w w w w w w w mr NW lqw lw m ,w ,qw ear w i w Im z 0 z Yw 01 *I**k Las Vegas: the country's decadent most city. Staffer recounts his bouts with gambling and brutality DAY ONE: Wcome to the sickest city on earth. This was my first thought as I got off the plane in Las Vegas. I came out here on the dubious pretense of covering George Foreman's fifth comeback fight, against an "opponent" named Rocky Sekorski. My real reasons for coming were to garner first-hand experience of the world's most decadent enter- tainment center, gamble away my parents' hard-earned money, and come home with some great "war" stories. The plane from Detroit was filled with old people wearing tacky clothes and drinking heavily. My mind teemed with de- bauched expectations of meeting prostitutes and mobsters and dreams of making the big kill. Actually, I had no idea what to expect beyond neon lights and heavy expenses. As I sat on the plane, my apprehensions about Vegas grew. I was afraid that the people at Bally's Hotel, where I was staying and the fight was to be held, would figure out The Michigan Daily wasn't a professional newspaper or ask me to show some ID. I am only 19, and Nevada is a 21 state for both drinking and gambling. By the time we taxied to the gate, I had mustered up my courage and bounded off the plane with my reporter's notebook in one hand and my Mastercard in the other. I was ready for Las Vegas. Or so I thought. The first things I noticed as I got off the plane were the slot machines. Well, welcome to Las Vegas. On my way to the baggage claim and taxi stands, I passed at least a hundred one- armed bandits. I grabbed my luggage amidst a sea of fat peo- ple and took a limousine, which in Vegas is cheaper than a cab, to the hotel. Las Vegas is not very impressive in the daytime. Streets of squat, ugly houses turn into boulevards of monstrous hotels and casinos. Nighttime, of course, is a different story. Bil- lions of flashing lights of all colors and designs bathe the streets and the masses of people flooding the Strip, the city's main gambling artery. Despite the fact that the week before Christmas is the only slow time in Vegas, the streets were filled. When we arrived at Bally's, on the far end of the Strip, the driver winked, waved good-bye, and said, "Have a lucky day" - the preferred salutation in Las Vegas. After hearing that ex- pression for three days, by the end of my trip and cash supply I was ready to brain the next person who uttered it. I walked into Bally's and was shocked by the immensity of the place. The lobby/casino, which is the largest in Las Vegas, is more than 50,000 square feet and 140 yards long, and you have to walk through it to get anywhere in the gigantic hotel. As I checked in, the registration assistant saw on my reserva- tion card that I was "press," and gushed good cheer all over me. When the next person came up to the desk, he was gushed upon, too. Everyone's royalty in Las Vegas. Fortunately for me I am color-blind because Las Vegas is glaringly loud. The city is draped in the gaudiest vestiges of excess and decadence, which convey the message of the town: Levin is a Daily opinion writer By Joshua Ray Levin waste, debauchery, and tastelessness. People come to Las Vegas to let themselves go, and the garishly rich decor of the Strip creates a perfect atmosphere for them to do so. I entered the bowels of the googleplex which was the hotel to introduce myself to Paula Gamage, Bally's public relations director, who dispensed press credentials for the fight. When I met Gamage in her small office, I was more than a little nervous about being discovered as a college newspaper writer. I was shaking when she handed me the phone to talk to Lee Samuels, the coordinating supervisor from Top Rank Produc- tions, the fight promoters. Samuels, sounding highly skeptical, asked me who I was and what paper I worked for. When he asked for my editor's name and number, I was sure I was sunk since no one was still at the Daily. But before kicking me out, Samuels granted permission to go to Fore- man's workout that afternoon. He was still unaware I was a student journalist, and I was glad I would have the chance to see Foreman once before being bounced out on my butt. I returned to the casino, ready to test the waters of drinking and gambling in Las Vegas. Although drinks are free to any- one in the casino, I went to the nearest bar and ordered a beer. Better to find out if they'll card me right away. The bartender couldn't have blinked twice, before sliding me a draft. I felt ready to try the tables. On the way to the blackjack tables, I stopped to ask a man for the time, as there are no clocks in the casino. He started to panic, backed up, said "I don't talk to reporters," and ran away. After I stopped trembling, I thought, "Holy Shit, I'm a marked man in Las Vegas!" and trembled a whole lot more. My $15 in cash disappeared quickly on the blackjack tables, so I went to one of the many credit card "Instant Cash" ma- chines. I gave the cashier my card and driver's license As the person was filling out the cash advance form, she wrote out my birthdate and kept going. I'm safe, I thought, just as she stopped and looked back at my license. "Wait a second," she said with a Jamaican accent, "we're not allowed to give money to people, your age... So we'll just have to change your birthdate." She crossed out the 1968 on the record and changed it to 1966. "Now, don't tell anyone here I did this," she said as she smiled and handed me the cash. I love Las Vegas. I returned to the tables, and tried my hand at some different games. There were quite a few players on the floor for 2 p.m. on a Wednesday. Between roulette, craps, the Big Six wheel, and another $3 blackjack table, I made a fast $20 donation to Bally's coffers and returned to the bar. Instead of trying my luck at the "Instant Cash" window again, I decided to case the joint. There were a lot of old, fat, and handicapped people playing the games, and very few yup- pies. Everyone, even the winners, had blank expressions or looks of disgust on their faces. As I cruised the casino, I passed everything from poker ta- bles with 20 cent antes to the baccarat rooms, where bets often soar into the thousands. I decided to avoid the bacrrat rooms at all costs. With their smart tuxedos and aristocratic looks, the baccarat players all reminded me of Omar Sharif. Statistics show that craps holds the best odds for the expe- rienced gambler. Not so for me. The only truly rude person I encountered in a casino was the pit boss at the crap table. With someone as green as myself doing every possible thing wrong and distracting him from his arduous job'of following each bet, I can hardly blame him. I gathered from his utter contempt that it would be wise for me to leave, so I did. Stumbling through the hotel lobby, I ran into Foreman and his advisor, the former great light heavyweight champion Archie Moore. Foreman was talking to a reporter while Moore was glad-handing around the area, talking up his fighter. I found it curious that Foreman, a Christian preacher, would be hanging out so near the tables, the liquor, and the working women. Nixing the opportunity to talk to them, I walked on. There really isn't much to do in Vegas besides gamble, es- pecially during the day. This is, of course, intentional. Non- gambling activities like swimming, tennis, shows, eating, and drinking are all located near the casino, and you have to pass all those tables to return to your room. The reason that drinks - which, by the way, are incredibly strong - are delivered free to the tables is because every time someone leaves a game to get a drink, the casino is losing the money that player may have blown gambling. Some casinos even have slot machines in the bathrooms, so their customers can never escape the op- portunity to throw away more money. On the ride over to Johnny Tocco's gym, where Foreman was training, the cabdriver asked me if I were in town alone and if I wanted any female company during my stay. He in- formed me that prostitution is illegal in Las Vegas but li- censed in the neighboring counties. I learned that the women receive medical examinations weekly and are considered safer than the unlicensed working women in Las Vegas. When I de- clined, he added that there were male prostitutes also available, for a slightly higher fee. Again, I passed. I later found out that for 150 dollars an hour, you can have triple-X exotic dancers come to your room and "satisfy your every desire." Everything that money can buy... After the workout, at which I was the only reporter, I had to walk back to Bally's because I was, once again, low on cash. Tocco's gym is in downtown Las Vegas, which is a lot smaller and less flashy than the Strip, which snakes into it. I was surprised and disturbed to find myself walking through a low income area. The irony of poverty in the literal shadows of twenty story, billion dollar casinos reminded me of the slums behind the Capitol building in Washington, D.C. It took me two hours to walk the several miles back to Bally's, including some unprofitable casino stop along the way. I was reminded of the movie Westworld, because each casino was decorated in a different "setting." The Frontier has a Western design; the Sahara sports a desert look. Circus-Circus is obvious. There's something for everyone. I made another cash withdrawal on my credit card (at this point I was down to $100), and waited at Ball's for my cousin Les Morgenstein, who was posing as my photographer, to arrive. While waiting for Les in' the lobby, I sat down at a 25 cent video poker machine to pass the time. Keeping one eye on the door, I slowly ran out of quarters.. Les walked in just as I dropped my last two quarters. I had the ace, king, queen, and jack of spades, and the jack of hearts. Normally, I would have saved the jacks, because you need jacks or better to win. But seeing as this was my last hand, I went for the big win - a royal flush. I couldn't believe my eyes as I pulled the ten of spades, completing the flush. At 250 to one, I walked away with $125. Les was definitely glad to see me. And I was excited to see Les. In a town where everyone is out for themselves, Las Vegas is a very lonely city without company. We went to Caesar's Palace to try our hands at real poker. We sat at the 1 to 4 dollar tables, so it wasn't that real, but I did win over twenty bucks. I also won two fake, gold Caesar's medallions for my efforts at the tables. After we left the tables, we grabbed the 99 cent midnight breakfast at the casino next door and called it a night. DAY TWO: After spending the afternoon losing the money I won the night before, I bagged the blackjack and we grabbed dinner at one of the many cheap buffets offered by the casinos. Like liquor, food in Las Vegas is plentiful and cheap, a courtesy to the players. and sexism. I drank har year, because I needed i son told us when we we in Vegas. We didn't in watched Miracle on 34th DAY THREE: S truggling out of weigh-ins. At the gym L introduced himself. He ringside seats and a fre with Foreman and Mo seventy year-old Moore me." I quickly obliged. We spent the day aw even more gruesomely pletely mesmerizing, a patched Sekorski in the one of his heavy blows 1 The biggest cheers w half-naked women, borro round cards were hoote asked one of them after -. The brutality in Las Vegas is not limited to the ring alone. After eating, we hurried back to Bally's to catch Donn Ar- den's ten million dollar "Jubilee," the casino's production ex- travaganza. Gamage told me that, if I really wanted to see what Las Vegas was all about, I had to take in at least one floor show. Although neither of us were crazy about going, the hotel gave us free admission and drinks, so we decided we might as well scope it out. Before I left, one high ranking Dailyite suggested I take hallucinogens with me to Las Vegas to get a more: unique per- spective on the city. Well, fortunately for me, I didn't, because there is no way I could have handled anything as outrageously stupid as Jubilee if I were whacked out. Words cannot describe how taudry and ridiculous the show was. Sequins, polyester, feathers, and breasts abounded. They even managed to get in a nude dance/rape sequence during their rendition of the sinking of the Titanic. Get the picture? The music was taped and the singers were lip-synching. The only person with a glimmer of talent was a fourteen year-old juggler wearing gold medallions and a polyester jump suit unbuttoned to his stomach. The show was chock-full of racism She looked at me, laughe spect, I guess it was a makes her living shedd Ann Arbor too long. After the fight, I toc play the Palace one last I got $25 in chips, puttii the airport. Four hours h lars in my pocket and a casino bathroom at Bally old Yugoslavian bathro friend since I arrived in I DAY FOUR: said good-bye to Le fun in Las Vegas, but I depth in Vegas; nothing I was as glad to leave as that the next time I go,]r I better understand how 0 Which is gaudier... Levin's jacket or the facade of Caesar's Palace? PAGE 6 WWEEKEND/JANUARY 15, 1988 WEEKEND/JANUARY 15, 1988