
Winning numbers drawn in Tuesday’s Wisconsin Pick 3 San Francisco Chronicle
source

Winning numbers drawn in Tuesday’s Wisconsin Pick 3 San Francisco Chronicle
source

(Gray News) – The Mega Millions jackpot rose to $965 million after no one matched all six numbers drawn Tuesday night.
The numbers were 10, 13, 40, 42, 46 and a gold Mega Ball of 1.
The jackpot remains the eighth-largest prize in the history of the game. It has been growing since it was last won in Virginia in June.
EN ESPAÑOL | Mega Millions: números ganadores del sorteo del 11 de noviembre
If someone wins, they can either take the full jackpot amount, before taxes, in annual payments over 30 years, or take a one-time cash option of an estimated $445.3 million.
The largest Mega Millions jackpot to ever be won was Aug. 8, 2023. A single ticket bought in Florida won the grand prize of $1.602 billion.
Mega Millions tickets are sold in 45 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Drawings are held at 11 p.m. Eastern on Tuesdays and Fridays.
The odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 290,472,336.
Copyright 2025 Gray Local Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

Charity Event Returns November 12 With Bingo, Burgers, and Drag Performances, All to Support Meal Deliveries for Homebound Seniors and Veterans Across West L.A
Meals on Wheels of West Los Angeles is teaming up with Hamburger Mary’s in West Hollywood for a night of food, fun, and fundraising at its annual Drag Queen Bingo event on Tuesday, November 12, at 7:00 p.m.
The evening will combine bingo, burgers, and lively performances, with all proceeds supporting Meals on Wheels’ mission to deliver nutritious meals and companionship to homebound seniors, veterans, and individuals with disabilities across Brentwood and West Los Angeles, including at the VA.
Guests can arrive as early as 6:30 p.m., with no registration required to participate. A $20 suggested donation covers bingo cards, and attendees are encouraged to bring friends for an evening that mixes laughter with community spirit.
Founded in 1976, Meals on Wheels of West Los Angeles provides more than 87,000 meals each year, ensuring that residents who are unable to shop or cook for themselves remain nourished and connected.
Volunteers deliver hot midday and cold evening meals Monday through Friday, offering not only food but also friendship and wellness check-ins that help combat loneliness and isolation. Brentwood deliveries are organized out of the Village Lutheran church on Church Lane in Brentwood Glen.
“The glitter’s always fun, but the cause is real. Help us feed and care for those who need your hand to sashay hunger away!”
The event will take place at Hamburger Mary’s, 8288 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood. For more information about the program or to volunteer, visit mealsonwheelswestla.org.
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Charity Event Returns November 12 With Bingo, Burgers, and Drag Performances, All to Support Meal Deliveries for Homebound Seniors and…
Charity Event Returns November 12 With Bingo, Burgers, and Drag Performances, All to Support Meal Deliveries for Homebound Seniors and…
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The Georgia Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Nov. 11, 2025, results for each game:
10-13-40-42-46, Mega Ball: 01
Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.
Midday: 6-3-1
Evening: 3-3-4
Night: 3-3-4
Check Cash 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Midday: 6-6-1-9
Evening: 8-8-1-1
Night: 2-2-4-3
Check Cash 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
15-29-31-32-58, Cash Ball: 04
Check Cash4Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Early Bird: 13
Matinee: 07
Drive Time: 13
Primetime: 11
Night Owl: 05
Check Cash Pop payouts and previous drawings here.
Midday: 6-8-3-5-4
Evening: 8-5-8-3-7
Check Georgia FIVE payouts and previous drawings here.
01-14-36-37-41
Check Fantasy 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Georgia editor. You can send feedback using this form.

Editor’s Note: Michael Onysko and Gunnar Ivarsson are both former Daily staffers. Onysko and Iverson were not involved in the writing or editing of this article.
At the Tufts Community Union Senate meeting on Sunday, members discussed the TCU Judiciary, clubs sports and ongoing projects.
The TCU Judiciary oversees the process for student groups to become recognized by the university. Advocacy Chair of the Judiciary Jia Nicdao spoke to senators about the Judiciary’s role and its importance for recognizing student groups on campus.
“Our main purpose is to oversee club recognition and re-recognition. And basically, recognition allows these clubs that are voted in to have more benefits, like TCU funding, room [reservations], [positions] at the club fair and just allow them to have more opportunities,” Nicdao said.
Following the discussion about club recognition, the Senate emphasized the importance of updating club mission statements. “I think it’s important to allow leaders of clubs to say ‘Hey, the need has changed, and we also need to weigh in differently on campus,’” TCU President Dhruv Sampat said.
The Senate also debated how it plans to work with club sports in the future, since they do not go through the Judiciary process but are funded by TCU.
Sampat noted that, along with club sports, many Leonard Carmichael Society and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts Student Government Association subgroups do not go through the Judiciary either.
“We’re trying to align everyone the TCU gives money to and where that money is going … those are holes that we’re also looking to fill,” Sampat said.
“There are ongoing discussions to get the school to contribute to funding or for athletics to pay for certain club sports, but those are longer conversations,” Sampat said regarding club sports.
Sampat added that TCU spends at least $100,000 a year leasing six vans for club sports “in addition to everything else we give club sports.”
“Whether that should be coming completely from the Student Activities Fund, which is meant very directly for student activities, or whether we should also be paying for things like van rental and van leases — even when TCU by and large doesn’t always get to use them the same way as club sports — [is something we’re still discussing],” he said.
The Student Activities Fund has not changed in eight years. “We’ll be talking to [the trustee representatives that manage the Student Activity Fee] about recognizing that and also seeing that if nothing’s going to change there, then the administration needs to step up,” Sampat said.
The Senate also went over brief project updates from its various committees.
The Administration & Policy Committee is collaborating with the Food Insecurity Subcommittee for a meal swipe drive this week, running through Nov. 14. “It’s just to get as many swipes as possible from any person who’s on a meal plan … [where] all 400 swipes are not being used,” TCU Vice President Alex Vang said.
The Education Committee is hosting a Major Insights event, featuring “ambassadors from different departments across Arts and Sciences, Engineering and SMFA [to] talk about their experience [with] people who haven’t declared a major yet,” sophomore and Education Committee Chair Gunnar Ivarsson said.
“I started preliminary discussions [about] free printing during finals, trying to see if we could work anything out with Tisch library and also the Dean’s Office. I have a meeting scheduled with them next week to see if we could work anything out and see possible avenues for funding,” Class of 2027 Senator Michael Onysko said.
“I’m also working with Tisch Library to secure a coffee vending machine. We have a vendor approved, and we have a space approved in Tisch library. We’re just waiting on [Tufts Technology Services] to process the payments,” he added.
The Committee on Community & Diversity will host a meet-and-greet and town hall in the Mayer Campus Center lobby Friday, Nov. 15 from 1–2 p.m., according to committee Chair Iman Boulouah.
The Senate also heard an appeal for funding from the Amalgamates a capella group, which requested $2,400 to record songs for an album. Two group representatives attended the meeting, and the Senate voted to approve the funding.
The Senate also reviewed Allocations Board recommendations for funding for the Chinese Students and Scholars Association, the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Tufts Mock Trial and Planned Parenthood Action. The Senate passed all funding recommendations.
“We’re doing fantastically well, [but] unfortunately, we’re on a bit of a tighter timeline now. We have three Senate meetings left,” Sampat said to Senate members. “So this month is really the last month that we can help. … As much as possible, carve out time in your personal days — even if it’s half an hour every other day — to just follow up on these projects and make sure we’re in a good position.”

The South Dakota Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Nov. 11, 2025, results for each game:
10-13-40-42-46, Mega Ball: 01
Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.
12-25-30-40-42, Lucky Ball: 15
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a South Dakota editor. You can send feedback using this form.

Brokerage account <br> IRA account <br> Checking & savings <br> Money Manager <br> Cashback invested <br> UGMA/UTMA <br> Debit card & learning app <br> Brokerage account <br> IRA account <br> Checking & savings <br> Money Manager <br> Cashback invested <br> UGMA/UTMA <br> Debit card & learning app <br>The last time the Powerball jackpot hit was on October 4, 2021, when a single ticket in California won the $699.8 million prize. <br>If you’re trying to increase your odds of winning by playing with a pool of people, like co-workers, you’ll need to establish some ground rules, says<a href="https://www.suddenmoney.com/"> Susan Bradley</a>, a certified financial planner and founder of the Sudden Money Institute in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.<br>“Any kind of a pool is risky. There’s no legality around it people can use, and they make their own agreements and usually they don’t think through all of the possibilities,” says Bradley, who has advised past lottery winners who have won with a pool of others. Here’s what you need to know — and what to do to protect yourself.<br><br>No matter who you are playing the lottery with, “you have to have a written agreement,” says Bradley. “The main thing with Powerball pools is to have clear agreements, who’s in, who’s not, and meet once in a while if you’re going to do this all the time.”<br>“Have fun and have a coffee together,” Bradley says, and discuss terms. “Is everybody equal? Does everybody have to put money in weekly? Can somebody put in a year’s worth in advance?”<br>It’s important that “somebody has to be minding the money,” she says.<br>When creating a written agreement, “define who’s a member of the group,” she says. “You have to cover when people don’t put money in. Maybe they’re out on a business trip, and you’re doing this on a regular basis and they just forgot to give you the $20, and that’s the week you won, are they in or are they out?”<br>Think these things through beforehand and come up with “a way for the contributors to kind of have some sort of acknowledgement that they put in,” she says.<br>One way to acknowledge the players is by taking a picture of the tickets that were bought with the pooled money, “and circulate it so everybody can see,” Bradley says.<br>In your written agreement, define how the prize would be divided. “Talk about it. What are the rules? Is everybody equal? Did everyone put in the same amount? Does that mean everyone has to take [the prize] the same way?” Bradley says.<br>When you win the lottery you can decide whether or not to take the prize in a lump sum payment or as annual payments and how you choose makes a difference, she says.<br>Establishing the rules for whoever is in charge of buying the tickets is very important, says Bradley. In some pools, the person buying the ticket may be entitled to a bigger piece of the pie.<br>“Does somebody get extra because they go through the hassle of buying the ticket? That’s the kind of stuff you have to talk about, because frequently people make up the rules afterwards,” she says.<br>“The classic is the person who’s going to buy the tickets for the pool also buys a ticket for themselves and the ticket they bought for themselves happens to be the winner. That’s the kind of thing you really want to clear up beforehand,” she says.<br>To fix this, “the best way to do it is the person who buys them doesn’t buy their own,” Bradley says.<br>If you’re a winner, Bradley suggests hiring a team of people she calls a “brain trust.” The team would include a certified financial transitionist, a certified public accountant, an attorney, and a philanthropic consultant, she says.<br>When you win the lottery, “the way life is fades away pretty quickly, and you find you have a boatload of new responsibilities,” she says. “It’s fun to have the money, but it’s complicated. There’s a huge amount of planning that could be done in advance and that really can’t be done on your own. You need to have a good team.”<br>This material has been presented for informational and educational purposes only. The views expressed in the articles above are generalized and may not be appropriate for all investors. The information contained in this article should not be construed as, and may not be used in connection with, an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy or hold, an interest in any security or investment product. There is no guarantee that past performance will recur or result in a positive outcome. Carefully consider your financial situation, including investment objective, time horizon, risk tolerance, and fees prior to making any investment decisions. No level of diversification or asset allocation can ensure profits or guarantee against losses. Article contributors are not affiliated with Acorns Advisers, LLC. and do not provide investment advice to Acorns’ clients. Acorns is not engaged in rendering tax, legal or accounting advice. Please consult a qualified professional for this type of service.<br>Sofia Pitt was a reporter for Grow.<br><br><a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiX0FVX3lxTFA5Q3I5ZmQ1eFVVLXQ3NjVYWE5xWGNWVTdfR0dHMWM2ellUNWJmdnpVQzZzQmU0N09zUlFVMFZDWDVlZkJiSFRyeXBmZ3NndTVuVEYxZzdwcEJSUF9GMi1F?oc=5">source</a>