IM l2w q ~ rn Tonight: Mostly cloudy, low around 320. Tomorrow: Cloudy, chance of rain, high around 450. One hundred six years of editorialfreedom Monday November 18, 1996 4 { kwandan refugees return to homes U Thousands starving on 20-mile stretch of road Los Angeles Times GISENYI, Rwanda -And still they For the third straight day, through drenching rain and blinding sun, all day long and through the cold night, crowds of refugees returning from Zaire cascaded through this border town yesterday and poured into western Rwanda in an unbroken stream that stretched as far as the eye could see. . For 40 miles inside Rwanda, the solemn column of people clogged the gle, narrow road that snakes up ep hills, past cloud-shrouded volca- noes and through lush green farms. A few buses and trucks were pressed into service, with people clinging to the roofs, but the vast majority of returnees walked. Those too exhausted to continue stopped on the roadside, and at midday cooking fires pumped a choking blue haze into the air. When rain poured Own, the refugees suddenly disap- peared under a colorful array of blue, yellow and green plastic sheeting. The crush was relentless, the confu- sion intense. Parents bundled sleeping infants fore and aft, carried crying tod- dlers on their shoulders and tied torn rags to the wrists of- small children, dragging them along in the crowds. Gnarled men and haggard women hobbled with canes, slowly picking ,ir way. A few were pushed - or pro- lied themselves - in battered wheel- chairs. One man staggered on crutches, metal surgical pins sticking out of his leg. Anyone old enough to walk carried a plastic pail, a burlap sack, a rolled foam mattress, a blackened pot, usually perched on a coil of cloth atop the head. One man even marched with a hot pink electric guitar. Some slipped into farmers' fields 1d local gardens to forage for food.. They dug for sweet potatoes, pulled cabbagelike greens, -plucked ears of corn or stripped bunches of bananas from trees. Local villagers pulled out chairs and sat chatting and pointing at the passing parade. Except for crying children, the loudest sound was the drumming of thousands of shuffling feet on mile after mile of pavement. * And still they came. Ray Wilkinson, spokesperson for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, estimated that 350,000 to 400,000 ethnic Hutus had returned to Rwanda since early Friday, with an additional 100,000 or so still trekking toward Rwanda's border. The refugee agency sent several dozen buses into Zaire late last night, he said, to pick up See RWANDA, Page 7A Board votes to fund students' child care By Jodi S. Cohen Daily Staff Reporter The University Board of Regents voted Friday to help student parents by using general fund money for child care grants. The money for the child care scholar- ships also will come from a $1 per term increase in student fees that students voted for last spring. The University will match the $73,000 generated by the stu- dent fee with money from the general fund, totaling about $150,000 annually. General fund money comes mainly from state appropriations and tuition. Under the plan, money will be paid directly to child care providers, who could be indepen- dent from the University. The Office of Financial Aid will control the child care scholarships with the help of a small oversight committee of stu- dents, faculty and staff.Newman staff. Task force mem- bers acknowledged that it is difficult to determine the extent of student need, but estimated that about 20 percent of University graduate students and a smaller number of undergraduates have children. Declining an offer from Regent . Andrea Fischer ~w Newman (R-Ann child car Arbor), who vol- unteered to su port e insteaddraise the " money privately, public fu the regents approved the pilot program with a 6- 2 vote. Newman and Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) opposed the pro- gram, which was brought to the board by the University's Child Care Task Force. "I feel personally so strongly that matching funds not be taken," said Newman, who has previously voted against tuition increases. "I feel that I can raise privately the matching funds ... I will make a substantial contribution of my own into that." Newman asked the board to give her until the end of the year to raise the $73,000 from private donors. "What I want is a guarantee if these matching funds are raised privately, the money won't be taken out of the general fund," Newman said, arguing that tuition money for education should not be used to pay for child care. Other regents said the proposal was a statement of public policy and should not be confused with a regent's desire to raise funds privately. support e and we it with - Fiona Rose M SA president "I see this as an access issue," said Regent Laurence Deitch (D-Bloomfield Hills), who participated in the meeting via a conference call from Phoenix, Ariz. "This issue of access and fairness to stu- dents is a public responsibility." Deitch also countered Newman's argument, saying that using money from the general fund to pay for child care would not hurt education. "The students voted for this and there is no higher political authority than that which resides with the people," Deitch said. "Education expenditures don't boil down to reading, writing and arithmetic only" Deitch said University policy should not be determined "on an ad hoc basis by individual regents' desires, however well-intentioned." Michigan Student Assembly President Fiona Rose was a driving force behind See CHILD CARE, Page 7A - - JENNIE SERVAAs/DaIy High fashion Timi Hunt models authentic African fashions during the cultural segment of a fashion show at Betsey Barbour residence hall last night. 1 1 I Parties look to tweak language require nent Interim CEO to By Will Weissert Daily Staff Reporter The nearly 17,000 LSA students on campus have different interests and backgrounds - but most have at least some courses in common, thanks to the four-semester foreign language require- ment. That could change after Wednesday and Thursday's Michigan Student Assembly elections. Six of the eight parties vying for the assembly's 24 vacant seats want to see the requirement modified, if not done away with alto- gether. Assistant LSA Dean David Schoem said the administration would value input from MSA. "We'd be very interested about what MSA has to say on this issue," Schoem said. "We usually work with LSA- Student Government - but we would also be interested in what other elected students have to say." Schoem said a committee was cur- rently examining the requirement and would have a report ready this spring. "We are trying to look at what stu- dents think about language instruction courses and where improvements can be made," Schoem said. "But we've found general support for the require- ment to be greater than we anticipat- ed." But many of the parties said they wanted to see the requirement restruc- tured. "laving to memorize some vocab words and then spitting them out on a test - that's no way to learn a lan- guage," said Students' Party Coordinator Chad Bailey. "These class- es need to allow more student input and be more effective and more fun." Victors Party spokesperson Nicholas Kirk said four required semesters is too much for most students. "There could be some kind of reduc- tion in the requirement," Kirk said. "It seems like a good foundation for a lan- guage could be achieved in one year, not two." boy. 20-21 MSA Parties Divided Party line: LSA Foreign Language Requirement Crush the Purple Dinosaur: Should be left up to individual departments Liberty: Reduce requirement to two semesters Michigan: Modify or abolish require- ment Nihilist: Moot point - MSA cannot affect requirement Slumber: Abolish requirement Students': Increase student input in language classes United People's Coalition: Requirement should not be changed Victors: Reduce requirement to two semesters Liberty Party Chair Martin Howrylak agreed LSA students should only have to take two semesters of for- eign language, but said students should not have a pass/fail option. "These classes should be more effec- tive at teaching the language," Howrylak said. "But I think changing it See MSA, Page 5A keep 'U' By Jeff Eldridge Daily Staff Reporter With the arrival of a new University president, the departure of other execu- tives impending and interim officials filling many-top administration slots, it almost takes a scorecard to keep track of who is coming and going from the Fleming Administration Building. A new interim administrator will soon be stepping into one of the University's top positions. Chandler Matthews, for- mer associate vice president for finance. will serve as interim executive vice pres- ident and chief financial officer of the University starting Jan. 1. "You try to keep things going," Matthews said. "It's a dynamic place." Matthews will step into the building in a period of change and transition. He said maintaining the University's finan- cial strength and continuing a positive status quo will be an important responsi- bility during his period as interim leader. Matthews said it is "exciting" that he will serve when the next University president, Lee Bollinger, comes into the job, and that it was an incentive for him to agree to serve. Matthews came to the University as controller in 1970. He was promoted to associate vice president for finance in -running 1989 and served in that position until his retirement last April. Current Chief Financial Officer Farris Womack, who is scheduled to step down Dec. 3 1 after eight years of service, has set a tough act to follow, Matthews said. "There's no way I can be another Farris Womack," Matthews said. "It would be an impossible task." The chief financial officer oversees the University's investment strategy and performs financial analysis, among other things. Womack oversaw a growth in the University's investment endowments from $300 million to $1.6 billion during the past eight years. Interim President Homer Neal said Matthews comes to the job with a record of distinction. "Chandler Matthews has had an extensive background and experience in the University's administration and financial affairs," Neal said. "We are very grateful that he is willing to return from retirement to serve the University during this interim period." Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison said the search to find a full-time chief financial officer will proceed quickly. "We'll name a search committee in the next week for the CFO," Harrison said: 'Taste' of Puerto Rico begins heritage week Wixom shooting becomes tragic for 'U' student From Staff and Wire PReports NOVI - A man who prosecutors said was rebuffed by security when he tried to propose to an auto plant worker was charged Friday with murder and 25 other crimes in a plant By Ann Stewart Daily Staff Reporter A celebration of Puerto Rican history and lture brought the Latino/a student commu- nity together as Puerto Rican Week began yes- terday. The week started with a "taste" of Puerto Rican culture at Trotter House yesterday afternoon. More than 50 students gathered to sample Puerto Rican cuisine like arroz con worked together for the first time on the project. "We wanted to create more unity in the Latino community at U-M and (for) the larger community to see that there is unity in the different Latino organizations," she said. Tuesday night, the celebration continues with the showing of "La Guagua Aerea," a comedy about early Puerto Rican immigrants on their journey to New York Wednesday, Osvaldo Rivera is scheduled to polio, guava paste, and mofongo, a dish made with plantains. Students said it was good to mingle and enjoy food that remind- ed them of home. "The food is the best," said LSA senior Ricky Guzman. Puerto Rican Week. Tomorrow: Movie, "La Guagua Aerea," Angell 11a11 Auditorium BJ7p~rm. Wednesday: Caribbean serenate, Wolverine Room, Michigan Union, 7 p.m. Thursday: Marta Moreno Vega, Welker Room, Michigan Union, 6 p~mn. Friday: Dance performance and work- shop, Wedge Room, West Quad, 6-8 p.m. present a "Caribbean Serenate." The presen- tation will explore the Afri c an- H i span i c music that is part of Puerto Rican culture. "It reflects history," PRA President Tito Pando said. "Puerto Rico is made up of dif- shooting that killed one man and wounded three. Gerald Atkins of Wixom was arraigned Friday on a charge of first-degree murder in the death of Darrell Izzard, killed in Thursday's shooting spree at Ford Motor Co.'s Wixom plant 30 miles northwest of "He worked his whole life to make sure his whole family was happy. - Jeffrey Izzrd LSA senior MARGARET MYERS/Daily r