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Published Monday, July 26, 2010 12:01 AM

Austin poker group not folding yet

By BEN WEAR

Austin American-Statesman

AUSTIN -- The game, like its long-time hostess, endures.

On most Friday nights for the past 64 years or so, while other Austinites were off at football games or movies or dinner, or whatever, political pioneer Emma Long and her friends instead have gathered around her dining table for poker. Three-raise limit, top bet a dollar, losses capped at $15 apiece. No silly games. Emma gets the last deal, and, always, the last word. Call if you can't come, and by God, don't do that too often.

Liberal Democrats preferred.

In 1948, when Dewey defeated Truman (well, almost) and Long beat the odds to became Austin's first female City Council member, she and her late husband, Stuart, were holding the game. In 1969, when Long lost her final race for council after pushing for an ordinance outlawing racial discrimination in housing, the Longs brought out the chips, as usual.

In the summer of 2010, with Long now 98 and three other long-time players in their ninth decade, almost every Friday and almost always at her Wilshire Woods home, everyone antes up a nickel just after 7 p.m., and the cards and chips fly.

Sixty-four years running, three to four hours at a pop. Something close to 10,000 hours, more than a year straight, of five-card stud, high Chicago, "Emma's game" and "That Woman's Game."

"I don't know exactly when it started, but it was right after World War II," says Long, who, because she was born on Feb. 29, jokes that she is 24. Long -- nails perfect, striking red hair and makeup just so, wearing a large bejeweled necklace and a brilliant blue crepe dress -- presents an unusually elegant image for a poker game.

"She's Lady Gaga," says Margie Alford, 72, a retired art director in the fashion industry who is the game's token Republican.

"What else am I going to do with this stuff," Long says. "I'm 98 years old!"

The pot right, Judy Alexander, a psychotherapist who at 58 is the youngest member among the regular players, begins to deal. The game, a free-wheeling, beer-and-cigarettes affair in the early days, Long's sons say, is a more circumspect occasion these days. Long, though she uses a walker, retains the command of her 17 years on the council. When you've had a city park named after you (and later, a beer at an Austin brew pub), and the game's on your turf, you get to the call the shots.

"There's no drinking, no cussing, no smoking," Alexander explains. "It's about the game."

They call it "poverty poker." If your $15 runs out, you can play hands without betting until you win, rake that pot and keep going. And, in an odd sort of inflationary illusion, each player actually has $30 of chips, but they're worth only $15. Go figure. The accounting at evening's end, however, is strict. You win, you win. You lose, you lose.

Emma and Stuart, a radio newsman in those early years and later impresario of Long News Service at the Capitol, began the game when they lived in Tarrytown on Clearview Drive, and Emma wasn't yet a politician.

In 1975, the Longs and the game moved to Emma's current home in Wilshire Woods, in East Austin. On the walls are evidence of the mark the Longs made on Austin history, with framed front-page clippings, Ben Sargent political cartoons featuring Emma Long, and photos with her alongside Lyndon Baines Johnson, Lady Bird Johnson, the City Council and other luminaries.

LBJ "dropped in on one night," Long says. "He didn't play, but he was there."

Stuart Long died in 1977. Emma, and the game, survived him.

Judy Alexander says she's thought a lot about the allure of the game, especially when friends ask her to go out on a Friday night and she has to explain, once again, that she has a regular poker gig with people decades her senior.

"For them, I would guess it's a perspective into their past, a familiar ongoing experience they have," Alexander said of those around the table. "That's very soothing as life happens around you, as you lose things, people die, you still have these people and this experience."




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