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    They already have the first $10,000 Winner:


    ATLANTIC WOMAN WINS $10,000

    April Zarbano Wins Top Prize in Scratch Game


    A Cass County woman rode into the sunset with a large lottery prize! April Zarbano of Atlantic won $10,000 playing "The Duke" instant-scratch game. She purchased the winning ticket at Kum & Go, 701 Poplar St. in Atlantic. [about an hour and a quarter west of Winterset.]


    Zarbano claimed her prize at the Iowa Lottery's regional office in Council Bluffs. "I was sitting right outside the door of Kum & Go [when I scratched the winning ticket]," she said. "I started crying and shaking and the [clerk] came running out and said, 'How much did you win?'"


    Zarbano said she called her husband right away to tell him the good news. As it turns out, it was his birthday that day!


    She said she's pretty sure how they'll use her prize money. "We've been looking for a house, so I believe we're going to use most of it for a down payment," she said.


    The Duke is a $2 scratch game commemorating the 100th birthday of legendary screen actor and Iowa native John Wayne. If a player matches any of "their numbers" to a "winning number," they win the prize shown for that number. If they find a "horseshoe" symbol, they win that prize instantly. The overall odds of winning in the game are approximately 1 in 4.


    Zarbano claimed the first top prize in the game, which went on sale beginning May 14. The game is already nearly sold out. Nine top prizes of $10,000 are still up for grabs in the game as well as more than 250 prizes of $100.


    Since the Iowa Lottery's inception in 1985, more than $2 billion has been awarded in prizes and more than $1 billion has been raised for state programs.


    For those who are concerned about how Iowa Lottery proceeds are spent:


    Lottery profits have helped the state in a variety of ways through the years. When legislation authorizing the Iowa Lottery was signed into law in 1985, lottery profits were earmarked for the Iowa Plan, a long-term economic development program.


    In 1991, lottery profits were designated for environmental and cultural programs. But after one year, all lottery proceeds were directed to the state general fund. Most lottery revenues have continued to go to the general fund since that time. More than 60 percent of the money in the general fund goes to Iowa's public K-12 schools and higher education. Other programs that receive money from the general fund include justice programs, health and human services and agricultural programs.


    The Lottery also provides a portion of its revenues to the state Gambling Treatment Program, which administers the 1-800-BETSOFF helpline for those concerned about program gambling. Through the years, the lottery has provided more than $12 million in funding to the gambling treatment program.


    Lottery revenues also were used to secure financing for the Vision Iowa program. Vision Iowa was created in 2000 to provide funding for tourism attractions and school repairs in the state. Bonds for the program were issued with direct funding provided by state revenues from racetracks and casinos, and lottery revenues used as a backup over the 20-year payback period of the bonds.


    The Lottery sells tickets in three general categories: instant-scratch, pull-tab and lotto games. Lottery products are sold at more than 2,600 retail locations in Iowa.


    The Iowa Lottery is a state-run program and *ALL* lottery profits go into helping fund state programs; they are not getting rich or lining their pockets. Because of their situation, the Lottery could not donate to the new Museum directly, but donated 10% of the licensing fee (so the licensing fee was $24,000).


    Wayne Davis
    Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

    Actually, they did contribute to the new John Wayne Museum. The Iowa Lottery could not do so directly due to state law, but Scientific Games, who did the actual licensing of Wayne's name for the Scratch game, gave a check for over $2,400 (a percentage of the licensing fee) to the museum at the Groundbreaking ceremony on May 26th (Wayne's 100th birthday, of course!)


    There were 600,000 scratch tickets produced. The tickets went on sale May 14th; they were all gone by last weekend, the fastest sell-out in Iowa Lottery history. Personally, I think it's the game's subject matter! :hyper:


    Wayne Davis
    Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

    For those that did not get the opportunity to see the print edition of this story, it is by FAR the biggest story on the FRONT PAGE of the Sunday, May 20, 2007 Des Moines Register, AND takes up another full page inside! :hyper:


    Content-wise it seems the Register always has to appear not too supportive, but there's no question that the front page placement and the event listing will really help to bring folks in from all over Iowa!


    And there's even a nifty video feature: http://desmoinesregister.com/a…O01/70517056/0/BUSINESS04


    YEAH!


    Wayne Davis
    Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

    It was in last Sunday's Milwaukee Journal. I've been talking to Jackie for what seems like months. We're trying to get some copies of the print edition as the online ones tend to be pretty bare bones, like the article in the Omaha World Herald that didn't look like much online but was the entire cover of their travel section page and text that continued onto another page. Considering how many times I e-mailed Jackie the high-resolution images for the Centennial I would HOPE some of them made it into the print version!


    The Des Moines Register has had a reporter around here the last week or so. They're supposed to be doing a nice write up on the event too.


    The Chicago Tribune had a travel writer here today that I spend about an hour with. Sadly, their article won't be in their paper until Sunday, May 27th, which won't help much for the Centennial but will help with the Museum.


    Local Des Moines TV news has started coverage today. And I have been doing radio interviews like crazy the last few days.


    Almost here now . . .


    Wayne Davis
    The Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

    I spoke on the phone to the article's writer, Ashley, for about 20 minutes. She was really hung up about how Californians seem bound and determined to tear stuff down and to build new.


    Of course, John Wayne's BIRTHPLACE home is still around and lovingly preserved as it was in 1907 here in Winterset!


    Wayne Davis (who lives in a house built in 1869)
    Birthplace of John Wayne
    http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org

    Thanks, everybody. It's great to be here! The Birthplace of John Wayne is a bit late on getting this 100th Birthday Centennial Celebration organized and things are literally updating almost daily, and I wanted to spread the word to the faithful, and this seemed by far to be very the best place to do so.


    It's going to be an exciting time, but it's also to help raise the money for the new state-of-the-art John Wayne Museum and Learning Center, the only museum in the world we are aware of devoted to John Wayne. And what better place to have it than in the very town where the Duke was born?


    The best and most up-to-date source of Centennial events and schedules is http://www.johnwaynebirthplace.org/centennial. I update that just as soon as information is finalized.


    I'll be happy to answer any questions I can. And yes, my name really is Wayne (no relation to Marion Morrison though LOL).