PAGE 2A LAWRENCE FORECAST Nathan Wendt and Tyter Wieland KU atmospheric science students THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2011 Hi: 60 Friday LO: 49 Warming up and sunny with winds from the South at 10-15 mph. Nice, but a little hungry. --- Nice, but a little breezy. Saturday HI: 68 Partly cloudy. L0: 35 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Enjoy the warmth before it gets cold. Penguin Sunday HI: 41 Partly cloudy. LO: 30 Stay inside and watch football. Monday HI: 49 Partly cloudy. LO: 35 Perfect fall weather. Once a year, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will pay for you to take your professor to lunch. Must be faculty, not a teaching assistant, and they must teach in the College. Check out clax.ku.edu for details. CORRECTION A brief on page three Wednesday, "Tickets on sale for game against Missouri in KC." gave incorrect information about where tickets for the Kansas-Missouri football game are available. In fact, tickets can be bought online on multiple sites. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MANAGEMENT Editor-in-Chief Kelly Stroda Managing editors Joel Petterson Jonathan Shorman Clavton Ashley ADVERTISING MANAGEMENT Business manager Garrett Lent Sales manager Stephanie Green NEWS SECTION EDITORS Art director Ben Pirotte Assignment editors Ian Cummings Laura Sather Hannah Wise Copy chiefs Lisa Curran Maria Daniels Emily Glover Roshi Ooommen Design chiefs Stephanie Schulz Hannah Wise Bailey Atkinson Opinion editor Mandy Matney Editorial editor Vikaas Shanker Photo editor Mike Gunnoe Associate photo editor Chris Bronson Sports editor Max Rothman Associate sports editor Mike Lavieri Sports Web editor Blake Schuster 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan. 68045 Special sections editor Emily Glover Web editor Tim Shedor ADVISERS General manager and news adviser Malcolm Gibson Sales and marketing adviser Joe Schlitt Contact Us editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) - 864-4810 Advertising: (785) - 864-4358 Twitter: UDK_News Facebook facebook.com/thekansan The University Daily Kansan is the student newspaper of the University of Kansas. The first copy is paid through the student activity fee. Additional copies of the Kansan are 50 cents. Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kansan business office, 2051A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045. KHK is the student voice in radio. When it's rock "n' roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHK 90.7 is for wau. The University Dalkan Kansas (ISSN 0746-9467) is published daily during the school year except Saturday, Sunday, fall break, spring break and exams and weekly during the summer session excluding holidays. Annual subscriptions by mail are $250 plus tax. Send address changes to The University Dalkan Kansas, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyvale Avenue. KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS Check out KUJH-TV on Knology of Kansas KUJH channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUHF's website at tx.uku.edu. Associated Press NEWS AROUND THE WORLD SAN JUAN Puerto Rico is having its deadliest year on record as authorities struggle to control a rampant drug war on the U.S. Caribbean territory. Police said Wednesday that three people died overnight in separate incidents, raising the year's homicide toll to 995 on the island of 4 million people. That matches a 1994 record with six weeks left to go in the year. Local authorities say 70 percent of the killings are drug related. LAGOS, NIGERIA Two tanker trucks exploded during rush hour Wednesday in the Nigerian capital of Abuja, seriously injuring one person in a city still tense after repeated threats and bombings by a radical Muslim sect. KIEV. UKRAINE Panicked passers-by fled both scenes but police and rescue officials told The Associated Press the two explosions bore no signs of sabotage. Firefighters sprayed down the burning remains of the tankers with foam to keep the flames from spreading. The former write-in candidate for Arizona governor traveled to Ukraine looking for love. He ended up hungry and sick in a homeless shelter — the victim of an Internet dating scam. Social workers were stunned to find Cary Dolego, 53, sitting on a city street last Wednesday, behaving strangely and suffering from pneumonia. Dolego had traveled to Ukraine this spring to do research for an engineering project and look for a wife. MANILA. PHILIPPINES In a highly symbolic ceremony aboard a guided-missile destroyer Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton underscored America's military and diplomatic backing for the Philippines as it engages in an increasingly tense territorial dispute with China in the resource-rich South China Sea. On board the USS Fitzgerald in Manila Bay, Clinton and Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario signed a declaration calling for multilateral talks to resolve maritime disputes. POLITICS Event attendees asked to prove citizenship The town hall-style meeting at Granite State Manufacturing, the first of two events Perry was holding in New Hampshire, was open to the public. MANCHESTER, N.H. — People attending a Rick Perry presidential campaign event Wednesday were asked to prove they are American citizens. But campaign officials said federal regulations required proof of citizenship because the company handles defense contracts. A Granite State employee sat beside a Perry campaign staffer at the door and asked attendees whether they were citizens. The employee, who refused to give her name, said non-citizens wouldn't be admitted. While Perry's rivals have faced similar restrictions when they held events on the premises of federal defense contractors, the issue Wednesday brought unwanted attention to Perry's complicated immigration record at a critical point in his quest for the Republican presidential nomination. Some of his rivals privately seized on "It's disturbing, especially given his record on immigration," said Eva Milana, executive director of the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition. his decision to hold an event with such restrictions. The leader of a regional immigration advocacy group was more vocal. Perry, the governor of Texas, has faced sustained criticism over a Texas policy that allows in-state college tuition for illegal immigrants. He also has struggled to win over some conservatives for being against putting up a fence along the border with Mexico. John Stephen, a prominent Perry supporter in New Hampshire and recent Republican gubernatorial candidate, defended Perry. "This is a manufacturing business where the governor wanted to meet with workers," Stephen said. "There is no one that's done more through action to oppose illegal immigration than Rick Perry." Associated Press November 14-18,2011 ALUMNI APPRECIATION WEEK Learn how YOU can make KU a better place for future generations Sign our alumni thank-you card STOP BY WESCOE BEACH OR THE KANSAS UNION BETWEEN 9:30 a.m. & 3:30 p.m.&: Receive daily give-a-ways Find out how you could win an iPad