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・ Mirko Jović
・ Mirko Jozić
・ Mirko Jurkovic
・ Mirko Kokotović
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・ Mirko Kovats
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・ Mirko Kovač (basketball)
・ Mirko Kovač (writer)
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Mirko Marjanović
・ Mirko Marjanović (writer)
・ Mirko Martucci
・ Mirko Mazzari
・ Mirko Mihić
・ Mirko Mikić
・ Mirko Milašević
・ Mirko Mulalić
・ Mirko Murovic
・ Mirko Müller
・ Mirko Nišović
・ Mirko Norac
・ Mirko Novosel
・ Mirko Opazo
・ Mirko Oremuš


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Mirko Marjanović : ウィキペディア英語版
Mirko Marjanović

Mirko Marjanović (, ; 27 July 1937 – 21 February 2006) was a former Prime Minister of Serbia from 1994 to 2000 and a high-ranking official in Slobodan Milošević's Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS).
==Biography==
Marjanović was born into a large working-class family with 7 children in Knin, in the Littoral Banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (present-day Croatia). He had 4 brothers and 2 sisters. His father, Dušan, worked in the local factory, while mother Marija was a homemaker.
After completing primary school and gymnasium in his hometown, Marjanović moved to Zagreb where he attended musical academy which he never finished.
He then moved to Belgrade, where in 1960 he graduated at University of Belgrade's Faculty of Economics, more specifically at the department for microeconomics.
Upon graduation, Marjanović came back to Knin since he found employment there as the supervisor in Tvik factory. From there, he advanced to the position of financial director, and eventually moving on to metallurgical factory in Zenica. In 1973, he transferred to the Moscow outpost of Progres - a state company that handled close to 80% of Yugoslav black metallurgy and other heavy industries.
By 1976 he quickly advanced up the ranks to become one of the directors at Progres. He handled company's steel division in Russia quite successfully while developing an impressive network of influential friends and business partners such as Viktor Chernomyrdin (later to become Prime Minister of Russia), and Yuri Brezhnev, son of Leonid Brezhnev.
In 1979, Marjanovic was named as Progres' general director.
From 1989 until 1994, he was the president of FK Partizan's executive board. One of his more notable moves while at the post was bringing Predrag Mijatović to the club in December 1989. Mijatović, at the time a young promising player from Titograd's FK Budućnost, was very close to signing with Hajduk Split when Marjanović stepped in and convinced him to come to Belgrade. Upon leaving the club, Marjanović was named Partizan's honorary president.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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