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*Gambling Industry Significado La
*Gambling Industry Significado De
*Gambling Industry Significado Meaning
*Gambling Industry Significado Definition
Del Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English movie/media/gambling etc mogul movie/media/gambling etc mogul POWER a businessman or businesswoman who has great power and influence in a particular industry → mogul Ejemplos desde el Corpus movie/media/gambling etc mogul. Under normal circumstances Chaplin may well have simply thrown the. The activity of betting money, for example in a game or on a horse race: Gambling can be an addictive habit. He had to borrow money to pay off his gambling debts. Gambling definition, the activity or practice of playing at a game of chance for money or other stakes. Noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc. (hobby) gioco d’azzardo nm. Sostantivo maschile: Identifica un essere, un oggetto o un concetto che assume genere maschile: medico, gatto, strumento, assegno, dolore. After his wife died, Kyle got into gambling and lost all of his money. Our casino and gambling glossary is very useful, you will find every term used so that the next time when you are sitting among friends playing cards, craps or any other table game; you will certainly be well-aware and versed with all the different casino terms. Make our gambling dictionary your companion and watch as you build your vocabulary.Gaming
The act or practice of gambling; an agreement between two or more individuals to play collectively at a game of chance for a stake or wager, which will become the property of the winner and to which all involved make a contribution.
Since the early 1990s, gaming laws have been in a constant state of flux. Regulation of gaming is generally reserved to the states, but the U.S. Congress became involved in it in 1988 with the passage of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (Gaming Act) (Pub. Rivers casino pittsburgh dining. Law. No. 100-497, 102 Stat. 2467 [25 U.S.C.A. § 2701 et seq.] [Oct. 17, 1988]), which brought tribal gaming under the regulation of state and federal governments.
Before the 1990s, most gaming was illegal in a majority of states. Since the passage of the Gaming Act, many state legislatures have approved gaming in a variety of forms. Some states still outlaw all but charitable gambling, but most have expanded their definition of legal gaming operations to promote economic development.
The Legal History of gambling in the United States is marked by dramatic swings between prohibition and popularity. In colonial times, games of chance were generally illegal except for state and private lotteries. Other gaming was considered a sin and not fit for discussion in polite society. In the early nineteenth century, the popular belief changed from seeing gaming as a sin to seeing it as a vice. Gamblers were no longer considered fallen in the eyes of God but were now seen as simply victims of their own weaknesses.
Gaming came under renewed attack during the presidency of Andrew Jackson (1829– 37). Part of the ’Jacksonian morality’ of the period revived the view of gambling as sinful. By 1862, gaming was illegal in all states except Missouri and Kentucky, both of which retained state lotteries.
After the Civil War, legal gaming experienced a brief renaissance, only to fall out of favor again in the 1890s. At this point, it was outlawed even in the western territories, where card games such as poker and blackjack had become a regular diversion in frontier life. By 1910, the United States was again virtually free of legalized gaming. Only Maryland and Kentucky allowed gambling, in the sole form of horse race betting.
In 1931, Nevada re-legalized casino gaming. Many states followed this lead in the 1930s by legalizing pari-mutuel betting, wherein all bets are pooled and then paid, less a management fee, to the holders of winning tickets. In 1963, New Hampshire formed the first State Lottery since the 1910s. By the 1990s, gaming was the largest and fastest growing segment of the U.S. entertainment industry. In 1992, for example, U.S. citizens spent approximately four times more on gaming than on movies. Gaming is still illegal in some states, but most states have at least one form of legal gambling, most commonly a state-run lottery. In fact, instead of prohibiting gaming, many states now actively promote it by sponsoring lotteries and other games of chance.
Gaming laws vary from state to state. Idaho, for example, declares that ’gambling is contrary to public policy and is strictly prohibited except for’ pari-mutuel betting, bingo and raffle games for charity, and a state lottery (Idaho Const. art. III, § 20). Like lotteries in other states, the purpose of the one in Idaho is to generate revenue for the state. The lottery is run by the Idaho State Lottery Commission, which oversees all aspects of the game, including expenses and advertising.
In addition to lotteries, some states with direct access to major river systems or lakes expanded their venues for gaming to include riverboats. On July 1, 1989, Iowa became the first state to authorize its Racing and Gaming Commission to grant a license to qualified organizations for the purpose of conducting gambling games on excursion boats in counties where referendums have been approved. Illinois quickly followed Iowa with its Riverboat Gambling Act (230 ILCS 10), which went into effect on February 7, 1990. Four more states subsequently passed legislation permitting licensing for riverboat casinos: Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Missouri. Some riverboat gambling vessels are permanently docked while others embark on brief cruises and return to their docks after several hours of gaming, dining, and entertainment for passengers.
Alabama is one of the few states that prohibit all gambling except for charitable gaming. Alabama maintains no state lottery and punishes gambling through criminal statutes. Under the Code of Alabama, sections 13A-12-24 and 13A-12-25 (1975), the possession of gambling records is a class A misdemeanor, which carries a penalty of not more than one year in jail or a $2,000 fine, or both.
Nevada is the most permissive state for gambling. Its public policy of gaming holds that ’[t]he gaming industry is vitally important to the economy of the state and the General Welfare of the inhabitants’ (Nev. Rev. Stat. § 463.0129). Nevada statutes allow the broadest range of gaming activities, including pari-mutuel betting, betting on sports competitions and other events, and the full panoply of casino games. Gambling is heavily regulated by the Nevada Gaming Commission, and a wide range of criminal statutes are designed to ensure cooperation with the regulations of the commission.
New Jersey is another active promoter of gaming. In 1976, New Jersey voters passed a Referendum approving casino gaming, and that decision was codified in the Casino Control Act (N.J. Stat. Ann. § 5:12-1 et seq.). Gaming is limited to Atlantic City, and it does not include betting on sports events other than horse and dog races. However, like Nevada, New Jersey offers the full array of casino games.
The Gaming Act divides all gambling into three classes. Class I includes all traditional Indian games performed as a part of, or in connection with, tribal ceremonies or celebrations. Class II is limited to bingo, pull tabs, and card games not explicitly prohibited by the laws of the state. Class III encompasses all other forms of gambling, such as slot machines, poker, blackjack, dice games, off-track betting (where bets may be placed by persons not at the race track) and pari-mutuel betting on horses and dogs, and lotteries.
An Indian tribe may operate a class I game without restrictions. It may offer class II games with the oversight of the National Indian Gaming Commission, and class III games only if it reaches an agreement with the state in which it resides.
The Gaming Act provides that Native American tribes may operate high-stakes casinos only if they reach an agreement with the state in which they reside. Under the act, a state is required to enter into Good Faith negotiations with a federally recognized tribe to allow class III gaming that was legal in the state before the negotiations began. For example, if a state has legalized blackjack but not poker, blackjack is available for negotiations but not poker. Furthermore, when a state approves a new form of gambling, the state must make the new game available in negotiations with native tribes.
Native American groups have criticized the Gaming Act as interfering with tribal sovereignty. Indeed, a primary purpose of the act was to reconcile state interests in gaming with those of the tribe’s. Before the act, some Native American tribes ran sizable gambling operations on their land without regulation by the federal or state governments.
The Gaming Act has also created opposition in some states that seeks to minimize gambling within their boundaries. Maine, for example, refused to give the Passamaquoddy tribe a license to conduct class III gaming operations on tribal land in Calais, near the Canadian border. The tribe sued the state for the right to conduct the high-stakes gaming. However, several years earlier, Maine had given the tribe land in exchange for the tribe’s agreement to submit to state jurisdiction. In Passamaquoddy Tribe v. Maine, 1996 WL 44707, 75 F. 3d 784 (1st Cir. 1996), the First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the tribe. The court noted that Congress had been aware of Maine’s agreement with the tribe and that Congress could have added to the Gaming Act, but chose not to, language making the act applicable to the state of Maine. According to the court, the gaming statute did not erase the 1980 agreement between the tribe and the state, and Maine had the right to refuse the tribe’s request.Further readings
American Gaming Association. Avi casino laughlin nv. Available online at <www.americangaming.org> (accessed July 26, 2003).
Campion, Kristen M. 1995. ’Riverboats: Floating Our Way to a Brighter Fiscal Future?’ Seton Hall Legislative Journal 19.
Rose, I. Nelson. 1993. ’Gambling and the Law—Update 1993.’ Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal 15.Cross-references
Native American Rights; State Lottery.West’s Encyclopedia of American Law, edition 2. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Important notice:
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A - Agriculture, forestry and fishing
A1 - Crop and animal production, hunting and related service activities
A1.1 - Growing of non-perennial crops
A1.1.1 - Growing of cereals (except rice), leguminous crops and oil seeds
A1.1.2 - Growing of rice
A1.1.3 - Growing of vegetables and melons, roots and tubers
A1.1.4 - Growing of sugar cane
A1.1.5 - Growing of tobacco
A1.1.6 - Growing of fibre crops
A1.1.9 - Growing of other non-perennial crops
A1.2 - Growing of perennial crops
A1.2.1 - Growing of grapes
A1.2.2 - Growing of tropical and subtropical fruits
A1.2.3 - Growing of citrus fruits
A1.2.4 - Growing of pome fruits and stone fruits
A1.2.5 - Growing of other tree and bush fruits and nuts
A1.2.6 - Growing of oleaginous fruits
A1.2.7 - Growing of beverage crops
A1.2.8 - Growing of spices, aromatic, drug and pharmaceutical crops
A1.2.9 - Growing of other perennial crops
A1.3 - Plant propagation
A1.3.0 - Plant propagation
A1.4 - Animal production
A1.4.1 - Raising of dairy cattle
A1.4.2 - Raising of other cattle and buffaloes
A1.4.3 - Raising of horses and other equines
A1.4.4 - Raising of camels and camelids
A1.4.5 - Raising of sheep and goats
A1.4.6 - Raising of swine/pigs
A1.4.7 - Raising of poultry
A1.4.9 - Raising of other animals
A1.5 - Mixed farming
A1.5.0 - Mixed farming
A1.6 - Support activities to agriculture and post-harvest crop activities
A1.6.1 - Support activities for crop production
A1.6.2 - Support activities for animal production
A1.6.3 - Post-harvest crop activities
A1.6.4 - Seed processing for propagation
A1.7 - Hunting, trapping and related service activities
A1.7.0 - Hunting, trapping and related service activities
A2 - Forestry and logging
A2.1 - Silviculture and other forestry activities
A2.1.0 - Silviculture and other forestry activities
A2.2 - Logging
A2.2.0 - Logging
A2.3 - Gathering of wild growing non-wood products
A2.3.0 - Gathering of wild growing non-wood products
A2.4 - Support services to forestry
A2.4.0 - Support services to forestry
A3 - Fishing and aquaculture
A3.1 - Fishing
A3.1.1 - Marine fishing
A3.1.2 - Freshwater fishing
A3.2 - Aquaculture
A3.2.1 - Marine aquaculture
A3.2.2 - Freshwater aquaculture
B - Mining and quarrying
B5 - Mining of coal and lignite
B5.1 - Mining of hard coal
B5.1.0 - Mining of hard coal
B5.2 - Mining of lignite
B5.2.0 - Mining of lignite
B6 - Extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas
B6.1 - Extraction of crude petroleum
B6.1.0 - Extraction of crude petroleum
B6.2 - Extraction of natural gas
B6.2.0 - Extraction of natural gas
B7 - Mining of metal ores
B7.1 - Mining of iron ores
B7.1.0 - Mining of iron ores
B7.2 - Mining of non-ferrous metal ores
B7.2.1 - Mining of uranium and thorium ores
B7.2.9 - Mining of other non-ferrous metal ores
B8 - Other mining and quarrying
B8.1 - Quarrying of stone, sand and clay
B8.1.1 - Quarrying of ornamental and building stone, limestone, gypsum, chalk and slate
B8.1.2 - Operation of gravel and sand pits; mining of clays and kaolin
B8.9 - Mining and quarrying n.e.c.
B8.9.1 - Mining of chemical and fertiliser minerals
B8.9.2 - Extraction of peat
B8.9.3 - Extraction of salt
B8.9.9 - Other mining and quarrying n.e.c.
B9 - Mining support service activities
B9.1 - Support activities for petroleum and natural gas extraction
B9.1.0 - Support activities for petroleum and natural gas extraction
B9.9 - Support activities for other mining and quarrying
B9.9.0 - Support activities for other mining and quarrying
C - Manufacturing
C10 - Manufacture of food products
C10.1 - Processing and preserving of meat and production of meat products
C10.1.1 - Processing and preserving of meat
C10.1.2 - Processing and preserving of poultry meat
C10.1.3 - Production of meat and poultry meat products
C10.2 - Processing and preserving of fish, crustaceans and molluscs
C10.2.0 - Processing and preserving of fish, crustaceans and molluscs
C10.3 - Processing and preserving of fruit and vegetables
C10.3.1 - Processing and preserving of potatoes
C10.3.2 - Manufacture of fruit and vegetable juice
C10.3.9 - Other processing and preserving of fruit and vegetables
C10.4 - Manufacture of vegetable and animal oils and fats
C10.4.1 - Manufacture of oils and fats
C10.4.2 - Manufacture of margarine and similar edible fats
C10.5 - Manufacture of dairy products
C10.5.1 - Operation of dairies and cheese making
C10.5.2 - Manufacture of ice cream
C10.6 - Manufacture of grain mill products, starches and starch products
C10.6.1 - Manufacture of grain mill products
C10.6.2 - Manufacture of starches and starch products
C10.7 - Manufacture of bakery and farinaceous products
C10.7.1 - Manufacture of bread; manufacture of fresh pastry goods and cakes
C10.7.2 - Manufacture of rusks and biscuits; manufacture of preserved pastry goods and cakes
C10.7.3 - Manufacture of macaroni, noodles, couscous and similar farinaceous products
C10.8 - Manufacture of other food products
C10.8.1 - Manufacture of sugar
C10.8.2 - Manufacture of cocoa, chocolate and sugar confectionery
C10.8.3 - Processing of tea and coffee
C10.8.4 - Manufacture of condiments and seasonings
C10.8.5 - Manufacture of prepared meals and dishes
C10.8.6 - Manufacture of homogenised food preparations and dietetic food
C10.8.9 - Manufacture of other food products n.e.c.
C10.9 - Manufacture of prepared animal feeds
C10.9.1 - Manufacture of prepared feeds for farm animals
C10.9.2 - Manufacture of prepared pet foods
C11 - Manufacture of beverages
C11.0 - Manufacture of beverages
C11.0.1 - Distilling, rectifying and blending of spirits
C11.0.2 - Manufacture of wine from grape
C11.0.3 - Manufacture of cider and other fruit wines
C11.0.4 - Manufacture of other non-distilled fermented beverages
C11.0.5 - Manufacture of beer
C11.0.6 - Manufacture of malt
C11.0.7 - Manufacture of soft drinks; production of mineral waters and other bottled waters
C12 - Manufacture of tobacco products
C12.0 - Manufacture of tobacco products
C12.0.0 - Manufacture of tobacco products
C13 - Manufacture of textiles
C13.1 - Preparation and spinning of textile fibres
C13.1.0 - Preparation and spinning of textile fibres
C13.2 - Weaving of textiles
C13.2.0 - Weaving of textiles
C13.3 - Finishing of textiles
C13.3.0 - Finishing of textiles
C13.9 - Manufacture of other textiles
C13.9.1 - Manufacture of knitted and crocheted fabrics
C13.9.2 - Manufacture of made-up textile articles, except apparel
C13.9.3 - Manufacture of carpets and rugs
C13.9.4 - Manufacture of cordage, rope, twine and netting
C13.9.5 - Manufacture of non-wovens and articles made from non-wovens, except apparel
C13.9.6 - Manufacture of other technical and industrial textiles
C13.9.9 - Manufacture of other textiles n.e.c.
C14 - Manufacture of wearing apparel
C14.1 - Manufacture of wearing apparel, except fur apparel
C14.1.1 - Manufacture of leather clothes
C14.1.2 - Manufacture of workwear
C14.1.3 - Manufacture of other outerwear
C14.1.4 - Manufacture of underwear
C14.1.9 - Manufacture of other wearing apparel and accessories
C14.2 - Manufacture of articles of fur
C14.2.0 - Manufacture of articles of fur
C14.3 - Manufacture of knitted and crocheted apparel
C14.3.1 - Manufacture of knitted and crocheted hosiery
C14.3.9 - Manufacture of other knitted and crocheted apparel
C15 - Manufacture of leather and related products
C15.1 - Tanning and dressing of leather; manufacture of luggage, handbags, saddlery and harness; dressing and dyeing of fur
C15.1.1 - Tanning and dressing of leather; dressing and dyeing of fur
C15.1.2 - Manufacture of luggage, handbags and the like, saddlery and harness
C15.2 - Manufacture of footwear
C15.2.0 - Manufacture of footwear
C16 - Manufacture of wood and of products of wood and cork, except furniture; manufacture of articles of straw and plaiting materials
C16.1 - Sawmilling and planing of wood
C16.1.0 - Sawmilling and planing of wood
C16.2 - Manufacture of products of wood, cork,

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