[4] He described Grigory Zinoviev as a dreamer, a sleepwalker, who lived in a world of pure literature.
[5] He won, ahead of Nicolas Rossolimo and Vitaly Halberstadt, in the 8th Paris City Chess Championship in 1932.
He participated not in the 5th Chess Olympiad but in the General Congress, finishing second, half a point behind Eugene Znosko-Borovsky.
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