Pokerstars Recruiting Fish

January 18, 2006

"The contract basically says 'If you want to play in our pokerstars tournaments ... then you also have to give up all of these other rights,'" Gary said, adding that professional pokerstars players are making efforts to organize into a union of sorts. But legal talk didn't dominate the night – the collection of expert pokerstars com players present offered their guidance to enthusiasts in the audience seeking tips. The player said "aggression" was what pushed him to the finals of major free top 5 pokerstars .com tournaments. "Being the first one to take the step out is a very good strategy," he said.

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The event was moderated by Weld Professor of Law Charles R. Nesson '60. In his closing remarks, Nesson offered his own viewpoint on the pokerstars com debate. Nesson also said that as a student at HLS in the 1960s, one former professor recommended that playing bridge was the best way to prepare for law school.

In fact, by the sixth grade, his father was working with him to understand calculus. Says Columbia University Professor Irving Sklansky; "I was constantly working with him with math, although my wife didn't like it." Apparently, she had planned for David to be doctor, but while attending college, David had more fun shooting pool and playing pokerstars than thinking about a life in medicine. Like some of the other great pokerstars players of our time, David was blessed to play in a game where the players discussed their actions and the outcome after each hand. Says David; "it made everyone think a lot about pokerstars." After graduating in 1970 from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, he moved back to Teaneck and took a job at Kwasha Lipton Group, an actuarial consulting firm in Fort Lee, but hated the routine. As many bored employees do, David found ways to occupy his time - such as using his calculator to figure out the odds on draw for pokerstars.

Sklansky had always loved math, and using his intellect to better understand card games and gambling was such a natural thing that heading to Las Vegas was an easy decision. Upon arrival, he found that his math abilities were immediately of great use not just at the pokerstars tables, but in finding flaws in many of the local casino's promotions.