Cue Master Will I 1 ! Play Here Next Week I Inthfnauonai COURT H GENERAL II I- SECURITY "T* I

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Cue Master Will I 1 ! Play Here Next Week I Inthfnauonai COURT H GENERAL II I- SECURITY Huachuca, Fort Arizona THE APACHE SENTINEL, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1945- Page Five The Dumborton Oaks Pro osals Cue Master Will i 1 ! Play Here Next Week I INTHfNAUONAI COURT H GENERAL II i- SECURITY "t* i When Andrew Ponzi of Philadel- fundamentals of good billiards, and phia comes to Port Huachuca on reveal an assortment cf trick shots Tuesday, May Ist, with his bag of that are bcth amazing and highly billiard playing tricks, officers and entertaining. enlisted men will see a fellow who Ponzi, who will play against the learned to play pocket billiards with best competition we can muster, a broken arm, and who, although he demonstrates the fundamentals of was blind for six months during his billiard achievement winds up captured the his exhibition with a of boyhood, championship variety — ***^*™ trick ¦^ mmim» 9K of the world in a sport that requires shots, is hailed as one of the most ECONOMIC very keen eyesight. , daring players in the game and as a fellow The interesting story of Andrew who specializes in high runs. ~ Ponzi relates that he lost his sight He set a world’s record, Which still |' COUNCIL SECRETARIAT H’ j ill when a boy of eight years, regaining stands, in 1935, when he pocketed |:|| COMMITTEE 7." 111 " J" 1 mmmmmmmmmimmmmJf- j SECRETARY ||§ mmmmmmmmmmrn ' I REGIONAL » 7 u .. I arrangements >¦ •• & : ••r.-' ¦=:. i ' ? AGENCIES i * S* INTERNATIONAL LABOR L u INTERNATIONAL I !&.> £%¦ :C'! '=£ '• V-: j-X-; X|X;H :T ' * m ORGANIZATION E !5 MONETARY FUND I ¦ \ ? ..,*$ o. X ;*¦. rnmxmrtsm wiwbbwha.u*; •>•«»'<¦' .u". • Mr *, b 1 ~ 1 S;‘ |: UNITED NATIONS FOOD ANO L & INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR I <•' ,' ] ** Ilf " AI» m AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION f! RECONSTRUCTION 0 DEVELOPMENT 1'• .y J NATIONAL 5X |:i«aiiJiuuu'A.i-JU. j. 1.U1.1 1.. , IJ, :::>!.-.Ji^,u.4,,AULLaT,-.,,ini.u,i ' f ">X ..? ." • • CONTINGENTS Os SEA |MS,B SgMSfIL ' ' S sJR ¦ !°”rarar W othcreconom.cagenc.es } ARWED FORCES ;! "• * •, .• ••. v • _ tJHW t: ."i H IhII This chart shows the framework for a World tion. The proposals are not binding and be ... may jfflMHMiMBi Security Organization as outlined in the Dumbarton amended by the delegates to the San Francisco Oaks Proposals—a series of recommendations agreed Conference. The Proposals for Regional Security upon by representatives of the United States, Great Arrangements and Agencies; National Contingents Britain, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and of Armed Forces and the 6 sub-divisions under the China in October, 1944. On April 25, at San Fran- Economic and Social Council (as shown in the * of more than Na- v * cisco, representatives 40 United chart) were tentative and the matter was ** j‘ ji * m |pp|| / left m 111 B I tions met to consider these proposals and to largely in the hands of the delegates. draft a charter for the World Security Organiza- YANK Tells ! VetWhoGotNo.l Business Loan Os Gl Racket Tells Servicemen How It's Done % NEW most complete YORK—The Arlington, Va. (ACS) —Thiie first ex-serviceman to secure report to date on the GI racketeers j who worked with the French Black a business loan under the GI Bil11 is a 26-year-old veteran who ;;. Market is featured in the May 4th , jis starting a meat distribution bu isiness. * issue of YANK, The Army Weekly. 1 He’s Jack C. Breeden, who) received a medical discharge Reading like a gangster novel of last December after three yean s of service, during which he the twenties, YANK’s article de- collected four campaign stars forr the Pacific, scribes the methods used by the action in news Army’s Criminal Investigation Divi- Interviewed for Army spapers, Breeden gave a first- sion (CID) men in tracking down hand account of how an ex-GI gcoes about borrowing the money the gangs of AWOLs who did a mil- <S>, "to set up shop. He went to lion dollar business in stolen GI sup- plies and gasoline. work on the loan immediately The GI mobsters used all the Beer Bottle upon discharge. tricks of the old prohibition gangs “But it really began before plus a few more twists of their own I that,” explains the young busi- including the French equivalent of Round-Up » : ! ness man. “I started by saving American gun molls, who assisted in i money helped The sale of Rainier Beer is be- while in the service. It making deals for the stolen supplies, i me to get started and it naturally W ¥'kJ Gang reached ing discontinued in all PXs on 1 ~ wHKmMz, organization its the Post, Captain Carl Saber, PX came in handy while I was treading highest level of perfection in the so- : J water waiting for the loan to go called Vincennes gang, which was Officer, announced this week, | and the cooperation residents through. If you want to know, I used directed by an AWOL medic with a | of 1 is requested in returning at once to bank S4O a month besides carry- powerful imagination. Posing as an 1 ing an and up all empty Rainier bottles and : allotment full insurance.” MP lieutenant, he rounded some j Outlining the procedure ob- ! cases. for AWOLs in a Montmartre bar and taining a GI loan, Breeden pointed It six months later due to a sur- 153 balls in succession during a told them that they faced death by ! Bottles and cases will be ac- \ out that as far as the banks and the geon’s skill. It was nine years later, world’s challenge match with Erwin for Then he re- i cepted at the Post Exchange Gro- 1 several hanging desertion. ( government are concerned, the con- lfbwever, before he began to play j Rudolph. On occasions, he They looked like ! eery Store, and those possessing it has counted than lented. pretty good siderations are the same as those pocket billiards and was a broken more 200 consecu- bo#s, he said, and if they did him a ! these items are urged to turn that introduced him to the | tive balls in exhibition play, and i them in as as possible so involved in any commercial loan. arm- favor he’d be willing to let them go. j rapidly said, game. only last December, he ran that they may be returned to the “First,” he “the bank dis- 131 The favor was to drive his tracks j you—- ! against Irving Crane, successfully Rainier cusses the proposition with Andy that he was a mes- and join his “outfit.” Thoroughly manufacturers of Beer. whole recalls withstanding the latter’s challenge and cases both and you want to have the senger boy in Philadelphia, and one scared, they agreed. Bottles are lay it be- for the title. Last March, in a match scarce commodities, and of i thing planned so you can day he stuck his arm out of a Street Little by little this boss added to lovers Then, for with Willie Mosconi, Ponzi had high suds would do to see i fore them. after sending car window, only to have a truck his T/O until he had from 60 to 70 well that your eligibility, they runs of 103, 101 and 98, remarkable they are so that more of i certificate of the arm against the side of men and from 20 to 30 trucks. The returned fill On this crush ! billiards when one considers the I the amber fluid may be delivered i give you a form to out. the With his arm in a cast, he ; outfit was conducted along strictly your estimated volume of car. ; safety requirements of title competi- for further guzzling. Let’s round you state whiled away his time in a church militaryj lines with reveille, special business, income taxes and operating I tion. orders, passes to town I up those Rainier bottles now, and recreation room, where he was ex- Ponzi’s show will I promotions, expenses for the coming year. You Soon, be well worth and duty rosters. It had everything, any other bottle that isn’t doing posed to pocket billiards. even He will and 1 also estimate salaries to be deducted was in a i seeing. challenge play in fact, except Good Conduct Medals any good just lieing around. though his right arm still the best players on the post and and what per cent can be classed as cast, beat all the other take ; and rotation. The men lived in a Andy could a few minutes to explain how profit. neighborhood shooting proper warehouse for four months without I kids in the handling of the cue improve i “The bank checks this and sends pockets. can ! the real MPs or the neighboring the gang was anything but a legiti- balls into anybody’s ability to drop balls into it to the RF’C, which examines it !j French civilians ever dreaming that mate military unit. From that unusual start, Ponzi pockets. His trick shot assortment is thoroughly to see if it’s sound. It went on to win the championship of ; one of the best in the business. I then goes to the Veterans Adminis- the world in pocket billiards on three Ponzi’s tour of Army, Navy, Ma- ! tration for final approval and 50% occasions. He is truly rine and Coast Guard bases is sanc- Here's Fire | guarantee of the loan, different one the Dope On New Bombs lot to do of the great cuemen of all time and tioned by the Billiard Association of By Camp Newspaper Service i . “Experience also has a show May Ist, will be America and is approved Here the with the application.
Recommended publications
  • The Hustler-&- the Champ
    EXCLUSIVE BOOK EXCERPT BD PRESENTS A SNEAK PEEK AT A NEW BOOK By “UNTOLD STORIES” cOLUMNIST R.A. DYER, CHRONICLING THE LIVES OF MINNESOTA FATS AND WILLIE MOSCONI AND HOW THEIR RIVALRY DEFINED POOL. The husTler -&- The Champ THE FUTURE RIVALS FIRST MET AS YOUNG MEN AT FRANKIE MASON’S POOLROOM IN PHILADELPHIA, WHERE RUDOLF WANDERONE — AKA MINNESOTA FATS — CHALLENGED STRAIGHT-AS-AN-ARROW WILLIE MOSCONI TO $50-PER-GAME ONE-POCKET. DYER RECONSTRUCTS THAT FATEFUL MEETING. O HE comes up the steps, strid- papers and the pool magazines, he took billiards. He has never held a job, and ing across wood floors looking fat to the road. And so here he comes, he’s so, exactly and precisely like Willie Sand well fed but no doubt with arrived in Philadelphia, and at his side Mosconi, he has sought refuge in pool- desperation behind a carefree façade. is that other back room player of shady halls. But unlike Willie, Wanderone The Depression then beat down upon repute, Babyface Alton Whitlow, and embraced this life with gusto. Unlike the nation; men were broke, families together they scan the room. Willie, Wanderone never cared about were starving — and maybe Rudolf Suckers, suckers everywhere, they looking like a lowlife scoundrel but Wanderone was too. Sometimes he must think. rather feared being mistaken for a pen- lived at home, sometimes not. He had If they were starving, they never let niless bum. During those days when foraged through the poolhalls of Man- on. If they were one loss away from joblessness defined America, Wan- hattan and Brooklyn and then, when homelessness, they never said.
    [Show full text]
  • Oliver Ortman and Charles Ursitti Elected to 2015 BCA Hall of Fame Class
    Contact: Mike Panozzo United States Billiard Media Association 312-341-1110 [email protected] Rob Johnson Billiard Congress of America 303-243-5070 [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Oliver Ortmann and Charles Ursitti Earn Enshrinement in Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame Broomfield, Colo., August 18, 2015 —Two trailblazers in the pool world have earned election into the Billiard Congress of America Hall of Fame in 2015. Former world champion Oliver Ortmann of Germany and pool promoter/historian Charles Ursitti will be inducted as the 65th and 66th members of the sport’s hall of fame, the United States Billiard Media Association announced today. Ortmann, 48, of Hamburg, will enter the Greatest Players wing of the BCA Hall of Fame, while Ursitti, 68, who was born in New York City and now resides in Florida, will be honored for Meritorious Service. Both will be formally inducted during ceremonies on Oct. 29, 2015, at the Sheraton Norfolk Waterside in Norfolk, Va. One of the most decorated players in Europe, Ortmann led the way for European players in the United States by scoring a shocking win over pool legend Steve Mizerak in the final of the 1989 BCA U.S. Open 14.1 Championship in Chicago. Ortmann went on to win the 1993 BCA U.S. Open, as well as three World Pool-Billiard Association world titles — the 1993 WPA World 9-Ball Championship and the WPA World 14.1 Championship in 2007 and 2010. The fiery Ortmann twice won the International Challenge of Champions (1997 and 2000), and captained Team Europe’s winning Mosconi Cup squad in 2002.
    [Show full text]
  • Billiards-Digest-PROOFED.Pdf
    APA NATIONAL TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS MOVING ON UP The American Poolplayers Association National Team Championships’ short trip produced big dividends. By Skip Maloney MAZING HOW the scenery can change when you move across the street. After nearly a quarter century based at the now shut- Atered Riviera Hotel & Casino in Las Ve- gas, the American Poolplayers Associa- tion relocated its annual National Team Championships to the nearby Westgate More than 300 tables awaited APA teams at the Westgate Hotel in Las Vegas. Hotel & Casino (formerly the Las Vegas Hilton). The change seemed to do the “There weren’t many hiccups,” said gas for the Nationals before,” said team event plenty of good. Bowman. captain Matthew Leckner. “I advanced “It was fantastic,” said APA’s Mar- In fact, the 2014 National Team to regional (competition) the last three keting Director, Jason Bowman. “Defi- Championships ushered in several sig- years in a row, each year on a different nitely an upgrade. I’d spent nearly a nificant improvements. For the first team. year’s worth of nights at the Riviera, time, competitors could download an “It was my first time as a captain,” he and though there was some sentiment online tournament bracket App to keep added, confessing that a lot of his time about that, the Westgate is just a differ- track of individual schedules and get a during the team’s regular 16-week sea- ent class of hotel; a definite step up.” glimpse of a progress in each division. son was spent “figuring out who was go- The most significant improvement, Also first time, the APA live-streamed ing to show up or not.” Bowman went on to explain, was ad- some of the matches.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Willie Mosconi Papers
    Guide to the Willie Mosconi Papers NMAH.AC.0744 Cathy Keen 2002 Archives Center, National Museum of American History P.O. Box 37012 Suite 1100, MRC 601 Washington, D.C. 20013-7012 [email protected] http://americanhistory.si.edu/archives Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 2 Biographical / Historical.................................................................................................... 2 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 3 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 4 Series 1: Personal and Biographical Materials, 1945 - 1999................................... 4 Series 2: Papers Relating to Mosconi's Career, 1946 - 1994.................................. 5 Series 3: Printed Materials, 1924 - 2000................................................................. 6 Series 4: Videos, 1952 - 1991................................................................................. 7 Willie Mosconi Papers NMAH.AC.0744 Collection Overview Repository: Archives Center, National Museum of American History Title: Willie
    [Show full text]
  • September2003
    www.insidepool.com 58 30 < On the Cover Relative unknown 70 German player Thorsten Hohmann surprised many with his first place win at Cardiff, Wales, over Alex Pagulayan. of Cover photo by Lawrence Table Contents Lustig. Features 30 Hohmann Hooks World Pool Championship by InsidePOOL Staff Wins in Cardiff over Pagulayan in the Instruction Finals 10 Ask Allison 38 The 2003 BCA International Trade Columns by Allison Fisher Expo 8 There It is There 62 How to Go Pro by Sally P. Timko by Sally P. Timko 12 What’s the Move? The Best Show Ever! 74 What’s in the Case by Jimmy Reid 40 Regional Tour Review Monica Webb Banking and Kicking by InsidePOOL Staff 76 Site Seeing 14 That’s What I’m Find the Tour That’s Right for You by Dain Anderson Talking About 52 7 Ways to Prepare for the Match of High Tech May Get You Half by Keith McCready Your Life Price The Dipsy-Do 66 by InsidePOOL Staff 78 The Good Old Days 16 Grady’s Grad School 54 Parica Sweeps Great Seminole by Mark & Connie Stellinga by Grady Mathews Seniors Open Rack ‘Em Up Aggressive but Intelligent by Paul Berg 80 What’s New? 22 Technically Speaking 86 The School for Scoundrels End-Game Play Wins Largest Payday in Senior History by InsidePOOL Staff by Steve Crutchfield by Chef Anton Departments 18 Beat People with a Stick 58 Williams Sets Off Florida Pro Tour 84 Hall Monitor The Myth of the Tangent The Grifter’s Dream 4 Pool on TV by Tom Simpson by Paul Berg by Paul Berg Line, Part 2 88 The Buss Stop 6 Advertiser Directory A Change of Perspective Wins Inaugural Fire Cracker Open Ghosts of
    [Show full text]
  • Bob Jewett Double-Elimination Formats Another Loss Isn't Necessarily the Player's Gain
    Bob Jewett Double-Elimination Formats Another loss isn't necessarily the player's gain. In the past two months I've tried to con- vince you that round-robin or single-elimi- nation formats are the best. This month, we'll go over what has become the standard for large tournaments in the US, the dou- ble-elimination format. I don't like the DE format myself, but it's useful to understand it if you're going to be a tournament direc- tor or even a player in one. The basic goal behind DE is to allow every player to have more than one match; the main complaint about single-elimina- tion is that everyone who loses in the first round only gets one match. You stay in the DE tournament until you have two losses. (Interestingly, you don't hear about tennis players clamoring for DE in tennis tourna- ments.) The problem is how to arrange the matches fairly, and for a reasonably speedy conclusion. ly determined, she or he comes over to play twice as many rounds as for single-elimina- Diagram 1 shows a standard DE chart for the winner of the winners' side in match 14. tion. Tournament spreadsheets on the Web eight players. The first matches are down There are two basic ways to do this final sites mentioned before will keep track of the middle. Seeding and byes for the first match. In the old days, if the winners' final- these details for you. round are done the same as for single-elim- ist lost, then each player would have only An alternative DE chart is shown in ination, which was covered last month.
    [Show full text]
  • 2004 Bob Jewett
    Bob Jewett Thin Hits Learn this to psyche out your opponents. Do you feel good about your thin hits? would be a half-ball hit.) an inch of the object ball, it will be driven Would you like to play them better and The vertical axis is how far the object ball about 18 inches along the end rail. If the smarter? If so, read on. will roll for a shot that just brings the cue cue ball or table is not quite right, and you If you play any pool game, you will often ball 8 diamonds back to the end cushion get a tenth of an inch of roll-off, you could find yourself in a situation like Diagram 1. you start from — use the "Start long" curve get no hit at all or the object ball would be The cue ball is a mile from the object ball, for this. For example, if you hit a tenth of driven 35 inches or about 3 diamonds. That and you need to both make a would be very bad for your good hit on the object ball and safety, as it would leave the leave no shot. Is a thin hit — ball in front of the corner just nudging the ball so it pocket. moves as little as possible — So, how good are your thin the right shot for you? hits? In Diagram 3 are a cou- In the extreme position ple drills to test and improve shown, you should probably them. Shot A is the same sort shoot something else if it's of safety as in Diagram 1, but available, but let's look at the arranged the short way on the thin hit a little closer.
    [Show full text]
  • Favorite Non-Athletes in Sports!
    Favorite Non-Athletes In Sports FREE Series | Volume 10 Sports Comic Book Copyright 2015 | 2nd Edition 2016 By Jim Sweeney If you’re as rabid a sports fan as me, you’ll agree that sports comprise the best form of entertainment. NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL and FIFA games showcase some of the greatest athletes on the planet. But, sports entertainment is more than just watching phenomenal athletes ply their craft on the ice, field, diamond, hardwood or pitch. What provide the extra sizzle in sports are countless non-athletes that make the games possible and entertaining. They enrich the overall fan experience. A number of non-athletic performers and icons deliver invaluable appeal and bring the entertainment aspects of sports to greater levels. I highlight them in this book. Some picks are as obvious as the bowtie I’m wearing. And, others on this list may surprise you. None are actual athletes. A few aren’t even real at all. But, all of them show up at NFL, MLB, NCAA and NHL games. You will adore one of the most unlikely sportscasters on television. You will envy the driver of the baddest maintenance vehicle in sports. You will wince at the thought of a big mouthed bloviator. You will probably scowl at the refs I feature. But, you’ll immediately recognize that games don’t get played without them. You’ll recite familiar lines from a series of iconic movies starring a fictional fighting sports character. You might proudly don the ridiculous foam hats worn by the loyal fans of this historic NFL franchise.
    [Show full text]
  • Greenleaf Vs. Brunswick Pool’S Bad Boy Vs
    UNTOLD STORIES: GREENLEAF VS. BRUNSWICK POOL’S BAD BOY VS. BRUNSWICK Jilted Greenleaf fi led suit for $100K in industry row. Story by R.A. Dyer N NOV. 5, 1946, at precisely 10:35 not the company, that barred Greenleaf. Welcome back to Untold Stories. This a.m., pool superstar Ralph Green- Brunswick further alleged that Green- month’s installment is about that fasci- O leaf sent a short telegram to table- leaf was barred from the tournament nating $100,000 lawsuit, 282 pages of maker Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. not for any improper monopolistic rea- which I managed to dig up after several It was written in all caps — which I sons, but because the former champion long-distance phone calls and discus- know is how such things were writ- had acted deplorably during previous sions with various archivists and reviews ten back then — but it nonetheless matches. of newspaper clippings. Although it’s gives the note an appropriately IMAGE COURTESY THE BILLIARD ARCHIVE unclear how the lawsuit turned breathless feel. out — I imagine it was probably This is what it said: settled or dropped — the papers “HAVE BEEN PLAYING BY do provide a fascinating glimpse FAR BEST POCKET BILLIARDS of some of the behind-the-cur- OF MY CAREER IN MATCHES tains ugliness of the pool world. RIGHT IN PHILADELPHIA One document also provides a WHERE TOURNAMENT IS TO rough timeline of Greenleaf’s BE PLAYED. ALSO HAD GOOD professional career, which is the PUBLICITY ON SAME. ALSO fi rst I’ve ever come across. IN BEST SHAPE OTHERWISE This month’s column is mostly EXPECT TO BE IN TOUR- based on those court records, NAMENT.
    [Show full text]
  • Ist Big League Meet in History Without Deal I,Akrs
    PAGE 38 I) ETK O 1 1 EV E N ING TIM E S (THOSE CHEERY 880r» Friday, December 1. 1942 Wistert Picked on United Press All-Amoricn Team By LEO H. rETEBSEN choice- Bob Dove. Notre Dame ond team six times and was not consin’s big games against Ohio TACKLE AL WISTERT. nois. A scrambler, busy every (UP).— end and Dick Wildung, Minne- mentioned on one ballot. State and Minnesota Michigan. Fixcels as an offensive minute of the hall game, he goi SPORTS NFW YORK. Doc. 4 END 808 DOVE. Notre blocker and opened the holes Tie United Press today presents sota tackle. Schricnor received 752 point* more publicity than any lineman and 718. Dame. In making All-American that made Michigan's reverse By LEO MACDONELL its 19-12 All-American football Unlike last year, when the WUdUBS last year he was noted for plays work so well. Played 549 this season on two notable per- team, by sports Although a* chosen writers voting reflected the absence of ranked probably catching Angelo Bertelli's passes. iMit a possihle boo minutes. Re- formances, against to the best » from eo««t coast. any player play- team in the country. guard, but wailing "lineman of and lown. ; dominant or failed to place man Started season as ceived wall ! Irish Can Gc* Pas* Bu* Sailors Have Shut As in |>«st years, the Midwest, ers. the balloting this Ohio State a to Smashing the year” trophy in Chicago and CENTER SPENCER D- >rar the team. two shifted hack end. with si\ players, again domi- brought out three men who on first But end who played best Judge Robert .1.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Jean Could Beat Greenleaf, but Not the Bottle. Story by R.A
    UNTOLD STORIES: ANDREW ST. JEAN ALL THAT TALENT SQUANDERED St. Jean could beat Greenleaf, but not the bottle. Story by R.A. Dyer HIS IS the story of Ralph Greenleaf’s of booze and gambling, and was treach- Desell that they lost track of St. Jean drinking partner, a man who was erous as a player and extremely skilled. over the years, although one recalled T a gambler and a contender for the He was said to have the ability to run seeing him play against Willie Hoppe national championship. He was a hell- 70 balls one-handed and during his during the 1920s. St. Jean also was said raiser of the old school — of the very old later years made his living playing three- to frequent a social club in Lowell popu- school — a product of Prohibition and cushion billiards with only one hand. lar with French-Canadians. It’s called of the Roaring ’20s. Sometimes he wore It was cirrhosis that killed him. He the Pastetempe Club and it’s still there a tuxedo, sometimes a mask. He almost was buried in his hometown of Lowell, in downtown, looking pretty much the always carried a fl ask. Mass. (also the home of Jack Kerouac), same as always. “He was dyed-in-the- Welcome back to Untold Stories. PHOTOS COURTESTY OF THE BILLIARD ARCHIVE This month I’m profi ling Andrew St. Jean, one of the most colorful almost-champions of our most col- orful sport. In 1928, St. Jean was runner-up for the title, being bested only by the great Greenleaf himself.
    [Show full text]
  • Zen Pool Complete by Max Eberle
    Welcome to ZEN POOL Enjoy your journey. For more in depth pool training: http://www.propoolacademy.com Thank You, Max Eberle “For those of you who might not have ever seen Max play, he possesses the soundest fundamentals I have ever seen, I would highly recommend any advice/instruction he has to offer. ” —Corey Harper, World Class Pro “Zen Pool is THE BIBLE for anyone looking to enjoy the game, improve their skills, or hustle the hell out of somebody!” —Rory Freedman, co-author of Skinny Bitch “It’s damn fun!” —Johnny Knoxville, Movie Star “It’s like the bible of pool!” —Eric, San Diego “Got so much from this book, went on to be mentally strong and that translated to the physical part of the game. Book is worth much more!” —Jason “Your book was just what I needed. I met my old adversary again last week in a league match. Thrashed him 8-2. A close friend, who is also a very good pool player asked, “How the hell did you do that?” ‘Zen Pool’, I said.” —Allan, UK “Zen Pool is not as wordy like some other pool books available in the bookstores here. I always read it when my game isn’t going my way. It also motivates me and gives me a reason to improve on my game everyday.” —Thomas “I truly enjoyed Zen Pool and I believe that the mental focus necessary to become a better player is the most logical next step to improve my game.” —Bob, Indiana “I’ve taken a few lessons from Max in the past and purchased the book many months ago.
    [Show full text]