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Online Casino News for Monday - January 26, 2004

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• Major stakes, gambling initiatives Card rooms target tribe's monopoly
• Indians seek Palm Springs entertainment facility
• Tribe seek casino facility in downtown Palm Springs
• Slow casinos in the Catskills
• An A.C. establishment with antiques
• Not Limited to the Reservation
• Bolton casino receives greenlight
• Tribe envisions entertainment district
• Don't take a chance on expanded gaming
• Queen Mary 2 Comes to Florida
• VLTs ready to launch in a city already familiar with gambling
• Schaghticoke decision could have major effect
• Legal slots in Berks not probable
• Tribe criticizes Carcieri proposals
• Mob's 'mini-casinos' increasing, sheriff states
• Graton tribe insists county disregarding hate speech
• Music in casinos, from karaoke to Alan Parsons
• Desperate for cash, N.Y. wager on gambling
• Gambling fate decided by Franklin voters
• Sigma Game Given Mississippi Authorization
• VGMs prepared to launch in a city that's no stranger to betting
• $100 gamble on Panthers could turn to $10,000 for one man
• Gambling, a lucrative profit or a curse?
• Md. lawmakers received endowments from gaming interests
• Cardroom owner cautious about bets
• Playing rough with casino revenues
• Indians seek Palm Springs entertainment facility
• Gaming Tribes possibly fined for illegal machine
Online Casino News
Cardroom owner cautious about bets - 2004-01-26
George Teeny confesses he's nervous. Who wouldn't be?
The La Center, Wash., cardrooms, the New Phoenix and the Last Frontier, are two among his most profitable in Washington state.

The tribe has not revealed that it will construct a casino there, but it has prepared an environmental evaluation for a 41,800-square-foot casino that would have room for over 400 slot machines and several gambling tables.
Read the full story at The Oregonian
 
Playing rough with casino revenues - 2004-01-26
California's Indian tribes have been very skilled at getting their way on gaming. This is all the more reason why the Schwarzenegger administration, which is attempting to get tribes to pay a decent share of their casino profits, should be questioning the latest gambit by a powerful Palm Springs tribe.

In addition to the tribes' uneasiness is a competing ballot initiative that would grant racetrack and card room interests the right to have slot machines if the tribes evade paying 25 percent of their gaming profits to the state.
Read the full story at Daily Breeze
 







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