Harry Fishbein
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Harry_Fishbein an entity of type: Thing
Harry J. Fishbein (April 18, 1897 – February 19, 1976) was an American bridge player and club owner. He used to be a professional basketball player. In teams-of-four competition, Fishbein was a runner-up for the world championship in the 1959 Bermuda Bowl, playing on the United States team in a three-way round-robin among Europe, North America, and South America representatives. Fishbein was "the presiding genius" of the famous Mayfair club [or Mayfair Bridge Club] for more than 20 years" – proprietor of the training ground of experts from 1943 to 1966. As of 1960 he was also ACBL Treasurer.
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rdf:langString
Harry Fishbein
rdf:langString
Harry J. Fishbein
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Harry J. Fishbein
xsd:date
1976-02-19
xsd:date
1897-04-18
xsd:integer
44125258
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1048273289
xsd:date
1897-04-18
xsd:date
1976-02-19
rdf:langString
bridge player and club owner
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American
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Harry J. Fishbein (April 18, 1897 – February 19, 1976) was an American bridge player and club owner. He used to be a professional basketball player. In teams-of-four competition, Fishbein was a runner-up for the world championship in the 1959 Bermuda Bowl, playing on the United States team in a three-way round-robin among Europe, North America, and South America representatives. Fishbein was "the presiding genius" of the famous Mayfair club [or Mayfair Bridge Club] for more than 20 years" – proprietor of the training ground of experts from 1943 to 1966. As of 1960 he was also ACBL Treasurer. He developed the Fishbein convention as a defense against preemptive opening bids.
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11290
xsd:gYear
1897
xsd:gYear
1976