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School of Electrical Engineering Zagreb (Croatian: Elektrotehnička škola Zagreb) is a IT and Engineering school. It was founded in 1959 as Center for educating " Rade Končar " . In 1991 the school changed its name to School of Electrical Engineering which is still its name.
The High School of Electrical Engineering in Sarajevo established the School's Electrical Engineering Department in 1945/1946. years. The first generation of electrical technicians in the electrical engineering department of the Secondary Technical School had one class with 42 students, 30 of whom successfully completed their education in 1948/ ...
Official logo of Faculty of Electrical Engineering in Sarajevo. The Faculty of Electrical Engineering (Serbo-Croatian: Elektrotehnički Fakultet) or ETF is one of the faculties of University of Sarajevo. The faculty was formed in 1961. The Building of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering is on the campus of the University of Sarajevo.
This is the list of schools providing secondary education in Zagreb, Croatia. [1]Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium. Agricultural School Zagreb; Archdiocesan Classical Gymnasium ...
The model line is referred to officially as the E-Class (or E-Klasse). All generations of the E-Class have offered either rear-wheel drive or Mercedes' 4Matic four-wheel drive system. The E-Class is Mercedes-Benz' best-selling model, with more than 13 million sold by 2015. [1] The first E-Class series was originally available as four-door sedan ...
Trg oslobođenja - Alija Izetbegović is a square in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.It lies between the municipalities Stari Grad and Centar.It links the main pedestrian thoroughfare of the Sarajevo old town, Ferhadija street, with Zelenih Beretki street, with the Dom Armije (1881).
Founded in July 1952, the Faculty of Economics of the University of Sarajevo was one of the four faculties of economics in socialist Yugoslavia. The first lecture was held in the building of the Palace of Justice (today's Rectorate and Faculty of Law) on 14 October 1952. Enrolments averaged 200 per year in the 1950s.
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