/ 19 February 2006

Hopeful Americans queue for record lottery jackpot

At least one person bought a winning ticket for Saturday’s record $365-million (about R2,2-billion) Powerball lottery jackpot in the United States, officials said.

A winning ticket was sold Lincoln, Nebraska, the Nebraska Lottery reported. It was not known late on Saturday whether other winning tickets were sold in other states.

The chances of winning the jackpot by matching all six numbers were 1 in 146,1-million. The winning numbers drawn on Saturday night were 15, 17, 43, 44, 48 and Powerball 29.

People with dreams of winning the record jackpot stood in lengthening lines to buy tickets that flew out of machines at dizzying speeds.

”I figure somebody is going to win it, so it might as well be me,” said Casey Symonds after buying $25-worth of tickets for himself and four co-workers on Friday in Nebraska.

The Powerball jackpot topped the previous lottery record, which was $363-million for the Big Game — the forerunner of Mega Millions. That was won by two ticket holders in Illinois and Michigan in 2000.

Powerball’s previous record of $340-million was won by an Oregon family in October.

West Virginia retailers cranked out tickets at a rate of 29 per second on Friday, said Libby White, the lottery’s marketing director. North Carolina and Virginia residents called the West Virginia lottery asking for directions to the closest retailer, she said.

Sales in South Carolina reached $11 000 a minute on Friday, ”pretty staggering”, said John CB Smith, chairperson of the state’s lottery commission.

The big buyers usually are people representing pools of co-workers, and some bought hundreds of tickets at a time, said Hope Travers, clerk at a 7-Eleven in Rhode Island.

”They’ve been driving me nutty,” she said.

But with that much money on the line, sometimes the pool buyers ask for separate tickets on the side, said Bruce Rogers, owner of Kevin’s Corner Smoke Shop in downtown Providence, Rhode Island.

”I say, ‘What are you going to do, leave everyone else out?’ They say, ‘Yeah, I’d do it in a heartbeat,”’ he said.

Charlie Jasmer (59), a former Minnesota milk-truck driver who won a $5-million Powerball jackpot in 1997, even had tickets for Saturday’s jackpot — but hoped a group won rather than an individual. ”It’d be better to make a bunch of people happy instead of one person miserable.”

Powerball is played in 28 states plus the District of Columbia and the US Virgin Islands. It is run by the Multi-State Lottery Association based in Des Moines, Iowa. — Sapa-AP