William Kwai Sun Chow

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Kwai_Sun_Chow an entity of type: Thing

William Kwai Sun Chow (July 3, 1914 – September 21, 1987, AKA William Ah Sun Chow Hoon) was instrumental in the development of the martial arts in the United States, specifically the family of styles referred to as kenpo/kempo. rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Kwai Sun Chow
rdf:langString William Kwai Sun Chow
rdf:langString Ah Sun Chow Hoon
rdf:langString William Kwai Sun Chow
xsd:date 1987-09-21
xsd:date 1914-07-03
xsd:integer 7180130
xsd:integer 1104636098
rdf:langString Edmund Parker, Bobby Lowe, Vernon Kam, Adriano Directo Emperado ,Anthony S. Agisa
xsd:date 1914-07-03
rdf:langString William Ah Sun Chow Hoon
xsd:date 1987-09-21
rdf:langString Ah Sun Chow Hoon
xsd:integer 10
rdf:langString William Kwai Sun Chow (July 3, 1914 – September 21, 1987, AKA William Ah Sun Chow Hoon) was instrumental in the development of the martial arts in the United States, specifically the family of styles referred to as kenpo/kempo. Born in Honolulu, Hawaii Chow was the third of sixteen children and the first son born to Sun Chow Hoon (AKA Ah Hoon Chow) and Rose Kalamalio Naehu. Chow's father came to Hawaii at the age of 19 and worked in a laundromat as a laborer. His mother was of Hawaiian descent. One of his brothers, John Chow-Hoon, would also become a well–known martial artist. Chow left school at age eleven when he was in the sixth grade.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7833

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