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Decades of Dollars (DoD) was an American lottery game that began as a multi-state game in January 2011, though by its end, only the Virginia Lottery offered it. [1] Georgia and Kentucky joined Virginia in launching DoD; Arkansas joined in May 2011.
Lotto South′s replacement was Win for Life, which ended in 2011 in Kentucky and winter 2014 in Georgia; Win for Life was retired on September 13, 2014, after which Virginia replaced it with $1,000,000 Moneyball. Georgia, Kentucky, and Virginia began sales of Decades of Dollars on January 30, 2011. (Arkansas joined on May 3, 2011.)
On October 19, 2014, Decades of Dollars no longer was available in Arkansas, Georgia, or Kentucky; the three lotteries participated in the launch of "Monopoly Millionaires' Club", whose sales were suspended in December. Decades of Dollars held its final drawing on April 30, 2015; Virginia then joined the multi-state "Cash4Life".
In December, two Georgia election workers won a $148M defamation judgment against Rudy Giuliani. Thanksgiving is the one-month anniversary of Giuliani's deadline to turn over assets.
This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: 9 Antique Items You Could Sell for Thousands of Dollars. Show comments. Advertisement. Advertisement. In Other News. Entertainment.
The first modern government-run US lottery was established in Puerto Rico in 1934. [8] This was followed, decades later, by the New Hampshire Lottery in 1964. Instant lottery tickets, also known as scratch cards, were introduced in the 1970s and have become a major source of lottery revenue.
1950 and 1951 Proof Half Dollars — Typically worth hundreds to thousands of dollars depending on ... 4 Decades of Valuable Coins: ... Rain in Southern California creates mudflows but helps ...
Coca-Cola Plaza behind the College of Business Administration at Georgia Southern. Ensuing decades found more name and mission changes: to Georgia Teachers College in 1939 and Georgia Southern College in 1959. The university finally integrated its student body in 1965, [13] eleven years after the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Brown v.