Pages THE BATTALION THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1979 3rd Canada no-confidence vote beaten United Press International OTTAWA — Prime Minister Joe Clark squeaked by with a two-vote margin in the third House of Com mons’ challenge to his 5-month-old Conservative government. Former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, who proposed Tuesday's no-confidence motion condemning Clark’s handling of Canada’s eco nomy and energy policies, said he probably will try again to bring down the minority government. “We won’t harass the government on every issue for harassment’s sake but if there is an important issue we will take action,” the Liberal Party leader told reporters after the splin ter Social Credit party saved the gov ernment with its five votes. “We will probably introduce another non-confidence motion around budget time,” said Trudeau of the tactic that could lead to new elections if the government is defe ated. The vote on Trudeau’s motion was 140 to 138, with all 26 New Demo cratic Party members joining his Li berals’ 112 member caucus. Russia’s hidden cemetery Stand Out O The Slopes! Everything new for the ski season at.. . CARNABY SQUARE LTD CULPEPPER PLAZA COLLEGE STATION 10-6 MON.-SAT. 10-8 Thursdays 10-8 after Thanksgiving Don’t forget the style show Nov. 13 at T.J.’s at 6:30 featuring womens fashions from Carnaby tux JL Square LTD. United Press International MOSCOW — Khrushchev is here. Stalins’s wife and grandson are here. Mikoyan rests nearby. Hundreds of those who have brought honor to their country are here in Novodevichy Cemetery, which after the Kremlin Wall itself, is the most esteemed place of rest in the Soviet Union. On a sunny Saturday, one of the few between the fading light of sum mer and the onslaught of the noto rious Moscow winter, Novodevichy offers a breath of fresh air that is mental worlds away from the urban glumness outside. The cemetery is next to Novode vichy Monastery where in 1698 Prin cess Sofia, half sister of Peter the Great, barricaded herself during the final days of the Streltsy uprising she led. Few Moscovites may walk through the groves of trees and see where their most famous country- ^ men rest. Novodevichy is bordered by heavy iron gates, watched over by militzia^city police) wearing frosty, forbidding expressions. Entrance in recent years has been restricted to those who have a rela tive buried on the grounds, and even some of those who produce passes identifying them as legitimate mour ners are turned away. For those who have the right or the persistence to get past the guards, Novodevichy can be a lesson in Russian history. The best known resident of the burial ground is Nikita Khrushchev, who ruled the Soviet Union for a decade before being forced out of power in 1964. Probably because he died out of power and out of favor, he was denied interment in the Krem lin Wall, resting place of Russia’s greatest heroes and leaders. Instead, his body was consigned to the thick black dirt here. It was not until four years later that an eight-foot monu ment of the dictator who shook the world by pounding his shoe on the podium of the United Nations was erected. By MER1 Bat Elmer Blaim ok off his cov uch and ] e coffee t; you wa Jo live in a said- Let m make adjusl JZZ7 N 0T- i°- of the fits live with * .death of 'ional def (S or to p •ehold. flER° ,c dead to live v r. We adj Inner and e’s mothei illege Stati percent c o or thrc ging/'am |U.S. gove ntofAmei R children, ■e within 10 I one child t are not m at least or of the «®P/e®:S£££E I / • No Minlmums V jf • Large Orders / JU ■ • Legal Sfae4 x AC Legal State 4^ OVERNIGHT RATES — 4* DURING THE DAY Reductions €? Dissertations CottatUm & Binding & Fading WE HAVE A XEROX 9400 - THE BEST COPYING MACHINE IN THE WOMDI A survivor of the Soviet scramble to the top was Anastas Mikoyan, once chairman of the Supreme Soviet and president of the Soviet Union. He served under four abso lute rulers — Nikoli Lenin, Josef Stalin, Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev — before retiring honor ably, if not entirely voluntarily, in 1965. He has been here since his death last year, but Mikoyan still has no plaque to his memory. His burial place is identifiable only because a photograph of him covered in plastic is propped on two sticks above the plot where he rests. Kinko’s Graphics, Inc. 201 Colleere Main St. (713)846-9508 Novodevichy also provides a place of burial for victims of embarrassing incidents whose passing is best not put on display. MSC TOWN HALL Presents: Stalin’s second wife, Ni Alliluyeva, who died in 193 cumstances suggesting foul pi . here, not far from Mikoyan. Sc* ..1 . i . dictator’s grandson, Vasily Jb v1 1 ir ,^ vich Stalin, who died in 1973K s P t)U f C ’ / 1 age of 23 from a drug overdoi|r enct ’ ^ lances in one Tl . f Hrs. Blaine : It is tor reasons such as tin*, ,i •. XI j.i.. . Bd couldn t Novodevichy is is not open CT . i public. Often a stroll tl f ““"vTu lanes will reveal the grave ofm ^ prominent Russian whose deal® ( | ?i never announced. ®“fm livin Ip her book, Hgnity,” 1 le most diffi Hhe older j of depen and his fi Sirements ( Blaine said The man whose name the fr°m i bears, Andrei Tupole, lies h h takes from the crash victims. He iJ^rstanding 1972, revered as one ofthepirP^ 61106 back of the Soviet aircraft industry, 71° f e t mom,T Novodevichy, he could eaiL$ ls as P oss ibl missed. Bossible for “We have to ■er than JWUHWMHJ HM M'lU Six of the 14 victims ofthed at the 1973 Paris Air Showwkl killed when a TU-144 exploAl flames and crashed are buried{ Their tragic deaths are depictel carving of the airplane ona( wall. st MSC CEPHEID VARIABLE,** presents TIME MACHI ■ m very hi . “It’s hom feel a part lildred Bla her mo “It takes erstanding, situation, b fre end.” laine said it ■ “Mother dren,” he s her in a iy women ■ ave to go i she’s right ot all two- ilies are a: Thursday, November 8 rated 0 601 Rudder 8:00 & 10:30 75(1 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16 — 8:00 PM G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM TICKETS: $ 4 50 , $ 5 25 , $ 5 75 Tickets & Information — MSC Box Office 845-2916 llown holll BRYAN COLLEGE STATION JAYCEES CASINO NIGHT NOV. 10th 7:30-11:30 GAMES 11:30 AUCTION RAMADA INN BALLROOM $5.00 at the door secures you play money in advance to bet on various games of chance; Chuck-O-Luck, Roulette, Black Jack, Wheel of Fortune, dice and more. Bid your fortune in play money on one of the many prizes that will be auctioned off when the games end. Mixed drinks and beer will be served Come out, be a winner.