2. Gaming Entertainment
• Casino industry.
• Land-based-cards rooms, charitable
games, lottery operated games
& wagering on grey hound & horse races
• River boats - popular on cruise ships,
barges that are moored in water & do not
cruise called dockside casinos.
4. As a form of entertainment and a social
activity.
Amenities of the gaming operation
Diverse activities during a stay.
5.
6. Senet or Senat is a board game from
predynastic and ancient egypt.The oldest
hieroglyph representing a Senet game dates
to around 3100 BC. The senet word mean,
"game of passing."
7. Go ("weiqi" in Chinese, "baduk" in Korean)
is an ancient Board game for two players that
originated in China more than 2,000 years
ago. The game is noted for being rich in
strategy despite its relatively simple rules.
8. Chariot racing, also known as equestrian game,
was one of the most popular game in ancient
Greek, Roman & Byzantine Sports. Chariot racing
was often dangerous to both driver and horse as
they frequently suffered serious injury and even
death, but generated strong spectator
enthusiasm.
Cockfight is a blood sport between two roosters
(cocks), held in a ring called a cockpit.
Dice Throwing using dice such as these were
carried all across the Roman Empire by traveling,
marching legionnaires during the 1st to 3rd
centuries AD.
9.
10.
11.
12. King Henry VIII, a gamble himself. Outlawed
gambling when he discovered that his
soldiers spent more time in gambling than
proving their battle skills.
13. Venice, Italy Baden Baden
A public gambling was legalize for the first
time in 1626
Germany
Opened in 1748 and still opened today
14. Las Vegas
“American Dream”
From early 1940’s-1976 Las Vegas has a
monopoly on the casino business, not the
gaming entertainment.
No hotel rooms
No entertainment & other amenities
15. Often associated with organized crime
Encourages individuals to spend/lose money
intended for their families
Basic concept – a person who received a prize
or money when no comparable work or effort
was made to earn the reward.
Leads to increase in crime in general
Tremendous amount of money without
producing anything
Can become addiction
38. A marina (coast or shore) is a dock or basin
with moorings and supplies for yachts and
small boats.
39. Marinas may be located along the banks of
rivers connecting to lakes or seas and may be
inland. They are also located on coastal
harbors (natural or man made) or coastal
lagoons, either as stand alone facilities or
within a port complex.
40. A marina may have refueling, washing and repair
facilities, ship chandeliers, stores and restaurants.
A marina may include ground facilities such as
parking lots for vehicles and boat trailers. Slipways
(or boat ramps) transfer a trailered boat into the
water. A marina may have a boat hoist well (a
traveling crane) operated by service personnel. A
marina may provide in- or out-of-water boat
storage.
41. Some marinas offer boat storage including rack
storage and dry storage yards. Dry storage or dry
stacking (as opposed to on-water storage) is
mainly found in the USA and Europe.
Drystack boat storage stores boats vertically in
rack systems up to four boats high. It extends
the life of the boat by keeping the hull dry,
provides storage at seasonal marinas, and allows
for storage of smaller boats in marinas lacking
wet slip capacity. Drystack is particularly useful
out of season, and important where winter
temperatures are cold enough for the water to
freeze.
42.
43. Boats are moored on buoys, on fixed or
floating walkways tied to an anchoring piling
by a roller or ring mechanism (floating docks,
pontoons). Buoys are cheaper to rent but less
convenient than being able to walk from land
to boat. Harbor shuttles (water taxis), may
transfer people between the shore and boats
moored on buoys.