Gas surplus creating lower prices See page 3 Thursday is no longer Focus day. Because of The Battalion’s increased volume of advertising, Focus, the weekly entertainment supplement, now will be published on Fridays. Today’s television schedule is on page 7 of The Battalion, so you won’t miss a day. You’ll still find this weekend’s entertainment listings and features in Focus. But you’re on your own for tonight. See Focus on Frida y The Battalion Serving the University community ol 75 No. 104 USPS 045360 20 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, February 25, 1982 Three-judge panel to rule on removing White from case United Press International DALLAS — A three-judge panel charged with drafting legislative re districting plans is considering mo tions by the Texas governor and House speaker to remove Attorney General Mark White as their lawyer in the case. The panel is expected to make a ruling on the motions late today. Both Gov. Bill Clements and Speaker Bill Clayton are named as defendants in a redistricting suit that was pending before the court when the Justice Department declared the state’s House and Senate districts in valid. The Justice Department said the plans illegally diluted the voting strengths of blacks and Mexican- Americans. Clements was named as a defen dant because he is the state’s highest political figure and Clayton because he was a member of the five-man panel that drew the new House and Senate districts because of problems with the plans passed by the Legisla ture. After the adverse ruling by the Jus tice Department, the court agreed to redraw the districts and to take sug gestions on the configuration of the districts from all parties involved in the original suit. The original lawsuit was filed by two Republican lawmakers, several people active in the Texas GOP and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund. They contend the districts discriminated against Re publicans, minorities and urban resi dents. Clayton, Clements and Secretary of State David Dean all have been openly critical of White’s handling of the case, saying he has taken actions with the court without consulting them. White and Dean have had a parti cularly heated exchange, with Dean contending that White has kept state officials in the dark about the case and White countering that the state has only one interest in the case and one lawyer — himself. The motions by Clayton and Cle ments are both pending before U.S. District Judge Jerry Bucnmeyer. Also on the panel are U.S. District Judges Carolyn Randall and Barefoot San ders. Senators designate sites for upcoming elections by Cyndy Davis Battalion Staff Student senators Wednesday night designated nine polling places for up coming spring elections after consid erable debate about the ninth loca tion. Senators approved these locations proposed by Election Commissioner George Crowson: the Academic and Agency Building, Zachry Engineer ing Center, the Memorial Student Center, Harrington Classroom Cen ter, Sterling C. Evans Library and Sbi- sa Dining Hall for the two-day elec tions. The Kleberg Animal Science Center and the Veterinary Medicine Complex will be polling sites for one day only. Crowson said the commission chose places that are accessible to the most students, emphasizing academic rather than living areas of campus. An exception was made for Sbisa since one-fifth of the student popula tion eats there, he said. However, those polling places were later recalled for consideration by Senator George Boozalis who said a south campus polling site was needed also. Senator Mark Ely agreed, saying, “The point is to get people involved, we want people to get out and vote.” Senators then approved the addi tion of Heldenfels Hall to the list of polling locations for March 30 and 31. In other business, senators voted down a bill calling for support of the MSC Council’s electronic message center. Senator Greg Hood said sena tors need more information about the project before they can support it. The Department of Census and Research Organization Bill, recom mending formation of such a depart ment to provide a statistically valid method of gathering student view points, passed unanimously. Senators conducted campus can vasses last fall which failed to provide representative student responses to survey questions. Also approved was the Dead Week Library Bill, a proposal that the Sterl ing C. Evans Library stay open until 2 a.m. beginning May 1. The bill also allocates $190 for the project. The Parking Research Bill was in troduced and passed, asking that an external research group conduct stu dies on campus parking, traffic and pedestrian problems. The bill also calls for recommendations to be made to the University’s five-year master planning committee. “This problem has been seriously neglected for so long,” Chris Lang ford, student vice president, for stu dent services said. “The time has come to deal with it.” Langford said research by an ex ternal firm would have more emph asis with the Texas A&M System Board of Regents than would re search conducted by the System. Senators also appointed the fol lowing students to senate seats: Mary Ann French, Keith Carmichael, Mark Jameson, Robert Ruiz and Debbie Moy. Judicial Board Chairman Lance Wright announced that the College of Liberal Arts Senior senate seat is open and that Matt Woodruff, who was the only original applicant for the posi tion, will be considered. If Woodruff is not appointed, additional applica tions will be accepted. Magna Carta to be on display in the MSC Vandiver welcomes document to U.S. = by Steven B. Larkin Battalion Reporter Everybody who is interested in li berty is going to be touched by this document,” said Texas A&M Presi dent Frank E. Vandiver Wednesday, as he welcomed the arrival of the Magna Carta at Houston’s Intercon tinental Airport. J Vandiver was part of a University delegation that met the Very Rev. Oliver Finennes, dean of the Lincoln Cathedral in England, who accompa nied the ancient parchment on its flight to the United States. “Seeing a 750-year-old document concerned about the basics of human freedom is a great experience for any one in the West,” Finennes said. He has brought the document to Amer ica on previous visits. H The Magna Carta, carried by three armed guards, was protected by a spe cially designed case and was never opened for exhibit at the press recep tion. Information concerning the location of the 13th century docu ment is being kept confidential until it arrives for display at the University campus Sunday. P The fragile parchment will be open for public exhibit at the Memorial Student Center Sunday through Tuesday. About 8,000 visitors are expected to view the document during its stay on the campus, says J. Wayne Stark, special assistant to the University president, specifically for cultural de velopment. Stark has served as head of the committee responsible for bringing the document to the Univer sity. Texas A&M is the initial stop for the 14-week nationwide tour that will take the historical document to Mis sissippi, Tennessee, North and South Carolina and Virginia. This is the fifth time the document has been on public exhibit in the United States. Signed and sealed by King John in an historic meeting at Runnymede in 1215, the Magna Carta was a treaty between the king and his barons that guaranteed the rights of all people and made the king subject to law. Some of the provisions of the Magna Carta provided that no one could be deprived of his right to life, liberty or property without due process. The $14,750 needed to bring the Magna Carta to the Unversity was raised through private donations, a $1,650 grant from the Texas Com mission for Humanities and a $2,000 donation by the city of College Sta tion. inside Classified Local.. . . National. Opinions Sports... State What’s U p 12 3 . 9 . 2 17 . 6 14 forecast Today’s forecast: Overcast and rainy with temperatures in the mid-50s. Friday’s forecast calls for mostly cloudy skies with cool tem peratures and a 50 percent chance of rain. University president Dr. Frank E. Vandiver greets the Very Rev. Oliver Finennes, dean of the Lincoln Cathedral in England, at Houston’s Intercontinental staff photo by David Fisher Airport Wednesday afternoon. The Rev. Finennes accompanied the Magna Carta — sealed in a special case due to its age and condition — to the United States.