You are buying 2 oversized, Stardust Casino issued, postcards as pictured.

The Stardust Resort and Casino was a casino resort located on 60 acres along the Las Vegas Strip. The Stardust construction began in 1954. The Stardust had numerous creditors, and construction was stopped in 1956, when the project ran out of money.
The Stardust was the largest hotel in the world when it opened, with 1,065 rooms. The rooms were located across six motel-like buildings, each named after a planet: Jupiter, Mars, Mercury, Neptune, Saturn, and Venus. Parking was provided outside each building. 
The casino measured 16,500 square feet, and the resort interior featured rich red and deep brown coloring. The hotel included the Big Dipper swimming pool, measuring 105 feet long and containing 175,000 US gallons . It also featured the Stardust Drive-In movie theater, located behind the resort. It predated the Stardust's opening. The Stardust also had its own barbershop, which operated for more than 40 years, until the resort's closure.
The Stardust Country Club, located a few miles east of the resort, was added in 1961. The resort also owned and operated the off-site Stardust International Raceway, which held races from 1965 to 1968. The racetrack was created to attract high rollers to the resort. The track was located west of the resort.
In 1967, the Stardust opened Horseman's Park, which was located behind the resort and hosted horse events. It was the only horse show arena on the Las Vegas Strip. A 142-space RV park, called Camperland, was opened behind the hotel in 1972, on less than 10 acres.  The Stardust was the first resort on the Las Vegas Strip to offer an RV park. It was an immediate success, and plans were quickly announced to expand the site to 400 spaces. Additionally plans were announced for a 17-story hotel tower, although it ultimately would not be until 1990 that the resort added a high-rise tower.
The Stardust sportsbook became popular across the United States in the late 1980s, after being featured in various media such as television news and magazines. The sportsbook offered Las Vegas' first line in betting, and was popular among professional bettors.
The sportsbook offered unique betting rules during its peak. The sportsbook also allowed betting on any kind of sport.

The 1958 Stardust façade sign was 216 feet long and 37 feet  high, wrapping around two sides of the building, and was lit with 7,100 feet of neon tubing and 11,000 incandescent bulbs. It weighed 129 short tons , contained 32,000 feet of wiring, and drew 3,000 amps.  Three-dimensional acrylic glass planets spun alongside 20 sparkling neon starbursts. Across the universe was a jagged galaxy of electric lettering spelling out "Stardust". The "S" alone contained 975 lamps. At night, the neon constellation was reportedly visible from over 3 miles away.

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