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Online Casino News for Sunday - February 29, 2004

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• Attempts to save beaches delayed
• Windsor man hits the $4.5M slot jackpot
• Being leap year baby has pros and cons, sometimes
• Understanding Blair Hull
• Trump Seeking Lucky Hand with Agreement
• New laundering regulations broaden anti-fraud net
• Casino boosts job market? You bet!
• Spam sinners could be virus victims, claims expert
• Hesperia voters voice opinion Tuesday regarding proposed Indian casino
• Legislators want casino topic on ballot
• Casino amid poor cities' dispute with suburbs
• Casino Competition: A tale of four tribes
• Casinos measures state of California
• Mass Casino Wedding, Ideal Day to Take the Leap
• Mystery novels transfer you into a different world
• Bureau of Indian Affairs deal with federal inquires over disputes
• BIA dealing with latest in series of federal probes
• Forum concentrates on taxes
• Highlighting Hoboken as a tourist location
• Council obtains decision on licenses for liquor
• Casino Measure X in California
• Trump Seeking Lucky Hand with Agreement
• Pair anticipates school initiates mighty La. casino-style poker league
• Casino poker tour willing to deal out wealth
• $1 Nets $4.5 Million On Slots
• First Cutt-off Date for Bills Emerges
• Sault Fire Department Salvages Kewadin Casino
• Parting Las Vegas
• Circumventing A Haunting Casino Addiction
• It Began With Lunch... : A lengthy relationship between 'lovebirds' is now heading for court
Online Casino News
Mystery novels transfer you into a different world - 2004-02-29
Mystery readers range in all shapes, sizes and temperaments. Some need a mystery that's as much page-turning adventure as whodunit; others want big doses of history or a hit of anglophilia.

At the top of the must-read list this winter is "Sky Woman Falling" ($22.95, Berkley Prime Crime).
Kirk Mitchell taps the emotions of the two complex investigators, a creation myth, resentments of white proprietors who may lose their property in a conflict with the Oneida nation, and casino corruption.
Read the full story at The Olympian
 
Bureau of Indian Affairs deal with federal inquires over disputes - 2004-02-29
Conflict-of-interest probes were initiated this past week into a regional office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs are just the latest inquiries of an agency that has faced ongoing allegations of ethics violations and incompetent management.

The re-engineered tribe, which now features several BIA officials along with dozens of their relatives, wants to construct a $100 million casino in one of California’s thriving wine regions with the BIA’s assistance agency.
Read the full story at thedesertsun.com
 







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