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Poker stars join to take aim at the House rules
From the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Poker stars join to take aim at the House rules
By Steve Goldstein
Inquirer Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — In a somber Rayburn House Office Building hearing room yesterday, one floor above where Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was testifying about Iran, the discussion was of another threat:
Denying folks the right to play Internet poker for money.
Poker & the Law
From the Wall Street Journal Law Blog.
Alan Dershowitz and Charles Nesson have a few things in common. They're both famed Harvard Law professors. They're both provocative. And they both love poker.
Betting on Students
From the Chronicle of Higher Education.
By Peter Monaghan
Can poker capture — and improve — the minds of young Americans? Charles R. Nesson, a Harvard law professor, insists that it can.
From Second Life Insider
From Second Life Insider:

Harvard explores the case against Addis
Posted Oct 16th 2007 9:00PM by Tateru Nino
Filed under: Educational, News, Events, Mixed Reality, Teaching
Profs Back Online Poker
From the Boston Herald.
Harvard lawyers work to overturn gaming ban
By Scott Van Voorhis
Poker players pining for a return of Internet gaming now have the law on their side. Harvard Law, that is.
A pair of top Harvard Law School professors have taken up an unlikely cause - the legalization of online poker.
How to Deal… With Life
From Inside Higher Ed.
By Andy Guess
Poker Plays a Role in Harvard Classrooms
From National Public Radio.
Fascination with the game of poker is turning out to be an ace in the hole for educators. At Harvard, the card game is used in algebra classes and in law-school classes. Harvard law professor Charles Nesson tells Scott Simon how he and his colleagues deal with the subject.
Listen to the interview here.
Harvard Law's poker panacea
From the Financial Times.
By Roger Blitz
Leisure Industries Correspondent
Last updated: August 18 2007 14:52
Harvard Law school thinks it has found the solution to many of society's problems, from teenage delinquency to world diplomatic crises: a hand of poker.
Harvard Ponders Just What It Takes to Excel at Poker
Prof. Nesson and Others Stress the Skill Involved; Why It's a Legal Issue
From the Wall Street Journal.
By NEIL KING JR.
May 3, 2007
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Four-time poker champion Howard Lederer makes a plush living playing cards. His scholarly calm at the table has earned him the title "The Professor," along with $3.3 million in tournament prize money.
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