Online Casino Ace - Online Casino News

English German French Spanish Italian Dutch



Online Casino News for Friday - February 6, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Gambling comment difficult to understand
• UK Casino trade goes into land grab phase....
• Gambling on a show and sell approach
• Pawlenty insists Minnesota must adjust to quick change
• Legislature Presses On With Gambling Proposal
• Adversaries of expanded gaming in Maryland introduce new campaign
• Study's take on gambling impacts not detailed
• Indian Tribe suggests giant casino, resort on Shabbona property
• Coalition battles casino endangerment
• D'Iberville casino finally gets greenlight
• Please, no betting, but 'Rings' triumphs in Vegas
• Gaming Board makes 7 casino bids public
• $81.2 million on Super Bowl is record wager
• Yes, casino fever has returned
• Pawlenty seeks bargaining power with tribes
• Scrutiny ubiquitous as D.M. weighs casino alternatives
• How conmen transformed a 1c cheque into nearly $1m
• Romulus, Flint offer casino
• Powerful opinions charge casino hearing
• 7 months of good fortune leads to big Borgata development
• Casino Takes The Cake Out Of Bridal Showcase
• Casino-opposing author links with Blumenthal for Kent forum
• Black Enterprise Report to Launch New Episodes in February
• Donald arrives in Vegas
Online Casino News
Gambling on a show and sell approach - 2004-02-06
Coming from his second meeting with Gov. Donald L. Carcieri, J. Terrance Lanni, chairman and chief executive officer of MGM Mirage, saw the 30-minute meeting as a "meet and greet."

MGM Mirage is the probable buyer of Wembley, plc, the parent company of Lincoln Park, site of a video slot machine operation that is a key source of revenue for state government.
As a result, Lanni supplied no information about whether MGM Mirage is scheduled to continue to operate Lincoln Park as it is, turn it into a casino or whether they would maintain live dog racing.
Read the full story at Pawtucket Times
 
Pawlenty insists Minnesota must adjust to quick change - 2004-02-06
Gov. Tim Pawlenty called on the Minnesota Legislature on Thursday to employ the "special Minnesota spirit" to changing the manner in which the state approaches everything from gambling and public safety to taxes and education funding.

The greatest surprise was Pawlenty's public message that he wants to bargain the state's gambling compacts with Indian tribes that give them a monopoly on casino gambling in the state. The state receives no earnings from the casinos -- a sore point with many lawmakers.
Read the full story at Duluth News Tribune
 







Copyright © 2008 Online Casino Ace Inc

2008-12-01