LOTTOMIKE's Blog

dog awarded for saving owner with 911 call
















Dog Awarded for Saving Owner With 911 Call

ORLANDO, Fla. (June 20) - A 17-pound beagle named Belle is more than man's best friend. She's a lifesaver. Belle was in Washington, D.C., on Monday to receive an award for biting onto owner Kevin Weaver's cell phone to call 911 after the diabetic Ocoee man had a seizure and collapsed.

   


Belle, shown with her owner, became the first canine recipient to win the VITA Wireless Samaritan Award, given for using a cell phone to save a life.


   

"There is no doubt in my mind that I'd be dead if I didn't have Belle," said Weaver, 34, whose blood sugar had dropped dangerously low. Belle had been trained to summon help in just those circumstances.

She was the first canine recipient to win the VITA Wireless Samaritan Award, given to someone who used a cell phone to save a life, prevent a crime or help in an emergency, the Orlando Sentinel reported Monday.

   


   
Weaver first heard about service dogs while he was working as a flight attendant after befriending a frequent passenger who taught dogs to help diabetic patients. Using their keen sense of smell, the animals can detect abnormalities in a person's blood-sugar levels.

The dog periodically licks Weaver's nose to take her own reading of his blood-sugar level. If something seems off to her, she will paw and whine at him.

"Every time she paws at me like that I grab my meter and test myself," Weaver said. "She's never been wrong."


Entry #540

4654

4654 could show in cash 4 for tennessee evening.....

Entry #539

pick three and pick four

i have done several studies to see how much profit i could make on pick three and pick four.i have given up on the pick three lately to play the pick four more since i make more money on it.however i am not ready to give up pick three totally just yet.i wish you could bet multiple times on a number at betslips.thats where i could make more on the three number games.......

Entry #538

5864

look for 5864 in tennessee or georgia soon.....

Entry #537

the minimum wage

If minimum wage is raised, who benefits?
Congress has started a debate on raising the $5.15-an-hour minimum wage. The Senate rejected a big hike Wednesday.

ATLANTA - Keisha Walker, for one, is happy that Congress is at least debating whether to raise the minimum wage. For her, boosting it to $7.25 would mean earning an extra $1 an hour - enough to pay for eight months of groceries or perhaps a few nights out.
An office assistant for a low-income apartment complex in Atlanta, earning $6.25 an hour, Ms. Walker is one of 139,000 Georgians who would benefit directly from a minimum-wage hike. A technical school dropout and mom in her late 20s, she scratches together a living, relying on her fiancé to pay major bills.






If minimum wage is raised, who benefits?


   
"They need to raise it if only to help people pay for [rising] rent," she says, returning by bus from taking her two sons and a nephew to football practice. "It's getting so you can't survive in this country."

Such a raise looks unlikely, with the Senate Wednesday voting down a wage-hike amendment and a House committee poised to do the same. Still, the debate focuses attention on people at the very lowest wage rungs. When adjusted for rising living costs, those earning minimum wage make less per hour today than they have in the past 51 years. A glimpse at this low-wage workforce shows a broad blend of faces and backgrounds from teenage lifeguards to single moms, from immigrants to grandmothers, that, together, wage-hike proponents say, form an alliance of the chronically underpaid.

But whether the fortunes of these 8 million Americans, earning less than $7.25 an hour, would rise or falter under the first government-ordered wage hike in 10 years is the broader debate spreading from restaurant kitchens on Capitol Hill to the grocery store aisles of Atlanta.

"The typical minimum-wage worker is not a teenager earning side money," says Isaac Shapiro, an associate director at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning think tank in Washington. "Most minimum-wage workers, those most affected by the wage increase and those just above the minimum wage, their earnings can really be vital to their household economics."

Big contributors to household income

Some 48 percent, or 3.5 million, are between 25 and 64 years old who, on average, contribute more than half of the income in their households, experts say. Raising the minimum wage is a $18.4 billion proposition that is supported by 83 percent of Americans, according to the Pew Center for the People and the Press.

"This is an issue that has to do with the fact that economic growth is not being shared equitably among all Americans," says a spokesman for Rep. George Miller (D) of California, who had introduced a minimum-wage bill last year.

Lanky, with a wide smile and a tight-knit straw hat on his head, Thomas, a Liberian immigrant who prefers not to give his last name, worked for five years as a gas-station attendant, never making more than $5.15 an hour. It was so little money he had to quit. He went freelance, selling mattresses on the street from the back of his beat-up Chevrolet truck. He rents a room with a friend in a flop house. He sends his extra money back home to Liberia - or gives it to needy people in his neighborhood.

"There's no way you can depend on one job anymore," says Thomas. "You have to get out there and hustle, have two or three different things going, to make it work. Everyone is suffering. They all tell you the same story."

Story continues below

   
MOVING UP: Ayhan Ayana, of Redneck's BBQ in Allston, Mass., once worked 125-hour weeks delivering pizzas. He now pays his drivers $7.00 per hour, whereas many pizza deliverers earn only $4.00.
ASHLEY TWIGGS


According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, nearly a third of the workers who start at minimum wage are still working at that rate three years later. A quarter, also like Thomas, stop working - or at least leave official payrolls. Thirty-nine percent move up to better wages.

In Atlanta, working full time at minimum wage amounts to a third of the $32,000 a year it takes for a no-frills life, says the Center for Economic and Policy Research. Only six percent of Georgia residents hold low-wage jobs, while states like Montana, West Virginia, and Alabama have the highest rates, around 10 percent. Twenty-one states have set higher-than-national minimum wage rates.

One reason even some Republicans are mulling the wage hike is that the number of single mothers making minimum wage has nearly doubled in the last 10 years. Of Americans making less than $7.25 an hour, half are over 24 years old, and about half are primary household earners. Sixty-two percent are white, 16 percent are black, and 17 percent are Hispanic. Nearly twice as many are women than men.

"The relative value of the minimum wage has fallen by nearly 20 percent," says Heather Boushey, an economist with the Center for Economic and Policy Resarch. "These families are already living at the bottom, and you're talking about families who didn't have a lot of frills to begin with."

For Ms. Walker, the Atlanta office assistant, rising child-care costs mean that her weekly paycheck is not enough to stay employed, at least when school is out, so she took the summer off to care for her two boys, Derick and Rico. That means she has learned how to cook and takes the bus. Her boys' football program is subsidized. Movie nights are out. Cookouts in the park are in.

"I'm lucky to have someone who can help out," she says. "A lot of people don't."

One of them is Mary Davidson, a single, 50-something dry-cleaning clerk in Charlotte, N.C.. Rising gas prices forced her to look for work closer to home. She found a job at $6.50 an hour, and she took it.

Going out to eat is out of the question. But she finds solace in her church choir, but feels guilty even there. Her income, especially working only 20 hours a week, doesn't allow her the 10 percent tithe that is expected.

"I'm making $6.50 - that's no money!" she says. "People should understand, especially people at the White House behind a desk - put yourself in my shoes. Pay my money for your bills. See if you can make it!"

Are minimums counterproductive?

But some economists say the minimum wage does more damage than good, and see its diminishing value as a sign of its waning importance. After all, they say, the number of people who would be affected by the wage increase has decreased from 10 million in 1996 to some 8 million today, while average wages have risen from $12 to $16 an hour since the last hike.

In fact, they say, upping wages will only create incentives for businesses to hire fewer low-skilled workers - which is what happened when at least 146,000 restaurant workers lost their jobs after the last minimum-wage hike, according to the National Restaurant Association.






Entry #536

5487

looking for 5487 straight in tennessee.......

Entry #535

indian casinos now a 23 billion dollar a year industry






Indian Casinos Now a $23 Billion-a-Year Industry


SACRAMENTO, Calif. (June 21) - Gambling revenue at American Indian casinos nationwide grew to nearly $23 billion last year, climbing at a rate more than three times faster than traditional gambling operations.

   

.

   

California tribes accounted for nearly a third of the money, according to a comprehensive report on Indian gambling to be released Wednesday.

Nationwide, Indian gambling revenue grew by 15.6 percent in 2005, even though no major casinos opened last year, according to the Indian Gaming Industry Report, compiled by economist Alan Meister. It was the 10th consecutive year in which revenues increased by about 15 percent.

The growth can be attributed to expanded offerings at existing casinos and stepped-up marketing by tribes that are adding Las Vegas-style amenities to lure more visitors.

The report shows tribal casinos closing in on the amount of profits taken in by other casinos, which had $29.6 billion in revenue in 2005, a 4.6 percent rise from the previous year.

   
   
California's tribes saw revenue climb by 24 percent, to $7.2 billion, in a state where 55 tribes operate 57 casinos. That rate of growth isn't likely to slow any time soon, Meister said.

Nebraska led all states in growth last year, at 228 percent, after adding a third casino and other offerings at existing facilities. Only four states saw a decline in revenue: Alaska, Louisiana, Maine and South Carolina.

Meister, an economist with the Analysis Group in Los Angeles, uses data from government agencies, Indian tribes and casinos, gambling associations and other studies, as well as some proprietary financial data that tribes are not required to publicly report.

Wednesday's report also found the nation's 420 Indian casinos are responsible for the equivalent of 310,000 full-time jobs and about $10.5 billion in wages. Meister said Indian gambling directly and indirectly accounts for $6.9 billion in tax revenue.


Entry #534

5749

looking for 5749 to come in for tennessee today for evening.......

Entry #533

bringing the DVD war home





















Format Faceoff: Bringing the DVD War Home
Blu-ray Player and Titles Hit Stores, Taking On HD-DVD; Is It Time to Choose Sides?



A little over 30 years ago, Sony Corp. introduced the Betamax, kicking off a long battle with the rival VHS recorder. When Sony lost, consumers were left with clunky, outmoded Betamax machines and movies.

Here comes the latest format war.

   


   
This week, U.S. consumers will get their first opportunity to buy movies and players based on Blu-ray -- one of two new technologies now battling to replace DVDs with a format that plays movies in clear high-definition video.

Sony -- determined to avoid a repeat of past failures -- has corralled an arsenal of powerful partners to its side in backing Blu-ray, including electronics makers such as Matsu a Electric Industrial Co.'s Panasonic and Samsung Electronics Co. and Hollywood studios like News Corp.'s Twentieth Century Fox and Walt Disney Co. that are putting out Blu-ray hardware and movies.

Today, retail and video-rental outlets like Netflix Inc. will begin offering seven titles from Sony's own studio, Sony Pictures, including "The Terminator," "House of Flying Daggers" and "The Fifth Element," while a Samsung Blu-ray player, the BD-P1000, will be in stores later this week for $1,000.

The new Blu-ray products will face off against hardware and movies that support a competing high-definition optical disc format called HD-DVD. That one is backed by Toshiba Corp., Microsoft Corp. and Hollywood studios like General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal. While both camps claim various benefits for their video formats, HD-DVD players clearly have an edge on price, at least initially.

Toshiba has been selling a player in the U.S. for several months, the HD-A1, for $500 -- half the cost of Samsung's competing Blu-ray player. Consumers who decide to buy one of the players now must do so with courage. In the worst-case scenario, they could end up with a contemporary equivalent of a Betamax machine, for which it becomes harder to find movies as studios shift their allegiance to one high-definition format.

Analysts say the industry politics that led to the current format battle will likely end up keeping most consumers on the sidelines for awhile. "From the consumer standpoint, it's very unfortunate," says Vamsi Sistla, director of broadband and multimedia research at ABI Research, a market analysis firm in Oyster Bay, N.Y.

"The consumer is still very confused. If you spend $500 to $1,000, you don't know which studio is going to continue to support content on that particular format." Many early-adopters may be willing to stomach the risk, though, because of the rewards both video formats offer.

Movies in Blu-ray and HD-DVD display pictures with noticeably more clarity and detail than conventional DVDs, as long as users are watching them on high-definition television sets. In one demonstration, the Blu-ray camp has shown scenes from "Lawrence of Arabia" on a split-screen: one side shows Blu-ray's capabilities, with a team of horsemen crossing the desert in finely etched detail. The other side of the screen shows the same scene in standard-definition where the same horsemen appear as a dusty, undifferentiated mass.

Analysts say that the two high-definition technologies offer comparable visual quality. Initially, the selection of Blu-ray and HD-DVD movies will be limited, with only a little over two-dozen titles available for HD-DVD through retailers and rental stores. The slate of Blu-ray titles will expand throughout the summer from Sony Picture's initial line-up of seven movies as more studios join the fray.



Movies in either format typically command a premium over current conventional DVD prices. The HD-DVD version of "The Bourne Supremacy," for instance, currently costs $24.49 on Amazon.com, compared with $13.88 for the standard DVD version of the same movie.

Complicating matters, selections of movies will also be determined by which format various Hollywood studios are supporting. Twentieth Century Fox, Disney, Lionsgate Entertainment Corp. and Sony are supporting Blu-ray, Universal is supporting HD-DVD and Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros. and Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures are putting out movies in both formats.

Some electronics companies, including Korea's LG Electronics Inc., are considering offering "dual-format" hardware that plays movies in Blu-ray and HD-DVD, a step that could allay consumer concerns.

Because Blu-ray has amassed more Hollywood support, some analysts give that format an edge over HD-DVD. Blu-ray is also more complex than its rival. Due to technical snags, the first Blu-ray discs will be limited to half of the 50 gigabyte storage capacity that its backers have touted for the technology. That means that Hollywood studios initially won't be offering Blu-ray movies longer than two hours or so, which rules out longer epics like those from the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy. At the moment, movies on HD-DVD can run a bit longer than those on Blu-ray (the longest right now, is "The Last Samurai" at just over 2-1/2 hours).

Benjamin S. Feingold, president of world-wide home entertainment, digital distribution and acquisitions for Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, says the higher-capacity Blu-ray discs will be available by the fourth quarter of this year. That is also when Blu-ray is expected to get a big boost from PlayStation 3, Sony's new game console, which will start at $499 and contain a Blu-ray player.

   
   
   

HD-DVD's supporters believe their less-expensive players will give them an advantage. Jodi Sally, vice president of marketing at Toshiba of America's digital audio video group, says the company's HD-DVD players have been selling out in some locations since they went on the market, though quantities have been limited. Ms. Sally says the company has sold in the "tens of thousands" of the players.

It is possible, too, that consumers could decide to side-step the confusion of the high-definition format battles altogether. Ted Schadler, an analyst at Forrester Research, says some consumers may not think the image quality of the new discs is worth all the hassle when conventional DVDs look "pretty good" on high-definition television sets.


Entry #532

news of the wierd-rock and roll gangs take over austrailia

Australia's The Bulletin is reporting that feuding gangs armed with spears and machetes - and named after such heavy metal bands and albums as Judas Priest, Cowboys From Hell and Fear Factory - have run amok at the biggest Aboriginal settlement in Australia, destroying homes and terrifying families hiding from the violence.

On October 23, 2002, after a policeman shot dead a Judas Priest gang member in Port Keats, the JPs - who that day had been fighting the Evil Warriors [photo] - turned savagely on anyone with links to the Warriors. A Port Keats woman by the name of Margaret Rose Perdjert felt their wrath due to her marriage to Eugenio Kurungaiyi, the deputy commander of the Evil Warriors.

"They [Judas Priest members] smashed my house, all my property, everything. They trashed my washing machine, my deep freezer, DVD and video machine, TV, table, chairs, everything," she says. "They burned my clothes, mattresses, blankets. I was there."

The Evil Warriors align themselves musically to the heavy metal bands PANTERA, ICED EARTH and TESTAMENT. Outcrops of graffiti across the Top End testify that PANTERA's "Cowboys From Hell" album is regarded as a seminal work. ICED EARTH has albums called "The Dark Saga", "Dark Genesis" and "Burnt Offerings". TESTAMENT album titles include "Demonic" and "Signs of Chaos", all of it suggesting the gangs rejoice in concepts forbidden and reviled by the church.

The Judas Priest boys take their name from the leather-and-chain British band. METALLICA, the band that screams against injustice over studiously disjointed machine-gun bursts of sound, is also rated highly by JP. Both groups reject the other's music as crap.

Beneath the two dominant gangs are sub-gangs with names like the Lica (from METALLICA) Warriors, Mad Warriors, Fear Factory, Big T (taken from the band TESTAMENT), the German Punks, the White Lions and the Cowboys From Hell - a small group of young boys from just up the road at Palumpa. They are variously aligned to the two main groups.

Read more at The Bulletin.

Entry #531

north korea reportedly preparing for missle test
















North Korea Reportedly Preparing for Missile Test
Booster Rockets Loaded Onto Launch Pad, Fuel Tanks Arrive on Site
SEOUL, South Korea (June 17) - North Korea loaded booster rockets onto a launch pad and moved about 10 fuel tanks to a launch site in preparation to test-fire a long-range missile that could reach as far as the U.S. mainland, a newspaper reported Saturday.

   
A man walks by models of North Korea's Scud-B missile, center, and other South Korean missiles at a Museum in Seoul, South Korea.


South Korea and the United States made the assessment after analyzing satellite images, the Chosun Ilbo reported, citing an unnamed high-level South Korean government official.

The report follows warnings by the U.S. government that the communist state was accelerating preparations for testing a missile that has the potential to strike the United States.

A U.S. government official said Friday that a test of the Taepodong-2 long-range missile may be imminent. The Washington official agreed to speak but only on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.

The official said the Bush administration is very concerned about activities that point toward a test, but declined to elaborate.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters that any missile launch by the North Koreans would be a provocation and would violate their 1999 commitment not to carry out such tests.

   


   
Japanese and South Korean officials also have expressed concern in recent days about the reported North Korean missile launch activities.

The reports of a possible launch come after a prolonged hiatus in six-party nuclear disarmament talks designed to create a Korean peninsula free of nuclear weapons.

Persistent efforts by the United States and other members of the group to persuade North Korea to resume the discussions have not been successful. There have been no discussions since last November.

North Korea is demanding that the United States revoke sanctions that Washington imposed several months ago in response to alleged North Korean counterfeiting of U.S. dollars and other currency violations.


Entry #530

4444

could the 4444 show up soon?

Entry #529

from beyond the grave he earns more than most living celebrities



Elvis Tops Forbes' List of Dead Celebs


LOS ANGELES (June 16) - Even in the afterlife, some celebrities remain big-time moneymakers. Elvis Presley , Albert Einstein, Kurt Cobain, Andy Warhol and Marilyn Monroe continue to earn enviable incomes from the grave, according to Forbes magazine.






Presley, who died in 1977, raked in an estimated $52 million last year. Cobain, who committed suicide in 1994, generated about $50 million. Most of that came when his widow, Courtney Love , sold 25 percent of Nirvana 's song catalog in April.


Einstein, who has been dead for more than 50 years, took in about $20 million in 2005, Forbes estimates. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem controls the famed thinker's estate and collects $5 million a year from the use of his images. The university also earns royalties from Disney's line of Baby Einstein toys and videos, Forbes reports, which generated $400 million in sales last year.


Warhol died in 1987. Still, he earned $16 million last year through the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, which owns his estate. Monroe, who died in 1962, generated $8 million in 2005.

Entry #527