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Online Casino News for Saturday - February 7, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Isle heat things up in St. Louis
• Orange panel to speak with casino proposers
• DeJope casino offers alternative choices
• Going across the border for a cigarette
• Minnesota Gov. Wants Earnings From Tribes
• Morlino pushes for a 'moral minimum'
• Pawlenty offers choices for casino
• Casino Gambling Could Gain Some Votes
• Indiana smoke shops prepare for sales rush
• State of the State speech ruffles tribe's feathers
• Pawlenty leans toward proposal for casinos
• Bishop states Madison requires an improvement in moral fiber
• Introducing... Belle Vue, the new Las Vegas?
• A Chance Meeting
• Crown Casino's high-roller ways a 'shambles'
• More than one hundred challengers for poker champ
• Maine Tribes Attempt New Method to Get Slot-Machine Rights
• Busch affirms blacks right about slots possession
• Rain offers showers of money for gambler
• US powerhouses place city on casino-war footing
• Money from casino target reality, desire
• Transform arena into casino
• Affair of the Heart Casino celebration scheduled for Feb. 14
• Hot words hurl as casino vote gets closer
• McGreevey taps GOP developer to head top casino agency
• Johnson wants a probe into Schaghticoke acknowledgement
Online Casino News
DeJope casino offers alternative choices - 2004-02-07
Due to my broad responsibilities in working with Wisconsin's American Indian tribes within my many years working with the Department of Natural Resources, I personally observed the benefits of Indian gaming to the tribes and to state taxpayers.

In counties where Indian casinos are top employers, total employment increased an average of 2 percent quicker than in other regions over the past decade - an incremental rise of nearly 22 percent faster than statewide employment growth.
Read the full story at Capital Times
 
Going across the border for a cigarette - 2004-02-07
A proposed tax in Cook County has Indiana smoke shop retailers anxiously hoping for hordes of people crossing the border to feed their nicotine habits.

People won't have to look for a proliferation of new tobacco-selling entities, however. Ben Mena, owner of Cigarette Express in Hammond, sees Illinois locals driving over the border daily to gamble at Horseshoe Casino, and that didn’t generate a need for any more smoke shops.
Read the full story at Post-Tribune
 






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