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    Charles Goren  -  
        The ACBL presented Charles Goren the "Hall of Fame" 
        award, offering the following testimonial: No name is more closely associated with the game 
        of bridge than that of Charles Goren. Indeed, Goren earned and proudly 
        bore the nickname of “Mr. Bridge.”  Born in Philadelphia , Goren earned a law degree 
        as a young man but practiced only briefly before bridge became first in 
        his life.  As a protege of fellow Hall-of-Famer Milton 
        Work, Goren adapted Work's point-count evaluation method and published 
        the now-familiar 4–3–2–1 system. The idea caught on quickly and was used 
        by millions of players. Goren — a tireless worker — promoted his ideas 
        through books, tours and lectures. Overnight, point-count displaced Ely 
        Culbertson's honor-trick approach to hand evaluation.  Goren's hugely successful books, Contract Bridge 
        Complete and Point Count Bidding, made his methods — dubbed “Standard 
        American” — the most widely played system in the history of the game.
         Goren's talents were not limited to writing and 
        lecturing. He also hosted the popular televison program Championship 
        Bridge with Charles Goren from 1959 to 1964.  The record for the most number of wins in the 
        annual McKenney contest (now the Barry Crane Top 500 masterpoint race) 
        is held by Goren, who won it eight times. He also holds the record for 
        most number of consecutive victories in the contest: five, from 1947 
        through 1951.  His tournament career was outstanding. Goren won 
        34 national championships (now NABCs) and earned a world championship 
        title when the U.S. squad won the inaugural Bermuda Bowl in 1950. 
         The name of Goren became synonymous with bridge 
        to millions. His importance as a world figure was recognized when he was 
        on the front cover of Time magazine. His classic Contract Bridge 
        Complete ran to 12 editions.  It is estimated that Goren books have sold more 
        than 10 million copies. His writings have been translated into a dozen 
        languages. His books include: Better Bridge for Better Players, Standard 
        Book of Bidding, Contract Bridge Made Easy, A Self-Teacher, Point-Count 
        Bidding in Contract Bridge, Goren Presents the Italian Bridge System, 
        New Contract Bridge in a Nutshell; Sports Illustrated Book of Bridge, 
        Goren's Winning Partnership Bridge, Charles Goren's Bridge Complete, and 
        Goren on Play and Defense.  Goren became a world champion in Bermuda in 1950 
        when the first Bermuda Bowl World Championship was staged. Placed 2nd 
        1956 and 1957 Bermuda Bowls, member of U.S. team that finished 4th in 
        first World Team Olympiad in Turin in 1960. His television show, 
        Championship Bridge with Charles Goren, ran from 1959 to 1964. It was 
        called the first successful bridge program on television and won an 
        award as one of the best new television features.  A lifelong bachelor, Goren may genuinely have 
        been married to the game. In spite of his work as writer, lecturer, 
        promoter, TV personality (unlike Culbertson, who grew bored with the 
        game when he became successful), Goren was devoted to tournament play.
         He seldom played rubber bridge, and never for 
        high stakes. He considered his playing status amateur and once turned 
        over to the Damon Runyon Cancer Fund the full amount of a $1,500 purse 
        which he won in a charity tournament played in Las Vegas .  Before his retirement from active competition in 
        1966, he captured virtually every major bridge trophy in U.S. tournament 
        play. ACBL Honorary Member 1959, one of first 3 elected to ACBL Hall of 
        Fame (then of The Bridge World) in 1963. Member ACBL Laws Commission 
        from 1956, contributing editor of The Bridge World, member of Editorial 
        Advisory Board of Bridge Encyclopedia. Awarded the honorary degree of 
        Doctor of Laws by McGill University 1963.  After retiring from the tournament scene in the 
        late Sixties, Goren lived quietly at his home in Miami Beach . For the 
        last 19 years of his life he lived with his nephew, Marvin Goren, in 
        Southern California . Because of poor eyesight and failing health, he 
        was seldom seen in the Seventies.  There were rare appearances on the According to 
        Goren panel shows at North American Bridge Championships and in 1972 he 
        hosted a party for the press at his Miami Beach home during the Fourth 
        World Bridge Olympiad. 
 His personal record by events: won Bermuda Bowl 1950, placed 2nd 1956, 
        57; 3rd World Team Olympiad 1960. On the national level he won the 
        Vanderbilt 1944, 45, placed 2nd 1934, 36, 49, 50, 53, 55, 59, 62; Asbury 
        Park Trophy (later the Spingold) 1937; Spingold Master KO Teams 1943, 
        47, 51, 56, 60, 2nd 1939, 1950; Reisinger BAM Teams (formerly Chicago) 
        1937, 38, 39, 42, 43, 50, 57, 63, 2nd 1944, 51; Master Mixed Teams 1938, 
        41, 43, 44, 48, 54, 2nd 1946, 49, 50, 51; Men's BAM Teams 1952, 2nd 
        1946, 55; Life Master Pairs 1942, 58, 2nd 1953; Open Pairs 1940; Mixed 
        Pairs 1943, 47, 2nd 1934; Men's Pairs 1938, 43, 49, 2nd in 1935; Masters 
        Individual 1945; McKenney Trophy 1937, 43, 45, 47 48, 49, 50, 51.
 See
        Bridge books authored 
        by Charles Goren.
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