The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 17, 1986 -Page 5 Khadafy makes t.v. broadcast; accuses U.S. of killing civilians ni'" ""d "from Page ' The Pentagon denied U.S. war- planes were flying over Libya, but St- ate Department spokesman Bernard Kalk declined to comment on the possibility of reconli)sance flights. In Washington. wiitary comman- ders at the Pentagon are actively in- vestigating the possibilitv that the F- ill bomber missing from this week's aerial raids on Libva may have drop- ped a bomb off- target after being hit by anti aircraft fire admnistration sources said yesterday The search tor an answer to what happened to the F 11 has been com- plicated by incomplete reports from othet American pilots engaged in the pre-dawn raid and the inability of Navy searchers to locate any sign of the mrissing plane. the sources said. MF1ANWIJILE, 1Def'ense secretary Caspar Weinberger said that damage to the French Embassy and nearby residences in Tt'ipoli may have been caused by a bomb from an Air Force F-111 that failed to return from the at- tacks on two Libyan cities. Adm William Crowe. chairmanof the ,Joint Chiefs of Staff said the sear- ch for the two missing eewmen had been called off after Navy planes and ships failed to find any trace of them or their plane "It could have come from the plane that is missing, "Weinberger said in- Boston, where he went to deliver two speeches .We just don't have any idea. The simple correct answer is, t we don't know .ow the (damage) message broadcast to Libya, warned this week that the Libyan people must accept the consequences for allowing Moamrnmar Khadafy to remain as their leader. ALTHOUGH the editorial, broad cast in Arabic and English on four Voice of America frequencies beamed at Libya, did not directly advocate a coup against Khadafy. but it slopp d just short. The message told the Libyans that Khadafy "is a vicious and irrational man" who has personally issued threats and orders to carry out at tacks against Americans in Europe The broadcast continued. "Colonel Khadafy is your head of state So long as Libyans obey his orders, then thv.x must also accept the consequet e" President Reagan praised Iwo ' .S airmen lost in the raid on Libya as "heroes of our hearts" yesterday and said the attack was needed to stop Moammar Khadafy from sending his millions "around the world to maim and murder innocents." As the administration analyzed sketchy reports of damage, casualties and the whereabouts of Khadafy Reagan portrayed Monday's military strike as the culmination of a steady but unsuccessful effort to pressure the Libyan leader with less severe measures. 'We tried quiet diplomacy. We tried public condemnation. We tried etonoi sanlctions and, yes, we tried a show of military might," he said, referring to last month's naval maneuvers near the Gulf of Sidra. "B-it Khadalye intensified his terrorist war sending his agents around the! world to murder and maim innocen- ts- C ONSIDFRING AN ABORTION? ucmplete Cfidential Information Pregoa y Counseling Center 59 N Hewitt. Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088(any time) Hell -s thot right? The Daily? The Michigan Daily? Carrie' Bloom County .. . HE BLOOM COUNTY? Now in Mohawk Nine-year-old Eric Heller, from Pittsfield Township, gels Street Barber Shop. his hair cut by ill Stoeberg yesterday at State 'U' officials plan new computer center (Continued from Page 1) It is scheduled to open 16 to 18 mon- ths after the University Board of Regents decides on the site, which could be as early as 1987. After the regents make a decision it will take four months to finalize plans, and about "12 months to build the bugger," said Deputy Vice Provost for Information Technology Greg Marks. University Vice President and chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff recommended the Angell Hall site to the regents last month, but officials may also consider the area between the Natural Resources Building and Randall Laboratory. "We're looking for other sites," said Jack Weidenbach, the University's director of business operations. "It will be something around the Diag, so it will remain open." DeVarti wins ~request for vote recount (Continued from Page 1) creased that margin this year by 79 votes. IN PRECINCTS where Democrats ivon last year, this year their winning margin also decreased, DeVarti said. In the Democratic 1st Precinct DeVarti beat Republican Larry Hahn by 156 votes last year. That margin decreased to 132 votes this year. Two of the precincts where DeVarti is requesting a recount, however, do not follow this trend. In the 10th Precinct DeVarti losy by 26 votes last year, but this year he lost by 31 votes. In the 7th Precinct he lost by 138 votes in 1985. This year he lost by 156 votes. DeVarti said he held no animosity toward his opponent, Gerald Jer- nigan, and was only following up the possibility of a human error in the vote counting process. ACTIVISTS Apply now with state's largest and best paying canvass. The Michigan Citizens' Lobby is hiring. Help win the ballot proposal to stop rate hikes for the Fermi & Midland nuclear power plants. Great campaign ex- perience. Call 663-6824. 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 HN 0E NOON FORUM FRIDAY, APRIL 18 TOM WEISSKOPF "Economics, Reagonomics -is It Working?" LUNCH AVAILABLE FOR Si For info call 662.5189 The spot in front of the Un burned down in 1982 will probably not dergraduate Library w here t he be selected, he said, because students Economics building stood before *i like to relax there, 3 occurred. The United States, in a special