PAGE 2A LAWRENCEORECAST Forecast by Mike Robinson KU atmospheric science students Penguin --- TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2011 Tuesday HI: 56 Cloudy early but breaking up L0: 32 later. Cool with a north wind at 15 to 20 mph. Penguin HI: 52 LO: 29 Wednesday A north wind at 10 to 15 mph and clear skies. A brisk evening THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Getting chilly Penguin Thursday Slight chance of morning frost. Clear skies and light northwest winds. HI: 54 LO: 35 Still chilly Mickey Mouse HI: 65 LO: 40 The actress who played June Cleaver from Leave it to Beaver died a year ago Sunday. The actor who played her husband Ward was born right here in Lawrence in 1909. Friday Partly cloudy. South winds at 5 to 10 mph. Warming up for the weekend 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 Maria Daniels Emily Glover Design chiefs Stephanie Schulz Hannise Wahne Bailey Atkinson Editorial editor Vikaas Shanker Opinion editor Mandy Matney Photo editor Mike Gunnoe Associate photo editor Chris Bronson Sports Web editor Blake Schuster ADVISERS Special sections editor Emily Glover Web editor Tim Shedor General manager and news adviser Malcolm Gibson Sales and marketing adviser Jon Schlitt 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, 2015 Dale Human Development Center, 100 Sunnside Avenue, Lawrence, KS, 66045. 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 Dailay Kansan (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 Dailay Kansan, 2015A Dole Human Development Center, 1000 Sunnyside Avenue. Associated Press KANSAN MEDIA PARTNERS Check out KUJH-TV on Knology of Kansas Channel 31 in Lawrence for more on what you read in today's Kansan and other news. Also see KUJH's website at kuju.edu KHK is the student voice in radio. It let's its roc 'n roll or reggae, sports or special events, KHK 90.7 for you. 2000 Dole Human Development Center 1000 Sunnyside Avenue Lawrence, Kan. 68045 NEWS AROUND THE WORLD SANTIAGO, CHILE Chile is giving nearly 57,000 18-year-olds one month to report for potential military duty, saying the government needs to fill gaps in its armed forces because a nationwide student protest movement has reduced the number of volunteers it usually gets. Military service is obligatory in Chile, but there are usually enough volunteers to fill the ranks so that no one has to serve against their will. So far this year, 14,127 men and women born in 1993 have signed up, and armed forces deputy secretary Alfonso Vargas said they need a bigger pool to choose from to fill 11,340 spots. That's why 56,793 more teenagers will need to report in a month for potential duty in 2012, he explained on the draft office's website. PARIS The head of France's DCRI counterespionage agency was handed preliminary charges Monday in a probe into allegations of spying on journalists at the daily "Le Monde," his attorney said. Patrick Maisonneuve said the preliminary charges against Bernard Squarcini include "violating secret correspondence" and "unlawfully collecting data." Under French law, preliminary charges allow magistrates to continue investigating before determining whether to send the case to trial. KAMPALA. UGANDA The probe stems from a suit filed by "Le Monde" last year. The newspaper alleged the office of French President Nicolas Sarkozy asked the DCRI to identify a journalist's source and stop leaks in a scandal surrounding L'Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, Europe's wealthiest woman. Police in Uganda fired tear gas at protesters demonstrating against high food prices and corruption in the capital. Police spokeswoman Judith Nabakooba said police stopped Monday's demonstration after participants tried to block the roads and appealed to others to join them. Witness Henry Mukaga said some protesters threw stones at police and at motorists driving through the market where the protest erupted. Participants said they were responding to a call from an opposition group to resume "walk to work" protests over food prices and corruption. Those marches in March and April were among the most serious anti-government protests in sub-Saharan Africa this year. Human Rights Watch said police killed nine people during the marches. SANAA. YEMEN Fighting between troops loyal to Yemen's embattled leader and rival forces on Monday killed at least 18 people, including eight supporters of a powerful tribal chief who defected to the opposition in March. The pre-dawn fighting, the worst in the capital Sanaa in weeks, has revived fears of civil war in the strategically located nation on the southern corner of the Arabian Peninsula. Mortars, rockets and heavy machine-guns were used in the hours-long battle in the northern sector of the city close to the international airport. A series of blasts shook the city for hours, forcing residents in many parts to take shelter in basements. The fighting continued throughout the night, briefly stopped for the dawn prayers and then resumed. It ceased by sunrise. CAMPUS The School of Music will be joining in on the fun this Halloween season with a "Cowboys vs. Aliens" themed concert and costume contest. Costumes and cowboys for fall The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 28 at the Lied Center, and will feature a costumed symphony orchestra performing cowboy classics as well as movie scores from sci-fi and western movies. The costume contest will precede the concert at 6:30 p.m. at the center's Seymour Gallery. The contest will be open to all members of the community, and will feature separate sections for youth under 18, college students and adults. KPR's news director, J Schafer, will emcee the event. Judges will include Nancy Longhurst, general manager of the Olivia Collection, and Dena Register, professor FOR MORE INFORMATION: Call KU School of Music at 785-864-3436 or visit http://music.ku.edu/ of music education and music therapy, as well as Baby Jay. In addition to the concert and contest, Sigma Alpha iota will be holding an "instrument Petting Zoo" before the concert, an all-ages event designed to give concert-goers the opportunity to hold and play instruments used in the concert. Tickets will cost $7 for general admission, and $5 for students and seniors. John Garfield REGIONAL Mother fears arrest in missing child case ASSOCIATED PRESS KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Law enforcement officials launched a new round of searches for a missing Kansas City baby on Monday after her mother went on national television and admitted she was drunk when the girl disappeared but insisted she did nothing to harm the child. In a tearful interview on NBC's "Today" show, Deborah Bradley said she believes she will be arrested in the disappearance of Lisa Irwin, who was 10 months old when she was reported missing in the early hours of Oct. 4. Security video from a grocery store shows Bradley buying a box of wine and other goods, and leaving the store with a man the family later said was her brother Bradley said she bought boxed wine and consumed "enough to be drunk" that night, but denied she did anything to hurt Lisa. "No, no ... I don't think alcohol changes a person enough to do something like that," she said. Bradley also told Fox News in an interview aired Monday that she got drunk and may have blacked out. She said she frequently drinks to intoxication but only after her children are safely in bed. She also said she takes anxiety medication and had taken a dose that day. Asked how she would respond to others who would criticize her heavy drinking while caring for her children. Bradley became defiant. "She was sleeping. You know, I don't see the problem in me having my grown up time," she said. "I take good care of my kids. I keep my house clean, do their laundry, I kiss their boo-boos. I fix them food. I'm involved in their school stuff. I mean, to me, there's nothing wrong doing what I want to do after dark." Not long after the interviews aired, local and federal authorities began fresh searches for the girl, including bringing tracking dogs into the family's home and draining a nearby creek. WELCOME HOME TO OUR NEW Lauren Angley Natalie Ardizzoni Elisa Banowsky Heather Banwart Gretchen Beaver Taylor Bondy Claire Breslin Ann Budd Whitney Burnett Sammy Campbell Jessica Clifford Kelsy Cornejo Tori Couts Cheyenne Davis Michaela Dougherty Shae Fournier Kelly Freeman Maddie Gaughan Sigma Kappa doves! Associated Press Lisa Gebhardt Angela Geist Katie Goll Alison Kelly Sara King Nikki Koppers Dani Kuhn Lauren Kuthan Morgan Lamb Alex Lanning Jessica Lebel Regan Lesperance Kendra McGrath Becca Medwin Jordan Mentzer Kelsey Mosher Mackenzie Oatman Mergie Peet ONE Heart Bailey Petrillo Claire Price Jenn Rose Lauren Russell Erika Sander Allison Saunders Faye Schumacher Katie Scott Jamie Sear Dana Sherard Shelby Short Erin Sloan Samantha Thomas Carynn Valdez Katherine Waechter Jenny Weissbeck Anna West Hillary Willson KEEPING THE HAWKS ROLLING SINCE 1974 Don's Auto Center Inc. Auto Repair and Machine Shop 785.841.4833 11th & Haskell --- .