Zsuzsa Csisztu | |
---|---|
Full name | Zsuzsanna Csisztu |
Country represented | Hungary |
Born | Pilisborosjenő, Hungary | February 15, 1970
Residence | Budapest, Hungary |
Discipline | Women's artistic gymnastics |
Level | Senior International Elite |
Years on national team | 1982–92 (Hungary) |
College team | Minnesota Golden Gophers (1990–1992) |
Zsuzsa Csisztu (born February 15, 1970) is a Hungarian former artistic gymnast. She competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics. [1] In 1992 she started her cooperation with television and has worked as a TV presenter and actress since then.
Alisa Mikhailovna Galliamova is a Russian chess player who holds the FIDE titles of International Master (IM) and Woman Grandmaster (WGM). She is twice runner-up at the Women's World Chess Championship, in 1999 and 2006, and three-time Russian women's champion. She was known as "Alisa Galliamova-Ivanchuk" from 1993 to 2001.
Zsuzsa Körmöczy was a Hungarian tennis player. She reached a career high of World No. 2 in women's tennis, and won the 1958 French Open at the age of 34.
Zsuzsa Almássy is a Hungarian former figure skater. She is the 1969 World bronze medalist, a three-time European medalist, and a five-time Hungarian national champion. She competed at three Winter Olympics, placing 17th in 1964, 6th in 1968, and 5th in 1972. She was coached by Arnold Gerschwiler.
Zsuzsanna "Zsuzsa" Kézi was a Hungarian handball player, Olympic Games and World Championship bronze medalist. She was born in Bakonybánk. She won the bronze medal on the 1975 World Championship in the Soviet Union, and added another bronze to her collection on the 1976 Summer Olympics.
Zsuzsa Budavari-Novak is a Hungarian conductor and current leader of the Maribor Academic Choir in Slovenia.
Zsuzsa Fey is a Romanian orienteering competitor. She won a gold medal in the relay event at the 1996 Junior World Orienteering Championships in Govora.
Zsuzsa Koncz is a Hungarian pop singer, whose lyrics were sometimes highly critical of the country's pre-1990 political system.
Susan Polgar is a Hungarian-American chess grandmaster. Polgár was Women's World Chess Champion from 1996 to 1999. On FIDE's Elo rating system list of July 1984, at the age of 15, she became the top-ranked female chess player in the world. In 1991, she became the third woman to be awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE. She won eleven medals at the Women's Chess Olympiad.
Katalin Juhász was a Hungarian foil fencer.
Zsuzsa Bánk is a German writer.
Zsuzsa Kovács is a retired Hungarian swimmer who won a bronze medal in the 4×100 m freestyle relay at the 1962 European Aquatics Championships. She competed in the 4×100 m medley relay and 200 m breaststroke events at the 1964 Summer Olympics, but did not reach the finals.
Zsuzsa Verőci is a Hungarian chess Woman International Master (1969) and Woman Grandmaster (1978). She has also been a FIDE International Arbiter since 1995. Her current FIDE rating is 2246 and her peak rating, from July 2003 to April 2004, was 2315. She was born February 19, 1949, in Budapest, Hungary.
Zsuzsanna "Zsuzsa" Nagy is a retired Hungarian gymnast. She competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in all artistic gymnastics events and won a bronze medal in the team competition. Her best individual result was 34th place on the balance beam. She won another bronze team medal at the 1974 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships.
Zsuzsa Rakovszky is a Hungarian translator and writer. Her surname also appears as Rakovsky.
Zsuzsa Szabó is a retired Hungarian middle-distance runner. She competed at the 1964 Olympics in the 800 m and finished in fourth place. Two years later she won a gold and a silver medal in this event at the European indoor and outdoor championships, respectively.
Zsuzsa Makai, born as Suzana Makai, was a Romanian and Hungarian chess player. She holds the title of Woman International Master. She is a Hungarian Women's Chess Champion (1980).
Zsuzsa Vanyek is a Hungarian female former track and field athlete who competed in the long jump, triple jump and the heptathlon. She won 25 national titles indoors and outdoors, including 18 in the long jump and five in heptathlon.
Zsuzsa Nagy is a Hungarian judoka. She competed in the women's half-middleweight event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
Zsuzsa Ferge was a Hungarian sociologist and statistician who is particularly known for her work on poverty reduction. She was a Professor Emerita in the Department of Policy, Economics, and Law at Eötvös Loránd University, where she helped to establish a department of social policy studies. She was also the head of the Poverty Research Center there, as well as the Chief Researcher at the Working Unit on Hungary's National Program against Child Poverty, holding both of these positions after her retirement.