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AT THESE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE-1420 CRESCENT RD ORCHARD DRUG-1410 KASOLD DR RANEY DRUG-925 IOWA RANEY DRUG-921 MASSACHUSETTS WATKINS HEALTH CENTER PHARMACY NATION/WORLD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN South African Blacks go to polls Tens of thousands vote for first time The Associated Press The heavy turnout was a striking repudiation of the bomb-throwers, as Blacks went out of their way to show they would not be denied their moment of glory. "I can't wait to vote," said 29-year-old David Maimola, speaking from a hospital bed where he was recovering from injuries sustained in a bomb blast Sunday. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa Black South Africans made history yesterday, voting by the tens of thousands to take control of their country for the first time since whites arrived 342 years ago. pected right-wingers that killed 21 people and injured more than 150, no violence was reported yesterday. Refusing to be cowed by a wave of deadly bombings, the elderly and infirm came in droves from squatter settlements and thatched villages to mark a simple cross on a piece of paper. Some literally crawled and others were pushed to the polls in wheelbarrows. Many broke down in tears after making their mark. "Weneed freedom." said 72-year-old Florence Ndimanglee, voting with other elderly people near Cape Town. Despite late-arriving ballots and lines so long in some places that people collapsed, the mood among Blacks casting the first vote of their lives was jubilant. "We are tired of being slaves." "After what has happened to me I want a new government," he said. Yesterday's voting was reserved for the aged, invalids, people in hospitals and the military. General voting begins today, when African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela and President F.W. de Klerk will cast their ballots. "Today marks the dawn of our freedom." Mandela said. For Gladys Shabalala, a 62-year-old retired nurse nursing near Durban, it was a day of immeasurable significance. "There have been so many white elections," she said. "I used to pass the posters on the road and dream about whether I would be able to vote. That's why I came so early, to see if this is really happening." After two days of bombings by sus- The election, set to conclude tomorrow night, will select a national assembly and nine provincial assemblies. The ANC is expected to win about 60 percent of the vote. Second place should go to de Klerk's National Party, which implemented apartheid to separate the races, then dismantled it under growing pressure at home and abroad. Company agrees to produce RU-486 The duplicate drug could be ready for human trials by the end of the year. said Lawrence Lader, president of Abortion Rights Mobilization. He refused to identify the company. The Associated Press NEW YORK — An abortion rights organization signed an agreement with an overseas manufacturer to produce a generic equivalent of the RU-486 abortion pill. Abortion opponents have fought to keep RU-486 out of the United States. The drug's maker, Rousselulcaf of France, began negotiating a year ago to make the drug available for testing in the United States. RU-486 replaces surgical abortions performed early in a woman's pregnancy. It causes the uterus to shed its lining with the fertilized embryo and has been used by tens of thousands of women in France, Britain and Sweden. Abortion Rights Mobilization announced in April 1993 that its researchers had duplicated the drug. Serbs withdraw weapons new air strikes unlikely NATO had given the Bosnian Serbs until 7 p.m. CDT yesterday to withdraw their big guns 12.4 miles from the center of the eastern Muslim enclave. SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Serb forces withdrew all known heavy weapons from around Gorazde ahead of a NATO deadline yesterday. U.N. officials said, indicating that new air strikes by the alliance were unlikely. The Associated Press But he said that did not necessarily mean the Serbs had fully com- U. N. military observers in Gorazde reported about four hours before the deadline that all known heavy weapons had been cleared from the exclusion zone, said Cmdr. Eric Chaperon, a U.N. representative in Sarajevo. plied, and he said the United Nations would not be able to check until this morning. Earlier, the Serbs claimed that they had completed the withdrawal, while U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher said that the Serbs had moved some weapons, but not enough. "The trend is in the right direction" but "one cannot yet say compliance can be achieved," Christopher said in Geneva. The United Nations did not act when Serbs missed previous deadlines to cease fire and withdraw from Gorazde. But U.N. and NATO military leaders meeting yesterday in Brussels, Belgium, said they agreed the latest deadline must be met or air strikes would be launched.