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Online Casino News for Friday - March 21, 2003

More Online Casino News
• Online Gambling Ban's Delay Brings Criticism
• City officials stand up against gambling
• Top Three Online Gambling Trade Shows
• Coalition rallies in opposition of proposal to add casino gambling
• Gambler Is Issued Treatment Rather Than Jail Time
• Casinos would bear majority of new taxes
• Front Media and IGSN Reveal New Program For Online Gaming
• New 24 Hour Bingo Site Debuts at Nickelbingo.com
• Gambling proceeds for February plunge
• Fed Judge Agree In Favor Of Santee Sioux Casino
• Court is in favor of Santee Sioux in casino battle
• New bill reduces Nevada's rainy day fund of $135 million
• Decision postponed for Chicago casino
• South African Gaming Group Reports Rise In Earnings
• Le Reve makes comfortable bid on Wynns unique opportunity
• New Jersey authorizes dates reduction for Monmouth, the Meadowlands
• Controversial Illinois gaming board member quits
• Court reverses casino developer Wynn decision
• Conflict has little impact on Las Vegas gaming business
• Hunt Adkins propels casino ad campaign
• Lawyer New Jersey Requires Election for VLTs
• From Gambling Addiction To Cancer: Production of health videos
• Food-service backing casino industry, tax on businesses
• Real-estate and casino mogul insists Miss USA pageant is a worthy investment
• February gambling profits drop miserably
• March Madness recommendations for the majority
Online Casino News
Court is in favor of Santee Sioux in casino battle - 2003-03-21
A federal appeals court revealed Thursday that the Santee Sioux tribe can retain the 50 or so gaming machines that defend its modest casino in Knox County.

"Now tribes may operate certain video electronic gambling machines without having to get a tribal-state compact and without threat of prosecution from the federal government."
Read the full story at Grand Island Independent
 
New bill reduces Nevada's rainy day fund of $135 million - 2003-03-21
Nevada lawmakers rushed on Friday to grant absolute authorization to a bill that assists in balancing this year's budget by draining $135 million from the state's "rainy day" fund.

If legislators hold off much longer this fiscal year, he insisted it would be too late to obtain enough revenues from the short-term levies, and"that's gambling too much with the well-being of this state."
Read the full story at RGJ.com
 







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