Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gambler's Book Club / GBC Press is a bookstore & small press dedicated to gambling. Now located at 5473 S Eastern Ave in Paradise, Nevada, it was originally located in the Huntridge area of Las Vegas. The company has operated for over 40 years.
Interior of a casino in Winnemucca, Nevada The following casinos are located in Nevada. List of casinos See also: Category:Casinos in Nevada List of casinos in the U.S. state of Nevada Casino City County State District Type Comments Aladdin Paradise Clark Nevada Las Vegas defunct closed 1997. Demolished in 1998. Now the site of Planet Hollywood. Aliante Casino and Hotel North Las Vegas Clark ...
Binion's Gambling Hall & Hotel, formerly Binion's Horseshoe, is a casino on Fremont Street along the Fremont Street Experience pedestrian mall in Downtown Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. It is owned by TLC Casino Enterprises. The casino is named for its founder, Benny Binion, whose family ran it from its founding in 1951 until 2004. The hotel ...
Anthony Curtis (born c. 1958) is an American blackjack player, gambler, author and publisher. He publishes the Las Vegas Advisor, a newsletter founded in 1983 that covers discounts in Las Vegas, and Huntington Press, a publishing house that has released books about gambling, as well as true crime, [citation needed] including The Killing of Tupac Shakur, a Los Angeles Times bestseller by author ...
Brandon Griggs has been going to Las Vegas since the 1980s in a variety of roles: as an unlucky gambler, as a working journalist, as a soon-to-be-wed bachelor and as just another tourist wearing ...
The Las Vegas Club closed that year, [46] when Houssels relocated it across the street to the Overland Hotel at 18 Fremont Street. [31] [47] Meanwhile, the original Las Vegas Club later operated as The Westerner casino during the 1950s, and then as the Club Bingo until 1983, when it became part of the Pioneer Club. [31] [33] [24] [48]
Casino operator Las Vegas Sands—which, despite the name, no longer has resorts in Vegas—credited a boom in Asian travel for better-than-expected revenue.
Caesars, however, declined his request. Walters then took his proposition to the Atlantic Club Casino Hotel, then known as the Golden Nugget, which was accepted. [7] Walters and his gambling partner delivered $2 million to the cage at the Atlantic Club Casino Hotel. The pair noticed a wheel bias and bet on the 7–10–20–27–36.