Bingo! Operators complain DF&A getting windfall from game card tax
By Rob Moritz Arkansas News Bureau LITTLE ROCK - Bingo became legal in Arkansas last summer and is going well for the charitable organizations that operate them, but operators say the big winner so far has been the state Department of Finance and Administration.
Related Bingo News:
- Bingo hall operators might defy law
- Changes in Bingo Law would mean more expense for operators
- WAFF 48’s Jeanie Powell talks exclusively to bingo operators
- Bingo Alerts Partners with Leading Bingo Operators
- What do adult clubs and bingo halls have in common?
- Electronic Bingo Operators Warned of Arrest and Seizure
- Smoking ban proves a drag for bingo operators
- Big Bucks Bingo Operators Busted
- Bingo operators cheer efforts to cut card tax taken by state
- Bingo hall operators asking for tax breaks
- Bingo operators can take 50% cut, state official says
- NORTH DAKOTA: Bingo operators hope state tax cuts will offset losses
Do you know that:
- The most significant forms of illegal gambling in the United States are numbers, betting with bookmakers or bookies, and sports pools or sports cards.
- The age of electronic games began in 1964 with the Nevada Electronic's solid state "21" machines. The most successful of these was the Dale Electronics' Poker-Matic, which could be found in most Nevada casinos.
- When playing blackjack, always split Aces and never split 4's, 5's or Tens. You would be surprised at how many players split Tens. Why risk getting a lower hand when you already have a twenty value? Also note that at most casinos, you are not allowed to re-split Aces.
- If you have even seen a Baccarat player bend the cards and make a fold in them, don't be surprised. This is common because once the decks in the card shoe are finished in Baccarat, they are usually thrown away. In Baccarat, do not bet on a tie hand.

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