Online Casino Ace - Online Casino News

English German French Spanish Italian Dutch



Online Casino News for Thursday - February 5, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Ontario casinos see a drop in profit
• 'Price is Right' ready for return via gambling online
• Isle of Capri gets ambitious with St. Louis County casino
• Initiative could generate millions
• No regular business
• Panel doubts growth of California casinos
• Lawmaker: Tracks delaying casino agreement
• Gaming, two strategies provoke clashes
• Tribe gambles on ballot
• Cyclic disorder
• Harrah’s E.C. boat’s earnings rise 11 percent
• Tribes, Arnold draw closer gambling agreement
• MGM Mirage agrees to deal for UK casino
• Plymouth wants city casino voyages to end
• Tracks Would Like to Switch Tables on Gambling
• Calculated state cuts of casino decline
• Illinois biased in justly regulating casinos, it owns one
• 20th Casino Night to be birthday celebration
• D.M. states it would copntemplate a casino
• Controversial halftime flash shows how far we've come
• Judge temporarily bans SoCal tribe from excluding members
• Nevada Official Talk Use of National Emergency Unemployed System
• British Land partner with MGM on Meadowhall Casino
• Casino patrons were forced to leave without notice
• Casino project disclosed
• Earnings Get a Boost at Boyd Gaming
Online Casino News
Harrah’s E.C. boat’s earnings rise 11 percent - 2004-02-05
Harrah’s Entertainment profits for 2003 rose 5.5 percent to a record $4.32 billion from $4.1 billion in 2002.

Locally, the East Chicago boat drove up its earnings by 11 percent in the fourth quarter, also establishing a record.

“It was bound to happen, and it did happen,’’ stated Ron Koziol, a Midwest gambling analyst. “There’s no doubt that high taxes and a cut back in casino hours and cut back in personnel all played a role in people going to Indiana.”
Read the full story at Post-Tribune
 
Tribes, Arnold draw closer gambling agreement - 2004-02-05
Negotiators for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and several Native- American tribes have moved forward quickly on a long-term agreement that would expand casino gambling operations while sharply increasing contributions to the state, sources stated Tuesday.

If the administration agrees to a compact for 50 years or longer that raises the cap on the number of slot machines permitted in tribal casinos and allows the addition of high-stakes games like craps and roulette, then some tribes might be open to pay over 15 percent of their annual gaming revenue to the state.
Read the full story at Whittier Daily News
 







Copyright © 2008 Online Casino Ace Inc

2008-12-01