POKER BRAIN


Book Description

POKER BRAIN is a poker coach, life coach, and finance advisor all gathered as one. This book provides a holistic, concise, and clear poker playing method, by which a player can earn half of bankroll as monthly income. Another words, if the bankroll is $3,000, with these directions, can expect $1,500 every month. Calculating a larger bankroll, if player has a $9,000 bankroll, can expect to make $4,500 every month. Awesome.




POKER INSTINCT 1


Book Description

Le poker est un jeu de hasard qui n'a rien a voir avec la chance...ou alors juste un peu ! Je vous propose de progresser depuis le joueur "intuitif " que vous etes, vers le joueur "calculateur," puis aboutir au joueur "d'instinct," d'ou le titre de ce livre: POKER INSTINCT. Le but de ce livre, ecrit directement en francais, est justement de se demarquer de tous les livres ecrits jusqu'alors sur le poker: Ce livre sera ainsi votre coach lors de votre apprentissage du poker moderne, en vous montrant que ce jeu est en realite surtout un sport d'agilite intellectuelle et de psychologie appliquee. Alors que le hasard est bien present, on s'apercevra rapidement qu'un bon joueur finit par gagner systematiquement sur le long terme. Bienvenue dans Poker Instinct, Bienvenue chez les joueurs gagnants !




82nd Airborne Division


Book Description

Follow the All American Division from its activation in 1917 through campaigns in St. Mihiel, Anzio, Normandy, Holland, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, and Iraq. Includes more than 700 biographies of 82nd Airborne veterans, personal stories and roster, awards and decorations, five Medal of Honor recipients, a memorial section and index. Hundreds of photos show America's Guard of Honor in action for over 75 years.




REPORTER


Book Description

When a United Press International executive asked Al Benn where he wanted to begin his journalism career, he unhesitatingly replied: “Where the action is.” Little did he know at the time that he’d wind up reporting on America’s civil rights movement in Birmingham, Alabama which was known as BOMBingham in the 1960s. Benn had no experience as a reporter in 1964, but he quickly learned by following and watching those who did. One night, he might be in a pasture covering a Ku Klux Klan rally where grand dragons and imperial wizards in white sheets delivered hate-filled speeches under the glow of burning crosses. The next night, he might be inside a black church where civil rights leaders called for peace and racial harmony. It was an exciting, often harrowing time for the rookie reporter—filled with deadline pressures, danger and the knowledge that he had become personally involved in covering developments of historic proportions. When he wasn’t chronicling civil rights events, Benn wrote about scientists and astronauts involved in the space race as well as reaction on the home front to the war that raged in Vietnam. His favorite assignment was covering football at the University of Alabama where he got to know the Crimson Tide’s head coach, Paul “Bear” Bryant, and reported the exploits of star quarterbacks such as Joe Namath and Ken Stabler. He also found time to write several exclusive stories. One involved secret payments to the widows of Alabama pilots killed during the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion in Cuba. Another centered on the national boycott of Beatles records--launched by two Birmingham radio personalities upset over a comment by John Lennon that his group was more popular than Jesus. Benn left UPI in 1967 to begin the newspaper phase of his journalism career. He worked in three states, becoming an editor and publisher, before landing his best job of all —covering rural Alabama for the Montgomery Advertiser in 1980. Benn has written about heroes and heels, legends and losers, captains of industry and disgraced CEOs. Most of all, he’s focused on the people who work hard to support their families and improve the quality of life in their cities. They’re his heroes. This book explores Benn’s four decades as a journalist. It recounts the hectic pace at UPI where he faced deadlines every minute as well as newspaper work that afforded him a chance to write columns, do investigative reporting and, as he did at UPI, drop everything and race to the next big story. It’s also about growing up in the slums of a small Pennsylvania town and then enlisting in the Marine Corps where he gained his first journalism experience. So, come along on a 40-year ride through an important period in American history. It’s a career as seen through the eyes of a reporter who admits he got just what he asked for in 1964—plenty of action.




Seventeenth Airborne Division


Book Description







Evocatus Bloodline


Book Description

Three years after 9/11, Lauren Hunter is living the good life on the French Riviera—a world away from Tel Aviv, Israel where her estranged son Ryan is a CIA officer. Ryan Hunter believes his mother, a Port Authority police officer, was killed in the North Tower of the World Trade Center on 9/11. He has no idea Lauren was part of a clandestine black operation responsible for the attacks. Ryan is shown evidence his mother is alive and leaves the CIA to search for her. He is unaware a sinister group of elitists known as The Ring is attempting to locate and silence Lauren and her fellow conspirators. The Ring has hired former US Army Delta Force member Nate Lashlie to lead a group of mercenaries on a mission to follow Ryan to his mother and force her to reveal the location of her former 9/11 compatriots. They have orders to kill them all and collect the bounty. Ryan enlists the help of a fellow CIA officer, a former White House terrorism czar, and an NSA deputy director in the race to find his mother ahead of the mercenaries. This fast-paced suspense thriller is the second book in the Evocatus Series and takes the reader on an exciting worldwide quest as a son struggles to find and save his long-lost mother from certain death. Along the way, he learns the shocking truth she vowed to keep secret.




Where's Charlie?


Book Description

History books and novels are filled with stories of young men and women going off to war. In each, the experiences and challenges are as varied as the people themselves. The stories tell of leaders and followers, cowards and heroes. In Where's Charlie? author Tim Soyars narrates his own story of how he came of age while serving in the US Army during the Vietnam War. In this memoir, Soyars tells how his personality, background, and attitude contributed to his will to succeed and his desire to be involved in the Vietnam War. As a boy, he always knew he'd serve his country. With both humor and sincerity, Soyars narrates his story--his birth in Virginia in 1945, his induction into the army in 1965, his marriage in 1966, and his one-year service in Vietnam with the First Calvary from March of 1967 to 1968. Including photos of the period, Where's Charlie? conveys not only the sadness and heroics often associated with war, but also shares stories of warmth, compassion, and romance. It provides a glimpse into the horror of battle and offers insight into one soldier's actions and thoughts during this unique time in history.




Congressional Record


Book Description

The Congressional Record is the official record of the proceedings and debates of the United States Congress. It is published daily when Congress is in session. The Congressional Record began publication in 1873. Debates for sessions prior to 1873 are recorded in The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (1789-1824), the Register of Debates in Congress (1824-1837), and the Congressional Globe (1833-1873)