The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1982, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Battalion/Page 5
March 2, 1982
Western democracies felt
influence of Magna Carta
by Hope E. Paasch
Battalion Staff ^
Aside from its influence on
England in 1215, Magna Carta
deals with topics relevent to
Western democracies today, the
priest who travels with the docu
ment said Monday.
The Very Rev. Oliver Fien
nes, dean ol Lincoln Cathedral
in England, is at Texas A&M
University along with one of the
copies of Magna Carta. Only
four of the original copies re
main, and the one currently in
226 MSC belongs to the Lincoln
Cathedral.
Fiennes speech in 201 MSC
was sponsored by MSC Great
Issues.
The fact that Magna Carta
has survived for over 750 years
proves its lasting worth, Fiennes
said. Many of the principles in
the charter have been incorpo
rated into the constitutions of
several nations, including the
United States.
One can look at the Magna
Carta two different ways, Fien
nes said. The first is to study the
document from a historical
point of view; what it meant in
1215 and what it has meant to
England. Fiennes said he is
neither a Magna Carta scholar,
nor is he knowledgeable of the
detailed content of the charter.
The second way of looking at
the charter, Fiennes said, is to
examine sections that were the
foundation for some of today’s
democratic ideas. Magna Carta
dealt with women’s rights, trial
by a jury of peers and the con
cept that government is not
above the law, Fiennes said.
The charter specifically states
that a widow could not be forced
to marry against her will, estab
lishing tier right to choose her
partner, Fiennes said. In con
trast, Magna Carta disallowed
court evidence from a woman
unless the trial concerned her
husband’s murder.
One, and perhaps the most
famous, section of Magna Carta
concerns what Americans refer
to as due process of law, Fiennes
said. This clause guarantees ev
ery free man the right to trial by
a jury of his peers. The clause
also states that a man cannot be
arrested unless witnesses of the
crime are available.
Magna Carta put govern
ment, including the king, under
written law. This, Fiennes said,
was a new concept in govern
ment.
)blem
Mate
cals to combat
ttion of fire ai
ed Debault, \
$156,000 Iron
anchers to pay
aving their lai
he chemical Ai
they applied f<
hey were toldb)
e department
receive only ab(
of the cherai
1.
leagan Browml
ed us the funds he Very Rev. Oliver Fiennes, dean of the Monday to a group on the influence of
le if we colleincoln Cathedral in England, spoke Magna Carta on Western democracies,
from the people| '
M)0-acre blocks !M§
HSlalse alarms frequent
with campus system
by Greg Trest
auk said if the si
department cai
available to theij
achers, “We doe!
ice but to returd
iney and let the V Battalion Reporter
er our land." About 90 percent of campus
! recallsare f alse alarms, 99 per-
i an r i U ifet °f which are caused by van-
le, a candidate I alisn) or , ac(; j dent / says
commissioner jr rt R Sti / el Texas A&M
ec.al House co !ifety direaor
\ f l . t anI ’ In 1981, University Police re-
hmks Brownuor ded (o 56f) fire £ la six
ae magnitude of f j hich were actua , rires The
blem and tlu ^| e g e station Fire Depart-
art ment recen KL h as responded to 26 fire
provide Amdroi^ ()n ^ ^ ,
wnersof$l aiq n i vsix were r fires
IpMost campus buildings are
Iwiected to the Hawkeye re-
.-iQrting system, a detector that
* H U L fl/i Afr nSeS sm °h es or heavy vapors
' n V !> i> n d provides an early warning
HEATREfe“ panB lo d “ r lhe
.■“It’s not that the system is
E. 29th _j)iaHunctioning, it just is ex-
7:25 9 - 35 remely sensitive,” Stiteler said,
ARBAROSAiPWlaining the high incidence if
i Nelson. Gary Blaise alarms.
?, .c q.50 spray, cigarette smoke
KI Vi IT o V onilL reven P a ‘ nt va P°rs can trigger
NNERYFWhe alarm, he said.
Nick Nolle
‘"‘y-is |
REDS i;
7:30 9:45
\RTHUR
Moore/Liza M®
7:25-9:10
[IN WONDERS
l/IL ANDMAXOEH
Walt Disney
7:30 9:45
IDERSOF
LOST “
The Hawkeye reporting sys
tem has a transmitter in each
building and operates on a radio
frequency that sends a signal to
both the University Police Sta
tion and the Physical Plant,
Stiteler said. Each location has
two receivers that are monitored
constantly. The signal that com
es in tells where the fire is, he
said.
University Police officers
then respond to the call and call
city firemen if there is a fire.
This practice, however, carries
the potential of greater fire loss
due to firemen arriving late.
Stiteler said.
Thirteen campus buildings
are designated as immediate
notification areas because of
their contents or value. When
the alarm sounds in these build
ings, the College Station Fire
Department is notified immedi
ately.
Come Join Us For
Happy Hour!!
qq , 2 p.m.-6 p.m. Daily
yyC Pitchers of Lowenbrau and Miller Lite
990 Orders of Nachos
at
ALFREDO’S TACOS AL CARBON
509 University Dr. NORTHGATE 846-3824
lal Juried
MSC TOWN Hflll
presents
ONUJE
Need Your Car
“Tuned Up”
For Spring
Break?
Let Custom Sounds’
Audio Mechanics Tune It Up!
CWSTON SOUNDS HAS ••TUNE-UP”
SPECIALS LIKE THESE ALL WEEKt
OiD PIONEER KP-4500
AM/FM
Stereo
with
Reverse
In Dash
Cassette
Auto-
Only
JENSEN
SOUND LABORATORIES
“For the Serious
Car Stereo Person’
$
oo
6V1" Dual Cone
Speakers Re g . $43.00
*29 ,s pair
RES 18 10 watt
AM/FM Stereo
Cassette with
Electornic Tuning
A124 100 Watt
Power Amp
JI033 100 Watt
6x9 T riax
Speakers
SAVE
*250!
$ 599 95
JET SOUNDS
JS-71
Eight Band
Graphic
Equalizer
With twin LED power
indicators, speaker
fader, defeat switch
and 40 watts RMS
power per channel.
Our Most $ I
Popular I *
Equalizer/ Booster
“Hit The
Road
With
The Good
Ol’ Boys
^ SANYO FT-C6
AM/FM In Dash
Stereo Cassette
with Auto Reverse
only $ 99 95
SP772
6x9
Triaxial
Speakers
*79
; 7 #
>9
FT-510
AM/FM
In Dash
Cassette
Deck
10 watts/channel
Auto Reverse
Separate Bass, Treble
The Store Worth Looking For!
CUSTOM
SOUNDS
| s rnilFGE
TEXAS
CUSTOM \
[ROUNDS 41 \ OLD COLLEGE
I TRIANGLE . \
1 BOWL \.
UNIVERSITY
| WELLBORN
OPEN
10-6
Mon.-Sat.
3806-A Old College Rd.
(Next to Triangle
Bowling Alley)
846-5803