Tuesday, December 16, 2014

$250 FREEROLLS STARTING AT 6:00 PM EST.

freeroll   
 Today starting at 6:00 PM there will be a $250 freeroll and there will be a new $250 freeroll starting every fifteen minutes after that until 7:00 PM EST. 250freeroll

 As always good luck and may your pocket pairs hold.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Winning Millions, This Sunday!


As if a $1 million guaranteed poker tournament for US players wasn't newsworthy enough, Americas Cardroom is making even more noise by announcing that players can get into the tournament for freeThe online poker site today released its satellite schedule for Winning Millions, a $1 Million poker tournament set to get underway on December 14th. The satellite schedule includes two freerolls per day. You can see more information HERE

Poker players can also win their spot in the $109 nightly event through $7 and $22 satellites running daily. The $22 turbo satellite has $0.55 feeders that run 3 times per day. Players can also earn seats into the $7 satellites through freerolls running at 10:00am and 1:30pm EST. With a structure like this a player can ultimately win a $540 seat with a $0 investment and potentially a $200,000 first place prize. 

The online poker site has seen zero overlays, a signal that tournament traffic at Americas Cardroom is returning to the pre-Black Friday numbers rather quickly. You can see our Winning Millions video with al the information that you need HERE

Winning Millions is a Texas Hold'em tournament featuring a $500+$40 buy-in, scheduled for December 14th, 2014. It features a $1 million guaranteed prize pool, but the final number could grow even bigger given Americas Cardroom's history of eclipsing their guaranteed tournaments.

Thanks to the fastest payouts in the industry, easy deposits, and a tournament schedule that puts players first, Americas Cardroom has continued to attract new players to their community in record numbers. The $1 million tournament announcement is likely to push traffic at Americas Cardroom to new heights, ultimately leading to bigger prize pools in other tournaments as new players join the community. 

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Veterans House Car Repair Fund

Hello, my name is Terry and I am a Desert Storm and Desert Shield disabled veteran who served in the U.S. Air Force from 1989-1996. To help other veterans and their families, I have established a private charity called Veterans House. Veterans House is a three bedroom brick house situated on a 1 acre lot next to Lake Lavon in Lavon Shores.

At Veterans House, we provide a variety of support for our struggling military veterans and their families based on their needs including assistance with medical and mental issues, affordable housing, food, clothing, assistance with pharmaceutical expenses, transportation, career training, job placement and much more. We not only help veterans but the civilian community as well. Where there’s a need, we want to help where we can.

Please if you can help us get this car fixed it would mean so much to so many. Follow the link to make a donation and help insure that we can continue providing transportation for people to their medical, physical therapy appointments and more.

Thank you for your time and donation.

Donations of thirty dollars or more are eligible for free membership to Team P4AC and Veterans House if you would like. Members are generally anyone who loves to play poker or wants to learn for free, people who are comedians, musicians or are in the entertainment business, military veterans and their families, people in the telecommunications industry and people who just want to support a great cause. For more info send email to terry@poker4acause.org.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

To Current & Future Friends


Friends Please Read!!!!!!!!!!!
Hello to any and all poker players, poker industry professionals, military service members, IT Professionals, engineers, linemen, splicers - copper/fiber/coax, tower climbers, LAN/WAN installers, musicians, actors, booking agents, talent companies, bands, models, record labels, promoters, business owners, advertisers all my friends in these industries and people who want to help others by either learning and playing poker or by getting involved and helping me to achieve not just my goals but our team goals to bring help to others through comedy, music and poker. I have started a team of poker players who play poker in support of charity. I have donated a house to be used for the purposes of establishing the first P4AC Veterans House and I have a studio event space at P4AC Studios 2521 Merrill Road. I am also looking for musicians to complete a band for P4AC Music. Players have three main options of how they can help. Play with our team online from almost anywhere in the world. If you are in Dallas TX join our team and come play at our studio in Dallas, or straight donation. Donations could be of your time, help, money, food, clothes, etc. If you are interested in learning to play poker or would just like a safe friendly place to play real money online poker or you would just like more info on how you can help even if you are not any of the above mentioned people. If you are in one of the career fields listed above and are interested in helping and you are in my friends list I will be expecting to here from you. Please message me here or send email to: terry@poker4acause.org for more info. Thank you.

I invite everyone who wants to talk or ask questions to our live chat page today. If you already play at CarbonPoker and you did not join our group by signing up for Carbon through P4AC Poker4ACause.org it's ok you can still play in our games and freerolls. It's just when you play in our games and tournaments and you did not sign up through P4AC then your rakes and fees from your real money game play will not go to P4AC but to Carbon. If you sign up for Carbon through P4AC then anytime you play in any real money game or tournament your rakes and fees will go to charity.

If you would like to talk or ask questions today visit this link.
http://poker4acause.org/p4ac-chat/

Thursday, June 19, 2014

INSIDE GAMING: POKERSTARS DEAL MADE WITH EYE ON CALIFORNIA

18 June 2014
By Howard Stutz
California is known for having high-priced beachfront real estate. But even $4.9 billion might not be enough of a payment to let a Canadian gaming company settle into the neighborhood.

Montreal-based Amaya Gaming Group, Inc.’s agreement last week to acquire the parent company of online gaming giant PokerStars — the largest Internet gaming purchase — is all about California.

Some Golden State residents, however, want to stop the moving vans at the Canadian border.

Despite its best efforts — including forfeiting $731 million to federal prosecutors in 2012 — PokerStars hasn’t been able to buy into the budding U.S. online gaming market.

Nevada shut PokerStars out of the game for at least five years. New Jersey initially said no, but might be softening its position now that Amaya plans to clean house of PokerStars ownership once it takes over in September.

Lawmakers are considering legal Internet poker. Twin pieces of legislation are being debated in the state’s Assembly and Senate in Sacramento, Calif.

The Golden State, whose economy would be the world’s eighth-largest if it were a country, is considered the nation’s top legalization target by the online gaming community.

California has already flexed its muscles in Indian gaming. The state’s tribal casinos produced $6.96 billion in gaming revenue in 2012, according to Casino City’s annual report, which was almost one-fourth of the total collected by Indian gaming nationwide.

PokerStars — along with its affiliated Full Tilt Poker — controls 54 percent of global online gaming traffic outside the United States. Combined, the websites have more than 85 million registered players. There are millions more potential customers in the United States who haven’t been able to log onto PokerStars since 2011.

Amaya said the combined businesses would have totaled $1.3 billion in revenue in 2013, with PokerStars accounting for more than $1.1 billion of the figure.

That’s one reason the competition would like to keep PokerStars from entering the game.

PokerStars has been sidelined by the hangover from the “Black Friday” federal crackdown on illegal Internet gaming in April 2011. PokerStars pulled out of the U.S. after its founder and two other company officials were indicted in connection with fraud and 15031-laundering charges.

The indictments still stand against the individuals. But the company’s cash forfeiture 16 months after the indictments settled PokerStars’ legal differences in connection with accepting online wagers from American gamblers following the 2006 passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act.

The Justice Department said the agreement wouldn’t preclude PokerStars from entering legal U.S. online gaming markets.

Individual states don’t see it that way.

Nevada’s interactive gaming regulations include a “bad actor clause” that puts a five-year ban on companies that took bets from Americans after 2006. New Jersey’s Internet gaming laws don’t include the “bad actor clause,” but PokerStars couldn’t get licensed.

Meanwhile, California’s online poker bills include “bad actor” clauses that aim directly at PokerStars. The company has a deal to operate online poker for three Southern California card rooms and the Morongo Band of Mission Indians. However, 13 other Indian tribes are backing the legislation as written.

PokerStars asked Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe, who specializes in constitutional law, to review California’s proposed online poker legislation. In a statement Tuesday, Tribe concluded that neither bill would survive a constitutional challenge on several grounds.

“A court should also have little difficulty recognizing the harm to PokerStars’ intangible property, including harm that takes the form of rendering that property valueless as an object of sale or licensing to others,” Tribe said.

In its announcement about buying privately held Oldford Group — parent company of PokerStars owner Rational Group — Amaya was hopeful the deal would facilitate entry into the United States.

Amaya, publicly traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange, is a New Jersey-licensed serviceprovider.

PokerStars has an agreement to be the online gaming partner with Resorts Atlantic City. The deal may see new life, mainly because of the state’s online gaming revenue not reaching lofty projections and declining for the second straight month in May.

David Rebuck, New Jersey’s gaming enforcement director, said regulators were “encouraged” by Amaya’s purchase of PokerStars “and the expanded opportunities it might provide.”

Eilers Research gaming analyst Adam Krejcik told investors Tuesday that the deal should land PokerStars in New Jersey. But he predicted California will continue to hang out a “No Vacancy” sign.

POKERSTARS ACQUISITION NOT A GAME-CHANGER -- YET

16 June 2014
By Vin Narayanan

The bwin.party merger was big. This is bigger. On Thursday, Amaya Gaming purchased the parent company of PokerStars.com and Full Tilt Poker for $4.9 billion.
According to the financials released in the statement announcing this deal, the newly combined company had pro forma combined revenue of $1.3 billion in 2013. When bwin.party merged, its combined pro forma revenue was $943.45 million.
But Amaya's acquisition of PokerStars and Full Tilt Pokerrepresents more than the creation of the world's largest publicly listed online gaming company. It's a seismic shift in the business of online poker and a curious end to the era of offshore poker rooms in the U.S.


UIGEA FREEROLLING

PokerStars has dominated the online poker scene for so long that it's almost hard to remember what it was like before it existed. But prior to PokerStars' ascendance, PartyPoker was the king, ruling the online poker universe because it was the biggest and most successful room in the U.S. It had plenty of competition, with Full Tilt, PokerStars, Absolute Poker and a host of others nipping at its heels. But PartyPoker was the undisputed leader -- a publicly traded company that had earned the trust of players and, to a certain degree, legitimized the business to the investor class. Its initial valuation on the London Stock Exchange was $8.46 billion.

PartyPoker's reign was cut short when the U.S. passed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) in 2006. Although the act didn't criminalize online gaming, it did make processing payments for unlawful gambling illegal. The definition of unlawful gambling was muddy at best, though the Department of Justice (DOJ) maintained all forms of online gaming were illegal based on a narrow reading of the Wire Act and the online gaming industry maintained that the Wire Act applied only to sports betting.

PartyPoker adopted a conservative approach to the passsage of the UIGEA and pulled out of the U.S. market with the hope that it could "cleanly" reenter the U.S. when public policy towards online gaming changed. The decision financially gutted PartyPoker. In 2006, one day before PartyPoker announced it would leave the U.S. market, its stock was trading at 107 pence. The day after it announced its exit from the U.S., PartyPoker's stock price plummeted to 45 pence per share, and eventually bottomed out weeks later at 26 pence. Billions of dollars evaporated in the span of a few weeks.

Other publicly listed companies followed PartyPoker's lead and exited the U.S. market. But PokerStars and Full Tilt, which were both privately held, gambled that by continuing to take American players, they could become the dominant forces in online poker throughout the world -- and buy forgiveness from the U.S. when that market opened up. But they were only half right.

CASH DOESN'T SOLVE EVERYTHING

Fueled by their access to the U.S. market -- and the revenue it generated -- PokerStars and Full Tilt went on to dominate the online poker world. But unfortunately for them, banks and payment processors adopted the same conservative approach to online gaming as PartyPoker. As a result, Full Tilt and PokerStars had to resort to trickery -- and some in some cases, outright deception -- to move money in and out of player accounts. And in 2011, the DOJ indicted PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker on a variety of bank fraud, wire fraud and money laundering charges.

Full Tilt went out of business as a result of the indictments. The company had hidden the fact that it was struggling to move money in and out of the system in the U.S. Deposits were being credited to accounts even though money was unable to make its way through the system. It was using player funds to help pay operating costs, and could not return the money to its players. PokerStars, however, had plenty of cash on hand. And it settled with the DOJ, hoping the goodwill generated by its $731 million settlement in 2012 would pave the way to access to a U.S. market that was just beginning to open up. The settlement also included the acquisition of Full Tilt and the ability to pay back all Full Tilt players (eventually) -- which generated even more positive publicity. PokerStars also didn't have to admit to any guilt, which preserved their hopes for eventually acquiring a license in the U.S.

Meanwhile, PokerStars' daily operations didn't take a hit. It became the place to play, and the online poker room easily maintained its top status. From PokerStars' viewpoint: So far, so good. But unfortunately for PokerStars, it underestimated the depth of the animus it faced from the American brick-and-mortar casino industry.

BAD ACTORS

For American casino executives -- and casino companies -- PokerStars accepting U.S. play post UIGEA was a personal affront. The executives went through intrusive investigations into their personal lives, and their families' personal lives, just for the right to access one state in the U.S. Executives and companies that operated in more than one state faced lengthy probes in each market/state they were trying to enter.

PokerStars -- in its mind -- was trying to skirt the system. The American casino industry also worried it couldn't compete with PokerStars -- especially because PokerStars had an "illegal" head start. That fear combined with personal outrage over PokerStars' behavior prompted the American casino industry to fight PokerStars entry in the regulated U.S. market.

Nevada passed online gaming legislation that included a "bad actors" clause, which prohibited companies that accepted U.S. play post UIGEA from entering the Nevada market for five years. California is considering a similar strategy as it considers online gaming legislation. And New Jersey suspended PokerStars' application to provide online poker software in New Jersey because of the company's continuing ties to its founder, Isai Scheinberg.

As a result, PokerStars' efforts to buy forgiveness were on life support.

LAUNDERING A COMPANY

So how do you "clean a company?" You get acquired by one that has access to cash and a good reputation. That's where Amaya Gaming steps into the picture.

Amaya, which is already licensed to provide online gaming software and technology in New Jersey, has been trying for years to raise its profile in the online gaming industry. The b2b software company was founded in 2004. And in 2012, it went on a buying spree that signaled its arrival as a player, buying online game developer Cryptologic ($35.8 million), land-based slot manufacturer Cadilac Jack ($167 million) and poker network Ongame (25 million euros).

The Ongame network was operated by bwin prior to bwin's merger with PartyGaming. But withWSOP.com and bwin.party taking the early lead in the regulated U.S. online poker market, Amaya needed a game changer. Enter PokerStars. If Amaya could buy PokerStars, it would have the online poker product it needed, and the PokerStars platform would have the "legitimacy" it needed to enter the U.S. market. The Scheinbergs added to that "legitimacy" by agreeing to step down after the purchase. Now Amaya just needed the cash to make the $4.9 billion purchase.

THE INVESTOR CLASS RETURNS

The most important element of Amaya's purchase of PokerStars has nothing to do with poker software, players or regulations. That honor belongs to the financing of the deal.

At least $2.9 billion of the purchase price is coming from a combination of investment banks and private equity groups. This massive investment, along with another $1 billion in convertible preferred shares means the investor class believes in the future of online gaming -- and is betting heavily on its future. With online poker slowing down globally, it's a massive bet that the U.S. market is going to grow quickly -- and that Amaya is the correct steward to bring it into the U.S.

A CLOUDY FUTURE

But just because Amaya bought PokerStars, it doesn't mean PokerStars "is back." There are too many major questions to be answered to make that declaration. First, Amaya is a b2b provider. Is Amaya going to switch its strategy and become a b2c provider? If PokerStars remains in the background, can it succeed as "just a supplier?" Or is its marketing and operations savvy critical to its success?

How will the two companies merge? Will Amaya's corporate culture slow down the hard-charging PokerStars? Will American casinos trust Amaya enough to form a partnership? Or will the casinos be suspicious of that large b2c presence globally?

And what will regulators think of the merger? These are major issues that need to be addressed before anyone can say PokerStars "is back."

Even if PokerStars ends up in front of American consumers in the near future, it won't be the same product that they grew accustomed to prior to 2011. The player liquidity pool will be restricted to the population of any given state, so the days of "any game, any stake, any time" are gone. The revenue model will be different as well. With fewer players, and less money coming in, Amaya will have to be more judicious about spending money to acquire players. And which casinos will partner with Amaya? Will the PokerStars brand be able to help a "second-tier" casino succeed online? Or will a well-run poker room by top-tier brands triumph?

It's a different poker world that PokerStars is returning to. Players are going to have to adjust their expectations. And Amaya might have to as well.

Friday, May 23, 2014

Did You Know?

I want to educate people to the fact that playing poker is not a crime. Playing poker online is not a crime. It's just like when you go to a casino. Online poker sites operate the same way.
They only operate in countries or places it is legal to do so. So when you download a poker sites software and use it. It is like you are sitting in there casino where it is legal to play. No different then going to any real casino.

I think the confusion most people and players who want to play online poker have is they always here that online poker is illegal in the states and it is.  Right now it is illegal for anyone who wants to own or run an online poker site within the US borders.
Thats why people like me have to go to offshore legal sites to affiliate with instead of one here in the USA.
Recent changes have two states leading the way for casinos to operate online. Las Vegas and New Jersey are leading the fight.
Thats only two states so we all need to pitch in and do our part. We will do our best to keep players informed of whats going on in the poker world and how you can help.  If you have been on the fence about online poker it is time to get off. I want to help new players to not just learn how to play texas holdem poker but also teach them bank roll management, help them with my affiliate sites software, give freerolls to new players and the size games needed for a new player to be able to learn and gain experience at the poker table without risking to many chips.
The best advice I can give is if you want to play online poker or if you want to learn or even start your own poker league for your group we can help. Members can request a game or tournament built to their specifications and we can have your game added to the schedule.

Best of all when you join Team P4AC Poker at Poker4acause.org and play poker online with us at one of our affiliate poker rooms 100% of the money raised from rake and buy in fee's from real money game play and tournaments will go toward P4AC's Veterans House and the P4AC Mission to bring help to those that are not only in need but deserve a litte respect and care. You can help just by playing poker a game so many love to play. So will you join me and my friends as we set off on an adventure to help people through comedy, music and poker. It's gonna be an awesome ride.

Thanks for taking the time to read this. I hope it was informative for some of you.
If you would like more info or would like to contact or join Team P4AC please send email to: terry@poker4acause.org

Thank You

If you would like to get started playing poker now click the Carbon Poker Banner on the right side of this page to join Team P4AC @ Carbon Poker.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Play Online Poker & Help Combat Child Hunger

Join my group of poker players who play online poker in support of the children, families and military veterans who receive assistance at P4AC's Veterans House.
Play in real money poker games and tournaments. Easily fund your account with your debit card.
Sign up for Free Texas Holdem Poker instruction. Play in tournaments with buy ins as low as ten cents with a one cent fee. 100% of the rake and fees from our members poker play at our online cash tables and in our online tournaments is used to fund P4AC's Veterans House and continue the P4AC mission to bring help to others.


If you would like a safe legal place to play online poker you have found the place. Best of all when you play poker at Carbon as a member of Poker4acause.org your rakes and fees go to help others in the community.

For more info email terry@poker4acause.org

To download our free software and start playing real money online poker now just click on the Carbon Poker banner to the right of this page.


Thursday, May 15, 2014

P4AC Charity Poker Tournament Benefitting Veterans House

Click image above to enlarge.
Calling all poker players in the Dallas and surrounding areas.  Please read the above advertisement to join me for a great game of Texas Holdem for a great cause.
Please remember all rebuys will go to the pot so that there will be cash prizes as well for other places. The amount of rebuys will determine number of places paid and amounts.
For more info or to join this event please email terry@poker4acause.org or call 214-668-8836
Thank you.

I can also set these games up online at our poker sites so that you or your organization can play from the comfort of home.

Business owners, members of church groups, local charities and anyone else who wants to play poker for their favorite cause or if you or your charity organization would like to talk about setting up an online Texas Holdem charity event for your cause you can also contact me at the contacts mentioned above.
Just send an email requesting more info to terry@poker4acause.org.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

We Need Your Email Address



srischwab & Fungus


Hello We would like to welcome two new members who joined Team P4AC online at Americas Cardroom last month. They will be representing Team P4AC at ACR and anytime they play in any real money game they will be supporting Team P4AC's mission to help others.


Please welcome srischwab and Fungus to our team of poker players. Like so many they have signed up and not yet sent me an email. Please remember, I have to have your email so we can send you coupons, info and passwords for our private tournaments and freerolls. So please make sure you send us an email and tell us your new screen name so we can add you to our players list.


Other new players who recently signed up for Team P4AC at ACR and need to send us an email to be added to our email list are......


greenbaydave, acman64, ColdKickinIt and buzzmac


If your screen name is listed here you need to send us an email to terry@poker4acause.org

Saturday, February 1, 2014

P4AC Poker Open House Weekend Feb. 8th & 9th

On February 8th & 9th, P4AC Poker will be having an open house event for poker players in the Dallas, TX area.
We invite you to come out and see our poker room and event hall. We will also be having charity holdem tournaments that weekend to help raise money for Veterans House and Worldstrides.

Tournaments are as follows:

Event #1  Feb. 8th 

Charity Tournament for Worldstrides

$40 buy in splits $25 to pot $15 to charity.

Saturday, 8th @ 11:00 AM registration starts. Cards in the air at 12:00 PM.

Starting chips 5,000 with one hour of late registration.

Optional Add on at first break = $15 for 5,000 chips. Add on goes to charity.

Event #2  Feb. 8th

Charity Tournament for Veterans House

$50 buy in splits $40 to pot / $10 to charity.

Saturday, 8th @ 5:00 PM registration starts. Cards in the air
at 6:00 PM.

Starting chips 5,000 with one hour of late registration.

Unlimited rebuys for first hour.  Must fall below 2,501 to rebuy.
Rebuy options are $15 for 2,500 chips.  Splits $10 to pot $5 to charity or $30 for 5,000 chips. Splits $20 to pot $10 to charity.

Add on at break = $40 for 7,500 chips. Splits 50/50 pot & charity.

With 50 players the pot will be $2,000 guaranteed and will increase with rebuys and add ons.


Event #3  Feb. 9th

Charity Tournament for Veterans House

$50 buy in splits $40 to pot / $10 to charity.

Sunday, 9th @ 11:00 AM registration starts. Cards in the air
at 12:00 PM.

Starting chips 5,000 with one hour of late registration. No rebuys.

Add on at break = $40 for 7,500 chips. Splits 50/50 pot & charity.

With 50 players the pot will be 2,000 guaranteed.

Event #4  Feb. 9th

$35 buy in.
Splits $30 to pot $5 staffing fee.

Sunday, 9th @ 6:00 PM registration starts. Cards in the air
at 7:00 PM.
5,000 starting chips with 15 min. blinds.  No rebuys.
Add on at break 3,000 chips for $15
Splits $10 to pot & $5 to charity.

Free no rake cash tables will be available all weekend for members. Small blind goes to charity.  Please tip your dealers.

Friday, January 31, 2014

PERSPECTIVES WEEKLY: Online Poker News


It's an interesting week of online gambling news, as J Todd has stories on the latest attempts to expand the industry in New Jersey. Plus, headlines from South Africa, Steve Wynn and Sheldon Adelson.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Veterans Appreciation Holiday Party


Special thanks go out to these local area businesses and there managers for their contributions to this event.

Monday, January 13, 2014

The Elks, P4AC, and Veterans House Charity Event

Dear Fellow Members:


Please help us help this 14 year old child who has been placed in hospice care after a long illness.  One of our members, Preston Sams is spearheading a huge fundraiser for February 22nd to help this family out, another member Tony Jacinto has agreed to cook the food for this event.  If you can donate an auction item of any kind it would be greatly appreciated (lottery tickets, jewelry, hair cuts, pedicures, manicures, massages, oil changes, food baskets, artwork, tools, gift cards, ANYTHING that can be auctioned or raffled off or a cash donation [no item or amount too small]) it would be greatly appreciated.  There will be a car show, karaoke contest, band and other festivities.  YOUR HELP IS NEEDED!!!! and it would be nice to see dozens of our members come show the love and support for this family who desperately need our help.

Look in those eyes and ask yourself, what pain you would have if that was your child or grandchild and how hard it would be to know you only have minutes, hours, days or weeks with that sweet baby?

HELP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hello would you like to help this little boy and others like him within your communities?

My name is Terry Cody founder of Veterans House, Poker4ACause.org, Team P4AC and P4AC Entertainment Studio.

If you would like to help Joey Moore a 14 yr old hospice patient by making a donation just send an email to:  terry@poker4acause.org with "I want to help Joey" in the subject line.  I will then send you an email with the proper donation link for Joey.  Any funds donated through this link will go straight to Joey and his family.

If you would like to make a donation to P4AC's Veterans House just use the donate button on the right of this blog.

If you know of someone in your community who is in need of help it could be a military veteran, child, mother, father, neighbor or anyone whom you know that needs assistance.  Please inform them about Veterans House and have them get in touch with us.  Cases are dealt with in the order of severity of situation, type of assistance needed, time of submission and so forth.
Send email to:  terry@poker4acause.org with "Help" in the subject line, a description of the situation and the type of help you are requesting.

Poker Players!

Did you know that if you Join Team P4AC Poker at one of our poker rooms the funds raised from your rakes and fees will go to P4AC's Veterans House and to their continuing mission to bring help to others.


If you would like to join Team P4AC Poker or would like more info please visit

Please share this blog with friends.

From all of us here at P4AC, Veterans House and The Garland Elks Lodge.

Thank you.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

P4AC Poker Dallas, TX

To join our local private poker group in Dallas, TX
call 214-668-8836 or send email to poker4acause.org with
( I want to play.) In the subject line or you can come by our showroom at

2521 Merrell RD. #104
Dallas, TX. 75229

Members only!

Free daily cash and tournament classes.
Daily $35 new player tournament @ 7 PM.
Big screen TV, snacks, food and soft drinks available.
Fridge available for BYOB.

Rent our event space for your next private party or event. Call for Pricing.