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Online Casino News for Monday - February 9, 2004

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• LV company appear to be convening with Macau tycoon
• Vegas-based Boyd Gaming to purchase Coast Casinos
• One-time mobster cautions about effects of gambling's
• Atlantic City casinos get new look with younger gamblers
• Rendell project could place slots in Poconos
• Gov.'s gambling project is a sad bet for majority of community
• Casino tax could offer some aid
• A state-owned casino could expand profits
• 40 Caught In Banting Casino
• Kirwan insists abandon property tax to finance education
• Pubs Require Pokies To Make Money
• From casinos to cruises, seniors are hard to track down
• Casinos takes chance on full house
• Las Vegas Casino Owner Pinnacle Entertainment Discloses Broader Quarterly Loss
• In praise of casino pessimism
• Legislators divided over expansion
• From Illinois to Trump Casino
• N.J., casinos bargaining for track agreement
• No parole for two killers
• Boyd to purchase Coast Casinos in $1.28bn agreement
• HK's Shun Tak claims no association with MGM casino venture
• Harrah’s to launch women’s gambling site from UK
• Anecdotal Data Directed At Gambling's Increased Role in Wisconsin Bankruptcies
• Foxwoods takes a gamble on new ad campaign
• Casino Funds Pending For California Counties
• Lopez And Affleck's Casino War
• Legislator pushes for BIA investigation
• Aboriginal students receives grants for excellence
Online Casino News
One-time mobster cautions about effects of gambling's - 2004-02-09
The fight over authorized gambling in Kansas got an unususal revival from a former mob figure who admitted that gambling leads to a range of social complications.

Franzese stated statistics indicated that a few years after a casino is established in a community, "crime rates start to rise, the incidence of pathological gamblers starts to rise, problem gamblers start to arise."
Read the full story at Washington Times
 
Atlantic City casinos get new look with younger gamblers - 2004-02-09
Matt Goscky – a regular at the Borgata, the newest casino in the New Jersey gambling mecca of Atlantic City – is youthful, makes big wagers and loses consistantly. He may be just what that city requires.

The billion-dollar, 43-story Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa dominates the skyline of once-fading Atlantic City. The first new casino to be constructed there in 13 years, it is enticing a dramatically younger crowd than the 55-plus players the East Coast resort city has normally attracted since gambling was authorized in 1977.
Read the full story at SignOn San Diego
 







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