
Las Vegas, NV (PRWEB) May 12, 2012
The Las Vegas personal injury lawyers at the law firm of Bernstein & Poisson, a firm that represents clients who have been injured by way of traffic accidents, drunk driver accidents and other legal causes of action, hereby announce that the firm has made a donation to the Nevada Chapter of the March of Dimes. This donation was made in furtherance of a fund raising effort being made for a recent event.
The event that was garnering donations was the 2012 March for Babies Walk, which took place on Saturday, May 7. The event was designed to bring about not only charitable contributions, but also awareness to the need for help for families who give birth to children who are extremely ill and/or who are born premature and thereby too weak to survive on their own. The health care costs for these situations can be exorbitant and simply too much for many families to afford, and the March of Dimes makes the effort to help families defray those costs in order to avoid financial ruin.
Specifically, the Las Vegas personal injury attorneys at Bernstein & Poisson made the donations to a staff member who was going to walk in the event in an effort to raise funds with members of her volunteer team. The firm was happy to provide the donation funds to this charitable organization. The Las Vegas injury attorneys at the firm have long held the belief that helping and serving the community as an active member organization in any way possible is an ideal worth constant pursuit.
The Las Vegas accident lawyers at Bernstein & Poisson encourage anyone who has the means and the opportunity to make contributions to worthwhile charitable organizations when possible. These donations can and often do make the difference between life and death for many people. They can also make the difference between financial stability and desperation for many families struggling with serious health challenges and difficulties.
About Bernstein & Poisson
Bernstein & Poisson is a law firm comprised of Las Vegas personal injury lawyers who have handled cases on behalf of injured clients that include issues such as negligence, wrongful death, auto accidents, motorcycle accidents, bicycle accidents, trucking accidents, pedestrian accidents, premises liability, nursing home abuse cases, nursing home neglect matters, slip and fall situations, drunk driver auto accidents, medical malpractice and many other types of legal matters in which injured and suffering clients have needed legal help.

A deliciously wry, edge-of-the-seat memoir of making a fortune with card counters across a wide swath of blackjack in America. At twenty-four, Josh Axelrad held down a respectable and ominously dull job on Wall Street. Adventure was a tuna fish sandwich instead of the usual turkey for lunch. Then one night, a stranger at a cocktail party persuaded him to leave the nine-to-five behind and pursue an unlikely dream: the jackpot. The stranger was a blackjack card counter, and he sold Axelrad on the vision of Vegas with all its intrigue, adventure- and cash. Repeat Until Rich is Axelrad’s taut, atmospheric, and darkly hilarious account of ditching the mundane and entering the alternative universe of professional blackjack. Axelrad has one thing in common with his team: Jon Roth, the leader and a former options trader; Neal Matcha, a recovering lawyer; Aldous Kaufman, a retired math Ph.D. candidate. They all thrived in the straight world, found success boring, and vowed to make life more exotic. Axelrad adopts Roth’s philosophy-”repeat until rich”-and from his strategy and skill spring hasty retreats across casino floors, high-speed car chases, arrests on dubious grounds, and the massive cash paydays that make it all worthwhile. Along the way, he unveils the tactics and debunks the myths of professional card counters. In team play, he’s either the “big player,” who bets the big money, or the “controller,” who subtly coordinates the team’s betting while wagering only the minimum himself. Counting is not illegal, and it’s less intellectually daunting than its MIT-level mystique suggests. With clarity and wit, Repeat Until Rich proves the old gambler’s maxim that “if you can tip awaiter, you can count cards.” But it also proves how zealous, even forceful, casino bosses can be in “backing off” counters-seeing past their undercover methods and banning them from the tables. Josh soon grows to love all this trouble, and discovers, more than the money, what he needs most
Price: $ 0.99
Sold by Barnes & Noble
9800pro | Appadvice | $729900 | Giraffe™ | Ambrym | Findseattleonline | 1150p | Jewelgold/tan | The top 10 ways to feel loved rightnow | Wolfsburg escort | New York Invisalign | social media marketing