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Books > Sport & Leisure > Hobbies, quizzes & games > Gambling
Over the past 25 years, Indian gaming has become a significant
source of revenue for many tribes, reaching $28 billion in fiscal
year 2013. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA), the primary
federal statute governing Indian gaming, provides a statutory basis
for the regulation of Indian gaming. Tribes, states, Interior, and
the Commission have varying roles in Indian gaming. This book
examines Interior's review process to help ensure that tribal-state
compacts comply with IGRA; how states and selected tribes regulate
Indian gaming; the Commission's authority to regulate Indian
gaming; and the Commission's efforts to ensure tribes' compliance
with IGRA and Commission regulations.
Straight Flush is the true story of a group of University of
Montana frat brothers who turned a weekly poker game in the
basement of a local bar into one of the largest online poker
companies in the world. At its height, the group's online empire
was bringing in revenues of over a million dollars a day. The
industry they launched grew so huge so fast, and in such a grey
area of US and international law, at first it was never really
clear whether their actions were legal or criminal. From setting up
their operations in Costa Rica, to their efforts at building a veil
of legitimacy in Vancouver; from embracing a hedonistic lifestyle
of girls, drugs and money to becoming some of the richest people in
the world; from engaging in operations against their competitors
that sometimes escalated into near all-out wars to the legal
battles that finally resulted in one of them heading to prison and
another living life on the run - Straight Flush is an exclusive
look behind the headlines of one of the biggest stories of the past
decade.
An elegant and amusing account of how gambling has been reshaped by
the application of science and revealed the truth behind a lucky
bet (Wall Street Journal). For the past 500 years, gamblers-led by
mathematicians and scientists-have been trying to figure out how to
pull the rug out from under Lady Luck. In The Perfect Bet,
mathematician and award-winning writer Adam Kucharski tells the
astonishing story of how the experts have succeeded,
revolutionizing mathematics and science in the process. The house
can seem unbeatable. Kucharski shows us just why it isn't. Even
better, he demonstrates how the search for the perfect bet has been
crucial for the scientific pursuit of a better world.
In 1950 Las Vegas saw a million tourists. In 1960 it attracted ten
million. The city entered the fifties as a regional destination
where prosperous postwar Americans could enjoy vices largely
forbidden elsewhere, and it emerged in the sixties as a national
hotspot, the glitzy resort city that lights up the American West
today. Becoming America's Playground chronicles the vice and the
toil that gave Las Vegas its worldwide reputation in those
transformative years. Las Vegas's rise was no happy accident. After
World War II, vacationing Americans traveled the country in record
numbers, making tourism a top industry in such states as California
and Florida. The Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce saw its chance and
developed a plan to capitalize on the town's burgeoning reputation
for leisure. Las Vegas pinned its hopes for the future on
Americans' need for escape. Transforming a vice city financed
largely by the mob into a family vacation spot was not easy. Hotel
and casino publicists closely monitored media representations of
the city and took every opportunity to stage images of good, clean
fun for the public - posing even the atomic bomb tests conducted
just miles away as an attraction. The racism and sexism common in
the rest of the nation in the era prevailed in Las Vegas too. The
wild success of Frank Sinatra's Rat Pack performances at the Sands
Hotel in 1960 demonstrated the city's slow progress toward
equality. Women couldn't work as dealers in Las Vegas until the
1970s, yet they found more opportunities for well-paying jobs there
than many American women could find elsewhere. Gragg shows how a
place like the Las Vegas Strip - with its glitz and vast wealth and
its wildly public consumption of vice - rose to prominence in the
1950s, a decade of Cold War anxiety and civil rights conflict.
Becoming America's Playground brings this pivotal decade in Las
Vegas into sharp focus for the first time.
Steve Wynn is the former owner of the Bellagio -- Las Vegas's
latest monument to conspicuous consumption whose hotel and casino
contain over $300 million in fine art and $1.5 billion in Wall
Street money. He's a mogul whose empire at one point included the
Mirage, the Golden Nugget, and Treasure Island. But how did he gain
and wield his tremendous power in Nevada? And why did a
confidential Scotland Yard report prevent him from opening a casino
in London? When this biography, written by a local reporter, was
first released in 1995, Steve Wynn brought suit against its
original publisher and forced him into bankruptcy. Now available in
paperback, the inside story of the biggest phenomenon to roil Las
Vegas since Hoover Dam gives readers an intimate glimpse at the
real business that's conducted beyond the gaming tables.
For nearly five years, he was known as the 'Darling Of Las Vegas';
the biggest high roller to hit Sin City in decades, a hotshot,
twenty one year-old kid with a seemingly unlimited bankroll and an
even more unlimited lust for big money action. His name was Semyon
Dukatch, and stories swirled in his wake. Some said he was a
Russian arms dealer, others a pop star from Eastern Europe. But the
truth was even more unlikely: he was a twenty-one year old graduate
student who had a plan that would one day make him richer than
anyone could possibly imagine. The Darling of Las Vegas quickly
became a legend in the casino world. He is the only person banned
from the island of Aruba. He was held, at gunpoint, in a cave in
Monte Carlo and told that if he ever returned, he'd be murdered.
And he made millions of dollars playing blackjack, using three
simple techniques that gave him the edge, techniques that are
revealed in this book for the first time. This is his story, the
ultimate true story of Las Vegas, the book Vegas doesn't want you
to read...
The Russian language edition of Reading Poker Tells, which has been
described as the best book on the subject of poker tells. There are
physical and verbal tells in every live poker game. Knowing how to
recognize and understand these tells can give you a significant
edge on the competition. This book will teach you how to analyze
opponents' physical gestures, facial expressions, body posture, and
verbal statements for clues about their hand strength. This book
includes: The common poker tells shown by amateurs The more subtle
tells that some experienced players may have Situations where tells
are likely to be displayed Common verbal statements and their
likely meanings A practical way to categorize and remember tells
Methods of psychological manipulation and deception How to
recognize and avoid angle-shooting Strategies for becoming
unreadable
"The Definitive Guide to Betting on Football" is a distillation of
"Racing Post" expert Kevin Pullein's extensive knowledge on how to
make money when betting on football. His weekly column in the
"Post" is hugely popular with sports betting fans. In this
masterwork Pullein explains how you can work out what is likely to
happen during a football match and how you might be able to exploit
this knowledge profitably by betting. In each chapter there will be
both theory and practice, in separate but complementary sections.
The theory will always be simply explained and illustrated, and
will satisfy both the more-specialist and the less-experienced
reader alike, each of whom will be able to get out of it want they
want most - as well as a lot of other things beside. Topics include
first and second half betting, corners, first goalscorer, final
result, bookings, spread betting, betting exchanges and ante post.
Why has gambling become so accepted in the U.S. when other
historical vices, like smoking and drinking, continue to evoke
morality-based opposition? That simple but intriguing question
guides this path-breaking volume, the first interdisciplinary
academic study of gambling. Led by the renowned Alan Wolfe and with
essays by experts at the country's premiere centers in public
policy, clinical addiction, law, gaming, psychology, sociology,
moral philosophy, theology, and the arts, "Gambling: Mapping the
American Moral Landscape" is a tour de force of the booming
cultural and moral phenomenon that has become woven into the fabric
of American life. Both an attempt to understand and an effort to
predict its future consequences, the book will prove evocative and
critical reading for American civic and church leaders, activists,
historians and government officials.
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