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Online Casino News for Friday - January 30, 2004

More Online Casino News
• From the lottery, to the grave
• Big Thunder Valley Casino shows signs of life
• County evaluator lowers hotel-casino property values
• BIA gives acknowledgement Schaghticoke
• Massive casino purchases stadium
• State tribe granted gateway to possible casino
• How to blow a billion dollars? Make a list.
• Dice on ice: Tribe revokes proposal for hotel
• Committee declines tribes’ slots bid
• Gearing up
• China could be dubbed Las Vegas of Asia
• Panel make request for 2 stadiums
• Landmark Castaways casino shuts down
• Illinois could enter into casino industry
• Gambling on a diminishing tradition
• Results of Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority Disclose For 2004
• Bidder Proposes Casino To State
• 2 academics: Casino agreement bad
• For bettors, the Super isn't all its cracked up to be
• Mayor's Former Colleague Suspected In Scam
• Registration increases following changes at music school
• Palace Casino jumps into the game
• Gaming business humming
• Coalition forming in oppposition of slots
• Local lawmakers confront faculty's worries
• Taft discusses employment
• Chances of gambling, good or bad in Nebraska
• Texas may proceed with VLTs
Online Casino News
For bettors, the Super isn't all its cracked up to be - 2004-01-30
The voice at the other end of the telephone was deep and mysterious. Jewish Family Services of Buffalo and Erie County arranged an interview with one of its compulsive-gambling patients, a man anonymously known as "Pete." It seemed to be a fitting choice, I thought.

Niagara Falls is just walking distance of casinos. Why not save people the jump and offer Dr. Kevorkian's suicide machine? Gambling might be enjoyable for some, but it's a road to misery for millions who suffer when the family members blow tax dollars.
Read the full story at Buffalo News, NY
 
Mayor's Former Colleague Suspected In Scam - 2004-01-30
A federal prosecutor kick-started the trial of a former business colleague of Rosemont Mayor Don Stephens on Thursday by claiming the associate orchestrated a "nice tidy scam" that swindled the suburb's insurance company out of close to $300,000 in seven years.

Stephens nearly completed a long-held fantasy when the legislature four years ago authorized a riverboat gambling casino license for Rosemont.
Read the full story at WBBM, IL
 






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