Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, August 11, 1983 Delayed aid strands- Nigerian students NEW YORK (AP) At least 10,000 Nigerian students are stranded on American campuses without money for tuition of living expenses because of delays in scholarship funding from their homeland, university officials say. American officials blame the delay on the Nigerian government's response to an economic pinch, while a Nigerian official attributes it to bureaucratic errors. But whatever the cause, the students without funds . have been barred from registering for classes at hundreds of colleges and universities this fall. That leaves the students, who cannot work under U.S. immigration rules, in violation of their student visas and sub- ject to deportation, officials said. Jule Rose of Iowa State University, coordinator for Nigerian students for the National Association for Foreign students, said 10,000 to 13,000 Nigerian students - about half the Nigerian students in this country - have not received their scholarship funds. She said those students will be unable to pay their tuition, rent and utilities or buy books and even food as the fall semester begins later this month. The students owe $22 million in tuition and $65 million in living expenses to hun- dreds of colleges and universities, she said. Rose said each school where Nigerian students are in default is handling the problem on its own. She said most universities are not allowing the students to register for classes this fall if they still owe for last year, though some require all students to pay at least part of this semester's fees in advance. "The financial condition of Nigerian students in the United States is an em- barrassment to all of us associated with international education," said Dixon Johnson of the University of Tennessee. Johnson, president of the National Associatin of Foreign Student Advisers, said one Nigerian student, a young woman who is blind, has not received a penny of her promised living expenses since arriving in Knoxville last March. He said university officials are using her $4,500 tuition deposit to pay for her room and board. "It appears that their government, through a policy of neglect or indif- ference or corruption or all of the above, is placing these students in an impossible position," Johnson said. Local group plans to attend national civil rights rally (Coninued from Page *)'c GROUPS supporting this year's rally Unitarian Church on Washtenaw range from the United Auto Workers Avenue. and the National Association for the THE BENEFIT will feature local Advancement of Colored People, to the performers and speakers volunteering National Organization for Women. their time for the night. Tickets are $3 National planners expect 100,000 at the door. Some of the money will be people will turn out for the anniversary used to help subsidize the cost of bus rally. tickets, and some for publicity, Peter- Over 200,000 people swelled the son said. streets of Washington in 1963, when The The benefit will also give people who Rev. Martin Luther King gave his "I can't make the tripto Washington a have a dream" speech. chance to participate. City councilmember Larry Hunter "It's a good time for people who can't (D-First Ward), who helped organize afford to go to Washington to come and the coalition, said he hopes the rally support the cause," Peterson said. wil ofer chnceto reae iporant The coalition's buses will leave will offer a chance to create important Friday, August 26 at 7:30, and return to political alliances.AnAbrthmrng fhe2h. "THERE'S strength in numbers. The Ann Arbor the morning of the 28th. coalition might be the source of some vital political action," he said. THE DAILY Hunter said the coalition has sent out CLASSIFIEDS 750 notices announcing the rally, in anCL SIED effort to show the link between peace, ARE A GREAT jobs, and freedom..W YT GE In order to make the rally available WAY TO GET to those who might not be able to afford FAST RESULTS the bus ticket, the coalition is staging a CALL 764-0557 benefit at 7;30 tomorrow night at the Isn't your future worth the investment in a top quality resume? At Kolossos Printing, we do the kind offine typesetting and layout used by the companies to which you're applying. Wordprocessors cannot provide comparable quality, and advertising agencies don't do resumes. As a commercial printer, Kolossos can offer you top quality at an affordable price - the best of both worlds. Isn't that what you deserve? Kolossos Printing 310 E. Washington 994-5400 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Libyan forces threaten Chad N'DJAMENA, Chad - A furious Libyan armor and air onslaught is threatening the collapse of the strategic northern outpost of Faya-Largeau, Western military sources reported yesterday night. The reports conificted with statements made earlier in the day by Chad's Information Minister Soumaila Mahamat, who said President Hissene Habre's government troops at Faya-Largeau had "decisively defeated" and beaten back the Libyan assault. The Libyan-backed rebels, led by former President Goukouni Oueddei, claimed to have completely overrun Faya-Largeau. Western military sources in the capital of N'Djamena said all radio con- tact with Faya-Largeau was lost at midday and that the situation there was regarded as "extremely critical." Beirut cabinet officials kidnapped BEIRUT, Lebanon - Druse foes of Christian President Amin Gemayel kidnapped three of his Cabinet members yesterday and rocketed the U.S. Marine compound at Beirut airport, the Defense Ministry and the Presiden- tial Palace. Authorities said the shelling killed five Lebanese civilians and wounded 30 people, including a Marine. An Israeli soldier also was killed by a rocket fired during a daylong renewal of the Druse-Christian warfare in the Israeli- occupied central mountains. One of the Druse shells landed 500 yards from U.S. presidential envoy Robert McFarlane as he toured the Marine compound at the airport, and he left hurriedly under escort. The Marines leaped into foxholes and went on their highest state of alert, and six U.S. Navy support ships pulled back from the Beirut coast. Kissinger Commission member assails Pres. Reagan's policy WASHINGTON - The Kissinger Commission on Central America policy was sworn in yesterday as the White House rejected conservative demands that one member be replaced, and two other panelists expressed dismay over President Reagan's present course in the region. Minutes before the State Department ceremony, San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros, a Democrat on the commission, said the chief problem for the United States is the "heavy-handed" image it has acquired in region through such activiities as "toppling governments and rigging elections." Declaring that pursuit of such policies has cost the United States dearly and are "always a danger," Cisneros said he hopes President Reagan will take no actions which will pre-empt the work of the commission. On Tuesday, Cisneros called administration's policies "wrong and potentially dangerous." 'Blood Alley' crash kills 11 COACHELLA, Calif. - A car fleeing the Border Patrol on a dangerous desert highway called "Blood Alley" ran a stop sign yesterday and was hit broadside by a tractor-trailer truck, killing 11 men and boys, authorities said. Ten were found dead at the scene of the collision which culminated a 30- mile chase at speeds up to 100 mph, according to the California Highway Patrol. Another died 10 hours later at a Palm Springs hospital. Neither the Border Patrol agents nor the driver of the truck, which was loaded with hay, were injured. The victims appeared to be Hispanic, possibly farmworkers, said highway patrol spokesman Jim Mousely. The accident occurred about 2 a.m. on a stretch of two-lane Highway 86 about 120 miles east of Los Angeles. It brought to at least 57 the number of people who have died on the highway in this area since 1980, officials said. Highway patrol officer Tom Granger said most of the victims, jammed in the 1974 Ford Galaxy, were hidden during the chase. Toxic fumes float over Atlanta ATLANTA - A burning truckload of chemicals spread a cloud of toxic fumes over parts of southwest Atlanta yesterday, sending more than 60 people to the hospital, forcing the evacuation of 100 homes and closing part of a busy highway at the morning rush hour. The injured included 19 of the 80 firefighters who doused the chemicals with water for nearly eight hours. The blaze broke out about 5:30 a.m. in a tractor-trailer carrying 160 55- gallon drums of sodium hydrosulfite on Interstate 285. The mixture of water with the chemical created a toxic cloud of sulfurous . acid vapor that forced officials to close five miles of the highway as the mor- ning rush hour began. Homes within a half-mile radius were evacuated. The highway was reopened in time for the afternoon rush hour after em- ployees of O.H. Materials, a Covington firm under contract with the En- vironmental Protection Agency, removed the drums from the trailer. Fire Chief B.J. Thompson said the vacuees were allowed to return to their homes about 3:30 p.m, and the "hazard is completely over." Officials built a water-filled lagoon along the highway to submerge the drums as they were removed from the truck. 4 i I I I I