| gocekBlogGary - Gary Gocek writes Christian articles and stories, songs, software and web content. (undated) | 
|  Acoustic Songwriter Showcase June 27 (Tue, 27 May 2025 17:17:00 +0000) | 
|  The wind over the waters (Sat, 22 Mar 2025 03:15:00 +0000) | 
|  Recent ponderings 2 (Mon, 17 Feb 2025 16:54:00 +0000) | 
|  Recent ponderings 1 (Thu, 30 Jan 2025 01:07:00 +0000) | 
|  Weather and astronomy on gocek.org (Sat, 11 Jan 2025 23:15:00 +0000) | 
|  Another perspective on miracles (Sat, 11 Jan 2025 21:24:00 +0000) | 
|  Strong versus weak, tactics and strategy (Thu, 19 Dec 2024 02:37:00 +0000) | 
|  The gocek.org Youtube WFH playlist! (Wed, 11 Dec 2024 23:17:00 +0000) | 
|  To prove a dogmatic miracle (Mon, 18 Nov 2024 17:32:00 +0000) | 
|  To prove a miracle (Tue, 05 Nov 2024 15:52:00 +0000) | 
|  Evolution from Judaism to Christianity (Mon, 14 Oct 2024 15:37:00 +0000) | 
|  The church as a "system" (Mon, 22 Jul 2024 18:14:00 +0000) | 
|  The wind over the waters REVISITED (Sun, 14 Jul 2024 20:13:00 +0000) | 
|  Educational settings, plus the hedgehog and the fox (Thu, 20 Jun 2024 03:41:00 +0000) | 
|  United Airlines employee racism in Athens (Tue, 18 Jun 2024 15:04:00 +0000) | 
|  Santorini, Greece wrapup (Sun, 16 Jun 2024 08:11:00 +0000) | 
|  Clouds? What clouds? (Thu, 13 Jun 2024 09:46:00 +0000) | 
|  gocekBlogGary: In the footsteps of Paul in Corinth, Greece (Sat, 08 Jun 2024 15:50:00 +0000) | 
|  Now THAT'S a view! (Sat, 08 Jun 2024 12:54:00 +0000) | 
|  In the footsteps of Paul in Corinth, Greece (Thu, 06 Jun 2024 20:48:00 +0000) | 
|  Acropolis, Agora, Parthenon (Wed, 05 Jun 2024 18:19:00 +0000) | 
|  Athens traffic (Tue, 04 Jun 2024 10:43:00 +0000) | 
|  Greece or bust! (Sat, 01 Jun 2024 01:33:00 +0000) | 
|  My letter to the Wall Street Journal (Thu, 16 May 2024 13:49:00 +0000) | 
|  What does the Good News sound like? (Tue, 14 May 2024 20:06:00 +0000) | 
             
        
        
	Gary and Sue got married!
        
	Saturday, August 2, 2003
	Scroll for photos.
	Scroll for our honeymoon diary.
            
        
	We hope you all had as great a time at the wedding as we did.  You were 
		very generous with your gifts, thanks very much.  (The giver of 
				one gift remains unidentified - a scented candle with a brown wooden 5x7 Potter 
				& Smith picture frame.)
            
        
        
        
        
	Since this page was previously used for lodging info, I'll state here that Greg 
		and Dan and Gary stayed at the Budget Inn on Route 31 near Fairport, the night 
		before the wedding.  For $79, it was way overpriced.  It was clean, 
		but in other ways it was a dump.  There, I feel better.
            
        
	Honeymoon diary links:
            
        
	Tuesday, September 2, 2003 ... 
Wednesday, 
			September 3, 2003 ... 
Thursday, September 4, 2003
		... 
Friday, September 5, 2003 ... 
Saturday, 
			September 6, 2003
             
        
        
	Gary and Susan's Vegas Honeymoon, September 2-6, 2003
        
        
	We flew out of Rochester, NY. Gary's sister had given us rolls of 
			coins, and these confused the security people watching the x-ray of Gary's 
			carry-on bag. Susan's cuticle scissors practically brought in the National 
			Guard, but they ultimately allowed Susan on the plane with them.
            
        
	We arrived at the Las Vegas (LV) airport (actually in Clark County) 
			and checked in to our hotel (the Flamingo hotel and casino) at the Park Place 
			desk near baggage carousel #1. There was a line of about ten people here, but 
			we would later see a line of many dozens of people at the hotel, so this is 
			definitely the best way to check in. The Park Place corporation owns Flamingo, 
			Paris, Bally's, Caesars, and the LV Hilton. You normally get your keys here, 
			but our room was not ready. Gary asked about a mini-suite, but it would have 
			been $60 extra per night, so we got room 16069, right next to the elevators and 
			with a view of the pool area. Some rooms are a long way from the elevators, so 
			this was quite nice. This room is a renovated room, so it did not have the 
			worn-out look of some rooms.
            
        
	We arrived at the Flamingo at about noon, but had to wait until 3 pm 
			for our keys. We signed up for the Player's Club, which gives awards for 
			gambling. You get a mag-strip card which is inserted into machines or handed to 
			dealers. There is a wide, mall-like aisle below the registration area that 
			leads to the restaurants. We had salads at the unnamed soup & salad bar 
			next to the Pink Ginger restaurant. We walked farther down the aisle, past the 
			buffet, to the tour desk, and made reservations for a tour of Red Rock Canyon. 
			See Wednesday for a tour description.
            
        
	We didn't do a whole lot before dinner. We lost about $15 in a $1 
			slot machine, then won $5.50 in a nickel slot machine. We had dinner at the 
			Eiffel Tower restaurant in Paris. This is a very opulent restaurant, where a 
			beautiful hostess in a gown leads you from the elevator to the dining room, and 
			the waiters all wear tuxedos.
            
        
	Having said this about the restaurant, we had a drink at the bar 
			before being seated, and there was another couple next to us. After a bit, Gary 
			noticed that the man had pulled open his suit jacket and had moved close to his 
			female companion. His jacket then hid her left arm, and only her right arm was 
			visible for a few minutes. You decide...
            
        
	Although all of our dinners were great, this was the best, with great 
			presentation, great food, and a great view. We were seated at a booth that was 
			situated in such a way that it would have been used by Frank, Jack, and 
			Marilyn, back in the day. We believe that we got the booth because Sue wore her 
			fancy wedding dress (a dress that works in public, not a typical white wedding 
			gown) to dinner that night. $246 including a bottle of wine and a tip. At all 
			our evening meals, we bought a bottle of wine. All dinner prices shown include 
			the wine, taxes, tip, etc.
            
        
	We played quarter and nickel slots in the Paris casino and lost about $14.
            
        
        
	We had a light breakfast at Bugsy's Deli. The Flamingo property was 
			originally owned by gangster Bugsy Siegel.  Every transaction we saw at 
			the deli had some sort of goofup, such as incorrect change or incomplete 
			orders. The staff solved the problems, and Sue says they weren't friendly, but 
			Gary thinks they just weren't very bright. There were no muffins, so Gary had a 
			croissant, and the coffee was mediocre.
            
        
	We went on a four-hour Pink Jeep tour of Red Rock Canyon. See 
				www.pinkjeep.com. Our guide was Mike Metzger. There were two other 
			guides with us, in training, and no other customers. The canyon is 16 miles 
			from the Strip. Of course, it's like a different world out there. Mike was very 
			knowledgeable about wildlife and fauna, and we saw wild horses and burros and 
			squirrels and rabbits and birds. Also, Mike pointed out various types of trees, 
			plants, and cacti. And lots of great scenery.
            
	We returned to the Flamingo and had lunch at the Flamingo buffet, 
			which was quite nice. We then went for some gambling at Flamingo, where Gary 
			had found a 9-7 double-bonus video poker machine. More on gambling later. Gary 
			fluctuated here a couple hundred dollars and hit four 3s and cashed out with a 
			profit. Susan had planned to gamble at nickel slots, but the Flamingo wouldn't 
			exchange her rolls of dimes, so she went shopping. Gary took the dimes to 
			O'Shea's casino, which is run by Park Place and would accept the dimes. Gary 
			went back to the room because he was sort of dazed by having won the money. 
			Gary returned to the machine to get his Player's Club card, which was still in 
			the machine. Gary returned again to look for one remaining roll of dimes which 
			he had left in the coin return, but that was gone, so we count that as a $5 
			gambling loss. Then Gary watched TV until Susan returned.
            
        
	We figured out how to use the buses. It's $2 per ride, up and down 
			the strip, or you can pay the driver $5 for a 24 hour pass. We had dinner at 
			Red Square, inside Mandalay Bay, several blocks from our hotel, which was too 
			far to walk in the 100 degree heat. We both had beef Stroganoff, which was 
			great. The service was great, and they have an amazing vodka selection, but we 
			don't drink vodka. The atmosphere is a bit dark and dingy, as it is themed on 
			Communist Russia, with pictures of Lenin on the wall. The music was modern, and 
			we wished they had pushed the Russian theme a bit more. About $200. We bought a 
			t-shirt here for Gary's son Dan.
            
        
	We looked around at other casinos, but didn't gamble any more this day.
            
        
        
	We had our light breakfast at the coffee counter near the Oktoberfest 
			beer area. The coffee was great, they had blueberry muffins, and we were able 
			to eat outside in the shade. The coffee was great here all week.
            
        
	We headed out to Luxor where we had seen interesting games. We signed 
			up for their Player's Club. Most of the Player's Club cards are tied to 
			multiple casinos, depending on which corporation owns the casinos. We started 
			at a 98.4% slot machine, fluctuated a couple hundred dollars, and cashed out 
			with a profit.
            
        
	We had lunch at the Luxor buffet, and Gary was impressed to find 
			small Polish sausages with sauerkraut.  Susan then went shopping while 
			Gary sat at a full-pay video poker machine. Gary fluctuated here a couple 
			hundred dollars and cashed out with a four-of-a-kind and a profit.  Unlike 
			most major Strip casino machines which print bar-coded tickets at cash-out 
			time, this game paid off with $1 tokens.  Yeah, lots of them, and it's a 
			pain in the ass to carry tokens to the redemption counter.
            
        
	We saw the show "O", by Cirque du Soleil, at Bellagio. There is a 
			pool of water built into the stage, and you can't see into it, but the show 
			takes place in and around the water.
            
        
	We took a cab to the Venetian for dinner at Valentino. This was a 
			great restaurant as well. The atmosphere is that of a well-lit, modern, 
			eclectic, high class restaurant, contrasted with the dark, traditional, 
			high-class atmosphere of Eiffel Tower. Susan left the table for a moment at 
			Valentino, and the bus-girl re-folded her napkin while she was away. The dining 
			room is fairly small and quiet. About $230.
            
        
        
	We had our light breakfast from the counter with the good coffee. We 
			went to Paris, a long block away from our hotel. We found the 98% slot 
			machines, fluctuated a couple hundred dollars, and made another nice profit on 
			these normally deadly slot machines. Sue went 
			shopping!
            
        
	Gary went to Bellagio for more video poker. Gary put $200 into a 
			full-pay machine and lost that, and put in another $100, and went down another 
			$50, so he was down $250. Finally, the machine started giving some hands, and 
			he worked his way back to even. He went back down $150 and worked his way even. 
			He went back down $150, got close to even, then hit two full-house hands in a 
			row. The last full house was dealt (no need to draw cards). He cashed out after 
			2.5 hours with a $25 profit.
            
        
	Gary needed a break, so he went to talk to the Player's Club staff. 
			In the one session of video poker, he earned a free buffet for two, and $20 
			cash back.
            
        
	Gary then sat at a 9-7 double bonus video poker machine. This machine 
			was super hot and Gary cashed out quickly with a profit.
            
        
	Gary couldn't lose, baby. So he went back to the 98% machines at 
			Paris, and quickly lost.
            
        
	Gary didn't want to finish gambling on a losing note, so he went back 
			to Bellagio for one more round of double bonus VP. Up and down, then four aces 
			and a profit. (Ha, and you thought he was going to lose it all, didn't you? 
			Gary is convinced that if everyone would learn to play VP correctly, we would 
			bury Las Vegas in one day.)  So there he was, walking around Vegas with 
			money in his pockets!
            
        
	Gary bought a Harley t-shirt for his son Greg ($20). He returned to 
			the Flamingo to look for Sue at the pool, but she wasn't there. She was in the 
			room, and Gary told her about his five hours of gambling. Sue had been worried 
			that Gary had either been mugged, or was running wild around Vegas with a 
			showgirl on each arm, or had lost everything and was feverishly trying to win 
			it back.
            
        
	We went to dinner at Elements in Aladdin, another modern-ish, 
			eclectic restaurant. Charles the waiter was a big, jolly guy, and we had a 
			great time and a great meal. About $200.
            
        
	We then took a cab to New York, New York to see Rita Rudner (a 
			comedienne). We were in the second row of this small cabaret theater. It 
			appeared that they had both overbooked the front row, and had a couple of 
			no-shows, so there was lots of activity up front involving young women with 
			low-cut dresses. Rita's joke about expensive restaurants is that they no longer 
			show prices on menus, just faces with expressions of varying degrees of horror. 
			The show was great, and Rita told Gary (during her Q&A session) to quit 
			gambling while he was ahead. That must be a girl thing.
            
        
	We took the bus to the Venetian to exchange some Rockport sandals 
			that Susan had bought Gary, for a different size. Then we took the bus back to 
			the Flamingo.
            
        
        
	Gary got the good coffee from the counter and brought it back to the 
			room, and we packed. We got our shuttle to the airport. Gary swears there was a 
			slot machine there that would take your plane ticket and give you machine 
			credit. But Susan made him come home with her.
            
        
        
	All four restaurants were 10 out of 10 for food and service. But 
			Eiffel Tower was truly world class, with great servers who were very friendly 
			and willing to chat. Our cool booth made for an unforgettable experience. It 
			was the most expensive, but not by a lot. Our main waiter Christophe was a 
			native Parisian (the real Paris).
            
        
	Elements came in second place, again with a friendly staff. The 
			waiter Charles was wonderful, and the general manager stopped by the table for 
			a chat. We couldn't linger due to our show schedule, but it was a fun place.
            
        
	Valentino was just slightly more reserved, so we didn't leave with 
			such an excited feeling, although they did serve a killer lasagna. The 
			sommelier poured the 1992 wine into a decanter in order to separate as much 
			wine as possible from the sediment, which impressed Gary.
            
        
	Red Square's food and service were great, and the waitress said we 
			had the special lovers' booth, the booth in the back in the corner in the dark. 
			But if you're not a vodka drinker, Red Square's strangely dark atmosphere and 
			non-Russian background music make for an experience that was half a notch below 
			the others. Gary wished they had more Eastern European food, such as anything 
			with cabbage.
            
        
        
	Originally, I had planned to play video poker (VP) and craps. Susan 
			wanted to play slot machines and roulette. Ultimately, we never played any 
			table games, due to our sleeping late, dinner and show schedules, crowds, etc.
            
        
	Surviving the casinos requires a bankroll that you can afford to 
			lose, and a goal that you can stop at when you're winning.  Also consider 
			a time limit, and wear a watch because you won't find any wall clocks.  
			You need to read a basic book on the types of games that you want to 
			play.  There is a Waldenbooks store on the Strip at the Fashion Mall, and 
			they sell gambling books.  You won't find gambling books at the hotel gift 
			shops.  Some games provide better odds than others.  For each game, 
			there are conservative and risky strategies.  It's unclear that any sort 
			of gambling is ever "smart", but some strategies are dumber than others, 
			including the lack of a strategy.
            
        
	Your bankroll needs to be realistic.  You will always lose a $25 
			bankroll; that's just not enough money to provide enough plays to get a winning 
			hit.  Well, maybe on a nickel machine, but you'll only win a few dollars 
			on a nickel machine.
            
        
	Gary likes to play with Susan's head a bit by 
			pretending he "has the fever", but honestly, he stopped gambling when the money 
			became unreal.  We got really lucky and won at least a little, all the 
			time.  When the amount started fluctuating up and down hundreds of dollars 
			at a time, it was time to get out.
            
 
        
	The gambling books often make vague statements about abandoning
		machines that don't seem to be paying off. This makes sense for
		slots, where the payoff percentage is unknown. But for a VP machine
		with a good pay table, you know what the long term payoff is. In my
		opinion, you need a sufficient bankroll to allow the odds to work
		themselves out. The gambling books recommend a 200-400 credit
		bankroll for a full-pay VP machine. In my (limited) experience, I
		believe it would be hard to recover from a 400 credit deficit,
		although I did recover from a 250 credit deficit and profited 25
		credits after almost 2.5 hours of play. Your bankroll may be limited
		by the amount of money you can afford to lose, so if you can't 
			afford to lose 200-400 credits, then you'll reduce your 
			short-term chances of making a profit at VP.
            
        
	The gambling books remind us that gambling is first done for fun,
		then for money. I agree that you don't want to set out for a casino
		because you need to find a way to pay your bills. On the other hand,
		losing sucks. When I walk into a casino and see all those blank
		faces staring at the slots, I don't see anyone having fun, except 
			for maybe the one or two people actively getting a big 
			payoff. I just can't imagine anyone telling me that he or 
			she enjoys losing 15% of her money because the slots are so much fun to
		play.  My 2.5 hour marathon VP session 
			was fun, but it's easy to say that now, after having 
			cashed out with a small profit, rather than having surrendered 
			to the machine with a loss.
            
        
        
	Slot machines usually have 3-5 reels, each displaying 1-5 lines of 
			symbols. You can bet varying numbers of credits on each play, where the credits 
			cost 1 cent to 5 dollars or more, depending on the machine. Modern video slots 
			don't always simulate the old mechanical reels, but today, the most common 
			machines still have reels, or simulated video reels. Sometimes, the extra lines 
			of symbols can be diagonal, e.g., a machine with three reels might display 
			three horizontal lines of symbols, and it might pay on five lines including the 
			diagonals. But you need to bet at least five credits to put all five lines into 
			play.
            
        
	Some machines offer a large number of payoffs on various combinations 
			of symbols, from 1 credit to thousands. Other machines offer a small number of 
			unique payoffs. Usually, machines that offer the highest jackpot payoffs offer 
			fewer low-end payoffs. And vice-versa; machines that offer many low-end payoffs 
			tend to offer smaller jackpots.
            
        
	The machines are set at the factory to return a percentage of the 
			played credits as payoffs. Most machines do not display their payoff 
			percentages, but some of the Strip casinos that we visited had small groups of 
			machines that were marked as "97%" or more. At Luxor, we saw machines marked at 
			98.4%. In a casino with hundreds of slot machines, there might be a 10-20 high 
			payoff machines.
            
        
	On Tuesday, the Flamingo had eight 98% slots, but these were removed 
			on Wednesday. New machines were up and running by the end of Friday, but they 
			were not marked with a payoff percentage.
            
        
	Although there is no law governing the minimum payoff of a slot, the 
			rumor is that competition for gamblers keeps the slot payoff percentages in the 
			high 80s to low 90s, except for the few machines offering 97% or 98%. I have no 
			idea why anyone would play a lower percentage machine, although the high 
			percentage machines tended to have smaller jackpots.
            
        
	Nevada law does require that any advertised payoffs must be payable. 
			In other words, if a machine says that 3 cherries will pay 500 credits, then it 
			must be possible to get three cherries, and it must then pay 500 credits. But 
			the odds of getting three cherries is not governed, other than that they must 
			be greater than zero. If a machine offers a large number of credits as a 
			jackpot, it offers smaller low-end payoffs in order to maintain the long-term 
			payoff percentage.
            
        
	The machines cannot easily be reset at the casino. The payoff 
			percentage is set at the factory, and the casinos install whatever they want to 
			install.
            
        
	The slots do not track payoffs in order to adjust the next payoff. 
			They are random devices, but the reels are manufactured to produce predictable 
			results over many plays. A long losing streak does not mean that you are about 
			to hit a winner. All you know is that the machine is set to pay off a 
			percentage, and that percentage is less than 100%. You don't know the 
			percentage, and you don't know when the machine will pay the next jackpot. The 
			chance of any particular outcome is exactly the same, every time.
            
        
	Progressive machines offer a jackpot that increases over time until 
			someone wins. But note that the total payoff is counted toward the percentage. 
			Again, low-end payoffs have to be reduced in order to increase the high-end 
			payoffs.
            
        
	My personal preference is for a non-progressive machine with lots of 
			low-end payoffs. I don't mind machines with more than three reels as long as 
			they offer lots of paying combinations. I feel that the low-end payoffs keep me 
			alive with a given bankroll, until I finally hit the big payoff that allows me 
			to cash out with a profit. Sometimes.
            
        
	Sue and I played three 98% machines with a large ($200-$300) 
			bankroll. We won and lost those amounts.. I think we got really lucky and 
			really unlucky. We verified, to some extent, that a large initial bankroll can 
			survive for a moderate profit.
            
        
	Most machines allow the player to bet more than one credit per play. 
			Usually, there are bonuses or extra winning combinations when playing the max 
			number of credits, so this is always the best choice.
            
        
	Overall, I think slots are fair but deadly, and even with the 98% 
			machines, you'll lose in the long run (by definition). There are lots of 
			gamblers just dying to find an illegally unfair machine at a major casino, but 
			the casinos won't cheat you. There is too much money to be made legally.
            
        
        
	Video poker machines differ from slots in that the odds are 
			indirectly stated on the pay table. We assume that VP machines deal randomly 
			from a 52 card deck, and we assume that an unfair machine will be removed or 
			caught by the Gaming Commission cops. So, we know the winning hands and the 
			odds of getting any one.
            
        
	A VP machine displays the payoff for each type of winning hand. Like 
			slots, the progressive and bonus machines that offer high payoffs for some 
			hands also offer no payoffs for other hands, when compared to the non-bonus 
			machines.
            
        
	A full-pay, 9-6, non-bonus, non-progressive video poker machine 
			offers 9 credits for a full house and 6 credits for a flush. Other hands pay 
			other amounts. Typically, players bet 5 credits per hand, because there is a 
			bonus payoff for a royal flush. Royals are rare, but 
			the bonus is there, so it's the best choice.
            
        
	In the major Strip casinos, I found lots of VP games (spread 
			throughout each casino), but only a few full-pay games. The other non-bonus 
			machines were set at 8-5, 7-5, or 6-5. The only reason to play those lower 
			paying machines is for a large progressive payoff, or because you are stupid. 
			The odds of getting the royal flush required for the progressive payoff are 
			very low.
            
        
	Most VP machines were of the double-bonus or double-double-bonus 
			variety. These bonus machines pay higher amounts for four-of-a-kind, at the 
			expense of the lower end payoffs. On the DDB machines, there were no payoffs 
			for low hands; you need at least a flush. I played 9-7 DB machines 
				(not DDB) and won lots of money with those.
            
        
	The full-pay machines pay moderately, and can be played for over a 
			99% payoff rate. This is a game of skill as well as luck, and you need to learn 
			the correct plays when drawing cards. In my opinion, you bankroll these 
			machines with 300 credits and play for a small, 60 credit profit. Streaks (good 
			and bad) will be short. The payoffs are very predictable. If you just can't get 
			ahead and finally give up, you will likely lose only a small amount. With a 
			99%+ payoff percentage, you'll go up and down, and you play until a good streak 
			gets you a small profit.
            
        
	Because the 9-7 DB machines offer smaller payoffs for low-end hands, 
			they can present longer bad streaks, but this machine still pays off at over 
			99%. You need to bankroll at least 300 credits, maybe 400, and play for 
				the 4-of-a-kind. I got lucky and hit four aces in one of my 
			sessions.
            
        
	The Flamingo had one $1 9-7 DB machine, and one $5 full-pay machine. 
			The $5 credit value is too rich for my blood. I would have to risk a $1500 
			bankroll.
            
        
	Luxor had $1 full-pay machines. Bellagio was my favorite Strip casino 
			for VP, with both $1 full-pay, and $1 9-7 DB machines. I profited from VP at 
			Bellagio and earned a free buffet.
            
        
        
        
	It is very easy to enter any casino and play. You don't need a 
			Player's Club card, but if you think you'll visit LV more than once, it's 
			probably worth it to give up the personal information. (In fact, many players 
			consider comps and cash-back awards to be part of the expected return.)  
			It might seem easiest just to play at your hotel's casino, but I had better 
			luck and a better experience at other casinos. Decide on your goals, and look 
			for machines that meet your goals. It might take a half hour of searching to 
			find the right machine. My preference is for low-payoff, $1 per credit, 
			non-progressive machines on which I can grind out moderate profits.
            
        
	We stayed at the Flamingo, but that was a tough casino. I really had 
			to study the machines there, and there were very few that attracted me. There 
			was, in my opinion, only one playable VP machine, and I won. The 98% slots were 
			removed while we were at the hotel.
            
        
	Paris was OK, and we hit a 98% slot there for a profit. I also lost 
				some money in a 98% slot at Paris. I didn't see any full-pay or 9-7 
			DB VP machines, but I didn't look hard.
            
        
	I really liked the atmosphere at Luxor, and we won at the 98.4% slot 
			and the full-pay VP machine. I didn't see any 9-7 DB machines here.
            
        
	I cleaned up at Bellagio with full-pay and 9-7 DB VP. I didn't see 
			any 98% slots. This casino gets very crowded and rowdy when "O" is playing.
            
        
        
	LV = Las Vegas
			VP = video poker
			DB = double bonus
			DDB = double-double-bonus
			full-pay = a non-bonus VP machine with a decent 9-6 payoff percentage
			9-6 = video poker, 9 credits for full house, 6 credits for flush
			9-7 = video poker, 9 credits for full house, 7 credits for flush
			O = the show at Bellagio
			payoff percentage = percentage of played credits that a machine eventually pays 
			off