PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Retirement Looking Good After Hitting $167,648 Jackpot at WinADayCasino.com

A senior citizen preparing to retire has won a $167,648 progressive jackpot at WinADayCasino.com. A new game is is expected later this month, the new Fruitful 7s -- a pub-style fruit machine featuring free spins.

Retirement Looking Good After Hitting $167,648 Jackpot at WinADayCasino.com
2011-05-11
LONDON, ENGLAND, May 11, 2011 (Press-News.org) A senior citizen preparing to retire has won a massive $167,648 progressive jackpot at WinADayCasino.com. All of the online slot machines at WinADay are tied to the same frequently hit jackpot but this time the player, known as GOLD1968, won the big one playing one of her favorites, Vegas Mania.

Vegas Mania is a 5 reel, 21 payline slot machine with all the flashing lights and exciting sounds of The Strip. There are Wild and Double Wild symbols that boost winnings and players can win up to 15 free spins.

"I've often imagined what it must feel like to win a big jackpot - and now I know. It's truly amazing!" said Cheryl W. who's been playing online casino games at WinADay Casino just over a year now. "I am so happy I found this casino! From my very first visit I could see how much time and effort they put into making their games. I've never seen anything like them anywhere else! The sounds and animations get me every time. Vegas Mania and Leprechaun Luck are my absolute favourites but there are a few right behind them. The new Fair Tycoon game, for instance, is such a great idea for a slot, really entertaining."

"I will retire in a couple of years so this extra money is most welcome! I must make sure I don't spend it all but I am planning to buy something for myself and Hubby and the kids. I get the shivers whenever I realize I really did win, it's such a nice feeling. I will always remember seeing the five horseshoes hit on one payline and the realization that I'd hit the Jackpot."

For the last year or so there has usually been about ten weeks between big jackpot wins at WinADay. This time it's only been six weeks. In April, a Canadian online slots player known as POWERBALL won $165,900 playing the Tropical Treat slot machine, one of the online casino's newest flash technology games with enhanced full-screen graphics and rich sound effects.

It's only a couple of weeks since WinADay launched its last new one-of-kind slot machine, the new carnival-themed Fair Tycoon that has a bonus game where players build their own amusement park. Nevertheless, another new game is already expected later this month. The new Fruitful 7s will be a simple fruit machine featuring free spins - like those you'd find in any pub.

"Some of the slots that our games designers come up with are quite over-the-top -- amazing graphics and special effects," said WinADay Manager Michael Hilary. "Players love the really spectacular games with elaborate bonus games, like Fair Tycoon and Pyramid Plunder. But more basic, traditional slots like Slot-o-matic are also played a lot. So for the new Fruitful 7s we thought we'd get back to basics - good old cherries, lemons and bars!"

WinADayCasino.com currently has 24 one-of-a-kind casino games - online slot machines, video poker, roulette and keno. It's a no download casino so there's nothing to install or set up, players can go straight to the games.

View a video version of this story on the Slotland News channel at YouTube: http://www.YouTube.com/SlotlandNews.

Media inquiries:
Larry Colcy, Lyceum Media
+44 (0)207 976 6469
winaday@lyceummedia.com

About WinADayCasino.com
A product of Slotland Entertainment S.A., WinADayCasino.com is a whimsical instant-play Flash casino offering unique free and real-money slot machines and card games that are available only at WinADay. All of the one-of-a-kind games are tied to one progressive jackpot. Generous deposit bonuses, game-of-the-month bonuses, daily random draws bonuses and frequent six-figure progressive jackpot wins have made this casino popular around the world.WinADay's affiliate program is managed by SlotlandAffiliates.com.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Retirement Looking Good After Hitting $167,648 Jackpot at WinADayCasino.com

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Coffee reduces breast cancer risk

2011-05-11
Recently published research shows that coffee drinkers enjoy not only the taste of their coffee but also a reduced risk of cancer with their cuppa. More detailed research published today in BioMed Central's open access journal Breast Cancer Research shows that drinking coffee specifically reduces the risk of antiestrogen-resistant estrogen-receptor (ER)-negative breast cancer. Researchers from Sweden compared lifestyle factors and coffee consumption between women with breast cancer and age-matched women without. They found that coffee drinkers had a lower incidence of ...

15 eggs is the perfect number needed to achieve a live birth after IVF

2011-05-11
An analysis of over 400,000 IVF cycles in the UK has shown that doctors should aim to retrieve around 15 eggs from a woman's ovaries in a single cycle in order to have the best chance of achieving a live birth after assisted reproduction technology. The study, which is published online in Europe's leading reproductive medicine journal Human Reproduction [1], found that there was a strong relationship between live birth rates and the number of eggs retrieved in one cycle. The live birth rate rose with an increasing number of eggs up to about 15; it levelled off between ...

Drug regulators are protecting profits over patients, warn researchers

2011-05-11
Medicines regulators are protecting drug company profits rather than the lives and welfare of patients by withholding unpublished trial data, argue researchers on bmj.com today. They call for full access to full trial reports (published and unpublished) to allow the true benefits and harms of treatments to be independently assessed by the scientific community. Despite the existence of hundreds of thousands of clinical trials, doctors are unable to choose the best treatments for their patients because research results are being reported selectively, write Professor ...

RNA spurs melanoma development

2011-05-11
ORLANDO, Fla., May 10, 2011 –Traditionally, RNA was mostly known as the messenger molecule that carries protein-making instructions from a cell's nucleus to the cytoplasm. But scientists now estimate that approximately 97 percent of human RNA doesn't actually code for proteins at all. A flurry of research in the past decade has revealed that some types of non-coding RNAs switch genes on and off and influence protein function. The best studied non-coding RNAs are the microRNAs. Now, researchers led by Dr. Ranjan Perera at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham) ...

McMaster scientists find protein’s bad guy role in prostate cancer

2011-05-11
Hamilton, ON (May 10, 2011) – It's a disease affecting those closest to us – our fathers, brothers and sons. Prostate cancer impacts one in six men in Canada. Last year, roughly 24,600 men were diagnosed with the disease. Most types of prostate cancer are curable if caught and treated early. But little is understood about the mechanisms that cause a tumour to metastasize and spread to other parts of the body. Damu Tang, an associate professor of medicine in the Division of Nephrology of the McMaster University's Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine and St. Joseph's ...

Successful depression treatment of mothers has long-term effects on offspring

2011-05-11
DALLAS – May 10, 2011 – Children whose mothers are successfully treated for depression show progressive and marked improvement in their own behaviors even a year after their moms discontinue treatment, new UT Southwestern Medical Center-led research shows. Additionally, the faster mothers got better, the faster their kids improved – and the greater the degree of improvement experienced. "If you treat the mother when she is depressed and don't even go through the process of treating the children of these mothers, they still get better as their mothers get better," said ...

CO2 makes life difficult for algae

2011-05-11
The acidification of the world's oceans could have major consequences for the marine environment. New research shows that coccoliths, which are an important part of the marine environment, dissolve when seawater acidifies. Associate Professor Tue Hassenkam and colleagues at the Nano-Science Center, University of Copenhagen, are the first to have measured how individual coccoliths react to water with different degrees of acidity. Coccoliths are very small shells of calcium carbonate that encapsulate a number of species of alga. Algae plays an important role in the global ...

Noted researcher addresses multiple dimensions of video game effects in new journal article

Noted researcher addresses multiple dimensions of video game effects in new journal article
2011-05-11
AMES, Iowa -- Douglas Gentile is painfully aware of how research on the effects of video games on kids is often oversimplified to say that games are either "good" or "bad." The associate professor of psychology at Iowa State University has had his own research typecast on the "bad" side with studies on violent video game's effects and video game addiction, even though he's also done studies demonstrating the benefits of games. A new article by Gentile appearing in the journal Child Development Perspectives argues that existing video game literature can't be classified ...

Wide-reaching report finds strong support for nurse and pharmacist prescribing

2011-05-11
Greater powers introduced by the government to enable specially trained nurses and pharmacists to prescribe medication in England have been successfully adopted, according to a new report. Health service researchers from the universities of Southampton and Keele found widespread acceptance of the new powers among patients and that prescribing practices were safe and appropriate for the type of medical conditions being treated. The Department of Health-funded report, published today (Tuesday, 10 May 2011), gives a national 'snapshot' of how successfully nurse and pharmacist ...

As good as gold

As good as gold
2011-05-11
Similar to humans, the bacteria and tiny plants living in the ocean need iron for energy and growth. But their situation is quite different than ours — for one, they can't exactly turn to natural iron sources like leafy greens or red meat for a pick-me-up. So where does their iron come from? New research published by "Nature Geoscience" points to a source on the seafloor: minute particles (called nanoparticles) of pyrite, or fool's gold, from hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean. Scientists already knew the vents' cloudy plumes emitted from the earth's interior ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Multisite review shows serious adverse events occur frequently in outpatient care

Study highlights need for improvement of patient safety in outpatient settings

Sylvester researchers develop a nanoparticle that can penetrate the blood-brain barrier

Caterbot? Robatapillar? It crawls with ease through loops and bends

Geologists, biologists unearth the atomic fingerprints of cancer

Purdue pharmacy researcher receives $2.4 million NIH grant to fight antimicrobial-resistant lung infections

The Clues for Cleaner Water

New $14.5 million center to help US Navy overcome emerging challenges

Now available from Penn Nursing: innovative, online psychedelic course

Greet receives funding for Abstraction in the Andes, 1950 - 1970

Mindfulness training enhances opioid addiction treatment

Using advanced genetic techniques, scientists create mice with traits of Tourette disorder

3D video conferencing tool lets remote user control the view

The Ottawa Hospital is expanding life-saving biotherapeutics research and manufacturing to its new campus thanks to $59 million grant

Early neurodevelopmental assessments for predicting long-term outcomes in infants at high risk of cerebral palsy

Snowfall and drought: $4.8 million field campaign will improve forecasts in western US, led by U-M

SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024

Science doesn't understand how ice forms (video)

Study reveals APOE4 gene duplication as a new genetic form of Alzheimer's disease

Study highlights key predictors of adolescent substance use; special issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry focuses on substance use disorders

Racial and ethnic disparities in initiation of direct oral anticoagulants among Medicare beneficiaries

Behavioral interventions to improve breast cancer screening outreach

Venus has almost no water. A new study may reveal why

DDT pollutants found in deep sea fish off Los Angeles coast

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy

Microscopic heart vessels imaged in super-resolution for first time at Imperial

Clinical trial shows that cytisinicline can help people quit vaping

Groundbreaking microcapacitors could power chips of the future

Machine learning for maternal health: University of Oklahoma engineer receives NSF Career Award for preeclampsia study

Unraveling isopods' culinary secrets and why it matters for ecosystems

[Press-News.org] Retirement Looking Good After Hitting $167,648 Jackpot at WinADayCasino.com
A senior citizen preparing to retire has won a $167,648 progressive jackpot at WinADayCasino.com. A new game is is expected later this month, the new Fruitful 7s -- a pub-style fruit machine featuring free spins.