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INSURED MUNICIPALS INCOME TRUST™ AGEdwards INVESTMENTS SINCE 1887 1119 Villa Maria Rd. 846-7703 Member SIPC A prospectus containing more complete information on the IM-IT® unit trust, including all charges and expenses, will be sent upon request. Read it carefully before you invest. Send no money. This advertisement is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy any of these securities The offering is made only by the prospectus Copies of the prospectus may be obtained in any state in which this announcement is circulated from only such dealers or brokers as may lawfully offer these securities in such state * ‘The terms of the insurance policy are more fully described in the prospectus: no representation is made as to the insurer s ability to meet its commitments. The AAA rating is due to an insurance policy issued by AMBAC Indemnity Corporation and relates only to the units of the Trust and not to the bonds in the portfolio The insurance does not remove the market risk of the units IM-IT and insured Municipals Income Trust are trademarks of Van Kampen Merritt. Inc Units may or may not be available AN-B-l 19-SMC Page 10 The Battalion Thursday, March 1, 1990 Wolf pack rocked by point-shaving allegation RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina State coach Jim Valvano and two former players denied alle gations Wednesday of point-shaving in a basketball game against Tampa, a smaller, unranked school, in 1986. The Greensboro News 8c Record, quoting unnamed sources, reported that a State Bureau of Investigation probe centered on a Dec. 27, 1986, game between then 12th-ranked N.C. State and the Division II school. The Wolfpack lost, 67-62. William Dowdy, the SBI’s chief in vestigator, acknowledged that the agency was investigating the N.C. State basketball program — already on two years’ probation for NCAA violations — and that part of the probe would include the point-shav ing allegations. However, he added, “There was no information to lead me to believe there was any point-shaving.” “I was never aware of anything going on with point-shaving,” Vinny Del Negro, now a guard with the Sacramento Kings, said in a tele phone interview from Miami. “I just think we had a bad game.” “I don’t know anything,” said Bennie Bolton, another member of the ’86 team, reached at his home in Washington. “I heard about it, yeah,” said Bol ton, who has been playing in Austra lia. “It was just a case of coming in against a hungry team and we didn’t play up to our capabilities.” Valvano, who missed the game at Tampa due to illness, said he never suspected anyone of trying to throw the game. “If I had, I would have reported it,” he said. “But I never reported it because I never had a reason to.” “I don’t know what to make of it,” said Tampa coach Richard Schmidt, whose 1986-87 team finished 26-6. “If there was point-shaving going on, why would it be against us? There wasn’t even a line on the game, at least not to my knowledge.” Stockpiling pheasants County flocking to pheasant populating VERNON (AP) — Lon Byars and about 150 others want to establish a pheasant population in Wilbarger County. But they face a formidable task. Say “pheasant.” It’s a new word for this North Texas county along the Red River, and it doesn’t come easily except for hunters who travel elsewhere in search of the game. But get used to it. The idea just might fly. Two years ago, Byars said, County Judge Bobby Arnold and the county agricultural extension agent got a group of men and women together to gauge their feelings on the mat ter. Byars, a farmer, and about 60 others, including other farmers, business owners, professionals and homemakers, heard a man from Tillman County, Okla., just across the Red River, talk about efforts to develop a pheasant population there. “He told us Tillman County alone couldn’t start a pheasant population in this area,” Byars said, “and that the more pheasants you put out, the better the chances would be. “We’d been seeing some pheas ants in the county that had migrated from Tillman County,” Byars added. “That aroused some interest. We wondered where they were com ing from. After he told us about their program, the judge asked for a show of hands to see if there was an interest to start a program here. There was definitely an interest.” And the government’s involve ment in the effort ended right there. It just so happened that one of the interested men was the county judge and the other was the extension agent. Since that meeting in Jan uary, 1988, Greenbelt Pheasants Inc. has been formed, thousands of pri vate dollars have been donated and thousands of birds have been re leased. Byars, president of Greenbelt Pheasants, said that in 1988, about 15,000 ring-neck pheasants flew the coops set up across the country in abandoned houses, unused barns and other structures donated by res idents. In 1989, about 14,000 birds — at about $1 a bird — were released, about 500 from each of 30 release sites, Byars said. At each site, the birds are hatched in a 10-foot-by-20-foot brooder house where they are kept until they’re about 2 weeks old, Byars said. Then the fledglings are let into a 20-foot-by-75-foot net-covered flight pen where they test their wings. “Then, at six to eight weeks of age, depending on their maturity, they’ll be released out of the pen,” Byars said. “The gates are opened and they’re allowed to venture out on their own.” Food and water are kept nearby, he said. “After a week or so, few stay around. “We release them in all parts of the county,” Byars said, “but we try to release some in a habitat with some type of feed grain and some type of foliage cover.” It’s a considerable amount of work, and that’s what was lacking in a previous effort to establish a pheasant population here, Byars said. “(The Texas Department of) Parks and Wildlife tried this same thing,” he said. “They had game farms in East Texas and they brought them out here in coops and released them.” The failure might have been be cause they were hatched in one envi ronment and released in another; or because the birds released were fewer in number; or because the de partment “didn’t want anyone to know they were doing it,” Byars said. But for whatever reason, the idea was grounded from the start, he said. “By them not telling anyone they were doing it, no one planted any thing for the birds or left any hab itat, any crops standing,” Byars said. That may be part of the reason Greenbelt Pheasants gets no state support for the present project. “In fact, we couldn’t even get any encouragement from those people, any indication that it would work,” Byars said. But members of Greenbelt Pheas ants think the plan will work. Many farmers, Byars said, are leaving parts of their grain fields unhar vested just for the birds. So they hope that maybe the pheasants, which aren’t native to the United States and were introduced to the plains of West Texas only in the 1880s, will stay around this time, es pecially since so many are being re leased in such a small area. Why all the trouble? Pheasant hunting, which the state allows as close as Hardeman County to the west, is a secondary goal, Byars said. “We don’t promote hunting,” he said. “If we do establish a population here, then in the end there should be a hunting season. But it was sold basically on the aesthetics of the pro gram. It’s going to enhance the qual ity of all our wildlife — ducks, tur key, deer. All wildlife will benefit from that habitat.” Byars said that at the end of this year, the program will be evaluated and its organizers will decide whether to ask donors, who were asked for only three years of involve ment, to extend their support. Right now, he said, the program seems to be working. Lehmann (Continued from page 9) wants to drop that requirement to two years. Money issue #2 is how much the owners should contribute to the player’s benefit program. Last season, the owners contributed $34.2 million to the program and offered to donate 44.86 million this season. However, the players want a contribution of 62.5 million. Money issue #3 is minimum player salary. The players want an increase from $68,000 to $112,500. The owners are offering $85,000. Money issue #4 is roster size. Since 1985, the owners have limited roster size to 24 players. The players union wants rosters restored to 25 players. Neither side is innocent in this issue. The owners, despite their cries, are still rolling in profits. Almost all major league teams showed a profit last season, and they’ll get even more cash this season. The new television contracts with ESPN and CBS will generate $20 million for each team this season before the first fan even takes a seat. Players get paid astronomical sums to play a kid’s game. The travel is no doubt difficult, but it’s not as if the players are being forced to walk on hot coals for a living. They’re asking for a minimum of $112,500 to play a game that all of us would gladly play. If the owners are so strapped for cash, then why are they still handing out multi-million dollar salaries to marginally-talented free agents? The owners started this salary feeding frenzy with their irresponsible spending, and now we’re suffering for it. Because until the season starts, the fans will be locked out in the cold. CELEBRATE HAPPY HOUR IN NORTHGATE! I 25 Bar Drinks! I 75 Premium Drinks! 75C Draft! 4-8 Mon.-Fri. ALL DAY SAT til 8 G I Z O ’ S 846-7275 109 Boyett across from 7-11 ■ NATIONAL BESTSELLER) 00 01 00 INNUMERACY MATHEMATICAL ILLITERACY AND ITS CONSEQUENCES HOW ‘MATH LITERATE’ ARE YOU? (Questions taken from INNUMERACY by John Allen Paulos) 1. About how fast does human hair grow in miles per hour? a) .0003 mph b) .00000001 mph c) .000000000008 mph 2. Which is the more improbable feat: a would-be psychic who cor rectly predicts 54 of 100 coin flips or one who correctly predicts just 31 of them? a) 54 b) 31 c) equally likely 3. If you take a deep breath, what is the probability that you will have inhaled one of the molecules Julius Caesar exhaled with his dying breath? a) 1/(6 x 10 23 ) b) about 5%-10% c) better than 99% 4. What is the approximate population of the United States? the world? a) 150 million, b) 250 million, c) 480 million, 3 billion 5 billion 2.6 billion A weathercaster announced a 50% chance of rain for Saturday and a 50% chance for Sunday and concluded there was a 100% chance of rain for the weekend. What should he have said about the chances for rain that weekend? a) 75% chance b) 50%-100%, c) he was right to say a not enough 100% chance information to say Be one of the first 500 to answer all 5 questions correctly and receive a FREE COPY of INNUMERACY, John Paulos’s funny and fascinating bestseller that will “improve the quality of thinking of virtually anyone." (Isaac Asimov) Mail your answers to: VINTAGE BOOKS, Box IVK-C, 201 East 50th St., New York, N.Y. 10022. 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