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Busted slot joint’s rebirth?


To call this tiny 39-year-old slot joint, formerly named the Beverly Hillbillies Beverly Hillbillies

the rustication of California’s wealthy Beverly Hills. [TV: Terrace, I, 93–94]

See : Unsophistication
 Gambler Casino, dilapidated would be a compliment.

Pigeons picking at candy wrappers In data mining and treatment learning, wrappers were used by Ron Kohavi and George John. Their idea was to wrap their treatments learners in a preprocessor that would search to make subsets from the current set of attributes.  flutter Flutter (aeronautics)

An aeroelastic self-excited vibration with a sustained or divergent amplitude, which occurs when a structure is placed in a flow of sufficiently high velocity. Flutter is an instability that can be extremely violent.
 about the front stoop, underneath the red 1980s awning with the cowboy boot logo.

Peek through the dirty tinted-glass doors along Lake Mead Boulevard in North Las Vegas North Las Vegas, city (1990 pop. 47,707), Clark co., SE Nev., a residential suburb of Las Vegas; inc. 1946. Tourism is the economic mainstay of this growing suburb. The city's population more than tripled between 1990 and 2003.  and you’ll see a gutted interior. The front of the bar has been torn off and insulation has fallen from the walls to the ripped carpet.

Notably, there are no slot machines.

But they may soon be returning.

Dotty’s, a chain of mini casinos in the Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States.  Valley, wants to remodel re·mod·el  
tr.v. re·mod·eled also re·mod·elled, re·mod·el·ing also re·mod·el·ling, re·mod·els also re·mod·els
To make over in structure or style; reconstruct.
 and reopen the casino.

For all its minuses, the property does have something going for itself. The half-acre site has long been a gaming enterprise district, meaning new ownership would not need to go through the long and costly process of winning the city’s approval to conduct gaming.

“We’re trying to get this outdated, dilapidated, perhaps even blighted, building up to current standards,” George Garcia, a consultant representing Dotty’s, told planning commissioners recently.

And they are doing it at a time when gaming companies are reeling from the recession and fending off bankruptcy filings.

Garcia says Dotty’s sees a chance for long-term growth in North Las Vegas, which has been one of the fastest-growing cities in the country for the past decade.

The city would be thrilled to see anything at the corner, less than a half-mile from City Hall. North Las Vegas has big plans to revamp re·vamp  
tr.v. re·vamped, re·vamp·ing, re·vamps
1. To patch up or restore; renovate.

2. To revise or reconstruct (a manuscript, for example).

3. To vamp (a shoe) anew.

n.
 its aging downtown. But the recession has delayed several major projects.

“It will definitely improve the site,” said Frank Fiori, the city’s planning and zoning director. “They are going to redo To reverse an undo operation. See undo.  the landscaping as much as they can and redo the exterior of building.”

For now the vacant 3,500-square-foot storefront is flanked by a small insurance office and a beauty salon offering $25 manicures, “cash only.”

Still, it has a history.

In 2005 Max Baer This article is about the boxer and actor. For an article about his actor son, see Max Baer Jr..
Maximilian Adelbert "Madcap Maxie" Baer (February 11, 1909 – November 21, 1959) was a famous American boxer of the 1930s, onetime Heavyweight Champion of the
 Jr., the man who played Jethro Bodine on “The Beverly Hillbillies,” received a gaming license as a 10 percent owner of the casino and gave it the name.

He acknowledged he had been to the place only twice.

He would have seen 30 slot machines and a small restaurant.

Most recently another company owned the casino until it closed this year.

Next up is Dotty’s, which has a history of running small casinos.

The roughly 20 Dotty’s in the region are owned by Nevada Restaurant Services Inc., a company run by Richard C. Estey.

The media-shy Estey also owns a chain of Dotty’s in Oregon.

The feeling of a Dotty’s is simple. They are small, no-frills slot joints with a tiny restaurant attached. They are also known to sell cheap cigarettes.

“It’s a place where you can go in and do gaming and smoke and drink and they feel there is potential on the corner,” Fiori said.

Simple enough.

And good enough compared with what’s now there.

Mike Trask can be reached at 259-8826 or at mike.trask@lasvegassun.com.
Copyright 2009 Las Vegas Sun
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

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Article Details
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Author:Mike Trask
Publication:Las Vegas Sun
Date:May 6, 2009
Words:505
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