Photos by Lee Roy Leschper Jr. Chili teams to compete Saturday for Olympic title THE THIRD ANNUAL B-CS Jaycee chili Olympics will be held Saturday at Fellowship Hall, 1-mile off Highway 6 East By-pass on Tabor Road exit. The cook-off will have beer can smashing, cow chip throwing, and seed splitting events as well as a parachutist, beer, and a live band. In the picture above, members of the “Aggie Chili” team use a voltage tester to sample the potency of their chili during last year’s Olympics. Sampling is one of the biggest attrac tions at the chili competition as shown in the picture on the right. Oscar-winning films Two Academy Award-winning an animated parable about the short films — a student-made political climate of the 1960s — story of a young man who clings P^ s s ^9 r y a mus i c 9l friend- to a fantasey cowboy world and S ^'P that bridges generations, are San Antonio Symphony treats youth to concert April 11 Three Youth Symphony Concerts by San Antonio will be pre sented by the San Antonio Symphony in Rudder Auditorium on Wednesday, April 11. The concerts, sponsored by the Arts Council of Brazos Valley in cooperation with OPAS, will be presented in this community for the tenth consecutive year. Harvey Biskin will conduct all three concerts, which are scheduled for 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Texas A&M students may purchase tickets for remaining seats at the 11 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. concerts for $1 at the box office. Tickets are also on sale at the elementary and junior high schools in Bryan and College Station. The program for the 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. concerts will be: ‘Musical Menagerie’ Fledermaus Overture ... Strauss Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks ... Moussorgsky Tubby the Tuba ... Kleinsinger Circus Polka ... Stravinsky The Swan ... St. Saens Hippo Dance ... White Gazza Ladra Overture ... Rossini The program for the 1:30 p.m. concert will be: ‘The Movies’ Theme from “2001” ... Strauss Highlights from “Rocky”... Conti/Arr. Lowden Music from “Henry V” ... Walton Sorcerer’s Apprentice ... Dukas Music from “Star Wars” ... Williams/Arr. Burden Monday featured on the tenth and last episode of “Academy Leaders” Monday, April 16 at 8 p.m. The series is devoted to show ing Oscar-winning and nominated short films. Here is a synopsis of the last episode: —The Violin: A gentle fable aobut a wandering old musician, a young boy, and their shared love for music. Concert violinist Maurice Soloway appears as the itinerant fiddler and plays a score of his own composition. Canadian filmmaker George Pastic won an Academy nomin in 1974 for this live action short. —Is It Always Right to be Right?: This film had its begin ning in a 1969 Los Angeles Times editorial on the problems of communication between people on opposite sides of the political fence, which was written by War ren H. Schmidt, then assistant dean of the School of Business Administration at UCLA. The film is produced by Nick Bosustow, a second generation animator whose father created the charac ter Mr. Magoo, and is narrated by Orson Welles. The film won the 1970 Academy Award f 0 r best animated short. The “Academy Leaders” se ries was produced by KCET in Los Angeles for national airinq on PBS.