3 (D 2 c &) ^Picture MXM3 Arkansas still alive perfect? w in race for Cotton 5 See story, page 3 Life in theCoriK<)fGtckt*at 'ILvas A&M I a Will vanOuilxt'k See Sports, page 9 II The Battalion Serving the University community Vol. 76 No. 54 USPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Monday, November 15, 1982 ^Brezhnev is buried; U.S. is warned United Press International MOSCOW — President Leonid I Brezhnev was buried today in a Bolemn Red Square funeral that drew presidents, premiers and princes to lonor the man who ruled the world’s Jiost powerful communist nation for 18 years. Brezhnev’s successor, Communist Party chief Yuri Andropov, eulogized Jiim as a “true son of the party” who built up the nation’s economy and [ military power. Brezhnev’s black coffin was lo wered into a grave in a tiny cemetery reserved for the most revered Soviet statesmen behind the Lenin Mausoleum. Worked stopped around the coun try for five minutes as bells pealed and factory whistles blared, followed by a moment of silence. Brezhnev’s coffin was drawn across the soldier-lined empty square, on a gun carriage. The coffin was escorted by a military honor guard and followed by grieving family mem bers and party officials. Speaking over Brezhnev’s open casket atop Lenin’s tomb, Andropov delivered the eulogy to the man who presided over the largest military buildup in Soviet history and watched detente with the West crumble in his later years. “In a complicated international situation, where imperialism is pushing the world to the path of con frontation, our party and our govern ment will do their best to struggle to preserve the interests of our people to rebuff any of those who want war, and to strengthen our defense might,” Andropov said. Defense Minister Dmitry Usitnov echoed Andropov’s clear warning to the West, saying Brezhnev, a marshal of the Soviet Union, always showed a “fatherly concern” for the Soviet army and navy. As they spoke, foreign delegates watched from gray stone benches on either side of the marble tomb. Among them were Polish leader Gen. Wqjciech Jaruzelski, Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Palestinian guerrilla chief Yasser Arafat. Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State George Schultz headed the U.S. delegation at today’s 70-minute ceremony, along with more than 100 other foreign digni taries. Bush and Shultz were expected to meet with Andropov at a Kremlin re ception after the rites. The funeral began at the House of Unions, where Brezhnev’s body hand lain for three days on a bier covered with flowers. An honor guard, carrying bayonetted rifles and goosestepping to the strain’s of Chopin’s funeral march, accompanied Brezhnev’s cof fin at the head of procession of offic ers bearing a huge portrait of the dead leader. Foreign students leave home, come to A&M