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Gilley's country-western club seeks new home

The sawdust has yet to settle on the future of Gilley's, the New Frontier's biggest attraction.

Phil Ruffin owns the country-western club's franchise rights for Nevada and remains tight-lipped about where or when the nightclub will reappear on the Las Vegas landscape.

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  • The boot-scootin' comes to a halt and the mechanical bull throws its last patron around 5 a.m. Sunday morning, when Gilley's ends a run that began Dec. 3, 1998.

    "I would love to see it relocate at South Point," said long-time customer Joanna Maestro-Smith, referring to the Michael Gaughan property eight miles south of the New Frontier on the Strip.

    She said it would make sense because Gaughan is a fan of the country-western lifestyle.

    Najam Khan, the New Frontier's general manager, declined to say where the dancehall might relocate, only saying that Ruffin is looking at a couple of locations.

    Gilley's manager Larry Black said the 652-person capacity club had a 2 1/2-hour wait last weekend and he expects more of the same tonight.

    No patron may be more disheartened about the loss of Gilley's than Las Vegan Lamar Briley.

    A local country-western dance instructor, he has been going to the club for eight years, usually four nights a week.

    "I love it and it would be nice if they relocate," he said.

    Briley's attachment to the country-western nightclub goes beyond just having a place to dance and socialize with friends.

    He met his wife, Marsha, at Gilley's 2 1/2 years ago.



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