LOTTOMIKE's Blog

studying computerized draws

all i've ever played mostly are ball drawn states with the exception of oregon pick 4 every now and then.recently i got the urge to sit down and study computerized draws.don't get me wrong i'm totally against computerized draws.what i noticed surprised me.i started with pick 3 games.i noticed a lot of numbers seem to be repeating.i saw a pick 3 number straight three times in a month.got me very interested.if you are smart enough and study these draws there is a potential to make some extra dough on this.like i said everyone knows i'm against computerized draws but there is a trend even in these computerized draws.........

Entry #465

688

look for 688 in tennessee or kentucky soon.....

Entry #464

if the online bill is passed

if the online bill is passed we will have to come up with a different method to play online.any suggestions on how you think it will change things if passed?

Entry #463

bush says U.S. not listening to domestic calls
















Bush Says U.S. Not Listening to Domestic Calls
Sidesteps Questions About Collection of Records

WASHINGTON (May 16) - President Bush insisted Tuesday that the United States does not listen in on domestic telephone conversations among ordinary Americans. But he declined to specifically discuss the government's alleged compiling of phone records, or whether it would amount to an invasion of privacy.

   

President Bush, speaking Tuesday at a White House press conference with Australian Prime Minister John Howard, maintained the administration's surveillance activities are lawful.


   

"We do not listen to domestic phone calls without court approval," Bush said in an East Room news conference with Australian Prime Minister John Howard.

"What I've told the American people is we'll protect them against an al-Qaida attack. And we'll do that within the law," Bush said.

The president's new press secretary, Tony Snow, later insisted that Bush's comments did not amount to a confirmation of published reports that the NSA's surveillance was broader than initially acknowledged and that it included secretly collecting millions of phone-call records.

Bush said, "This government will continue to guard the privacy of the American people. But if al-Qaida is calling into the United States, we want to know, and we want to know why."

However, he did not respond directly when asked whether it was a violation of privacy for the National Security Agency to seek phone records from telephone companies.

A Senate confirmation hearing is scheduled for Thursday on Bush's nomination of Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden to head the Central Intelligence Agency. As the NSA director from 1999-2005, Hayden oversaw the government's warrantless surveillance program.

   


   
Questions about that program, and new revelations about the NSA's phone data bank, may be obstacles to Hayden's confirmation.

Bush did appear to acknowledge the NSA sweep of phone records indirectly, saying that the program referred to by a reporter in a question "is one that has been fully briefed to members of the United States Congress in both political parties."

"They're very aware of what is taking place. The American people expect their government to protect them within the laws of this country and I'm going to continue to do just that," he said.

However, Snow, in his first on-camera briefing as press secretary, later denied that Bush was confirming a story about collecting domestic phone records that was first reported last week in USA Today.

"He was talking about foreign-to-domestic calls," Snow said. "The allegations in the USA Today piece were of a different nature."

"There seems to be a notion that because the president has talked a little bit about one surveillance program, and one matter of intelligence gathering, that somehow we have to tell the entire world -- we have to make intelligence-gathering transparent," Snow said. "Let me remind you, it's a war on terror. ... Al-Qaida does not believe in transparency. What al Qaida believes in is mayhem."

To coincide with Hayden's hearings, Americans United For Change is running an ad denouncing the administration's condemnation of leaks.

Democrats have said the White House has a double standard, criticizing leaks on its national security programs while approving leaks on political adversaries to defend the case for the Iraq war. The disclosure of former CIA operative Valerie Plame's name has cited as the epitome of that policy.

The ad will quote the first President Bush expressing "contempt and anger" in 1999 for those who expose the names of U.S. sources. Spokesman Brad Woodhouse said his organization is spending just over $100,000 on CNN, Fox and the Fox affiliate in Waco, Texas.

On another subject, Bush defended his day-old initiative that aims to place up to 6,000 National Guard troops along the country's southern border to help enforce immigration laws.

The deployment "really is not going to put a strain on our capacity to fight and win the war on terror," Bush said. Critics have suggested that National Guard troops, who would carry out this mission, already are stretched thin with assignments in Iraq and Afghanistan and in coping with natural disasters at home, including Hurricane Katrina.

He thanked visiting Australian Prime Minister John Howard for standing firm on keeping Australian troops in Iraq.

For his part, Howard said that the "war on terror will go on for some time. I think we have to accept that."


.



Entry #462

686

look for 686 in tennessee or oklahoma tonight.....

Entry #461

1975

might play the 1975 for tennessee and georgia.every now and then i play my birth year.......

Entry #460

787

look for 787 to show soon in kentucky or tennessee......

Entry #459

5648

still looking for one of these to show up in tennessee......

5846,5648,4658,4856.......

Entry #458

458

the 458 should show again tennessee cash 3 very soon......

Entry #455

5446

look for the 5446 to show in georgia or tennessee soon......

Entry #454

stuck in a rut

well its been april 10,2006 since i had a straight pick 4 hit.looking for that next hit.........

Entry #453

paraplegic ditches wheelchair,flees cop














'Paraplegic' Ditches Wheelchair, Flees Cops

   

Las Vegas Police Department
Laura Lee Medley is charged with filing false documents, attempted grand theft and two counts of insurance fraud.



   
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (May 12) - Authorities said a woman who claimed she was a paraplegic and repeatedly filed claims and lawsuits for noncompliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act was a con artist without any physical limitations.

After her arrest this month by Las Vegas police, Laura Lee Medley, 35, leaped from her wheelchair and ran for freedom, officials said.

Complaining earlier that she was having medical problems, police took the woman to a Las Vegas hospital for treatment, said David Wert, spokesman for San Bernardino County.

"That's where the great miracle occurred," he said. Medley "made a break for it," leading police on a brief foot pursuit before she was captured, Wert said.

Medley's claims against public entities - including San Bernardino County, South Pasadena and Long Beach - claimed a bus dropped her off near what she called a non-ADA compliant roadway or curb, causing her wheelchair to topple. She claimed three broken arms in eight weeks - two lefts and a right.

South Pasadena settled Medley's claim for $6,700 on Oct. 18, 2005.

Her questionable claims led to last week's arrest in Las Vegas.

Medley was charged with filing false documents, attempted grand theft and two counts of insurance fraud. She is in a Las Vegas jail awaiting extradition to San Bernardino.

Medley's alleged deception was discovered by San Bernardino County officials after she filed a complaint saying she fell and broke her left arm on Oct. 17, 2005.

   


   
County lawyer Mike Sachs said Medley called him in December to complain about treatment she was receiving from county employees. Medley claimed she was an ADA compliance expert and she threatened to organize a protest march, Sachs said.

"She was a very pushy lady, and anytime she wasn't happy with a response she was getting from someone at the county, she would try to go to the next highest person," Sachs said.

On Feb. 4, she filed a claim for $9,072 in medical expenses and lost wages. Medley then produced hospital medical records, documents that repeatedly misspelled Bernardino as Bernadino.

The hospital confirmed the documents were bogus.

Sachs said they learned Medley filed a nearly identical wheelchair-toppling claim seeking $5,200 from Long Beach. The claim was denied because the sidewalk was wheelchair accessible, Long Beach Deputy City Attorney Belinda Mayes said.

Medley then filed a federal lawsuit April 4 against Long Beach. That U.S. District Court suit is still pending and Mayes declined comment.


Entry #452

686

the 686 could show for georgia or tennessee for cash 3 saturday......

Entry #451