6B Friday, October 28,1994 NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN advertise in the University Daily Kansan The Phantoms of the Nigh A Haunted House October 14, 15, 21, 22, 28, 29, 30 7 PM to 10 PM + Douglas County Fairground Adults $6.00 Adults $4.00 Children under 12 All adults $4.00 Adults $3.50 Children under 12 Second time through/game night (only at the door) Second time through/$2.00 Children under 12 **GROUP DEVELOPMENT** This equipment is purchased at Lawrence Community Trust £4.90 Adjusts £8.00 Children under 15 Alvira KGua, 910, Iowa Dillier's Ice Shop, 812 W. 103 W. 23 The Eic. Shop, 228 W.餐 + Fun & Games, 816 M. Raven Bookshelf, 8 W. RTM Lawrence Community, 913 New Hampsi At the Door Ticket Outlets Presented by the Lawrence Community Theatre and Lawrence Parks & Recreation NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass.841-0100 When you're stuck writing your next paper you need... The Bard's Notebook. $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $ It's the complete, step-by-step, tutorial guide from topic selection to proof checking your work complete with examples. It shows exactly how to write better papers and teaches you the basic skills faster. It's like having your professor there to help you write. BARD'S NOTEBOOK costs only $49.95 plus $5.95 shipping and handling. Mastercard, Visa, Discoveror accepted. Windows PC or Macintosh version available. Allow 10 days delivery. Or mail checks to P.O. Box 475, Church Hill, MD 21690. Allow 3 weeks for delivery. TO ORDER CALL 1-800-866-6464 NOW. DON'T WAIT. The Bard's Notebook™ Your writing tutor any time you need it! For a Devilishly Good Time Red Devil Ale! This new ale is one of over 40 different kinds of beer featured at the Barefoot Iguana. 'It's for the soul.' Bard's Notebook is a registered trademark of The Bard Company, 1994 Grand Opening Halloween Weekend Door prizes every half hour--NO COVER Friday 28th Saturday 29th Sunday 30th Monday 31st Sci-Fi Theater Fairy Tales Pirate Island Halloween Party Costume Theme Dance, 28th-31st! 9TH & IOWA HILL-CREST SHOPPING CENTER OPEN WED-SUN 6 P/M+2AM · 749-1666 Daily $1 Drinks & Full Bar Jayhawks Saturday·1 p.m. Kickoff Memorial Stadium vs. Oklahoma State Cowboys Cheer on the Jayhawks as they lasso the Cowboys! Homecoming '94 "The Spirits Come Alive" FRIDAY: Parade on Jayhawk Boulevard beginning at 2:30 Featuring the Marching Jayhawks and KU Spirit Squad then... THE NEWS in brief NEW YORK Study of abortion pill shrouded in secrecy Fearful of violence, a research organization is conducting the first nationwide study of the French abortion pill RU-486 without saying where the work is being done or how many clinics are participating. "You may have noticed there are some nuts out there who do bad things to people who deliver abortions," said C. Wayne Bardin, research director at the Population Council, the nonprofit group sponsoring the study. More than 100 women have been given the pill since September as part of the $8 million study, which could make the drug routinely available in the United States by 1996. Bardin said. The availability of RU-486, now called mifapristone, will not be advertised, Bardin said yesterday at a news conference. Women coming to clinics for surgical abortions will be quietly taken aside and advised of the new option. SARAJEVO, Bosnia Serbs flee after Muslim invasion Muslim-led government forces closed in on Bhac, a front-line town west of Sarajevo, yesterday following a stunning victory over Bosnian Serbs that forced thousands of Serb civilians to flee. The Serbs suffered "immense material damage and losses," said Lt. Gen. Manojilo Milovanovic, the Bosnian Serb army's chief of staff. U. N. relief workers estimated 7,500 Serb civilians — mostly women, children and elderly — had fled advancing government forces in two areas: the Kupres area 55 miles west of Sarajevo and the Bhaclac enclave in the northwest. Relief workers began sending in food and blankets to the displaced — one of the largest throngs of Serb refugees to flee at one time since the war began in April 1992. More than 200,000 people have died or disappeared since Bosnia seceded from Yugoslavia. LOS ANGELES Race enters into jury selection Race emerged again as an issue in the O.J. Simpson case yesterday as defense lawyers accused a prosecutor of treating African-American jury prospects differently, in particular a man questioned intensely for a half-hour. "It implies an insidious effort to try to get African-American jurors removed for cause because they are Black, because they have Black heroes and because O.J. Simpson is one of them," said Simpson attorney Robert Shantro. "I think it's subtle, and it may be intentional," Shapiro said. UNION, South Carolina Two young boys still missing The father of two boys reportedly taken in a carjacking begged for the gunman to return them yesterday as frustrated investigators checked out leads and turned up nothing. "I plead to the guy ... to please return our children to us safely and unharmed." David Smith said. "It is harder as time goes by to deal with." he said. He and his wife, Susan, were going over police pictures trying to identify a suspect. Mrs. Smith told authorities a man forced his way at gunpoint into her car Tuesday night and told her to drive. She said he forced her out a short time later and drove away with 3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alex, both still strapped in the safety seats. "I just feel hopeless. I can't do enough. My children wanted me. They needed me. And now I can't help them," Mrs. Smith said. About 50 investigators were sifting through tips from around the nation that the Smiths' burgundy car, the children or both were sighted. Few of the reports panned out. LOS ANGELES Housekeeper donates millions Walt Disney's housekeeper was a crusty, chain-smoking character who was more Hazel than Mary Poppins. In the end, Thelma Howard proved to be a fairy godmother. The frugal woman who ran the Disney household for 30 years left half of her $9 million estate to poor and disabled children. "We're delighted," said Jack Shakey, president of the California Community Foundation. "It was unexpected." The foundation, which administrators $130 million-plus to charities each year, will assist the Thelma Pearl Howard Foundation in dispensing the money. Howard died June 10, days before her 80th birthday. She left the other half of her fortune to her son, Michael, her only child from a brief marriage. Compiled from The Associated Press. 7