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British Council Presents

Gambling by Richard Sidaway

Human beings have spent large amounts of money trying to beat the laws of probability for centuries. More than 30 countries currently have legalised gambling in the form of national lotteries or private casinos. In the last ten years this addictive pastime has been generating millions more via the internet.

So how do you become a successful gambler?

Back in 1873, engineer Joseph Jagger won $300,000 dollars in three days at the casino in Monte Carlo by noticing that the mechanical faults in their roulette wheels made certain numbers come up more often than others. More recently, an Australian wrote a software programme to help him spot winners on the horses in Hong Kong and has supposedly won $150 million over the last 20 years.

What’s the biggest lottery jackpot ever?

The record is currently $390 million, won by two people in the USA in May 2002. This, of course, is peanuts. It costs $444 million a year just to keep an aircraft carrier in the water. The biggest single win on a national lottery was $314.9 million in the Powerball game in 2002 by a man who had already made a fortune in the sewer business. Another American won $39.7 million from a slot machine in a Las Vegas casino in 2003 after putting in about $100 worth of coins. The lucky man had actually only gone to watch a basketball match.

Why do lotteries exist?

Often to make money for the state. The Chinese had a lottery over 2,000 years ago to raise money to build the Great Wall. King James I of England set one up to finance the new colony of Virginia in America in the 17th century. The British Museum in London was also built this way.

Which city earns the most from gambling?

Las Vegas, of course. Before gaming was legalised there in the 1930s it was a small desert town; today it has 35 million visitors and earns seven and a half thousand million dollars from its casinos every year. What do they do with the profits? Build hotels, it seems – the world’s biggest is the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino with 5,005 rooms. In fact somebody estimated it would take one person 329 years to sleep in every hotel room in Vegas.

What’s the least successful bet?

Politician and fraudster Horatio Bottomley went to Belgium in 1914 and bought all six horses in a race. He also paid the jockeys to cross the finishing line in a particular order. Then he put huge amounts of money on all the horses. Unfortunately, the race meeting was by the sea and a mist came in and covered the entire course. The jockeys couldn’t see each other and the judges couldn’t make out who had won. Bottomley lost a fortune.

What’s the longest-running bet?

There was a ten-year bet between writer Paul Ehrlich and businessman Julian Simon that the price of certain metals would be higher in 1990 than in 1980. Ehrlich lost when copper, chrome, nickel, tin and tungsten dropped in price. Simon was trying to make the point that the world is not heading for catastrophe and that we are not using up the world’s resources as Ehrlich had predicted. He refused, however, to agree to a second bet that in the following ten years there would be an increase in greenhouse gases and AIDS victims and a decrease in tropical rainforests, agricultural land and human sperm counts.

What’s the strangest bet ever made?

Here’s one that started a hundred years ago in a London club, presumably after a certain amount of alcohol had been taken. An American businessman bet a British investor $100,000 that it was not possible to walk around the world without being recognised. A certain Harry Bensley agreed to take up the challenge. He had to wear an iron mask for the whole trip and pay his way by selling pictures of himself. While travelling, he also had to find a woman who would marry him, to push a pram and carry only one change of underwear! He set off from London in January 1908 and was arrested a few miles down the road for selling postcards without a licence. He supposedly got most of the way round the world and was in Italy on his way home in 1914 when the First World War broke out and he had to call the whole thing off.

Word Search

See if you can find these words in the grid. They can be horizontal, vertical, diagonal and backwards.

BET

AD_I_TI_E

G_MI_G

LOSS_S

C_S_NO

LO_TE_Y

F_RT_N_

PR_FI_S

FR_UD_T_R

RU_N

Joke Teacher

‘Wit ought to be a glorious treat, like caviar. Never spread it about like marmalade.’

Noel Coward

‘An original idea. That can’t be too hard. The library must be full of them.’

Stephen Fry

Clever and original ideas that amuse us are known as wit. It is a type of humour for which individuals often become famous. Who is famously witty in your country?

‘He has all the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire.’

Winston Churchill

VOCABULARY

Five words/phrases from the text:

• make out: see or distinguish

• break out: start suddenly

• take up: accept

• set off: start on a journey

• call off: cancel

EXERCISE ONE

Vocabulary gap fill. Now use the five words/phrases to fill the gaps in the sentences below:

Nobody was very surprised when war ________[1] in 1939.

I usually ________[2] very early in the morning to avoid the traffic.

It was not an easy decision to make but she decided to ________[3] the challenge.

We had to __________[4] the match because of the bad weather.

In the dark it was very difficult to ________[5] which was the right house.

EXERCISE TWO

Comprehension: explain the significance of the following numbers:

1. 3

2. 100

3. 7.5 thousand million

4. Six

5. 1908

Answers:

Vocabulary: 1. broke out; 2. set off; 3. take up; 4. call off; 5. make out

Comprehension:

1. The number of days it took Joseph Jaggers to win $300,000 at Monte Carlo.

2. The amount of dollars someone spent in 2003 to win $39.7 million in Las Vegas.

3. The amount of dollars Las Vegas earns from gambling every year.

4. The number of horses Horatio Bottomley bought to try and fix a horse race.

5. The year Harry Bensley started walking around the world to win a bet.

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From www.britishcouncil.org