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[资讯]全球彩票珍藏协会聚会落幕 53位收藏家齐聚费城

级别: 银牌会员
  7月29日,全球彩票珍藏协会(Global Lottery Collector's Society,简称GLCS)在美国宾夕法尼亚州费城举行了为期3天的年度聚会。
  票面丰富 “与会”彩票堆成山
  “在这样一间彩票如山堆的酒店会议室中,来自世界各地的自称‘彩票学家’的彩票收藏家们正在忙碌着,他们是全球彩票珍藏协会的成员。这些彩票中或许还有中奖票,但是这对于他们来说并不重要,重要的是这些彩票奇特的主题、丰富多彩的设计以及彩票本身让人难忘的意义。”费城媒体这样写道。
  根据全球彩票珍藏协会官方网站的介绍,这是该协会成立以来的第23届年度聚会,约有58位成员参与了此次聚会,他们均来自全球各地。
  彩票“牵线”交流交换交朋友
  一对来自法国的60多岁的夫妻,为了找寻他们的“梦中彩票”,从遥远的法国勒立石多恩小城镇赶到了美国费城。“我们带来了很多法国彩票,有情人节主题的,有度假主题的。”皮埃尔和安妮说,“我们还有法国国家彩票,这个彩票的历史甚至可以追溯到1933年。”聚会上,夫妻二人将自己想要的彩票的特点和名字写在纸上:M&M巧克力糖果、贝蒂、粉红豹、猫王头像等等。
  据了解,该协会的年度聚会不仅为会员们提供见面交流的机会,还可以交换彩票、结交朋友和参与趣味活动。
  收藏彩票 特别的“寻票启事”
  全球彩票珍藏协会副总裁史蒂夫·吉尔伯特在会议上发布了一张特别的“寻票启事”:这组名为“百万元抽奖”的彩票一共有八张,发行于20世纪70年代,当时仅在宾夕法尼亚全国赛马场销售过。
  “我想这会很困难,但是也要试一试。”史蒂夫·吉尔伯特说。
  全球彩票珍藏协会创始人比尔·帕斯奎诺表示,由于协会成立初期会员少之又少,因此对于“大龄”彩票的找寻会很困难。
  珍藏彩票 见证全球彩票发展
  “我们收集这些彩票不是为了发财或是得到幸运,我们只是要得到这张彩票而已。”比尔·帕斯奎诺笑着说道,“但是,如果是碰巧遇到了中奖票,我会很高兴得到这个意外的惊喜。”
  64岁的比尔·帕斯奎诺来自美国宾夕法尼亚州兰开斯特,他是一位退休教师,他于20世纪80年代创建了全球彩票珍藏协会。那个时候只有十几个州发行了彩票,每个州的彩票类型基本上在6个以下。目前,包括华盛顿特区、波多黎各岛和维尔京群岛在内,全美国有43个州发行了彩票,全世界各国的彩票事业正在蓬勃发展着。
  宾夕法尼亚州国家彩票发言人伊丽莎白表示,单就该州而言,每年发行的新彩票种类在55至65个,近期的有:10美元每张的即开票“现金堆”,最高奖金为20万美元;1美元每张的即开票“双倍骰子”,最高奖金为2000美元。
  新闻来源:公益时报 吴妍/编译
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级别: 银牌会员
只看该作者 1  发表于: 2011-08-31

                       Lottery ticket collectors eye keepsakes, not money
Pierre Lasnier, from Le Plessis Dorin, France, sorts through lottery tickets during the "Lottovention," in Northeast Philadelphia, on Friday July 29, 2011. Most people toss away losing lottery tickets, but not self-described "lotologists." Members of the small but enthusiastic Global Lottery Collector's Society keep scratch-off tickets from all over the world. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)
PHILADELPHIA—Among the mountains of losing lottery tickets piled high in a hotel conference room, someone may yet hit a jackpot.
But it won't be money that makes the winner. For members of the Global Lottery Collector's Society, the scratch-off cards themselves are worth keeping because of their quirky themes and colorful designs.

From a $3 Montana lottery ticket based on the game Uno to a series of $2 "Star Trek" stubs from Virginia, the game themes run the gamut from movies and TV shows to sports teams and holiday cheer. The cards come in different sizes, shapes and denominations.

"The whole purpose of collecting is not to get rich, or to get lucky, but to get the tickets," said club co-founder Bill Pasquino. "But if I happen to hit a jackpot along the way, I'd be very happy."

This weekend, Pasquino is joining about two dozen other club members at the group's annual "Lotovention." Held this year in northeast Philadelphia, the gathering is an opportunity to meet other self-described "lotologists," trade tickets and take a gander at the never-ending multitude of collectible material.
Pasquino, 64, a retired teacher from Lancaster, Pa., said that when the club started in the late 1980s, only about a dozen states had lotteries -- and none would issue more than six tickets per year.

Today, 43 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands have lotteries, as do countries across the world.

Pennsylvania alone issues between 55 and 65 new instant games a year, according to state lottery spokeswoman Elizabeth Brassell. Recent scratch-offs include the $10 "Stacks of Cash" ticket -- top prize $200,000 -- and the cheaper $1 "Dice Doubler," with a jackpot of merely $2,000.

While the club focuses on modern scratch-off tickets, lotteries in the U.S. date to Colonial times. Princeton University's library boasts a collection of tickets from 1761-1826, noting that lotteries were common sources of public financing because there were relatively few banks.

Benjamin Franklin financed cannons for the Revolutionary War through lotteries, while Thomas Jefferson disposed of most of his estate through such tickets, according to Princeton archives.

Modern lottery stub collectors get their goods through buying or trading, and occasionally through friendly vendors or distributors who save voided sample tickets for them, Pasquino said.

Most collectors actually scratch the tickets to see if they win -- Pasquino's biggest prize so far is $500 -- though some leave them untouched, forgoing a possible jackpot to keep them pristine. The club does not take a stance on gambling.

At the convention on Friday, club vice president Steve Gilbert hoped to find a set of eight Pennsylvania lottery tickets from the late 1970s -- the only state-issued stubs he doesn't have in a trove of thousands. The "Multi-Million Sweepstakes" were sold only at Penn National racetrack, he said.

"The older tickets are very difficult to find," said Gilbert, of Philadelphia.

That's partly because there were fewer collectors back then. But despite the proliferation in scratch-offs, the club has seen its membership wane in recent years -- from about 550 at its peak to 150 or 200 today, according to Pasquino.

Pierre and Anne-Marie Lasnier, who are in their 60s, traveled to Lotovention from the small town of Le Plessis Dorn, France. They came to see what they could add to a collection that includes French national lottery tickets dating back to 1933.

They brought with them hundreds of sample tickets from France: 3 euros for a Valentine's Day-themed ticket; 5 euros for one offering a chance at "Vacances a vie" -- vacation for life.

The couple posted a note at their table to let people know they're seeking lottery tickets featuring images of M&Ms candy, Betty Boop, Pink Panther, Elvis and the zodiac. They had no luck in the first few hours of the gathering on Friday.

"Not yet," Anne-Marie Lasnier said. "But we have time."
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级别: 总版主

只看该作者 2  发表于: 2011-08-31
谢谢太仓阿熊的~全球彩票珍藏协会聚会落资讯分享。
没想到彩票也有这么多人喜爱

级别: 新手上路
只看该作者 3  发表于: 2012-06-21
关注了哈~!!!
http://www.gd560.com/ 武动乾坤
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