deitzel said. "Just to see every- one come together with such reverence in such a powerful and inspiring way ... (shows) how far we've come." Dental School student Elena Petrova-Amstutz said in an interview after the vigil-that she volunteered at ground zero the day after the 9/11 attacks. She emphasized the anniversary's importance for all Americans. "I hope that we will never forget the day and that no mat- ter where we are - in the U.S. or anywhere in the world - we will always remember the peo- ple who lost their lives," she said. Business School senior Jeff Ong said he felt the ceremony had an appropriate and reflec- tive tone. "Any time something tragic like this happens, it's always a good time to reflect, take a step back and assess how you are working to affect some kind of positive change in our society," he said. CAROLYN LOLL, POOL/AP Michael Lehrman, executive managing director of Cantor Fitzgerld and Co., bows his head yesterday at the names of some of the over 600 employees from Cantor Fitzgerald who lost their lives in the 2001 terrorist attacks. Looking back and ahead, America remembers 9 11 Obama: 'These past 10 years tell a story of resilience' NEW YORK (AP) - Deter- mined never to forget but per- haps ready to move on, the nation gently handed Sept. 11 over to history yesterday and etched its memory on a new gen- eration. A stark memorial took its place where twin towers once stood, and the names of the lost resounded from children too young to remember terror from a decade ago. In New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, across the United States and the world, people car- ried out rituals now as famil- iar as they are heartbreaking: American flags unfurled at the new World Trade Center tower and the Eiffel Tower, and tears shed at the base of the Pentagon and a base in Iraq. President Barack Obama quot- ed the Bible and spoke of finding strength in fear. George W. Bush, still new to the presidency that day, invoked the national sacri- fice of the Civil War. Vice Presi- dent Joe Biden said hope must grow from tragedy. And Jessica Rhodes talked about her niece, Kathryn L. LaBorie, the lead flight attendant on the plane that hit the south tower. She remembered a radiant smile and infinite compassion, and suggested that now, 10 years on, it is time to turn acorner. "Although she may not ever be found, she will never ever be lost to her family and her friends," Rhodes said after she read a seg- ment of the list of the dead at ground zero. "Today we honor her by letting go of the sadness over losing her and embracing the joy of having known her." It was the 10th time the nation has paused to remember a defin- ing day. In doing so, it closed a decade that produced two wars, deep changes in national security, shifts in everyday life - and, months before it ended, the death at American hands of the elusive terrorist who master- minded the attack. "These past 10 years tell a story of resilience," Obama said at a memorial concert at the Kennedy Center after he visited all three attack sites. "It will be said of us that we kept that faith; that we took a painful blow, and emerged stronger," he said. The anniversary took place under heightened security. In New York and Washington especially, authorities were on alert. Ahead of the anniversary, the federal government warned those cities of a tip about a pos- sible car-bomb plot. Police searched trucks in New York, and streets near the trade center were blocked. To walk within blocks of the site, people had to go through checkpoints. The names of the fallen - 2,983 of them, including all the victims from the three Sept. 11 attack sites and six people who died when terrorists set off a truck bomb under the towers in 1993 - echoed across a place utterly transformed. In the exact footprints of the two towers was a stately memori- al, two great, weeping waterfalls, unveiled for the first time and, at least on the first day, open only to the relatives of the victims. Around the square perimeter of each were bronze parapets, etched with names. Four terror- related arrests made in Sweden NATO: Truck bomb targets U.S. base in Afghanistan Officials suspect. men linked to al- Qaida STOCKHOLM (AP) - Swed- ish police arrested four people on suspicion of preparing a ter- ror attack and evacuated an arts center in the country's second largest city, security officials said yesterday. The four were arrested in the west coast city of Goteborg and were suspected of plotting ter- rorism, security service spokes- woman Sara Kvarnstrom said. She declined to give details on the arrests and wouldn't say whether they were linked to the 10th anni- versary of the Sept.11 attacks. Kvarnstrom said Swedish security service SAPO saw no reason to raise its terror alert level, which has been at "elevat- ed" since October. "Our assessment is that there is no reason for public concern at the moment," she told The Asso- ciated Press. Swedish tabloid Expressen, citing an unnamed police source, said investigators suspect the men belong to a terror network with links to al-Qaida, and that they had acquired, or were trying to acquire, firearms, explosives and hand grenades. Security police declined to comment on the newspaper's information. Police in Goteborg said in a statement they had evacu- ated the Roda Sten arts center, located beneath the city's land- mark half-mile (930-meter) Alvs- borg bridge, because of a threat deemed to pose "serious danger to life, health or substantial dam- age of property." Kvarnstrom declined to say if the arts center or the bridge were considered potential targets for a terror attack. The Alvsborg bridge runs over Goteborg's harbor to connect the mainland with the island of His- ingen. The six-lane passage is a vital link from the Norwegian capital Oslo to southern Sweden. Goteborg police and Sweden's Stockholm-based counterterror- ism unit assisted security police with the arrests. Henrik Wallgren, 46, says he saw a Swedish navy combat boat race back and forth on the river by the arts center just before he and others were evacuated from the center. "We were sitting on a skate- board ramp behind the graffiti wall at Roda Sten," when it hap- pened, he told The Associated Press. Roda Sten is a former heat- ing plant that was abandoned for years before being reopened as an arts center in 2000, according to its website. Taliban claims responsibility for attack KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Nearly 80 American soldiers were wounded and two Afghan civil- ians were kiled in a Taliban truck bombing targeting an American base in eastern Afghanistan, NATO said yesterday, astark reminder that the war in Afghanistan still rages 10 years after the Sept.11 terror attacks against the United States. The blast, which occurred late Saturday, shaved the facades from shops outside the Combat Outpost Sayed Abad inWardak province and broke windows in government offic- es nearby, said Roshana Wardak, a former parliamentarian who runs a clinic in the nearby town of the same name. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack. Eight wounded civilians were brought to Wardak's clinic, two of them with wounds serious enough that they were sent to Kabul. She said one 3-year-old girl died of her wounds on the way tothe clinic. The attack was carried out by a Taliban suicide bomber who deto- nated a large bomb inside a truck carrying firewood, NATO said. It was unclear how many foreign and Afghan soldiers were serving on the base. "Most of the force of the explo- sion was absorbed by the protective barrier at the outpost entrance," NATO said, adding thatthe damage was repairable and that operations werecontinuing. Fewer than 25 Afghan civilians were also wounded, NATO said, adding that none of the 77 injuries sustained by the Americans were life-threatening. Spokesman Maj. Russell Fox said yesterday that all the international troops at the combat outpost are American. The truck bombing came hours after the Taliban vowed to keep fighting U.S. forces in Afghani- stan until all American troops leave the country and stressed that their movement had no role in the Sept.11 attacks. xFI VRVER }.M9iEIkJ" OF Mt13 -.cRC ItoAN M S - $10 OFF any Fall 2011 U-Move Fitness Class (must register in U-Move office with ad; cannot be combined with other offers) .--..--------------------- ------- kines.umich.edu/umove + (734)764-1342 3064 CCRB + U-Move@umich.edu Join UM's new physical activity challenge ACTIVE U AUTUMN Mhealthy.umich.edu/autumn