July 8, 2010
Table games open at Pa. casinos
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WASHINGTON, Pa. -- The electronic clanging of slot machines was relegated to background noise Thursday, replaced by the whirling of roulette wheels, the rolling of dice and dealers calling out, "Place your bets!"

The first table games opened Thursday morning at three western Pennsylvania casinos, welcomed by hundreds of early risers who wanted to be the first in the state to try their luck at craps, poker and other games. Casino officials in Washington and Erie celebrated the new games with ribbon cuttings, while in Pittsburgh gamblers were met at the tables at 6 a.m. by hostesses carrying doughnuts and orange juice.

"Let the games begin," Bill Paulos, a principal of Las Vegas-based Cannery Casino Resorts, the Meadows' owner, said as a growing number of gamblers began arriving.

The first at the craps tables at 6 a.m. was Jerry Testa, 47, of nearby Moon Township. He woke up his wife Terri, 45, more than three hours earlier so they'd be there when the tables opened. And she came dressed for the occasion, with black and white dice dangling from her earrings and bracelet and a silver roulette wheel charm -- that spun -- on a chain around her neck.

"I've played in a lot of casinos around the country and across the world, and I figured since it was now in my hometown I wanted to be the first to throw the dice," Jerry Testa said.

Throughout the morning, the couple split their time between the craps and roulette tables, where Jerry Testa played his favorite -- 8 black -- on each spin. He said he always plays the same numbers, which correspond to family members' birthdates.

"Oh, there we go. Finally hit it," he said as the small ball spinning in the opposite direction of the wheel fell into the slot for the number 8, making him a winner.

The first slots casinos in Pennsylvania opened in 2006. Last year, Gov. Ed Rendell and top legislators included the legalization of table games as part of a handshake deal to raise more revenue for the recession-battered state treasury. Lawmakers passed the bill in January.

Payment of licensing fees by the state's nine operating casinos and an additional casino expected to open later this year brought in $165 million in June. During the next 12 months, tens of millions of dollars are expected to flow to the state and some local governments from a 16 percent tax on the casinos' take at the tables.

The casinos expect to hire about 4,400 new employees by the end of the year, a number that includes dealers, pit bosses, cashiers and others needed because of the addition of table games.

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Table games open at Pa. casinos

WASHINGTON, Pa. -- The electronic clanging of slot machines was relegated to background noise Thursday, replaced by the whirling of roulette wheels, the rolling of dice and dealers calling out, "Place your bets!"

The first table games opened Thursday morning at three western Pennsylvania casinos, welcomed by hundreds of early risers who wanted to be the first in the state to try their luck at craps, poker and other games. Casino officials in Washington and Erie celebrated the new games with ribbon cuttings, while in Pittsburgh gamblers were met at the tables at 6 a.m. by hostesses carrying doughnuts and orange juice.

"Let the games begin," Bill Paulos, a principal of Las Vegas-based Cannery Casino Resorts, the Meadows' owner, said as a growing number of gamblers began arriving.

The first at the craps tables at 6 a.m. was Jerry Testa, 47, of nearby Moon Township. He woke up his wife Terri, 45, more than three hours earlier so they'd be there when the tables opened. And she came dressed for the occasion, with black and white dice dangling from her earrings and bracelet and a silver roulette wheel charm -- that spun -- on a chain around her neck.

"I've played in a lot of casinos around the country and across the world, and I figured since it was now in my hometown I wanted to be the first to throw the dice," Jerry Testa said.

Throughout the morning, the couple split their time between the craps and roulette tables, where Jerry Testa played his favorite -- 8 black -- on each spin. He said he always plays the same numbers, which correspond to family members' birthdates.

"Oh, there we go. Finally hit it," he said as the small ball spinning in the opposite direction of the wheel fell into the slot for the number 8, making him a winner.

The first slots casinos in Pennsylvania opened in 2006. Last year, Gov. Ed Rendell and top legislators included the legalization of table games as part of a handshake deal to raise more revenue for the recession-battered state treasury. Lawmakers passed the bill in January.

Payment of licensing fees by the state's nine operating casinos and an additional casino expected to open later this year brought in $165 million in June. During the next 12 months, tens of millions of dollars are expected to flow to the state and some local governments from a 16 percent tax on the casinos' take at the tables.

The casinos expect to hire about 4,400 new employees by the end of the year, a number that includes dealers, pit bosses, cashiers and others needed because of the addition of table games.

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