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The serious business of bingo. Inga Rinne. Contributed to The Globe and Mail. Published February 23, 2010. This article was published more than 15 years ago. Some information may no longer be current.
The City Council on Tuesday gave a bingo parlor operator the responsibility of finding out whether a statewide smoking law applies to his Beach Boulevard facility.
Bingo at Clifton's Boys & Girls Club is a big deal. The club funds almost 20 percent of its $5 million budget through the bingo earnings. The club runs eight sessions between Tuesday and Saturday ...
TORRINGTON -- Bingo is serious business at St. Maron's Church on Main Street. The church holds Bingo several times a week, more than other organizations in Torrington. Tom Ferrarotti is one of the ...
As the world continues to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic, a group of bingo lovers made sure they were still able to play the game that they enjoy at a church in Edison.
Bingo was also a reliable moneymaker for St. Martin's, netting as much as $50,000 a year for more than a dozen programs serving the community and the poor, said the Rev. Michael Kelly, the church ...
Copernicus Center Thursday Night Bingo isn’t some amateur-hour, rinky-dink distraction for you and your pals at your local watering hole—this is serious bingo for serious people.
The History of Bingo Bingo began back in 1530, as an Italian state lottery game called "Lo Giuoco del Lotto D'Italia," which is still played every Saturday in Italy. It spread to France in 1778 ...
It's a word I might have used to describe bingo before I actually tried it and felt the singe of stressed brain cells. Truth is, I found it action-fast fun. In the end, I waged $7 and lost everything.
They’re whole buildings dedicated just to Bingo. I saw a billboard for one near Brooklyn with a bunch of 20-somethings on it, but I don’t know if that’s really what Baltimore’s serious ...
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