The Battalion Debriefing r i Tuesday • February 18, Lotto scratches a College statistics students find mathematical error in advertisements. Sun Studies Amy Dunlap, The Battalion Will Jenkins, a junior marketing major, reads at Research Park Monday afternoon, when temperatures were unseasonably warm. SAN ANTONIO (AP) — TheTexas Lottery has pulled printed ads for its Cash 5 game from stores after a col lege statistics class sent a letter claim ing that possible winnings in the game were being exaggerated. The class at San Antonio College, which was using Cash 5 data to practice statistical analysis, deter mined that someone who matches all five numbers in the game could win $57,575.70. In-store ads for the game, how ever, state that five-of-five winners can win $75,000. Lottery Commission spokesper son Steve Levine said Cash 5 televi sion ads will not be changed, and the decision to remove the printed ads is not an admission of error. “The students just came up with a different way of finding their fig ures than we did; we’re not saying their way is right,” Levine said. “We decided to pull the ads be cause that’s the first thing we do when we get a legitimate and rea sonable complaint about our ad vertising ... and we alre; thinking about renewingc Gerald Busald, who teat! 16-member, sophomore tistics class, said student their numbers before their complaint. “We kept doing thema our numbers didn’t change sent the Lottery Commissi) ter and our statistical Busald said. “The $75,000 figure seem an estimate of the averageo tal winnings from thefirst 15 ings, which averages i $76,943.79.” In their letter, thestudf gued that the lottery’s fij "analogous to saying thatia town of 100 peoplewhereo son earns $101,000 annua, the other 99 earn $1,000 eat the average income isSSl.Oi In Cash 5, players try topi numbers out of 39. The odd ting all five are one in 575," Busald argues that, since cent of the money bet on awardeci to people who have numbers, the expecteddistri: works out to $57,575.70. “It’s not rocket science, said. “Students figureditoii calculators.” This day in history Weather Today is Tuesday, Feb. 18, the 49th day of 1997. There are 316 days left in the year. In 1516, Mary Tudor, the Queen of England popularly known as “Bloody Mary,” was born in Greenwich Palace. In 1861, Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president of the Confederate States of America in Montgomery, Ala. In 1885, Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was published in the United States for the first time. In 1930, the ninth planet of our solar system, Plu to, was discovered. In 1953, Bwana Devil, the movie that heralded the 3-D fad of the ’50’s, opened in New York. In 1960, the eighth Winter Olympic Games were for mally opened in Squaw Valley, Calif., by Vice President Richard Nixon. In 1970, the Chicago Seven defendants were found innocent of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 De mocratic National Convention. In 1972, the California Supreme Court struck down the state’s death penalty. In 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747, went on its maiden “flight” above the Mojave Desert in southeast California. In 1988, Anthony M. Kennedy was sworn in as the 104th justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Tonight Today's birthdays Actor Jack Balance is 76. Cosmopolitan editor He len Gurley Brown is 75. Sen. John Warner, R-Va., is 70. Singer Yoko Ono is 64. Singer Irma Thomas is 56. Singer Dennis DeYoung (Styx) is 50. Actress Cybill Shepherd is 47. Singer Juice Newton is 45. Actor John Travolta is 43. Game show hostess Vanna White is 40. Actor Matt Dillon is 33. Rapper Dr. Dre is 32. Actress Molly Ringwald is 29. Tomorrow Highs & Low Today’s Expected! 71°F “Th wlu You nor you Tonight’s Expectei| 56°F Mostly cloudy with winds from the south east at 15 mph. Mostly cloudy with winds from the south east at 10 to 15 mph. Cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers. Gusty winds from the southeast at 15 mph. Tomorrow’s Expec High 68°F By Mel The B JOHN J. KOLDUS III FACULTY/STAFF ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Recognizes an outstanding faculty/staff member for his or her interest in student growth, education, and unity through student organization work. Any student, student organization, faculty, or staff member may nominate. For more information or an application, contact Troy Young, Recreational Sports, 862-1999. Nominations due Friday, February 28, 1997 5 p.m. at MS 4250 or dropped off on the 1 Oth floor of Rudder Tower. HIT THE MARK WITH THE PRINCETON REVIEW ON THE ORE Our average score improvement on the GRE is 215 points. We offer 45 hours of classroom instruction, four full- length exams and unlimited extra-help with your instructor for one price. We have added another section to prepare for the April 12th paper & pencil exam. The class will meet on Wednesdays and Mondays from 6:00- 9:30 p.m. beginning on Wednesday, February 26th. call us at 696-9099 ove sees r phrase that land time a; Tomorrowhvjjv While somes Expected!; vith ever .vday d< r U or f having to de Meting issue out Information courtesy ofWi 0mi:one °f ano Kerry Meade,; J/dio is Cauca LOOKING FI TOE MOSl Iter African-/ Seven month |es race as an CAMP CHAMPIONS INCREDIBl SUMMER OF YOUR a dating partr Stand why so is important. I’ve always s< [Meade said friend and I; other coupl ire — a coup lleade said i bantered sc Ird her datir ncan man, Come see the Camp Champions team! Tuesday, February 18 Exhibit Hall of Rudder Tower 9:30 am - 4 pm MSC Visual Arts and MSC Literary Arts present Layers of African- American History The Works of Leamon Green and Phillis Wheatley Tuesday, February 1 8 5 to 7 pm Visual Arts Gallery Memorial Student Center room 289 5 pm. Discussion with painter Leamon Green 6 pm. Reading of poetry by Phillis Wheatley Refreshments provided The Leamon Green exhibit is open until February 2 7 The Women In Science and Engineering (WISE), an organization of women graduate students, staff and faculty will host its fifth annual all-day professional and career development conference. The conference "Adapting to a Changing World" which will take place on Saturday, February 22, 1997, at the MSC on the Texas A&M campus, will focus on giving participants the skills and insights need ed to succeed in the scientific and technological workplace of the year 2000 and beyond. Participants will select from topics such as: A Room of Your Own: At the Top, How to Get Your Research Funded, Sex Differences and Evolution, Conflict Resolution, and others. This year's keynote speaker will be the former Chief Scientist for NASA and current Vice Chancellor for Research at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Dr. France Cordova. Contact Nancy Magnussen at (409) 845-5587 or via e-mail at nan- cy@isc.tamu.edu for registration information. Free child care will be provided on site. Registration deadline is February 19. Sponsors: Office of the Vice President for Research and Associate Provost for Graduate Studies College of Engineering College of Agriculture College of Science College of Geosciences & Maritime Studies Women's Studies GTE The Battalion summer - yidesp counselotKl/X/ bomt nothi In of bad celt Each memt t seems to t before; tl 'hole fails to s Rachel Barry, Editor in Chief Michael Landauer, Executive Editor Wesley Poston, CityEi Tiffany Moore, Managing Editor Kristina Buffin, Sports Stew Milne, Visual Arts Editor Alex Walters, Opinion Edi® 5 John LeBas, Aggielife Editor Chris Stevens, Web Ediths Jody Holley, Night News Editor Tim Moog, Photo Editor Helen Cuncy, Night News Editor | The guitaris itana sounc ick both the L rsity that Sai inding like c John Herm; Ind. His orga Brad Grabber, CartoonE/b 6 Doors, bu jte as catchy a Staff Members lost part, the City Desk - Assistant Editor: Melissa Nunnery: Reporters: Rebecca Torrellas, Brandon Hausenfluck, Kevin Cunw 9 : Vantage of the Oliveira, Erica Roy, Graham Harvey, JoAnne Whittemore, Jackie Vratil, Benjamin Cheng, Shikonya Cureton.W ^ 0 jr. Schlueter, Kathleen Strickland, Marissa Alanis & Shea Wiggins F ,. . 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