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By ADAM KERLIN
Bills that would allow Maryland’s slots facilities to have table games were overshadowed Tuesday by legislation aimed at attracting more contractors to the rebidding of the state’s two unlicensed slots sites.
The addition of table games such as poker and black jack has been advertised by some legislators as a sure way of bringing in revenue and reducing the state’s deficit, but talk of expanding the state’s gaming industry comes before a single slot machine has been played in Maryland.
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