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  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi12.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem22.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI1.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi15.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi09.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi08.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi04.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana4.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI8.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI7.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi16.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi13.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi11.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi06.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi05.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana10.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana9.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana7.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana6.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana5.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg8.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg4.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg6.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg5.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem12.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem21.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem19.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem8.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem7.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem16.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem15.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem11.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem1.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem3.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem14.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem23.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem13.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI6.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI4.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI3.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi14.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi10.jpg
  • Padova, Alex Zanardi. Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaleks dzaˈnardi]; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian racing driver and paracyclist.<br />
He won two CART championship titles in North America during the late 1990s. He also had a less successful career as a Formula One driver. More recently, he has attracted widespread praise for his return to competition in the aftermath of a crash in 2001 that resulted in the amputation of his legs. He returned to racing less than two years after the accident, competing in the FIA World Touring Car Championship for BMW Team Italy-Spain between 2003 and 2009.<br />
Switching sports, Zanardi took up competition in handbiking, a form of paralympic cycling, with the stated goal of representing Italy at the 2012 Summer Paralympics. In September 2011, Zanardi won his first senior international handbiking medal, the silver medal in the H4 (handbike) category time trial at the UCI World Road Para-Cycling Championships.[1] In September 2012 he won gold medals at the London Paralympics in the individual H4 time trial and the individual H4 road race,[2][3][4] followed by a silver medal in the mixed H1-4 team relay.<br />
On 11 September 2012 he was included by International Paralympic Committee into the London 2012: Top 12 performances list.[5]
    alex zanardi07.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana8.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana3.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana2.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg2.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg3.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem9.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem20.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem10.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem18.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem6.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem5.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem4.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI5.jpg
  • Passo S. Pellegrino. Corridore da corse a tappe, professionista dal 2005, ha vinto la Vuelta a España 2010 e il Giro d'Italia 2013, due edizioni della Tirreno-Adriatico, ed è il secondo italiano, dopo Felice Gimondi, ad essere salito sul podio di tutti e tre i Grandi Giri[1]. Ha vinto il titolo di campione nazionale italiano nel giugno 2014. È soprannominato "Lo squalo dello Stretto" fin da dilettante, per via del suo modo di correre sempre all'attacco[2.   s an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered one of the strongest stage race riders of these years. He rides for the Kazakhstani UCI ProTeam Astana.[2] Born near the Strait of Messina, his nickname is the "Shark of the Strait" or simply "The Shark".[3][4] His first major win came at the 2006 GP Ouest-France, where he beat an impressive field on a tough course. However, experts such as Michele Bartoli have said Nibali is most suited to competing in multi-stage races.[5] Nibali's biggest wins to date are the 2010 Vuelta a España and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. He has also won two editions of the Tirreno-Adriatico stage race.
    VINCENZO NIBALI2.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    Fabiano Caruana1.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg9.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg7.jpg
  • Milan, Cara Goldenberg..Cara Goldenberg is at the top of her game. She is the founder and managing partner of Permian Investment Partners, a New York City-based hedge fund she launched in 2008...Goldenberg began her career at Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune 500) as an analyst in the investment banking division. Her strong quant skills quickly funneled her into the private equity group, a move that allowed her to circumvent the traditional analyst-associate-business school route that many of her peers would follow......
    Cara Goldenberg1.jpg
  • RAVENNA, la campionessa di canoa Josefa Idem. Josefa Idem Guerrini (born September 23, 1964 in Goch, West Germany) is a West German-born Italian sprint canoer. Competing in seven Summer Olympics, she has five medals (she will compete in her 8th Olympic: a world record [1]). Winning 35 international medals during her career, Idem was the first Italian woman to win World Championships (22 total, five gold) and Olympic medals in canoe sprint. At the 2009 world championships, she became the oldest medalist in the history of the world championships.
    Josefa-Idem2.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    fabiano Caruana010.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    fabiano Caruana011.jpg
  • Lugano, il campione scacchista Fabiano Caruana. Fabiano Caruana was born on July 30, 1992 in Miami, Florida of an Italian-American father and an Italian mother. At the age of 4 his family relocated from Miami, Florida to Park Slope, Brooklyn. Coincidentally, this was the same neighborhood where Bobby Fischer lived during his youth. At age 5, his chess talent was discovered in an after school chess program at Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, Brooklyn. That same year he played his first tournament at the Polgar Chess Center in Queens, New York.<br />
<br />
Up to the age of twelve, he lived and played in the United States, occasionally traveling to Europe and South America for tournaments.<br />
<br />
His first chess coach, from age six to eight, was National Master Bruce Pandolfini, and from age eight to twelve he studied with Grandmaster Miron Sher. In 2004 at age twelve, he relocated with his family from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Madrid to pursue a professional chess career. He trained with International Master Boris Zlotnik in Madrid, and in 2007 he moved to Budapest to train with Grandmaster Alexander Chernin.<br />
<br />
At age fourteen Caruana became the youngest ever Grandmaster of both the United States and Italy (surpassing the record in the United States set by Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura). He currently lives in Lugano Switzerland, and plays for Italy.
    fabiano Caruana009.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, Stretching the length of the ship, the Pool and Sports Zone is an ample playground for guests of all ages, featuring four unique types of pools, two FlowRider surf simulators, a zip line, amazing views of Boardwalk and Central Park below, plus the introduction of a trio of water slides as well as the Ultimate Abyss. plus bars and afternoon lice concerts The Perfect Storm – spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-66.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-65.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-69.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, The Perfect Storm – spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-68.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, The Perfect Storm – spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-67.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, Stretching the length of the ship, the Pool and Sports Zone is an ample playground for guests of all ages, featuring four unique types of pools, two FlowRider surf simulators, a zip line, amazing views of Boardwalk and Central Park below, plus the introduction of a trio of water slides as well as the Ultimate Abyss. plus bars and afternoon lice concerts The Perfect Storm – spiraling five decks above the landscaped, open-air Central Park in the center of the ship, waterslides Cyclone, Typhoon and Supercell come together as The Perfect Storm. Guests can challenge each other and race to the finish line with  Cyclone and Typhoon, which twist and turn down three decks, while sliders in Supercell will be swirled around its unique champagne bowl before descending into a big splash finale.
    Harmony of the seas-64.jpg
  • Royal Caribbean, Harmony of the Seas, Seas is the Ultimate Abyss, the tallest slide on the high seas, which will intimidate the bravest of guests and challenge them to prove their courage. Towering more than 150 feet above sea level, overlooking the AquaTheater at the aft of the ship, Boardwalk
    Harmony of the seas-63.jpg
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Alberto Bernasconi

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