I 1 Page 2-Friday, November 2, 1979-The Michigan Daily -U WILL BE BURIED NEXT TO IE 1st Lady Matnie dies "I APPLIED MYSELF ANDGOT FEDERAL STUDY MONEY -Robin Clark "My parents help pay my college tuition, and I also work part-time. But last year I realized I might not have enough money to continue my education. "Then I found out about the Middle Income Student Assistance Act. It provides more aid than ever before for education after high school. "I applied and found out that I was eligible for a Basic Educational Oppor- tunity Grant (BEOG). You should also apply to see if you qualify for BEOG or one of the other programs available to almost all students enrolled in colleges or technical schools. "If you'd like to get more education and need study money, do what I did. Write to Box 84, Washington, D.C. 20044 and ask for a free booklet. It's called "A Student Consumer's Guide to Six Federal Finan- cial Aid Programs" Then get in touch with the counselor or financial aid admin- istrator in the school of your choice for help in applying. (And be sure to com- plete the forms carefully so you will be eligible for the help you need!) "Remember: If you want education after high school and need financial assistance to get it, "IT'S TIME TO APPLY YOURSELF" 14 . 0 ...&.s United States Office of Education United States Office of Education Regular Students 250 line Newspaper Prepared by Masai Enterprises, Inc. 1979 From AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Mamie Eisenhower will be buried tomorrow beside her beloved Ike, the husband of more than a half-century with whom she shared a glittering military career and the presidency. To the nation, she was "Mamie," a shy, quiet woman who was happy to be known simply as the wife of Dwight Eisenhower, a five-star general and the country's 34th president. "I miss this man of mine; he was my life," she would tell interviewers after Eisenhower's death in 1969 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. They had been married nearly 53 years. PRESIDENT CARTER said she was a warm and gracious first lady who "carried out her public and private duties, despite a lifetime of fragile health, in a way that won her a special place in the heart of Americans and of people all over the world." After 10 years of living alone on the Eisenhower farm at the edge of the Civil War battlefield in Gettysburg, Pa., Mrs. Eisenhower suffered a stroke Sept. 25 and was paralyzed on her right side. She had been undergoing physical therapy since then at Walter Reed. MRS. EISENHOWER died at 1:35 a.m. Thursday, ap- parently of heart failure. She would have been 83 on Nov. 14. .As Eisenhower planned, she will be buried beside him in the "Place of Meditation," a small chapel with richly colored windows and Travertine marble wall panels situated just across from Eisenhower's boyhood home at Abilene, Kan. Both are on the grounds of the Eisenhower Center at Abilene. Beside her sister, Mrs. Eisenhower leaves her son, John, his wife, their four children and four granddaughters. The Eisenhowers had another son, Doud Dwight, who died of scarlet fever at age three. MAMIE GENEVA DOUD was born in Boone, Iowa, on November 14, 1896, and was the eldest of three daughters to a well-to-do meat packing house operator. Mamie was 18 when she met 2nd Lt. Eisenhower while she was visiting friends at Fort Sam Houston. The young officer, fresh out of West Point, courted her and gave her an engagement ring that was a full-sized copy of Ike's class ring - amethyst set in gold. They were married July 1, 1916, and Mamie, not yet 20, began following her husband to a variety of duty posts. SHE SAID ONCE that they lived in 37 houses during their married life. After Eisenhower's death she endured in silence the repor- ts that Ike had a torrid romance with Lt. Kay Summersby, his wartime driver, and that he once thought of divorcing Mamie to marry the young British woman. John Eisenhower called the divorce story an "egregious falsehood" and wrote in the preface to a book "Letters to Mamie" that "there is no evidence that divorce ever seriously crossed Dad's mind, even in the loneliest moments across the Atlantic." With only her Secret Service contingent for company, Mrs. Eisenhower tried last winter to move into Army Distaff Hall, a home for Army widows in Washington that she helped found. But there was no room in the 300-capacity residence even for one who bore the name of one of America's most distinguished soldiers. For a short time she lived in Wardman Towers, the Washington apartment building where she stayed when Eisenhower was in Europe, but she went back to Gettysburg. "The walls just kept closing in on me and I didn't like it," she said. Panel: Chemicals unregulated I U WASHINGTON (AP) - Millions of tons of potentially hazardous chemicals, some covered over by tennis courts, parking lots and private homes, are not covered by federal enviromen- tal laws, a congressional panel said yesterday. A House Commerce investigative subcommittee said in a report of its survey of disposal sites that "the hazardous waste disposal problem may well be the single most significant en- vironmental health issue of the decade." OF 3,383 WASTE sites identified by the subcommittee, 1,099 are no longer in use. The report said the closed sites contain an estimated 100 million tons of chemical wastes. The report said among these closed sites a substantial portion have probably been abandoned, with no company or person identifiable as responsible for cleaning up the areas. The subcommittee said it found such abandoned sites beneath tennis courts, a yacht club, church parking lots, a 18 die as Ell SAN SALVADOR (Reuter) - At least 18 persons, including six National Guardsmen, were killed in fresh clashes in El Salvador as opposition appeared to be mounting to a civilian- military junta which seized power 17 days ago. cemetery, a raceway, botanical gar- dens, nurseries and an old silo. EIGHTY FORMER dump sites were described now as private residences and farms, including pasture land and gardens. At a news conference, Rep. Bob Eckhardt, (D-Texas), the subcommit- tee chairman, said the nation's 53 largest chemical companies were sur- veyed on their waste disposal practices. He said the companies provided in- formation on how 1,605 chemical plants disposed of wastes at 3,383 sites. Most of the disposal took place after 1950. "THESE SITES do not necessarily pose threats to public health or the en- vironment," the report said. However, the subcommittee found that many of the sites contain large amounts of dangerous toxic chemicals that can cause disease or other poten- tial harm. E'ckhardt said the subcommittee conducted the survey in 'part because the Environmental Protection Agency has failed to make its own comprehen- sive effort to find out where the poten- tial hazards lie. IN RESPONSE, EPA Diiector Douglas Costle said he is ordering an immediate review of the list to deter- mine which of the sites might pose hazards. "Where sites are discovered that pose hazardous waste problems, EPA will utilize all of its available resources and legal authorities to undertake en- forcement actions and, where authority allows, to require cleanup," Costle said in a statement. The subcommittee report said that "a substantial amount of potentially hazardous waste is lying in landfills, pits, ponds and lagoons and will not be covered by EPA's hazardous waste program.' "Many of these closed sites contain wastes with chemical components known to pose potentially serious hazards to the public health and the en- vironment," it said. Today, 'in MU U MiamCsburg, Ohio NCR means -next generation microelectronics Salvador riots A military spokesman said 12 people died near the central market here yesterday when armed leftist demon- strators hurled incendiary bombs at security forces in a passing truck. HE SAID the troops opened fire in self defense. Earlier six National Guardsmen were killed in an ambush 40 miles southeast of the capital. The clashes occurred three days after the worst recent outbreak of violence in which armed leftists tried to storm a San Salvador newspaper office. In a I continue six-hour gunbattle with security forces at least 20 people were killed. Since the junta deposed rightwing President Carlos Humberto Romero in a bloodless coup Oct. 15, nearly 100 people have been killed in a wave of politically-motivated violence. IN OTHER incidents yesterday unidentified gunmen wearing military uniforms kidnapped Jaime Hill Arguello, a rich Salvadorean in- dustrialist, after killing his bodyguard. General Romero was deposed by the junta for his failure to establish con- stitutional order in El Salvador. As yet the junta has made little progress in bringing peace and order to this poor, overcrowded country. Feb. 2nd LSAIs CALL 1-261-LSAT OR WRITE: SECOND CHANCE University LSAT Preparation Service Presents 33900 Schoolcraft Road, Suite G-2 C O D P E S R Livonia, Michigan 48150 for more info call 994-5350 I1 If you want to build a career in the vital field of microelectronics, talk to a company with the resources, the staff, and the commitment you need: NCR. Professionals at our Miamisburg, Ohio operation are now developing, designing, and fabricating a new generation of- MOS/LSI semiconductors and memories-devices that will substantially enhance our position as the world's 2nd largest computer company. Entry-level assignments span the full range of engineering functions, including advanced device development, memory and logic design, test systems development, process engineering, and quality assurance/reliability. You should have a BS/MS/PhD in EE, or an MS/PhD in Solid State Physics, or a degree in Math or Computer Science with engineering emphasis at the MS or PhD level. Off-the-job, you'll enjoy the advantages of living in a spacious community on the outskirts of Dayton and just a short drive from Cincinnati. Educational opportunities are readily available- with NCR paying full tuition. Contact your placement office to learn when we'll be on campus. If. you can't meet with our representative, or if we are not visiting your campus, please write to Personnel Resources at the address below. Only permanent residents or citizens of the U.S. will be considered. NCR Corporation Microelectronics Operation 8181 Byers Road Miamisbura, Ohio 45342 FREE (-1- / Si Founded by Mharishi Mahesh Yogi INTRODUCTION to the Transcendental Meditation Program TUESDAY, NOV. 6th 8:00 P.M. Multi-Purpose Room, UGLI Daily Official Bulletin Friday, November 2, 1979 Dally Calendar WUOM: Hispanic Heritage, "Lulac: 50 Years Later" about the League of United Latin-American Citizens, 10 a.m. Engineering Humanities: Richard Falk, Leo Marx, open discussion, Rackham Conf. Rm., 10 a.m. Guild House: Luncheon, Michelle Russell, "Arts and Politics," 802 Monroe, noon. SSEAS: Robert Snow, "Multi-Nationals in Southeast Asia," Lane Commons, noon; "American Involvement in Export Oriented Industrialization in the Philippines," 48 Lane Hall, 3p.m. Center for Chinese Studies: Michel Oksenberg, "U.S.-China Relations," 200 Lane Hil, 4p.m. Music school: University Chamber Orchestra, Paul Makanowitzky, conductor, Hill, 8p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No. 50 Friday, November 2,1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornin s during the University year at 420 Ma nard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters) 13by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. or every Wednesday-Noon & 8:00 P.M.-Michigan Union For Information Call 668-8256 Room 4313 (C) 1976 World Plan Executive Council-U.S. All rights reserved. Transcendental Meditation is a series of WPEC-U.S. a nonprofit education organization NEW H Mon.-Fr C,(o Invites you to join h im for URS .n. Lion and Jewel U-M Dept. of Theatre $ promo SHOWCASE PRODUCTION APPY HC .4 D.m.-6 . By Wole Soyinko TONIGHT AT 8:00 I Mammmrw" 9