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His mother originates from White Carniola, which is a small traditional region in southeastern Slovenia.His father is of Serbian descent.His grandfather was a Serbian soldier who fought on the Salonika front in the First World War, to whom he also dedicated a song called "Pukni zoro" from his album Montevideo, Bog te video in 2013.
Miloš Radanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Радановић, born 5 November 1980) is a Montenegrin retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Club career
Miloš Mihajlović is a 1999 graduate of the (University of Art) Faculty of Music in Belgrade, and in 2005 completed his postgraduate studies there with the highest distinction. [1]
Velimirović was a Junior Fellow in Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks for the 1955/56 and 1956/57 academic years. [1] From 1957 to 1969, he taught at Yale University.During that time, he was awarded a Fulbright fellowship for research in Greece in the 1963/64 academic year.
W–L Date Tournament Tier Surface Opponent Score Loss 0–1: Sep 2023: M15 Vienna, Austria WTT Clay Peter Heller 6–7 (7–9), 2–6 Loss 0–2: Sep 2024: M15 Vienna, Austria WTT Clay Andrej Martin: 2–6, 1–6 Loss 0–3: Sep 2024: M15 Pardubice, Czech Republic WTT Clay Maxim Mrva: 4–6, 5–7 Loss 0–4: Sep 2024: M15 Trnava, Slovakia WTT ...
The music of Vojvodina is played by such organizations as the Opera of the Serbian National Theatre, an orchestra, the Tamburitza Orchestra of Radio Television of Vojvodina, Guitarists Association of Vojvodina the National String Orchestra, Zlatna Tamburica, the Association of Serbian Singing Groups, Oj Dunave, Dunave Plavi, the Academy of the Arts in Novi Sad and the Muzička Omladina youth ...
Miloš signed an exclusive recording contract to Deutsche Grammophon in 2010. His career began its meteoric rise in 2011 with the release of his debut album Mediterráneo [5] (titled The Guitar for the U.K. market), topping the classical charts around the world and turning him into “classical music’s guitar hero” (the Telegraph). [6]
[1] [2] [3] The real transfer speed between the Amiga 3000/4000 implementation of Zorro III and a Zorro III card is somewhere around 13.5 MByte/s due to the limitations of the Buster chip. [4] This was comparable to Intel's first PCI implementation, which peaked at 25 MByte/s. Zorro III was optimized for future single-chip implementations of ...