Online Casino Ace - Online Casino News

English German French Spanish Italian Dutch



Online Casino News for Sunday - January 25, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Gambling chairman discussess worries
• North Korea Gambling Web Site Stopped
• Kent-based tribe awaits acceptance ruling
• Casinos ought to use an improved yardstick
• Frigid weather doesn't slow pace of casino development
• Seeking a plan
• State's position over gambling changes
• `Great deals' on Sin City's Web site
• Mohegan Sun Festival Presents Wine Tasting
• Head of the casino classroom
• Ho-Chunk Casino Presents New Range Of Card Games
• Casinos Re-launch Bargains With State
• State Gaming Commission official makes case to legislators
• Governor, Narragansett Chief Disagree Over Casino
• City partners with casino group
• Casino could invest $375 M into Southland
• Bill Ordine, soothing tequila gods in Sin City
• The Kenosha casino escapade
• Going from Showdown to Good Times
• Best bet: Concentrate on slots' net effect
• Fool believes Harrah's may suggest Horseshoe
• Casino project surfaces, but discussions are slow
• Once-guarded state adopts gambling
• Shooting Vegas Was Norm For Newton
• Polk supervisors consider balance budget slash
• Trial For Shinnecock Casino Begins
• Preparing for a gamble
• Village excluded even after joining coalition
• County Commissioners Want Another Bargain On Pyramid Deal
• State would be wise evade legal gambling temptation
Online Casino News
Fool believes Harrah's may suggest Horseshoe - 2004-01-25
The Motley Fool last week speculated Harrah's Entertainment may be looking for a buyer of Binion's Horseshoe. For around $50 million, Harrah's is picking up the most wanted brand and the prestige of owning the World Series of Poker.

And Boyd Gaming Corp., which currently has three downtown casinos, may show interest in Binion's Horseshoe, the Fool alleged.
Read the full story at Las Vegas Review Journal
 
Casino project surfaces, but discussions are slow - 2004-01-25
Officials with a Kansas-based Indian tribe seeking to claim around 1,280 acres of ancestral property near Shabbona say they are not far from crafting a deal with the governor's office that would permit the tribe to build a casino on the site.

But gossip about what might happen to the land - which features much of Shabbona Lake State Park - and the mention of a proposal detailing the casino-resort development are spurring local government representatives to demand more openness.
Read the full story at Daily Chronicle
 







Copyright © 2008 Online Casino Ace Inc

2008-11-20