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Show .Reno Night June 7 "Box cars sorry my dear," cries a visor clad Nan McPollin, raking losing bets across the crap table and continuing to fleece her old friend, Alice O'Neill out of her $13,000 stake. Can this be Park City? Are the good old days coming com-ing back? You can find out for yourselves June 7 when the Memorial Building will be transformed into a reasonable rea-sonable facsimile of a posh gambling casino typical of those found in Las Vegas, lars inartificial greenbacks. Apart from the usual dice and cards there will also be bingo, roulette, refreshments refresh-ments and dancing to live entertainment. And to give the evening a more authentic flair, Clem Hansen is currently cur-rently searching out several remaining back-room Park City card dealers, who not only remember the "goodol' days" but were the 'good ol' days." Fake dough won't be the only thingyoucanwinat Reno Night at the end of the evening eve-ning you can use your winnings win-nings to bid for real prizes donated by local merchants, which will be put on the auction auc-tion block for the highest bid. Reno Night starts at 7:00 p.m. and will go until 11:00 p.m. Each person will receive re-ceive $13,000 in fake money to be wisely wagered through out the evening. The cost is a measly $1.50 a mere fraction frac-tion of what a trip to real Reno with real money would cost. n.t:iiu diiu uit; u zlul Sponsors of the evening, the Memorial Building Summer Sum-mer Recreation program, have purchased a "Night in Reno" party kit from Harold's Har-old's Club, which provides all the ingredients for a great time. Included in the kit are cards, dice, poker, crap 21 tables, posters and hundreds of thousands of dol- |