Smokey College Football Picks with the Bandit
A frank discussion on the weekly college football matchups
Categories: Comedy
Tags: bandit, college, college football, Football, lines, smokey, spreads
A frank discussion on the weekly college football matchups
Categories: Comedy
Tags: bandit, college, college football, Football, lines, smokey, spreads
Every week on the Smarter Bets podcast, David Solar and Dan McGuire break down the biggest games using public betting trends, sharp money indicators, historically profitable betting systems and more. This insight, strategy, and overview will help even the most casual bettor make smarter bets.
Categories: Uncategorised
Tags: BASKETBALL, betting, Football, gambling, Injuries, lines, MLB, Moneyline, nba, NCAAB, ncaaf, nfl, nhl, odds, picks, scores, SPorts, sportsbook, spreads, trends, Vegas
Doug Parker gives weekly cruise news, ship reviews, money saving tips, answers your travel questions, and helps you make the most of your cruise vacation.
Categories: Leisure, Society & Culture
Tags: caribbean, carnival, carnivalcruiseline, celebrity, cruise, cruiselines, cruises, cruising, deals, expeditions, family, Holland, information, Line, lines, msccruises, norwegian, princess, reviews, river, Royal, ship, ships, travel, vacation, Vacations, virginvoyages, windstar
The podcast for the regular gambler. We are four guys who live and die on the daily lines. We look at the board and breakdown where our money is going. Tail or Fade we are here to give you the picks you need
Tags: betting, crone, gambling, lines, nfl, sports betting, Sports Gambling
When President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in 1933, one in four Americans was out of work nationally, but in some cities and some industries unemployment was well over 50 percent. Equally troubling were the bank panics. Between 1929 and 1931, 4,000 banks closed for good; by 1933 the number rose to more than 9,000, with $2.5 billion in lost deposits. Banks never have as much in their vaults as people have deposited, and if all depositors claim their money at once, the bank is ruined. Millions of Americans lost their money because they arrived at the bank too late to withdraw their savings. The panics raised troubling questions about credit, value, and the nature of capitalism itself. And they made clear the unpredictable relationship between public perception and general financial health—the extent to which the economy seemed to work as long as everyone believed that it would. To stop the run on banks, many states simply closed their banks the day before Roosevelt’s inauguration. Roosevelt himself declared a four-day “bank holiday” almost immediately upon taking office and made a national radio address on Sunday, March 12, 1933, to explain the banking problem. Then until 1944 FDR spoke to America as the depression gave rise to World War II.
Categories: Kids & Family, Society & Culture
Tags: 1920s, 1930s, 1940, banking, bread, camardella, crash, Crises, Deal, Democratic, depression, FDR, government, humphrey, ii, lines, Market, new, President, stock, stocks, unemployed, war, world, wwii