Page 4/The Battalion/Thursday, July Sponsored by Lions Club Annual rodeo starts Friday by Rebecca DiMeo Battalion Reporter The Bryan Breakfast Lions Club will sponsor its 12th Annual Rodeo at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Brazos County Arena. Rodeo events will include a junior breakaway, bareback rid ing, tiedown, ribbon roping, team roping, bull riding, steer wrestling and barrel racing, advertising chairman Virgil Schlueter said. Tickets for the event will be available only at the rodeo. Sammy Catalena, rodeo own er and a Bryan Breakfast Lions Club charter member, said the Lions Club doesn’t favor adv ance ticket sales. Because the Lions Club is a civic organization, he said, peo ple buy tickets without attending the rodeo. But because the club wants people to attend, tickets will be sold only at the gates. Prices are $3.50 for adults and $2 for children. Members also will sell raffle tickets for a chance to win half of a processed calf each night of the rodeo. The raffle tickets will cost $1. Proceeds from the rodeo will go to the winners of the events as prize money ranging from $15 to $40. The money also will go to “whatever projects arise that are worthy of a need,” Catalena said. Current club projects include the Brazos Valley Rehabilitation Center, the Lions Club Crippled Childrens’ Camp in Kerrville and college scholarhip awards for students from the Bryan- College Station area. Catalena could not estimate the expected crowds, but said the rodeo is expected to be a big moneymaker. The rodeo doesn’t draw crowds like it used to, but a number of people will come because it’s a Lions Club event, he said. Club members will work at the concession stand or the gates, parking cars, loading chutes with animals, selling raf fle tickets, or patrolling as secur ity, Catalena said. During the past eleven years, there have been no major in juries at the rodeo. Catalena said the worst injury was in a pasture during the businessmen’s wild cow saddling event several years ago. “We’ve hauled more people out of the arena in that event than in the regular contestant events,” he said. For this reason, the event was taken out this year and replaced with a children’s pig scramble. The rodeo is open to anyone wanting to participate. Bookings will be taken from noon until 6 p.m. Wednesday at 822-4462. Youth settle out of court by Tim Widdison Battalion Reporter Several young children are touring facilities at Texas A&M this summer through a special program sponsored by the Bra zos County Juvenile Services De partment. The summer program was developed as an option for young children, ages 10 to 13, charged with first time offenses who want to avoid going through the court system. Melinda Morrow, a summer intern with Juvenile Services at the Brazos County Courthouse, is coordinating this year’s sum mer program. The program, now in its fourth year, sponsors educa tional tours of the community once a week for six weeks, Mor row said. A maximum of 12 chil dren enroll in the program each summer on a voluntary basis. Enrolling in the program is not an admission of guilt to any crime, Morrow said, it’s only an option to being tried through the courts. The children are from the Bryan area, she said, and many of them come from disadvan taged homes. The tours are the first opportunity for many of them to get out into the com munity, she said. Tours this summer have in cluded KAMU-TV and the math labs on campus, Morrow said. At KAMU the children tested equipment and were able to watch themselves on television monitors, she said. In the math labs, students tak ing math classes at the Universi ty played math games with the childien, taught them some math skills and showed them how to use a computer, Morrow said. Other tours have included the Veterinary School and the Creamery, she said. The Final tour for this sum mer will be Tuesday. The chil dren will tour the facilities of the Texas A&M Athletic Depart ment, Morrow said. The tour may include a visit with some athletes and lunch at Cain Hall. Informant explodes bomb plot A United Press International GOLDEN, Colo. — Author ities say a Maryland woman who advertised in “Soldier of For tune” magazine for a “profes- explosives expert sional’ plot to blow up a county jail got more than she bargained for. Instead of a professional ex plosives man, what she got was a police informant. 4^ Officials have accused Mar garet H. Sexton, 34, an unem ployed student from Beltsville, Md., of of fering to pay Edward Satchfield, of Orange, $8,000 plus expenses to get explosives and blow a hole in the north wall of the county jail located in Gol den, west of Denver. Satchfield said he contacted First Presbyterian Church Serving Luncheon Buffet Sunday through Friday 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 1100 Carter Creek Parkway, Bryan 823-8073 Dr. Robert Leslie, Pastor Barbara Ridlen, DCE SUNDAY: the woman after an advertise ment was placed in the Boulder- based magazine for someone seeking “high adventure and appropriate pay.” As soon as he discovered the plot, Satchfield notified the Houston office of the FBI. Authorities said the woman apparently wanted to help in mate Mark Nola escape from the jail in Golden. Both she and Nola now are being held on $100,000 bond in connection with the attempted escape plan. Nola has been in jail since July 8 on felony theft, burglary and forgery charges. Jefferson County Sheriffs Captain Robert Squires said his agency was alerted to the attempted escape five days be fore it was scheduled to happen. The woman was arrested in her hotel room Monday. “We were waiting for her,” Squires said. “We knew about the whole thing because Mr. Satchfield was working with us.” Alien: A storv where around every < dting movie f an industria against a dea< ing alien wh growing as h crew. Thursd. On Colder Fonda and I bu: n star in th Pry of an spending the their lives tog ing with grow Saturday. Rat iSame Tim Alan Alda an star in this rc about a couph what, meets e each other. Si X he Grai Hoffman rek of graduatior iworld problei Rinnan next Rted PG. jpThe Stine gHn of all tim j^Rdford anc gluv trying to ] it? The ar «us advei HResc/ay. Ra Blazing Brooks is the hind this hi 'Se how the A pigs life Roger Schneider, a senior animal sci ence major from Poth, gives iron shots to a new pig litter born at the center Wednesday. staff photo by BrendiiPri^ ^ e< ^ ne Plitt I l&I 84( Ethics committee kills 1 House Speaker probe aws 3D: |ws movies thought it w into the me have brougl story — too one that got -5*5*- Delicious Food Beautiful View Worship at 8:30AM & 11:00AM Church School at 9:30 AM College Class at 9:30 AM (Bus from TAMU Krueger Dunn - 9:10 AM Northgate - 9:15 AM Youth Meeting at 5:00 PM Nursery: All Events United Press International AUSTIN — The issue of House Speaker Gib Lewis’ botched 1981 campaign finan cial report, which plagued the speaker for four months and cost him $800 in criminal fines, was put to rest by an ethics com mittee’s unanimous vote to close its investigation of the matter. ""vhihhhi “I am pleased both with the action of the committee and the fact this matter is finally closed,” Lewis said Tuesday after the House Ethics Committee voted 7-0 to end its investigation. ■m- COULTER DRIVE Open to the Public “Quality First” VILLA MARIA ROAD Activities Hot Line - 822-7063 MSC Cafeteria Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. Each Daily Special Only $2.39 Plus Tax. “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M MONDAY EVENING TUESDAY EVENING WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPECIAL EVENING SPECIAL Salisoury Steak with Mexican Fiesta Dinner Chicken Fried Steak w cream Gravy Mushroom Gravy Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas Whipped Potatoes and Choice of one other Whipped Potatoes w chili Vegetable Your Choice of Mexican Rice Roll or Corn Bread and Butter I One Vegetable Patio Style Pinto Beans Coffee or Tea I Roll or, Corn Bread and Butter Tostadas Coffee or Tea Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter Lewis had asked the commit tee, which was formed by the House last April to look into alleged ethical violations by law makers, to study his failure to disclose business ties to mem bers of the liquor and horse rac ing industries. misdemeanor charges B an incompletecampaiguRL report. He asked font*,lass: A 1 imum fine of $1,000% ut jjf e 0 f ceived an $800 fine 01)1^ an{ j t } 1( commendation of Ok !go through. County district attorney.R,’ s wen t Rated R. “This committee shoal r sider that matter close I commend the speaker to I ping forthrightly foiw taking the action he tool! lashdan mittee member Rep. y( D-Grockett, said. The omissions, which were revealed by the news media last March, prompted intense critic ism of the speaker by critics who said the incident tainted his abil ity to deal fairly with horse rac ing and DWI legislation. Lewis, D-Fort Worth, said the errors were inadvertent and pleaded no contest May 27 to United Pri The most o nglish is “si In uses, L In a written statememl committee, L.ewis saidl never “unduly influe 0 as a partic his business associaioll blamed the reportingen* his inability t° deciphering * plex financial reporlinf! 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