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・ Nikola Tolimir
・ Nikola Tomašić
・ Nikola Tonev
・ Nikola Toshkovich
・ Nikola Trajković
・ Nikola Mikelini
・ Nikola Mikhov
・ Nikola Mikić
・ Nikola Milanković
・ Nikola Milev
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・ Nikola Milojević (tennis)
・ Nikola Milošević
・ Nikola Milošević (footballer)
Nikola Milošević (politician)
・ Nikola Milutinov
・ Nikola Minkov
・ Nikola Mirković
・ Nikola Mirotić
・ Nikola Mitrevski
・ Nikola Mitrović
・ Nikola Mitrović (footballer, born 1997)
・ Nikola Mladenov
・ Nikola Mladenović
・ Nikola Mojsilović
・ Nikola Mollov
・ Nikola Moravčević
・ Nikola Moushmov
・ Nikola Murišić


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Nikola Milošević (politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Nikola Milošević (politician)

Nikola Milošević, PhD (Serbian Cyrillic: Никола Милошевић) (born in Sarajevo, Kingdom of Yugoslavia on April 17, 1929 – died in Belgrade, Serbia on January 24, 2007) was a Serbian writer, political philosopher, literary critic, and politician.
He graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy. He was professor of Literary Theory at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology since 1969. He became a correspondent member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in 1983 and a full member in 1994. He was president of the Miloš Crnjanski Endowment in Belgrade.
== Political and intellectual activity ==
In 1968 during a big student revolt in the streets of Belgrade, he daily criticized official press coverage of the protests in front of hundreds of protesting students. For this reason he was denounced by semi-official newspaper ''Politika''. He was a leading anti-Marxist intellectual in Serbia during the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1970s he criticized severely Vladimir Lenin's involvement in pre-revolutionary robberies and this had powerful echo and undermined pro-Marxist intelligentsia in Yugoslavia that supported the regime of Josip Broz Tito. In his 1985 book ''Marxism and Jesuitism'' he severely criticized Lenin and Joseph Stalin, which prompted Soviet officials to unsuccessfully demand his removal from the University of Belgrade. He continued his anti-communist involvement during the regime of Slobodan Milošević (1990–2000) and was eventually banned from entering the Faculty of Philology building in 1998 by a Milošević regime appointed dean.
Nikola Milošević's lectures at the Faculty of Philology were attended by the who is who of intellectual Belgrade and his polemics with Marxist authors attracted considerable attention. In 1982, he declined to accept the highest communist award of the City of Belgrade for scholars and artists – the October Prize.
In political sphere he was a conservative liberal. He was one of the founders of the re-established Democratic Party in Serbia in 1990. After quarrels with party's leader prof. Dragoljub Mićunović, Nikola Milošević, together with a group of ten prominent members of the Democratic Party, established a new party – the Serbian Liberal Party. This party advocated liberal and anti-communist ideas and boycotted all elections during the reign of Slobodan Milošević (1990–2000). In 2003 Nikola Milošević became a member of the Serbian Parliament since the Serbian Liberal Party participated in December 2003 elections as a coalition partner of the Democratic Party of Serbia.
His last publication was a collection of political polemics entitled ''Politički spomenar: Od Broza do DOS-a'' (Recollection: From Broz to DOS ).

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