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Politics : The Obama - Clinton Disaster -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (23438)12/15/2009 12:30:00 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 103300
 
BUSTED: Lieberman Caught Flip-Flopping On Medicare Buy-In

Joe Weisenthal
Dec. 15, 2009, 8:02 AM | 299 |comment8
businessinsider.com

Harry Reid caved to Joe Lieberman last night night, and dropped from healthcare reform a scheme that would allow private individuals the opportunity to buy into Medicare.

Barack Obama told Reid to cut a deal with the former, but estranged, democratic Veep candidate at all costs.

Why did Joe Lieberman decided to cause trouble? Probably because he hates his old friends. After all, just three months ago, he favored the Medicare buy-in. And it's on video. (Via Memeorandum and WhoRunsGov)

<<< YouTube FLASHBACK: Joe Lieberman proposes Medicare expansion >>>

<iframe src="http://www.businessinsider.com/embed?id=4b2788df000000000049f345&amp;width=600&amp;height=430" width="600" height="430" border="0" frameborder="0"></iframe>



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (23438)12/16/2009 12:19:12 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 103300
 
Sahara closes two hotel towers due to low demand

By ARNOLD M. KNIGHTLY
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
The Sahara closed two of its three hotel towers for the winter season because of low demand, but the casino and other amentities will remain open, a property spokeswoman confirmed.

“Two towers of the Sahara Hotel will remain dark based on demand through the holiday winter,” an e-mail statement said late Monday. “Upon further demand, Sahara Hotel will make more rooms available.”





Sahara closes two hotel towers due to low demand
Real estate analysts predict continued gloom for Las Vegas
sales







Property spokeswoman Verena King could not say how many rooms were shut or how many workers might be laid off because of the closings. She added, though, that the towers could be reopened if needed because of increased customer demand.

The Tangiers tower will remain open at the Sahara, which opened in 1952 and has 1,720 rooms.

Michael Zaletel, owner of travel site i4vegas.com, said hotels often shut down rooms during slow seasons to help reduce expenses and salaries.

Sahara also shut down its buffet last week, as it does every year at this time.

The Sahara is privately owned by Los Angeles-based SBE Entertainment and private equity firm Stockbridge Real Estate Funds of San Francisco. They purchased the Rat Pack-era Sahara in late 2007 for $331.8 million.

Before the economic downturn, the new owners planned to build a new 1,000-room hotel tower. The renovation plans also called for demolishing the 200-room Tunis tower, and completely renovating the 17-acre property.

The Sahara does not release its financial information, but nearby mid- and lower-tier hotel-casinos have struggled during the recession.

The Riviera’s revenues decline 28.9 percent the first nine months of the year while its room rates dropping 20.8 percent. The Stratosphere’s revenues fell 17 percent and room rates dropped 31.3 percent, and Circus Circus saw revenues drop 21.9 percent, with room rates dropping 32.3 percent.

Binion’s Gambling Hall & Hotel downtown closed all of its hotel rooms Monday and cut 100 positions. The downtown casino company also blamed the decline in visitor traffic and revenues for the closing.