The World Series of Poker main event started yesterday at the Rio in Las Vegas with the first flight of over 1000 players. Last year's field of over 2500 has been more than doubled to 5600. Paul Phillips, poker player and raconteur extraordinaire, is keeping a daily diary for Slate magazine. The first installment is here. It includes a brief synopsis of his banning from Binion's, home of the World Series until this year, in 2001, a situation which led to me being barred from that property as well. I didn't mind that, since I thought it was a cesspool anyway and wasn't planning to play in the World Series until it left there. It was all quite amusing. He also includes a couple of notes on problems with the way the tournament is run:
Harrah's acquired the World Series of Poker two years ago, and the abrupt change in management has led to numerous missteps. One example I noticed today: Despite documented cases of players sneaking fake chips into the tournament, the Rio is still selling souvenir chips that look almost exactly like the real thing. Even more embarrassing is a tale I heard from entrants in the WSOP's first preliminary event five weeks ago. When they showed up, the players discovered they had been seated alphabetically, placing fathers and sons next to each other and forming a table full of the many pros named Nguyen. (The organizers eventually redrew the starting positions.) This is a nerve-racking atmosphere; I'm getting more nervous knowing that I cannot trust the basic competence of the tournament staff.
The table full of Nguyens is amusing, but that's a brutal table with Men, Min and Scotty Nguyen at the same table. Good luck to Paul this year, and to Kellen, one of the regular players in my home game, who is playing today.
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Ed, I can't post anything but comments here, but I'll just let you know about an article on this morning's NYTimes web site. This has nothing to do with the post
Leading Cardinal Redefines Church's View on Evolution
An influential cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church, which has long been regarded as an ally of the theory of evolution, is now suggesting that belief in evolution as accepted by science today may be incompatible with Catholic faith.
The cardinal, Christoph Schönborn, archbishop of Vienna, a theologian who is close to Pope Benedict XVI, staked out his position in an Op-Ed article in The New York Times on Thursday, writing, "Evolution in the sense of common ancestry might be true, but evolution in the neo-Darwinian sense - an unguided, unplanned process of random variation and natural selection - is not."
I'll just quote my Bavarian mother in law: "die gehen rueckwaerts, nicht vorwaerts", They're going backwards, not forwards. It's hilarious. (Sorry, I don't know how to do Umlauts--two little dots on the vowels on HTML web sites such as this)
Sorry, link to the article
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/09/science/09cardinal.html?hp&ex=1120968000&en=c1d22e12f70c2ef1&ei=5094&partner=homepage
Sorry, I don't know how to do Umlauts--two little dots on the vowels on HTML web sites such as this.
raj,
You can use the Windows ALT keycodes for that operation. Make sure your NumLock is on, then push the ALT key while simultaneously typing the 4-number code. When you release the keys you should see the following:
à = 0196
à = 0203
à = 0207
à = 0214
à = 0220
Ÿ = 0159
ä = 0228
ë = 0235
ï = 0239
ö = 0246
ü = 0252
ÿ = 0255
Dave S.