... LAWRENCE FORECAST PAGE 2 Pineapple Penguin Mike Robinson and Shaun Roecke KU atmospheric science students Tuesday HI: 83 Sunny and warm with a high of 83. Winds switching from SW to NW at 12-20 mph LO: 47 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25. 2011 M Enjoy the sunshine while it lasts Wednesday CORRECTION Wednesday HI: 50 LO: 34 HI: 50 likely. High of 50 and northwest heat at 10 to 15%. MOH: chance of rain 50%. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bernie Thursday HI: 50 Clearing skies but chilly L0: 40 Light winds from the north and a high of 50. Here's the cold front Penguin Shades and sweaters HI: 60 LO: 37 CONNECTION On Friday, Oct. 21, The Kansan incorrectly cited the views of Hank Booth, interim president of Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Booth does not think it would benefit the economy to make students pay an income tax while they are in school preparing for better jobs. Friday Mostly sunny and a high of 60. Light wind from the west Not too bad for sexy costumes THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NEWS MANAGEMENT Editor-in-Chief Kelly Stroda Managing editors Joel Petterson Jonathan Shorman Clayton 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 Marla Daniels Emily Glover 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 Special sections editor Emily Glover ADVISERS Web editor Tim Shedor General manager and news adviser Malcolm Gibson Sales and marketing adviser Jon Schlitt Contact Us editor@kansan.com www.kansan.com Newsroom: (785) -864-4810 Advertising: (785) 864-4358 Twitter. UDK_News Facebook facebook.com/thekansan.com 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, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunside Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045. The University Dalkan School (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 School, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Summisway Avenue. KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS Check out KUJH-TV on Kologiess of Kansas KUJH 31 in Lawrence for more on what you've read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at tvku.edu KHIK is the student voice in radio. Whether it's rock 'n roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHIK 90.7 is for you. 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan., 66045 NEWS AROUND THE WORLD Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY A Utah woman accused of trying to sell her 13-year-old daughter's virginity has pleaded guilty to forcing the girl to model for men in her underwear. The 33-year-old woman made the plea Monday in Salt Lake City to two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. She faces up to 30 years in prison at sentencing Dec. 5. Authorities say she had her daughter model in underwear for a man to whom she was offering to sell the girl's virginity for $10,000. She also took cellphone pictures of the girl and sent them to another man. The Associated Press isn't naming her to avoid identifying her daughter. MEXICO CITY Mexican President Felipe Calderon has signed a decree tightening regulations on day care centers, two years after a fire at a center in northern Mexico killed 49 children and injured 70. Calderon says the new rules will not allow centers within 50 yards of any facility that presents a fire risk or other hazard. The rules strengthen oversight and require centers to have emergency and disaster plans. It does not prohibit privately run centers, but requires them to be registered. Calderon said Sunday the decree aims to prevent a recurrence of "the most terrible of tragedies" — the fire at a center in the northern state of Sonora on June 5, 2009. BAMAKO, MALI Moammar Gadhafi's regime poured tens of billions of dollars into some of Africa's poorest countries. Even when he came to visit, the eccentric Libyan leader won admiration for handing out money to beggars on the streets. "Other heads of state just drive past here in their limousines. Gadhafi stopped, pushed away his bodyguards and shook our hands," said Cherno Diallo, standing Monday beside hundreds of caged birds he sells. "Gadhafi's death has touched every Malian, every single one of us." While Western powers heralded Gadhafi's demise, many Africans were gathering at mosques built with Gadhafi's money to mourn the man they consider an anti-imperialist martyr and benefactor. RANGSIT, THAILAND Supanee Pansuwan has already picked up and moved four times since fast-rising floodwaters began swallowing her home in central Thailand a month ago. Now, as the murky waters threaten the shelter on the outskirts of Bangkok where she's lived for two weeks, she's being asked to flee again. REGIONAL Bangkok Gov. Sukhumbhand Paribatra warned residents in a televised address late Sunday that a large volume of water is surging forward faster than expected and is threatening six districts as it moves closer to the city's more developed areas, including neighborhoods near Chatuchuk weekend market, a popular shopping stop for tourists. Kansas company pleads guilty in N.D. bird deaths Slawson Exploration Co. Inc., of Wichita was charged under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act with for killing 12 birds in oil waste pits in western North Dakota from May 6 through June 20. BISMARCK, N.D. — One of seven oil companies charged with killing migratory birds during drilling operations has pleaded guilty. Under a plea agreement filed in federal court Monday, Slawson will pay $12,000 to a nonprofit wildlife group. The maximum penalty for each misdemeanor charge under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act is six months in prison and a $15,000 fine. Six other oil companies have pleaded not guilty to charges that their oil waste pits killed birds. They were arraigned last month in U.S. District Court in Bismarck and have until Tuesday to file pretrial arguments. Associated Press STATE KC Planned Parenthood clinic case postponed OLATHE — A Kansas trial court judge postponed a criminal case against a Planned Parenthood clinic Monday, only days after the disclosure that the state health department's routine document shredding had destroyed copies of abortion reports later needed as evidence. Prosecutors received a two-week delay for a preliminary hearing scheduled to start Monday so they could determine whether they have enough evidence to go to trial. Abortion opponents have described the case in Johnson County District Court, filed in October 2007 but long delayed by legal disputes, as the first in the nation in which a prosecutor has charged a Planned Parenthood clinic with a crime. 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