Albert "Dingy" Weiss (December 24, 1900 - September 1981) [1] was an American bridge player from Miami Beach, Florida. [2]
Samuel M. Stayman was an American bridge player, writer, and administrator. He is best known for Stayman, one of the world's most popular bidding conventions; indeed, a day after writing his obituary Alan Truscott called him "the player best known in the world".
Ronald D. Rubin is an American bridge player. He is best known for winning the 1983 Bermuda Bowl world teams bridge championship. In addition he has won 11 North American Bridge Championships. Rubin is from North Miami Beach, Florida.
Ira Rubin was an American professional contract bridge player. Rubin attended the Bronx High School of Science and later New York University. Rubin lived in Fair Lawn and resided in nearby Paramus for 35 years.
Sidney Silodor was an American bridge player. Silodor was a World Champion, winning the Bermuda Bowl in 1950. Silodor is currently 6th on the all-time list of North American Bridge Championships wins with 34. Silodor was a lawyer from Havertown, Pennsylvania.
Geoff Hampson is a Canadian professional bridge player. Hampson is from Toronto and the son of Sharon Hampson of "Sharon Lois and Bram" and American folk singer Joe Hampson.
Steve Garner is a professional American bridge player. Garner finished second in the World Championship in 2007 and has won 10 North American Bridge Championships. He lives in Chicago.
Edward M. "Eddie" Wold is an American professional bridge player from Houston, Texas. Wold is a graduate of Rice University. Wold is an accomplished teacher and plays regularly at Houston's Westside Bridge Academy, particularly in that club's Saturday afternoon "common game," where over a thousand pairs from all over the country play identical boards.
Harry J. Fishbein 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.
Eric Alan Greco is an American bridge player. He is from Annandale, Virginia.
Charles (Chuck) Frederick Burger was an American bridge player. Burger was from West Bloomfield, Michigan, and was an attorney.
Howard M. Weinstein is an American bridge player from Chicago, Illinois. He is a graduate of University of Minnesota. He is related to Josh Weinstein from Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Michael Brad Moss is an American bridge player from Berkeley, California and New York City. He is the son of Gail Greenberg.
Bart Bramley is an American bridge player. Bramley is from Chicago, Illinois.
Tobias Stone was an American bridge player and writer from New York City.
Paul Herbert Hodge was an American bridge player.
George Robert Nail was an American bridge player and a club owner and teacher in Houston, Texas.
Peter A. Leventritt was an American bridge player, president of the American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) for 1945–1946. Leventritt was from New York City.
Thomas Koonce Sanders, Sr. was an American bridge player from Nashville, Tennessee. He was married to Carol Sanders, a women's teams world champion player.
Björn Fallenius is a Swedish bridge player, for many years a resident of New York City. He and his late wife Kathy Fallenius operated the Cavendish Bridge Club.
Daniel "Danny" Rotman is a professional American bridge player from Aventura, Florida.