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Archive for May, 2010

Originally posted on the HeraldScotland.com website.

Phil Miller, Arts Correspondent

29 May 2010

It may be the first national artistic movement inspired entirely by cold, hard cash.

With government cuts, standstill budgets, the financial crisis and the ongoing recession, many young and established visual artists are facing a bleak financial future unless they get a lucky break.

But a new collective of UK contemporary artists – led by Glasgow-based Ellie Harrison – have decided to engineer their own luck, with a scheme which maximises their chances of winning large amounts of money on the various National Lottery draws.

To be launched nationally in July, the Syndicate, as they call themselves, will “strategically” play the lottery games using a mathematical system they believe increases the odds for the 40 players to win large amounts of money, which will then be shared equally.

The group of artists – including Harrison, who graduates from Glasgow School of Art’s esteemed MFA course this summer, John Beagles, S Mark Gubb, who is representing Wales at the Venice Biennale, and the Becks Futures-nominated Hayley Newman – will purchase 44 lines on each of the two weekly UK Lotto draws, at £1 a ticket, and 36 lines on the weekly EuroMillions which is £2 a ticket.

Each artist joining the Syndicate is therefore required to pay £4 a week for the duration of the year, or a total of £208 a year for each artist.

Each of the 44 lines they choose will use the same five Artists’ Lottery Syndicate numbers, which are secret, with the sixth number on each line being unique to that ticket.

The numbers on a lotto ticket range from 1 to 49, so the remaining 44 numbers available will be entered on the lotto lines filled in by the artists.

This system, the Syndicate said, hugely increases the chances of winning the Lotto or EuroMillions jackpots.

Harrison said the system means they will try to utilise the idea of luck, which has always played an important part in artistic careers, as well as a new way to access Lottery cash which has, since its start in 1994, been a boon for the cultural sphere.

She added: “I had the idea for the Artists’ Lottery Syndicate when it appeared that the glory days of arts funding which we witnessed under New Labour were drawing to a close.

“It seemed clear that artists would have to find new ways of funding their work and surviving in what was being referred to as a new ‘age of austerity’ for the arts.

“The Artists’ Lottery Syndicate aims to be a speculative new way of acquiring funds for artists. I thought it could be a fun collective activity, which would act as a gentle critique of artist’s relationships to the economy, as well as a potential money maker.

“It is a group of artists who are still aspirational, despite this time of economic doom and gloom, and who are coming together to support each other in their attempts to hit the jackpot. We’re using a specially calculated combination of numbers to maximise our odds of winning prizes. At the end of the year, each of the artists will receive a cheque for one-fortieth of the money we accumulate.”

The Syndicate is being run by Harrison and its other members include MFA students and artists from Birmingham, Cardiff, Fife, Glasgow, Lancaster, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Nottingham, Plymouth, Preston, Stoke-on-Trent, Suffolk and Worcestershire.

It will initially run from July 1 this year to July 2011, but may be continued if it proves to be successful.

The GSA Master course has produced artists such as the Turner Prize-winning Richard Wright, Douglas Gordon and Simon Starling.

This year its graduation show is being held at the Glue Factory and the CCA in Glasgow, and runs from June 11.

The big winners

The odds of winning the jackpot with a single ticket are nearly 14 million to one, but for a group running 30 tickets the chances are better, at 466,666 to one. The individual prize each person takes will fall in proportion to this, however.

Around a quarter of all jackpot wins are by syndicates, according to the National Lottery, but organisers warn would-be syndicate managers that they should sign contracts beforehand to avoid disputes.

Issues such as whether or not to go public in the event of a win can be divisive, and even close friends are advised to set out ground rules in advance.

Seven IT workers from Merseyside shared a £45m lottery jackpot in November last year, taking home more than £6m each, just two months after another group of nine friends, based at the Doon Inn in Blantyre, shared £4.5m.

Five years ago a syndicate of six women at the Morrison Bowmore’s bottling plant in Glasgow each won a £2.5m share of the total £15m jackpot.


http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/artists-in-a-bid-for-success-with-different-type-of-draw-1.1031219

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Lottery Shake Up Sees Contracts Lost

Posted by admin on May-27-2010

Originally published on National-Lottery.com

It can mean a lot to a village shop to be the only place to be selling lottery tickets for miles, especially in rural regions. Offering lottery tickets for sale can mean keeping your head above water when you run the post office in a tiny hamlet or the petrol station on a little used b road. So the latest lottery shake up will mean a great deal to certain lottery retailers because as many as 175 stores around the UK are to lose their lottery contracts for not performing as well as they could on the sale of lottery tickets.

The changes to lottery retailers around the UK are to take place in 28 days and all affected retailers have been advised of the removal of lottery machines in their premises. The changes effect lottery terminals that are turning over less that £1,000 a week and this could mean a blow to rural communities.

It’s not just rural locations either, at least half of the 175 terminals to be removed are in chain stores around the UK, making this a big cut back for the lottery company. The UK Lotto have made no secret about their desire to cut administration costs and it seems that this is one way that they are reaching their aim.

Check your local lottery shop, it’s quite possible there will be no lottery sales there soon, although with so many lottery players now buying lottery tickets online, it’s little wonder that lottery kiosks are reducing around the UK.

Article Last Updated: 27th May 2010


http://www.national-lottery.com/news/lottery-shake-up-sees-contracts-lost.asp

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Lotto man wants dustbin job back

Posted by admin on May-20-2010

Perhaps money doesn’t change you. Maybe it just makes you the same – but with money……

Originally published on the BBC website.

A notorious National Lottery millionaire from Norfolk says he wants to work as a dustman again after losing his fortune.

Michael Carroll, of Downham Market, was 19 when he won £9.7m in November 2002.

Mr Carroll, dubbed the “Lotto lout” by the tabloids because of his life of petty crime, collected his jackpot still wearing an electronic tag.

Veolia Environmental Services, which runs the bin service, said: “We are not recruiting for operatives in the area.”

Life and times of Michael Carroll:

· November 2002: Mr Carroll wins £9.7m jackpot while under electronic tagging order for being drunk and disorderly
· December 2002: He is fined £1,300 for dodging two £5 train fares
· June 2003: Fined £12,000 for claiming nearly £330 in Jobseeker’s Allowance while working as a dustman
· July 2004: Jailed for five months for breaching a court order
· February 2006: Sentenced to nine months in prison after pleading guilty to affray
· January 2007: Given a two-year supervised community order for abusing train travellers

Mr Carroll’s house in Swaffham was recently put up for sale.

He said: “I need some money don’t I? I can’t keep on going on as I have been.

“It will get me back into reality instead of the rollercoaster I’ve been on for the last eight years.”

He said he preferred working outside, but added he was now more unfit than he had been when he gave up the job in 2002.

When father-of-two Mr Carroll was jailed for affray in 2006, Norwich Crown court heard he had 42 previous offences recorded since 1997.

Just before he was jailed he admitted in an interview with BBC Look East that he had spent £1.2m of his lottery fortune on cocaine but added that he had stopped taking drugs.

Asked if he regretted what he had done since winning the jackpot, Mr Carroll said: “When you give nine million pounds to a 19-year-old what do you think is going to happen?”

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/england/norfolk/8692475.stm

Published: 2010/05/19 17:10:38 GMT

© BBC MMX

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What A Lott I’ve Got…Not!

Posted by admin on May-19-2010

Originally published by the Scottish Sun.

By Nick Sharpe on 19 May 2010

A CLEANER told last night how she sparked a Lotto frenzy – after wrongly believing she had bagged a stunning £84million jackpot.

Sadie McGhee, 65, almost collapsed with shock after reading out her “winning” EuroMillions ticket numbers to stunned workmates.

Within minutes, news of her amazing “windfall” had spread like wildfire round one of Scotland’s biggest hospitals.

And soon Sadie’s name was cropping up on internet chatrooms as word got round she was now apparently mega-rich.

It was only after the shaken gran was driven home that her hubby John, 67, checked the ticket and revealed she had won NOTHING – because she’d been looking at a RESULTS slip.

But last night the couple insisted they are relieved they didn’t win the record sum.

Sadie explained her phone had not stopped ringing, people approached her in the streets to ask about it and her grandkids were hassled at school. Sadie, of Mount Florida, Glasgow, said: “Honestly, I am glad I didn’t won. The feeling of thinking I had won £84million was awful.”

Retired joiner John added: “It really worried me that I might answer the door to someone with a knife demanding money.”

Sadie told how the frenzy started during a canteen debate at the city’s Victoria Infirmary.

She said: “Some of the girls I work with had heard no one had claimed the big win from Friday’s Euro lottery.
“So I said it might be me, and fished out of my bag what I thought was my ticket.

“They read out the numbers – and I started panicking.

“I honestly thought I’d won. I was shouting and screaming.

“I lost my voice over it and I was sick with excitement.

“I was in such a state that my boss had to take me home.When I got in I just shouted, ‘John, we’ve won the lottery.’

“He took the ticket off me, looked at it, then said, ‘Don’t be so daft.’John told me I had been looking at the wrong slip.

“But I don’t know how the mistake was made. There must have been another seven people in the hospital who checked it and they all thought it was a winner.”

Camelot confirmed this week that a UK-based winner has now come forward to claim the bumper £84,451,321 prize, which is Britain’s biggest ever.

They would not confirm if the cash was paid to an individual or a syndicate.

But Sadie – who has bought a ticket for every EuroMillions draw – told how she is now relieved not to be picking up a cheque for £84million.

She said: “At the point when I believed I had won, I kept thinking about what a ridiculous amount of money it was.

“It was a horrible feeling and I didn’t like it. I never want to feel that again.

“Anyway, I have everything I want.
“If I had won, I would have given the money away.”

Sadie explained that three years ago she bagged £2,000 with five Lotto numbers.

But she gave the cash to her family and friends.

Hubby John added: “At the end of the day, this was a lot of fuss over nothing.”

nicksharpe@the-sun.co.uk

http://www.thesun.co.uk/scotsol/homepage/news/2978370/What-a-lott-Ive-gotnot-Gran-in-84m-jackpot-mix-up.html

> Footnote: Camelot report the real winner of the top prize has requested to stay anonymous.

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£84m EuroMillions win to be claimed

Posted by admin on May-17-2010

Originally posted to Google news.

(UKPA)

A UK ticketholder could be celebrating a record £84.4 million windfall after staking a claim on the EuroMillions jackpot.

National Lottery officials will be able to pay out the prize when the banks open if the claim is verified.

The winner of the country’s biggest lottery jackpot came forward on Sunday.

A spokesman for Camelot said: “We are looking forward to welcoming the lucky ticketholder to our millionaires club which is already 2,400 strong.”
No details have been released about the winner of Friday’s draw.

It is not known if the winning ticket belongs to an individual or a syndicate and they can decide whether or not to go public.

The ticketholder has been catapulted into first place on the National Lottery Rich List, ahead of Nigel Page and Justine Laycock, who won a £56 million EuroMillions jackpot in February.
Friday’s £84.4 million prize means the winner would immediately become the 789th richest person in the country, according to the Sunday Times Rich List 2010.

Based on figures in the survey released last month, they are just shaded by pop star Robbie Williams and Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts, who are both worth £85 million.
But they are wealthier than the likes of former James Bond actor Sir Sean Connery (£80 million), rock legend Jimmy Page (£75 million) and comedian and actor Rowan Atkinson (£70 million).

Copyright © 2010 The Press Association. All rights reserved.

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Lottery winner’s time running out

Posted by admin on May-14-2010

Originally posted on the BBC News website on 14 May 2010.

Time is running out for a Northern Ireland winner to claim a lottery prize worth more than £600,000.

The unclaimed prize was won in the EuroMillions draw on Friday 11 December.

The winning numbers were 20, 41, 43, 44 and 46. The Lucky Star numbers were two and nine. The deadline for claiming the prize expires at 1730 BST on 9 June.

If the £616,198 is not claimed the money will be given to charity.

A National Lottery spokesperson said: “We are desperately keen to find the mystery ticket holder – the prize could really make a huge difference to their life.”

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/northern_ireland/8681739.stm

Published: 2010/05/14 05:47:00 GMT

© BBC MMX

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Elottery Syndicates Golden Ticket Prizes

Posted by admin on May-13-2010

Originally posted on FreeGamblingAdvice.com by gambler.

Elottery syndicates introduced the Golden ticket incentive for lottery players back in 2009, since then it has given away many prizes to players each and every month, and then in January 2010 it gave away the first ever elottery BMW mini as a prize to one lucky syndicate member.

The benefits of playing in a lottery syndicate are well publicised with Camelot (the UK National lottery operator) reporting one in 4 jackpot wins are won by syndicates. A lottery syndicate is a group of people who get together to play the lotto in a group. In theory they increase their chances of a win by pooling their tickets. Lottery syndicates exist in most work places in the UK and around the world. They can be organised by individuals or by a professional lottery syndicate company like elottery.

In 2009 the elottery company introduced the Golden Ticket incentive to reward the players who stay and play month in month out with additional chances to win prizes other than just the cash prizes from the lottery itself. The system works as follows, every time a member plays in a game for 4 consecutive weeks they collect Golden tickets, at the end of a 4 week cycle the tickets are put into a hat and a number are drawn at random and awarded prizes.

The prizes so far have included: web books, cash, hardwood 8-seater garden furniture set, complete with matching seat covers and parasol… there’s a brilliant gas Bar-B-Q with all the tools to go with it… a stunning hardwood swinging garden chair… a huge portable garden swimming pool complete with ladder to climb in, filter system and cover… and a very comfortable hammock to laze in the sun. A Holiday to Centre Parcs, a London Theatre Show and overnight hotel stay for two, on a Champagne Balloon Flight, an Indoor Sky-Diving experience for two, a Micro-Light Flying Experience, sports car experience day and 4×4 off road days.

As well as the four weekly prizes there is also the annual draw, where one lucky winner gets to drive home a brand new BMW mini to keep forever. In January 2010 David Jenkins was lucky enough to win the mini, and collected it in front of many of the leading elottery affiliates.

With the odds of winning the lottery so high, regardless of if you play in an elottery syndicate, a normal lotto syndicate or by yourself, the extra prizes make it even more fun as if you don’t win a share of a huge jackpot there could be other prizes on there way to you. Even better news for elottery affiliates is that if you also play in the games and someone in your elottery syndicate business wins a prize subject to some rules you can also win a matching prize or take a cash alternative.

I am sure you will agree that makes it even more attractive to be an elottery affiliates member as well as a player. Imagine growing a elottery business with members all over the globe and everytime one of them wins a golden ticket prize, you also win the same prize. This of course is on top of the commission you get from promoting the syndicates and any prizes you may well win from playing in the syndicates yourself. Elottery has now been around for well over 6 years, and the author of this article has been involved for at least 4 of those, in this time he has learnt lots and lots about affiliate and online marketing.

The amazing power of the internet makes it easier and easier for individuals to market a range of products or services online to make profit, and to create streams of residual income. Anyone can do it, it just takes time and effort and consistency.

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Nigerian held on cheating charges

Posted by admin on May-7-2010

Reprinted from the Central Chronicle

By Our Staff Reporter
Bhopal, May 6:

A Nigerian national had been arrested by the cyber cell of the Madhya Pradesh Police in Mumbai on charges of cheating a person each in Morena and Bhopal by telling them they ‘won’ a UK on-line lottery.

The accused Garwin Brown was arrested in Mumbai yesterday and presented in the court here today. The court sent the accused for a three-day police remand, a state police spokesperson said.

Brown had lured Morena resident Shailendra Singh Rathore by telling him that he had won a UK Lottery while taking more than Rs 4 lakh from him. This apart, the accused also collected Rs 2.45 lakh from a Bhopal resident Akhil.

The accused sent an e-mail to Mr Rathore stating that he had won a Rs 7 lakh British Pound lottery of the MSN Yahoo Award and Corporation and some persons would contact him shortly.

After sending some of the e-mails, the accused got Rathore to deposit Rs 25,000 as ‘Customs Clearance.’ Thereafter a demand was made to deposit a fee of Rs 1.37 lakh and another fee of Rs 2.60 lakh for receiving an ‘Anti Terrorism Certificate’ which Rathore deposited, the spokesperson said.

Later, Rathore was informed that the winner amount is about to be deposited into his account so he must deposit another Rs 2.60 lakh.

While getting suspicious, Rathore contacted the concerned bank and was informed of the fraud. The complaint was lodged by him on July 24 last year at the cyber cell. The cyber cell made communication with the accused and tracked his location as ‘Char Bangla’ Andheri (West).

Later, a police team from Bhopal reached Mumbai and arrested him.

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