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Ucsd Poker Club

Join your colleagues by becoming a member of the UCSD Faculty Club. Membership is open to UCSD faculty, staff, graduate students, researchers, alumni and members of the community who support UCSD. Benefits of membership include the daily lunch buffet at a discounted price, 20% off happy hour prices, use of the Seuss Library during the day, and invitations to special events and quarterly wine dinners. Members also receive reciprocal privileges at many other faculty clubs, as well as the abilty to book the Club for private social events such as weddings or birthdays, at special member prices.

  1. Poker Club Imdb

To become a member, complete the Membership Application or downloadthe form and bring or mail it to the Club.

INITIATION FEES & DUES

Rotaract Club at UCSD: San Diego Car Club: San Diego Homeless Health Initiative: SENDforC San Diego. UC San Diego 9500 Gilman Dr. La Jolla, CA 92093 (858). UCSD Departmental memberships allow multiple faculty members in the same department to use the department's membership card for Club lunches and events. Departments are charged $210 per account semi-annually in January and July. Download Department Membership Application. Reciprocal Clubs. As a member of the Faculty Club you have membership. Husky Table Tennis Club 108 views 10:26 Cadet Boys Final: Jensen (2304) vs. Darryl (2211) at Joola Spring Open in Milpitas, CA on 3/7/2020 - Duration: 10:41.

UCSD faculty, staff, researchers, alumni, and graduate students pay a one-time initiation fee of $50.

Community members pay a one-time initiation fee of $100.

Monthly Dues


Ucsd Poker Club
AffiliationSingle MembershipFamily Membership
Active faculty, staff, graduate students and alumni$14$16
Retired faculty & staff$10$12
Community members$16$18

PAYMENT OPTIONS

Monthly dues may be paid in one of three ways:

  1. Payroll Deduction (available for members on Regental payroll.)
    • Dues are deducted monthly.
    • Please provide authorization information on the membership application.
    • First month’s dues must be paid by check or credit card (Visa, American Express, Mastercard, Discover).
  2. Credit Card
    • Dues are billed semi-annually in January and July.
    • Please provide credit card information on the membership application.
  3. Check
    • Dues are billed semi-annually in January and July.
    • Checks should be made payable to UCSD Faculty Club.

UCSD DEPARTMENTAL MEMBERSHIPS

UCSD Departmental memberships allow multiple faculty members in the same department to use the department's membership card for Club lunches and events. Departments are charged $210 per account semi-annually in January and July. Download Department Membership Application.

Reciprocal Clubs

As a member of the Faculty Club you have membership privileges with reciprocal clubs. Click here to see the full list of Faculty Clubs.

Somewhere in an off-campus apartment, students are shuffling cards and stacking chips for a friendly poker game. You can bet on it. And if these young card sharks have sights on climbing to the top of the poker world, they’d be wise to take notes from UC San Diego alumna and professional poker player Maria Ho, ’05.

As the second ranked women’s poker player in the world, Ho has over $2.6 million in lifetime winnings and is co-host and strategic commentator on the Heartland Poker Tour—quite an about-face for a communications major who originally planned to be a broadcast journalist and reporter.

Since her very first game of poker at UCSD, breaking into the boy’s club would be a recurring theme in her career. In fact, just to play her first hand she had to crash a poker night held by a group of guy friends. “They didn’t want to invite me… and the less they wanted me more the more I wanted to play,” says Ho.

The game was on. Though the cards became a calling for Ho through college, she made a deal with herself to make it to class and to never fall behind, even as the allure of poker grew stronger and she found herself spending more nights in the casino. Despite long nights, her studies paid dividends at the poker table as well.

“UCSD—it was a nest where I was taught how to study, and I brought those study habits to the game, to learn new game theories. I think being at UCSD taught me the methodology of study, and that has benefitted me.”

Ho didn’t tell her family, including her sister who received a Ph.D. from UC San Diego, that she was playing poker recreationally in college. It wasn’t until she graduated that she broke the news, telling them she was taking a year off to play poker before looking for a job. And she wasn’t bluffing—from that point on, she made her name in the professional circuit.

With all her success, Ho says she feels “pretty badass being a top woman in a male-dominated sport.” Having always been the only girl in the room with opponents—mostly men—who questioned her skill, Ho felt underestimated. However, it was that feeling of underestimation that kept her motivated.

“There’s a bias in poker. Men believe women are timid, play tight, don’t play speculative hands and don’t bluff.” By playing into their stereotypes, Ho was able to outplay her male opponents and to help blaze new trails for females at the poker table.

Ho complements her achievements at the table with a career that brings her communications degree full circle. Not only is she a top commentator for broadcast tournaments, Ho has gone into celebrity endorsements, appearances on TV shows like The Amazing Race, and is most proud to spend time fighting for local charities and nonprofit organizations and raising awareness for humanitarian issues.

Ho was recently nominated for an American Poker Award for Charitable Initiative of the Year for organizing and hosting a charity event during the World Series of Poker to raise funds to help the T.J. Martell Foundation find cures for leukemia, cancer and AIDS.

Poker Club Imdb

There’s a saying in poker tournaments that to have a chance to win you need only “a chip and a chair.” That may be true for one-and-done dreamers, but to break down barriers and be a consistent winner who transcends the game to help other people, that takes skill and smarts—two things Ho has in spades.