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Online Casino News for Thursday - January 22, 2004

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• Experiencing the "Pinch" of Pyramid Doubt
• Pataki seeks gambling to balance the budget again
• Boyd Gaming to Purchase Riverboat Casino
• Perini Building Co. Granted Contract to Construct Renaissance Hotel
• Gambler welcome in A.C after 25-year prohibition
• Floating Casinos Busted as Police Commence War On Organized Crime
• Huge casino wins dent Stanley's revenues
• Violence explodes at casino
• Ultimatum might end Jumer’s casino plans
• Harrah's puts Caddo casino on the market
• Casino friends, opponents state case
• Tribe rekindles casino plan
• Construction Of Hard Rock Hotel & Casino To Start Next Week
• Isle of Man expects games firms will substitute casinos
• Two additional employees arrested in casino scam
• Peoria Tribe to launch new casino
• Casino taxes likely to remain stable, Moak indicates
• House OKs pull-tab machine bill
• Riverboat numbers, earnings fall
• Legislators turn attention to gaming again
• Delegates deliberate power play on gambling issue
• Free obsessive gambling treatment
• Tribes seeking to run racino
• Charles Town scheduling a $25-million development
• Measure requests Indians pay state portion of gambling income
• Customers hit casino owner's revenue
• Macao launches a 12th casino
• Bribes claim endangers Sharon's future
• L.A. man guilty in Vegas casino counterfeiting trial
• A killing in midnight casino lounge battle
Online Casino News
Casino friends, opponents state case - 2004-01-22
The debate was a heated one as anti-casino advocates and Ho-Chunk Nation representatives battled one another Wednesday in the first official debate on a Feb. 17 election to expand gambling at DeJope Bingo Hall.

Hosted by the Downtown Rotary Club, the lively 40-minute discussion pitted national gambling expert William Thompson, appointed by the anti-casino group No Dane Casino, against a Ho-Chunk official and pro-casino group spokeswoman.
Read the full story at Wisconsin State Journal
 
Tribe rekindles casino plan - 2004-01-22
The Stillaguamish Tribe had to fold its hand the first time it tried to construct a casino.

Following months of soliciting and reviewing new investment opportunities, the tribe has lined up a $19 million loan from Marshall Bank of Minneapolis to build a 22,000-square-foot casino on 20 acres of federal trust land the tribe owns a few miles northwest of Arlington.
Read the full story at HeraldNet
 







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