home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
-
-
- Correspondent Priscilla Painton had been in New York City only
- a few months when it began to dawn on her that perhaps all roads
- led to Atlantic City. When Gaddafi-linked terrorists threatened to
- attack the U.S., what city were they rumored to have chosen? When
- casino owner Donald Trump insulted hotel queen Leona Helmsley, what
- were they fighting over? When Cher made a concert tour comeback
- after eight years, where did she open? The answer every time:
- Atlantic City. So Painton set out to discover the lure. "The only
- thing I knew about Atlantic City was that Louis Malle had made a
- movie about it," she says. Painton, an American, grew up in Paris
- and attended French schools until college and, like the French
- director, found the famous U.S. resort something exotic. "I
- approached this American shrine -- and Atlantic City is one -- with
- the intense curiosity of a foreigner," she says.
-
- Trump, who owns a sizable chunk of the city, conveniently
- popped up on her first visit. Painton had booked a flight aboard
- the Trump Air helicopter service, only to discover the tycoon
- himself was a passenger. Trump pointed out the town's attractions
- and even gave her a ride from the airport in his limousine. On
- other visits, Painton traveled less grandly aboard the buses that
- carry many of the millions of gamblers who constitute Atlantic
- City's primary source of income.
-
- Though she definitely does not qualify as a high roller,
- Painton could hardly have reported and written our story on one of
- America's gambling capitals without sampling a bit of the action.
- Estimated slot-machine losses in the course of two evenings: $50.
- But Painton did taste one of the luxuries the casinos lavish on
- their best customers. With all its regular rooms occupied, Bally's
- Grand Casino Hotel one evening assigned her to a suite with a
- Jacuzzi and a TV hidden in a marble plinth. Unhappily, the upgrade
- did not result in a night of rest. Explains Painton: "The man in
- the next room was a lucky gambler who celebrated his big win by
- singing reggae tunes at the top of his voice." That's Atlantic City
- for you.