30-hour fast begins tonight By JAN EVANS City Reporter A 30-hour fast tor world hunger jonsored by the Methodist Student Movement will begin tonight at 9. After a speech by the Kev. W.C. Hall, about 30 students will discuss world hunger problems, hold prayer sessions, and participate in games to help pass the hours without food. e atteinMlhe students have collected $250 ng to dak-it! donations and pledges for missed id,(ar^™“°' c 17 —*-• - 1 - f ‘■ 1 — Jh—in isconsin so far. Forty percent of the mey will go to World Vision Inter- Btional, a worldwide relief organi sation, and the rest will go to the United Methodist Committee on uverseas Relief. There will be two speakers Satur- ond; ani ^ r - Benton Storey, a horticul- hbegm ^ Ure P r °f esso r a tTexas A&M Univer- todte^ ty ' wi11 s P eak at 1° a.m. on miscon- aservali (^P^ ons a b°'it world hunger and the igingvair P* 1 ® 1 "' K At 1 p.m. Irene Adame will dis- reasinglvi|if lympicl| efits s have igsens sof ic potos" forBuit:® eluctancf hesuniii ghttol: at least United Press International port, mlBVCN ANTONIO — Officials are g, but«edicting 4 million people will ♦cuss problems of ilegal aliens. Adame was a missionary in Mexico for seven years. The public is welcome to attend the speeches. David Oswald, chairman of the Methodist Student Movement, said the participants in the fast were asked to have their last meal at noon Friday. “We plan for the participants to stay together during the fast so that while we share the experience of feeling hunger, we can also learn why hunger exists in the world and what we can do about it. “We hope to get people involved because otherwise nothing will happen.” The fast will end at 6 p.m. Satur day with a light meal. Speeches will be at the Wesley Foundation in the Methodist Stu dent Center at 201 Tauber Rd. The center is across the street from A&M United Methodist Church on Uni versity Drive. 'iesta may lure million people THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1980 Page 3 Brazos de Dios this weekend about y faces. on Post tend a record 142 events during le 10-day Fiesta San Jacinto which "icially opens today. ic first major parade will be the new Hispanic-oriented Rey Feo (Ugly King) procession which starts atl:30p.m. Saturday. It features 102 Mexican-style entries, including Miss Mazatlan. .. Among opening events today is Fiesta UTSA on the campus of the University of Texas-San Antonio, featuring a variety of foods and game 1 booths. Also scheduled today are art ex hibits at Alamo Plaza and McNay In- stitute and Witte Memorial Museum. During the Fiesta, dance com- I panics, bands and other live enter tainment will appear daily at El Mer cado and the Fiesta Carnival will be open for business each night. The three older parades, the Bat tle of Flowers, Fiesta River Parade and Fiesta Flambeau Parades, are scheduled next week. Texans, Viets halt fleet build-up United Press International HOUSTON — Texan and Viet namese fishermen have agreed to an Informal moratorium on expansion of the commercial fleet working the crowded Galveston Bay, a mediator announced. . “It’s a voluntary or gentlemen’s agreement to hold the number of boats to the current level,” John Townsend said. “New boats can be swapped for old boats but that’s it. Both sides have agreed to try to hold it.” Townsend, chairman of Gov. Bill Now you know United Press International WASHINGTON — Inflation has driven up highway construction costs 156 percent in the last 10 years, according to the Road Information Program. The group estimates the price tag for repairing and rebuilding the nation’s broken-down roads and bridges is $124 billion, but state and federal agencies are able to collect and spend only about $30 billion annually. Ill United Press International WASHINGTON — Some scien- g to p lists estimate that world population gnoif fbout 25,000 years ago was only 3.34 million — about the number of peo ple living in Chicago today, accord- e? 1 ing to the National Geographic lancini Society, to can Clements’ Task Force on In dochinese Resettlement, said the agreement was reached after a series of meetings. Townsend and other federal, state and local officials have tried to mini mize friction between native and re fugee fishermen in the Kemah- Seabrook area to prevent trouble when shrimp season opens next month. A U.S. Commerce Department study last fall indicated efforts should be made to relieve growing pressure from Indochinese refugee involve ment on the Texas fishing industry. The refugee population in Texas has been estimated at 25,000 and growing. Officials have said Vietnamese are moving onto the Texas Gulf Coast from other parts of the country be cause they like the hot, steamy cli mate and the fishing life. They work and live cheaper than American fishermen and pose a threat to economic stability in the area, fishermen have charged. Last year, violence erupted in the fishing village of Seabrook, on San Antonio Bay near Corpus Christi. One Texan was killed and two Viet namese were acquitted of murder charges on grounds of self-defense. yfltpj ionr; ■St#', jW a ne* 1 "Tliei •inon 1 ' * PIZZA INN OF BRYAN Sunday Night Buffet 6-8:30 p.m. ALL YOU CAN EAT $^69 ONLY CL Includes Pizza, Salad & Spaghetti (This offer good only at the Biyan Pizza Inn.) 1803 Greenfield Plaza by Bryan High 846-1784 By NANCY ANDERSEN City Staff Pull on your Tony Lamas, grab your hat and head for the Brazos County Pavilion this weekend for this area’s first professional rodeo, just one of the activities during Bra zos de Dios: A Western Festival. Brazos de Dios, the original name given to the Brazos River by Spanish conquistadors, will celebrate the heritage of the Brazos Valley. The events reflect the Spanish and West ern influences. The Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association rodeo kicked off the fes tival Thursday and will continue nightly at 7:30 p m. through Saturday. Professional cowboys from all uv 0 ^ the country will compete in such events as bull riding, calf roping and steer wrestling fe r prize money. World champion bull rider Donnie Gay and world champion saddle bronc rider Monty Hawkeye Hen son will be featured competitors. Advance reserved tickets are $4.50 and are available at the Bryan- College Station Chamber of Com merce, and general admission are $5.50 at the gate. Daily events (10 a.m. to 6 p.m.) include an arts and crafts fair, stroll ing entertainment and game booths. An assasination squad, face painting, a bucking horse, a jail and the Silver Dollar Massage Parlor are just some of the game booths. Admission to the rrr fiesta grounds is $1 for adults and 50 | cents for children under eight. I The Fourth Annual Bryan-College Station Jaycee Chili Olympics is the featured event on Saturday with competitors vying for a spot in the World Champion Chili Cook-Off in Terlingua. In addition the Jaycees will sponsor lemon tossing, egg roll ing, fertilizer flinging and waterme lon seed spitting contests. Strange bird This photograph of a macaw was developed using the Sabattier effect in the darkroom. The bird resides in the Explorer s Hall at the headquarters of the Naional Geographic Society in Washing ton D.C. The photographer, Dave Tollefson, resides in Col lege Station. Photo by Dave Tollefson 4- i! >11 T 1 y It ft" FORT STEAKHOUSE A UNIQUE EXPERIENCE IN GOOD FOOD, FUN AND FRIENDS. 2528 S. Texas College Station PIONEER SUPERCHARGED SUPER SYSTEM Soup-up your car with Pioneer high-performance stereo equipment. KPX-9000 In-dash cassette component AM/FM stereo. 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