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Online Casino News for Thursday - January 15, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Hotels, casinos rate themselves, lowering worth of ratings
• Casino issues bids to purchase
• Okla. tribes fight for contended casino near Denver
• Tribes tired of handing more casino earnings to California
• Sky City discusses purchase of MGM's Darwin casino
• Casino authority cuts entertainment grant
• John Brackenbury Appointed To Board of Directors of Isle of Capri Casinos
• Casinos' earnings a jackpot for region
• President Casinos, Inc. Discloses Fruits of Third Quarter
• Several Calif. tribes consider casino payments to state
• Deloitte attacked over casino group auditing
• An analysis of Casino Mohegan Sun
• Memorial park granted $10,000
• Nevada Hillbillies casino met with opposition
• Education, casino gambling: Governor avoiding issues
• Casino suit ensues between Louisiana tribe and Campo band
• Casino Employees Provide Excellent Service and Are Reliable
• Casino Has Developed Jobs And A Few Millionaires
• Seminoles Wagering On Hard Rock Casinos
• Valley casinos new penny slot machines are a hit
• St. Louis proposes Pinnacle for new casino location
• Darwin casino proposal yanks SkyCity down
• New proposal for 7.7% of casino shares
• Casinos' earnings a jackpot for Detroit region
• A solid bet
• Casino’s crowds attendance falls as revenue rises
• Gambling defender says towns in uproar
• City aims to get $1 mil from tribe for Heard
• Cops will be watching Raceway
• Hands off the proceeds, tribes relay to governor
• Maine Officials Investigate Company Acquiring Racetrack
• Casino problems emerge for Deloitte
Online Casino News
Okla. tribes fight for contended casino near Denver - 2004-01-15
A pair of tribes in Oklahoma publicized their endorsement Wednesday for a proposal to construct a casino off Interstate 70 east of Denver.

Former accounts of the "Homecoming Project" linked the casino to reparations from the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre. On Wednesday, however, the tribes stayed clear of Sand Creek.
Read the full story at Denver Post
 
Tribes tired of handing more casino earnings to California - 2004-01-15
Indian tribes with casino gambling are willing to be great neighbors and citizens, their leaders state, but that doesn't actually mean handing over more cash to the state just because California is in an economic slump.

He and other tribal leaders balked at Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's suggestions that casinos share more of their earnings with the state, which is fighting to maintain its budget in the black.
Read the full story at San Francisco Chronicle
 






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