Plaza still a "go", Tropicana gets new boss, Gibbons still irrelevant

It's Day Five of the "Hell No, We Won't Go" crisis and Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners members Drs. Daniel McBride and Javaid Anwar continue to thumb their noses at Gov. Jim Gibbons. As does board Executive Director Tony Clark. There's little I would I like to see much more than watching a pack of dobermans chase McBride, Anwar and Clark from their offices.

Then again, it's quite a spectacle to see Nevada public officials not only recognizing that The Gibber is a paper tiger but openly daring him to do something about it. For now, we've got a Nevada governor who looks increasingly ineffectual — with 2 3/4 years to go on his term.

"Forging ahead as planned." That's the word on Elad Group's Plaza project, budgeted at $6 billion — with 6,700 units and a casino floor larger even than the MGM Grand's — slated to open in 2011. The Clark County Commission gave Elad the green light yesterday. So, anybody got $6 billion these chaps can borrow?

(For the absolute latest in Plaza designs, see VegasTodayandTomorrow.com)

Columbia Sussex Watch: The first day of Spring also means that William J. Yung III has 12 days to find a buyer and consummate the sale of Casino Aztar, in Evansville, Ind., or risk having it taken away from him when Indiana's gaming commission meets to reconsider Columbia Sussex's license, on March 31.

Meanwhile, Yung has enlisted some adult supervision (and relinquished one of his 21 corporate titles) by installing Scott Butera as president of Tropicana Entertainment. Butera has bounced around these last five years, from UBS to Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts to working for local developer Brett Torino and thence to 15 months with the runaway Cosmopolitan Resort Casino.

To say that Butera's got his work cut out for him at the remaining Trops is a considerable understatement. But he does know the casino business, which appears to be more than can be said of the crew currently calling the shots from Fort Mitchell, Kentucky.

Chips ahoy! Following a well-publicized rollout in Las Vegas, Harrah's Entertainment is taking its $25K gold chip gimmick to Caesars Atlantic City. Hey, if it's working, more power to 'em.

Man bans himself from Atlantic City casinos for life, but wants to play elsewhere, then finds he can't. What part of "self exclusion" do bozos like this fail to comprehend?

Shameless Self-Promotion Dept.: Like real estate ads, I'm inescapable in the Las Vegas media this weekend. So if you're not glutted already, you can read my takes on the new movies Look and Under the Same Moon, not to mention UNLV Opera Theatre's recent staging of Mozart's Cosi fan tutté. Oh, and did I mention last week's DVD review? I didn't? How remiss of me.

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