n Wednesday, October 19,1983/The Battalion/Page 5 Reagan asks for guidance Marine’s widow prays I United Press International lENSACOLA, Fla. — The Iwile of a Marine captain killed ■Beirut said Tuesday she told President Reagan she was praving he made “the right jirisions” about sending troops to Lebanon. ■ “I told him I had been praving for him to make the right decisions,” said Marian •'Gail” Older, wife of Capt. lhael J. Ohler. “It meant a Kto me. It was really some- Big to get a call from the A Ksident. I’m thankful we f inave the type of government wht re people care.” I /■Ohler, 25, said she received lorovitI telephone call from the /J’gRll Rfcgan Monday night. ‘ ■' ^ e warUe< J to express his ttinee Ipndolences and said he and ■rs. Reagan were praying for He,” she said. “He believed the 0||y husband gave his life for and h his country. W'He told me he had done ..more praying for guidance in I last two years than he ever ■l before. He tried to en- 3 Brage me and said I had a good life ahead of me,” Ohler ed. il asked i! vide J2i; ISENfot m. Then e self-supi A memorial service for Ohler will be at 1 p.m. Friday at the Marine Corps Air Sta tion in New River, N.C. Ohler will be buried at Barrancas National Cemetery on Pensa cola Naval Station. Ohler, a helicopter pilot and air liason officer, was sta tioned at the air station and Camp Lejeune, N.C. before he was ordered to Beirut in May. He was shot in the head Sunday when Marines came under small arms fire from Shiite Moslem positions in Beirut. He was the seventh Marine serving with the Multi national Force to die. Ohler said her husband hoped the force would bring peace in Lebanon. “My husband served the Lord through serving in the Marine Corps,” she said. “He told my daughter in one of his tapes he was there to help those people get some peace like we have here.” Capt. Rick Hamme, a friend of Ohler’s who saw him in Lebanon earlier this year, said fellow officers at Camp Lejeune were surprised by the captain’s death. “It was a shock. People said, ‘Mike, not Mike.’ He was well- known and loved,” said Ham me, who traveled to Pensacola to help Ohler’s family com plete funeral arrangements. When they met in Beirut, the two talked of their fami lies, Hamme said. “I have a 4-month-old son at home. We talked a lot about his wife who was expecting.” Ohler, a native of Hunting- ton, N.Y., never saw his 3- month-old son Benjamin, who was born in June after he left the United States. He is also survived by his 2-year-old daughter, Sarah Marie. Mrs. Ohler came to her pa rent’s home in Pensacola from Jacksonville, N.C., where the couple had lived, when her husband went abroad. The two met in Pensacola in 1978 while he was undergoing flight training and they were married in November 1979. Ohler graduated from the Naval Academy in 1977. Illegal aliens fill farm void United Press International LAS CRUCES, N.M. — The U.S. Census Bureau estimates at least half the 3.5 million to 6 mil lion illegal aliens in the United States are from Mexico. In New Mexico, the immig rants blend into the local popu lation easily and generally be nefit the agriculture sector, according to Clyde Eastman, a sociologist with the New Mexico State University Agriculture Ex periment Station. Eastman said undocumented workers are willing to do much of the ranch and farm work that Americans find undesirable, and they will work for lower wages. “Production of many agricul tural commodities is not very profitable,” Eastman said. “And any savings goes directly into the producers’ bank accounts. “In this situation, even small amounts become a relatively large portion of the profit. “But the availability of willing labor is more important than cost savings.” Eastman interviewed 50 pro ducers involved in New Mexico agriculture about production practices and employment of undocumented workers, and he said the immigration situation in New Mexico is unique. Eastman said Mexican work ers can cross the border relative ly easily on their own, with friends or relatives. If they intend to work near the border, the cost of coming over is low and they often come and go several times a year, he said. He said illegals who remain near the border are less likely to be exploited or mistreated, com pared with those who seek em ployment far into the country’s interior. Eastman said if the un documented worker is removed from the state’s agriculture scene, the ramifications could be far reaching. Producers, he said, would have difficulty finding Amer ican labor willing to do some of the tedious, boring work neces sary to keep operations going. It is also a safety valve for Mexico,” he said. ear. Mm e of reve metimeb “c. 2, dum >ne$ ssio! utility ::8 ; purpoi " ! provide! the waietl lacililies :8 cr Northll icil imivil . if this rev" inits spec: i the J.A1 i., develop tech ini * Station. 1 any asked: Id use the) iod for tk FAMOUS MAKER ACTIVE SPORTSWEAR SEPARA TES