Economics, Chemistry get new fcilities (Continued from Page 1) "(A new facility) must be flexible because you don't know what will come up in the future," he said. The changes will ultimately save the University money, he added, because the new facilities will allow research to be conducted more efficiently. "Chemistry has changed enormously from a gallon-type operation to a very small operation," he said. Instead of using large amounts of chemicals to perform experiments, researchers today rely more heavily on computer systems. Dear Merchant. Did you know that Daily readers spend over $125 million on items you sell? GET YOUR AD! CALL 764-0554 The project includes a sophisticated computer information system which will speed up research, Dunn said. THE FOUR-story building, expected to be completed in three years, will add several lecture and seminar rooms and more than 100 small research labs. An underground library is also being planned for a later time. Regents also approved a $4.3 million renovation plan for Lorch Hall which will be funded by an insurance set- tlement from the fire in the Economics Building. Although CRISP would be relocated under the plan, the economics depar- tment, Center for Research in Economic Development and the In- stitute for Public Policy would be housed in Lorch Hall. A new location for CRISP has not been decided yet. CERVICAL CAPS Now being fitted at both NORTHLAND FAMILY PLANNING CLINICS Call For An Appointment: Southfield: (313) 559-0590 One Northland Plaza - 20755 Greenfield Romulus: (313) 941-1810 10000 Wayne Rd.. Suite A 100 other services: " Free Pregnancy Testing " Abortion Services (up to 18 weeks, in clinic) (19 to 22 weeks, in hospital) - Birth Control and Family Planning Blue Cross, Medicaid, insurance accepted FAMILY PLANNING CLINICS, INC. IN BRI EF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Mozambique bombing strike, draws South African revenge PRETORIA, South Africa - Warplanes pounded suspected guerrilla bases in neighboring Mozambique yesterday to avenge the car bomb attack by black nationalist rebels in Pretoria last week. Mozambique said five people were killed and 30 wounded in the raid. The warplanes armed with missiles and cannon also "effectively neutralized" Soviet-made SAM-5 anti-aircraft missile batteries guarding the facilities, said South African Defense Minister General Magnus Malan. The official Mozambique news agency AIM said all of the dead and woun- ded were civilian Mozambicans living in the suburb of Matola. AIM and South African officials said seven jet fighters swooped over the city warning the Maputo airport tower an attack was about to begin, then unleashed a barrage of rockets and machine-gun fire. Thatcher ad charged as racist LONDON - Opposition politicians hoping to erode Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's lead in the polls, yesterday charged a Conservative election advertisement aimed at black voters was "degrading" racism. The Labor Party rolled out the adjectives to denounce the Conservative Party ad in ethnic minority newspapers as "fraudulent ... pious nonsense," and in the worst possible taste. The advertisement - showing a smartly dressed black man - appealed to the black population to re-elect the Conservative Party, which passed the Nationality Act guranteeing full citizenship to all British citizens. "Labor says he's black. Tories say he's British" said the poster. Britain's Asians and West Indians make up only about 4 percent of the population and wield just 2.5 million votes, but they are concentrated in parliamentary seats where the ballot could easily swing to favor either the Conservatives or a.Labor candidate in elections June 9. Peru warfare kills 169 LIMA, Peru - The military said yesterday that 160 people - all but two of them rebels or peasants - were killed ina week of fighting in central Peru, and President Fernando Belaunde suggested he might send a special anti- guerrilla squad into the battle zone. The report on the bloodiest week yet in the 3-year-old guerrilla war raised the official death toll from two months of fighting to 560. More than 1,000 people have been reported killed since Belaunde sent soldiers into the guerrilla heartland last Dec. 29. About 1,000 officers of the civil guard, national police and Republican Guard - backed by 2,000 soldiers - are battling an estimated 500-700 leftist rebels around the state capital of Ayacucho, 350 miles southeast of Lima. But Belaunde told reporters here that he was considering pulling out the soldiers and sending in a "more modern and flexible" police force. He did not elaborate, but apparently was referring to a special anti-guerrilla police squad. Israeli doctors vow to strike TEL AVIV, Israel - Striking public-health doctors yesterday vowed to defy any government back-to-work order, and skeleton crews staffed most of Israel's hospitals where patients complained about lack of attention. The government issued back-to-work orders yesterday to 1,300 of some 8,000 striking doctors. Many hospitals were close to collapse, with just 10 percent of the physicians on duty. The orders were read on Israel Television and state radio broadcast the names of the doctors who were told to report to work at 8 a.m. An Isreal Television correspondent said he was told by Attorney General Yitzhak Zamir that if the doctors disobeyed the orders, it would be regarded as civil disobedience and the defiant doctors would be brought to trial quicky and punished. Some 8,000 doctors, the vast majority of the physicians in a country where most people subscribe to the public health service, walked off their jobs Sun- day in-a pay dispute and hid in resort hotels from their government em- ployers. Hundreds camp-out for loans COLUMBUS, Ohio - Hundreds of people, many of whom had camped out- side banks through three days of rain, jammed lending offices yesterday in a scramble to get one of up to 6,000 home mortgage loans being offered at 9.98 percent interest. Mark Hendrickson, 26, said he had "butterflies, heart palpitations - the whole thing," while waiting outside Buckeye Federal Savings and Loan in downtown Columbus since Friday morning. But when the doors opened at 8 a.m., Hendrickson was at the head of the line of 112 people. "It was definitely worth it," he said. "We did it," said his smiling wife, Trish, who had kept vigil with her husband in an alley behind the savings and loan. Yesterday was the first day financial institutions could lend from a $300 million fund raised by a state bond sale, and most reported large crowds for the first-come, first-served loans. Some hopeful homebuyers had lined up as early as Wednesday, officials said. Raymond Sawyer, executive director of the Ohio Housing Finance Agen- cy, estimed the money would provide 5,000 to 6,000 30-year mortgages, gran- ted through 449 institutions statewide. 4