About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 27. Chapters: Miguel Najdorf, Raul Sanguineti, Erich Eliskases, Sonja Graf, Paulino Frydman, Carlos Guimard, Francisco Benko, Paul Michel, Markas Luckis, Albert Becker, Julio Kaplan, Roberto Grau, Movsas Feigins, Bernardo Wexler, Ji i Pelikan, Alberto Foguelman, Gerardo Barbero, Isaias Pleci, Juan Iliesco, Samuel Schweber, Karel Skali ka, Adolf Seitz, Cristobal Dominguez, Rolando Illa, Miguel Quinteros, Heinrich Reinhardt, Damian Reca, Herman Pilnik, Daniel Campora, Carlos Maderna, Luis Piazzini, Victor Winz, Raimundo Garcia, Benito Villegas, Gaston Needleman, Pablo Ricardi, Virgilio Fenoglio, Julio Bolbochan, Ariel Sorin, Chris de Ronde, Aaron Schwartzman, Jorge Rubinetti, Paulette Schwartzmann, Hugo Spangenberg, Ruben Felgaer, Hector Rossetto, Jacobo Bolbochan, Oscar Panno, Jorge Szmetan, Pablo Zarnicki, Luis Argentino Palau, Jose Rubinstein, Carlos Garcia Palermo, Juan Vinuesa, Carlos Bielicki, Jose Gerschman, Augusto de Muro. Excerpt: Miguel Najdorf (born Mendel (Mieczys aw) Najdorf in Grodzisk Mazowiecki near Warsaw, Poland, April 15, 1910 - died in Malaga, Spain, July 4, 1997) was a Polish-born Argentine chess grandmaster of Jewish origin, famous for his Najdorf Variation. Mieczys aw Najdorf was tutored first by Dawid Przepiorka, then by Savielly Tartakower, the latter of whom he always referred to as "my teacher." At the beginning of his chess career, in 1929, Najdorf defeated Glucksberg in a famous game known as "The Polish Immortal." In 1930, he tied for 6th-7th at the Warsaw Championship, an event won by Paulino Frydman. In 1931, he took second in Warsaw, behind Frydman. In 1932, he tied for 9th-10th in Warsaw. In 1933, he won in Warsaw (Quadrangular). In January 1934, he finished second to Rudolf Spielmann, in Warsaw. In summer 1934, he lost a match against Ored Karlin (+1 -2 =1). In 1934, he...