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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
An A.C. establishment with antiques - 2004-01-26
For a city with a valuable history but a short memory, Princeton Antiques & Books is the perfect antidote.
Want postcards from pre-casino Atlantic City? They're here, 50,000 of them, somewhere amid shelves filled with rare books; Tiffany lamps; art glass; and photo albums packed with 8-by-11 stills of the beach, the Boardwalk, the early Miss America pageants, and more.

An honor system in a casino town? What are the chances?
Read the full story at Philadelphia Inquirer
 
Not Limited to the Reservation - 2004-01-26
When the Shinnecock Indian Nation commenced building a 65,000-square-foot casino in Hampton Bays last summer, tribal leaders knew they were in for a war. That's because, according to the U.S. government, it is is not an official tribe at all.
They had applied for federal acknowledgement, a prerequisite for launching a casino, almost 25 years earlier, and were still waiting for a decision.
Read the full story at Newsday
 







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