
if it says to remove 5 blue dots and you remove 6 that is fine). You can go over the specified goals (e.g.The level is complete when all goals are reached.When you have completed a specific goal it turns into a checkmark.The top of the screen shows how many more pieces you need to complete for each color and how many moves or seconds you have remaining to reach the goal.removing 5 green dots and 5 pink dots in 30 seconds.removing 2 orange dots and 5 blue dots in 10 moves.The game is unending, or only ends when you can not remove any more pieces from the playing field.A group of multiple line segments at different directions which is continuous only counts as a single move.The top of the screen shows how many moves you have remaining and your current score.Connect as many dots as you can in 30 moves.Connect as many dots as you can in 60 seconds.The game offers four playing modes: timed, moves, endless & levels.When you make a line segment those dots are removed from the game and the dots which were above that area fall down the playing field.The line segments can be vertical, horizontal, or both, though can not be diagonal. Make line segments connecting dots of the same color.All Rights Reserved.Use your mouse or tap your screen to create line segments connecting two or more dots. If you want the Jaguars in Jacksonville, then you will believe the city benefits plenty. If you're fine with the concept of the Jaguars not being in Jacksonville, then you won't believe the city benefits enough. Does the city benefit from professional sports enough to merit public funding? Everyone has their opinion. Bottom line: If a smaller-market team is to participate in the NFL, stadium funding usually must be a public-private partnership.


A first thought always will be, "Why can't rich owners pay for this themselves?" Explaining that small markets can't generate the revenue to justify owners self-funding megastadiums gets a bit too complex and cumbersome for many people to want to accept, so the discussion often ends there.

Many people always will instinctively recoil at the idea of public funds supporting professional sports.

There are many, many levels in this discussion – too many to address in one O-Zone answer and possibly too many to address in multiple answers.
